The origin, affinities and primary signification of English words, as far as they have been ascertained. The genuine orthography and pronunciation of words, according to general usage, or to just principles of ANALOoy. Accurate and discriminating definitions, with numerous authorities and illustrations.
TO WHICH ARE PREFIXED,
AN INTRODUCTORY DISSERTATION ON THE
ORIGIN, HISTORY
AND CONNECTION OF THE
LANGUAGES OF WESTERN ASIA AND OF EUROPE, AND A CONCISE GRAMMAR
"
OF THE
ENGLISH LANGUAGE. ^.
^
\
f
^--^ fe vV.
'»ro
0.^^^—"
BY NOAH WEBSTER, LL. D. IN T^VO VOIiUIWES.
VOL. He
tliat
wishes
to
I.
be counted among the benefactors of posterity, must add, by his
own
toil, to
the acquisitions of his ancestors.—i{
NEW YORK: PUBLISHED BY S. CONVERSE. PRINTED Br HEZEKIAH HOWE
1828.
—NEW HAVEN.
DISTRICT OF CONNECTICUT,
Beit hemembered, L^'• Noah •
"
Webster,
following;, to wit
ss.
That on the fourteenth day of April, in the tifty-second year of the Independence of the United States of America, of the said District, hath deposited in this office the title of a Book, the right whereof he claims as Author, in the words
:
An American Dictionary of the English Language intended to exhibit, I. The origin, affinities, and primary signification of English words, as far they have been ascertained. II. The genuine orthography and pronunciation of words, according to general usage, or to just principles of analogy. Accurate and discriminating definitions, with numerous authorities and illustrations. To which are prefixed, an introductory dissertation on the origin, history and connection of the languages of Western Asia and of Europe, and a concise grammar of the English language. By Noah Webster, LL. D. In two volumes." In conformity to the act of Congress of the United States, entitled, " An act for the encouragement of learning, by securing the copies of Maps, Charts and Books, to the authors and proprietors of such copies, during the times therein mentioned." And also to the act, entitled, " An act supplementary to an act, entitled An act for the encouragement of learning, by securing the copies of maps, charts, and books, to the authors and proprietors of such copies during the times therein mentioned,' and extending the benefits thereof to the arts of designing, engraving, and etching historical and other prints." CHAS. A. INGERSOLL, Clerk of the District of Connecticut. A true copy of Record, examined and sealed by me, CHAS, A. INGERSOLL, Clerk of the District of Connecticut. ;
as
III.
—
'
April 14th, 1828.
\60^
PREFACE. In the year 1783, just at the close of the revolution, I published an elementary book for facilitating the acquisition of our vernacular tongue, and for correcting a vicious pronunciation, which prevailed extensively among the common Soon after the publication of that work, I believe in the following year, that learned and people of tiiis country. one of the trustees of Yale College, suggested to me, the respectable scholar, the Rev. Dr. Goodrich of Durham, of and compiling a dictionary, which should complete a system for the instruction of the propriety
expediency
my
At that time, I could not indulge the thought, much less the hope, of nor had I the means of support, during the execution undertaking such a work ; as I was neither qualified by research, For many years therefore, though I considered such a work as it. undertake of the work, had I been disposed to as I was under the necessity of devoting my time to other very desirable, yet it appeared to me impracticable citizens of this country in the language.
;
occupations for obtaining subsistence. About twenty seven years ago, I began to think of attempting the compilation of a Dictionary. I was induced to this undertaking, not more by the suggestion of friends, than by my own experience of the want of such a work, while readin
modern books of
for
In this pursuit,
science.
dictionary, for explaining many To remedy this defect in part,
new I
I
found almost insuperable
words, which recent discoveries
published
my Compendious
Dictionary
in
1
806
;
from the want of a had introduced into use.
difficulties,
in the physical sciences
and soon
after
made
preparations
undertaking a larger work.
My original design did not extend to an investigation of the origin and progress of our language much less of I limited my views to the correcting of certain errors in the best English Dictionaries, and to the other languages. two letters of the alphabet, I determined supplying of words in which they are deficient. But after writing through ;
I found to change my plan. myself embarrassed, at every step, for want of a knowledge of the origin of words, which Johnson, Bailey, .Innius, Skinner and some other authors do not afford the means of obtaining. Then laying and all books aside my manuscripts, treating of language, except lexicons and dictionaries, I endeavored, by a diligent comparison of words, having the same or cognate radical letters, in about twenty languages, to obtain a more correct knowledge of the primary sense of original words, of the affinities between the English and many other languages, and thus to enable myself to trace words to their source. I had not pursued this course more than three or four years, before I discovered that I had to unlearn a great deal that I had spent years in learning, and that it was necessary for me to go back to the first rudiments of a branch of erudition, which I had before cultivated, as I had supposed, with success. I spent ten years in this comparison of radical words, and in forming a synopsis of the principal words in twenty languages, arranged in classes, under their primary elements or letters. The result has been to open what are to me new views of language, and to unfold what appear to be the genuine principles on which these languages are
constructed.
After completing this synopsis, I proceeded to correct what I had written of the Dictionary, and to complete the remaining part of the work. But before I had finished it, I determined on a voyage to Europe, with the view of obtaining some books and some assistance which I wanted ; of learning the real state of the pronunciation of our in England, as well as the general state of and of attempting to bring about some philology in that country agreement or coincidence of opinions, in regard to unsettled points in pronunciation and grammatical construction. In some of these objects I failed in others, my designs were answered. It is not only important, but, in a degree necessary, that the people of this country, should have an American
language
;
;
Dictionary of the English Language
;
for,
although the body of the language
is
the
same
as in England, and
it is
some differences must exist. Language is the expression of ideas and if the people of one country cannot preserve an identity of ideas, they cannot retain an identity of language. Now an desirable to perpetuate that sameness, yet
;
PREFACE. depends materially updn a sameness of things or objects witli which the people of the two countiies But in no two portions of the earth, remote from each other, can such identity be found. Even must be different. But the principal differences between the people of this country and of all others, physical objects arise from different forms of government, different laws, institutions and customs. Thus the practice of hawking and identity of ideas
are conversant.
hunting, the institution of heraldry, and the feudal system of England originated terms which formed, and some of which now form, a necessary part of the language of that country but, in the United States, many of these terms are no part of our present language, and they cannot be, for the things which they express do not exist in this country. They can be known to us only as obsolete or as foreign words. On the otlier hand, the institutions in this country which are new and peculiar, give rise to new terms or to new applications of old terms, unknown to the people of England which cannot be explained by them and which will not be inserted in their dictionaries, unless copied from ;
—
;
Thus the terms, land-office ; luiid-wurrant ; location of land; consociation of churches ; regent of a university; intendant of a city plantation, selectmen, senate, congress, court, assembly, escheat, &c. are either words not belonging to the language of England, or they are applied to things in this country which do not exist in that. No person in this country will be satisfied with the English definitions of the words congress, senate and assembly, court, &c. for although these are words used in England, yet they are applied in this country to express ideas which they ours.
;
do not express
in that country. sense in the United States.
With our present
constitutions of government, escheat can never have
its
feudal
many cases, the nature of our governments, and of our civil institutions, requires an Thus appropriate language in the definition of words, even when the words express the same thing, as in England. the English Dictionaries inform us that a Justice is one deputed by the King to do right by way of judgment he is a But
this
Lord by
is
not
his office
all.
—
In
Justices of the peace are appointed by the King''s commission
—language which
—
is
inaccurate in
So constitutionally is defined by Todd or Chalmers, legally, but in this respect to this officer in the United States. country the distinction between constitution and law requires a different definition. In the United States, a jdantation a very different thing from what it is in England. The word marshal, in this country, has one important application
is
unknown
A great
England or in Europe. number of words in our language
in
require to be defined in a phraseology accommodated to the condition people in these states, and the people of England must look to an American Dictionary for a correct understanding of such terms. The necessity therefore of a Dictionary suited to the people of the United States is obvious and I should suppose
and
institutions of the
;
that this fact being admitted, there could be
no difference of opinion as
to the time,
when such
a work ought to be
substituted for English Dictionaries. There are many other considerations of a public nature, which serve to justify this attempt to furnish an Amcrica,n Work which shall be a guide to the youth of the United States. Most of these are too obvious to require illustration.
One consideration however which is dictated by my own feelings, but which I trust will meet with approbation in " The chief glory of a correspondent feelings in my fellow citizens, ought not to be passed in silence. It is this. " arises from its authors." With this opmion deeply impressed on my mind, I have the nation," says Dr. Johnson, a wish to to to same ambition which actuated that great man when he expressed Hooker, to Bacon, give celebrity Milton and to Boyle. I do not indeed expect to add celebrity to the names oi FranlcUn, Washington, Adams, Jay, Madison, Marshall, liamsay, Dwight, Smith, Trumbull, Hamilton, Belknap, Ames, Mason, Kent, Hare, SilUniun, Cleavelund, Walsh, their science but it is with pride and Irving, and many other Americans distinguished by their writings or by satisfaction, that I can place them, as authorities, on the same page with those of Boyle, Hooker, Milton, Dryclcn, ;
Addison, Ray, Milner, Cowper, Davy, Thomson and Jameson. A life devoted to reading and to an investigation of the origin and principles of our vernacular language, and a view to a comparison of their style and especially a particular examination of the best English writers, with me to atlirm with phraseology, with those of the best American writers, and with our colloquial usage, enables confidence, that the genuine English idiom is as well preserved by the unmixed English of this country, as it is by the best English writers. Examples to prove this fact will be found in the Introduction to this work. It is true, that many of our writers have neglected to cultivate taste, and the embellishments of style but even these have written In this respect, Franklin and Washington, whose language is their hereditary the language in its genuine idiom. mother tongue, unsophisticated by modern grammar, present as pure models of genuine English, as Addison or ;
PREFACE. But
Swift.
I
may go
farther,
and
affirm, with truth, that our country has
produced some of
tiie
best models of
of the autiiors of the Federalist of Mr. Ames; of Dr. Mason ; of Mr. composition. The style of President Sinitli Harper; of Chancellor Kent; [ihc prose] of Mr. Barlow; of the legal ilecisions of tlic Supreme Court of the United of the reports of legal decisions in some of the particular states ; and many other writings ; in purity, in States ;
;
;
in technical precision, is equaled only by that of the best British authors, and surpassed by that of no English compositions of a similar kind. The United States commenced their existence under circumstances wholly novel and unexampled in the history of nations. Tiiey commenced with civilization, with learning, with science, with constitutions of free government, and
elegance and
Their population is now equal to that of England in arts with that best gift of God to man, the christian religion. and sciences, our citizens are very little behind the most enlightened people on earth in some respects, they have no and our language, within two centuries, will be spoken by more people in this country, than any other superiors language on earth, except the Chinese, in Asia, and even that may not be an exception. It has been my aim in this work, now oflered to my fellow citizens, to ascertain the true principles of the language, to purify it from some palpable errors, and reduce the number of its anomalies, thus in its orthography and structure in its forms, both of words and sentences and in this manner, to fuftiish a and it more consistency regularity giving standard of our vernacular tongue, which we shall not be ashamed to bequeath to three hundred millions of people, ;
;
;
;
;
who
are destined to occupy, and
I
hope, to adorn the vast territory within our jurisdiction.
language can be improved in regularity, so as to be more easily acquired by our own citizens, and by foreigners, and thus be rendered a more useful instrument for the propagation of science, arts, civilization and Christianity if it can be rescued from the mischievous influence of sciolists and that dabbling spirit of innovation which is perpetually If the
;
disturbing
its
and
settled usages
filling
it
with anomalies
;
if,
our vernacular language can be redeemed from would be a source of great satisfaction to me to
in short,
it corruptions, and our philology and literature from degradation be one among the instruments of promoting these valuable objects. If this object cannot be effected, and my wishes and hopes are to be frustrated, my labor will be lost, and this work must sink into oblivion. This Dictionary, like all others of the kind, must be left, in some degree, imperfect for what individual is competent to trace to their source, and define in all their various applications, popular, scientific and technical, sixty or seventy It satisfies my mind that I have done all that my health, my talents and my pecuniary means would thousand words ;
;
!
enable
me
for their
to accomplish.
improvement and
I
present
it
to
their happiness
my ;
fellow citizens, not with frigid indifference, but with my ardent wishes for the continued increase of the wealth, the learning, the moral and
and
and the glory of my country. that great and benevolent Being, wiio, during the preparation of amidst obstacles and toils, disappointments, infirmities and depression; religious elevation of character,
To
tiiis
work, has sustained a feeble constitution,
who has twice borne me and my manuscripts and given me strength and resolution to bring the work to a close, I would present the And if the talent which he entrusted to my care, has not been put to tribute of my most grateful acknowledgments. " the most profitable use in his service, I hope it has not been kept laid up in a napkin," and that any misapi)lication of it may be graciously forgiven.
in safety across the Atlantic,
New
Haven, 1828.
-
N.
^VEBSTER.
INTRODUCTION.
DEFINITION OF LANGUAGE.
edge increases, and be subject cident to
or Speech is the utterance of articulate sounds or voices, ren^ of significant by usage, for tlie expression and communication thoughts. to this definition, language belongs exclusively to intellectual According no for and intelligent beings, and among terrestrial beings, to man only ; animal on earth, except man, can pronounce words. The word language is sometimes used in a more comprehensive sense, and applied to the sounds by which irrational animals express their feelings or afleotions ; as to the neighing of the horse, the lowing of the ox, the barking of the dog, and to the cackling and chiiping of fowls ; for the sounds uttered by these animals So also language is are perfectly understood by the respective species. deaf and dumb persons manifest figuratively applied to the signs by which for these are instruments of communicating thoughts. their i
Language
(lercd
men
to continual alterations,
from other causes Jn>
in society.
A
brief account of the origin and progress of the principal languages, ancient and modern, that have been spoken by nations between the Ganges and the Atlantic ocean.
We learn from the Scriptures that Noah, who, with his family, wa.s preserved from destruction by the deluge, for the purpose of re-peopling the earth, had three sons, Shem, Ham and Japheth. This fact, a htlle obscured by tradition, was retained by our rude German ancestors, to the age of Tacitus.'^
Japheth was the eldest son ; but Shem, the ancestor of the Israelites, of the writers of the Scriptures, is named first in order.
and
The descendants of Shem and Ham peopled all the great plain, situated north and west of the Persian Gulf, between that Gulf and the Indian ocean on the east and the Arabic Gulf and the Mediterranean Sea on the west, with the northern coast of Africa; comprehending Assyria, Babylonia or Chaldea, Syria, Palestine, Arabia, Egypt, and Lybia. The principal languages or dialects used by these descendants, are known to us under the names of Chaldee, or Chaldaic, which is called also Aramean, Syriac, Heto usage. ing brew, Arabic, Ethiopic, Samaritan and Coptic. Of these, the Chaldee, and Hebrew are no longer living languages, but they have come down to us in ORIGIN books ; the Samaritan is probably extinct or lost in the modern languages of the country, but the language survives in a copy of the Pentateuch ; the read, in the Scriptures, that Go
OF LANGUAGE.
We
and have of sea, &c." Wards planted a garden, and placed in it the man he had made, with a command to keep it, and to dress it and he gave him a rule of moral conduct, in permitting him to eat the fruit of every tree in the garden, except one the eating of which was prohibited. We further read, tliat God brought to Adam the fowls and beasts he had made, and that Adam gave them names; and that when his female companion was made, he gave her a name. Afand subdue
;
;
tinually suffering alterations, from which no living language is exempt. These languages, except the Coptic, being used by the descendants of Shem, I call Shemitie, or Assyrian, in distinction from the Japhetic. .\s the descendants of Japheth peopled Asia Minor, the northern parts of Asia, about the Euxine and Caspian, and all Europe, their languages, have, in the long period that has elapsed since their dispersion, become very numerous. All languages having sprung from one source, the original words from
that God addressed Adam which they have been formed, must have been of equal antiquity. That and pronouncing the penalthe Celtic and Teutonic languages in Europe are, in this sense, as old as the In the account of these transactions, it is Chaldee and Hebrew, is a fact not only warranted by history and the comfurther related that Adam and Eve both replied to their Maker, and excused mon origin of Japheth and Shem, but susceptible of proof from the identity their disobedience. of many words yet existing, in both stocks. But there is a marked differIf we admit what is the literal and obvious interpretation of this narrative ence between the Shemitie and Japhetic languages ; for even when the rathat vocal sounds or words were used in these communicatiorLs between God and the progenitors of the human race, it results that Adam was not only en dical words are unquestionably the same, the modifications, or inflections dowed with intellect for understanding his Maker, or tlie signification of and combinations which form the compounds are, for the most part, different. As it has been made a question which of the Shemitie languages is the words, but was furnished both with the faculty of speech, and with speech most ancient, and much has been written to prove it to be the Hebrew, I itself, or the knowledge and use of words, as signs of ideas, and this before the formation of the woman. Hence we may infer that language was be will state briefly my opinion on what appears to me to be one of the plainest in the history of nations. have for our certain guides, in dequestions stowed on Adam, in the same manner as all his other faculties and knowl this question— 1st. The historical narrative of facts in the book of edge, by supernatural power or in other words, was of divine origin ; for termining Genesis, and 2d. The known and uniform progress of languages, within the supposing Adam to have had all the intellectual powers of any adult Individ period of authentic profane history. ual of the species, who has since lived, wc caiuiot admit as probable, or even 1. The Scripture informs us that, before the dispersion, the whole earth possible, that he should have invented and constructed even a barren Ian was of one language and of one oi' the same speech ; and that the descendguage, as soon as he was created, without supernatural aid. It may even be doubted, whether without such aid, men would ever have learnt the use ants of Noah journeyed from the east, and settled on the plain of Shinar, or in Chahlea. The language used at that time, by the inhabitants of that of the organs of speech, so far as to form a language. At any rate, the in vention of words, and the construction of a language must have been by ; slow process, and must have required a much longer time, than that which * passed between the creation of Adam and of Eve. It is therefore probable Celebrant, carminibus antiquis, Tuistonem deum terr4 editum, et filium that language as well as the faculty of speech, was the immediate gift of Mannum, originem gentis conditoresque. Manno tres filios assignant. De God. We are not however to suppose tlie language of our first parents in Mor. Germ. 2. paradise to have been copious, like most modern languages; or the identical In ancient songs they celebrate Tnisto, a god sprung from the earth, and language they used, to be now in existence. Many of the primitive radical his son Mannus [Man], the origin and founders of their nation. To Manwords may and probably do exist in various languages ; but observation nus they assign three sons. teaches tliat languages must improve and Noah is here called Man. undergo great changes as knowl-
ter the eating of the forbidden fiuit, it is stated and Eve, reproving them for their disobedience, ties,
which they had incurred.
We
;
—
INTRODUCTION. must then have been the oldest or the primitive Iano;uage of man. 9. The vernacular words in the Celtic and Teutonic languages of modern This must have been the original Chaldec. Europe, which are evidently the same words as still exist in the Shemitic 2. The Script\ire informs us, that in consequence of the impious attempts languages, are of the same antiquity being a part of the common language of the people to build a c'ty and tower, >vhose top might reach to heaven, which was used on the plain of Shinar, before the dispersion. with a view to make themselves a name and prevent their dispersion, God The descendants of Japheth peopled the northern part of Asia, and all Euinterposed and confounded their language, ed that they could not understand rope or if some colonies from Egypt planted themselves in Greece, at an eareach other in eonsequeace uf Mhicl". they were dispersed " from thence ly period, they or their descendants must have been merged in the mass of over the face of all fliB siti'th." Certain it is that the Greek language is cbieHy formJaphetic population. 3. If the confusion of languages at Babel originated the differences which ed on the same radical words, as the Celtic and Teutonic languages. The Japhetic tribes of men, whose descendants peopled the south and gave rise to the various languages of the families which separated at the Of these west of Europe, were first established in the country now called Persia, or dispersion, then those several languages are all of equal antiquity. the Hebrew, as a distinct language, was not one; for the Hebrew nation by the natives themselves, Iran. Of this fact, the evidence now existing is was of posterior origin. decisive. The numerous words found in the Greek, Latin, Gaelic, English 4. All the words of the several great races of men, both in Asia and Eu- and the kindreil tongues, which are slill used in Persia, prove, beyond all rope, which are vernacular in their several languages, and unequivocally question, that Persia must have been the residence of the people whose dethe same, are of equal antiquity, as they must have been derive
;
-i
;
;
war
of four kings or chieftains with five
;
as also of the cities of
Sodom and
often migrated in a body, and otten the
personal characteristics of the pro-
Gomorrah, prove Syria to h.ave been, at that time, well-peopled. The lan- genitor might be distinctly traced in his descendants for many generations. guage of the inhabitants then must have been coeval with the nation, and In process of time, some of these families became nations; more generally, It may be added that in by means of wars and long anterior to the Hebrew as a distinct dialect. migrations, different tribes became blended, and the the early peiiods of the world, when no books existed, nations, living re- distinction of families was lost. In rude ages, the families or tribes of men are named from some charactermote or distinct, never borrowed words from each other. One nation, living or more generally, from the place of their residence. in the midst of another, as the Hebrews did among the Egyptians, may adopt istic of the people a single word, or a few words; but a family of words thus adopted is an The Greeks gave the name of Scylhia to the north of Europe and Asia, but occurrence rarely or never known. The borrowing of words, in modern the primitive inhabitants of the west of Europe, they called KsXroi, Kelts, These were descendants from the times, is almost wholly from the use of books. Celts, a word signifying woods men* 5. It is probable that some difi'crences of language were produced by the same ancestors as the Greeks and Romans themselves, but they had pushed confusion but neither that event nor any supernatural event is necessary their migrations into Gaul, Spain and Britain. The first settlers or occupiThe ers of these countries were driven forward by successive herds, until to account for the differences oftUalect or of languages, now existing. they all or Teutonic the Gothic of stock, different modern languages there they made their stand, and there we originated were checked by the ocean in the natural course of events; and the differences are as great between find their descendants at this day. These may be considered as the dethem as they are between the languages of the Shemitic stock. scendants of the earliest settlers, or first inhabitants of the countries where 6. Soon after two races of men of a common stock have separated and they are found. Among these are the inhabitants of France, south of the to d' Garonne, and those of the north of Spain, called by the Romans Aquitani placed themselves in distant countries, the language of each begins verge from that of the other, by various means. 1. One tribe or nation and Cantabri, in more modern times Gascoigns, Basques, and Cantabrians, will suffer one word to become obsolete and be forgotten another, will suffer who still retain their native language and in Great Britain, the Gaels in the loss of another sometimes a whole family of words will be lost at other Scotland, and the natives of the north and west of Ireland, who also retain times, a part only at other times, a single word only of a numerous family their primitive language.! will be retained by one nation, while another nation will retain the whole. The first inhabitants of the north and west of Europe, known to the Greeks 2. The same word will be differently applied by two distant races of men and Romans, to whom we are indebted for our earliest accounts of that reand the difference will be so great as to obscure the original affinity. 3, gion, were the Cimbri, who inhabited the peninsula of Denmark, now called Words will be compounded by two nations in a different manner, the same Jutland, and the tribes which belonged to the Teutonic and Gothic races, radical words taking a different prefix or suffix, indifferent languages. Thus which were established in Germany and on both sides of the Baltic. Whethtvisdoni in English Is in German wei^heit. [wisehead, wisehood] from ii'ise, er tribes of Celtic origin had overspread the latter countries, before the arriIn English misleadis in Danish Jiirleder, from lead, leder. 4. The val of the Gothic and Teutonic races, and all Europe had been inhabited by weis. so much changed pronunciation and orthography of words will often be that the same word in two languages, cannot without difficulty, be recognized as identical. No person, without a considerable attention to the changes Welsh celt, a cover, or shelter, a Celt; celtiad, an inhabitant of the cowhich letters have suffered, would at once suspect or believe the English vert or wood celu, to conceal, Lat. relo. In Gaelic the word is coilt or ; let and the French laisser to be the same word. The Celts were originally a tribe or nation inhabiting the north of eeilt. 7. As Abram migrated from Chaldea, he must have spoken the Chaldee or the still more northern territory. and probably, at that time, the Syriac, Arabic and Egyptian, had Italy, tribes or na;
;
;
—
;
;
;
;
;
language,
not become so different, as to render it impracticable for him to converse with But the language of Abram's de the inhabitants of Palestine and Egypt. scendants, and that of the land of Shinar or the Chaldee must, in the natural course of things, have begun to diverge, soon after the separation; and the changes in each language being dilTerent, would, in the course of a few So in the days of Hezekiah centuries, form somewhat different languages. the Syriac and Hebrew had become, in a degree, distinct languages. 2 Kings xviii. In which of these languages, the greatest number of alterations were produced, we do not know ; but from the general observations I have made, in my researches, it appears that the Chaldee dialect, in the use of dental letters instead of sibilants, is much the most general in the Celtic and Teutonic languages of Europe. Thus the German only has a sibilant in I think li'asser, when the other Teutonic languages have a dental, water. also that there are far more words in the European languages which accord with the Chaldee or Arabic, than there are words which accord with the Hebrew. If this observation is well-founded, the Hebrew must have suffered the loss of more primitive words than the other languages of the Shemitic This however is true, that all of them have lost some words, and family. in some cases, the Hebrew retains what the others have lost. 8. The Hebrew Scriptures arc, by many centuries, the most ancient Hence probably the strange inference, that the Hebrew writings extant. as if the inhabitants of Chaldea and Syria had had is the oldest language no language, for ages belbre the progenitor of the Hebrews was born. ;
t I purposely omit all consideration of the different families, which first peopled Greece and Italy. In Greece, we read of the Hellenes, the Acha;ans, the Dorians, the yEolians, In Italy, of the Illyrians, the Liburni, the the lonians, the Pelasgi, &c. SicuH, the Veneti or Henetl, the Iberi, Ligures, Sicani, Etrusci, Insubres, But as these nations or their deSabini, Latini, Samnites, and many others. scendants gave the name of Celts to the Umbri, or nations that dwelt in the north, in the less cutivated parts of Europe, and to the inhabitants of Gaul; and as all the tribes, under whatever denomination they were known, were branches of the great Japhetic stock, I shall call them by that general name, Celts ; and under the general name of Goths or Teutons, shall the various tribes that inhabited the north of Germany, and the
tions
Tpaioi. or Tpaixoi, the
comprehend
country north of the Baltic or Scandinavia. A late writer seems to consider the Teutonic races, as the only ancestors But from Celtic words, still found in the Greek of the fireeks and Romans. and Latin ; words not belonging to any of the Gothic or Teutonic languages ; Greece and Italy, it is demonstr.ably certain that the primitive settlers in Lat. brachittm, the belonged to the Celtic races. Thus the Greek jSpaxiuv, not found arm, is formed on the Gaelic braigh, raigh, W. drnic, a word the Welsh mociaw, to mock, is found in the So nations. Teutonic the among to mock, and Ir. mngadh. a mocking ; but and French Greek nwqiier, fiuxau, Many similar facts prove not in any of the Gothic or Teutonic languages. that the Celtic races were among the earliest inhabitants of Greece.
INTRODUCTION. the borders of Sarmaliajias heen aqucstion much disputed Frencli writers generally by historiaiH and antiquaries. The GcriTiari and contend that the Celts inhabited all the north of Europe, as Car at least a:* Sarmatia; but some respectable English writers are ol a dilierent opinion. it is agreed that the Welsh are descendants of the Cimbri, inhabitants of Jutland, and their language bears a strong alliiiity to the Celtic languages, which still exist; a fact that countenances the opinion of the German and French « ritcrs. But the dispute is of little moment the Celtic, Teutonic all of the Japhetic stock, migrating from Asia and Gothic races
the Celts, even
to
Now
:
were masters of tliat country. It contains also some words of Gothic origin, introduced by the Goths wlio conquered that country, at the downfall of tinRoman Empire. The French also contains .some words of Teutonic origin, either from the Belgic tribes who occupied the country to the Seine, at the time of Cesar's invasion, or from the Franks who estabhshed the dynasty of the Merovingian Kings in the fifth century, or from the Normans who obtained possession of the northern part of that kingdom in the tenth century, or from all these sources. The German, Dutch or Belgic, Anglo-Saxon, Danish and Swedish languages are of Teutonic or Gothic origin.'" They are all closely allied ; a great part of the words in them all being the same or from the same roots, ^vith different prefixes or affixes. There is however a greater difference between the Danish and Swedish, which are of the Gotliic stock, and the German and Dutch, which are of Teutonic origin, than between two languages of the same .stock, as between the Danish and Swedish. The Norwegian, Icelandic, and some of the languages or dialects of Switzerland, belong to the same stock ; but of these I liave no particular knowledge. The Basque or Cantabrian in Spain the Gaelic in the nortli of Scotland, and the Hiberno-Celtic, or native language of Ireland, are the purest remains of the ancient Celtic. From a comparison of a vocabulary of the Gaelic and Hiberno-Celtic, I find little or no difVerence between them and from a long and attentive examination of tliis language, and of the languages *f Teutonic origin, I find less difference between theui, than most autliors have
being and pursuing dilierent courses westthrough Asia Minor at different times, ward. The first tribes probably sought the waiin climates along the north coast of the Mediterranean, and established themselves in Greece and Italy. Others followed tlie course of the Danube and its subsidiary streams, till they foil upon the rivers that conducted them (o the Baltic. The first inhabitants of Greece and Italy were probably of the Celtic race ; but if they were, it is very evident that tribes of the teutonic or Gothic races invaded iliose countries before they were civilized, and intermingled with the oriThe Pelasgi may have been among the number. This ginal inhabitants. is an inference which I draw from the airmitics of the Greek and Latin Ian guagcs, with those of Teutonic origin. The Teutonic and Gothic races imwest of the Vistula pressed tbeii' language \ipon all the continent of Europe and from that river to the Rhine, or rather to the Seine, anterior to the conquest of Gaul by Julius Cesar. The same races invading and conquering the south of Europe, in the fourth and fifth century, on tlie downfall of the supposed to exist. The Armoric or language of Brittany in the northwest angle of France, Roman empire, infused a portion of llicii- language into the Italian and Spanand the Cornish, in the southwest of England, are also of Celtic origin. The ish, which is still di-;!inguishable. The ancient Sarmatia, including Poland and Russia, wa.s probably peo Cornish is now extinct ; but the Armoric is a living language. The English as now spoken, is a language composed of words from north pled originally by races of men who passed into Europe by the country The basis of the language is Anglo-Saxon, or, as I of the Euxine. Their original residence was along the rivers Kur and several others. Araxes, or on the mountains between the Euxine and Caspian. The name shall, for the sake of brevity, call it, Saxon, by which it is closely allied to But it reof the Riiss or Russians is clearly recognized in the Roxolani of Pliny and the languages of Teutonic and Gothic origin on the conUnent. Ptolemy, and possibly the ancestors of this race may have entered Europe by tains a great number of words from the ancient languages of Britain, the Asia Minor. That the Teutonic races, originally fiom Persia, inhabited Asia Belgic, or Lloegrian, and the Cymraeg, or Welsh ; particularly from the latMinor, and migrated westward by that course, is evident from the names ter, and some from the Cornish. Cesar informs us, that before he invaded which they impressed on mountains, rivers and places Such are the Cia- Britain, Belgic colonics had occupied the southern coast of England and in Pamphylia, now the inhabitants of the interior, northern and western parts, were the ancesgu» of Pliny, the Welsh and English crag ,* Pergn name of a small stream, near the site of tors of the present Welsh, wlio call themselves Cymry, and their country hiirg or bergeii ; Thi/mbreck, the brook. It wa.s contract- Cymru, a name which indicates their origin from the Cimbri, inhabitants of Troy ; a word in which we recognize the English the modern Denmark, or Cimbric Chersonese, now Jutland. ed by the Greeks into Thymbrins.i The modern Welsh contains many Latin words introduced by the Romans, Itis admitted by all gentlemen, acquainted with oriental literature, that ;
;
—
;
the Sanscrit, or ancient language of India, the parent of all the dialects of that great peninsula, is radically the same language or from the same stock the affinities between them being remarkalily as the Greek and Latin clcarand decisive. If .so, the inhabitants of India and the descendants of the Celtic and Teutonic nations are all of one family, and must have all migrated from one country, after the separation of the nations of the Shemitic stock ;
from those of the Japhetic race.t Whether that country was Persia, or Cashmir, or a country farther east One important inference results from this is a iioint not easily determined. fact, that the while men of Europe and the black or tawny men of India, are direct descendants from a common ancestor. Of the languages of Europe, the Greek was first improved and refined, and next to that the Latin. The affinity between these languages, and those of the west and north of Europe is very striking, and demonstrates thei: connnon origin. It is probable however that there are some words in the Greek derived from Africa, if Egyptian colonies were established in Greece, as historians inform us.
;
*Plin.
N. H.
Lib. 5, cap. 27.
possession of Britain lor five hundred years. But the body of the language is probably their vernacular tongue. It is more nearly allied to the languages of Celtic origin, than to those of the Teutonic and Gothic stock and of this British language, the Cornish and Armoric are dialects. It has been commonly supposed that the Britons were nearly exterminated by the Saxons, and that the few that survived, escaped into the west of England, now Wales. It is true that many took refuge in Wales, which their descendants still retain but it cannot be true that the other parts of England were enfirely depopulated. On the other hand, great numbers must have escaped slaughter, and been intermixed with their Saxon conThe Welsh words, which now form no unimportant part of the querors. English language, aftbrd decisive evidence of this fact. It is probable however that these words were for a long time used only by the common people, for few of them appear in the early Saxon writers. The English contains also many words, introduced by the Danes, who were, for some time, ina.sters of England which words are not found in the Saxon. These words prevail most in the northern counties of England but many of them are incorporated into the body of the language, and are used iu the United States. After the conquest, the Norman Kings endeavored to extirpate the English language, and substitute the Norman. For this purpose, it was ordained that all law proceedings and records should be in the Norman language ; and hence the early records and reports of law cases came to be written in Norman. But neither royal authority, nor the influence of courts, could change the vernacular language. After an experiment of three hundred years, the law was repealed; and since that period, the English has been, for the most part, the official, as well as the common language of the nation. A few Norman words however remain in the English ; most of them in law ;
;
;
;
Italian, Spanish, French and Portuguese, are composed chiefly of Latin words, much altered however both in ortliography and inflections. Perhaps nine tenths of all the words now found in those languages are of Latin origin ; being introduced by the Romans, who held Gaul in or being borrow subjection, five or si.\ centuries, and Spain much longer ed from Latin authors, since the revival of letters. All these languages however retain many words of Celtic origin ; the primitive language not liav In some instances, the same word has been ing been entirely extirpated. transmitted through both channels, the Celtic and the Latin, and is yet re Thus in French cider, and in Italian cedere, is directly from the tained. Latin cedo ; while the French, congedier, and Italian, congedare, are com posed of the same word, with a prefix, derived from the Celtic, and retained the Welsh in gadaw, to quit, to leave. [L. concedn.] And this same verb probably appears also in quit, a word common to the Teutonic and to the Celtic languages. See Conge, in the Dictionary. It must be observed further, that the Spanish language contains some words of African origin, introduced by the Carthaginians, before the Roman conquest of Spain, or afterwards by the Moors, w ho, for several centuries.
The modern
tians
who had
Strabo, Lib.
7.
language. Since the conquest, the English has not suffered any shock from the intermixture of conquerors with the natives of England ; but the language has undergone great alterations, by the disuse of a large portion of Saxon words, and the introduction of w ords from the Latin and Greek languages, with some French, Italian, and Spanish words. These words have, in some instances, been borrowed by authors, directly from the Latin and Greek ; but most of the Latin words have been received through the medium of the French and Italian. For terms in the sciences, authors have generally resorted to the Greek ; .and from this souice, as discoveries in science demand 6, informs us that the Dalmanew terms, the vocabulary of the English language is receiving continual
bad the singular practice of making a division of their fields every Hence perhaps the name from dual, and math or inadh, coun
eighth year. fry. 1
i
Clarke's Travels. See the word chuk in the Dictionary.
Vol.
I.
B.
*
In strictness, the Swedish and Danish are of Gothic origin, and the Gerof Teutonic origin.
man and Saxon,
INTRODUCTION. We
few words from the German and Swedish, »n
have
also a
'^^O im
—
origin.
3d, Norman, a mixture of French and Gothic. 4th, Latin, a language formed on the Celtic and Teutonic. 5th, French, chiefly Latin corrupted, but with a mixture of Celtic. 6th, Greek, formed on the Celtic and Teutonic, with some Coptic. 7th, A few words directly from the ItaUan, Spanish, German, and other languages of the continent. 8th, A few foreign words, introduced by commerce, or by political and lit-
erary intercourse.
Of these, the Saxon words constitute our mother tongue; being words which our ancestors brought with them from Asia. The Danish and Welsh
may be considered as a part of our vernacular are of equal antiquity with the Clialdee and Syriac.
also are primitive words, and
They
language.
AFFINITY OF LANGUAGES. On comparing
the structure of the diflerent languages of the Shemitic and Japhetic stocks, we cannot but be struck with the fact, that although a great number of words, consisting of the same or of cognate letters, and conveying the same ideas, are found in them all ; yet in the inflections, and in the manner of forming compounds and derivatives, there are remarkable diiferences between the two great families. In the modifications of the verb, for expressing person, time, and mode, very little resemblance is observable between them. If we could prove that the personal terminations of the verb in the Japhetic languages, were originally pronouns, expressive of the persons, we should prove an affinity between the words of the two races, in a most important particular. Some attempts of this kind have been made ; but
not with very satisfactory results.* In the formation of nouns, we recognize a resemblance between the English termination th, in birth, truth, drouth, [Saxon drugothe] warmth, &c., and the Shemitic terminations n' '>^^ HI; and the old plural termination en, retained in oxen, and the Welsh plural ending ion, coincide
nearly with
the
Arabic termination of the dual number /,
|
as well as with the and the regular masculine plural termination • » Chaldee, Hebrew, and Syriac ['. And it is justly remarked by Mitford, that in the variety of plural terminations of nouns, there is a striking resemblance between the Arabic and the Welsh. There is one instance, in the modem this languages of Teutonic origin, in which we find the Arabic nunnation is the German and Dutch binnen, the Saxon binnan or binnon, signifying ^
:
—
Hebrew and Chaldee ['3, Ar. ,..aj without the mark of nunnation, when it signifies within ; but when it signifies separation, space, inter-
within,
s
val, the original sense,
it is
written ,
ti_
-aj
>
and pronounced, with the nun-
nation, like the Teutonic word. One mode of forming nouns from verbs in the Shemitic languages is by I know of no instance of this manner of formation, in the Japrefixing m. except in some names which are of oriental origin. Mars phetic
class of words, being used in composition to vary the sense of other parts of speech, to an almost unUmited extent, it may be useful to give them a par-
ticular consideration.
The simple prepositions are, for the most part, verbs or participles, or derived from them; when verbs, they are the radical or primary word, sometimes varied in orthography by the addition or alteration of a single vowel, or perhaps, in some cases, by the loss of the initial consonant, or aspirate. Such are the Greek jtapa, rttpt, xata ; the Latin con and per ; the English The following, of, by, in, on, for, which retain their original consonants. un; the Latin ab, ad, pro, prce, re; the Greek arto, iHi,, rtpo, may have lost the initial or final consonants; of [or hof; in (or hi n ; ab {or hab ; pro (or prod. In some words, this loss can only be conjectured; in others, it is known or obvious. Thus the English by and be was originally bi", as it is in the Saxon ; and the Latin re, is written also red, evidently a derivative of an Arabic verb still existing; the Latin sub dm] super are formed probably from the Greek vxo, ^rttp, by the change of an aspirate into s, or the Greek words have lost that letter. The English but in the phrase " They are all here but one," is a participle the Sax. butah, or baton ; Dutch buiten, from buiten to rove. Among is the Saxon gemang, the verb, or the participle oi gemengan, to mingle. In general, the primary sense of the preposition is moving, or moved. Thus to in English and ad in Latin, primarily denote advancnig towards a " are going to town." place or object ; as in the sentence, From, of, Lat. ab, Gr. an.:, denote motion from a place or object. The French prts is fiom the Italian presso, and this is the Latin participle pressus, pressed ; hence it denotes near, close. In some instances prepositions are compounds, as (he English before ; that is, be or by fore, by the front, and the Fr. aupres, at or at near. Prepositions, from their frequent use, and from the ease with which their primary signification is modified to express ditferences of position, motion or relation, as occasions demand, have, in many instances, a great variety of applications ; not indeed as many as lexicogiaphers sometimes assign to them, but several different, and sometimes opposite significations ; as for exthe with the Latin and the Greek rtapa. ; amples, English /or, con, For, which is from the root of Saxon faran, Gr. ?topEvO|Uat, to pass, denotes to" wards, as in the phrase A ship bound /or Jamaica ;" or it denotes rH/a»or of, as "This measure is for the public benefit;" or "The present is for a fiiend." But it denotes also opposition or negation, as in forbear, forgive, forbid. With is a verb, but has rather the sense of a participle. It is found in the Gothic with a prefix, ga-withan, to join or unite. Its primary sense then is " joined, close ; hence, in company ; as in the sentences go with him," come with me." It has the sense also of from, against, contrariety, opIn Saxon it had also the position, as in withdraw, withstand, without. sense o( towards, as "with eorthan," towards the earth; also of for, de" noting substitution or equivalent in exchange, as sylan with djeges weorce," to give for a day's work ; also of opposite, over against, as " with tha sae," opposite the sea. Co7i in Latin generally signifies with, towards or to, denoting closeness or union, approach, joint operation and the like, as in concurro, conjungo, congredior ; but it has also the sense of against or opposition, as in contendo. The Greek Trapa, is doubtless from the root of the English fare, Saxon ;
,
We
'
—
languages, be from apj^s, but if so, the word was undoubtedly formed in the So we find Morpheus, the god of sleep, to be probably formed with It also at, to, Lat. signifies from, that is, departure the prefix m, from the Ethiopic f\Ql,
east.
—
We
,
We
^
—
•
;
—
13J*.
INTRODUCTION. words, are called separable : those which are used only prcposilioin, or more generally prepositionji For the sake of brevity, in composition are called inseparable prepositions. to other words in composition, I s've to all words or sinsjie letters, pretixed oi name the general prefixes. sense of a preposition, is, to the true of modes One of the best ascertaining exainine its various uses in composition, and discover what cllect it has in
The
prcposllioir;
wliirli are used, as distinct
—
The Greek
has
rctfyav,
?topjuo^at, rtopoj. Ga, in Gothic, and
and rtapa, probably from the same
root, as
well
a.'^
In a prefix of very extensive use. prefixed portion of all the verbs in the language. but in most .According to Lye, it has sometimes the sense of the Latin cum of the on the of words I cannot discern any effect this prefix signification It is retained in the Danish and in some German and Dutch simple verb. word to which it is pretixed. words, especially in the participles of verbs, and in nouns formed from them. modifying tlie signification of the often suffer the loss or change of a let- But it is remarkable that although the Saxon is our mother tongue, we have Prepositions, used in compounds, Thus ad in Latin not of euphony, or the ease of pronunciation. jter, for the sake remaining in the language a single instance of this prefix, with the oribecomes/ in affero ; con becomes col in colligo ; the Gr. jtapa loses a letter ginal orthography. The only remains of it are in the contraction, a, as in awake, adrift, ashamed, tic. from gew
Saxon,
it
Saxon,
is
It is
in
which
possible
this letter appears. that the first syllable o( govern, from Lat.
gnberno, Gr.
may be the same prefix or it may be the Welsh prefix go, which occurs in goberu, to work, which the Romans wrote operor. But I know not whether the first syllable of govern is a prefix or not. There is another word which retains this prefix corrupted, or its equivalent; this is common, which we have received from the Latin cofnmunis. This word in the Teutonic dialects is. Sax. genuene ; Ger. gemein ; Dutch, gemeen ; Dan. gemeen ; Sw. gemen. Now if this is the Latin communist, and of the identity of the hist component part of the word, there can, I think, be no doubt then the first part of the word is the Teutonic ge altered to com, or what is more probable, com is the equivalent oi ge, or ge may be a In either case, we arrive at contracted and corrupted form of cwm, co«i. the conclusion that the Teutonic ge, and tlie Latin cum, are equivalent in
zuCtpiaij,
This is tlie Gr. am, Slid, Sax. and Ooth, signities tigninst, opposite. and Latin ante, not borrowed from the Greek or Latin, but a native word. Examples, andstandan, to stand against, to resist. Jhtdswarian, answarian, to answer ; that is, to speak again, against or in return.
in
,-
words used,
SAXON AND GOTHIC.
ge
to a large
is
;
Jlnib, einb, ymb, usually emb, Saxon, signifying about, around ; coincidto go around ing with the Latin umb, and Gr. an^i. Example, emb-faran, See But to walk about ; embutan, about ; emb, about, and butan, without. ; JImbeht, cmbeht, ymbeht, office, duty, whence we have embassador. This or is andhahts. The minister servimt and a is in Gothic andbahtei. baililf, Dutch Germans have the word contracted in amt, charge, oifice, nnipt Dan. arnbt. The Gothic orthography gives rise to the question whether ignification. It is in GerIn, is used in the Saxon and Gothic, as in modern English. amb, emb, andarrt, Sax. and Goth. ajiJ, are not radically the same word; Fr. en. and it is very certain that the Gothic and Saxon and, is radically the same man ein, Dutch and Swedish in, Danish ind, Greek tv, Lat. in, " word as the Latin in, Dan. ind. So in Gothic, and wigans," in the ways, This is radically the same word as on and un, the German an, Dutch aan, " and haimos" In its original sense, it implies moving, advancing towards, into the highways. Luke, xiv. 23. per vicos, through the and Welsh an. and hence its use as a particle of negation or contrariety. " Eunt in urbem," towns. Luke, ix. 6. " Msec audio in te dici," I hear these thing.« This preposition, amb, is in Dutch am ; in German um ; in Swedish and they are going to the city. In modern military usage, on is used in the same sense of said against you. Danish om. " The army is marching on Liege." Jtt, is a Gothic preposition and prefix, coinciding with Eng. at, Lat. ad. advancing. Mid, in Saxon, signifies with. It is the Gothic mith, German mil, Be, in Saxon, as a preposition and prefix, is always written be, or big, anand the Gr. jutra; but not retained in English. It swering to the English by, a preposition, and be in beset. In Gothic, it is Dutch mede or met, The primary and principal seems to have the same origin as mid, middle, amidst. In the Gothic it is wrillenfti, by and be, being contractions of big. " stand or sit signification is near, close ; as by me." So in the word by- used as a prefix. It is used in Saxon, German, a is the verb It is a prefix of extensive use in the Saxon, German, Dutch, stander. miss, to deviate. Mis, prefix, Danish and Swedish. Its use in denoting instrumentality, may be from the Dutch, Swedish and Danish, in nearly the same sense, as in English. Its sense of liear/ies.'!, hut more probably it is from passing, like per, through, radical sense is to depart or wander. or it (\enotefi proceeding from like of, as salvation is of the Lord. Of, is a preposition and prefix of extensive use in the Saxon, as in English. For, in Saxon, as in English, is a preposition and prefi.x of extensive use It denotes primarily issuing, or proceeding from; hence separation, departure, In Saxon /or signifies a going, froni/a?an, to go, to fare. It is radically the and distance in the latter sense, it is written off. It is the Lafin ab, writsame word as /ore, in the sense of in .front, before. Its primary sense is ten by the early Romans af; the Greek arto, the German ab, the Dutch af ; advancing ; hence moving ton-ards ; hence the sense of in favor of, and Dan. and Sw. af. The Saxons often prefixed this word, in cases where we See the preceding remarks. that of opposition, or negation. use it after the verb as a modifier ; as of-drifan, to drive off ; as it is sfill used retain it as a prefix, in This word in German is/i7r, but, with this orthography, the word is little by the Germans, Dutch, Swedes and Danes. used in composition. Yet the German has /lirftiffe, intercession or praying offset and offspring. Sax. of-spring. As it denotes proceeding from, it is for; furwort, intercession, recommendation, and a pronoun [for-word ;] the proper sign of the genitive case ; the case expressing production. andfur-ivahr, forsooth. Ofer, Eng. over, Goth, iifar, G. ilber, D. orer, Dan. over, Sw. ofver, is In the sense of /ore, the German has vor, a word of extensive use as a in all the Teutonic and Gothic languages, which I preposition and prefix, Thus in Saxon /breseo/t, to foresee, is in German vorsehen. The have examined ; and in the same or similar senses. This seems to be the prefix. But in German as in Dutch Greek Drttp. from which the Latins formed super, by converting the aspirate identity of these words will not be questioned. the preposition Bee, which is the English /ar, and Saxon /yr, is used in of the Greek vowel into s. This is probably the Heb. Ch. Syr. Ar. "I0_;r, to Thus/ojcomposition, in words in which the Saxon and English have/or. pass, a passing, beyond. gifan, [Q forgive, is in German, vergeben, and in Dutch, vergeeven Saxon On, is a Saxon preposition and prefix of very extensive use. It is obvi" on /)r^i(aH, to forget ; German iierg'f.ssen , Onlch vergecten. Hence we see in the Saxon, as ously a different orthography of in, and it is used for in, that the Saxon for, fore, fyr, the English fur, fore, far, and tlie German It has also tlie sense we now give to on and onginn," in the beginning. /f(r, vor and ver, are from the same radix. of modifications other with signification. In Dutch, /be and /ore are represented by roor, and ver represents /or lyjo?!, In composition, it signifies into, or towards, as on-blawan, to blow in; Liiid/rr. and it is also a particle of negation, like onclifian, to adhere, to cleave to; The Danish also unites/or and/ore, as does the Swedish. un, as onbindan, to unbind. This on is only a different spelling of Jin, in The French has this word in pour, and the Spanish and Portuguese in Dutch on, German «n, used as a word of negation. The Gothic has un and " The latter Eu In this sense, por. signifies notonly/wr, but through, as in Portuguese, und, in the like sense, as the Danish has un ; the D. ont. " I will Here we see the un answers is sometimes written passarei piir Fran<;a." pass through France. precisely to the Greek avti, and as this sense of moving. In Spanish and Portuguese this word is written also para, U7id in Gothic, as in is written ind, in Danish, there can be little doubt, as if from the Greek. It is evidently the same word, probably received The original word may have that in, on, im, atti, are all from one stock. through a different channel from that of por. Now through is the exact been han, bin, or hon ; such loss of the first letter is very common ; and sense of tlie Latin per ; and per is the Italian picposition answering to /or from the Ch. and Heb. njn, presents us witli an example. See in and and por. But what is more to the puipose, the Spanish, Italian and Portu- inn, inn. guese word, equivalent to Uie English /orgit-f, is in Spanish pcrdonar ; in The German has an, and the Dutch aan, in the sense of in and on. Italian, yierrfonarf, and in Portuguese, /leriWr and the French is /loritoiOth, is a Saxon preposition and prefix, sometimes written ath and ed. and jicr. Here thon we have strong, if not conclusive evidence, that /or. pour, to the Lafin ad and re; as in oth-witan, to twit, to throw por, pa', par, and para, in dilicrcnt languages, are all from one stock, the answering nearly othword being varied in dialect, or by the different families ; just as we have in the teeth. It has also the sense o(from, or away, or against, as in This preposition is obsolete, but we have tlie remains to abjure. far. farther, as well as the Saxon/yr, and the English /or*A, further, from su'erian, the same primitive word. We have the same word in. pursue and pur- of it in twit, and perhaps in a few other words. chase, from the French j'onr. Sam, samod, a prefix. See the Danish and Swedish infra. ,
;
We
—
,•
INTRODUCTION. " wait till I It till town :" but we say, arrival ;" literally, " wait a preposition and prefix of extensive use in our mother tongue. come, till arrival ; that is, to the time of arrival. The diflereuce is not occurs as a prefix, in sucli words as, to-brtscaa, to break ; to-beran, to bring to I come," to retain it in together. Sax. togcedere ; and in to in the sense of the preposition, but in its application. or bear, lad-feire.] retain the Danish and Swedish and in Scotch use of toivardes The this word ; no slight eviSzx. The toward, ; to-morroiv, wards, to-day, to-night. Dutch write it toe, and the Germans jij, and both nations use it extensively dence of their origin. In Gothic it is written du, as in du-ginnan, to gin, that is, to as a prefix. U, in Danish, the Swedish O, is a prefix, equivalent to in, and is used as a uncivil. to learn which is privative or negative ; as in uaar, an unseasonable year ;
To,
my
is
my
We
would be gratifying whether the Ethiopic "^ , many verbs, is not the remains of the same preposition. Saxon prefix of extensive use, as a privative or particle of nega^ tion. See on and in. Under, is a Saxon preposition and prefix of considerable use, in the presprefixed
Un,
uurtig,
It
begin.
is
to
RUSSIAN.
a
ent English sense. The Germans write use it in like manner. The Danes and in the same sense.
unter, and the
it
Swedes write
it
Vo
or ve, signifies in, at, by, and But see^o. be, by.
Dutch onder, and the Eng. under, and use it Za, is
Up, tippe, is a Saxon preposition and prefix of considerable use, in the pre sent English sense. The Gothic bus iif, in the sense of the Latin suh. The Germans write it a»/and the Dutch op, the Danes op and tlie Swedes up, and all use it as a prefix. Us, in Gothic, is a preposition and prefix. This is the German aus, and It is the Saxon ut, the English out, Dutch uit, equivalent to the Latin ex. Swedish ut, and Danish ud, dialectically varied. To this answers the Welsh fis, used in composition, but ys seems rather to be a change of the Latin ex for the Latin erpello is written in Welsh yspetinxp, and extendo is estyn. Wither, in Saxon, from the root of with, denotes against, or opposition. It is a prefix in Saxon, written in German wider, in Dutch, weder ; Dan. and Swedish veder. It is obsolete, but retained in the old law term withernam, a counter-taking or distress. In the German language, there are some prepositions and prefixes not found in the Saxon ; as,
Ent, denoting from, out, away. £r, without, out or to. Dan. er.
may
possibly be from the
same
root
a:"
a prefix signifying/or, oti account of, by reason of, after, as in zaiiidwi/u, to envy, from iv'd, visage ; vi/u, to see, Lzt. video ; zadirayu, from deru, to tear ; zamirayu, to be astonished or stupified, from the root of Lat.
miror, and Russ. tnir, peace ; miryu, to pacify, to reconcile mirnie, pacific ; zamirenie, peace, pacification ; zamiriayu, to make peace ; Arm. miret, to hold, to stop ; the radical sense of wonder, astonishment, and of ;
peace.
Ko, a preposition signifying to, totvards,for. JVa, a preposition and prefix, signifying on, upon, at, for, to, seems to be the Germ. 7iach, Dutch na, as in nagrada, recompense ; na, and the root of Lat. gratia ; nasidayu, to sit down, &c. JVad, a preposition, signifying above or upon. O, a preposition, signifying of or from, and^br.
Ob,
a preposition
and prefix, signifying
to,
on, against, about, as obne-
to surround, to embrace ob and Sax. neman, to take. dt, is a preposition, signifying /ro/rt, and it may be the Eng. out. Po, is a preposition and prefi.x of extensive use, signifying in, by, after, from, &c. as podayu, to give to polagayu, to lay, to expend, employ, lay
mayu,
;
;
out ; to tax or assess ; to establish or fix ; to believe or suppose ; po and lay. but its most common This corresponds with Eng. by, and the Latin has it in possideo, and a few ; This other words. [Sax. besittan.] Pomeyj, rememhrance, po and mens, mind. signification in composition is after ; as in nachgehen, to go after. sense is easily deducible from its primary sense, which is close, near, from Sad, a preposition signifying/«r, or for the love of. urging, pressing, or following. In Dutch, this word is contracted to na, as So, a preposition and prefix of extensive use, signifying with, of, from ; in nabuur, neighbor ; nagaan, to follow. The Russ has na also, a prefix of and as a mark of comparison, it answers nearly to the Eng. so or as. extensive use, and probably the same word. This fact suggests the question, Y, with the sound of u, is a preposition and prefix of extensive use. It sigwhether the ancestors of these great families of men had not their residence nifies near, by, at, with, as uberayu, to put in order, to adjust, to cut, to in the same or an adjoining territory. It deserves also to be considered whethreap, to mow, to dress, Fr. parer, Lat. paro ; ugoda, satisfaction ; vgodnei, er this na, is not the Shemitic J, occurring as a prefix to verbs. good, useful, Eng. good; udol, a dale, from dol. JVeg, is a prefix used in the German and Dutch. It is the Saxon, Ger-
JVaeh, properly nigh, as in nachhar, neighbor
man, and Dutch weg, way ; in tlie sense of away, or passing from, from the verb, in Saxon, w
WELSH.
;
E
known
tin similis.
Til, botli in
Danish and Swedish,
is a prefix, and in Danish, of very exequivalent to the Enghsh to or towards, and signifies also at, in, on, by, and about, and in composition often has the sense of back or re, as in tilbage, backwards, that is, to back ; but generally it retains the sense of to or onward ; as in tilbyder, to offer, that is, to .speak or order to ; tildriver, to drive on; tilgiver, to allow, to pardon, that is, to give to, and hence to give back, to remit. This is the English till, which we use in the same sense as the Danes, but in English it always refers to time, whereas in
tensive use.
It is
Danish and Swedish, it refers
to /(/ace.
Thus we
to be prefixes. But in some instances, the original preposition is so obscured by a loss or change of letters, as not to be obvious, nor indeed discoverable, without reThus without the aid of the Saxon orsorting to an ancient orthography. thography, we should piobably not be able to detect the component parts of the English twit. But in Saxon it is written cdwitan and olhwitan ; the prep-
prefix oth, with tvitan, to disallow, reproach or cast in the teeth. has been above suggested to be possible, that in the Shemitic languamay be the same prefix as the Russian na, the Let the reader attend to the following words.
osition or It
ges, the 1 in triliteral roots,
cannot say, " We are goingi Dutch na, and German nach.
INTRODUCTION. Heb. B33
To
look, to behold, to regard,
to reach, exterul or
Ch.
To
look
Tlie primary sense of look,
;
throw.
bud
also to
French, frapper, Eng. Sax. gerffiiZmii,
to
to
rap.
make ready
;
in
Chaucer, grri/A,
to
make ready.
SaX.
hrcEd, quick; hrudian, to hasten; hrcednes, Eng. readiness. Spanish, frisar, to cui'l or frizzle ; rizar, the same.
or sprout.
Sax. gerefa, Eng. reeve, G. graf, D. graaf. Lat. glycyrrhiza, from the Greek ; Eng. liquoricehut in no language, have we such decisive evidence of the formation of accord with Lai. words, by prefixes, as in the Welsh. with bud, Sp. bntar, Fr. boulim, boiiter, video the Chaldee, with video and Take the following instances, from a much greater number that might he Fr. bout, end, from shooting, extendnig. to put, and Eng. iopoui, and produced, from Owen's Welsh Dictionary. Blanc, a colt, from llanc. Ar. iIXaJ To 6»rf to germinate. Sec Ch. supro. Blith, milk, from lith. Bliant, fine linen, from lliant. Heb. ^2i To fall ; to sink down to wither ; to fall off, as leaves and Plad, a flat piece or plate, from Had. foolish a 'jjJJ to ; Derivative, fuol to act foolishly disgrace. flowers Pled, a principle of extension, from lied. Heb. Ch. Syr. Sam. ioj'all. Pledren, a bladder, from pledyr, that distends, from lied. that is, to throw or put on. Ch. SaJ To niake/uu?,- to defile ; Pleth, a braid, from lleth, Eng. plait. Plicciaw, to pluck, from llig. to drive as camels ; to excel; also to an arrow as To ; shoot, y^f, \j^j Ploc, a block, from Hue ; plociaw, to block, to plug. Plwng, a plunge, from llu-ng, our vulgar lunge. die, that is probably to/«//. • Glwth, a glutton, from llwth. Can there be any question, thit fall, foul ?m'\ fool are this very word Glas, a blue color, veidancy, a green plat, whence Eng. glass, from Has. without the first consonant ? The Arabic without the first consonant agrees Glyd, gluten, glue, from llyd. with Gr. SaXXu, and tlie sense o( falling then, is to throw one's self down Claer, clear, from llaer. Heb. 10J To keep, guard, preserve, retiiin, observe. Clav, sick, from llnv. Ch. To observe ; to keep ; to lay up. C'lwpa,n club, a knob, from llwb. id. Syr. and Sam. Clwt, apiece, a clout, (lom llwd, llwt. Tosliine. Eth. hiDi Clamp, a mass, a lump. Clawd, a thin board, from llawd. To keep ; to see ; to look ; to attend. Ar. Cledyr, aboard or shingle, whence cledrwy, lattice, from lied. Bran, Eng. 6ra;!, from rhan ; rhanu, to rend. Remove the first letter, and this coincides with the Greek rjfpjio. Brid, a breaking out. from rhid. No person will doubt whether boj to circumcise, is formed onSl". Bro(;, noise, tumult, a brock, from rhoq. Ch. nOJ to cut ; to saw. Syr. id. LaU serra,serro. Bror, froth, foam, anger, broi^i, to chafe or fret, from brwc, a boiling or ferment, from rhivc, something rough, a grunt, Gr. fjpnj;u. Ar. ^xij To fade, to vanish, to perish, to be empty, to fail. Bryd, what moves, impulse, mind, thought, from rhyd. Brys, quickness, brisiaw, to hasten, to shoot along, from rhys, Eng. to Heb. r\3i to blow, to breathe. Ch. Syr. Eth. Ar. id. from ni3 , to blow rush, and crysiaw, to hasten, from rhys, to rush. [Here is the same word If the Shemitic J in these and similar words is a prefix or the remains of rhys, with different prefixes, forming brysiaw and crysiaw. Hence W. a preposition, it coincides very closely with the Russ. and Dutch na, and the brysg, Eng. brisk.] Now the German Graz, [pronounced grath,'\ a step, a degree, from rhaz, Lat. gradiis, latter we know to be a contraction of the German nach. imch is the English nigh ; for no person can doubt the identity of the Ger- gradior. man nachbar and the English neighbor. Greg, a cackling, from rheg. In the course of my investigations, I very early began to suspect that b,f, Grem, a crashing, gnash, a murmur, gremiaw, to crash or gnash, from introduced by peculiar rhem. Hence p, c, g and k before I and c, are either casual letters, hM.fremo, Gr. /3pf^w.* latthe modesof pronunciation, or the remains of prepositions ; most probably We have some instances of similar words in our own language ; such flag of the ter. 1 had advanced far in my dictionary, with increasing evidence and lag ; flap and lap ; clump and lump. truth of this conjecture, before I had received Owen's Dictionary of the There is another class of words which are probably formed with a prefi.x Welsh language. An examination of this work has confirmed my suspi- of a different kind. I refer to words in which s precedes another consonant, cions, or rather changed them into certainty. as scaljt, skull, slip, slide, sluggish, smoke, smooth, speed, spire, spin, If we attend to the manner of articulating the letters, and the ease with We find that tego, to cover, in Latin, is in stage, steep, stem, swell, spout. which bl, br,fl,fr,pl,pr, cl, er, gl,gr are pronounced, without an hiterven- Greek We find fiopoySoj f tyw ; the Latin fullo, is in Greek a^aXXu. that a preposiing vowel, even without a sheva, we -shall not be surprised lose tion or prefix, like be, pt, pa, po, or ge should, in a rapid pronunciation, its vowel, and tile consonant coalesce closely with the first letter of the prin* of his I do not follow Owen to the last step analysis, as I am of opinion Thus blank, prank, might naturally be formed from belank, cipal woid. but there is that, in making monosyllabic words to be compound, he often errs. For perank. That these words are thus formed, 1 do not know; Certain it xample, he supposes bro<^ a tumult, to be from rhor, a broken or rough utnothing in the composition of the words to render it improbable. on other terance a grunt or groan ; and this, to be a compound of rhy, excess, what is, that a vast number of words are formed with these prefixes, I beheve rho<; to be is over or beyond, and or, a forcible utterance, a groan, words, or the first consonant is a mere adventitious addition ; for they are a primitive uncompounded word, coinciding «ith the English rough. used with or without the first consonant. Take the following examples. Owen supposesp/arf, a flat thing, a plate, to be from Had, with py. Llad also raigh, Hiberno-Celtic, or Irish, brae or 6rof/i, the arm, is written and what is a he py, what is inward or explains, gift, good tilings, given, Welsh brai(, whence ,3pa;^icoi', brachium. Uraigh, the neck, Sax. hraca, I have no doubt that the first letter is a prefix in plad, but beyond involved. Eng. rack, Gr. paxi-i- Fraoch, heath, ling, brake, L. erica. all question, llad is from the same root as lied, breadth, coinciding with Lat. Welsh, llawr, Basque, lurra, Eng. ^ooc. tows both from a common root signifying to extend. But I do not beUeve 'Lixt.floccus, Eng. Jluck or lock. llad or lied to be compound words. Sax. hraccan, Eng. to reach, in vomiting.* Dug, a duke, Owen supposes to be formed on ug, over ; which cannot be Sax. hracod, Eng. ragged. Dur, steel, he derives true, unless the Latin dux, cluco, are compounds. Ger. rock, Eng. _//oc/f. from ur, extreme, over, but doubtless it is from the root of the Latin durus. Dutch, geluk, Ger. gluck, Eng. luck. So par, signifying what is contiguous, a state of readiness or preparation, Greek, Eolic Dialect, (Spoiox, for poSor, a rose. a Owen makes or match, compound oi py, and ar ; py, as Aj>air, fellow, Latin, clunis, Eng. loin, G. lende, W. dun, from Hun. above explained, and ar, a word of various significations,
To
lax J
spring, or issue as water
If the first letter
is
a prefix,
the
;
to flow out
;
to devise or strike
Hebrew word would
,•
;
;
;
;
^j
;
,•
*
the
H before same
I
and r
letters.
in
Saxon corresponds
to the
Greek
x,
and Latin
c,
each other, I think he would have formed a very different opinion as to their I am very well convinced that many of the w ords which he suporigin. before poses to be primitive or radical, are contractions, such as rhy, lie, lly, tie last
consonant being
lost.
INTRODUCTION. inquireJ whether the English the same root as rtr^yn, web or woof, rtiji'tor, a spindle, spirt, is not from in English is in Spanish brota. to Sprout spin joji'tf u, We find the Welsh ysbrig, the English sprig, is a compound of ys, a like the Lat. ex, and brig, top, prefix denoting issuing ov proceeding front, is
written also
B;UapaySos'
;
ami
it
may
i)e
summit. to
Vsgar, a separate part, a share ; ysgar, ysg(iru,to divide; ysgariau\ but the real root is composed of ys and car, according to Owen ; This is the English shear, shire. Gr. xapa. appears distinctly in the the throat, to shake roughly IS a Vsgegiaw, to shake by laying hold of the mouth, an entrance; a from to and choke, of ceg, cegiaie, compound j/s shake ; Sax. sceaean. choking. This may be the English or covering. Ysgm, a robe made of skin ; ys and ci)i, a spread 'shade ; ys and carod. Ysgodi, to shade ; ysgawd, a or puckered, a scrip ; ys and crab what Vsgrab, what is drawn up See Eng. crab, crabbed. slirinks. from rhav. Vygravu, to scrape; ys and crav, claws, to shriek, from cre(;, a shriek Ysgrer, a scream, a.' shriek, ysgreriaiv, from rhy g, rye, that is erei:ian,'to shriek, (mm creg, cri/g, hoarse, rough, This is the English rough, its roughness. from so named the grain rough ; from the root whole have the Here we Lat. raucus. process of formation, to We retain the Welsh ciefion, shriek, in our common word, o( rough. screak. to creak, and with a formative prefi.t, we have shriek, and our vulgar a wrinkle, The Latin shrug, are probably from the same
separate,
,
.
If this deduction is correct, the seBse denial; gwadu, to deny, or disown. It is so in other of denial is a throwing or thrusting back, a repelling.
words.
Yswitiaw,
to chirp, twitter,
from ysivid, that makes a quick turn.
Qu.
twitter.
In some of the foregoing words, it appears evident that the Welsh prefix, and the words, in which this is the case, ys, is an alteration of the Latin ex, were probably borrowed from the Latin, while the Roman armies had posBut there is a vast number of words, with this prefix, session of England. which are not of Latin origin ; and whether ys is a native prefix in the Welsh, may be a question. One thing is certain, that s before another consonant, and coalescing with it, is, in a great number of words, a prefix. The modern Italian affords abundant proof of the extensive use of s, as the remains or representative of ex ; as shallare, to unpack, unbale ; sbarsftatterf, to abate ; sftronoare, to pluck off branches; .scar60(0, beardless icare, to discharge ; scommodare, to incommode ; sconcordia, discord ; scornare. to break the horns ; scrostare, to pull off the crust ; and a great num;
ber of others. Now if the same manner of forming words with this prefix has actually we may rationally suppose prevailed among the northern nations of Europe, that many English words, and perhaps all of this class, are thus formed. or Thus scn^ffr may be formed from a root in Cd; shape, from Cb, Cp ; skill, from the root of Lat. calleo ; slip, from the root of Lat. labor ; smart, from the root of Lat. amarus, bitter, Heb. nn; smite, from the root Eng. rug, of Latin mitto ; span, from the root of pan, to stretch ; spar, from the root ruga, source. of bar ; speak, from the root of Lat. voco : speed, from a root in Pd, perhaps from ysgriv, a writing, from emu a mark Lat. from the root of deep ; Vsgrivenu, to write, Lat. scribo, peto ; steal, from the root of Lat. tollo ; steep, from rhiv, something that from cut, a row of notches ; criviaw, to cut, to' grave ; stretch, from the root of reach ; sweep, fiom the root of wipe ; stvun, Hence scrivener. divides. wan, white ; szeell, from the root of to itell. Sax. tvellan, to boil, &e. That a from Lat. to cub, or scopes, sweep, besom, ysgubaw, Vsgub, a sheaf many English and other Teutonic and Gothic words are thus formed, appears collection, a heap, a cube. to be certain. to whisk or scud ; from cud, ceThese facts being admitted, let us examine a little further. In Russ. Vsgud, something that whirls ; ysgudaw, the same. svadiba is a wedding. Is not this formed on the root of iped, with s for a lerity, flight; ysgulh, ysguthnw, thrust ; from gu-th, gwthiaw ? Svara is a quarrel. Is not this formed on the root of vary, variance, Ysgwth, a push ys'gu'thiaw, to push or to jet prefix the same ; probably'allied to Eng. shoot. The Welsh has ysgythu, Sverlo is a borer ; qu. bore and veru ; svertirayu, toroll qu. or of spar 1 or spout, from the same root. Lat. rerto ; skora, furs, peltry qu. Fr. cuir ; skot, a beast ; qu. cattle; , ;. llaciaw from slack, slacken Ilac, loose, to loose ; Dan. ktoben, and its root slabei, ; Yslac, slack, yslaciatr, skupayu, to purchase in gross qu. cheap, and slow. to allied slack, Eng. from lag ; to slacken, sluggish Uag, weak; qu. Lat. /a6o)-, /a^jsus s/agoi/i*, to fold qu. tey, andp/ko slivayu. or distended, is what from to off bark or skin lengthened i/sZa6, flap, qu. to pour out liquors Yslapiaw, to slap, qu. Lat. libo ; slupayu, to peel s a lank a tall, stripling, person, from llab, a Hag, a strip, a stroke. Llabi, snova, new ; Lat. liber ; snimayu, to take away ; qu. Sax. neman, to take The Lat. nivis is from this loobu, a lubber, is from the same root llabiaw, to slap. Lat. nomts ; snig, sneig, snow, Fr. neige. qu. but it is proRuss. spletayu, to plait, &.c. Ysled, a sled, from lied, says Owen, which denotes breadth, root, with g opened to v. word probably from the same root as lied, that The Russ. prefix so occurs in a great number of words ; sobirayu, to colbably from the root of slide, a stretch along. is, to extend, to lect or assemble, precisely the Heb. and Ch. "Oy. from mod, Eng Ysmot, a patch, a spot ; ysmotiaw, to spot, to dapple, It now becomes an interesting question, to determine how far any analogy 7note. , e ,u exists, between the languagesof the Japhetic and Shemitic families, in regard Ysmwciaw, ysmygu, to dim with smoke, from mwg, smoke, bo smooth to prefixes. For exam"ple, in the Shemitic languages, 3 is a prefix of extenfrom Welsh mwyth. almost exactly with the English and Dutch by, the r u r Owen. I should say Irom the root ot sive use, corresponding bei. This Yspail,spoil,'{rom paiZ, farina, says Saxon be, and German preposition and prefix has several senses the root ofpeel, to strip. Yspeilwta, to be sense ocpalea, straw, refuse, that is, from in the Saxon which are now obsolete ; but its present prevailing east wind. pilfering. , t x Shemitic the languages. nT>' D'Hp nn3, by a strong Owen hut this is the Latin ex- curs in all Yspeliaw, to expel, from pel, a ball, says Ex. xiv. 21. Compare the following definitions of this preposition the Sax. the same root. from be Ball from may pello. pelh, from Castle. to spike ; from pig, a sharp point, a pike. from Lye. and the Shemitic Yspig, a spike, a spine ; yspigaw, Sax. de, e, ex, in, secus, ad,juxta, secundum, pro, per, super, propter,
C/
;
;
•
;
;
;
,•
,•
;
;
;
;
;
.
.
.
:
;
Hence Eng.
spigot. circa. Yspin a spine, from pin, pen. The Heb. Ch. Syr. in, e, ex, cum, propter, usque ad, adeo ut, ad, super, per, from cyn, first, chief, foremost Ysgynu, to ascend, Lat. ascendo, contra, ante. radical sense is to shoot up. Eth. in, per, pro, propter, cum, secundum, apud. of water, a lake. Yslw^, a slough, from llwc, a collection Ar. in, cum, propter, per, ad, erga. a cause or principle of producing, the germ or Yspar. a spear, from pdr, as ber, a spit, In Numbers, xiv. 34, it signifies according to, or after ; D'DTI 153003, acseed of a thing, a spear. This consists of the same elements This signification is now perhaps obsolete in is to shoot cording to the number of days. and Eng. 4101% and in Italian bar is sbarra. The primary sense " be his in the Saxon ; as, msgnum," according to English, but was common thrust, drive. So " be tham ma!stan ;" by the most, is now suis. a fine brisk his ; sprig, a^incft. strength ; pro viribis I'sjoinc, ayincA, frompmc, gay, a most. is at the that from off, to explain ; parted i)tan, expressed by, Ysplan, clear, bright; j/s/f/fwia, and Persic, is the Arabic in word Hebrew, a that this it is remarkable plant; a plane; whence plant a child; Eng. ray, a shoot, a planting, used in oaths, precisely as it is in English. Gen. xxii. 16, '3, By Hence splendor, W. ysplander. to shoot, as a preposition ,
.
plant.
a bearing, a port, passage &c. Lat Ysporthi, to support, from porth, porta, porta. ^ r , from tag, a state ol being Ystac, a stack, a heap ; ystaca, a standard ; or stuffed clogged. -^ n.. J he a that from to continuity. tad, spreads, stay ; Ystad, a state ; ystadu, primary sense is to set. to spread Fstam, that is spread; a stain; tin, Lat. stannum ; ystaentaiv, to tin, or cover with tin ; from taen, a spread, a layer. over, to stain ; •
.
ystaenu,
tin from spreading ? The sense is to set, to throw Ystau'l. a stool, from taiel, a cast or throw. Tawl is the root of deal. ilown. a Ystor, astore, that forms a hulk, from tor, a swell, prominence. but the sense is a rushing. that is from stretched, torin, Y.itorm,:i storm, a stream, from compact, trim, that is, stretched, straight
Qu.
.
Now
,
planu,
is
trym, Ystrym, from extending. Ystwmp, a stump, from twmp, a round mass, a tump. from gwad, FstoafiauJ, to sguat, from t/sti'orf, a throw, or falling down,
IJvjij beballah or by Allah; Fersic, myself have I sworn. Arabic, The evichoda or begoda, by God, the very words now used in English. bei dence then is decisive that the Shemitic prefix 3 is the Teutonic 6c, by, is certainly a contraction of big, which contt-acted, and this Teutonic word used in the Saxon, especially in compound words, as in bigspell, [by-spell\ This prefix then was in universal use by a fable ; bigstandan, to stand bif. and this word alone is theori.'inal stock of mankind, before the dispersion; Shemuic and Teutonic landemonstrative proof of the common origin of the that this is the prefix b, and probably p, certain is it ..ua-^es equally in all the modern words of multitude a and before I and r, in block, b'raigh, Shemitic and probably, the same letter is a prefix in many
Now
languages;
"
We know
that be in the
as the simple a
verb
is
is a prefix, The all the Teutonic and Gothic languages. in elements and sigmticacorresponds exactly
Saxon bedalan, and Dutch bedeclen,
found in
Hebrew and Chaldee bna
m
INTRODUCTION. Whether the first letter is a prefix in the (son, with the Saxon and Dutch. See tlic word ihal, wtiicli wlien Iriflatter languages, let the reailer judge. ced, terminates in tlie VVelsl) tawl, a cast olf', a tlirow ; separatiou; lawlu, to cast or throw oil', to scpaiate. In Clialdee, 112 signifies to scatter, to disperse. The word has the same Syriac and .Samaritan. In Ethiopic, the word with X prefixed, signifies to wi.sh, love, desire,
one into the other, and the change seldom occasions much obscurity. njore didiculty, not so
gy
and with "^ prefixed, to strive, to endeavor, and without a prefix, Both these significations are from stretching, straining. course, race. In Arabic
j^j
signifies generally to ha.sten, to
run to; but
strife,
,
Jsj
to fovi or scattcrseed. signifies to disperse, This verb is writicii in Hebrew "113 with precisely the same signification. The Arabic also h;Ls the verb with this orthography, signifying to sow, and also to beat or stiike with a stick.
is less
1.
llie .signification in
much by
is so fiequent, tliat this circumstance The changes of signification occasion necessity, as because this branch of philolo-
understood.
OF ARTICULATIONS, OR CONSONANTS.
CIIAIVGE
The
articulations, letters which represent the junctions or joinings of the All these are organs, usually called consonants, are the stamina of words. convertilile and frequently converted into their The word
cognates. English bear represents the Latin fcro and pario, and fero is the Greek ipipu. Latin veuliis is wind in English ; anil habeo is have. The Latin dens,
The in
Dutch, Danish and Swedish
is
land; and danee in English
is
in
German
tanz.
These changes are too familiar to require a multiplication of examples. But there are others less comnion and obvious, which are yet equally certain. Thus in the G.aelic or Hiberno-t'eltic, m and mb are converfible with to or Here we have V ; and in Welsh m and v are changed, even in different cases of the same Now in Syriac ft dar, signifies strive, struggle. the simple verb, without the prefix, with the sense of the Etliiopic, with word. Thus in Irish the name of the hand in written cither lamh or lav, and in Welsh niaen, a stone, is written also vaen. The Greek (3 is always a prefix. Supra. pronounced a.s the English v, as (JouXofiai, Lat. volo, English will, German We find also the Arabic i tharra, the simple verb, signifies to .sprinkle. wollen ; and the sound of i the Greeks express by nfJ. In the Chaldee and one remarkable distinction is the use of a We find in Chaldee XIH, TTH and m, the simple verb, signifies to dis- dental letter in the Hebrew, former, where the latter has a sibilant. As PD cuth ? in Chaldee is WD cush in Hebrew 3rn, gold, in Chaldaic, is 3nt in Hethe same. In Arabic in to like the sow, 1 Syriac, signifies perse; ,^ brew. The like change appears in the modern languages for water which, Both this and the former verb sig- in most of the northern languages, is written with a dental, is, in German, foregoing verb, and hence to procreate. nify also to whiten, as 'the hair of the head, as we say, to sprinkle wjth gray written ifasser, and the Latin dens, W. dant, Dutch land, Swedish and J Danish land, is, in German, zahn. The like change is frequent in the The Arabic ] ^ signifies to drive, to impel, to repel, to contend, Greek and Latin. paTM, in one dialect, is (ppao-crt.', in another and the hairs. And here we have the literal signification Latins often changed ( of the indicative present, or infinitive, into s in the to shine, to sparkle. to strive of this whole cla.ss of verbs; to drive, urge, throw, send; hcucc to scat- preterit and participle, as mitto, tnittcre, }nisi, missvs. L and H, though not considered as letters of the same organ, arc really ter, to strive, to shoot a.s rays of light, procreate, kc. The Hebrew corresponding verb is mt or ^'17 to scatter, to sow; and such and changed the one into the other. Thus the Spaniards write blnndir (ov brandish, and escolta for escort. The Portuguese write iranrfo for bland, the word witli the like orthography occurs in Ch. Syr. and Ar. This is and branqutar, to whiten, for blanch. The Greek has (fpayiAXi.i for the .\nd who can doubt that is a the Latin sero. 3 prefix in tlie verb 113 hM'm In Eurojie however this change seems to be limited flagellum. above mentioned ? L is chiefly to two or three nations on the coast of the Mediterranean. In Welsh, goberu signifies to work, to operate; gober, work, operation sometimes commutable with D. formed by the prefix go and pe>' ; go denoting progress towards, approach, We have a few instances of the change of g^ or gh into/. Thus rough is and per rendered by Owen, that pervades, a fruit, a pear; but the real pronounced »«/, and trough, trauf. sense is to strain, to bring forth, to drive, thrust, urge, &.C. The Russians often change the d of a noun into the sound of j, or the This word, in the Annoric dialect, iswiitten either gofter or oher ; in in the verb formed from that noun as lad, accord, harmony, Latin operor, whence Eng. operate. The same word is in the Ethiopic, compound g, bred, damage, loss laju, to accord, or agree breju, to injure. The Italians and French have also changed a dental into a palatal letter, T'fl^ g»''6'"> 'o make, to do. f\1(\i agabar, to cause to be made; in many words; as Italian raggio, a ray, from Lat. radius ; and ragiune, tagabar, to work, operate, negotiate gabar, a maker. ^f" T n ^ "] f) ^ reason, fi-om ratio ; Fr. manger, to eat, from Lat. mando, or manduco. This is tlie Heb. and Ch. 13J to be strong, to prevail, to establish, and as In the south of Europe, the Greek x has been changed, in some instances, into the Italian or Spanish z, and then by the French into s. It seems a noun, a man; Ar. >J>.=» jabara, to make strong, to heal, as a broken that the Spanish z has, at some former period, been pronounced as a guttural. Thus the Gr. fi^uxim, Lat. brachium, the arm, is in Spanish brazo, bone to strengthen. That this Slieniitic word and the Welsh and Ethiopic are all radically one, and the Spaniards have the word fiom the Latin, or from the same source there cannot be a question and the Welsh proves indisputably that go is a as the Latin and Greek, the Celtic braic. This word, brazo, the French This then is a word formed on 13 or N13. The Heb. T3X, changed into bras, and from that we have brace and embrace, A similar prefix. change occurs in Dnrazzo, noni Dyrrachium, and in the Spanish luz, light. strong, that is, strained, and 13N, a wing, that is, a shoot, ai e from tlie same The Teutonic nations often used h to express the power of the Greek «, £ and the Latin c, as heart for napSm, horn for cornu. Hence we find that root, and in Arabic »j ? abara, signifies to prick, to sting, and its deriv the Saxon hiinian, hhonian or hlynian, to lean, is tlic Greek hAuw, Latin aUves, the extremity of a thing, a point, a needle, corresponding with the ctino. The letter /i is now dropped and we write the word lean. in like manner, the Saxon hlid, which we now write lid, is fiom the same Welsh bar, a summit, a tuft, a branch, a bar, and the Welsh bcr, a pike, a root as the Latin claudo, cludo, the Greek kAu^.-o.', which is contracted into in Welsh also, par, a spear, and lance, a spit, a spear, Lat. i>er« per, a M^iiu. And in this word we may notice another fact, that the word signifies spit, are all doubtless of the same origin. not In Syriac, only to shut, but to ])i'aise or celebrate, proving that this word and the to make, to work or operate. Is this j.o. ,tsabar, signifies Latin plaudo, are the same, with difiiirent pi-efixes, the same as laudo, and the same root with a diderent prefix ? that the primary sense is to strain. This in Saxon appears iu hlad, loud, ,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
—
;
The same word
in
Arabic
j.x*s
signifies to
be patient,
to
bear, to sus-
tain.
We
the Teutonic and Gothic languages, the same word is used with dilTerent Thus in our mother tongue, begin is writprefixes. ten gynnan, the simple radical word, and aginnan, beginnan, and nan ; and in the Gothic, dvginnan, which, in English,VouId be, ongynlogin. Should it appear upon investigation, that verbs in the Assyrian languages have the same prefixes which occur in the European languages, the fact will evidence more affinity between tlie languages of these two stocks than has yet been known lo exist. Let us now attend lo the natural causes which may be supposed to have obscured or destroyed the identity or resemblance of languages which had a comnion origin.
observe,
tliat in
The atfinily of words, in two or more different languaces, is known by identity of letters and identity of signification ; or by letters of the same organ, and a signification obviously deducible from the same sense. Letters of the same organ, as for example, b, /, ;) and t) are so easily converted, the!
hlydan, to cry out. In Latin, /and h have been converted, as hordeum (or fordeum ; and the Spaniards now write h for/, as hacer for the Latin facere ; kilo for filum ; herir iorferire, Uc. 2.
CH.\NGE OF VOMELS.
The change
of vowels is so common, as to occasion no difficulty in determining the sameness of words; indeed little or no regard is to be had to them, in a-scertaining the origin and affinity of languages. In this opinion 1 accord w ith almost all writers on this subject ; but I have to combat the opinion of that elegant scholar. Sir William Jones, who protests against the licentiousness of etymologists, not only in transposing letters, but in totally disregarding the vowels, and seems to admit the common origin of words only w hen written with the same letters, and used in a sense precisely the same.'*
*
Asiatic Researches, vol. 3, p. 4S9.
INTRODUCTION. prejudice existing against etymol- German brauchen, Dutch gebruiken, Danish bruger, Sw. bruka, Sax. bruit is justly liable to all the objections can, to use, topracfice. and hence the English brokci\ ogy. As the subject has been treated, The same remarks are applicable to Ta7na and racro-w ; (ppa7na and ippao-o-w ; urged against it. But it is obvious that Sir W. Jones had given very little attention to the subject, and that some of its most common and obvious prin- aXXayn and aWaaau ; xtipa"'"P and xapacrcrw, and many other words of like forIn all these cases, the last radical letter is to be sought in the deriHis had his obsen'ation. opinion with regard to both articu- mation. ciples escaped iblvatives of the verb, and in one of the past tenses, particularly in an aorist. as will from the lations and vowels is unequivocally erroneous, appear This fact affords no feeble evidence that in Greek, as in the Shemitic iowing list of words, taken from modern languages, and respecting the languanot have the ges, the preterit tense or an aorist, was the radix of the verb.* identity of which, that gentleman himself, if living, could But it is not in the Greek language only that we are to seek for the primislightest doubt. Latin tive radical letters, not in what is now called the root of the verb, but in the Swedish. Dutch. German. Saxojj. English. derivatives. The fact is the same in the Latin, and in the English. The araw, I tralio. trekken, draga, tragen, dragau, Latin ^itcius and _^ta/, cannot be deduced from_^Mo,- but the orthography of these words proves demonstrably that the gifva, give, original root v:asflugo, or fluco. g'fan, geeven, gebcn, So in EngHsh sight cannot be deduced from see, for no example can be found '"'' ^0''' f"^'' '°''''^'' of the letter g introduced to form the participles of verbs. Gr.''«J,. feet', J Sight, in Saxon hake, gesicht, D. zigl, G. sicht, Dan. sigt, Sw. sickt, is a participle; but the hook, hoc, haak, haken, verb in the infinitive, in Saxon is seon, geseoyi, Ger. sehen, D. zien, Dan. dag, tag, clay, dag, daeg, daag, habeo. seer, Sw. se ; in which no palatal letter is found, from which g or ch can be haben, hafva, habban, heli'bcn, have, deduced. The truth then is that the original verb was sega/i, or in Dutch [Fr. avoir, ai, as, a, avons, avez, ont.] lauten, zegen ; the g being lost as it is in the French nier, from the Lat. nego. lopa. hleapan, loopen, leap, In tlie change of letters in the Greek verbs betore mentioned, the process brinna, brandcn, brennen, burn, liyrnan, seems to have been from 7 or » to f , and then to u and t ; 7rpa7w, irpa^u, irpucvelle volo, woUen, willan, willcn, will, willja, This is cei'tainly a process which is natural and common. The (Tu, TrpciTTw. sten, stein, steen, stone, Stan, Latin brachium thus became in Spanish brazo, and then in French bras ; breit, bred, breed, bred, broad, and thus in the Italian, Alexandria has become Alessandria. erde, eorth, aarde, earth, jord, Dan. lord. When the last radical of a Greek verb is a dental, it may not be certain wie, ho, Dan. hvo. hwa, who, sukia, zoeken, suchen, sequor whether the original letter was d, or th or t. We find the Greek verb (TTrac. secan, seek, to draw, forms its derivatives with cr, crTrao-ga, arraiTii ; and this is probably the boon, bohne, bona, Dan. bonne. bean, bean, Here are scarcely two words written with the same letters in two lan- Armoric spaza, fi-om which we have spay. So W{<^, ippao'ii, and (fp^On, are guages; and yet no man ever called in question their identity, on account evidently of the same family. It is not improbable that the original letter of the difference of orthography. The diversity is equally great in almost might have a compound sound, or it might correspond ncaily to the Arabic So in the same words we often lind all other words of the same original. or the English dh or th, or ds, so as easily to pass into d or ]i or tO the vowel changed, as in the Lat. facio, feci ; ago, cgi ; sto, sfeti ; vello, into s. vulsi. Nothing is more certain than that the Welsh gtvyz, and the English It is equally clear that many Greek words have lost an initial consonant wood, are the same word, although there is one letter only common to them The letter most generally lost is probably the oriental n, but obviously the both. It is pronounced gooyth, that is, g, and wyth ; as guard for ward. There seems to palatals, 7 and k, have, in many instances, been dropped. be no question that the Greek o\oi is the English whole and perhaps all. This in Welsh is oil or holl, in Saxon al or geall ; and this is undoubtedly LOSS 3. So the Gr. o>.\u(ii is the Welsh colli, to lose ; and BiKm may the Shemitic Sj. be the English coil, Fr. cueillir. There are some words, which, in certain languages, have suffered a In hke manner, the Greek has, in many words, lost a labial initial, answerthange of a radical letter ; while in others it is wholly lost. For example, The Greek !i5m is undoubtedly the Latin video ing to the English 6, /or v. word, in Danish and Swedish is ord; icort, a plant, is urt ; the Saxon gear, ip7ov is from the same root as work ; i5ioi is from the root oi vid, in the Latin or ger, English year, in Danish is aar, in Swedish is &r, in Dutch jaar, and in German jaAr. and that individuus, is, separate, and from the Arabic, J^ j badda, dieido, we have a clear and decisive the yoke, and its
am not
I
at all surpviseil at tlie
common
'
CHANGE OR
OF RADICAL LETTERS.
,•
In
word,
example
affinities,
of changes in orthography. Yoke, the Latin jugum, is from the Chaldee, Syriac, and Arabic ju, zug, to join, to couple ; a word not found in the Hebrew. The Greeks retained the original letters in Cu^o!, {u^ow ; the Latins changed the first letter to J in jugum, and inserted a casual »i in ;'jmgo. From the Latin, the Italians formed giogo, a yoke, and giugnere, to join the Spaniards, yugo,a yoke, and juntar, to join; the French, Jo«g, a yoke, and ^oi'jirfrc, to join, in Saxon, yoke is geoc or ioc ; in Dutch, jwAr; G.
to separate.
In many instances, the Latin retained or restored the lost letter ; thus hajnaxa, for a^af a ; harpago for ap;ra7Ti ; harmonia for ap^ovia ; video for £i5w. If the marks of breathing, called spiritus asper and spiritus lenis, now prefixed to Greek words, were intended to represent the letters lost, or to stand The spirin the place of them, they answer this purpose very imperfectly. itus asper may stand for a palatal or guttural letter, but it does not designate which letter, the n. or the 3 much less does this or the other spiritus justjoch; Sw. ok. One of the most general chaqges that words have undergone is the entire ly represent the labials, 6,/, for «'. Whenever the Latins wrote /i in the loss of the palatal letter g, when it is radical and final in verbs ; or the open- place of the Greek spiritus, we may conclude that the original letter was n or have examples in the a cognate letter and we may conclude also that the V in video, and in divido, ing of that articulation to a vowel or diphthong. English bow, from Saxon bugan, to bend buy, from byegan ; brotv, from viduus, individuus, stands for the original labial lost in iifo, and iSios. But breg ; lay, from lagan, or lecgan ; say, from siegan ;fair, bom fager ; flail, there are many words, I apprehend, in which the lost letter is unknown, and from the Getmanflegel, Lat. flagelium; French nier, from Lat. nego, ne- in which the loss cannot be recovered, by any marks prefixed to the words. We may well suppose that hymnus exhibits the correct written form of gate. The same or similar changes have taken place in all the modern langua- uix'o! but what is there in the Greek v(fr,, to lead us to consider this word as Both the Greek the EngUsh woof, and wpau, to be the same as weave ? ges of which I have any knowledge. The loss and changes of radical letters in many Greek verbs deserve par- words have the spiritus asper. find in the Lexicons, irpayua, Trpa7o!, Trpaxiixos, are referticular notice. What proportion of Greek words have been contracted by the loss of an inracro-io to and theme or root to as the pro red to ?rpacT(7u, Trpatiu, ; pnrap, itial or final consonant, cannot, I apprehend, be determined with any pre; rayjia, This reference, so far as it operates as a direction to the cision at least, not in the present state of philological knowledge. It is pro(ppa7tia, to (ppatTo-u. student where to find the verb to which the word belongs, and its explana- bable the number of contracted words amounts to one fourth of all the verbs, But if the student supposes that these words and it may be more. tion, is useful and necessary. are formed from the theme, so called, or the first person of the indicative Similar contractions have taken place in all other languages ; a circummode, present tense, he is deceived. I am confident no example can be stance that embarrasses the philologist and lexicographer at every step of his found, in any language, of the palatals 7 and «, formed from the dentals and researches ; and which has led to innumerable mistakes in Etymology. sibilants, ^ and a, nor is pn™p,or any similar word formed by the addition of know that the Swedish &r, and Danish aar, a year, have lost the articulation the dental to a verb ending in a vowel. The truth is, the last radical in pm of g, asj is in the g, and that the English y in year, is the representative The ra- Dutch jaar. and German ja/ir is lost, in the indicative mode, and in irpao-au;, Trpairco, it is changed. : for the g is found in our mother tongue ; dical lost in pi" is 5 or 9 ; the original word was ptJu or piOw, and the deriva- and in a multitude of words, one language will supply the means of detertives pTiTup, piiTopiKTi, were formed before the radical letter was dropped in the No sooner is the verb restored to its primitive form, than we recogverb. nize its connection with the Irish raJ(Zfta?n, to speak ; Saxon r
;
We
;
;
;
We
;
;
We
;
;
original orthography restored,
INTRODUCTION. orthography which cannot be asrortaincd by another. But doubtless many changes have taken place of which the evidence is uncertain ; the chain which might conduct us to the original orthogand no means now remaining of repairing (he loss. raphy being broken, In no language, has the rejection or change of consonants seived so efibctSo e.xtensive have ually to obscure tlie original words as in the French. been the changes of orthography in that language, tliat luul not the early lexicographers indicated thelo.ss of letters by a mark, it would be impossible now to discover the original orthography, or to trace the connection of words with other languages, in a large portion of (hem. And it is with regret we observe the inliuence of the French practice of suppressing consonants, luinino; the real origin or true
extending itself to other countries. It is owing to the njost servile obsequiousness of nations, that Basil or liusilea, the elegant name of a town in Switzerland, has been corrupted to Basle, and pionounccd most barbarously The fiermans aie pursuing a like course in suppressing the palatal hale. letters: a most unfortunate circumstance for the strength of the language.
The
Italians also ha\'c a disposition to reject letters
wlien Ihey interfere
So also in sigguan, (o sing; laggs, long. In a few English. find (he Swedes and Danes have the word written in bo(h end tycka, tykker, to Ihink.- But in general the Gervviite words of this sort with ng. To show how important it is to know the true original orthography, I will mention one instance. In our mother tongue, the word to dye, or color, is the elcinenis or ladical letters are dg. To determine |Writtcn (/cagare; whether this and the Latin tingo arc the same words, we must first know whether n in tingo is radical or casual. This we cannot know with certainly, by the form of the word itself, for the n is carried through all (he tenses and forms of (he verb. But by looking into the Greek, we find the word w^ritten with 7, T177W and (his 1 Icarly proves the alliance of (be woid with deagan. See Dye in (he Dictionary. We have many Enghsh words, in which a d has been inserted before g, \^sm badge, budge, lodge, pledge, ivedge. In all words, I believe, of ihis class, (he (/is casual, and the g lollowing is the radical \eHer us pledge from the French pleige ; wedge from the Saxon wecg. The practice of inserting d in words of this sort seems to have originated in the necessity of some mode of preserving the English sound of g, whic.li might otfierwise be sounded as the t'rench g before e. And it is for this reason we still retain* and ought (0 retain in alledge, abridge. In like manner (he Teu(onic c has been changed into the sound of ch, as Sax. wacian, wcecian, to wake, to watch; Sax. thac, thatch. There are some nations which, in many words, pronounce and write g before u oi; as in the French guerre, for tnir ; gvede, for u'oad ; guet;or 7i^ as in
instances,
ways,
'inans,
we
as Ihnka, ta-nker
Danes, Swedes and Dutch
;
,
we see, in their language, ^imftore iovjiure ; Jiocco for Jlocro ; a change that has removed a radical consonant, and thus obscured or ratlicr destroyed the affinthe and Latin between Italian the words. ity Another diflerencc of writing and pronouncing, has been produced by the change of a sibilant fetter into an aspirate or econverso, by the change of an aspirate into a sibilant. No person doubts whether the Latin super is (he Greek uirip ; or o.^ciXu is siDiilis ; or aJ.s is sal, salt. The latter in Welsh is balen, hal. So hclyg, a willow, in Welsh, is in Latin salix. The tcr. ior ivait with their habits of pionunciation, and hence
110,
wv'iUcn
i'or
piano
;
:
w
the Latin sepiem, English seven. This in Persic is Ct.x& heft or haft, which approaches the Greek una. It has been commonly supposed, that in this case, (he aspirate in Greek has been converted into an s. There are however strong reasons for believing that the change has been (he reverse, and that s has been dropped, and its place supplied by an (Jreek
irrra is
aspirate.
The word
seven
is,
beyond
a question,
the Shemitic
»
: in Welsh, gwal, i'or wall ; gwain. Cor wain ; gwured, for guard, which in EngHsh is ward, Sp. guarda. In some instances, the « or w is dropped in modern writing, as in the French garenne, a warren : for This difference of garde, guard. orthography makes it difficult, in some
cases, to ascertain the (rue radical letters.
CHANGE OF
SIGNIFICATION.
j^.^
Another cause of obscurity in the affinity of languages, and one thai to have been n>ostly overlooked, is, the change of the primary sense of (he radical verb. In most cases, tliis change consists in a slight deflecsenex, in Welsh hen, seems clearly to be the Ar. sanna, to be old. tion, or difference of application, which has obtained among diflerent famIt is then clear (hat in these words s is radical. In .some cases, the literal sense is lost or obscured, It is probable however ilies of (he same stock. that the aspirate, in some cases, has been and the is retained. The first object, in such cases, is to figurative only changed into s. find the primary or literal sense, from which the various It deserves to be noticed that (he radix of a word is sometimes particular applicaobscured, tions may be easily deduced. in Greek and Latin, Thus, we find in Latin, libeo, libet, or lubeu, by the loss or change of a radical letter in the nomina-
whence
i'ya,
n3l7, Eng. sabbath
;
and the Gaelic sean, old, whence Latin seems
^
We find in Latin nepos, in the nominative, hnepotis in the gen- lubet, is rendered, to please, to like ; lubens, willing, glad, cheerful, pleashonos. honoris, &.c. In these changes, I suppose the letter restored ed; libenter, lubenter, willingly, gladly, readily. What is the primary be (he true ladical Tetter. Thus adamant has been sense, the visible or physical action, from which the ideaoft/'iHrn"- is taken? I find, either by knowing the radical sense of willing, ready, in other aajiaw, to subor by the predominant sense of the elements cases,
;
in the oblique cases to
deduced by our etymologists from the Greek a negative and
;
;
;
m
.'
m
We
VOL.
We
I.
C
INTRODUCTION. a sketching towards an object, coinciding with tlie primary sense of attention. The primary sense of reckon is to strain out sounds, to speak, tell, relate ; a sense now disused. Tile Saxon care, care, ccrrcion, to care, to carli, is connected in origin with tile Latin career, a prison ; both from the sense of straining, whence holding or restraint. To prove how the pi-imary general sense of a word may ramify into diiTerent senses, by special appropriation of the word among separate families of men proceeding from the same stock, let us observe the different senses in which leap is used by the English, and by the nations on the continent. In to leap over a fence. Knglish, to leap is simply to spring ; as, to leap a yard it will be seen that this But on the continent it signifies to run. word as used by the Germans cannot always be translated by itself, that is,i ;
j
Now
and this is precisely the Greek Ppix^^. The primary sense then throw, or drive, in a transitive sense ; or in an intransitive sense, break forth. and to curse have the same radical sense, which is, to send or pour out words, to drive or to strain out the voice, precisely as in the Latin appello, from pello, whence peal, as of thunder or of a bell. The two senses spring from the appropriation of loud words to express particular acts. This depends on usage, like all other particular applications of one general signification. The sense in Scripture is to utter words either in a good or bad sense ; to bless, to salute, or to rail, to scold, to reproach ; and this very word is probably the root oirejiroach, as it certainly is of the Latin ^recor, used, like the Shemilic word, in both senses, /»rat//n^ and cursing, or deforth rain
is
;
to send,
to rush, to To bless
It is also the same word as the English ^irm/, It. pregare, L. precating.'* following pas- precor, the same ^spreach, D.prechen, W. pregethii. To the same family be" Nimm long the Gr. ppoix", Ppioc", Ppi-xaonai, to bray, to roai', to low, Lat. rugio. sage from Luther's Version of the Scriptures. 1. Sam. xvii. 17. fur deine broder diese epha sangen, und diese zehen brod, und /ai*f ins heer Here we see that bray is the same word, applied to the voice of the ass and zu deinen brudern." " Take now for thy brethren an ephah of this parched to breaking ill a mortar, and both are radically the same word as break. The sense of kneeling, if radical, is to throw, and if fiom the noun, the corn, and these ten loaves, and leap to the camp to thy brethren." Leap, instead of run, is good German, but bad English.* There are two other sense of the noun is a throwing, a bending. The Chaldee sense of digging, if radical, is from thrusting in an instrument, words in this passage, of wliich a like remark may be made. The German but perhaps it is a sense derived from the name of fcrot/, loaves, is our breail, which adiidts of no plural; and sangaji is our or breaking the ground a shoot or cion, and in reality, to set a shoot, to plant. singed, which we cannot apply to parched coin. The Syriac use of this word in Matthew xv. 19, is intransitive, to issue, So in some of the Teutonic languages, to tvarp kittens or pup])ies, to rt-arp eggs, is correct language, though to our cars very odd ; but this is only to shoot or break forth. So in Arabic, to rush on, to assault. The sense of a particular application of the primary sense, to throw. We say to lay eggs, firmness in Arabic is from setting, throwing down, as in kneeling ; and hence the sense of breast, the fixed, firm part. but to lay is to throw down. That this word has the sense both of blessing and of cursing or reproachBy this comparison of the different uses and applications of a word, we And it is by this ing, we have demonstrative evidence in the Welsh language. Rheg, in are able, in most cases, to detect its original signification. means, I apprehend, that we may arrive at a satisfactory explanation of the Welsh, is "[13, without the prefix. It signifies a sending out; utterance; manner in which the same word came to have different and even opposite a gift or present ; a consigning a ban, a curse or imprecation. Rhegu, to significations. give ; to consign ; to curse. From rhi}g is formed preg, a greeting, or saluis rendered, in tation, [the very Hebrew and Chaldee word.] pregeth, a sermon, and preIt is well known, for example, that the Hebrew word j'lD, our version of the Scriptures, both to bless and to curse. The propriety of gethu, to preach. Here we liave not only the origin oi preach, but another that who labors to the latter rendering is controverted by Parkhurst, prove, important fact, that preg, and of course 1*^3. is a compound word, composed But this is not all; the Welsh greg, a cackin Kings and in Job, where it is rendered, to curse, it ought to be rendered, of a prefix,/) or b, and rheg. It is true that is formed with the to bless ; and he cites, as authorities, the ancient versions. prefix g on this same rheg. [Dan. ling, gregar, to cackle, in 1 Kings xxi. 10. 13 ; and in Job i. 11, and ii. 5, the seventy have rendered krage, a crow.] the word by ivkoyiu, to bless and other ancient versions agree with the In Welsh, bregu signifies to break ; brig, a breach, a rupture. This But let the word be rendered by bless in the following passa- Owen deduces from bar, but no doubt erroneously. It is from rhegu, and Septuagint. "Put forth thy hand now, and touch his bone, and his flesh, and he there is some reason to think that break is from "1"13, rather than from ges. p^S, " Bless God and die." How will bless thee to thy face." very absurd does but probably both are from one radix, with different prefixes. such a translation appear. It shows the immense importance of understanding the true theory of language, and the primary sense of radical words. observe one prominent sense of the Arabic ,»5jj baraka, is to rain Let us then endeavor to discover, if possible, the source of the difficulty in to pour forth water, as clouds. This is precisely the Greek gpixw ; the case here mentioned. To be enabled to arrive at the primary sense, let violently ; a woid found in all the Teutonic and Gotliic languages, but written either us examine the word in the several languages, first, of the Shemitic, and with or without its prefix. then of the Japhetic stock. Saxon, rtBgn or regn, rain ; regnan, to rain. Heb. "|13 To bless to salute, or wish a blessing to. Dutch, regen, rain ; regenen, beregenen, to rain upon. to bla.spheme. 2. To curse German, regen, rain ; regnen, to rain ; beregnen, to rain on. 3. To couch or bend the knee, to kneel. Swedish, rcgna, to rain. Deriv. A blessing, and the knee. Danish, regn, rain ; regner, to rain. Chaldee, "jlS To bless ; to salute at meeting, and to bid farewell at Saxon, racu, rain; Cimbric, rmkia, id. parting. Here we find that the English rain, is from the same root as the Welsh 2. To bend the knee. rheg. rhegu, and the Shemitic "jl^. 3. To dig ; to plow ; to set slips of a vine or plant for propagation. or reccan, Pursuing the inquiry fiirther, we find that the Saxon recan, Tahn. and Rabbin. [W. rhegu,] .signifies to speak, to tell, to relate, to reckon, the primary sense Deriv. The knee ; a blessing ; a cursing ; a cion ; the young of fowls. of which last is to speak or tell ; also, to rule, which shows this to be the LaTo fall on the knees; to fall or bow down. Judg. tin same Syriac, rego ; also to care, which is the English reck. That this is the V. 27. word as rain, we know fiom the Danish, in which language, regner signiMath. xv. 19. 2. To issue or proceed from. In the German, fies both to rain and to reckon, to tell, to count or compute. 3. To bless. and to a reckon, written little the words are rechnen, regnen, to ilirt'erently
by the same word,
into English.
Take
for
illustration the
;
;
;
We
;
;
3LO
;
Samaritan, Ethiopic,
a'^S To
f\4Tl To
rain.
bless.
bless.
Arabic, isTj-j To bend the knee ; to fall on the breast, as a camel. 2. To be firm, or fixed. Gr. Ppix". 3. To rain violently ; to pour forth r;un, as the clouds. 4. To detract from ; to traduce ; to reproach or pursue with reiuoaches
6.
To bless to pray for a blessing on to prosper to be blessed. To ha^^ten to rush, as on an enemy to assail. The breast the bason of a fouutMn a fish pond, or receptacle ;
;
;
this is a fact
by no means
EngUsh reckon and
governing.
;
;
Dutch, reekenen and regenen; but find that the
straight, stretched. Hence we find that rain ;
;
;
Deriv.
in
reck, and the Latin rego, arc The pi imary sense is to strain, to reach, to stretch. Care the same word. is a stretching of the mind, like attention, fiom the Laiin teiulo, and reHence rectus, right, that is, straint is theradical sense of
to revile. 5.
So
uncommon. Here we
Deriv. the knee.
of
and the Latin regnum, reign, are radically the
same word. Now in Saxon racan, or riecan, is the English reach, to stretch or extend, from the same root, and probably reek, Saxon recan, reocan, to fume or smoke for this is, to send off. ;
might have mentioned before, that the Chaldee n0"13, a cion or branch, Irish Jraic, or rai»/) ; Welsh ftraif ; precisely the CeUic word for arm; the Greek poaxiuv, the Latin brachium, whence the Spanish braio, the French bras, whence the English brace. The arm is a shoot, Heb. and Ch. In the latter sense, usually from j j. pi3. a branch, and branch is from this root oi- one of the family, n being casual ; The Arabic word supplies us with the certain means ol (l.^termining the branch for brach. radical sense ; for among other significations, it has the sense of pouring
water, as in Heb. and Ch. a flash of light.
:
also increase
;
abundance
;
constancy
He
I
splendor;
is
whence whence
o
•
;
walks, he leaps, he runs.
— Cowper.
'•
Imiirobus urget iratis precibus."
— Horace.
INTRODUCTION. if radically to n'ng or sound; the latter sense from straining or throwing, as in other cases. Without n, wring would be wrig, and wrong, wrog ; wrong, wrag, Oermnn spirchen, to speak, Dan. vrag. Swedish spraka, spraA- ; DaIn Greek, pi7oi is a blanket or coverlet, and connected with pirjnmiii ; that The Danish to break; sprekker. and Swedish nish sprog, speech spricka, is, a .spread, from stretching, or throwing over. same word willi n casual is seen in spring, the brmking or opening of the We find also among the Chaldee derivatives the sense of a neck, and a winter and here we see the origin of the majine phrase, to spring a mast, joint. Now we find this word in Irish, braigh, the neck in Greek, withDanish springer, to liiirst, crack or spring. This in Swedish is written out the prefix, fax", the Fi)iiic of the back, Saxon, hrcwca, EngUsh, the without n, spricka, to brea}c, burst, split; hut a noun of this family has n, rack, and fiom the Greek, th.e rickets, from distortion. a spring, a running. fpringa, a crack, ami spring, Coinciding with the Greek P17V0M, lo break, we find in Welsh rhwgaw, to Now let us attend to other Shemitic words consisting of cognate elements. a anil connecta. with and Welsh,
On
this
word,
different, are
let
be further ohservcd, or on
it
formed, with the prefix
s,
or
pis
pi3,
I
the
sprnehe, speech; Dutch fpreeken, Sjwaak
;
;
;
;
rock, rend, coinciding eraig, crag, payja, Chaldee, 113 To rub or scrape; to rub out or tread out, as grain from the ed with these, the Saxon hracod, English ragged, that is, broken ; evidently ear or sheaf; Latin/)i<;o,/no. the participle of a verb of this family. 2. To collect and'bind, as sheaves; perhaps English, lo rake. Hence we find the senses of distortion and breaking connected in tliLs 3. To break or break down. root, in a great variety of instances. In Saxon and Gothic /i«^nan, /ragan, signi4. To question; to doubt. to lighten, to shine or flash, is one of this family. The The Shemitic p-)3,
sense is to shoot So in English refractory. Prov. ii. 12. Deriv. Froward ; perverse. root, the Arabic Tliisverb is not in the Hebrew; but there are two derivatives, one signishining; which from its use in breakso called of the inner vail the ;' probably temple Prance is of the fying ;
3^3
;
—
.
.
.
,
.
We
1
;
;
}^
;
—
o
~
;
;
;
;
We
—
—
Now
^'
INTRODUCTION. These
dilTerent repJerings
show the importance of understanding
Pi.
the ht-
X13> the verb differently pointed,
to
hew,
to
out down.
Josh. xvii.
m
the 15. 18. for whatever may be the real sense cral or primary sense of words ; Ez. xxiii. 47. 2. To cut down with the sword ; to kill. If we are give to vau ui be to divid-e. nassao-es above mentioned, it cannot 1 Sam. h. 29. 3. To make fat. it is diihcult to make sense ot the the followino- word, its usual sense of and, Thus far the Hebrew. are waves audits sea word yjl by translating it, he stilleih: hestilleth the i. 1. Gen. To create. Nt2 Chal. roar or be agUated ttwndtjwus, or he stilleih the sea that the waves may Is. xl. 20. 2. To cut off. would be, he rougnens This will not answer. The more rational version Talm. 3. To make fat ; to grow sound or strong. In Lthi it into agitation. the sea, and its ^v'aters roar, or he drives, impels and Deriv. Fat ; whole ; sound ; strong. to coagulate, to freeze, to become rigid ; word same the signifies opic, Gen. i. 1. Mark xiii. 19. and with a pretix, /;igeo, and tins sigSyr. j uc:s To create. this is undoubtedly the Latin rigeo, distant as a general rule, a and Deriv. for to remove To distance, (o wrinkle 2. distance, to Lat. ; allied ru^o, nification is perhaps contraho, and this the radical sense of wrinkle is to draw, as in contract, Sam. A-'Na To create. Gen. i. 22. Deut. iv. 32. are allied to rough, seems to be the sense of rigeo. Both these words t _
Castlf.
Castle. Castle.
—
This sense would perhaps well suit is from breaking or wrinkling. To create Job xxxviii. 7. [qu. 4 and 6.] Ar. also that in Job vu. j \j,j the context in these two passages, as it would Nom. V. 28. or guiltless, not obnoxious to punishment. 2. To be' free skin is rough. 31, and xxxii. 22. Rom. vii. 6 Now in Arabic, the general signification of i'JI is to return, to repeat, 3. To free ; to absolve, from a crime ; to liberate ; to dismiss ; to justify h may be from drawing back ; a different application oil to withdiaw, which XX. 7. Num. xiv. 18. Ex. or extend. the original sense, to strain, stretch, the Latin 4. To escape ; to forsake. The°ioot pn in Chaldee signifies to spit, and this is probably to restore to health. Lev. xiii. 5. To recover fioiii disease ; to be healed 18. Josh. V. 8. Math. iv. 23. verb in Arabic same The in varied somewhat \j application. ructo, 6. To cleanse ; to free from impurities to as strain, or teeth, shoot puto to reject, grow long 7. To abstain from. signifies to diive off, to rack ; also to spread, clear as wine precisely the English Deriv. Creator ; free ; unobnoxious clean ; empty. rify or make or make and to pour out. Hebrew pi, to empty, to draw out, to attenuate to spit, to draw out, to attenuate ; SaAr. \ To create. thin, and as a noun, spittle ;' Syriac. J.J to be fine, slender maritan, to pour out, to draw out, to extend ; Ethiopic, 2. To cut off; to hew or pare. has a like significa The verb or thin ; Arabic, to be soft, tender, thin. to distinguish. 3. To separate , to root, same original Hebrew, spread, tion, and is perhaps from the 4. To make thin. pp'y rendered But, says Castle, all the ancient 'interpreters stretch, extend. 5. To oppose ; to strive ; to resist. to strike, to beat, as plates ol the word, to ordain, establish, make lirm 6. To provoke ; to boast, or make a parade. But the sense is to stretch, to spread, and the beating is only the metal. Castle. 7. To distj ibute ; to disperse. with means of extending. Hence i''pi the iirmament, which agrees well to Gesenius, the primary sense of this verbis toheiv, to cut out, And to reconcile andAccording thus to make smooth, and thus to create ; and he deduces these senses Lat. regio, an extent ; in Hebrew, properly an expanse. be remembered it let this of word, in the same order, as he does those of the Arabic verb, which gives the word the ancient and modern interpretations are usually or always from stretching, tension. But there is no ground for this opinion ; and doubtless the verb orilike. tiinl strength and firmness " Regio a rfg-o quod ginated before the use of edge tools. Now let us hear Ainsworth on the word regio. sub regibus erant atque ab his reThe predominant senses of this word, are, to separate, to free, to remove ; priusquam provincis fierent, regiones more natural is it to deduce regio from the prima- as we see by the Arabic and Syriac. gebantur." How much which is to stretch, to strain, to extend! Megio is an exNow hetving is indeed separating, and we have tlie English word pare ry sense of rego, from this root but we must seek for a signification which is more general tent, a word of indefinite signification. In Chaldee and Arabic this verb signifies to mend, to repair, to make than that o( paring, or we shall not be able to account for the sense of makroot the See or over making strong. whole, from extending spreading ing fat, sound, entire, and strong, nor for that of being born. The truth undoubtedly is, this word is of the same family with the Eng'jj infra. observe that JJT and m'\ agree in original signification, with the lish bear, the Latin pario, and the radical sense is to throw, to thrust, to send, to drive, to extend ; hence to throw out, to produce, as apphed to the was formed of of its derivatives root which or some the English reach, on To throw or drive, is the primary sense of bii til of children or of the world. and were formed on any of the foregoing biliteThat lia. stretch. The Engli.«h word deal, when pia separation and division, that is, to drive off. that traced to its To create, is to proral roots we may not be able to affirm ; but it is certain from the Welsh root, presents the same fact. See Deal. the first consonant of the triliteral root is a prefix, and it is certain from the duce or bring forth, the same sense as that of birth, .ipplied to a different biliteral and same in the sense is the the that is from The sense of hewing and paring Shemitic languages primary driving off, separation. In object. or particular significations may Syriac, we observe the general application, in removal, or departure to a triliteral roots, or that all the applications The sense of fattening is derivative, and allied to that of healing distance. readily be deduced from one general signification. To illustrate this subject more fully, let us attend to the various applica- or making whole, sound, strong, in the Arabic, that is, preparing, bringing tions of some other Shemitic words of extensive use to a good state, or from tension, the usual primary sense of strength and
which
:
My
!
.
,
o
;
;
p
;
;
;
We
p3
power.
To obtain a more full and satisfactory view of this subject, let us attend to the same word in the modern languages of Europe.
»ra.
Heb. K^3 To
create.
This,
by most lexicographers,
in all tlie Shemitic languages. signification, Gen. i. 1. produce into being. 2.
To
is
given as the first
Parkhurst says,
form, by accretion or concretion of matter.
Gen.
i.
to create
LATIN.
to
;
21.
to
Paro,
prepare,
make ready, procure,
The
design, &.c.
radical sense of
In Hiph. To make fat to fatten or batten. 1 Sam. ii. 29. paro is probably the same as in the Shemitic languages to produce, to bring forward. So also ready implies an advancing, and so docs promptness. But Num. xvi. 30. 4. To do or perform something wonderful. In Kal, to renew, in a spiritual sense. the various ways of preparing a thing for use naturally give to the word, in 5. In Niph. To be renewed. results Ps. U. 12. process of time, a variety of particular significations; each of which The compounds of paro, are apin bringing the thing to the state desired. Castle says, comparo, to prepare or 1. To create from nothing, or to produce something new or excellent pnro, to prepare, to furnish, accouler or set out make ready ; from another thing. Gen. i. Is. xiii. 5. procure, to make equal, to compare, to join, to dress or to regain, to comIs. xlviii. 7. Ps. cii. 19. 2. In Niph. To be renewed or re-created. ;c;>ai"o, to repair, to create anew, /irrsparo, to prepare Let the Latin uses of this word be compared to pensate to bear away, or remove also to select 3. To cut off; to take away separo. to separate. the same Hebrew word in Joshua xvii. 15, where it is rendered cut with Josh. xvii. 15. 18. Ezek. xxiii. 47. prepare. down. " Ascend to the w»od country and cut down for thyself;" SeptuaGesenius says, This is one mo
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
point.
tions
is,
as in the Ar. ijii.
galaka, to be smooth, to
plane.
3.
make smooth. 2
ITALIAN.
To
Gen. i. 1. 21. 27. form, make. 1. Niph. passive of Kal. No. 2. Gen. ii. 4. Ezek. xxi. 30. Ps cii. 18. 2. To be born.
To
Parare, to prepare to garnish ; to adorn to propose an occasion to from or shelter to repair parry, or ward off, as a blow to defend to cover ;
;
;
:
;
;
;
INTRODUCTION. to teach
a garnishing ed, defended.
;
Apparare,
RUSSI.IN.
horsemanship, to stop parala, a wardiiic off, warded offor parried, sliieldparalo, prepared, ready, prompt,
ahorse
and
to stop,
to learn
;
in
;
apparato, learned, prepared
;
Uherayu, to put in order, to adjust, to mow or reap, apparato, preparation, hair. This word has the common prefi.\ u.
to cut, to dress as the
garnishiiienl.
Parecchio, a preparation; also equal, even, [L. par;] pnrecchiarc, to to make equal, to compare ; apparecchiare, to pre; paregs'iare, set in order appareggiare, to put in com pare, to ornament or garnish, to to equal. petition, to match,
PERSIC.
prepare
;
to
Compnrare,
to
compare.
«>
lo
vj poridan,
cut
off.
to unfurnish, to disgamish Disjiarare, to forget; disparare, sparare, make unready, lo disbowel, to separate, di-join, unpair ; to discharge, as
WELSH.
artillery.
/inparare, to learn. Par, something contiguous, or that is in continuity; a state of readinsss state ; to repair, or resort to, or JRiparare, to repair, to restore to the first or preparedness ; a pair or couple ; a fellow, match. have access to ; to parrif, or ward oil"; riparo, reparation, a fort, a bank Par, a cause the essence, germ or seed of a thing; & spear. fence, mound, remedy, shelter. Para, toconfinue,to endure, to persevere. Parad, a causing; parai, that causes to he. ;
Paraivd, prepared, ready parodi, to prepare. SPANISH. That all the foregoing words in the present European languages, [and sev-« eral others might have been added,] are fomieil from one stock or radix, coParnr, to prepare to stop, detain, prevent to end; to treat or use ill to The only inciding with the l.iatin jiaro, is a fact that admits of no question. stake at cards to point out the game, as pointers. doubt re.specling the correctness of the whole preceding statement, is, whethPiirada, a halt or slopping, end, pause a fold for cattle ; a relay, as of er the Latin and with regard is radically the same as the oriental X"13 paro where a or a or bet horses a dam or bank ; a stake troop: place parade, Indeed there to this point, I should suppose the evidence to be convincing. are assembled to exercise; p/irado, remiss, careless, unemployed. is good reason to believe that the oriental \erbs N13, 113, 1311, and 13J?, Par, a pair; a peer after-birth the handle of a bell. Certain it is that the English bear are all formed fioin one primitive radix. Aporar, lo stretch out Ihe hands or skirLs of a garment for receiving any and the latter corresponds nearly Ihe upper and hind qtiar- comprehends both the Latin/ero and j)ario, thing lo dig and heap earth round plants to close to bear. to dub as a ship. with rns and Eth. to couple male and female animals ter of a shoe lo the sole <(,/!,\^ a wardrobe; But admitting only vhat is certain, that all the foregoing European words Jlparador, a sideboard, a dresser in a kitchen, a workshop, show. are from one radix, we are then to seek for a primary meaning from which aparato, preparation, pomp, Aparear, to match to suit one thing to another, [pair.] may be deduced the following significations Lat. to prepare ; Ital. to adorn, or board on which Aparcjo, preparation, liainess, sizing of a piece of linen toparry, to stop, to defend, to repair, to learn Span, to prepare, to stop, to a ship. Port, to stop, to confine upon or something is to be painted, tackle, rigging employed on board of lay or stake as a wager, ^pair or coirple be contiguous, to drive or aim at, to parry, to pare ; Fr. to deck, toparry, to [Apparel, parrd.] Russ. to adjust, to dress, Comparar, to compare. stop, to pare ; Arm. to dress, to prepare, to parry ; to mow or reap; Welsh, ^re/'are(/«€ss, contiguity, a pair, a cause, to conjDespareJar, to make unequal. tinue or endui'e; and several other significations. J}isparar, to discharge, as fire arms. as to to shelte! to from sequester, goods.] Amparar, protect. [Aragon, The vai'ious siecnifications result throwing, sending, driving. To Eraparedar to confine or shut up. separate or remove is to drive or force apart hence to parry, and hence to Reparar, to repair; to observe carefully, to consider; to mend or correct; defend. Separation implies extension, a drawing out in length or time to guard, defend, protect ; to regain strength or recov- hence the 10 suspend or detain Portuguese senses of confining upon, reaching to the limit. This er from sickness to right the helm. gives the sense o{par, equal, that is, of the same extent, and hence coming Separar, to separate. to, and suiting, as in Latin convenio. Here let it be observed that admitting the word par, equal, to belong to PORTUGUESE. this family, as in the Welsh, we have strong reason to believe that the Shemitic 13n, to join, or fit together, to associate, whence as a noun, an associate, Parar, v. i. to stop, to cease to go forward to confine upon, to meet at is formed from the same root, or X12 for in the Saxon, we find not only to end, (o drive at something, lo aim at the end, to touch, to be bounded but gcfera, a companion, fellow or peer; gefera, answering precisely '* Nao posso parar com fome,* fera, to come to; to imply, involve, or comprise to the oriental word. '* 1 cannot bear hunger. Ninguem podc aqui parar," nobody can live or The sense of betting is from throwing down, as we say, to lay a wager. stay here. [t^ng. bear.] The sense of stopping is from setting, fixing, or from parrying. The sense Parar, v. t. lo stop, to hinder from proceeding to parry or ward off; to of or from extension, enadorning is from putting on, which is from sending, turn or change with regard to inclination or morals to lay or stake as a waof show, largement, as we say, to set off, and hence it is aUied to the sense _Pora«a, a stopping or place of stopping; a bet or wager. ger. or adPreparation is from producing, bringing forward, display, parade. to abet. Amparar, protect, shelter, defend, and often implies advancing, like ready, prompt, and justing, making right Comparar, to compare comprar, to buy, to procure. the latter word, prompt, from promo, to bring forth, affords a good illustraAparar, to pare, as an apple to mend or make a pen to parry a blow. tion of the words derived from paro. Aparelhar, to prepare, to fit, to cut out or rough hew aparelho, tackle in The senses of cutting off, paring, and the like, require no explanation. a ship for hoisting things, Eng. a parrel. The Italian, disparare, and the Spanish and Portuguese, disparar, to dis. Disparar, to shoot, to discharge, as fire-arms. fire arms, present the original sense of the root, to send or drive. This to make charge to observe i?f/)arar, to repair; to parry in fencing; to advert sense gives that of the Welsh pdr, a spear, as well as a cause, or that which iimends; to retrieve; to recover to recruit; to shelter; rc^aro, in fortifiA spear is a shoot, from the sense of thrusting ; and our word .<:pear impels. defense. cation, a pike, a lance, is 'probably formed from the root of bar and Welsh ber, a spit, r a spear, Lat. veru. Now in Chaldec, a bar i< X13i' from 13j;, to pass, a verb which is probably of the same family with X13. It is further to be observsbarra. and barra both written in Italian, bar is Parcr, to deck, adorn, trim, set off, embellish to parry or ward off. " Pa- ed that It is observed above that N13 is the English bear and the Latin pario ; but rerdes cuirs," to dress lether "Tiarerlepiodd'uncheva!," to pare a horse's Hebrew mS. parah,to be fruitful, to hear fruit, hoof. pario would seem to be the But this word seems to denote producing in animals. Parer, v. i. to stop paresse, idleness. applied to plants and However this may be, it is than the production of children. jPari, a lay, bet or wager parier, to bet or lay a wager. general, rather in English, as well as in Saxon, expresses the sense of both bear that certain Appareil, preparation, furniture, train, retinue, [Eng. apparel.] Appa Latin in Latin. The and fero, and the Greek tpipu, signify both raitx, tackle, sails and rigging, [Eng. parrel.] /ero pario or fruit. Pario, does not. So in the Goto carry and to proiluce, as young Pair, a peer, an equal pnire, a pair apparier, to pair, to match. In lo produce young. thic, bairan is to carry, gabairan is to carry and S^emparer, to seize, to invade. German, flihreii is to cairy, and geburen, to bring forth, to bear a child. In RejTirer, to repair. Dutch, beuren is to lift voeren, to carry and baaren, to bring forth, as Separer, to separate. Danish, barer, to cany, to support, children, to bear, to beget, to cause. ARMORIC. and to yield or produce. Sw. bara, to carry barn, a son. Irish, beirim, to bear or bring forth, and to tell or relate, like the Latin/ero, whence Fr. parPara, to dress, to trim, to stop, to parry, lo prepare ier, to speak. ;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
:
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
FRENCH.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
INTRODUCTION. It appears llicn (hat the English bi-ur and Ihe Saxon from which we have received it, and tlie Gothic and the Danish corresponding words unite, in the fiaine orthography, the senses of two words of difTerent ortliography in other I have found other examples of a similar kind. There is therelanguages. fore solid ground to helieve that all these words are from one primitive root the different n\odes of writing the word, and the several appropriations having originated in different families of the great races of men, before languages were reduced to writing; and when they came to he written, each word was written according to its usual proiumciation, and defined according to its use in each family. And by the intermixture of tribes, two or three derivatives of the same stock might have become a part of the same national language. Unquestionably the Greek (pipw, and tpoofw, are branches of the same stock. have, in the modern languages, decisive evidence that different verbs may have, and in fact have a common radix. Thus in English list and lust, are ditferent modes of writing the same word ; both are united in the other Teutonic dialects. So in Latin fibet and hibet ; and similar instances I have found in almost every language which I have examined. The Latin pareo, lo appear, to come to light, if not a compound word, may be of this family. Paries, a wall, if primarily a partition wall, is of the same stock. Per, belongs to this family, as its signification is TJfls.??/*^. The Sax. faran, to fare, Gr. jr.iptu^M^', seems to be from one branchof this stock, proba;
We
bly n^i?. See the word pass in the Dictionary, in the derivative senses of which there are some resemblances to those of S13.
133.
But it should be considered that the sense of covering is rarely express it. or never jirimary ; it is usually, from the sense of putting on, which is from the sense of throwing or pressing, or it is from overspreading, which is a spreading, stretching or throwing mer ; hence the derivative senses of covering and hiding. These latter senses are sometimes derived from others ; but these are the most general. Ami in this passage of Genesis, the literal sense is probably to put on, or to rub or spread over, a sense which coincides with that of the Chaldee and Syriac, Prov. xxx. 20, different-
though
ly applied.
The real original sense of this Shemitic verb is to remove, to separate, by Hence its application, in the Clialdec, Syrthrusting away or driving off. iac and Arabic, to denial, the rejection of God or truth. To deny or reject, is to thrust away. Hence from the Arabic, cajfer, an infidel, oiie who denies and rejects the Mohammedan religion ; hence Caffraria, the southern so called by the followers of Mohampart of Africa, the country of infidels med, just as the christians gave the name of pagans, to the inhabitants of villages, [pagvs,'\ who rejected the christian religion. This signification expl.ains the Hebrew uses of this word. Its literal sense is applied to the cleansing or purification of sacred things, as the altar. Lev. xvi. 18. In a spiritual sense, to the purification of the soul, a type of the purification by the blood of Christ; hence it is rendered atonement, or expiation. Hence ju'obably the sense of appeasing. Gen. xx.xii. 21. Prov. xvi. 14, though this may be from removing, or smoothing. The sense of forgiveness is from thrusting away or giving back, precisely as in the modern languages ; Lat. remitto, to send back or away ; forgive, to give back or away pardon, in French, Spanish, and Italian, has a like sense, which is more clearly exbitiited by the Dutch vergeeven, German vergcben ; ver being the English/nr, to give fur, to give away, hence, to reject, and remember no more. The sense of give and of the French donTo give, is to send, to cause to pass ; ner, is nearly the same as that of 133. and so of donner. Now it is a question of some moment whether the opinion that 133 is the same as the English cover, has not inclined lexicographers and commentators to render it by this word, in several passages, where the true sense is io forgive, or to purify by cleansing from sin. However this may be, the interpretation given above will fully disprove Lowth's assertion, that this word is never used in the sense of breaking or disannulling a covenant. So confident is the learned Bishop on this point that he ventures to call in question the reading, Isaiah xxviii. 18 ; and to suppose the true word to be 13n from 113 to break. With respect to the. reading I shall offer no opinion ; but if the present reading is correct, I am confident that no word in the Hebrew language is better fitted to expres.s Your covenant with death shall be unped away, abolished, or the sense. And so is the rendering in the Syriac. as in the version, disannulled. If 133 is a compound word and the first letter a prefix, it may be from the ;
:
This verb, says Lowlh, means to c-over, to cover sin, and so to expiate and it is never used in the sense of lireakini; or dissolving a covenant, though that notion occurs so often in the Scriptures nor can it be forced into this sense, but by a great deal of far fetched reasoning. See Isaiah xxvlii. 18. Lowth on Isaiah. Prelim. Diss. " texuit. "IflD, says Castle, operuit, Anglice, to couer; permctathesin, npuirra, Kpu^ri, peculiaiiter bitumine, sive glutinosa aliqua materia obduxit; picavit." Gen. vi. 14. Parkhurst gives to this verb the sense of covering or overspreading, as primary and deduces from it the Greek vpvnru, and English cover and coffer. ;
;
;
He however admits that in Isaiah xxviii. 18, it signifies, to annul, as a covenant. He also considers the sense of atonement or expiation to be radically that of covering. Gesenius agrees with the English Lexicographers, in assigning to this verb He admits the primary sense of covering or overlaying, as in Gen. vi. 14. that this word has the sense, in Isaiah xxviii. IS, oi'blotting out, obliterating. But he gives to it the sense of forgiving, in some passages, in which our In these pasversion has that o( purging aioay. Ps. Ixv. 3, and Ixxix. 9. sages. Castle renders the wo]d, to be merciful or propitious. In all these authors, there is, I conceive, a radical mistake, in supposing the primary sense to be to cover, and in the opinion that this Hebrew word A still greater mistake is in the supposition of is the English verb to cover. Castle and Parkhurst, that this, by a metathesis, gives the Greek upvmu. The English word cover comes to us through the French couvrir, from the Italian coprire, a contr.action of the Latin co-operio, whence co-opcrtus, The Latin aperio, is to open, and Italian coperto, covered, Eng. covert.^ operio, is to cover, both from pario, or one of [he roots in Br, which has just been explained. The root in these worils is per or par, and the sense is varior cover ed by prefixes ; perhaps ad-pario ab-pario and ob-pario. can have no connection with 133, unless this latter word is a compound,
Now
same root as the Arabic But the primary sense is but
whose
gafara,
signification
is
lo cover.
to throw or put on. It signifies also to forgive, to forgive is to send back or away, remitto, and not to cover. And I for want of knowing the primary sense of such verbs, the
apprehend that
word cover has been
often substituted for forgive, in the translating of this
verb.
S3 No.
1.
Heb
h)3,
To
h^
to sustain, to maintain, to
hold, to contain
Sw.
;
halla.
hd^2
To
hold,
comprehend.
So To
measure, that is, to ascertain the contents, or to stretch, and comprehend the whole. case, is very remote. Pah. To feed, to nourish. See '73S. Lotus see if we can gain any hght upon the subject of the primary sense Deriv. A measure also, custom, rite, manner, probably from holding or of 133 from the cognate languages. continued practice. Chaldee, "133 To deny, to reject. Prov. xxx. 9. To measure. Deriv. A measure. " She eateth and Syr. In Aph. 2. To wipe ; wipeth her mouth." Prov. xxx. 20. Matt, xxvii. 24. To follow ; to go behind ; Gr. axoXouOtu; that is, to hold Castle. Eth. tlQ) 3. To wash or cleanse. with 3
for a prefix.
This
may be
the fact, but the connection,
even
in that
Ch.
;
A
Gen. xviii. 1.5. Luke xii. 9. Syriuc, 1.213 To deny. To wipe, to wipe away, to disannul, to abolish. Prov. xxx. 20.
2.'
to, Is. xxviii.
or to press after.
The hinder
Deriv.
part
the poop of a ship
;
;
behind.
French,
cu/.
Castle. No. 2. Heb. 773 To finish to complete to make perfect. Gr. »aXor. 18. Gr. oAm, Eng. all, by the loss of the lirst letter S3 oil ; the whole To deny; todisheheve; to be an infidel to be impious; but in Welsh, holl, or oil ; and in Saxon al, lel and geall. Arabic, Ch. SS3 To crown to adorn Acts Hi. 13, 14. 2 Pet. ii. 1. 5. Jude 1.5. to blaspheme. To to Pih. perfect; 2. To cover; to conceal. complete to comprehend to embrace. a general rule, &c. Deriv. Comprehending to make expiation for one, and free him from crime. 3. To expiate universality Castle. Deriv. a crown all every one. Syr. '^.li.a To crown. ;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
Now the senses of the Chaldee, Syriac and Arabic, to deny, to reject, to disannul, to wipe, wash, or to cleanse by these acts, cannot be deduced from covering. In Hebrew, the word has the sense of covering, as the ark, with bitumen or pitch, in Gen. vi. 14 ; that is, to S77iear, or pay over, as our seamen now
Sam.
ZZiS As
Eth.
^A A
Ar.
V
^5
;
the Chaldee.
The same
;
To be weary
also, to cover.
or dull
;
to
be languid
;
to tire
:
also, to
crown
;
check
;
to shine.
Deriv. *
In this deduction of coKfc from the Latin,
ablest
French etymologist, whose works
I
I
am supported by
have seen.
Lunier, the
No.
3.
All
;
dullness
;
heaviness.
Heb. nS3 To hold Sw. h&lla.
Gr. wXuu;
; to
restrain
;
to shut or confine
;
to
INTRODUCTION. edge, wisdom, ignorance. These different significations may result from the different effects of the prefix on the original verb. Ch. ih3, nSo, '^3 To hold; (o restrain also, to trust tooonfiOein, or In Syr. to cause to perfect ^\\3aj the same word, signifies to be foolish, or mad also, to conto' hope. (See No. (i.) Also, to tinish (0 know, or to give understanding ; to observe to search or know thosume to cause In fail. Vt Gr. «ci,\no ; Lat. caZo to ask or seek to understand to discern or distinguish also to roughljInAph. To call; to cry out; to thunder; err, losin, to be foolish, or perverse. galw Knt;. to vail ; l.at. gullus, from crowing. In Sam. the same word signifies to look, and to be accustomed. See To hold lo restrain to forbid ; to deny. Syr. '\\s Deriv.
A pkce
of
confinement
Lat. caula.
;
;
;
rely on
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
.
;
;
;
;
O
Deriv.
all
Sam.
A-
;
;
Castell. col. 2.523.
a cork, bar or bolt.
;
That 12S/ is formed on the same root with a different prefix, is obvious and certain, from the correspondence of significations. This word in Hebrew signiiies to understand, or know ; to cause to undeistanJ ; to be wise, or to act wisely ; corresponding with the Ch. SjO above ; and being a mere dialectical orthogiaphy of the word. It signifies also lo deprive, strip, bei^..^> To keep; to preserve; to turn the face towards a thing reave ; and to waste, scatter and destroy also, to cast, as fruit or offspring ; Ar. So in Engli.-h,to behold. Also, to come to the end, a.s also, lo prosper. and look repeatedly. to and Ch. in to Ch. lo to abound food hlDi^ devour ; also, to to ; also, of life ; also, feed, pasture understand^ complete, lo finish ; also, to found, hinder, or detain ; also, to look attentively; also, to sprout ; also, to take up- to lay the foundation. This is T}D with jy prefixed. on a pledge, or upon trust ; supra, Chaldee. (See No. 6.) Syr. to found, to finish, to adorn. No. 4. Heb. Th2 To finish; to consume ; to bring to naught; to waste ; to fail. Ar. ^^'' '^ shakala, to bind under llic belly; to gird ; to bind the' (See No. ^.) No. .5. Ch. SjS To eat to consume ; also, to take ; to hold to con- feet; lo fetter; to shackle; to form, or fashion; to be dubious, obscure, tain. In Aph. to fjed; to give food ; also, to call; to thunder; to roar, or and intricate; to agree, suit or answer to ; to be like ; to have a beautiful form ; to know, perceive, or comprehend ; to hesitate ; lo be ignorant. Debellow also, to piilili-.h to accuse ; to dcfaiuc. See Castell. Col. 3750. Heb. to eat; to consume. rivative, a shackle. To this root Castle refers the English skill ; and it is certain the words ftSam. 2, To eat. correspond both in elements and in sense. Now in the Gothic and TeuTo VV.O to accuse. a crime to as tonic the verbs ; I ; Syr. publish divulge, languages, corre.sponding to these Shemiiic verbs, signify in To sulFice, as wc say, it is well, Lat. valeo ; also, to be Saxon, scylan, to separate, to distinguish Icelandic and Swedish, skilid, Eth. ATl to divide, separate, sever ; whence shield, that which separates, and or exist ; that is, to be held, or to be fixed or permanent, to continue. hence defends ; D. scheelen, to differ; schillen, to peel, or pare ; whence to devour ; to cori'ode ; Lat. hclluo. Ar. to eat scale and shell. To this root our lexicographers refer skill. The prefix in this word would seem to have the force of a Now is negative, like L. ex. in To trust ; to cojumit to another No. 6. Ar. y. confidence. it 5 possible to suppose that these words can be formed from a common root ? The sense of sin and fully is probably from wandering, deviating, as in (See No. 3.) and this is dcliiium a above. as modification of of the primary sense to trust, ; Etli. with a prefix only "73, to Tl Or the tP has, in these Lat. calleo ; W. gallu ; Eng. stretch or extend ; that is, departure, separation. No. To be able lo
Zy
To
hold, or restrain.
Eth. tlAf^ To hold, restrain, or prohibit. Deriv. Lat. oKus ; a fellow, or companion.
;
;
;
;
;
a
A
;
;
^3
®
A
7.
Heb.
8.
Ch.
;
by
prevail
;
;
senses, the Ibrce of a negative. The sense of knowing, understanding, is usually or always from taking, In this appliholding, or extending to; as we say, I take
could.
No.
'7D;>
To
digest
;
to
consume.
(No.
5.)
your meaning.
cation these words would seem to be directly from the Eth. and Ch. ShJ to tie ; to bind ; to unite ; also, to divide, im3- 5^ * To collect to be able ; the Latin calico, to be hard, and to know or be well skilled. This is the |)rimary sense of the word, or rather of this pel, or compel. These to extend. verbs this is from the same root as h^D, vhz, TiSd, we know That to to or word lT\D also, to strain ; impel press; root; urge, by are diU'eronl modilications of one radix ; and lunce the English hold, call, the Samaritan 24 ? iJ which signifies all, and which is a mere dialectical hollow, heal, hale ; the l^ulin calo, caulis, calico, callus ; Greek, K;Ua, «a\ or >ta.\\M ; and a multitude of words in all the modern languages of spelling of the Heb. and Ch. 13. The sense of depriving and wasfing, in tlie Hebrew, is from separation, Europe. The sense of holding, restraining, forbidding, hindering, and keeping, are the sense of the Gothic and Teutonic words but it is to be noticed that loo obvious to need any explanation. They arc from straining. To thij| this sense seems to imply thiowing, as one mode of paiUng, and this is also sense is nearly allied the sense of measuring,, or ascertaining what is held the direct act of fouudmg, laying the foundation. When we turn our attention to the Arabic, new afnnities are disclosed. That which is contained is all, the whole that is or contained.
Ar.
;
;
!
;
compre-
hended, from the
.->ense
bind, to gird, to shackle, and hence the English bind is to strain, the sense of hold. And here origin and piimary sense of shall, should ; Saxon Hence we see scealan, to be obliged ; that is, to be bound or constrained. why the words scale, shell and shall are all written alike in Saxon, sceal ; for scale and shell are fiom peeUng, or covering, binding. From this verb the Saxon has scyld, a crime, or guilt, Lat scelus, and
The
of extension.
The signification of finishing or perfecfing, seems, in a good sense, to be from that of soundness ; a sense which is from stretching or strength. Orj it maybe from Cuming to the end, Wkc: finish Mv\achieve, or from shutling,\^ And the seiise of consuming, wasting, failing, may be froui bringclosing. this may ing to an end. In Latin, to consunie is to take all ; and possibly be the sense of this vci b. but the Arabic sense of failure would seem rather to be fiom holding, slopping, or coming to an end. or be from The sense of eating may taking apart, but from consuming,
first definition is to
word.
we
The
arrive
radical sense of
at
the
The German ha;; the same word in schuld, guilt, culpabiliscyUl, a shield. Danish skulde, should, and scyld, a debt, a ty, debt; Dutch, schuld; This >vord scyld, shuld, aiid schuld, think the primary sense' fault, a crime ; Sw. sktdd. the same. is the Enghsh shoidd, the preterit of the verb -l:all ; and it is the word is to feed, to crowd, to stiill'; the primary sense of tlic root applied to thisj German, Dutch, D.rnish, Swedish, Norwegian, Saxon, lor under the Chaldee loot we find words which signify the used in the particular act nut of a species of oak, the Gr. ixtAi;!, and a collection or crowd of people, {Icelandic, and Swiss Lord's prayer, to express what is rendered in English Here we see the primary sense of the word 'debts ; forgive us our debts. [Gr. xK.!,^ both of which are from collecting or pressing together. The sense of seeing and looking is from reaching or casting and stri- ]is to be held, or bound ; hence, liable. The English word guilt may be from the same root, without a prefix ; but whether it is or not, we observe king, or from holding OY fi.cin g the eyes on. The sense of trusting seoins also to be that of holding lo or resting on. the word expresses more than the English word debt, trespass or offense ; it comprehends the sense of /aurt, or sin, with that of being held, or liable The English itold in beh^ild is liom this root. The sense of calkng, ruuring, and thunder, is from impelling the voice Ito answer or to punishment. Debt, in the modern use of the word, implies or sound ; a pressing, driving, or straining, applied to sound ; like the LatinI ,the latter, but not the former; trespass and offense imply the sin, but not have no English word that includes both senHence the sense of publishing, accusing and defam-i ithe liability to answer. appcllo, from pello. to |ses, except guilt, and this seems to be hardly adequate express the full some of the derivatives of No.
5, I
am
incliiieii to
;
We
ing.
^
j
The sense of sprouting, in the Arabic, is a shooting or pushing out, as in sense of scyld. To account for the various significations of the same word, in different other cases ; Lat. caulis. The sense of ability, power, strength, in No. 7, is from straining, stretch-] 'languages, and often in the same language, it is necessary to find the primaHence Lat. calleo, action expressed by the root; and in compound words it is necessary to ing, or holding, as in other words of the like sense. to^ ry observe or ascertain the different effects produced on the original word by be skilled, and to be haiaWi6ie has two different significations; that may be In Chaldee, to understand, know, or considei ; to look or behold; tocau.sc to understand ; Rabbinic, to be ignorant wlience its derivatives, knowl- imparted ; and in law, not partible, or divisible. Such is the fact also with ;
INTRODUCTION. number of instances of similar diver- cradle, through tlie Hebrew and through the Syriac, with the Latin radi}. sities in tlie application of prefixes may be found in the Shemitic lansjuag^es Here again we find the sense of roughness or grafing. Then turning to and this will account for ditferences which otherwise seem utterly irre- the Welsh, we find grydiaw, which signifies to utter a rough sound to concilable. shout, hoop or scream grydwst, a murmur, fiom gryd, a shout or hoop, and We find in our mother tongue, that the same word signifies to heal, and this froin rhyd, the word above mentioned so that crj/iiw, to shake, whence I
impassirmate.
am persuaded
a vast
;
;
;
;
;
conceal, Lat. celo ; Saxon htel, health ; halan, Jwlaii, to heal, to conceal ; ge-hwlan and ge-hclan, to heal and to conceal ; Old English hele. Hence we see that the English heal and the Latin celo are the same word diiTerently applied, but from a common signification, which is to make strong or fast, or to hold, from the sense of pressing. Or perhaps the Latin cel/> may have this sense of holding, restraining ; and heal may rather be to
from making perfect. No.
We may now
2.
;
is
as
grydiaw, to shout, and this is the Italian SdS.on grtudan ; Sw. grata; Dan. grader; Dutch kryteii ; Geiman greiten. This word in French is contracted, by the omission of the last radical, into crier for crider ; whence, probably, wc have cry, W. crj. Hence we find that the sense of is to utter a fry rough
sound
;
and this is connected with the braying of the ass, ivith shaking, trembling, and with roaring, murmuring, and thunder. The connection in example, is so marked as to preclude all hesitation as to the identity of If this word contains the words.
Supra.
also see the radical sense of holy
from the same root gridare; Sp. and Port, gritar cradle,
Saxon hal and
ge-lial,
;
this
whole, sound, ssife; halig, ho]y; halgian, tohailow. the sense of se|)aration, or driving off, like Latin sacer, as it may. it is fiom The Shemitic roots TU, Din, mn, and all, in some of the languages But I am inclined to be- of that stock, coincide in sense and elementsmp, shutting, confining, or restraining intercourse. with the English grate, French lieve the primary sense of holy is sound, entire, coinciding with tlie radical gralter ; and if the first letter is a prefix, they would seem to unite with sense of heal. the Latin ra(io. But this is a point 1 would not undertake to determine. Clod, Laudo, Claiido. One fact more. The Welsh cri, above mentioned, signifies a cri/ and In Welsh clod is praise, from Hod, a forcible utterance. This is the Eng- as an Now this coincides with the Latin criidus, in adjective, rough, raw. lish loud, and Lat. laudo, which with a pretix becomes plaudo. In Welsh, sense ; and crudus with the Wel*h cryd, above mentioned. llodi signifies to reach out, to crave, from the radical sense of Hod, to thrust The Dan. brygger, English to brew, are probably connected with break, out or extend ; but according to Owen, llodi is from llawd, which signi- viit\\ So under this loot, the Welsh grediaw, sigfreckle, and with rough. fies a shooting out, or a going onward, productiveness, a lad, and as an nifies to heat, scorch, parch, whence grcidyU, a griddle, from graid, that jdjective, tending forward, craving, lewd; llodig, craving, brimming; shoots in rays, heat, ardency, from gra, that shoots, or rises, as the nap or Uodineb, lewdness. Now. beyond all <|uestion, these words are tlic Chal- frieze of cloth. The latter is probably a contracted word, of the same famdee, Syriac, Hebrew, and Samaritan IT to beget to bring forth ; to cause ily, but not the root, as Owen supposes. But the radical sense implies a The Arabians shaking, agitation and roughness. to be be born ; and as a noun, a child of cither sex, a lad. ,•
;
and Ethiopians use vau or
waw, where
the Helirews use yod.
The Arabic Saxon.
corresponding word
is
^
^
(DA,?
the Ethiopic
to beget, to
bring
— Mcetau,io
Meet, mete, measure. put, to place; Fv. mettre,
It.
mettere,S\). Von.
me-
ter, Lat. tnitto.
forth.
Mlaudo. But the same Ametan, gemetan, to meet, to find, to measure. Greek word x\iiw, xKiio^j, signifies to shut or make fast. This is the Latin a Gemeting, gemetmig, meeting. The Saxons used h for the Greek » and the Latin c ; and cludo, claudo. Gemet, gemete, fit, suitable, Eng. tneet ; also, painted or portrayed. with these words accords tlie Saxon Idid, a cover English a lid ; that Gemetegan, gemetian, to moderate ; gemctlic, moderate, modest. which shuts or makes fast. That these words are all from one root, is Mete, measure, mode, Lat. modius, modus. a fact, apparent beyond any reasonable doubt nor is there the least dilfi.Meter, measure in verse, meter. [Not mefre.] culty in ascertaining the affinity, for the radical sense, to reach forward, to JMetere, an inventor, a painter. To thrust, gives the sense of thrust, to strain, solves the whole mystery. MtBte, middUng, [mcdiocris,] modest, moderate. begetting and i)roducing to strain or throw out the voice, gives the sense Mot, gemot, a meeting, a council. of praise ; and to thrust or press together, gives the sense of closing and a council of wise men.
But
this is not all.
In Greek, the verb
xAfiM,
a
;
;
;
fast. In this manner, words, which, at first \'icw, appear to have no connection, will, when pursued through different lang-uages, assimilate and unite, not only without forced analogies, but in defiance of all preconceived opinions and the reluctant mind is at last compelled to admit their
Witena-gcmot, Motion, to meet, especially for debate. Eng. to moot. Gothic. Motyan, gamotyan, to meet, to find. Mota, a place for the receipt of toll or customs. Dutch. Ontmoeten, to meet, to encounter.
identity.
Meet en, and toemeeten,
making
;
There is another set of words whose derivation from the same root is very These are the Danish stutter, to certain, though perhaps less obvious. shut, close, conclude, linish, determine ; stutter, a key-keeper, a jailor ; Swedish, sluia, claudere, obscrare, to shut. or sliutup,or end; slott, a castle D. sleutel, a key slot, a lock, a castle, a conclusion sluiten, to shut, lock, ;
;
;
close, stop, conclude
— —
to measure. Meeter, a measurer, Gemoeten, to meet ; gemoet, a meetiiig. German. Mass, measure, meter ; 7»asse, moderation. Messen, vermessen, to measure ; messer, a measurer. Gemass, measure ; also conformable, suitable ; Eng. meet, suitable man gemassigt, temperate, moderate.
—
;
Ger-
G. schloss, a lock schliessen, to close, conclude, fin; schleuse, a sluice ; D. sluis, id. Eng. sluice, that is, Swedish. Mota, to meet, to fall on, to come to, to happen. [This is or fastens ; Low Latin, exclusa. See Spelman's Glossary. the sense ofjijiditig.] are unequivocally formeil from tlie root of claudo, clausi, by Mote, a meeting. the prefix s, just as the Welsh yslae, slack, loose, is formed on Uac, and Mot, and emot, towards, against; as in motstci, to stand against, to observe all the ysjjeiliaw, on yspail, spoil, and this on the root oipeel. resist. Teutonic dialects use the dental t, as the final radical, except the German. Mala, to measure ; matt, measure, meter, mode. The Latins use both the dental and a sibilant, claudo, clausi, clausus. Mattelig, moderate, middling, frugal, temperate. If the Danish lyd, sound, Sw. lyda, to sound, is the same word as EngMalta, to be sufficient, to satisfy, to cloy. lish loud, these words belong to this family. fetter,
ish,
shackle
;
—
;
which shuts These words
We
Danish.
Cradle.
Another example.
The English word
— Milder,
to
meet,
contrary, opposite, against,
to
to,
convene
towards,
;
mtidcormodc,
for,
a
meeting ; mod,
on, by, aside, abreast, as in
Saxon cradel, is in Welsh modsetter, to set against, to oppose modsiger, to say against, to contradict In Welsh, the verbs crydu, cry- mod-vind, a contrary wind. cryd, a rocking, a shaking, a cradle. diaw, crydian, signify to shake, to tremble. These correspond to the Irish Moed, moden, ripe, mellow, mature. [Qu. Lat. mills.'] creaWmm, to shake Greek «pa5aK, to shake, to swing. The Welsh verbs Mode, manner, fashion. [Probably fi'om the Latin.] are by Owen, deduced from rhyd, which signifies a moving. Now n^^T in Maade, measure, form, style of writing, way, mode, manner, fashion. Hebrew, Chaldee, and Ethiopic, signifies to shake or tremble. The same [This is the native Danish w ord corresponding to the Lat. modus.] Maadelig, moderate, temperate. Mtet, enough, sufficient; tntclter, to satisfy, or sate, to glut. word in Arabic .Xc, signifies to thunder to impress terror; to tremFrom the same root are the G. 7nit, D. ?net, mede, Sw. and Dan. med, Gr. to shake. ble This coincides with the Latin to roar, to and cradle,
;
;
;
;
rudo,
;
bray
we know
;
from the voice of the ass, that roughness or shaking is an ingredient in the sense of this word. know it also from rudis, one of tlie af-
We
finities of 7-udo. There run hither and thither
;
shake.
In
Hebrew lin
Syriac and Eth.
to
is
to
also in
Arabic
i
\
move one way and
signifies to
rub or scrape.
,
which
is
rendered
to
the other ; to tremble ; to tremble or shake, and to palpitate ; in This coimects the word directly with
signifying with. By the first significafion of the Saxon matan, or metan, we find that this word, which is the English mcrt, is also the Frencli mettre and Lat. mitto, Meet is only a modithe sense of which is to throw or send, to put, to lay. 'fication of the same sense, to come to, to fall, to reach, hence to find ; as we say, to fall on. The sense of painting or portraying is peculiar to the Saxon. I am not confident that this sense is from finding ; but we observe that metcre is renIitra,
INTRODUCTION. This application coincides witli the English meet, but particularly with The sense oi paint then may be to find a painter. ithe Swedi.sh and Danish sense of the word. out, to devise or contrive. 4. To make thin, to attenuate The sense of dreaminit is also peculiar to the Saxon. The sen.se may he probably from stretching. Among the Arabic nouns formeil under this root, we fand a measure, or to devise or imagine, or it may be to rove, as in some other words of like si;;modius, showing that this verb is the same as the Ciialdec and Hebrew ; we infra. If so, this sense will accord with the Syriac nification. j.ic find also matter or pus, and lenity. Qu. Lat. mitis. dercd an inventor
anil
j
;
1
The other sifjniiications present no difficulty. To meet, is to come to, to reach in proceeding or in extending; hence to find. The primary seite of is to extend, to stretch to the full length or size of a thing. is from extending or reaching to. fit, suitable, like par, peer, pair, Sos7/!( is from the Latin seguor, through the French, to follow, to press or toward. See yor, under X13. supra. reach to be from the Saxon dialect, but moot The English meet and mete appear from the Gothic. Let it be remarked that in the Saxon, meet and mete, are united in the same orthography ; and in the Dutch the orthography is not very different ; so in the other ontmocten,gemoeten, to meet, and meeten, to measure. Not measure Meet,
languages. In German, mass is measure, and messen, to measure ; but the sense of Yet that mass is the same word as tneet, fit, varied meet, does not occur. is suitable, anonly in dialect, appears from this, that gemass, with a prefix, swering to the English meet. The Swedish and Danish words follow the Gothic orthography ; Swedish
In Chaldee, W3D or nt3D> signifies to come to, to happen, to reach, [to The meet,] to be ripe or mature, to cause to come, to bring or produce. first sense gives that of finding, and tlie latter gives that of maturing, and
we observe tliat matter, or pus, is from the Arabic J^^ madda, and the sense ai mature from the Chaldee NBO mita. Yet in the use o( maturate from the Latin maturo, we connect tlie words, for to maturate, is to ripen, and to generate matter. In Syriac, this verb signifies the same as the Chaldee, to come to; and also to be strong, to prevail, that is, to strain or stretch, the radical sense of power. In Hebrew, NXD has the sense of the foregoing verb in the Chaldee, to « find, to come to, to happen. In Chaldee, this verb signifies to find, and to be strong, to prevail ; bencr both in Hebrew and Chaldee, to be sufficient. Here we see the Danish and Swedish, matter, and mhlta, to be sufficient. This is also meet, dialec-
These significations give to meet, to fall on, to come to, to happen. lically varied. the sense of finding, and are closely allied to the senses of the Arabic verb In Syriac also this verb signifies to be strong or powerful ; also in Pah. to bring or press out, to defecate, which sense unites this word with the Heb. infra. nSD, to press, to squeeze. In Ethiopic, this verb signifies to come, to hapThe Dauisli verb is mijder, to meet, but in both the Swedish and Danish, pen, to cause to come, to bring in, to bring forth. Now it is evident tjiat Sw. tii^ita, the sense of measure is expressed by a different orthography. NYD, and the Chaldee XBD, are dialectical forms of the same word ; tiie In these two former to measure ; matt, measure ; Dan. maade, measure, mode. coinciding with the German mass, in orthography, but with the and to satisfy. See infra, the otlier languages wo find also the sense of sufficiency, languages, in signification. In Chaldee, ysn signifies the middle, and as a verb, to set in the miiUlc. and Heb. .and Ch. xxn. Ar. Jv to pass the middle, in Qu. bnot fliis a Syriac, to be divided in the middle. But in these Gothic dialects, there is one application of race
^^
^
We
^^\
We
The Latin 7iwdtis is from this root, and by its orthography, it seems to That the Shemitic wonis, nno, XBD, NVD and nDN, are words of the have been received from the Gothic race. The sense is measure, limit, from same stock with meet, mete, Lat. metinr, there can be no doubt, but it is of meeting and meatthe radix of many words not extending, or comprehending. This then becomes easy to understand why the different significations when they are a sense as which express limitation or restraint, moderate, modest, modify uring. "should be united in one word, in the Saxon language, the Shemitic, and in most of the Teudirectly contrary to that of the radical verb. expressed by very different words in In Saxon, Gothic, and other northern lan- tonic languages. We know indeed that in German a sibilant letter is often This leads us a step further. whence English used, in words which are written with a dental in all the other kindred languaguages, jnorf, moed, signifies mind, courage, spirit, anger, moody. The primary sense is an advancing or rushing forward, which ges. But in this case the German mass, measure, mu.st coincide with TO, as or stretching forward, and 'must the Swedish expres.ses mind or intention, that is, a setting mhta, and Dan. maade, and the Saxon metan, Dutch gtSo the Latin animus, also spirit, animation, heat, and lastly, anger. \moeten, Goth, motyan, Sw. mota, Dan. moder, with the Chaldee KOD, hut and the Greek uivoi, mind, signifies also, strength, gives rise to animosity 'not with the word XVD. same radical sense. is from the Mania force, vehemence, and anger. It may not be impossible nor improbable that all these words are fium one Let us now connect this root or these roots, with the Shemitic languages. stock or radix, and that the different orthographies and applications are diaIn Hebrew and Chaldee, ID, a measure. lectical families or races of signifies to measure changes of that root, introduced among different This coincides with the Latin metior, and Gr. niipw, as well as with the men, before languages were reduced to writing. Saxon, Dutch, Danish, and Swedish, which all write the word with a denIn the Latin m^msus, from metior, the n is probably casual, the original tal, but the German is mass. reason to think there are I have mesure. being mesus, as in the French In Syriac ^io signifies to escape, to get free, that is, to depart, a modifi- many instances of this insertion of n before d and s. From this exhibition of words and their significations, we may fairly incation of the sense of extending in the Arabic. A derivative in Syriac sigLat. mitto, French mettre, of the foUoiving words. nifies a dvity, toll or tribute and we have seen in the Gothic, that mota is a fer the common origin meet, to come \o,meet, fit, and me(f, to measure, Lat metior, metor, It may be from toll-house. measuring, that is, a portion, or perhaps income. English Gr. M"P«'>t"'Ps". Lat. mensura, Fr. mesure, Eng. measure, Lat. modui, mode. Sax. and Goth, mod, mind, anger, whence moody, Eng. moot, Lat maturus, This word in .\rabic madda, signifies, mature, and Eng. matter. 1. To stretch or extend, to draw out, to make or be long, to delay or give In Welsh, niadu signifies, to cause to proceed; to send, [Lit mitto;'] to lime, to forbear, to bring forth. To extend is the radical sense of measure. and mdd sigto become beneficial suffer to go off; to render productive 2. To separate, or throw offer out; to secern, secrete or discharge. Hence and mad, the or goes forward, hence what is good Here we have nifies, what proceeds to become matter or sanies, to produce pus, to maturate. or beneficial. adjective, signifies, proceeding, advancing, progressive, good the origin of the word matter, in the sense ofpus. It is an excretion, from This word then affords a clear proof of the radical sense ot good. We have throwing out, separating, freeing, discharging. Here we have the sense of like evidence in the English better, best, and in prosperity, which is from the Latin mitto, eniitto. the Greek irpcaf^p", to advance. 3. To assist, to supply. This sense is probably from coming to, that is, to " I was sick and In Welsh also we find madrez, matter, pus mMiru, to dissolve, to putrein visited me. 1 was and prison ye approach or visit. ye That these words are from the same root as the Arabic came to me." Math. fy, to become pus. ,-
;
nO
;
;
A^
;
;
;
;
xxv.
Vol.
I.
D.
INTRODUCTION. jthe
•S^ supra, think to he very obTious; and here we observe that the Welsh have one important sense derived from the root, that of gooiiy which occurs in none of the other lanpiuages. But the primary sense is the same as that of the other significations, to go forward, to advance ; hence to promote interest or happiness. Here we have undeniable evidence that the sense of good, Welsh mad, and the sense of matter, pus, proceed from the
the
I
same as that of light. So the river .9ar, in Europe, is doubtless fiom same source as the Orienntal IIN, to shine, whence air. And inj,
which, in Hebrew, signifies to flow as water, as well fies in Chaldee and Syiiac, to shine.
as to shine, chiefly signi-
To show the great importance, or rather the absolute necessity, of ascertaining the primary sense of words, in older to obtain clear ideas of the sense of ancient authors, more particularly of difficult passages in dead languages, let the reader attend to the following remarks. same radix. In commenting on certain parts of Isaiah xxviii, Lowth observes in his Preliminary Dissertation, the difficulty of determining the meaning of niH, in verse 15th. In our version, as in others, it is rendered agreement but, " The Greek ^i^u is rendered, to speak or say ; to tell, count, or number says Lowth, the word means no such thing in any part of the Bible, exin the ISth verse following nor can the lexicographers give any satisto gather, collect, or choose ; to discourse and to lie down. This last defi- cept factory account of the word in this sense." Vet he with Vitringa, nition shows that this word is tlie English he and and from this agrees applilay ; that in these passages it must have this The difficulty, it signification. cation, doubtless, the Latins had their lectus, a bed, that is, a spread, a lay The Latin lego, the same verb, is rendered, to gather; to choose; to seems, has arisen from not understanding the primary sense of seeing, for the verb to and as a noun the word signifies sight, generally signifies sef,read to steal, or collect by stealing; and the phrase, legere oram, signifies vision and so it is rendered in the Latin version annexed to to coast, to sail along a coast ; Vanderhooghf s legere vela, i< to furl the sails ; legere halt Bible. The seventy render it by o-uwBin.i, a covenant or league ; and they are turn, to take breath; legere littus, to sail close to the shore legere milites, followed " Nous avons intelligence avec le sepulchre." by the moderns. to enlist or muster soldiers; legere pvgno, to strike, perhaps to lay on with French. " Noi habbiam fatta lega col sepulcro." Italian of Diodati. the fist. Parkliurst understands the word to signify, to fasten, to settle, and he cites It would seem, at first view, that such various significations cannot pro" Joab took Amasa by the beard." Here the sense is ceed from one radix. But the fact that they do is indubitable. The prima- 2 Sam. XX, 9, ;nn, obvious and fiom this and other passages, we may infer with certainty, ry sense of the root must be to throw, strain or extend, which in this, as in that the radical sense is to reach to, or to seize, hold, or If the sense is almost all cases, gives the sense of speaking. The sense of fix. collecting, to reach to, then it accords with covenant, conveniens, coming to ; if the choosing, gathering, is from throwing, or drawing out, or separating by some such act or from throwing together. The sense of lying down is, sense is to fix, or fasten, then it agrees with league, Lat. ligo, and with pact, The sense of reading, in Latin, pactum, from pango, to make fast; all from the sense of extension, stretchprobably, from throwing one's self down. Hence the meaning of ntn, the breast; that is, the firm, is the same as that of speaking in the Greek, unless it may be from collect- ing, straining. And if the English gaze is the same word, which is not ing , that is, separating the letters, and uniting them in syllaliles and fixed, strong part. words for in the primitive mode of writing, diacritical points were not used. improbable, this determines the appropriate sense of seeing in this word, to to be or to look or reach with the eye fixed. fix, But probably the sense of reading is the same as in speaking. But we have other and decisive evidence of the primary The phrases legere oram, legere littus, in Latin, may coincide with that of signification of our seamen, to stretch or lay along the shore or coast, or to hxig the land ; this word in the obvious, undisputed meaning of iriN, the same word with to seize ; hence, behind, especially if this word lay in Sanscrit signifies to cling, as I have seen it a prefix, which signifies to catch, or lay hold on stated in some author, but for which I cannot vouch. If this sense is at- following, as if attached to ; and hence drawing out in time, to delay. tached to the word, it proves it closely allied to the L. ligo, to bind. That the .sense of throwing, or driving, is contained in this word, is cerit is not improbable that the Arabic jLs* hauz, may be a word tain from its derivatives. Thus, in Greek, airUiyw signifies to select, to collect; of the same stock and this signifies among other senses, to collect, contract and also to reject, to repudiate, and to forbid ; which imply throwing, or draw together, to accumulate, to have intercourse or commerce with thrusting away. another. The latter sense would give nearly the signification of the HeNow, if throwing, sending, or driving, is the primary sense, then the Lat- brew word. in lego, to read, and lego, legare, to send, are the radically the same word Lexicographers are often embarrassed to account for the difTerent signifiinflections of the verb being varied, arbitrarily, to designate the distinct ap- cation of words that are evidently derived fiom the same root. Thus, plications, just as iupello, appello, appeUere, to drive, and appello, appelin Hebrew, llty is rendered to sing to look, behold, or observe ; and to lare, to call. And here it may be worth a moment's consideration, whether several; rule; and its derivatives, a ruler, a wall, the navel-string, a chain or can a word signify to rule, and to sing, and to look ? &c. necklace, words with prefixes, such as slay, flog, and the Latin plico, W. plygu, are; can be more easy or natural. The sense is in both cases to stretch Nothing not formed on the root of lay, that is, lag or lak. The sense of slay. Sax. or To sing is to strain the voice ; to rule is to restrain strain, to reach. " slogan, slcean, is properly to strike, to beat; hence in Saxon, Hig slo- men ; and to see is to reach, or to hold in view. gon heora wedd," they sleic their league, or contract ; that is, they struck In Latin sero, signifies to sow, to plant, to beget, to spread ; consero. a bargain. It signifies also to throw, as to slag one into prison ; also to fall to set or lay. The sense of killing is derivative from that of striking,! ito sow, and to close or join ; desero, to leave off, to desert ; assero, to plant a striking down. by or near, and to assert, affirm, and pronounce; dissero, to discourse ; to insert, to implant ; resero, to unlock, to open, to disclose. Desero, Ftog-, Lat. _^ig-o, signifies primarily to rwsA, drive, strike, Eng. to lick ; [insero, " utsit desertum and if formed on the root of lay, is precisely the desert, Ainsworth says, is a compound of de and sero, popular i)hrase, to lay on. [to And dissero he supposes must be a metaIf plico is formed with a prefix on or its root, it must have been ori- Iquod non seritur nee colitur." /ay Then to fold, would be to lay on or phorical use of the word. Now, on the principles 1 have unfolded, nothing ginally pe/jco, that is, belico, belay. is easier than an explanation of these words. The sense of sero is to throw, close ; to lay one part to another. this word is ihe Welsh plygu, Ito thrust ; its literal sense is applied to sowing and to fold, which Owen makes to be a planting ; consero is to compound of py and lly. The latter thrust or drive together; desero is to throw from; assero is to throw, in word must be a contraction of llyg. know that the word rejUy is from the French repliquer, the Latin words, or to throw out, as in appello ; dissero is to throw words or arguments, the sense of is to throw or thrust in; 'with itisero to is not to spreading, Now, expatiating; replica. fold back, but to send back, to throw reply, back, as words, or an answer ; and this gives the precise sense of lay, to 'resero is to throw or drive from, hence to unlock or open. It is by resorting to the primary idea of words that we are able to exthrow, to send, which must be the sense of the radical word. It is no inconsiderable evidence of the truth of my conjecture, that wei plain applications, apparently, or in tact, diverse and even contrary. A veconstantly use the phrase to lay on, or lay to, as synonymous with pli/, a ry comnion example of this contrariety occurs in words which signify to word belonging to this family. To pledge, another of this family, is to or defend. For instance, the Latin arceo signifies to drive oft", and to prolay guard down, to deposit ; and the primary sense of play. Sax. plegan, Dan. leger,, tect, secure, hold, restrain, or keep from departingor escaping; two senses diSw. leka, is to strike or drive. This is extremely natural for o/cco signifies to thrust off, jrectly opposite. In Welsh, //wfiau' signifies to throw, drive back and this act defends the person or object attacked. Or if or to to dart; fling, cast, pelt ; drift; repel, from llur. a darting, a flash, glance, or sudden throw ; hence llu(;ed. we suppose tlie sense of strai)iing \o be anterior to that of repulsion, which lightLlug signifies also, that breaks, or begins to open, a gleam, a break- lis not improbable, then the act of straining or holding produces both efi'ecls; ning. ing out in blotches the plague. Llwg siunihes also, that is apt to break to repel or stop what advances to assault, and protect what is inclosed or asout, that is bright, a tumor, eruption. These words coincide with Eno-- saulted. The word- guard and warren present a similar application of the lish light, Lat. luceo ; the and all languages which I have examined, furnish a multiprimary sense of which is lo throw, shoot, or dart primary idea and these words all contain the elements of ^o^ and fling. tude of similar examples.
LEGO.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
Now
;
;
;
How
;
Now
I
We
|
I
;
I
;
;
!
;
;
;
In Welsh, llyru signifies to fiill fiat, to lie is evidently allied to lay and lie.
extended, or
to squat.
This
These
exaiiiples illustrate Ihe utility of extensive researches in language ; cogmite languages throw light on each other one language often reThese senses agree also with that of luck, to fall, or come suddenly ; that taining the radical meaning of a word which the others have lost. Who, or to rush drive js, for instance, that is acquainted along. only with the English use of the verb to In Russ. vlagayu is to lay, or put in equivalent to the German einlegen. have, would suspect that this word and happen arc radically one, and that The Latin ^iw is contracted from _^uo-o; and the radical sense of flow is the primary sense is tofall or rush, hence to fall on and seize ? Vet nothing ;
as all
;
INTHODUCriON. 7. To swell, distend, expand, spread. 8. To stir, shake, agitate, rouse, excite. /lafter,9. To .shoot as a plant to grow allied to No. 1. 10. To break, or burst; allied sometimes to No. 3. In like manner the primary sense of venio in Latin, cannot be certainly 11. To lift, raise, elevate; allied to No. 9. determined without resorting to other words, and to kindred languages. In 12. but in from To to or arrive to come tlcc, withdraw, word Spanish, venida, escape Latin, the fly; often allied to No. 1. signifies 13. To rage ; to burn ; allied to No. 7 and 8. venir, the Latin venio, signities not only a coming or arrival, but an attack 14. To fall; to fail; whence fading, Venio coincides in origin with the English yiurf , Saxon Jindin fencing. dying, fitc. 15. To approach, come, arrive, extend, reach. ThisU usually (he sense an ; German and Dutch finden, to tind, to fall or Ught on Danish_^;ider ; Swedish finna, to find, to discover, to meet, to strike against [otfendere.] of gaming. No. 34. 16. To go, walk, pass, advance; allied to No. 6. The primary sense o{ venio then is not merely to come or arrive, but to rush or 17. To -seize, take, hold sometimes allied to No. 31. move with a driving force ; and this sense i.s applicable to coining or going. 18. To strike; to beat; allied to No. 1. That the primary sense is to fall or rush, we have evidence in the Latin We have still 19. To swing to vibrate. No. 29. ventus, and English wind, both from the root of this verb. 20. To lean; to incline ; allied to the sense of further evidence in the word venom, which in Welsh is gwenivyn; gwen, wandering, or departing. 21. To rub, scratch, scrape; often connected with Venom is that while, and gwyn, rage, smart, whence gwynt, wind. driving, and with which frets or excites a raging pain. Hence we may infer that L. venor, to roughness. 22. To swim ; to float. hunt, to chase, is of the same family ; and so is venia, leave, or leave to de23. To stop, cease, rest; sometimes at least from a leaving, coinciding in signiiication with leave. straining, holding, faspai't, or a departure, * Tlie latter word, venia, proves another fact, that the primary sense of ve- tening. 24. To creep to crawl sometimes connected with scraping. nio is, in general, to move in any direction, and that the Latin sense, to come,^
U more
certain.
tained in cation.
In the Spanish language the senses ol both verbs are reand the Welsh Aapiaio gives us the true original signifi-
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
:
;
To To To
peel, to strip, whence spoiling. leap, to spring; allied to No. 9 and 1. 27. bring, bear, carry; in some instances connected with producing, ry to recur to tlie derivan\es. Thus the Latin livdo is rendered to hurt ; but, by adverting to allido, elido, and collide), we find that the original sig- throwing out. 28. To sweep. Hurt then is the secondaryi nification is to strike, hit, or dash against. 29. To hang. No. 19. sense ; the effect of the primary action expressed by the verb. 30. To shrink, or contract; that is, to draw. So the Latin rapio, to seize, does not give the sense of rapidus, rapid, See No. 3.
is
a particular appropriation of that sense. In ascertaining the primary sense of words,
2.'>.
often useful or necessa-
26.
but the sense of the latter proves the primary .sense of rapio to be to rush, and in its application, to rush on and seize. These examples will be sufficient to show how little the affinities of language have been understood. Men have been generally satisfied with a knowledge of the appropriate sense of words, without examining from
31. 32. 33.
it
is
34.
To run to rush forward; allied to No. 1. To put on or together; to unite allied to No. To knit, to weave. To gain, to win, to get. See No. 1.5. ;
;
1
and
3.
These and a few more verbs express the literal sense of all the primary But it must be remarked that all the foregoing significations are not visible or physical action, or ;)?^/;^a?t/ sense, that particular application roots. has been derived. Hence the obscurity that still rests on the theory of lan- distinct. So far from it, that the whole may be brought under the significaguage. It has been supposed that each word, particularly each verb, has tion of a very few words. The English words to send, throw, thrust, strain, an original specific sense, or application, distinct from every other verb. stretch, draw, drive, urge, press, embrace the primary sense of a great part We find, however, on a close examination and comparison of the same of all the verbs in every language which I have examined. Indeed it must word in different languages, that the fact is directly the reverse that a be so, for the verb is certainly the root of most words ; and the verb expresverb expressing some action, in a general sense, gives rise to various ap- ses mof ion, which always imphes the application offeree. Even the verbs which signify to hold or stop, in most instances at least, if And in the course of my repropriate senses, or particular applications. searches, 1 have been struck with the similarity of manner in which differ- not in all, denote primarily to strain or restrain by exertion of force ; and to ent nations have appropriated derivative and figurative senses. For exam- lie is primarily to throw down, to lay one's self down. So that intransitive ple, all nations, as far as my researches extend, agree in expressing the verbs are rarely exceptions to the general remark above made, that all sense oi pistice aniright, by straightness, and sin, iniquity, tcrong, by a verbs primarily express motion or exertion of force. The substantive verb deviation from a straight line or course. Equally remarkable is the simpli- has more claims to be an exception, than any other for this usually denotes, city of the analogies in language, and the small number of radical signifi- I think, permanence or continued being ; but the primary sense of this verb cations ; so small indeed, that I am persuaded the primary sensie of all the may perhaps be to set or fix ; and verbs having this sense often express exverbs in any language, may be expressed by thirty or forty words. tension in time or duration. So iii»u in Greek is to stretch, but the same We cannot, at tliis period of the world, determine, in all cases, which word teneo in Latin, is to hold ; hence continuance. words are primitive, and which are derivative nor whether the verb or Let us now attend to the radical sense of some of the most common verbs. the noun is the original word. Mon. Gebelin, in his Monde Primitif, Speaking, calling, crying, praying, utterance of sounds, is usually from maintains that the noun is the root of all other words. Never was a great- the sense of driving or straining. Thus in Latin, appello and compello, That some nouns may have been formed before the verbs though of a different conjugation from pello, depello, impello, are from the er mistake. with which they are connected, is possible ; but as languages are now con- same root and although the Latin repello does not signify to recall, yet the structed, it is demonstrably certain, that the verb is the radix or stock from corresponding word in Italian rappellare, and the French rappeler, signify which have sprung most of the nouns, adjectives, and other parts of speech to recall, and hence the English repeal. Hence also peal, either of a bell belonging to each family. This is the result of all my researches into the or of thunder. This is the Greek i3a^Xtij, and probably waUw is from the We find, indeed, that many modern verbs are form- same root. The sense o( striking is found in the Greek verb, and so it is in origin of languages. ed on nouns ; as to practice from practice; but the noun is derived from a the Lat. loquor, Eng. clock. But in general, speaking, in all its modificaGreek verb. So we use wrong as a verb from the adjective wrong tions, is the straining, driving, or impulse of sounds. Sometimes the sense but the latter is primarily a participle of the verb to wring. Indeed coincides more exactly with ihaXof breaking or bursting. a large part of all nouns were originally participles or adjectives, and Singing is a driving or straining of the voice ; and we apply strain to a the tilings which they denote were named from their quahties. So pard, passage of music, and to a course of speaking. I am not confident that I can refer the sensation ot hearing to any visible pardus, is from T13 barad, hail ; and the animal so named from his spots as if sprinkled with hail, or rather from the sense of it may sometimes be from striking, hitting, touching. But separation. Crape, action. Possibly the Fr. crfpe, is from crfper, to crisp. Sight signifies, primarily, seen ; it we observe that hear is connected in origin with car, as the Latin audio is being the participle of seon contracted from sigan. Draught is the parti- with the Greek on, wtm, the ear whence it appears probable that the verb ciple of draw, that which is drawn, or the act of drawing ; thought is tlie to hear, is formed from the name of the ear, and the ear is from some verb which signifies to shoot or extend, for it signifies a limb. participle of think. As the verb is the principal radix of other words, and as the The primary sense of seeing, is commonly to extend to, to reach ; as it proper province of this part of speech is to of behold, for the radical sense express action, almost all the modifica- were, to reach with the eye. Hence the use tions of tlie primary sense of the verb may be comprehended in one word, othotd is to strain and hence its signification in beholden, held, bound, obto move. See the verb See in the Dictionary. ligated. The principal varieties of motion or action may be expressed by the folThe sense of look may be somewhat different from that of see. It appear! in some instances to have for its primary signification to setid, throw, coat ; lowing verbs. 1. To drive, throw, thrust, send, that is, to send or cast the eye or sight. urge, press. 2. To set, fix, But The primary sense of feeling is to touch, hit, or strike ; and probably this these are from or down. lay. usually thrusting, throwing 3. To strain, stretch, draw, whence holding, binding, strength, power, and is the sense of taste. often health. Wonder and astonishment arc usually expressed by some word that sig4. To turn, wind, roll, wander. Hence the Latin miror, to wonder, is the Armoric nifies to stop or hold. 5. To flow, to blow, to rush. miret, to stop, hold, hinder ; coinciding with the English moor, and Spanish 6. To open, See No. 16. amarrar, to moor, as a ship. part, spht, separate, remove, scatter.
what
;
;
;
;
;
;
INTRODUCTION. on to thrust on. Wc h.ive a familiar examand capio ; for caplo is primarily to fall or rush ple in the Latin incipio, in on and seize. See Begin in the Dictionary. See AsAttempt is expressed by straining, stretching, as in Latin tento. say and Kssay. exPower, strength, iui the corresponding verb, to be able, are usually is the radical sense of ruling or and this pressed by straining, stretching, is an example, which gives rectus, right, governing. Of this the Latin rego
To begin
that
is,
is to
come, or
fall
;
stretched, straight.
Care, as has been stated,
is
usually from strainmg, ftiat
is,
a tension ot
the mind.
To think is to set or fix or hold in the is expressed by setting. approaches to the sense of Si(;V)ose, Lat. «/;>po;!o. And under this word, let us consider the various applications of the Latin to prune, lop or dress, as vines, is rendered verb puto puto. The simple that is, according to Ainsworth, putum, i. e. puruni reddo, purgo, by which or used I understand him to mean, thatj)i((u;« is either a change ofpunim, r are not for it a most improbable supposition, for the radical letters t and coramutable. Puto is rendered also, to make even, clear, adjust, or cast up Its compounds accounts ;Uso to think or consider; to suppose to debate. are amputo, to cut off, prune, amputate, to remove computo, to compute. to to reckon, to think or deem ; disputo, to make clear, to adjust or settle, or lay to, to to ascribe to to jeason or impute, debate, impitto, ; dispute to reckon up, to impute. place to account ; reputo, to consider, to revolve, or account reckon, The Latin depute signifies to think, judge or esteem, to and to prune ; but the Italian deputare, Spanish diputar, and French depuHow can the sense o( think, ter, from the Latin word, all signify, to send. and that of lop or prune, be deduced from a common root or radical sense ? We find the solution of this question in the verb to depute. The primary sense is to throw, thrust or send, or to set or lay, which is from throwing, To prune is to separate, remove, or drive oft"; to force off; to driving. think Is a setting in the mind ; to compute is to throw or put together, either in the mind or in numbers ; to dispute is to throw against or apart, like deand to repute, is to impute, is to throw or put to or on to beat from Thinking
mind.
It
;
;
;
;
bate, ; to think or throw in the mind, repeatedly.
;
To amputate,
is
to separate
by
Puto then in Latin is from the same root probably, as the and also the Dutch English put, or the same word differently applied; a or shoot, Gr. ipuiuv, &c. pooten, to plant ; pool, a paw, twig In attempting to discover the primary sense of words, we are to carry our and consider how rude of state mankind, reflections back to the primitive cutting round.
hard, have
from one the
all
the
root, the
more inclined
same elementary letters, and I suppose them all to be sense of which is, to draw, strain, shrink, contract. I am words coincide with calleo, to be
to this opinion, for these
know ; a sense that imples straining and holding. Hope is probably from reaching tbrward. We express strong desire by longing, reaching towards. Earnestness, boldness, daring, peril, promptness, readiness, willingness, love and favor, are expressed by advancing or inclining. Light is often expressed by opening, or the shooting of rays, radiation; and probaiily in many cases, the original word was applied to the dawn of Whiteness is often connected in origin with light. day in the morning. We have an instance of this in the Latin caneo, to shine and to be white. And that the primary sense of this word, is to shoot, to radiate, that is, to throw out or off, we have evidence in the verb cano, to sing, whence canto, the sense of which is retained in our popular use of cant ; to cant a stone ; to cant over a cask ; give the thing a cant ; for all these words are from one
strong or able, to
stock.
The Latin virtus, the English worth, is from the root of vireo, to grow, is, to stretch forward, to shoot; hence the original sense is strength, a Hence the Lasense we retain in its application to the qualities oif plants. tin sense of virtus, is bravery, coinciding with the sense of boldness, a projecting forward. Pride is from swelling or elevation, the primary sense of some other words that
nearly allied to it. Fear is usually from shrinking or from shaking, trembling; or sometimes perhaps from striking, a being struck, as with surprise. Holiness and sacredness are sometimes expressed by separation, as from common things. The Teutonic word holy however seems to be from the sense of sowidness, entireness. Faith and belief seem to imply a resting on, or a leaving. It is certain that the English belief i^ a compound of the prefix be and leaf, leave, perTo believe one then is to leave with him, to rest or suffer to rest mission. with him, and hence not to dispute, contend or deny. Color may by from spreading over or put'ing on but in some instances, See Dye and Tinge. the primary sense is to dip. Spots are from the sense of separating or from sprinkling, dispersion. The radical sense of making is to press, drive, or force. We use make in its true literal sense, in the phrases, make your horse draw, make your servant do what you wish. Feeding is from the sense of pressing, crowding, stuffing, that is, from ;
sense. men would effect their pui-poses, before the invention or use of the instru driving or thrusting. Eating seems to have a somewhat different The English verb to cut, signifies or Drinking is from drawing, or from wetting, plunging. Drench and raents which the moderns employ. and we are apt to consider this as drink are radically one word. dinarily to separate with an edged tool ; But if so, how can cut, the stroke of a whip Anger, and the like violent passions imply excitement, or violent action. the chief and original sense. which is a legitimate sense of the word, be deduced from the act of severing Hence their connection with burning or inflammation, the usual sense of commotion. have, in this popular use of the word, a clew to guide which is raging or violent by an edged tool ? Agreement, harmony, are usually from meeting, or union, or from exus to the primary sense, which is, to drive, urge, press, and applied to the to. arm, to strike. But we have better evidence. In the popular practice of tending, reaching are from the sense of throwing or setting down, or to ancall Dwelling, abiding, England, it is not uncommon to hear one person speaking in the Latin continuo, from teneo, other when running, and say, cut on, cut on; that is, hurry, run faster, resting, or from stretching ; as we see by This is Gr. Tiivu, to extend. drive, press on ; probably from striking a beast which one rides on. Hence we see, that this verb is the Latin Guarding and defending, are fiom roots that signify to stop, or to cut off; the original sense of the word. or more generally, from the sense of driving off, a repelling or striking ccedo, to strike, to cut down, somewhat differently applied, and cado, to fall, In some cases perhaps from holding. is only a modified sense of the same root, ;uid the compounds incido, to cut, back. the prepositions Opposition is usually expressed by meeting, and licnce and incido, to fall on, are of one family. To cut, is therefore primarily to wliich express opposition. Thus the Danish preposition mod, Swedish mot of before to if the bodies, strike, or drive, and to cut off, severing applied or emot, against, contrary, is the English word to meet. edged tools were used, was to force otT, or to strike oft"; hence the sense of denote breath, air, wind, the radiWords which expiess"s;»V;t primarily separating in the phrase to cut off a. retreat or communication. Hence the connection between So the Latin carpo is the English carve, originally to separate by plucking, cal sense of which is to flow, move or rush. hence passion, animosity. So in spirit and courage, animus, animostis ; pulling, seizing and tearing, afterwards, by cutting. have Greek (p?i»iii!, frenzy, is from (r?i', the mind, or rather from its primary sense, the sense oS is
We
New
Asking
usually expressed by
pressing, urging.
We
This verb signi- a moving or rushing. a clear proof of this in the Latin peto and its compounds. So in our mother-tongue, mod is mind or spirit; whence mood, in Engfies primarily to rush, to drive at, to assault, and this sense, in Dictionaries, in the sense of purpose, have the force of the ori- hsh, and Sax. modig, nioody, angry. Hence ought to stand first in the order of definitions. and impetuous. So tiie Latin rogu, comcides its primary signification, is a setting forward, as intention is from intendo, ginal in the words impetus to stretch, to strain, the sense that ought to stand first in a Dictionary. in elements with reach. of scolding, or throwing The act of understanding is expressed by reaching or taking, holding, Reproach, chiding, rebuke, are from the sense have a pop- out words with violence. sustaining ; the sense of comprehend, and of"understand. 1 take your meaning or your Sin, is generally from the sense of deviating, wandering, as is the pracular phrase which well expresses this sense, tice of lewdness. So in German, begreife7i, to begripe, to apprehend. idea." of stretching, making straight, Right, justice, equity, are from the sense .knowing seems to have the same radical sense as understanding. Pain, grief, distress, and iJie like affections, are usually expressed by or from laving, making smooth. Falsehood is from falling, failing, or from deviation, wandering, drawpressure or straining. Affliction is from striking. of rousing, excit- ing aside. Joy, mirth, and the like affections, are from the sense The primary sense of strange and /orei^n, is distant, and from some verb ing, lively action. to depart. Wild :ind fierce are from a like sense. Covering, and the like actions are from spreading over or cutting off, in- signifying arc from e.vhamting, drawing r'aJH.ua/iif]/, Ji'ane, and kindred words, terruption. Hiding, is from covering or from withdrawing, depai-ture; or concealment out, or fiom departing, withdrawing, falling away. as in the Paleness is usually fromfailure, a departure of color. or fast, be from making may withholding, restraining, suppressing, or making clear. is fiom display, expanding, Glon/ opening, Latin celo. or straining. Heat usually iniplies excitement ; but as the effect of heat as well as of Binding, making fast or close, is from pre.s.sure, of all primitive words cald is sometimes to contract, I think both are sometimes from the same raWriting is fiom scratching, engraving, the sense 4lix. Thuscoid and the Lat. caleo, to be warm, and callus and calleo, to be which express this act.
mmd
We
We
INTRODUCTION. some guftenio is a prefix, the root of this word may be the same. The object however for which this word is here mentioned, is chiefly to show tlie unimen have observed in expressing their ideas making use of Vapor, steam, smoke, are usually from verbs which signify to exhale or formity which 'the same visible physical action to represent tlie operations of the mind and throw olf. Thus passus moral ideas. Stepping seems to be from opening, e.xpaniling, stretching. in Latin i> from pani/o, to open, .but this agrees in origin with pateo, and Silence, deafness, dumbness, are from stopping, holding, or making Grad}is in Latin coinciiles with the Welsh rhawd, \fast. with the (;reek jrar-i.'. War is from the sense of striving, driving, struggling. a way, and thi<, when traced to its root, terminates in the oriental 11, mi, Good is generally from enlarging, or advancing, \\ke prosperous. in or to to stretch to Syriac |>; radah, Chaldoe, expand; go, open, pass. Evil is from wandering, departing, or sometimes from softness, weakness, Walking may be sometimes from a like source but the word walk siguilics or fluxibility, as is the case with the Latin malum, from tlie Welsh flowing primaiily to roll, pre.^.s, work and full, as a hat, whence walker signifies a
A
crowd,
a
mass, a wood. Sac
,
are from collecting or pressing, or
allied sigriitication.
;
I
I
;
mall.
fuller.
Softness and weakness are usually
The primary sense of the names of natural and material objects cannot named from yielding, bending, withbe ascertained. The reasons are obvious. Some of these names are however is sometimes connected with always
Softness smoothness, and perhaps with moisture.
drawing,
as
is
relaxation.
Sweetness seems
to
have
for its
detached branches of a family of words, which no longer form a part of our language, the verb and all the derivatives, except a single name, being extinct or found only in some remote country. Others of these names navie suffered such changes of orthography, that it isdillicult or impossible to asfrom certain the primary or radical letters, and of course the family to which they of Numerous such words in English, as in every occur examples belong.
primary sense, either soflness or smooth
ness.
Soughncss is from sharp points, wrinkling or breaking and acidity is sharpness or pungency, and nearly allied to roughness Death is expressed by falling or departure life by fixedness or continuother language. ance, or from animation, excitement ;
;
.S/«n, in Saxon, signifies to SeHing^ is primarily, a passing or transfer. give as well as to sell. A coast or border, is usually the extreme point, from extending. Law is from setting, establishing. The primary sense of son, daughter, offspring, is usually a shoot, or as we
Hence in Hebrew J3 ben, signifies both a son, a cion, a branch say, issue. and the young of other animals. A son, says Parkhurst, is from nJ3 banah, tobuild, and hence he infers that a son is so called, because he builds up or continues his father's house or family. But if so, how does the word apply to a branch, or an arrow? What do these buildup? The mistake of this autlior, and of others, proceeds fi-oin their not untlerstanding the original meaning of the verb, which is not to erect, or elevate, but to throw, to set, to found and this verb is probably retained in oui" word found. A son is that which is thrown or shot out, a cion or branch is the same, an offset, one an offset of the human body, the othei- of a plant, and an arrow is that which is shot or thrown. Hence probably the Hebrew J3X eben or even, a stone, W. maen, or vaen, that which is set, so named from its compactness or hard-
But fi'om such facts as have occurred to me, in my researches, I may venture to atfirm with confidence, that most names of natural objects are taken from some obvious quality or action, or some supposed quality of the thing; or from the particular action or operation by which it is produced. Thus tumors are named from pushing, or swelling ; and redness, or red, seems, in Isome instances at least, to be named from eruptions on the body. The human
body is named from shaping, that is, setting, fixing, or extending, and hence sometimes, the general name of the human race. The arm is a shoot, a push, as is the branch of a tree. A board, a table, a floor, is from spreading, or expanding, extending. Skin, and bark are from peeling, stripping, &c. The names of particular animals and plants cannot always be traced to their source but as far as I have been able to discover their origin, i find animals to be generally named from some striking characteristic of external appearance, from the voice, from habits of life, or from their office. There is reason for believing that the Greek sp u9o! and Latin siruihio, or ostrich, is from the same root as the English strut, the strutter; the primary sense of which root is, to stretch, which explains all the senses of the Greek and Latin words of this family. It is certain that the crow is named from its cry, c and the leopard from his spots. ness. And in Arabic j i abana, signifies to think, Lat. opinor, that is, Thus plants were named from their qualities: some from their form, others fiom their color, others from their eflbcts, others from the place of their to set in the mind. Few and small are senses often expressed by tlie same word. Thus, al- growth. The English root, Lat. radix, is only a particular application of rod though/e«> in English expresses merely a small number, yet the same word and ray, radius ; that is, a shoot. Spurge is undoubtedly from the root of the Latin purgo. in French, peu, and in the Italian, poco, signifies little in quantity, as well as There is reason to think that many names of plants were originally adjecfew in number. Cause is from the sense of urging, pressing, Hence it well tives, expressing their qualities, or the name was a compound used for the impelling. expresses that which produces an effect and hence it is pecuUarly expres- same purpose, one part of which has been dropped, and the other remaining sive of that by which a man seeks to obtain a claim in law. A cause in as the name of the plant. Thus pine, pinus, is from pin, pinna, penna ; for in Welsh pin is a pin and a pen or style for writing, and pinbren is a pinecourt is properly a pressing for like action from ago ; and prosecu ri^ht, tion from the Latin sequor, which is our word seek. Hence the Latin ac tree. The tree then was named from its leaf. Fir has a similar origin and signification. cuso, to accuse, to throw upon, to press or load with a charge. The Saxon It is probable or rather certain that some natural saca. contention, suit in law, is synonymous with cause, and from the root objects, as plants and minerals, received their names from their supposed qualities ; as in ages of otseek, sequor. It is the English sake. The word thingm nearly synonymous with cause and sake. See Thing ignorance end superstition, men might ascribe effects to them, by mistake. The whole history of magic and enchantment leads us to this conclusion. tn the Dictionary. Minerals are, in many instances, named from their obvious qualities, as The piimary sense of time, luck, chance, fortune, is to fall, to come, to arrive, to happen. Tide, time and season, have a like original sense. Tide gold from its yellowness, and iron from its hardness. The names can, in some in Saxon is time, not a flow of the sea, the latter cases, be traced to their original, as that of gold and of the Latin^ifrbeing a secondary and mod em application of the word. This primary signification rum Indeed tiie greatest ; but many of them, are not easily ascertained. of time will unfold of the specific names of animals, plants and minerals appear to be obto us what I formerly could not understand, and what I could find no person part to explain, that is, why the Latin tempora should signify times and the tem- scure. Some of them appear to have no connection with any family of words It seems that ples. tempora are ihe falls of the head. Hence also we un- in our language, and many of them are derived tons from Asia, and from derstand why tempest is roots which can be found only, if found at all, in the .\siatic languages. naturally deducible from tempus, as the primary sense is to fall, to rusb. These observations and explanations will be sulficient to show the imporHence tempestivus, seasonable, that comes in itance of developing, as far as possible, tiie origin of words, and of good time. Season has a like sense. comparing Hence also we are led to understand, what has seemed the ditlerent uses of the same word indifferent languages, in order to underinexplicable, how the French heureux, stand either tlie philosophy of speech, or the real force and signification of lucky, happy, can be regularly deduced from heure, an AV e hnd that in Greek and hour. words in their practical application. Latin, the prima'ry sense of hour is time, and time is a coming, a If it should be found to be true, that many of the Shemitic verbs are formfalling, a happening, like the English luck, and hence the sense ol lucky hence fortunate and ed with prefixes, Ukc those of the European languages, this may lead to new happy. The ifordfortunate IS precisely of the same character. illustrations of the original languages of the scriptures. In order to determine this fact, it will be useful to examine whether the Chaldee and Hebrew The primary sense of the Shemitic lan davar, or thavar, corresponds almost precisely with that of eausc and 3 is not often a prefix answering to be in tlie Teutonic languages whether thing in EngUsh, that is, to sUain, Hence it signifies, to speak, and in Ch. and Syr. J and 3 are not prefixes answering to the ga and ge of the Gothic and Teuurge, drive, tall or ruali. to lead to direct, to whether T, and n, and I, a dialectical form of D, do not coincide govern. As a noun, it signifies a word, that which is tonic uttered a thing, cause or matter, tliat is. that which with the Gothic du, the Saxon do not answer to s, sh, and sch in the modem EngUsh And it may be observed, that if the first letter is a striking. prefix answer- and German. ing to the Gothic du, Saxon and English to, in the Saxon to-drifan, to drive, If many of the Shemitic triliteral verbs are compound, it follows that the then the ro.y. 13 coincides .Ki any rate, 1 have no hesitation in ex.ictly with the Welsh /im, to command, which primary radix has not been detected. to retained lu composiUon in Uie Lat. impero. Indeed if the first syllable of affirming that the piimary sense of many of the roots in the Shemitic Ian;
;
—
;
;
;
;
;
;
•
INTRODUCTION. gusges, that sense which is almost indispensable to an understanding of many obscure passages in the scriptures, has been hitherto overlooked or In order fully to comprehend many uses of the words, it will be mistaken. necessary to compare them with the uses of the words of the same family in the modern languages, and this comparison nuist be far more extensive than any hitherto made, and conducted on principles which have not been before duly appreciated and applied. I have introduced the foregoing comparative view of the several si^ifi-
Progress and Changes of the English Language.
It has been already observed that the mother tongue of the English is the Anglo-Saxon. The following are specimens of that language as it was spoken or written in England before the Norman conquest. The first is from the Saxon Chronicle. The original is in one column, and the literal translation in the other. The English words in italics are Saxon words. Thenumberof these will show how large a proportion of the words is reeationsof the same word indifferent languages, not merely to illustrate the tained in the present English. general principles of language, but with a special reference to an explanation of the etymologies which occur in this work. Should my synopsis ever An. DCCCXCI. Her for se here An. 89L Here [this year] fared be published, the learned enquirer might pursue the subject at hispleasure east, and Earnulf cyning gefeaht with the army east and Earnulf, the king, The results of the foregoing remarks and illustrations may be thus reca- tha^m raede-here aer tha scipu co- fought with the cavalry [ride army] pitulated. mon,midEast-Francum,andSeaxum, ere the ships come, with the East1. The nations which now constitute the distinct fanjilies or races of Ja- and Ba>gerum, and bine geflymde. I'rancs, and Saxons and Bavarians, phet and Shem, are descendants of the common fanuly which inhabited the And thry Scottas cwomon to jElfrede and put lliein to flight. And three plain of Shinar, before the dispersion. cyninge on anum bate, butan aelcum Scots come to iElfred, the king, in a 2. The families at the dispersion retained a large proportion of the words gerethum, of Hibernia; and thonon [an] boat, without any rowers, from which were in common use, before that event, and the same were conveyed hi hi bestaelon, forthon the hi woldon Hibernia, and thence they privately to their posteiity. In the course of time, some of these words were drop- forGodes lufan on eltheodinesse bion, withdrew [bestnle] because that they ped by one family or tribe, and some by another, till very few of them are hy ne rohton hwsr. would, for God's love be [or live] retained in their original form and signification by all the nations which where they should not be anxious have sprung from the main stock. A few of them however are still found [reck, care.] all in or nearly all the languages which I have examined, bearing nearly the same signiiication and easily recognized as identical. Se bat wa:s geworht of thriddan The boat was wrought of tteo 3. Although few of the primitive Avords can now be recognized, as exist- healfre hyde, the hie on foron, and hi hides and a half [third half hide,'] in ing in all the languages, yet as we better understand the changes which namon mid him that hie hcefdon to which Ihey fared [came] anrf they have been made in the orthography and signiiication of the same radical seofon nihtum mete, and tha comon took with them that they had for sewords, the more affinities are discovered and particularly, when we un hie ymb seofon niht, to londe on ven nights meat, and they corne derstand Iheprimary sense, we find this to unite words whose appropriate CoiTiwealum, and foran tha sona to about the seventh night, to land in or customary signitications appear to have no connection. iElfrede cyninge. Cornwall, and fared [went] soon to 4. A great number of the primitive radical words are found in JE\(ret he ealra North- Alfred, that he lived north most of Now, n in these words is not radical ; remove manna north mest bude. He cwaeth all the north men. He quoth that severity, rigor, strictness. this letter and we have strog, streg, which coincide with the Latin stringo that he bude on tha^m lande northe- he dwelt in the [them] land northstrictus ; and these words are found to be from the same radix, which weardum with tha west sa. He ward, opposite [with] the west sea. signifies to draw, to strain, to stretch. sa;de theah thast that land sy Ht said though, that that land is due 5. It appears that b,p and/ are often prefixes, either the remains of pre- swythe north thanon ; ac hit is eall north from thence, and that it is all positions, or casual additions to words, introduced by peculiar modes of pro- west buton on feawum stowum sticce waste except [but] in a few places nunciation, which prefixes now precede consonants with which they readily maelum wiciath Finnas, on huntathe [stows] where the Fm»is for the most coalesce in pronunciation, as I and r, forming triliteral words on biliteral on wintra, and on sumera on fiscothe part dwell, for hunting in winter, He saede tha;t he a;t and in summei' [or fishing in that sea, roots; as in block from Hoc, or lock ; play, Sixon plegan, from leg or lek, be there ss. Swedish /fAa, Dan. leger ; flow, Lat. fluo, from lug, or luc, which appears sumum cyrre wolde fandiam hu [by the sea.] He said that he, at in lighl, lux, luceo, and in lug, a river, retained in Lugdumtm. some iimc, would findhow long that lange thiet land north right la^ge. 6. It appears also that c or k and g, are often prefixes before the same land lay right north. consonants, ( and r, as in Lat. clunis, Eng. loin ; W. clod, praise, from Hod. German gluck, English luck ; Lat. gratia, W. rhad. Laws of King iEthelbert. Latin, lavs, laudo 7. It appears also that s is a prefix in a vast number ol words, as in speed, Gif Cyning his Icode to him gehaspoil, swell, sweep ; and it is very evident that st are prefixed to many words If the King shall call [cite] his
—
;
;
,-
original, radical, initial consonant was r, as in straight, strict, strong, tath, and heom mon tha?r yfel gedo, stretch, from the root of right, rectus, reach, and in stride, from the root of II bote and cyning L. scillinga.
whose
people to him,
satisfaction of critics
Gif
man
thone
man
ofslshth,
XX
first consider that conclusions arc not hasty opinions, formed on scil. gebete. isolated facts; but that they have been forced upon nie, in opposition to all former habits of thinking, by a series of successive proofs and accumU scil. lating evidence, during a long course of investigation, in which I have com Gif thuinan (of aslshth) pared most of the radical words, in more than twenty languages, twice and Gif thuman na>gl of weordeth III
my
my
and any one [man]
evil,
pensation be made, to the King.
let
double com-
and Mty shillings
If in the King's town a a
man,
with
man
him compensate
let
slay
[boot]
fifty shillings.
If in an Earl's town one man another man, let him pay twelve shillings for reparation. slayeth
and commentators.
If any persons should be disposed to doubt or contradict these facts, let
them
do
shall there
the Latin gradior, W.rhaz. If these inferences are just, as I am persuaded they are, it follows that there is a more near resemblance and a much closer affinity between the Gif in Cyninges tune man mannan languages of Europe and of Western Asia, than has hitherto been supposed to exist. It tbilows also that some of the most important principles or rudi- ofsleah, L. scill. gebete. ments of language have hitherto escaped obsei-vation, and that philology is yet in its infancy. Should this prove, on further examination, to be the state of philology, it is resei-ved for future investigators to examine the Gif on Eorles tune man mannan original languages of the scriptures on new principles, which may sei-ve to illustrate ofsleath, XII Scil. gebete. some obscure and difficult passages, not hitherto explained to the general 1
If man,
man,
let
[any one] slayeth any him compensate with twen-
ty shillings.
XX
If the thumb shall be cut off, twenty shillings. If the thumb nad shall scytefinger (of be cut off, three shillings shall be the asla-hth,) VIII scil. gebete. Gif man compensation. 7/" any one [off slaymiddle finger (of a slsehth,) IV. scil. eth, striketh off,] cutteth off the fore Gif man gold-finger (of a gebete. finger [shoot finger,] let him comGif man pensate with eight shillings. slaehth,) VI scil. gebete. If one thon litlan finger (of a slshlh) XI cutteth off the middle finger, let him pay four shiUings. If any one cutprimary scil. gebete. That I have succeeded at last, in every instance, can teth off signification. the hardly gold finder [ring finger,] su|i|io3ed let him pay six yet, in most cases, I am perfectly satisfied with the results of If any shillings. researches. one cutteth off the littlefinger, let
some of them three times.
No
scil.
gebete.
Gif
man
part of my researches has given me more trouble or solicitude, than that of arriving at the precise radical signification of moral ideas ; such for example, as hope, love, favor, faith. Nor has it been with much less labor that I have obtained a clear knowledge of some of our physical actions. It is literally true that I have sometimes had a word under consideration for two or three years, before I could satisfy my own mind, as to the
—
pay eleven
\
\
shillings.
INTRODUCTION. Laws
of
Ik was,
King Eadgar.
Thu
wa.st,
Weis wesum, Vus wesuth.
We
Is was. Eis wesun.* order or instruct lliat each Israth that a;lc cristen man In the present tense of the substantive verb, our common people use u'nt man enrneslty accustom liis licarn to ciistendome geornlice chrislian " he d'nl This is evidently a contiaction of the present."' nostei' and [wean] his ctiildreii to Christianity as in this phrase wffiiiige and him pater the Swedish and Danish, Sr, er, present, indicative, singular, of the substantive him and teach credon tace. IChristendvm] Pater Noster and Creed. verb, vara or vcerer, to be, which we retain in are and were. In Swedish, han hr, and in Danish, ban er, he is. Hence he ernot or or We laerath that preost ne beo hun- We direct that a priest be not a not, contracted into he a'nt or e'nt. These facts serve to show how far the Gothic dialect has been infused into ac plegge hunter, nor hawker, nor a gamester ta ne hafecerc ne ta'flere on his bocum swa his hade gebirath. but that he apply to his books, as it the English language. to recite all the It would be tedious and to most readers becomes his order.
thee. right hand offend, [offendeth] In the Saxon phn-al however we see the origin of the vulgar practice So also in Chapter xviii. 8 and 9. retained in some parts of Eugland and of this country. IVe loves, they loves, which aie contractions of lufiath. In the substantive verb, our common people universally, and most persons * This is probably the Latin esse. The Latins dropped the first articulaof better education, unless they have rejected their traditionary language, tion r, which answers to our w. retain the Gothic dialect, in the past tense. The present tense indicative mode of the Latin verb, with the v restored, I was. was. would be written thus. Ye was. Thou wast.
still
We
He
was. They was. people may be ridiculed for this language, it is of genuine origin, as old as the Saxon word were. In Gothic, the past tense runs thus
However
—
Ego vesum, tu ves, ille vest.
nos vesumus, [was,] vos vestis, [was.] illi vesunt, [was.]
V'
INTRODUCTION. " If my bodily strength is equal to the task." ' A negro, "if he works for himself and not a for master, will do double the work." If there is If their conduct displays no true wisdom." Et ovfai tfir »j atna tov avSpuTtarv ittta fjjs yvvaixoi, if the any aggravation of our guilt." " The honorable Case of the man be [is] so with his wife. gentleman may, if he chooses, have the journals read " Whether this is a sufficient tie to unite them." If this measCh. xxii. 45. Et ovv Aa/3i8 xalii, auroi' Knpior, if David then call [calleth] again." ure comes recommended." " If there exists a country which contaias the him Lord. Ch.
xii. 26.
Et o aatavai Tov eatavaf
ix8aK>^fi., if
Satan cast [casteth] out
Satan.
Ch. xix.
10.
'"'
2
arSpwrtoj Sio^^ftprfat, though our outward man perish, [perishes or is perishing.] In all these passages, the English verb, in the .subjunctive, properly expresses a conditional, contingent or hypothetical future tense, contrary to the sense of the original, except in the last passage cited, where the apostle evidently spealis of the perishing of the outward man as a fact admitted, which renders the translation still more improper. Let us now attend to the following passages. Matthew vii. 9. rts i;iv i% vftav ai'flpurtos, op iav aitrjeti o vioi cwtov
Et o
Coi'. iv. 16.
f|to fifiuv
means of
Pitt.
protection."
" If the " If an asprudence of reserve and decorum dictates silence." sembly is viciously or feebly composed." If any persons are to make good " if the deficiences." King of the French has really deserved these mur" derous attempts." If this representation of M. Neckar was false." " Whether the " The system, if it deserves the name." politician looks for a power that our workmen call a purchase, and if he finds the power.''
" If he feels as "
men commonly
Burke.
feel."
" If the effects of climate If climate has such an effect on mankind." arc casual." Coxe's Russ. " If he ' If he thinks his aptop, or what man is there of you, whom if his son ask [shall ask] bread, not finds his collection too small." will he give him a stone. " Whether it leads to truth." "judgment If ne U'ams sufficiently enlightened." Koi tor ixSw aitfjBt], if he ask [shall ask] a fish, will he give him a ser- others This is generally the language of Johnagainst his own failings." pent. son. Here the original tense is varied to express a future or hypothetical In regard to this distinguished author, I would observe that, except the event, yet the verb in English is in the same tense as in the first class of ex- substantive verb, there is in his Rambler but a single instance of the subamples; and what renders the veision more objectionable, is, that the verb junctive form of the verb in conditional sentences. In all other cases the in the first clause, does not correspond with that in the second clause. use of the indicative is uniform. There is no possible way of making good English of the translation, but by Such also is the language of the most distinguished men in the United So it States, siipposing the verb in the first clause ask, to be in the future tense. particularly of those who wrote their native language as they receiwould be in Latin, and so it is, " si petierit." If thy son shall ask (or should ved it from tradition, and before grammars had made any impression on its ask) a fish, will he give, (or would he give) him a serpent? genuine construction. This fault runs through the whole English version of the scriptures, and "The prince that acquires new territory, if he^rwfe it vacant." "If a distinction of tenses clearly marked in the original languages, is generally we are industrious we shall never starve." " If one has more corn than neglected in the translation. he can consume, and another has less." Such is the o{ Franklin. Now the most unlettered man in this country, would express the sense in " If any persons thus qualified are to be found." "languag-e If it is thought pro" If the English, with the same marked distinction of tenses, which appears in the per." docs not choose to out the congress point particular regi" If the Greek. If thou art the son of God ; if thy right eye offends thee ; if the ment." " If I am informed." rightly army has not removed." case of the man is such ; if David calls him Lord ; or if the sense is under- " If a Such is the language of Washproposition has not been made." stood to be future and contingent, if thy son shall ask bread, or if he should ington. " If os/c bread, would be the uniform language of any of the common people of any philosopher prefenrfs." " If he has food for the present day." " our country. There would not probably be a single exception, unless in " If the Christian If a revelation is not impossible." system contains a the use of the substantive verb, which is often used in the sulijunctivc form. real communication to mankind." " If the former of these facts opposes And the most unlettered man would use the corresponding verbs in the two our reception of the miraculous " If the history of the gospel." preceding clauses, if he shall ask, will he give; or if he should ask, would he give. reflections nrc Such is the of late the President Smith.* just." language " The use of the verb in all similar phrases, is perfectly well settled in this deetiis the introduction of or their merIf 3ny government foreigners country, and perfectly uniform among the higher and lower classes of men ; chandize injurious." " Unless he violates the law of nations." " If a per" If he resides in a unless when the practice has been varied by the influence of Grammars, in son has a settlement in a hostile country." belligerent which the conjugation of the verb is according to the antiquated practice country." " If a foreign Consul carries on trade as a merchant." Such «f the age of Elizabeth. is the language of the ex-Chancellor Kent. 1 Tim. v. 4. El. 61 ti; But neither the authors here mentioned, nor most others, even the most XVC"' I'""''* V fxyofa ixn, if any widow, have [has] children or nephews. distinguished for erudition, are uniform and consistent with themselves in Verse 8. Ei Si tif tap ibtuip xai jjaXifa tiMi oixiiav ov itfopoii, if any the use of the tenses. In one sentence we find the indicative used, " If it is to be discovered only by the experiment." " If other indications are to be not for his and for those of his own own, provide [provideth] especially found." In the next sentence, " If to miscarry in an attempt be a house. proof This subjunctive form of the verb, if he be ; if he have ; if he go ; if he of having mistaken the direction of genius." Johnson. " If the former be refined if those virtues are 9ay ; if thou write ; whether thou see ; though he fall, which was geneaccompanied with equal Gibbon. rally used by the writers of the sixteenth century, was, in a great measure, abilities." " If love rcwai-d discarded before the time of Addison. Whether this change was in consehim. or if strike." Cowper. " Or if it does not brand him vengeance to the last." quence of the prevalence of colloquial usage over grammar rules, or beCowper. " If he is a cause discerning men perceived the impropriety and inconsistency of the pagan if endeavors are used if the person hath a liberal of education if I man be not to determine. Certain it to that these miseries. books, Milner. is, Locke, language pretend subject The following expressions occur in Pope's Preface to Homer's Iliad, in Watts, Addison, Pope, and other authors of the first distinction, who adorned the close of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth century, the compass of thirteen lines. " If heAas generally used the indicative mode to express condition, uncertainty, and given a regular catalogue of an army." " If he has funeral " If these hypothesis in the present and past tenses. Thus Locke writes games for Patroclus." " If two propositions are by nature imprinted." " If principle* are innate." V\yssesvisit the shades." " If " If he be detained from " Whether that subhis return." any person hath never examined this notion." " If Achilles be absent." " If the soul doth think in " If one C071stance thinks or no." sleep." " If he " If he does not reflect." siders well the.se men's w.iy of speaking." gives his hero a suit of celestial armor." ** Unless that notion produces a constant train of successive ideas." " If I recollect one English author only, who has been careful to avoid this inyour Lordship ?neans." Such is the language of Locke. consistency ; this is Gregory, who, in his Economt/ of JVature, has uniNow what is remarkable, the learned Dr. Lowth, the very author who formly used the indicative form of the verb in conditional sentences of this has, by his grammar, done much to sanction the subjunctive form of the kind. The like inconsistency occurs in almost all American writings. " If verb, in such cases, often uses the indicative in his own writings. " If he " If does not carefully attend to this if this pleasure arises from the shape of moral disposition lie here." preference necessarily involves the the composition if this is not firmly and well established." These verbs are knowledge of obligation." " If the proposition is true." " If the propoin contradiction of his own principles. On Isaiah. Prelim. Diss sition 6e confirmed." " If he refutes any thing." Addison. "If the reader has a mind to see a father of the same stamp.' In a pamphlet now before me, there are no less thzn fifty of these incon" If exercise throws off all superfluities— if it clears the vessels if it dis- sistencies in the compass of ninety pages ; and three of them in one senSuch is the language of Addison, the most tence. sipates a growing distemper." elegant writer of the genuine English idiom in the nation. " If the thief is poor if it obliges me to be conversant with scenes of
H
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
wretchedness."
Wilberforec. is not to be conquered. Lord Chatham. *The substantive verb is often used in the subjunctive form by writers arc to be satisfied with assertions." " If it gives blind confi- who never use that form in any other verb. The reason doubtless is that dence to any executive government." " If such an opinion /las gone forth." be is primarily the indicative as well as the subjunctive mode of that verh. " If our conduct A(M been marked with Fox. I be, we be, as used in Scripture. So in German Ich bin. vigor and wisdom."
" "
If If
Ameiica
we
INTRODUCTION. lIow,1nthis case, is a foreigner to understand the author? and how can tended by the populaiily of Murr.iy's grammar," has been to introduce, or such seiitrnccs be translated into anotlier language without a deviation from establish a form of the verb in writing, which is obsolete in colloq\iial lanthe original ? guage to till our books with a confusion of tenses, and thus to keep the The propiiefy of using the indicative form of the verb to express a pre- language unsettled. Nothing can be more perplexing to the student thali it is most every where to meet with sent or past event conditionally, does not rest solely on usage discrepancies between rules and practice. of There is another erroneous manner of writing, common to the best au(hat most the which words It is well correct upon principle. known, arc used to introduce a condition or hypothesis, and called most improperly thors in the language, which seems to have escaped notice. This is, to conjunctions, arc verbs, having not the least affinity to the class of words connect a verb in the past tense with a preceding one in the same tense, used to connect sentences. If is the Saxon gif, give, having lost its first when the latter verb is intended to express a very di/ferent time from the " Then Manasseh kyiew that letter i/"f«r the ancient giT". the Lord, he was God." 2 Though is also a verb now obsolete, except in former. Thus, Now let us analyze this conditional tense of the Citron, xxxiii. 13. the ini|)era(ive mode. " If the man knows his true interest, he will avoid a The Latins, in tliis case, would probably have used the infinitive Ma"verb. quarrel." Here is an omi.ssion of the word that after if. The true original phrase nasseh novit Jehovam deum esse. In English we ought to write and say, " Manasseh knew Jehovah to was " Jf that the man knows his true interest, he will avoid a quarrel" be God," or, Manasseh kntw that Jehovah he is God. In most .similar cases, the use of the infinitive in English is a« that is, give that [admit the fact which is expressed in the following clause] But there are many cases where the infinitive cannot the man kiwu's his true interest, then the consequence follows, he will elegant as in Latin. That in this sentence is a relative or denionstiative sub- be used. We cannot use it after say " he said him to be a good man," is avoid a quarrel. This will more plainly appear by transpo- not English stitute for the following clause. though he declared, or affirmed, or believed him to be a good ;
;
;
;
—
;
;
" The man h)wu's his true interest sing the clauses. give that [admit that ;] he will then avoid a quarrel. Now let the subjunctive Ibrm be used. "The man knowhis true interest ; give that; he will avoid a quarrel." Here the impropriety of this form of the verb appears in a strong light. It will appear more clearly by the use of other words of equivalent signitication. Grant the man know Ids true interest, he will avoid a quarrel. Allow the man know his true interest. Suppose the man know his true interest. never use the subjunctive form after the three last verbs which introduce the condition. Though is sometimes followed by the in dicative ; .sometimes by the subjunctive ; but it ought always to be follow ed by the indicative, for it supposes the fact to be given and so does admit, when used in hypothetical sentences. Admit that the man knows his inWe have then decisive proof that the use of the indicative form of terest. the verb after if, when it expresses a conditional event in present time, is most correct ; indeed it is the only correct form. This remark is equally applicable to the past tense, conditional. The language of Addison, Johnson, and other distinguished writers of the last century, in the use of the indicative, is therefore, more correct than the language of the writers in the age of Elizabeth and their practice is principally the common usage of our country at this day. 1 have, therefore, constructed a grammar on this usage ; bringing down the standard of writing a century and a half later than Bishop Lowth. I have done this, yir«<, on the authority of strict .analogical principles, as above stated ; secondly, on the authority of the best usage of that cluster of disand tinguished writers who adorned the beginning of the last century thirdly, on the authority of universal colloquial practice, which I consider as the real and only genuine language. I repeat this remark, that general and respectable usage in speaking is the genuine oi legilimate language of a country to which the written language ought to be conformed. Language is that which is uttered by the tongue, and if men do not write the language as it is spoken by the great body of respectable people, they do not write the real language. Now. in colloquial usage, the subjunctive form of the verb, in conditional sentences, is rarely used, and perhajjs neOur students are ver, except when the substantive verb is employed. taught in school the subjunctive Ibrm, if thou have, if he come, &c. and some of them continue, in after life, to write in that manner but in the course of more than forty years, I have not known thiee men who have ventured to use that form of the verb in conversation. We toil in school to learn a language which we dare not introduce into conversation, but which the force of custom compels us to abandon. In this respect, the present study of grammar is worse than useless. This colloquial custom accords with other languages. The French say and write s' (7 est, if he is. The Latins often used the same form, " si quid est in me ingenii, judices ;" but the use of the Latin subjunctive " depends on certain other words which precede ; as cum sit civis," as he is a citizen, or, since he is a citizen ; and the present tense is often used to exThat the Greeks used the indicapress what we express by an auxiliary. tive to express a conditional present tense, we have seen by citations above. By this arrangement of the verb, the indicative Ibrm after if and other verbs introducing a condition or hypothesis, may be used uniformly to exa fact or event under a or condition either in the present press supposition, or past tenses ; the speaker being uncertain respecting tlie fact, or representing it as doubtful. If the man is honest, he will return what he has borrowed. If the ship has arrived, we shall be informed of it tomorrow. If the bill was presentIf the law has been ed, it was doubtless paid. passed, we are precluded from further opposition. On the other hand, when it is intended to speak of a future contingent event, 1 would always use the auxiliaries that are proper for tlie purpose. " If it shall or shoidd rain tomoirow, we shall not ride to town." 1 would never use the subjunctive form if it rain in prose ; and in poetry, only from in this mannecessity, as an abridged phrase lor ifit shall or shovld rain, ner, the distinction between the tenses, which are now constantly conIbunded, maybe preserved and made obvious, both to natives and foreigners. The effect of the study of Lowth's principles, Mhichhas been greatly ex;
We
;
;
;
man,
is
elegant.
understand Uic impropriety of the common mode of using the latter verb, as in the example above cited, it may be remarked, that the present tense is that which is used to express what exists at all times. Thus we God (s or exists, whenever we say, speak of his permanent existence ; wo iron is a most valuable metal ; it is not rt)nsay, gold is yellow or ductile vertible into silver ; plants and animals are very distinct living beings. We do not say, gold was yellow iron was a valuable metal for we mean to express permanent qualities. Hence, in the passage cited from Chronicles, the first verb kneu', referiing to a fact past, is correct ; but the last, which is intended to express the permanent being or character of God, should be in the infinitive or the indicative present tense. The following are examples " His master had of correct language taught him that happiness consists in virtue." Anaeharsis, ii. 120. " Sabellius, who openly taught that there is but one person in tlie Godhead." Encyclopedia. " Out S3.\io\taught that eternal death is the proper punishment of sin." In order
to
;
:
Em^nons. " is the Having believed for many years, following an elastic fluid." The following would be still better : Having believed water to be an elastic fluid." " So the following We know not the use of the epidermis of shells. Some authors have supposed that it secured [secures] the shells from being covered with vermes." Edin. Encyc. " It was just remarked, that marine fossils did not [do not] comprise velb. getable remains." " If readers will turn their back on their old friends, they my thoughts
But very
that water
different
was
I.
E.
:
[is]
'
:
will find it difficult to call a single know that life was short [is short,] '
They
to remembrance who appeared to he was about to lose it." Rambler, jXo. 71.
man till
considered the body as a hydraulic machine, and the fluids
ing through a series of chiuiical changes [is] its
essential characteristic."
'
was declared by Ponipey,
It
violated,
he could stamp «
;
VoL.
;
;
;
a.s
pa.
Mas Darwin.
forgetting that ;uiimation
(hat if the Commonwealth was [should be] ith his foot and raise an arniy out of the ground." Rambler, JVo. 10.
In the foregoing sentence, the past tense is used for the future contingent. " It was affirmed in tlie last discourse, that much of the honorable practice of the world rested [rests] on the substratum of selfishness that society was [is] held together, in the exercise of its relative virtues, mainly by the tie of reciprocal advantage that a man's own interest bound [binds] him to all those average equities which obtained [obtain] in the neighborhood around him and in wliich if he proved [should prove] himself glaringly deficient, he would be abandoned by the respect, and the confidence, and the good will of the people with whom he had [might have, or should have] to do." Chahncr's Com. Dis.4. " In the last discourse, I observed that love constituted [constitutes] the whole moral character of God," Dwight's Tlieology. " And he but if one went [shall or should go] said, nay, father Abraham to them from the dead, they will repent. And he said to him, if they hear not Moses and the prophets, neither will tliey be persuaded though one rose [shall or should rise] from the dead." Luke, xvi. 30, 31. ;
;
;
;
" Independent of parties in the national legislature itself, as often as the period of discussion arrived, the state legislaUires, who will always be not *
Lindley Murray, in the introduction to his grammar, "acknowledges, in general terms, that the authors to whom the grammatical part of tjiis compilation is principally indebted for its materials are, Harris, Johnson, Lowth, Priestley, Bealiie, Sheridan, Walker, and Cocte." But on cxaiiMnation, it appears that the greatest portion of Oie grammatical part is tVoai Lowth, whose principles form the main structure of Murrr.y's cor.ipiiition. Some valuable notes and remarks are taken from P;ic.-tley*s grammar. I studied grammar in liie originals long before Murray's compilation appeared, and, in citing authorities, deem it proper to cite the originals.
^/
INTRODUCTION. only vigilant, but suspicious and jealous guardians of the rights of the citizens, against encroachments from the federal government, will constantly
have
awake to the conduct of the national rulers, and will be any thing iuiprojier appears, to sound the alarm to the
their attention
ready enough, people."
if
Let any man attempt to resolve the foregoing sentence, if he can, or render it into another language. " Cicero vindicated the truth, and inculcated the value of the precept, that nothing was [is] truly useful which iL-as [is] not honest." *' He undertook to show that justice was [is] of perpetual obligation." " The author concedes much of his argument, and admits that the sea was [is] susceptible of dominion." [Better still ; he admits the sea to be susceptible of dominion.] "A nation would be condemned by the impartial voice of mankind, if it voluntarily went [should go] to war, on a claim of which it doubted [should doubt] the legality." *' The Supieme Court observed that they were not at liberty to depart from the rule, whatever doubt might have been entertained, if the case icas [had
" And when the year was [liad] expired." 2 Chron. xxxvi. 10. " I only am [have] escaped alone to tell thee." Job i. 15. " And it came to Luke xix. 15. pass, when he was [had] returned." Return is sometimes a transitive verb, and sometimes intransitive. When a sum of borrowed money is returned, the phrase is correct, for this is the of a transitive verb. But when a rnan is form returned, we may passive In this case, the man returns by his own act, ask, who has returned him ? and he cannot be said to be returned. " He found the Coxe. Empress was [bad] departed." " They ivere [had] arrived within three days journey of the spice country." Gibbon, Ch. i. Note. " Neither Charles nor Diocletian were piad] arrived at a very advanced lb. Ch. xiii. period of life." '* The posterity of so many gods and heroes was [had] fallen into the most abject state." lb. Ch. ii. " Silver was [bad] groicn more common." lb. " He was [had] risen fiom the dead, and was [had] just ascended to heaven." Milnei', i. 20. "
been] eniirely new." Hearing that they M-ere [had] orriccd." 7J. 211. ' He held that the law of nations " Claudius vexed because his wife teas prohibited [prohibits] the use of pois[had] become a christian." lb, oned arms," 274. " He iusisted that the laws of war '' not the reader see how much we are [have] already departed no over a Does other power capgave [give] tive 'ban to keep him safely." from chii-itian simplicity .'" lb. 299. " The " general principle on the subject is, that, if a commander makes a My age iS [has] departed." Isaiah xxxviii. 12. " The man out of whom the demons were compact with the enemy, and it be of such a nature that the power to make [had] departed.^' Luke viii.
—
could be reasonably implied from the nature of the trust, it would be valid 35. " Workmen leere and binding, though hf abused his trust." Let any man translate this senMitford. [had] arrived to assist them." " A lb. tence into another language, if he can, without reducing the verbs to some body of Athenian horse was [had] just arrived." This fault is common in Mitford's Histoi'y of Greece. In the writings of consistency. " are more it occurs, but less entiwhich that States were have declared the United law, Roscoe, [are] elegant, frequently. Congress by *' l"he time limited for the reception of the cardinal teas expired." Hostled to priority of payment over jjri\'ale creditors, in cases of insolvency."
it
" The Supreme
r'ourt decided, that the acts of Congress, giving that gen-
United Siates, were [are] constitutional. was admitted that the government of the United States was of enumerated powers." eral piiority to (ht
"
It
" From his past designs and administrations
we
one
[is]
could never argue at
coe, Leo.
"
lb.
"
X.
He inquired whether the report was true, that a legate was arrived." L. Med. Tho nation being [having] once more ^o( into a course of borrowing."
all to
those which were future." [This is an odd combination of words.] "Jesus knowing tbatthe father had given all things into his hands, and he was come from God and went to God." John xiii. 3. " Alexander dispatched Eumenes with three hundred horse to two
" tliat
When
he ivas [had] retired
to his tent."
Price on Liberty. Coxe's Muss.
" He was lb. [had] not yet arrived."* The intransitive verb grow is constantly used by the Engli.sh as a transiThis is never used in the northern states, untive verb, as to grow wheat. less by persons who have adopted it recently from the English.
free that if they submitled and received him, [should or It seems almost incredible that such errors should continue, to this time, as a friend, no evil should befall them." " The apostle knew that the present season was [is] the only time allowed to disfigure the language of the most distinguished writers, and that they should escape animadversion. The practice has evidently been borrowed for this preparation." " What would be the real effect of that overpowering evidence, which from the French or Italian but surely no lover of correctness can excuse our adversaries required, [should require,] in a revelation, it is ditficult to such violation of the best established principles in our language. This fault occurs in a few instances, in the writings of the best American foretell." " It could not otherwise have been known that the word had It is however very rare, [has] this authors, as in the writings of Ames and Hamilton. either in books or in colloquial usage. Even our common people are remeaning." I told him if he went [should go] to-morrow, I would go with him. markably accurate in using the auxiliary have with the participles of intransitive verbs. This fault occurs in our hearing every hour in the day. They always, I believe, say, a ship has arrived, a plant has like fault prevails in other languages; indeed the English may have perished, the enemy had fled, the piice hod fallen, the corn has or had been led into it by reading foreign authors. *' Mais onaremarque avec rai- grown, the time hets expired, the man has returned, the vessel had departSuch also is the language ol' our most eminent writers. It has been remarked ed. son, que I'espace conchoidal etait infini." Lunier. " The Generals Gates and Sullivan have both arrived." with reason that the conchoidal space ivas [is] infinite. But whatever may be the practice of other nations, there would be no difWashington's Letters. " The Indians of the B. Trumbull. village had fled." ficulty in correcting such improprieties in our own language, if as much at"Our Tom has grown a sturdy boy." tention were given to the study of its true principles, as is given to other Progress of Dullness. "Our patriots have fallen." Discourse of D. IVcbster, Aug. 182G. But if in this particular, there is a Brit subjects of literature and science. EUicott. "Our commissary had not arrived." ish or American author who writes his vernacular language correctly, his The exceptions to this correct practice are chiefly in the use of the partiwritings have not fallen under inspection. There is another fault very common among English writers, though it is ciples of co/ne and go. It is very common to hear the expressions he is less frequent in the United States ; this is the conversion of an intransitive come or is gone, in which case, the participle seems to take the character of verb into a passive one. It is surprising that an error of this kind should an adjective although in mo.st instances, the regular form of expression, he have gained such an established use, in some foreign languages, as to be incu has come or has gone, is to be preferred. So dead, originally a participle, rable. Barbarous nations may indeed form languages ; but it should be the is used only as an adjective and deceased and departed are often used in the like manner. business of civilized men to purify their language from barbarisms. say, a deceased, or departed friend ; but it should be In the transitive verb, there is an that some action on an remarked that the original expression was, our friend has deceased, or has
—with assurance
cities
would submit and receive,]
;
A
my
;
;
We
agent
some way affects it. agent and the object change places
object, or in
When
this
performs verb becomes passive, the departed
in the sentence.
Thus, John loves Peter,
In the intransitive verb, transitive, but Peter is loved by John, is passive. is different ; for the action is limited to the agent ; and when it is stated that a thing is done, there is no agent by which it is done. I perish is
the case
intransitive ; lam perished is the passive form ; but tlie latter neither ex presses nor implies an agent by which I perish. This fault occurs frequently in the common version of the Scriptures. " Yea, whereto might the strength of their hands profit me, in whom old age was [had] perished." Job xxx. 2. " Their memorial is Ps. ix. 6. [has] perished witl> them." •' The heathen are [liave] perished out of this land." Ps. x. 16. •' Israel is [has] fled before the Philistines." 1 Sam. iv. 17. is
' David '•
is
The days
[has] fled."
2 Sam. xix.
icere [had] not expired."
9.
1
Sam.
xviii. 26.
and this phraseology, by an easy but heedless transition, became is deceased or is departed, in general, however, the conversion of an intransitive verb or form of expression into the passive form, is very rare of New England. among the people There Is a grammatical erroi' running through the writings of so respectaas it seems ble a writer as Mitford, which ought not to be passed unnoticed to be borrowed from the French language, whose idioms are different from the English, but which the English are too apt to follow. This fault is, in using the preterit or perfect tense, instead of the past tense indefinite, usuthis life
;
;
* On this use of intransitive verbs, as the ship was departed, it may be asked, The tree t« who departed it The mail is arrived, who has arrived it perished, who has perished it ? The enemy was fled, who fled them ? The time was expired, who expired it .'
.'
.'
INTRODUCTION. most improperly, the imperfect. Take the followins: sentences for] '* The conduct of Pelopidds towards .\rcudia and its minister at examples. the Persian court has scaicely been the result of mere caprice or resent ment." The verb here ought to be ivas. "The oration [of Isocrates] has been [was] a favorite of Dionysius of Halicarnassus." This form of expressing the time would be good in French, but is very bad in English. And it may be here remarked, that the tense he was, he arThese verbs, and all rived, he wrote, is not properly named imperfect. verbs of this form denote actions finished or perfect, as " in six days God created the heaven and the earth." Imperfect or unfinished action is exhe was in in this manner, reading, they tvcre writing. The pressed English error of calling the former tense imperfect has probably proceeded from a aervile adoption of the Latin names of the tenses, without considering the iJly called
—
difference of application. There are some errors in all the English Grammars, that have been derived to us from antiquity. Such is the arrangement of that among the conKai /caxapia rj rtiftuffasa junctions, like the Greek ^ti, and the Latin ut. OT't
believed that there shall be a performance of the things which were her from the Lord. Luke i. 45. In our version, on is rendered /or, but most erroneously. The true meaning and character of ltti will best appear, '• There shall be a perforby a transposition of the clauses of the verse. mance of the tilings told her from the Lord blessed or happy is she who betold
;
three, four, and
every other number in the laosuaire. Take the followiD
VVhen thus used, oh, two, three, are all indefinite that is, ; they are used With nouns which are indefinite, or expressing things not particularly designated. But this is not owing to the essential character of the adjectives, an, one, two, three; for any of them may be used with definite nouns and an ; IS continually thus used. " I will be an adversary to thine adversaries." " The angel stood for an adversary against Balaam." "Make this fellow return, lest in the battle he be an to us." " " " " " "
adversary
Rezon— was on adversary to Israel all the days of Solomon." -\nd he spake a parable to them to this end." And there was a wido»v in that city." .\nd seeing the multitude, he went up into a mountain." I will be a God to thee and thy seed after thee." Thou
art
Now let
a God ready
to
pardon."
any of these phrases be tested by the common definition of an or one single tiling of the kind Lowth. " I will be adversaries;" that is, any adversary, one of the kind, but vague or indeterminate." "Rezon was au adversary to Israel;" that is, in a vague sense any adversa"
that It 13 used in a vague sense, to a, point out in other respects indeterminate." " I will be an adversary to thine
:
lieved that." Here otj, that, appears to be what it really is, a relative or substitute for the whole clause in Greek succeeding it. So in Luke xxii. 18. Asyu yap vfuv on ov ^rj jtiu, &c. I say to you that I will not drink. \ will ry," indctcrniinate. And he spake a parable to them ;" that is, anii not drink, I say to you thai. It is the same in Latin, " Uico enim vobis parable, indeterminate. " Thou art a God, ready to pardon;" that is, any God, one of the kind, in a quod non bibam." Quod is here a relative governed by dicu, and referring to the following clause of the sentence. vague sense, indeterminate If it should be said, the noun is rendered So also Matthew ix. 28. nifttitrf oi't iwafxa.v tovto ttoiijaat ; Do determinate, be by other words in ye the sentence, and not an or a, this may be and generally is tnle but lieve that I am able to do this ? [1 am able to do this, do ye believe that?] this .shows that an iloesbynot This error runs through all Grammars, Greek, Latin, French, give to the noun its character of definiteness or English, kc. indefiniteness it retains its But how such an obvious always that the word that and its proper signification, which is one, and I
;
fact,
corresponding words in other languages, refer to the clause of a sentence, should escape observation, age after age, it is not easy to explain. How could it be suppos ed that a word is a conjunction which does 710/ join words or sentences That is used, in the passages cited, not to unite two sentences, but to con iinuethe same sent ci\cv, by an additional clause. The relative, when referring to a .sentence or the clause of a sentence, if not varied, for a variation of case is not wanted. So nottvithstanding and provided iaEnglish, am] pourmt que inFrench, are called conjunctions but most improperly ; as they are participles, and when called conjunclions, they always form, with a word, clause or sentence, the rase absolute or independent. Thu«, " it rains, but notwithstanding that, That fact, (it rains,) not opposing or pre[it rains,] 1 must go to town." Tenting me, that is, in opposition to that, I must go to town hoc non ob:
;
stante.
"
I
will
the fact,
ride,
provided you will accompany me."
That
is, 1
;
nothing more ; and
it is
used indifferently before nouns definite or indefi-
nite.
This mistake of the character of an
was
is
found in other languages
;
but
I
French Grammar in Paris, recommended by the Institute, the author of which had discarded the indefinite article. In English, an or a is, for the most Used with a part, entirely useless. noun in the singular number, it senes no purpose, that which the except form of the word, in the singular number, is intended to answer. It expresses unity only, and this is the province of the Were it singular number. " not for habit, give me orange," would express the sense of " give me an gratified to find a
orange," with precision and certainty. In this respect the Latin language has the advantage over the English. But the use of such a short word is not very inconvenient, and the usage cannot be changed. Other languages are subject to the same inconvenience; even the definite articles, orlletiiiitives, in Greek and in French, are very often useless, and were it not lor will ride, would be usage, improper.
will accompany me, being provided. \ie structure of 'these sentences. See my Philosophical and It is the same in French, pourvu que, that being provided, que leferring to the following clause. There are other points in grammar equally Not only in English faulty. From the period of the first Sason writings, our grammar, but in the grammars of other languages, men stumble at the threshlanguage has been sufferThe first writers, having no guide but the ear, old, and teach their children to stumble. In no language whatever can ing changes in orthography. lollowed each his own judgment or fancy; and hence a there be a part of speech properly called an article. There is no word or great portion of Saxon words are written with different letters, by different authors ; most of class of words that falls within the signification of ar/ic/e, a joint, or that can otherwise than arbitrarily be brought under that denomination. The defin- them are written two or three different ways, and some of them, fifteen or itive words called articles, are all When they are twenty. To this day, the orthogiaphy of some cla.sses of words is not enadjectives or pronouns. used with nouns, they are the signification of the tirely settled ; and in others, it is settled in a manner to confound the learner adjectives, modifying and mislead him into a false pronunciation. Nothing can be more nouns, like other adjectives ; tor this is their proper olfice. When disreputhey stand alone, they are pronouns, or substitutes for nouns. Thus hie, ille, table to the literary characterof a naUon, than the history of English orthogunless it is that of orthoepy. ipse in Latin, when used with nouns expressed, are adieetivcs; hie homo] raphy, 1. The Saxon this man; die homo, that man. When they stand alone, hie, ille, thev dipthong «, which probably had a specific and uniform sound or combination of stand in the place of nouns. sounds, has been discarded and ea generally substiThe fact is the same in other langua<^es. tuted in its place, as brceth, breath. The English the is an adjective, which, for ea thus united have rot a unidistinction, I caH n'definitive form sound, and of course they are no certain guide to adjective, and for brevity, a definitive, as it defines the In pronunciation. person or thing to some which It refers, or rather designates a instances, where the Saxon spelling was not uniform, the modem orBut why parficular person or thin"-. follows the most anomalous and difficult, instead of that which is this should be selected as the only definitive in our languac^e, is very thography strange when obviously this and that are more exactly deYiuiSve desi«, an ,r. r , 1'*'^"'"' •'"'""' ot ncreiy me one,' un,wws, "^ '' where nere u it was to adjective,; •"J"'^">>--,|h retain the sound ot tne of ft A before these vowels r' necessary " ei=. Thus found innearlv iirrt,,:. lir,n.„,„ „V p'^" "1 Thu. inu. rope, .and expressing a single person the Saxon «cea«,
Such
you
is
Practical
Grammar.
ORTHOGRAPHY.
Now
;
<%;
.-
n
;
i
1
—'."'—
...
jj
-
INTRODUCTION. In this country, many of our best writers have rejected the u from all words of this class, and reduced the whole to uniformity.* This is a desirable event; every rejection of an anomaly being a valuable improvement, monosyllables ded to the word, as in the past time and particijjles of verbs, we use k in which .sound judgment approves, and the love of regularity will vindicate and maintain. I have therefore followed the orthography of Gcncial Washthe place of the Saxon c, as in licked, licking. Our early writers attempted to extend this addition to words introduced ington, and the Congress of the United States, of Ash in his Dictionary, of from (he Latin and Greek, in which no such reason exists for the use of k Mitford in his History of Greece, &c. 8. There is another class of woids the orthography of which is not uniThus they wrote publick, iiiusick, rhetorick. In these and similar words the Latins used c for the Greek », as musicus, for \ioou\mi, and the early En- form, nor fully settled, such as take the termination able to form an adjec«. This was absurd tive. Thus Johnson writes proveable with p, but approvable and reprovaglish writers took both letters, the Roman c and Greek and removable ; tameable, enough but they never proceeded so far as to carry the absurdity through ble, without it. So moveable, but immovable After a but blamable, censjirable, desirable, excusable ; saleable, but ratable. the derivatives never writing publickation, musickal, rhetorickal. With like inconsistency Walker and Todd write daub with u and bedawb long struggle with the force of authority, good sense has nearly banished Todd writes abridgethis pedantic orthography from use ; and all words of tliis kind now appear, with !(', deviating in this instance, from Johnson. Walker in most of oar pubUc acts and elegant writings, in their proper sunplicity; ment and judgement with e, but acknowledgment without it. writes these words without e. hut adds it to lodgement. I have reduced all public, publication, music, musical. words of kind to letters have been discarded this in these In many words, formerly ending ie, uniformity. Walker Todd octoedral and 9. Johnson writes octoedrical ; Sheridan, from the singular number, and y substituted. Thus remedie, memorie, are, ; now written remedy, memory. But what is very singular, the plural of Jones follow Johnson ; but Jones has octahedron, which is not in the other these words retains the ie, with the addition of s, as in remedies. This anom- Dictionaries. The Greek, in words of this kind, is inconsistent, for omuj is I have followed the Greek comoy.ia. aly however creates no great inconvenience, except that it has been ex- changed, in compound words, to tended by negligent writers to words ending in ey, as in attornies. But pounds, and have inserted h wliich I consider as almost indispensable in the words ending in ey properly make the plural by simply taking s, as in surveys, English orthography, as octahedron. 10. Johnson introduced instructer, in the place of instructor, in opposiwhen an s is added, as in conveys. to verbs The same rule applies attorneys. tion to every authority which he has himself adduced to exemplify his defi5. In a vast number of words, the vowel e has been discarded as useless as in eggs for egges ; certain for certaine ; empress for empresse ; goodnessi nitions; Denham, Milton, Roscommon, Locke, Addison, Rogers, and the lor goodnesse. This is an improvement, as the e has no sound in modern common version of the Scriptures. But what is more singular, this orthogBut here again we meet with a surprising inconsistency; raphy, instructer, is contrary to his own practice ; at least, in four editions pronunciation. lor the same reason which justiiies this omission, would justify and require of his Rambler which I have examined, the word is uniformly written inthe omission of c linal in motive, pensive, juvenile, genuine, sanguine, doc-\ structor. The fact is the same with visitor. This is a point of little importance in itself; but when instructor had The introduction of e, trine, examine, determine, and a multitude of others. in most words of these classes, was at first wrong, as it could not plead any been from time immemorial, the established orthography, why unsettle the the let- practice ? I have in this word and in visitor adhered to the old orthography. authority in the originals but the retaining of it is unjustitiable, as is not a of it leads There words, ter is not merely useless, but, in very numerous classes particle of reason for altering instructor and visitor, which to[ would not apply to collector, cultivator, objector, projector, and a hundred a false pronunciation. Many of the most respectable English autliors, a^ century ago or more, omitted e in such words as examin, determin, famin,\ other words of similar termination. 11. Most of these and some other inconsistencies have been of long conductil, fertil, definit, &c. but these improvements were afterwards rejected! But there are others of more recent date, which admit of no In like manner, a linal e is inserted in tinuance. to the great injury of orthography. words of modern coinage, as in alumine, chlorine, chloride, oxyde,&LC. with-! apology, as they are changes from right to wrong. Such is the change of the old and correct orthography of defense, expense, offense, pretense, and out the least necessity or propriety. 6. A similar fate has attended the attempt to anglicize the orthography of, recompense, by substituting c for s as in defence. This change was probably another class of words, which we have received from the French. At a made or encouraged by printers, for the sake of avoiding the use of the old very early period, the words chambre, desastre, desordre, chartre, inonstre, long s ; but since this has been discarded, that reason no longer exists. The tendre, tigre, eyitre, fievre, diametre, arbitre, nombre, and others were redu- old orthography, defense, &i.c. is justified, not only by the Lafin originals, ced to the English form of spelling ; chamber, disaster, disorder, charter, but by the rule of uniformity ; for the derivatives are always written with monster, tender, tiger, enter, fever, diameter, arbiter, number. At a later s, defensive, extensive, offensive, pretension, recompensing. In favor 12. No less improper was the change of sceptic into skeptic. period. Sir Isaac Newton, Camden, Selden, Milton, Whitaker, Prideaux, Hook, Whiston, Bryant, and other authors of the first character, attempted of this innovation, it is alledged that the word is from the Greek crxtirrixoi. But True ; but is not scene derived from the Greek atmn, and scepter from to carry through this reformation, writing scepter, center, sepulcher. wxsavos ? Are not all from and ocean from this improvement was arrested, and a few words of this class retain their (THnTTTpov, and ascetic aamttnoi, French orthography; such are metre, mitre, nitre, spectre, sceptre, theatre, these words in exact analogy with each other, in their original orthography It is remarkable that a nation distinguish- Were they not formerly analogous in the English orthography ? W'hy viosepulchre, and sometimes centre. ed for erudition, should thus reject improvements, and retain anomalies, in late this analogy Why introduce an anomaly ? Such innovations, by dividin practice, in classes of words of I am opposition to all the convenience of uniformity. glad that so respecta- ing opinions and introducing discrepancies ble a writer as Mitford has discarded this innovation, and uniformly written like formation, have a mischievous effect, by keeping the language in perIn the present instance, want of uni petual fluctuation. center, scepter, theater, sepulcher. from time immemorial, been which an 13. In like is not the evil. has introduced The had, manner, dispatch, formity only present orthography awkward mode of writing the derivatives, for example, centred, sceptred, written with ;, was changed into despatch, on the wonderful discovery, that one vowel sepulchred ; whereas Milton and Pope wrote these words as regular deriva- the word is derived from the French depecher. But why change " So Coxe, in and not the other ? If we must follow the French, why not write despech, tions of ceH^e/*, scepter, sepulcher: thus, .Vce^/er^*/ King." his travels, " The principal wealth of the church is centered in the monas- or depech ? And why was this innovation limited to a single word Why This is correct. not carry the change through this whole class of words, and give us the teries." Is not Is not disaster from the French desastre? 7. Soon after the revival of letters in Europe, English writers began to benefit of uniformity ? borrow words from the French and Italian and usually with some little al [discharge from decharger ? Is not disarm from desarmer? Is not disobey leration of the orthography. Thus they wrote authour, embassadour, pre- ifrom desobeir? Is not disoblige (rom desutdiger ? Is not disorder from desdecessour, ancestour, successour ; using oi/r for the Latin termination or, 'ordre? The prefix dis is more properly English than de, though both are and the French eur, and writing similar words, in like manner, though not jused with propriety. But dispatch was the established orthography ; why ? of Latin or French What motive could induce them to write then disturb the Why select a single word from the whole class, evil, our aace^lo!s iuUoiiuoeul A' from Uie Greek, writing it generally after f, as in lick, stick, ihungh in some instances, omitting c, as in like and look. in which a syllable beginning with e or i is adHence in all
;
;
\
;
;
I
.'
.'
.'
;
practice
original.
these words, and errour, honour, favour, inferiour, &c. in this manner, But this following neither the Latin nor tlie French, I cannot conceive. orthography continued down to the seventeenth century, when the u began to be rejected from certain words of this class, and at the beginning of the last century, many of these words were written, ancestor, author, error, &c. as they are now written. But favor, honor, labor, candor, ardor, terror, vigor, inferior, superior, and a few others, were written with u, and .fohnson introduced this orthography into his dictionary. Nothing in language is more mischievous than the mistakes of a great man. It is not easy to understand why a man, whose professed object was to reduce the language to some regularity, should write author without ic and errour and honour with it! That he should write labour with u and laborious without it! Vigour, with u, and vigorous, invigorate, without it! Inferiour, superiour, with u, but inferiority, and superiority, without it Strange as it is, this inconsistency runs through his work, and his authority has been the means of continuing it, among his admirers, to this day. !
and introduce a change which creates uncertainty where none had existed for ages, without the smallest benefit to indemnify us for the perplexity and discordance occasioned by the innovation ? It is gratifying to observe the stern good sense of the English nation, preBlackstone, Paley, Coxe, senting a firm resistance to such innovations. Milner, Scott and Mitford, uniformly use the old and genuine orthography of instructor, visitor, sceptic and dispatch. 14. The omission of one / in befall, install, installment, recall, enthrall, &c., is by no means to be vindicated; as by custom, the two letters //, serve as a guide to the true pronunciation, that of broad a or aw. Accordthe letter a in instaling to the established rules of English pronunciation,
* The reformation commenced or received its most decided support and See WashingtotVs Letters, in two volumes, authority at the revolution. 8vo, 1795.
INTRODUCTION. tnent would have the sound it hus in balance ; it is therefoi-e expedient to retain both letters in all words of this chiss. 15. It is an established rule, in the English language, that monosyllabic verbs, ending in a single consonant, not preceded by a long vowel, and other verbs ending in a single accented consonant, and of course not preceded by a long vowel, double the final consonant, in all the derivatives, which are formed by a termination beginning with a vowel. Thxi-i, fit, hint, bar, when they take the terminations, ed, eili, ing, are written fitted, fitJlbet, teth, fitting; blotted, bliitteth, blotting ; barred, barreth, barring. compel, form the like derivatives ; abetted, abetteth, abetting ; compelled, this rule is, that without this duplieompelleth, compelling. The reason of cation of the l,i.st consonant, the vowel of the primitive word would, in the derivative, be naturally pronounced wrong, that is, with it.s long .sound ; fitHence we see the reason why verbs, havcd, bloting, lured, comjieled. ing the long sound of a vowel, do not double the last consonant, as feared, re]Kaled, repeated. The converse of this rule is, that verbs, ending in a single consonant, hut ha\ing the accent on the tir:;t syllable, or on a syllable preceding the last ought not to double the final consonant in the derivatives. Thus limit, la-
bor, charter, clatter, pardon, deliver, hinder, ha\'e Ibr their derivatives, But limited, laboreth, chartered, pardoning, elelivering, hinderest. strange as it may seem, the rule is wholly neglected and violated, in most of the words of this class in the language. Thus we observe, in all authors,
The word (ale is also ill-formed. The original word on the continent of is talk or talg ; and the change of k into e is not merely needless, but worse, for it precludes the use of the regular adjective, talcy. Hence see the adjective used is talcosc, an awkward compound of a Teutonic word with a Latin termination. This word should be written talk or talck, which would admit regular derivatives, talcky, talckiyiess. In like manner, zinc, if written zink, would admit the regular adjective zinky, as written Europe
we
by Kirwan. In botany, as the sexual system of the celebrated Swedish naturalist generally received, it seems proper to make the new terms, by which the classes and orders of plants are designated, a part of our language. Hitherto these names have not been anglicized but from the technical terms, English and .Xmerican writers have begun to form adjectives which are at variance with the analogies of our language. see in books such words as hexandrous, monogamous, polygamous, anil syngeiiesious. The writers who use these words, seem not to be aware of the importance of pursuing settled rules in the coining of words, as uniformity aids both in learning and in recollecting new names. The regular mode of forming adjectives from nouns ending in a or ia, is to add n to the noun, not ous. So we form Italian (torn Italia ; American from America. In some cases, the termination ic is usetl, but rarely or never ous ; or if it is, it is an anomaly. To arrest, if possible, the progress of these irregularities, and at the same time, to make the more important botanical terms really English, by giving them appropriate English terminations, and further to abridge the language of description, I have ventured to anglicize the names of all the classes and i.-»
now
;
We
ballotting, benelling, levelled, travelled, cancelled, rebelling, rivalling, n'or:^hipped, ivorshipper, apparelled, embon'eUed, libelling, and many others, in which the last consonant is doubled, in opposition to one of the oldest and orders, and insert them in this work. Thus from monandria, the name of the class containing plants with flowbest established rules in the language. Perry, in his Dictionary, lays down the rule for guidance, but has not been careful, in all cases, to observe it. ers having one stamen, I form monander, the name of an individual plant of 1 have endeavored to reduce these classes of words to a From monogqnia, the name of the order containing plants regular and uniform that character.
orthography. In like manner, nouns formed from such verbs are written with a single consonant, as jeweler, traveler, worshiper, for the purpose of What establishing a general rule, to which there may be no exception. should we say to a man who should write nudittor, alterrer, barterrer, banYet no good reason can be assigned why the ter7'er, gardenner, laborrer ? final consonant .should not be doubled in these words as well as jeweller, Tlie truth is, tlie syllable to be added is the usual tertraveller, enameller. mination er or ot% and nothing more. Not less remarkable is the practice of doubling the last consonant in equalAnd to add to the inconsistenled, equalling, but not in the xerb equalize. cy, the last consonant is sometimes doubled in tranquillize, a word in exact analogy with equalize. With regard to words which recent discoveries have introduced into the sciences, there may be some apology for ditferences of ni-thography, as writers have not established usage for a guide. Hence we find o.ryd is writ ten also orirfe and nxi/de ; oxygen ami hydrogen, are written z[fo oxige7ie, oxygene and hydrogetie. Sulphate, nitrate, &.C., are written also sulphat,
with flowers which have one pistil, I form monogyn, [pronounced monojyn] to express an individual plant of that order. The adjecti\'es are formed from the nouns with regular English terminations monandrian, monogynian, syngenesian, diecian, monecian,&ic. In describing a plant technically, according to this nomenclature, instead of saying, it is of the class monondria and order monogynia, the botanist nill call it a monogynian monander, a digynian pentander, a trigynian octaiiThese terms designate the class and order, der, a pentandrian diadelph. as perfectly as the use of the Latin technical names and in this manner we unite, in our botanical language, technical precision, witli brevity, correctness and elegance. It is with no small regret, that I see new terms formed, without a due regard to regular English analogies. New terms are often necessary, or at least very useful but they ought to be coined according to the settled prin-
nitrat.
ernize, civilize, animalize, and others, and be written systanize.
m
In adopt
:
;
A
ciples of the language.
neglect of these principles
is
obser\'able in the
word systematize, which, not being borrowed from the Greek, ought to follow the general rule of English formation, in agreement with legalize, modThis
is
what course is the Lexicographer to pursue Shall he the more important, as the derivatives .systemizing, systemization, are of method by which Walker attempts to settle pronunciation, and more easy utterance, than those of systematize, and particularly the noun
this case, tlie
;
.'
each mode of spelling many names appear on one side, and so many on may be asked, will undertake to graduate the scale authorities is to be determined ? Numbers will not
cite authorities in favor of
Then
the result
so systemalizatio7i. the other. l!ut who, it I observe in modern works on Natural History, the words crustaceology, by which the weight of and testaceology ; terms that are intended to designate the science of difleralways decide questions ent kinds of shells, from Crustacea, testacea. But who can countenance the of this sort to the satisfaction of the public. use of such words ? Where do we find another instance of similar terms In this case, I have determined to conform the orthography to established formed from should we violate an established principle adjectives English analogies the only authority from which there can he no legitimate in coining words of this family Besides, who can endure the derivatives, Now, no rule in orthography is better established, than that which crustaceological, testaceological, and much less the adverbs, if they should appeal. we have adopted from the Latin language, of representing the Hreek upsi- ever be wanted ? I have not admitted these anomalous words into this volon by the letter y. In the orthography of oxygen and hydrogen, from c|t! cabulary ; but have inserted the proper words, ctustalogy, testalogy, which and u5wp, this rule has been observed ; and why should oxyd be an excep- are regularly formed, like mineralogy. tion ? On this head I would subjoin a remark or two on the mode of writing InWith regard to sulphate, nitrate, and other names of that class of com- dian names of rivers, mountains and places in America, which we have pounds, I consider the final e as essential to the words, to prevent a false adopted. The French were the first pronunciation ; the vowel o having Its first sound as in/ate, though slightly who explored the country between .'
is,
.'
Why
.'
;
Europeans
pronounced.
The word chimistry has undergone two or three changes, according to Men have blundeied about the plainest fancy or to conjectural etymology. for to determine its true thing imaginable orthography, nothing was necessary but to open an Arabic Lexicon. The inhabitants of the South of Euwho introduced the word, doubtless knew its rope, origin, and wrote it correctly with (, not with y or e ; and had the English been contented to take it as they found it, the orthography would have been correct and uniform. In introducing words from other languages, it is de.siiable that the orthography should be conformed, as nearly as may be, to established English analFor this reason I must approve of the practice of Darwin who drops ogies. the Latin termination o( pyrites, writing with on the first the accent pyrite, ;
the great lakes and the gulf of Mexico, and of course, the first to commit to In dowriting the Indian names which occurred to them in their travels. ing this, they attempted to express the .sounds in letters, according to the French manner of pronunciation. Hence it happened that they wrote ch, where we should have written sh, had we first reduced those names to
Thus we have Chenango, .Michigan and Alichillimackinac,* writing. And as the French have no w in their lanin the French orthography. guage, they could not express the proper sound of the first .syllable of Wabash, IVisconsin, fVachita, otherwise than by writing them Ouabache, All this is Ouisconsin, Ouachita, and Missoori in French is Missouri. very proper for Frenchmen, for the letters used express the true sounds of the words. But in English, the letters used lead to a false pronunciation, Botanic Canto 2. 3.50. and for this Garden, syllable. It is to be reason, should not be used in English compositions. Stalactite has in like manner, been anglicized; and barytcs. it is hoped, deeply regretted tliat our language is thus doomed to be a heterogeneous may sutler the like change. In this manner, the words, in the English! metlley of English and foreign languages ; as the same letters representing form, become susceptible of a regular ])lural ; barytes and pyrites in twol and further they admit of regularly formsyllables, and stalactites in three ed ad}ectives, pyritic, barytic, stulactilic, which cannot be * regularly formThis word is, I believe, customarily pronounced .Mackinaw, and the ed from the Greek terminations. I original may well be suflered to fall into disuse. :
INTRODUCTION. tlie reader who Isyllable of e final, and of the termination ed. But no efibrt was probably In lever made to settle the pronunciation of words, till the last century. have always been a sulyect England, which was settled by various nations, there are numerous dialects of deep regret, and several attempts have been made to banish them Irom or diversities of language, still retained by the great mass of the population. The first settlers of New England, were almost all of English origin, and the language. The tirst attemjit oithis kind was made by Sir Thomas Smith, Secretary ol' State, to Queen Elizabeth another was made by Dr. Gill, a coming from different parts of England, they brought with them some diBut in the infancy of the settlements, the people celebrated master of St. Paul's School in London; another by Charles But- versities of language. an attempt was lived in towns adjacent or near to each other, for mutual aid and protection ler several attempts were made in the reign of Charles I. made by Elphinstone, in the last century; and lastly, another effort was from the natives and the male inhabitants of the first generation frequently made by Dr. Franklin. The latter gentleman compiled a dictionary on his assembled for the purpose of worship or for government. By the influence scheme of reform, and procured types to be cast, which he offered to me, |of these ami other causes, particularly by that of common schools, the differwith a view to engage me to prosecute his design. This offer I declined to ences of language among our citizens have been gradually lost so that in this part of tile United States, there can hardly be said to exist adiflerence accept; fori was then, and am still convinced, that the scheme of
different sounds, in dilll-ront languages, sei\e lo understands only his own.
The
eiubanass
irregularities in the English orthography
I
;
;
;
:
;
introdu-j
new
dialect. neither practicable nor expedient. |0f It is to be remarked further, that the first ministers of the gospel, who of success. Any But that some scheme for expressing the distinct sounds of our letters by 'migrated to this country, had been educated at the English universities, and is there to visible marks, ought to be adopted, a point about which be,i brought with them all the learning usually acquired in those institutions, ought and I trust there can be, but one opinion. That such a scheme is practica-j and the English language as it was then spoken. The influence of these Such is, men. who were greatly venerated, probably had no small effect in extinble as well as expedient, I should presume to lie equally evident. tlie state of our written language, that our own citizens never become mas-j guishing differences of speech. Hence it has happened that the traditional pronunciation of the language ters of orthography, without great difficulty and labor; and a great part of them never learn to spell words with correctness. In addition to this, the of well-educated people has been nearly the same in both countries, to this Among the common people, whose pi-onunciation in all countries is day. present orthography of some classes of words leads to a false pronunciation. In regard to the acquisition of our language by foreigners, the evil of our more or less corrupt, the diversities iu this country are far less numerous irregular orthography is extensive, beyond ',vhat is generally known or con- than in England. About fifty or sixty years ago, Thomas Sheridan, an Irish gentleman, who ceived. While the French and Italians have had the wisdom and the policy to refine and improve their respective languages, and render them almost had been the pupil of an intimate friend of Dean Swift, attempted to reduce the English lan- the pronunciation of English words to some system, and to introduce it into the common languages of all well-bred people in Europe guage, clothed in a barbarous orthography, is never learned by a foreigner popular use. His analysis of the English vowels is very critical, and in this but from necessity and the most copious language in Europe, embodying respect, there has been little improvement by later writers, though I an uncommon mass of science and erudition, is thus very limited in its use think none of them are perfectly correct. But in the application of his prinfulness. And to complete the mischief, the progress of arts, science and ciples, he failed of his object. Either he was not well acquainted with the or he had a disposition to introduce into use some Christianity among the heathen, and other rude or unevangelized nations, best English pronunciation, the English did not relish. The principal objection is most sensibly retarded by the difficulties of mastering an irregular or- peculiarities, which made to his scheme is that he gives to s the sound of s/i, in sudorific, superb, thography. The mode of ascertaining the proper pronunciation of words by marks, and other words where is followed by u long. These he pronounces &c. This pronunciation of s correspoints and trifling alterations of the present characters, seems to be the only shooderijic, shonperb, shooperfluiti/, one which can be reduced to practice. This mode resembling the use of ponding to the Sliemitic H/, he probably learnt in Ireland, for in the Irish Thus sean, old, is propoints in the Hebrew, has been adopted by some of the nations on the con branch of the Celtic, s has often the sound of sh. This pronunciation was no sooner published, than continent ; and I have pursued it, to a certain extent, in designating distinctions nounced shean. The scheme I have invented is not demned and rejected by the English. in the sounds of letters, in this work. considered as perfect; but it will accomplish some important purposes, by Another most extraordinary innovation of Sheridan was, his rejection of removing the most numerous classes of anomalies. With this scheme, the the Italian sound of a. as in father, calm, ask, from every word in the lanvisible characters of the language will present to the eye of a reader the true guage. Thus his notation gives to a in bar, the same sound as in barren, sounds of words ; and the scheme itself is so simple, that it may be learned barrel, bat ; to a father, pass, mass, pant, the same sound as in fat, panTo complete a scheme of this kind, a few other altera- ion, massacre, pan, fancy. Such a gross deviation from established Engin a few moments. tions would be necessary, but such as would not materially change the or- lish usage was of course condemned and rejected. learner or to the reader. the least or occasion n his difficulty pronunciation of ti and ci. before a vowel, as in partiality, otnnithography, After these alterations, there would remain a few^ words whose anomalies science, Sheridan is more correct than Walker, as he is in some other words; may he considered as incorrigible, such as knaw, gnaw, rotigh, &c., which such for example as bench, tench, book, took, and others of the same classes. Sheridan also contributed very much to propagate the change of tu into maybe collected into tables and easily learned, and all the other irregulariThis innovation was vinties may be so classed under general rules, as to be learned with very little ehu, or tshu; as in natshur, cultshur, virtshue. dicated on the supposed fact, that the letter u has the sound of yu; and labor. The adoption of this or any other scheme for removing the obstacles natyur, cultyur, virtyue, in a rapid enunciation, become natshur, &c. And which the English orthography presents to learners of the language, must to this day, this error respecting the sound of « is received in England as depend on public opinion. The plan I have adopted for representing the truth. But the fact is otherwise, and if not. it does not justify the practice ; sounds of letters by marks and points, in this work, is intended to answer two for in usage, u is short in nature, culture, as in tun; .so that on the princiFirst, to supersede the necessity of writing and printing the ples of Sheridan himself, this letter can have no effect on the preceding purposes. words a second time in an orthography adapted to express their pronuncia- articulation. This innovation however has prevailed to a considerable extent, although The latter method pursued by the English orthoepists, as applicable to tion. most words, is 1 think not only unnecessary but very inexpedient. The se- Sheridan subjected the change of tu to no rules. He is consistent in applycond purpose is, to exhibit to my fellow citizens the outline of a scheme for ing this change equally to tu, whether the accent follows the t or not. If without the use of is to be changed to (s/i«, in future, and perpetual, it ought to undergo difficulties of our tu the orthography, irregular removing new characters a scheme simple, easy of acquisition, and sufficient to an the same change in /(ituri'ti/, and perpetuity; and Sheridan, in pronounswer all tire more important puiposes of a regular orthography. cing tutor, tutelage, tumuli, as if written Ishuotiir, txhootelage, tshoomult, In other words, however, is certainly consistent, though wrong in fact. Sheridan is inconsistent with himself; tor he pronounces muUitshood, rectitshood, scrvitshood, while habitude, beatitude, certitude, decrepitude, gratitude, Slc. retain the proper sound of t. Walker's rule for changing tu to chu, only when the accent precedes, is As our langviage has been derived from various sources, and little or no and evidently made by him to suit his own practice. It systematic ellbrt has been made to reduce the orthography to any regularity, entirely arbitrary, Each has however the good effect of reducing the chus, and removing the outrathe pronunciation of the language is subject to numerous anomalies. of tshootor, tshoomult, &c. of our vowels has several different sounds; and some of the consonants re- geous anomalies That part of the lanThere are many other words which Sheridan has marked for a pronunciapresent very different articulations of the organs. which the later orthoepists guage whicit we have received from the Latin, is easily subjected to a few tion, which is not according to good usa2:e, and In general, however, it may be asserted that his notation is the fact with most of the de- have corrected. general rules of pronunciation. The same retain their French not warrant a tenth part as many deviations, from the present respectable of French does words rivatives from the Greek. origin Many
cing
characters into the language, attempt of this kind must certainly
is
fail
;
;
;
.'i
m
;
PROXUNCIATION.
orthography, which leads to a very erroneous pronunciation in English; and a large portion of our monosyllabic words of Saxon origin are extremely ir and pronunciation. regular both in orthography If we can judge, with tolerable certainty, from tlie versification of Chau cer, the pronunciation of words must have been, in many respects, different in his age, from that of the present day particularly in making a distinct :
this usage in England, as Walker's yet as his Dictionary was republished in classcountry, it had no small effect in corrupting the pronunciation of some What the es of words, and the effects of its influence are not yet extinct. was in England, I am precise effect of Sheridan's scheme of pronunciation not able to determine. But I have had information from the late venerable Haven, Dr. Johnson of Stratford, and fioin the late Dr. Hubbard of ;
New
INTRODUCTION. England between the yeai- 17G5 anil the revolution, tliat about It that period, the change of ( into chu had not taken place, to any extent. barristers and membegan to prevail on the stage and aniorig the younger bers of parliament, before Dr. Johnson left England, just before the war with conAme'rica, and Sheridan's IJictionary, published soon after, undoubtedly This change presents a new obstacle to tributed to extend the innovation. whose anomalies were before frightfully formithe acquisition of a language, " dable and perplexing. The favorers of innovation, seem not to reflect on the immense inconvenience of a correct notation of sounds in a language, by it.s in that notation proper characters the utilily of uniformity and permanence and the extensive evil of destroying or impairing the use of alphabetical The man who perverts or changes the established sound of a sinwriting.
wliowere
in
;
;
does an injury to that language, and to gle letter, especially of a consonant, the community using it, which tifty men of the same talents, can never repair.
In a few years after the publication of Sheridan's Dictionary, appeared Walker's, the author of which introduces the work to the public, with the following remarks, on the labors of his predecessors. " Among those writers who deserve the first praise on this subject, is Mr. reduced Elphinstone who, in his principles of the English language, has the cliaos to a system, and laid the foundation ot a just and regular pronunciBut this gentleman, by treating his subject with an allected obscuriation. to alter the whole orthography of the lanty, and by absurdly endeavoring guage, has unfortunately lost his credit with the public, for the part of his labors which entitles him to the highest praise." ' After him Ur. Kenriek contributed a portion of improvement, by his Rhetorical Dictionary, but he has rendered his Dictionary extremely im of doubtful and difii perfect, by entirely omitting a great number of words those very words for which a Dictionary of this kind cult pronuiKdation would naturally be consulted." [Let it be noted, that the same objection lies in full force against Sheridan, Walker, and .lones.J "To him succeeded Mr. Sheridan, who not only divided the words into ;ls Dr. Kenriek had done, but syllables, and placed figures over the vowels, by spelling these syllables as they are pronounced, seemed to conjplete the idea of a Pronouncing Dictionary, and to leave but little expectation of improvement. It must be confessed that his Dictionary is generally superior to every thing that preceded it, and his method of conveying the sound of of words by spelling them as they are pronounced, is highly rational and useBut here sincerity obliges me to .stop. The numerous instances I have ful. given of impropriety, inconsistency, and want of acquaintance with the anal ogies of the language, sufficiently show how imperfect I think his Dictiona' ry is, upon the whole, and what ample room was left for attempting another that might better answer the purpose of a guide to pronunciation." " The last writer on this subject is Mr. Nares, who, in his elements of orthoepy, has shown a clearness of method, and an extent of observation, which * deserve the highest encomiums. But he seems, on many occasions to have mistaken the best usage, and to have paid too little attention to the first ;
;
principles of pronunciation." Soon after the publication of Walker's Dictionary, appeared the Dictionary of Stephen Jones, who undertakes to correct the errors of Sheridan and Walker. This author objects to Sheridan, that he has not introduced the Italian sound of a, [as in fathrr,] in a single instance, and that Walker has been too sparing in the use of it. He objects that Sheridan has not, by any peculiar marks, pointed out the sound of oi or oi/, as in noise and cloy ; and that Walker has given distinctive marks of pronunciation to the diphthong mif which are terrilie to the learner, and not well calculated to express the exact sormd. He considers it as no trivial error in Walker's system, that he uses the long e in place of the short y. which gives to asperity, for example, He notices also :»s a fault in Walker's the ludicrous sound of aspereetee. scheme, that he makes no dift'erence in the sound of oo in tool, tooth, and in look, took. In all these particulars, except that of oi and oy, I think every man who From careful obserunderstands genuine English, will accord with Jones. vation, while in England, I know that Jones's notation is far more correct than that of Sheridan or Walker, and except in two or three classes of words, his pronunciation is exactly that which I uniformly heard in England, and nearly the .same as that of well-educated gentlemen in England. A few years after the appearance of Jones's Dictionary, William Perry published a pronouncing dictionary, in which an attempt is made to indicate the sounds of the letteis by certain arbitrary marks. In this work, the author has rejected most of the peculiarities of Sheridan, Walker and Jones, and given the language nearly as it was spoken, belbre those authors undertook to regulate the pronunciation. This author's manner of designating the sovinds of the letters is too complex for convenience, but his pronunciation is nearer to the actual usage in England, than that of either of his preHis orthography also is more correct, accorddecessors before mentioned. ing to present usage, than that of his predecessoi-s. During the year past, appeared the dictionary of R. S. Jameson, of Lincoln's Inn, intended to combine the merits of the most popular dictionaries, and to correct the false pronunciation of Walker, whose notation in some
New
he cntiiely rejects. He condemns, as a slovenly enunciathe sound given to d, which, before i and «, Walker directs, in certain words, to be pronounced like j. He rejects also his notation of ch, or ish, He rejects in congratulation, flatulent, natural, and all similar words. also the alTected pronunciation of Sheridan and Walker, in such words as gnide and kind. Most of the other errors of Walker, he copies, as he does classes of words, tion,
his antiquated orthography.
The English orthoepists have analyzed, and in general, have well defined or described, the sounds and appropriate uses of the letters of the alphabet. Sheridan's analysis, which appeared a few years before Walker's, is for the most part, correct ; but in describing the sounds of what may be called the broad diphthongal vowel i, I think he h:is erred, in making it to consist of the a or aw and e. He admits indeed that the voice docs not rest on the sound aw, but he contends that the mouth is opened to the same degree of aperture, and is in the same position, as if it were going to sound atr ; but before the voice can get a pa.ssagc to the lips, the under jaw is drawn up to the position, On this it is justly remarked by Walker, that uir and e are for sounding e. If the aw is precisely the component elements of the diphthong oi and oy. must be pronounced exactly alike ; 1 would add, then i and
oy pronounced, and if aw is ttot pronounced, then it is not a conjponent part of the diphthongal vowal i. Walker contends that this diphthong t, is composed of the sound of the If so, he must liave given to a, a Italian a, as in fatlur, and the sound of e. very dilt'erent sound from that which we are accustomed to give it. But* that sound of a is no more heard in i, than the sound of this is a mistake aw. The sound of in fifiht, mind, time, idle, is not /aicc^/i*, mawend, tawem, awedle ; nor is it f/ieght, m/'iend, tocm, iiedle. Let any man utter the aw or the Italian a before the e, and he will instantly perceive the The error, and reject both definitions, as leading to a false pronunciation. truth is, the mouth, in uttering i, is not opened so wide as in uttering aw or chara.; the initial sound is not that of aw or ii ; nor is it possible, by any The initial sound is acters we possess, to express the true sound on paper. not formed so deep in the throat as aio or a ; the position of the organs is The true sound can be learned only by nearly, yet not exactly the same. ;
i'
the ear. is the definition of the diphthongal u, or long u; It to consist of the sounds of e and oo or ^ii. sound indeed in certain words, as in vnite, union, and others; but departure from the proper sound of this character, as heard in cube, abuse, durable, human, jury. These words arc not pronounced, keoob, abeoose, deoorable, heooman,jeoory. The effort to introduce this atfected pronunciation is of most nuschievous tendency. The sound of e is not heard in the proper enunciation of the English », and for that reason, it should not be so stated on paper, nor named yu ; as the error naturally leads Dr. Kenriek remarks that we might as wcU to a corrupt pronunciation. prefix y to the other towels, as to (/, and pronounce them ya, ye, yi, yo. But this is not the whole evil ; this analysis of u has led orthoepists to give to our first or long u, two distinct sounds, or rather to make a diphthong and a vowel of this single letter. Thus they make it a diphthong in almost all situations, except after r, where they make it a vowel equivalent to oo or the French on. They represent ;( as being equivalent to ew, that is, e and 00, in cube, tube, duty, confusion, endure, pronounced, kewbe, tewbe, deutty, confewsion, endewre, but in brute, fruit, rude, intrude, ruby, they make u equivalent to oo ; thus. broote,froot, roode, infroode, rooby. I know not where this alTectation originated ; it first appeared in Sheridan's Dictionary, but it is a most unfounded distinction, and a mo.^t mischievous error. No such distinction was known to Dr. Johnson ; he gives the is observed long u but one sound, as in confusion ; and no such distinction among good speakers generally, either in this country or in England. I was in regard to this particularly attentive to the jiublic speakers in England, the distinction point, and was happy to find, that very few of them made here mentioned. In that country as in this, the long u has a uniform sound
Equally inaccurate
which these writers alledge
has
tliis
this is a
after all the consonants.
The source of the error in this as in another case to be mentioned herearticulations affect after, may be an inattention to the manner in which the To understand this, it will be necessary or the vowels which follow them. useful to examine the anatomical formation of articulate so\mds. "An articulate sound," says Lowth, "is the sotmd of the human voice, formed by the organs of speech. A vowel is a simple articulate sound." These definitions seem not to be sufficiently accurate. Articulation, in human speech, is the jointing, juncture or closing of the organs, which precedes and follows the vowels or open sounds, and which partially or totally A vowel or vocal sound is formed simply by opemng intercepts the voice. Thus in sounding a or o, the mouth is opened in a particular the mouth. manner, but without any articulation or closing of the organs. In strictness therefore, a simple vowel is not an articulate sound, as Lowth supposes; and it is certain that many irrational animals, without the power of articulation, do utter vowel sounds with great distinctness. An articulate sound then is properly a sound preceded or followed or both,
Thus ba, ab, and bad, are ararticulation or junction of the organs. the vowel being begun or closed, with a junction of the ; interrupting the voice, in ba and ab ; and in bad the vocal sound being preceded by one articulation and followed by another. The power of arti-
by an
ticulate sounds lips, '
Jn
many
instances, I suppose the writer means.
INTRODUCTION. ronsUUitcs llic oieat difference between men anil hriitef ; the latter being unable to articulate, can utter only vocal sounds. Tlie imperfect articulations of the parrot and some other animals form no exception that deserves notice. I give the name articulation, to the act of joining the organs, and to the In the latter sense, the character or letter which represents the junction. word is equivalent to cotifunant ; and articulation may be considered the preferable term, as it expresses the fact of closing the organs. filiation
Human
speech then consists of vocal sounds separated and modified by articulations of the organs. open the moulli, in a particular manner, to we then close the organs, interrupt that sound, and open the utter a vowel to utter a second vowel, and continue this opening and closing, to tlie end of the word. This process is carried on with surprising rapidity.
We
:
organs
Now
book
is In uutb, fliis notation is generally condemned iii strictly followed. England, and universally rejected in practice." In the notation of sounds, there is a mistake and inconsistency in all the orthoepists, which deserves notice, not on account of its practical importance. so much, as to expose an error in syllabication or the division of words into syllables, which has been maintained by all writers in Great Britain, from time immemorial. The rule is that " a single consonant between two vowels, must be joined to the latter sylbble." According to this rule, habit, baron, tenet, are to be divided thus, ha-bit, ba-ron, te-net. This rule is wholly arbitrary, and has for ages, retarded and rendered difHow is it possible that ficult, the acquisition of the language by children. men of discernment should support a rule that, in thousands of words, makes it necessary, to break a syllable, detaching one of the letters essential to it, and In the words above mentioned^ giving it a place in the next hab, bar, ten, are distinct syllables, which cannot be divided without violence. In many words, as in these, this syllable is the radix of the word the other syllable being formative or adventitious. But where this is not the case, convenience requires that syllables should, if possible, be kept entire ; and in all cases, the ilivision of syllables should, as far as possible, be such ?
in passing ii'om an articulation or close position, to an open position for uttering a vowel, it happens often that a very slight sound of e is uttered ; so as to be perceptible to tVie ear, either before or after the utterance of the proper vowel. This is remarkably the case with tlie long vowels preceding r, for such is the nature of that letter, that bare, mire, more, parent, apparent, Sac, cannot well be pronounced without a slight sound of e, between Thus the woiils above named are pro- as to lead the learner to a just pronunciation. the long vowel and the consonant. As in our language the long and short vowels are not distinguished by nounced nearly haer,mier,mocr.iiatrent,appaerent, and bare, mire, reaWy differences of character, when we see a single consonant bet^veen vowels, form two syllables, though they are considered to be monosyllables. we cannot determine, from the preceding vowel character, whether the like case, though less obvious, occurs in uttering u, particularly after sound is long or short. A stranger to the language knows not whether to In passing from the articulations, eb, the labial and palatal articulations. habit, ha-bit or hab-it. till he is instructed in the customary prowe are apt insen- pronounce eg, em, ep, or ]>e, to the sound of i(, as in nwie and jmre, nunciation. It was to avoid this inconvenience that our ancestors which proceeds from wrote two consonantsprobably of one in a sibly to utter a slight sound of c; and this utterance, instead great number of w ords, as in banthe particular situation of the organs, has been mistaken for the first compoIn this respect however there is no uniformity in English ; as ner, dinner. nent sound of the diphthongal u. The same cause has given rise to the we have retained the orthography of the languages from which generally as guide, guard, kind, pronunciation of e before the vowel in such words we have received the words, as in tutor, rigor, silent, and the like. This is precisely similar to the vulgar pronunciation of cow, gown, it should be observed that guise. although we often see the consonant ieown ; a pronunciation bounty, toivn, &c., that is, keow. geown, keounty, doubled, as in banner, yet no more than one articulation in these cases is This viformerly common in England, and not yet wholly extinct. ever used in speaking. close the organs but once between the first and cious pronunciation, in all words of this kind, whether countenanced by men second is it nor to use both the letters Ji, without pronounsyllable, possible of low life or of fashionable life, ought to be carefully avoided ; as the slencing ban, then intermitting the voice entirely, opening tlie organs and closder sound of e, in such cases, gives a feebleness to the words utterly inconHence in all cases, when the same consonant is ing them a second time. to is essential elowhich enunciation sistent with that full, open and manly written twice between vowels, as in banner, dinner, better, one of them only is quence. represented by an articulation of the organs, the other is useless, except The genuine sound of u long, detached from the influence of consonants, that it prevents any mistake, as to the sound of the preceding vowel. is the same in all the words above specified ; and the reason why it has been In tjie notation of all the orthoepists, there is inconsistency, at least, if not made a distinct vowel after r, as in rnde [rood,] is, that the organs are open, error. If they intend to express the true pronunciation by using the precise before the sound commences ; whereas when it follows most of our conson- letters necessary for the purpose, they all err. For instance, they write or close after an is commenced articulation, posi- bar'run for bar'on, when one articulation only is, or possibly can be, used ; ants, the sound immediately For this reason, u has more so also ballance, tion of the organs, as in mutable and infusion. This is biggot, biggamy, mellon, mettaphor, mellody. than after r ; but not distinctly its diphthongal sound after labials and palatals, only useless, for the use of the accent after the consonant, as bar'on, this accidental circumstance should not be the ground of radical distinctions, mel'on. &c. of answers the
A
Now
New
We
baVance, big'ot,
equivalent to the sounds of different letters. There is, in Walker's analysis of the alphabet, an error peculiar to Iiimself. This is, in making a distinction between the short i when it is Ibllowed by a In this case, he calls the first consonant, and when it is not ; as in ability. but the second he calls open, and equivalent to c in equal. i, in abil, short See principles 107, 544. He also makes the unaccented y at the end of a syllable precisely like the first sound of f, inwif, meter. Ability then written Never was a grosser misaccording to his principles would be abileetee. The sound of i and y in unaccented syllables, whether followed by take. an articulation or not, is always the short sound of e long, that is, e shortened ; the same sound in quality or kind, but not in quantity. To prove this fact, nothing is necessary but an attention to the manner in Avhich the words little and tiny, are pronounced, when they arc made emphatical by utterance. They are then pronounced leetle, teeny and this we hear every day, not only among children, but often among adults. In this change of pronunciation, there is nothing more than a prolongation of the sound of i, which, in the syllables, lit, tin, is short, in leetle, teeny, is long.
completely
purpose
determining
the pronunciation but it is contradictory to their own practice in a vast number of cases. Thus they write one consonant only in ciinl, civic, rivet ; and Walker wiiics kullonade, doubling/, but kulony, kolanise, with a single /. This want of system is observable in all the books which are ofiered to to the public as standards of orthoepy. A still greater fault, because it may lead to innumerable practical errors, consists in the notation of unaccented syllables. In this particular, there is error and discrepancy in the schemes of the orthoepists, which shows the utter impossibility of carrying them into eflfect. The final y unaccented, Walker makes to be e long, as I have before observed ; while Sheridan, Jones, and Perry, make it equivalent to short i, or at least, give it a short to universal Walker sound, according practice. pronounces tlie last vowel in natural and national, as a short ; Sheridan, as e short, naturel ; Jones, as u short, nalurul. Sheridan's notation may be a mistake, for he gives to al in national, the sound of ul. In the adjective deliberate. Walker and Jones give a in the last syllable its proper long sound ; and Sheridan, the sound of e short, deliberet. Dignitary is pronounced by Sheridan digniteand Jones to a The terminaand Walker its short sound, as in at. Walker has made a give different ry, In consequence of this mistake. uniformly notation of i when accented, and followed by a consonant in the same sylla- ting syllable ness is pronounced by Walker and Jones nes, by Sheridan iris, Thus to the as blessed7ies, blessednis. The same dilference exists in their notation oi" ble, and when it stands alone in the syllable and unaccented. less ; Sheridan, pronouncing it lis, as in blamelis, and Walker and Jones, first i in ability he assigns a different sound from that of the second ; and in article, he gives to i the sound of e long, arteecle ; but in articular, articuIt is in consequence of this mistake, tate, he gives it the short sound, tik. that he has throughout his Dictionary assigned to i and y unaccented and to • unaccented terminating words, the sound of elong; an error, which it is From the fact, which Walker relates of himself, Prin. 246, that he made 2/ ascertained by actual enumeration, extends to more than eleven thousand a distinction between the sound of ee in Jlee and in meet, until he had convowels or syllables ; an error, which, if carried to the full extent of his prin- sulted good speakers and particularly Mr. Garrick, who could find no dilferJones and Perry ence in the sound, it might be inferred that his ear was not very accurate. ciples, would subvert all the rules of English versification. have corrected this error in their notations, throughout the language. But his mistake evidently arose from not attending to the effect of the articIf it should be said, that Walker did not intend to direct y in this case, to ulation in the latter word, which stops the sound suddenly, but does not vary be pronounced as c long, but that his notation is intended only to mark the it. It is the same mistake which he made in the sound of i in the second the sound of the second i and it the of sound he either intended sound to be be the quality may replied, syllable of ability, which he calls short, while If he did of y is that of long e. The celebrity of Walker as a teacher of elocution, that of c long, according to his express direction, or he did not. his notation is not according to any good practice, either in England or the ami his key to the pronunciation of ancient names, which, with a few excepU. States, and by changing a short vowel into a long one, his notation would tions, is a good standard work, have led many persons to put more confidence subvert the rules of metrical composition. If he did not, his notation is in his than a close exaoiinatjon of its principles' will ;
;
—
;
adapted
to
mislead
tlie
learner, aud
it
English Orthoepy does mislead learners, wherever his support.
INTRODUCTIOIN. These differences, and many others, run througli giving e its proper sound. their worlcs, and appear in a large portion of all the words in the language. that all these gentlemen pronounced these words alike, it is
Now
probahle
The or so nearly alike that no difference would be noticed by a bystander. mischief of these notations is, that attempts are made to express minute distinctions or shades of sounds, so to speak, which cannot be represented A great part of the notations must, necessarily, to the eye by characters. be inaccurate, and for this reason, the notation of the vowels in unaccented From a careful attention to this subject, syllables should not be attempted. such notations are useless, and many of them all 1 am that persuaded mischievous, as they lead to a wrong pronunciation. In no case can the true pronunciation of words in a language be accurately and completely exNo pressed on paper; it can be caught only by the ear, and by practice. in attempt has ever been made to mark the pronunciation of all the vowels, any other language and in our language it is worse than useless. As Walker's pronunciation has been represented to the people of this country as the standard, I shall confine my remarks chiefly to his work with a view to ascertain its merits, and correct any erroneous impressions which have been received from such representations. 1. The first class of words which I shall mention, is that in which a has what is called, its Italian sound, as we pronounce it in father, psalm, calm. From a hasty enumeration of words of this class, 1 find there are two or three hundred in number, in which Walker gives to a its short sound, as in fat, bat, fancy, when, in fact, the most respectable usage in England, ;
This error well as in the United States, gives that letter its Italian sound. and Perry have corrected. To he correct in this class of words, we have only to retain the customary pronunciation of the northern States. 2. The notation of the sound of oo by Walker is wrong in most or all the words in which oo are followed by k, and in some others. Notwithstanding the distinction between the long and short sound of oo is clear and well established in a great number of words, yet he assigns the short sound to eight words only, viz. wool, tvood, good, hood, foot, stood, understood, and withstood. Principles 307. It seems inconceivable that a man bred or resident in London, should assign to oo in book, cook, took, and other like words, the same sound as in cool, boom, boot, food. Jones and Perry have corrected this notation, and given the pronunciation according to good usage, and just according to our customary pronunciation. While in England, I did not hear a single woi'd of this class pronounced according to Walker's notation. 3. To the letters ch in bench, bunch, clinch, drench, inch, tench, wrench and many other words, M'alker gives the French sound, that is, the sound It would seem by this and other of sh, instead of ch, as bensh, insft, &c. examples of wrong notation, that the author had been accustomed to some local peculiarities, either inLondon where all kinds of dialects are heard, or in some other place. In this instance, he gives to these words a pronunciation different from that of other orthoepists, and one which I have never heard His notation is palpably wrong, as either in England or in this country. our customary pronunciation is universally correct. 4. It has been already remarked, that Walker's notation of the sound of i and y short, in unaccented syllables, which he directs to he pronounced like e long, in nie, mete, is contrary to all good usage, and is rejected by every other orthocpist, except Jameson. Walker admits i to be short when followed by a consonant in the same syllable. Thus the first i in ability is Now observe the short, but the second i and the y are long e, abileetee. consequence. In the plural, abilities, according to his rule, must be pronounced afciVfe^ee^ ; but the word is never thus pronounced; universally it is pronounced abilitiz ; the last vowel sound is in practice immediately followed by a consonant, and by his own rule must be short. Then the re.lones
sult
is,
y
in ability
is
long
e,
change of sound no provision that 1 have ever seen.
but is
ie in
made
in
the pluralis short
i.
And
for this
Walker's scheme, nor in any other
In the analysis of the sounds of our letters. Walker alledges the diphthong ow, to consist of the broad a, or aw, and the Italian sound of u. Ac-
3. 0?/,
cording to his scheme, about, abound, round, now, iww, are to be pronounced, abawut, abuwund, rawund, naicit, vawu. But whoever heard this pronunciation ? The fact is not so ; the broad sound of a is not the initial this diphthong ; it is not commenced as deep in the throat, or with the same aperture as ou' it is a sound that can be learned only by the ear; The pronunciation of this diphthong is uniform in both countries. 6. In noting the sound of the unaccented vowels, and those which have the secondary accent, there are mistakes without ninnber, in all the schemes which I have seen, and one continued series of differences between the The following is a specimen. ortlioepists.
sound of
;
Sheridan.
INTRODUCTION. A great part of English words have 13. In the first edition of Walker's Dictionary, the author, under the word requiring iiUerprefalion. " -.in orthography sulficiently regular, and so well adapted to express the true tripod, observes, that all words of two syllables, with the accent on the pronunciation, that a few general rules only are wanted as a guide to the first, and having one consonant between two vowels, ought to have the vowlearner. el in the first syllable long." But this was too rash, for such words as cem'7. Another error of notation, in most of the English books, is that of the eiit, des'ert, preface, prcs'ent. prof it, »('fc'd,*ro/)'ic, and a multitude of others, vowel in the tirst syllable of eircle, circumstance, and many other words, stand, in the author's book, in direct opposition to his own lule. In a subthe tirst syllable of which Sheridan tirst and afterwards Walker and Jones sequent edition, the author, or some other person, has qualified the rule by This ilirected to be pronounced ser. pronunciation I have never heaid ei- an exception in favor of settled usage. This exception destroys the value ther in England or in this country. Perry's notation makes the syllable sur, of the rule ; and indeed there is, and there can be no rule applicable to words of this class. The pronunciation of the first vowel can be known according to all the usage with which I am acquainted. 8. Another objection to the books offered as standards of pronunciation, only by the usage. 14. The derivatives of nation and ratio. Walker and Jones particularly to the dictionaries of Sheridan and Walker, is that the rules are pronounce inconsistent, or t!ie execution of the woik is inconsistent with the rules. nash'onal, rash'onal. If this should be defended on the ground of the shorThus Walker l.iys it down as a rule. No. 357, that c after the accent and fol- tening power of the antepenultimate accent, then let me ask why we have lowed by eUy ia, ie, io, or eons, takes the sound of sh, as in ocean, social,' not nosh' onal from notion, devvsh'onal from devotion, probash' oner from Phocion, saponaceous, which are pronounced as if written oshea7i, sosheal, probation, stashJonary iVom station ? Why make rules and not apply Phosheon, saponasheous. But in the Dictionary, the author departs from them ? Why indulge such palpable inconsistences and multiply anomalies the rule, and directs these words to be pronounced as if written oshun, so15. Possess is, by the English orthoepists, pronounced pozzess ; but why So also in gracious, ancient, especial, provincial, tena- not then pronounce assess, assist, assassin, consession, obsession, with the shnl, saponashus. Can any good reason be assigned for mnVmg possess an excepcious, rapacious, and I know not how many others, the author depaits from sound of z ? his own rule ; so that either his rule or his pi actice must be wrong. tion to the pronunciation of this class of words ? This utterance of sounds And here it may be proper to notice a mistake of the author which has led through the nose is always disagreeable to the ear, and should be restricted to an erroneous notation in a great number of words. The mistake is, that to words in which usage is established. Good taste should rather induce a he assigns to c and t before the vowels ea, ia, ie, eo, and io, the sound of sh. limitation, than an extension of this practice. This remark applies also to Thus in ocean, he considers c as pronounced like sh ^ and in partial he con- some words beginning with dis, in which Walker goes beyond other orthoesiders the sound of sh as proceeding from t only. Now the truth is, that the pists in giving to s this nasal sound. ' sound of sh in these and in all similar cases, results from the combination of 16. Walker lays it down as a fact, that u has the sound of e and oo or yu. that is, from the rapid enunciation and This is true in many words, as in union, unite, c, t, or s with the following vowel unanimity, &.c. Hence blending of the two letters. Then the sound of the first vowel being blend- according to his principle, u in these words is to be pronounced yunion, ed with c or t, it ought not to he repeated anil form a distinct syllable. To yunite, without the letter y prefixed. Yet he writes these and similar make three syllables of ocea??, is to use the vowel e twice. In most cases, words with y, yunion, which upon his principles, would prefix yu to the all the orthoepists agree in pronouncing these combinations correctly in dis- sound of yu, and the pronuncialioii would be yuyuniie, or eooyunite. But syllables, and primitive words; as oshun, grashus, tenashus,parshal, sub- his notation of this sound of u is not uniform ; for he writes disunion and disBut in a number of unite without y, though it must be as proper in the compound as in the stanshal, nashun, relashun, preshus, and the Uke. words that are primitive in our language. Walker and Jones depart from this simple word. The same inconsistency occurs between use, written yuse., rule for although they pronounce conscience in t^vo syllables, conshense, yuze, and disuse, disuze. 17. There is a fault in Walker's notation of a, when it has the sound of oo, yet they pronounce nescience and prescience, in three, neshyense, preshySo also when they make tial one syllable in the primitive word, they tlie French ou. In the Key, he marks o when it has this sound with the ense. make two syllables of these letters in the derivatives partial is parshal, figure 2, and gives move as an example. Then according to his Key, o to error has led and a alone when thus marked, sounds as oo. But in the vocabulary, he thus but partiality is parsheality. Thus one another, large Sheridan and Perry, in marks both vowels in book, look, boot, and all similar words. Then accoipart of all words of this kind are mispronounced. this respect, are consistent and correct ; making one syllable only of eia, cie, ding to his notation, each of the vowels has the sound of oo, and book, look, He certainly did not intend this ; cio, tia, tio, both in primitives and derivatives, throughout the language. A are to be pronounced boo-ook, loo-ook. but such is precisely his direction, or the result of his notation ; and a forsingle line of poetry ought to settle this point forever. Expatiate free o'er all this scene of man. Pope. eigner, without counter-direction, must be led into this pronunciation. The same fault occurs in his notation of ee, as in meet and seek. 9. A remarkable instance of inconsistency occurs in the following words. 18. VoliLnte, Walker and Jones pronounce volyume ; why not then change Armature, aperture, breviature, feature, &c.. Walker pronoimces armatshure, npertshure, breviatshure, overtshure ; hutforfeeture is forfeetyure column into colyum ? Will it be said that in volume the « is long ? This is zni judicature, ligature, literature, miniature, nunciature, portraiture, not the fact at least I never heard it thus pronounced either in England or Can America ; it is always short in common usage, and so marked by Perry. prefecture, quadrature, signature, are pronounced as here written. 19. Inh, uncle, concord, concourse, concubine, are pronounced by Walany reason be possibly assigned for such inconsistency ? 10. Obedience and its family of words. Walker pronounces obejeence, obe- ker, ingh, ungkl, kongkord, kongkorse, kongkubine ; and these odious Expedi- vulgarisms are otfi^red for our adoption. There can be no apology for such jeent, obejeently, but disobedience, disobedient, as here written. ent is either as here written, or expejeent ; but expedience without the alter- attempts to corrupt our language. 20. The words brewery, finery, knavery, nicety, scenery, slavery, are, native. Why this inconsistency ? 11. Obdurate, obduracy, are marked to be pronounced obdurate or obju- by Walker and the other orthoepists, pronounced in three syllables, and imrate, obduracy or objuracy ; but objurately, objurateness, vvithout an alter- agery, in four ; the final e of the primitive word being detached from it, and In these last words occurs another error, the a in the third syllable uttered with /• as a distinct syllable. native. Why savagery has escaped the same It is obvious that in negligent practice, these words is made short, as if pronounced rat ; a deviation from all good usage. fate, I do not know. This notation of obdurate is inconsistent also with that of indurate, and have often been thus pronounced. But the most correct pronunciation rewith that of obdure ; an inconsistency which appears to have no plausible tains the original word entire in the derivative, the slight sound of <; before r no more constituting a syllable, than it does in mora and miVf. Take the pretext. The conversion of d intoj before i, is rejected, I believe, in all words, by following examples. Of marble stone was cut Jones, Perry and Jameson, and before u is rejected by Perry and Jameson, An altar carv'd with cunning imagery. and in many words by Jones. It is a departure from orthography wholly inSpenser. When in those oratories might you see excusable. liieroglypliii-s,
.'
;
;
;
,
;
12. Walker, Principles No, 92, lays it down as a rule, that when a is preceded by the gutturals hard g or c, [he should have said palatals,] it is, in by the intervention of a sound like e, so that card, cart, guard, regard, are pronounced like heard, heart, gheard, re gheard. Now it is remarkable that in the vocabulary or dictionary, the au thor has departed from his rule, for in not one of the foregoing words, except guard, nor in a multitude of other words which fall within the rule, has h directed this sound of e before the following vowel. Had he conformed to his own rule, he must have perverted the pronunciation oi car, carbuncle, care, carcass, cardinal, cargo, garden, garter, discard, and a long list of other words, too long to be here enumerated. The English orthoepists now confine this prepositive sound of e to guard, guaranty, guardian, guile, hind, and a few others. The probable origin ol this fault, has been already It is an affected pronunciation, which assigned, in treaUng of the letter u. Nares calls " a monster, peculiar to the stage." Indeed this slender sound n( e before another vowel, is wholly incompatible with that manly enuncialion which is peculiarly suited to the genius of the language. Pel ry and .Umeson have rejected it.
polite pronunciation, softened
Rich carvings, portraitures, and imagery. Dryden. Your gift shall two large goblets be silver, wrought with curious imagery. Dryden. Prior. What can thy imagery of sorrow mean Pronounced in four syllables, imagery, in these lines, makes a syllable too and in the last and the measure, much, example, utterly destroys it. injures same as it alPrior is the and The true pronunciation of Spenser, Dryden ways has been in my elementary books. 21. Formerly, the vioris puissance puissant had the accent on the second syllable although the poets seem, in some instances, to have blended But the modern change of the acthe four first letters'into one syllable. cent to the first syllable is not in accordance with English analogies, and it impairs the measure of many lines of poetry in which these words occur. In the adverb ^ufssanW^ it has a very bad effect. The foregoing obseiTations extend to whole classes of words, in which the genuine pronunciation has been changed, unsettled and perverted. It would be inconsistent with the limited nature of this Introduction, to enter It into an examination of every particular word of disputable pronunciation.
Of
?
,
;
,
INTRODUCTION. seems to be inexpedient and useless to bestow, page or a page, on a single word, in attempting or, in
many
cases,
to settle a point that,
as
Walker has done, half a The following lists are not complete, hut they comprehend the greatest some trilling point, number of words in their respective classes. The dates at the head of the country, has never been columns designate the year when the dictionaries in my possession were
to settle
in this
published, indicating nearly, but not exactly, the origin of each scheme. In disputed To give a brief statement of the errors, diversities and contradictions of Ithe orthography, I have given the letters used by each author, in the syllathe principal schemes of orthoepy, which have been ollered to the public, ible which contains the ditlerence of pronunciation ; in the others, I have within the last half century, two classes of words only will be sufficient, as||followed the common orthography,
This table of words may perhaps be thought a burlesque on English orIt certainly presents a phenomenon altogether novel in the history thoepy. of language. Of these live authorities, the notation of Perry, with the exception of a few words ending in ure, is most nearly accordant to the present usage in England, as far as my obser\'ations, while in that country, extended. That From an actual enuof Walker is by far the most remote from that usage. meration of the syllables in certain classes of words in which the vowel is erroneously pronounced, in Walker's scheme, 1 have ascertained that the number amounts to more than twelve thousand, without including several classes of unaccented syllables, which would swell the number by some thousands. Of this whole number, 1 did not, while in England, hear one vowel pronounced according to Walker's notation. The zeal manifested in this country, to make his pronunciation a standard, is absolute infatuation, as if adopted in its full extent, it would introduce many differences in the pronunciation of words in the two countries, where sameness now exists and even the attempt, should it not be successful, must multiply discordancies and distract opinions, and thus place the desired uniformity at a greater distance than ever. Fortunately, VValker's pronunciation has never been generally received in England, and where it has been received, we see, by ;
Vesture, Venture,
Vestyur. Ventyur.
Violoncello, Virtue, Vituline.
Veolontsello. Virtu.
Voluptuous, Vulture, Wafture.
Voluptuous. Vultvur.
Nodjule, Noctidyal or noctidjeal, Obejeence, Obejeent, Obduracy or objuracy. Obdurate or objurate,
Prelujeus, Presidjeal,
Procejure, Quotijean, Radiate or rajeate.
Radiant or rajeant, Radius or rajeus,
Occidjuus,
Odium
or ojeum, Ojus or ojeus, Ordeal or oijeal,
Rezidjual, Sardius or sarjeus, Sedulous or sedjulons, Studious or stujeus.
Penjulous, Penjuluni,
Tedious or tejeus.
Predial or prejeal. It would seem that, in a large part of these words, we may take our choice, either to retain the proper sound of d, or to convert it into that o( This j. choice certainly makes an odd kind of standard. But why mediate should retain the sound of d, while immediacy and medium suffer a change ; or why radiate should be given in the alternative, radiate or rajeate, while irradiate and irradianee are not subjected to any change ; or why obedi-
ence should be changed into obejeence, and disobedience remain unchanged, I am not able to conjecture. These classes of words exhibit a specimen of the modem orthoepy, so the want of our language ; it is indeed a brief and imperfect specimen, for I called, regulated. See bounteous, courteous, du- have ascertained by actual enumeration, that a catalogue of all the differenteous and plenteous. Why should plenteous be reduced to two syllables, ces of notation in these authors, would comprehend about one tt?'rdof all the when bounteous is pronounced in three ? And what reason can be assigned words in their vocabularies. Amidst this mass of errors and contradictions, our consolation is that the good sense of the English nation, a learned and refor the different notation of capitulate and recapitulate ? A remarkable instance of inconsistency in Walker's notation occurs in spectable people, is triumphing over the follies and caprices of fashion, and words of more syllables than two, ending in ture. Thus we find ture con- frowning on this most mischievous spirit of innovation. In proportion as the importance of settled usages and of preserving invioverted into churc [tshure] in Contextshure Abbreviatshure. Celatshure. late the proper sounds of letters, as the true and only safe landmarks of proDebentshure. Calentshure. Admixtshure. nunciation, shall be appreciated by an enUghtened people, just in that proDecoctshure. Adventshure. Compactshure. portion will all attempts of affected speakers to innovate upon such estabDefeatshure. lished usages be reprobated and resisted. Compostshure. Agricultshure. Concretshure. The intentions of the men who have undertaken to give a standard of pro.\pertshure. Dejectshure. Attaintshure. nunciation, have unquestionably been upright and sincere but facts have Conjectshure. Departshure. Dictatshure. Aventshure. Conjunctshure. proved that instead of good they have, on the whole, done harm ; for instead Overtshure. Divestshure. of reducing the pronunciation of words to uniformity, they have, to a considImpostshure. Indentshure. erable extent, unsettled it, and multiplied differences. The whole process Projectshure. of these attempts, from Sheridan's first publication, is within my memory, But in the following words the terminating syllabic remains unaltered. and I am confident, that whatever has been the effect of these attempts in lUiterature. Literature. Prelature. Great Britain, the result of them in the United States, has been to multiply Miniature. And such is the present state of the Quadriture. Intemperature. greatly the diversities of pronunciation. Investiture. Nunciature. Serrature. authorities, offered as standards, that it is impossible from books to gain a Judicature. Nutriture. correct knowledge of what is the general usage. If I had no other means of Signature. Prefecture. this than the Temperature. Ligature. general usage, English books, I should be utterly uuknowing Limature. ible to ascertain it and should give up the attempt as hopeless.' In this class of words, Sheridan and Jones are also inconsistent with themseveral in the Some of the differences of notation, books, may be rather apselves, though not to the same extent as Walker. Perry and Jameson re- parent than rea/; but with all due allowance for this imperfection of the In these schemes, I am persuaded that there are ten differences among these orthoetain, in all these words, the true orthrography and pronunciation. words also. Walker gives to m, in the last syllable, its first or long sound ; but pists, where there is one in the actual pronunciation of respectable people in this is an inaccurate notation and in most of them, the notation, if strictly the sound, in actual usage, is that of short u, England and the United States at least so far as my observation extends, either in England or the United States. followed, will lead to ten differences of pronunciation, where one only now In the following classes of words, as pronounced by Walker, there is either exists in the actual practice of the two countries. error or inconsistency, or both. This effect of multiplying doubts and diversities, has resulted fi-om very obvious causes. Individual or individjual, Assidjuous, Commodious or commojcus, 1 The limited acquaintance of orthoepists with the general usage, and Ingrejent [for ingredient,]
Jameson's Dictionary, that it is becoming unpopular and obsolete. We observe in the following list, that the three first of these orthoepists
have no rule by which their pronunciation of uniformity iu words of like orthography.
Hence
is
;
;
;
.
Credjulous, Dividual or dividjual. Fastidious or fastidjeOHs,
InsJidious or insidjeus.
Intermedial or intermejeal. Invidious or invidjeus. Mediocrity or mejeocrity.
"
Hideus or liidjeus. Immediacy or immejeasy.
Melodious or melojeus. Meridian or meridjean, Modulate or modjulate,
The multiplicity of books for instructing us in our vernacular language an evil of no small magnitude. Every man has some peculiar notions which he wishes to propagate, and there is scarcely any peculiarity or abThe facility of booksurdity for which some authority may not be found. making favors this disposition, and while a chief qualification for authorship is a dextrous use of an inverted pen, and a pair of scissors, we are not to ex-
Incendiary or incenjeary,
Nidjulation,
pect relief from the evil.
Gradient or grajeent. Gradual or gradjual, Guardian or guarjean,
Medium
or
mejeum.
is
INTRODUCTION. taking the pronunciation of London, or some dialect or local practice in The propagation of such a dialectical or pecuthat city, for the best usage. liar practice would of course distiirl) the uniformity of any other practice, in other parts of England or in tliis country. 2. The dilficulty or rather impracticahihty of representing sounds, and nice distinctions oi" sound, on paper; especially in unaccented syllables. S. The partiality o( authors for the practice of particular speakers, either stage players or others, which would lead them to denominate that the best tlieir
practice,
which had been adopted by
their favorites.
4. A spirit of fiistidious hypcrcriticism, which has led writers to make midistinctions, that are liable to be disputed, and which tend only to perplex the inquirer, and generate uncertainty or diversity, where no essential This spirit is continually prodifference had previously existed in practice. ducing new hooks and new schemes of orthoepy, and every additional book serves only to increase the difficulty of uniting opinions and establishing
nute
uniformity.
the most raisehievons project for corrupting the language, that human ingeBy removing the landmarks of language, all the fencetnuity ever devLsed. which can secure the purity and regularity of the language from unlicensed depredations without end are demolished, the chief use and value of alphabetical Wilting are destroyed, and every thing is given to chance and to caprice.
In determining the pronunciation of words in this work, I have availed myself of the most respectable English authorities, as well as of my owu personal observations in both countries, and of the observations of American gentlemen of erudition who have visited England. In selecting from a mass of contradictory authorities, I may not, iia all cases, have adopted the best pronunciation but I have spared no pains to execute tliis part of the work with fidelity. In general, the rules I have prescribed to myself are these. 1. The usage of respectable people in England and the United States, when identical in the two countries, settled and umlispuled. This rule comprehends most of the words in the language. 2. When usage is unsettled or uncertain, 1 have adjusted the pronunciation to the regular, established analogies of the language, as far as these can be definitely ascertained; having how;
This view of the subject is probably the most favorable (hat can be preThe real fact seems to be this; these men have taken for the standard, what they were pleased to call the best usage, which, in many cases, is a local usage or some favorite peculiarity of particular speakers, at least If they ever, in accentuation, some regard to euphony, or the prosaic melody which have had any authority at all ; or they have given the pronunciation which proceeds from a due succession of accented and unaccented syllables. sented.
There are some words, differently pronounced by respectable people, in happened to please their fancy, though not authorised by usage. In this manner, they have attempted to bend the common usage to their particular which no decisive reasons appear for preferring one mode of pronouncing them to another either might be adopted, without any injury to melody or fancies. It has been in this manner, by presenting to the public local or particular analogy. I see no particular reason, why pat'ent should have its first vowel and ina'tron, pa'tron, and pa'triot, the first vowel long. Much less practice, or mere innovation, for a standard, instead of general or national short, for making the a short in mat'ronal, and usage, that the authors above mentioned have unsettled the pronunciation of dc I approve the reasons assigned many words and multiplied diversities of practice. These attempts to ob- not in ma'tronly, or short in pat'ronnl, and not in pa'troness. The reasons trude local usage on the public, and bend to it the general or national usage, assigned by Walker appear to me to be absolute trifling. The rule of uniare the boldest assumptions of authority in language that the history of lite- formity is paramount to every other, excepting that oi" general undisputed and when the practice is unsettled, it seems to be tile duty of the rature has ever exhibited. In England however these pretensions to direct custom the pronunciation of the nation have less effect than they have in the United lexicographer to be guided by that rule, for his authority may lead to the States, for this obvious reason, that in England pronunciation is regulated uniformity desired. In a few instances, the cotnmon usage of a great and respectable portion almost exclusively by the practice of the higher classes of society, and not by books; hence if books do not exhibit the customary pronunciation, the of the people of this country accords with the analogies of the language, but work which offers it is neglected. not with the modern notation of English orthoepists. In such cases, it falsity of notation is easily detected, and the But in this country, where the people resort chiefly to books for rules of pro- seems expedient and proper, to retain our own usage. To renounce a prac;
;
nunciation, a false notation of sounds operates as a deception and misleads the How long the citizens of this country will submit to these impositions, time only can determine. The English language, when pronounced according to the genuine composition of its words, isa nervous, masculine language, well adapted to popular eloquence and it is not improbable that there may be some connection between this manly character of the language and the freedom of the British and American constitutions. They may perhaps act and react upon each other mutually, as cause and effect, and each contribute to the preservation At the same time, the language is, by no means, incapable of of the other. The attempts to refine upon the pronunciapoetical sweetness and melody. tion, within the last half century, have, in my opinion, added nothing to its smoothness and sweetness, but have very much impaired its strength of exThe attempts to banish the Italian sound pression as well as its regularity. of a and to introduce the sound of e before i and «, as in kind, guard, duty, &c. ought to be resisted, as iujurious to the manly character of the genuine inquirer.
;
English pronunciation.* In order to produce and preserve a tolerable degree of uniformity, and the genuine purity of our language, two things appear to be indispensable, viz. 1. To reject the practice of noting the sounds of the vowels in the unaccented syllables. Let any man, in genteel society or in public, pronounce the distinct sound of a in the last syllable of important, or the distinct sound of € in the terminations less and ness, as in hopeless, happiness, anti he would Indeed so different is the slight sound of a pass for a most inelegant speaker. great part of the unaccented vowels, in elegant pronunciation, from that which is directed in books of orthoepy, that no man can possibly acquire the nicer distinction of sounds, by means of books distinctions which no characters yet invented can express. Elegant pronunciation can be learned only by the ear. The French and Italians, whose languages are so popular in Europe, have never attempted to teach the sounds of their letters by asystem of notation, embracing the liner sounds of the vowels. 2. To preserve purity and uniformity in pronunciation, it is necessary to banish from use all books which change the orthography of words to adapt ;
the pronunciation to the fashion of the day.
The scheme now pursued
is
regular for one confessedly anomalous, out of respect to foreign usage, would hardly be consistent with the dignity of lexicography. When we have principle on our side, let us adhere to it. The time cannot tice confessedly
distant, when the population of this vast country will throw off their leading strings, and walk in their own strength ; and the more we can raise the credit and authority of principle over the caprices of fashion and innovaItion, the nearer we approach to uniformity and stability in practice. It is difficult, if not impracticable, to reconcile the opinions of a nation, in Iregard to every point, either of orthography or pronunciation. Every atitempt that has yet been made, in regard to the English language, has served tonly to increase the difficulty ; and as a gentleman remarked to me in Lona convention of learned men could not efi'ect the for no two men don, object, would think alike on the s\ibject. The language of a nation is the common property of the people, and no individual has a right to make inroads upon its principles. As it is the medium of communication between men, it is important that the same written ivords and the same oral sounds to express the same ideas, should be used by the whole nation. When any man therefore attempts to change the established orthography or pronunciation, except to correct palpable errors and produce uniformity, by recalling wanderers into the pale of regular No local practice, however analogies, he offers an indignity to the nation. There is great dignity, as well as prorespectable, will justify the attempt. priety, in respecting the universal and long established usages of a nation. With these views of the subject, I feel myself bound to reject all modern innovations, which violate the established principles and analogies of the language, and destroy or impair the value of alphabetical writing. I have therefore endeavored to present to my fellow citizens the English language^ in its genuine purity, as we have received the inheritance from our ancesIf the language is fatally destined to tors, without removing a landmark. be corrupted, I will not be an instrument of the mischief.
be
ETYSrOLOGY. Irregular as is the orthography of the English Language, and unsettled or corrupt as is the pronunciation, there is nothing either in English or in any other language of which I have any knov/ledge, which exhibits so strikingly the low state of philology as the etymological deductions of words, or the history of their origin, affinities and primary signification. To enable the young inquirer to estimate the erudition, correctness, or negligence of writers on this subject, and to awaken more attention to this branch of learning, I will state briefly the results of my researches and the opinions which I have been compelled to form on the merits of the principal treatises on this And if these opinions or this statement should be charged to egosubject. tism, or my over-weening confidence in the success of my own investiga-
•The French language, by the loss or imperfect use of articulations, though in utterance, has become so feeble in sound as to be unfit for From the specimens which 1 witnessed in the bold, impressive eloquence. Chamber of Deputies in Paris, I should suppose the orator mu^l depend alon his own animation and action for success in popular speakmost entirely The laning, with little or no aid from the strength and beauty of language. guage of popular eloquence should be neither the mouthing cantof the stage, nor the mincing aflfectation of dandies, nor the baby talk of the nursery. Such was not the language of Demosthenes nor of Cicero; and such may tions, my apology is, that I have suffered so nmch myself by a misplaced never be the language of the British Chatham, and of the Amei lean .\mes. confidence in the erudition of writers ; I have so often embraced errors rendered easy
INTRODUCTION. that if I can pre- guage from which they are immediately derived, especially when the or; vent my fellow -citizens, who have a taste for this study, from being subject- thography is too plain to be mistaken. They inform us that father is from ed to the same evils, 1 shall think the advantage obtained more than a bal- the Saxon feeder, that drop is ti-oni Sax. droppan, that picket is from the French piquet, and the like. So Johnson informs us that accent is from the ance for any unmerited imputation. The lirst example of etymology which I- shall mention, is that of Josephus, Latin accentus, and accept from the French accepter, Latin accipio. All " was this is well, but it can hardly be called etymology, or the deduction of words the historian of the Jews, who iiilbrms his readers, that the first man called Adam, which in the Hebrew tongue signifies one that is red, because from their originals. Whiter, in his Etymologicon Magndm, the first volume only of he was formed out of red earth compounded together ; for of that kind is I have which mere resemfrom a mistake a and true earth." Here is perused, began his work on a good plan, that of bringing toproceeding virgin blance of words ; it being certain that Adam no more signifies red earth, gether words of the same or of cognate radical letters, and in pursuance of than it does red cedar. This mistake is connecteil with another, that Adam his plan, he has collected many real affinities. But he has destroyed the was the proper name of the lirst man, an individual ; whereas the word is value of his work by mistaking the radical sense of many words, and by the generic name of the human species, and like man in English, siguilies confounding words of dilTcreut elements. Jamieson, in his Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language, has Conn, shape, image, expressing distinctively the characteristic eminence or Tliis fact explains the use of the collected the allinities of words in that language, particularly words of distinction of form of the human race. " And God Gothic and Teutonic origin, with industry and probably with judgment and a plural pronoun, in the account of the creation of the species. have and let them o>ir man after make in our Let us good degree of accuracy. In some instances, I think he has departed from likeness; said, image, dominion over the fish of the sea, S;c." Gen. i. 26. It is evident also that jcorrect principles of etymology, and mi.>laken facts, and he, a.s well as Whifalls short of truth in a most important particular, a clear underthe words used in relation to the species, the ima
which
it
has cost ine more labor
to
to learn
unlearn than
published systems of theology. Among the most celebrated authors of antiquity, who have written on the subject of language, is Varro, who has left a treatise De Lingua Latina. On this author's learning, Cicero, Quinctilian and Augustine have bestowed the most unbounded praises. He is pronoimccd to have been vir egregius ; eruditissimus Rumanorum ; peritissimus lingua; Latinai et omnis antiquiHe was doubtless a man of untatis, sine ulla dubitatione, doctissimus.^ common erudition for the age in which he lived and his etymological treatise may be consulted with advantage by persons who have knowledge enough of this subject to separate the certain or probable from the improbBut it is certain from what remains of his treatise, able and conjectural. that his knowledge of the origin of words did not extend beyond the most obvious facts and piinciples. Thus he deduces i;n7aa« from irteo; exitits from exeo ; victoria Irom vinco. All this is well ; and we have reason to think him correct, in deducing tie/Zus, fleece, from vellere, to pluck, as doubtAnd we less fleeces were plucked from sheep, before the use of shears. have reason to believe him when he informs us that imber was originally written himber ; that hircus was written by the Sabines Jirciis, and hadus, ;
fedus.
Very difTerent must be our opinion of the following etymologies. Pater, says Varro, is from patefacio ; ager ciiltus is so called because in seeds coalesce or unite with the earth; referring o^er perhaps to the root o{ a gge>', or the Greek a7{ip'o. Campus, he says, was so named beit
*
Thus far had I written, before I had seen this author's Hermes Sc vthBy this work I find the author agrees with me in regard to the and common origin of many of the Gothic and Greek prepositions.
icus.
identity
I had supposed that proof of such an obvious fact could hardly be neSome of these precessary, in the present state of philological knowledge. positions he has illustrated with a good degree of accuracy^ ; although should this work ever fall into his hands, 1 think he will be convinced that in one or two important points, his explanations are defective. In regard to other prepositions, I am satisfied the author has ventured upon unsafe ground, at least his opinions appear to me not to be well supported. In respect to his explanations of the names of the mythological deities, it appears to me the author, like all other authors whose works I have seen, wanders in darkness. From all my researches into the origin of words, I have drawn this conclusion, that the pagan deities are mostly the powers or supposed powers of nature, or imaginary beings supposed to preside over the various parts of creation, or the qualities of men, deified, that is, exalted and celebrated as supernatural agents. There are few of the names of these deities which I pretend to understand but there are a few of them that seem No person, I think, can doubt that the to be too obvious to be mistaken. Dryads are named from i{m, an oak or tree. Hence I infer that this name was applied to certain imaginary beings inhabiting the forests. No person can doubt, that J\rereus, the deity of the sea, and the nereids,
Indeed
;
cause fruits were first gathered from the open field, deducing the word fiom suNext to this, were the bills, colles, so named colendo, from colo, capio. because these were cultivated next to the open plain. That land or field nymphsof the sea, are named from the oriental ^nj, ^ * a river, from which appeared to be i\\t foundation of cattle and money was CdWeA fundus, the doubts that to flow. No Flora, the goddess of verb, corresponding person or it was so called because it pours forth [fundaf] annual crops. He de-! flowers, is merely a flowerdeified. duces cogitare from cogendo ; concilium from cogitatione ; cura Hence I infer that the true method of discovering the origin of the pagan froinj burning cor, the heart; volo from voluntas, and a volatu, a flying, becausei deities, is to find the meaning of their names. the mind flies instantly whither it will. How low must have been the slate of Now Diana is the goddess of hunting. What quality then is most necesphilology, when such improbable conjectures as these could attract the enWhat quality would rude men, destitute of the weapons sary for a hunter ? comiums before mentioned from Cicero and Quinctilian! which we possess, most value as useful in obtaining subsistence ? Doubtless The reader will find m;uiy things in Isidore and Priscian, worthj' of his! and swiftness. Thus we have substantial reasons for believing that courage attention, though much of what their woi'ks contain is now so famihar to Diana is the Celtic dan or dian, which signifies bold, strong, vehement, scholars of moderate attaiiunents, as scarcely to repay the labor of perusal. the root of Danube, Don, and other names of large rivers. But he who learns that Isidore makes oratio, a compound of oris ratio; no-i impetuous, If we examine the name oi Minerva, we shall find that the first syllable men, a contraction of nntamen ; and that he derives verbvm, from verberato contains the elements of mnH»s, the hand, and o( mind ; and the last constitaere. will hardly think it worth his labor to pursue his researches into that' uent part of the word corresponds well with the German arbeit, D. arbeid, author's works. Nor will he be disposed to relish Priscian's deduction ol^ Well, what are the characteristics labor, work, the last consonant being lost. lilera from legilitera, because a letter aflbrds the means of reading, or from of Minerva Why, she is the goddess of wisdom and of the arts. The sense lituro, to obliterate, because the ancients used to write on wax tables, and of-Moc!, would give one of her characteristics, and that of ;nan«« and arbeit, afterwards to obhtei ate what they had written. the other; but which is the true word, I do not know. Vossius \vrote a folio on the etymology of Latin words but from repeatThe two circumstances which chiefly distinguish Hercules are his labors ed exanunations of his book, I am persuaded that most of his deductions are and his club. We never hear of Hercules but with these accompaniments. far-fetched, conjectural and lanciful many of them are certainly erroneous. Now the first syllable of his name is precisely the root of the Greek ip7ov, and Minshew I have not consulted because from such Menage chiefly ipydi', that is, if'/ or ip«, which would give the sense of work, labor. Whether extracts as 1 have seen, from their writings, I am certain that little reliance the last constituent of the name isnXeici or from that root, I shall not pretend to can be placed on their opinions, except in cases too plain to be mistaken. aflirm. Indeed, I offer these explanations rather as ^jroftaft/t', than as clearly Junius and Skinner, the authorities for most of the etymologies of Bailey but they do appear to be probably well founded. Hercules tlien proved and Johnson, are sufficiently correct in referring English words to the lan- was a name given to any bold, heroic leader of a tribe of rude men, who was disfinguished for his achievements as a warrior and this name must have originated in very early ages, when clubs were the principal weapons of war, * Of the full value of these encomiums we can hardly judge, as most of and instruments of detense. And hence probably the origin of the scepter, Varro's writings h.ave perished, and some of those which survive appear in as a badge of royalty. Now it is worthy of remark that the war club of rude a mutilated form. But the greater his erudition, the more striking will ap- nations, at this day, especially of the savage nations of the south sea isles, is pf pear his ignorance of this subject. !the same shape as the ancient scepter.
^
.-
;
;
;
;
;
INTRODUCTION. The Hermes
of Harris, according to Dr. Lowth, "is the most beautiful and perfect example of analysis, that has been exhibited since the days of Aristotle." This, in my opinion, is not the character of the work, which, for tlie most part, consists ol passages from the works of Aristotle, Ammonius, It is little more than a colApollonius, Priscian, and other grammarians. lection of the opinions of the ancient writers on philology, whose metaTo show how illustrate the subject. physical subtilties rather obscure than when applied to the plainest subeasily men may be misled by metaphysics, from the Hermes. ject imaginable, take the following example as unrespects our primary perception, and denotes individuals known ; the respects our secondary perception, and denotes individuals as known." [This is nearly a hteral translation of a passage in Priscian, Lib. 17.] To illustrate the truth of this observation, the author gives the following example. "There goes a beggar with a long beard" indicating that the man had not been seen before and therefore a denotes the primary perception. A week after the man returns and I say, " There goes the beggar with belong beard;" the article the here indicating the secondary percepAll this is very well. tion, that is, that the man had been seen before. But let us try the rule by other examples, and see whether it is universal, or whether it is the peculiar and proper office of an or a to denote primary
throw. Hue, a darting or flashing, the root of luceo a simple root, that can have no connection with Kl-uc. Excepting Faber's work on the Cabiri, I have seen scarcely a book in any language, which exhibits so little etymological knowledge, with such ;
a series of erroneous or fanciful deductions, as Bryant's Analysis. Drummond's Origines abounds with etymological deductions of a similar character.
and thus originated in different tamiiies. " is, in our language, the common title of respect Sir," says the author, and the same term is employed in the name sense throughout every quarter of the globe. In the Sanscrit and Pci-sian, it means the organ of the head
He finds the word in Arabia, Turkey, in Greek, among the Peruitself." vians in South America, in Germany, Holland, and the contiguous counIn some of the languages of these countries, I have foun
that,
Letters formed by different organs are not commutable hence we are not admit a radical word beginning or ending with 4, /or v, to be the same as word beginning or ending with g. d, t, r or s ; nor a word whose radical to be the same as If n, one whose are m, elements r, d, or s, t. such words are in any case the same, they must have suffered some anomalous changes changes which are very unusual and which are never to ;
to
a
letters are
;
be admitted without the clearest evidence.
When this work was in the press, I first obtained a sight of a "History of the European Languages," by the late Dr. .\lexander Murray, Profcs.sor of Oriental languages in the University of Edinburgh. From a hasty i)erusal of the first volume, I find this learned professor studied the European languages with much attention and profit. He has gone lurther into the origin and formation of languages, than any author whose works I have read; and his writings unfold many valuable principles and
But he formed a theory which he attempted to support, in my opinlittle success at least, on his principles, all the usual rules of etymology are transgressed, and all distinction between words of different radical letters is abandoned. According to his theory, nine words are the foundations of language, viz. ag, wag, hwag,bag or hwag, [of wbich/ag^ and pag are softer varieties,] dwag, thwag or twag, gwag or ctvag, lag and Mag, mag, nag, and hnag, rug and hrag, swag. " By the help of these nine words and their compounds all the European languages have been from truth, and even from probability. formed." These are the author's words. To make out his scheme, he joins ag, having, to wag, move, and forms a The governing principles of etymology arc, Jir.'if, the identity of radical no attinity be- diminutive, wagag, to move a little or often. With ba, bear or bring, and letters, or a coincidence of cognates, in diltcrent languages ing admissible, except among words whose primary consonants are articu- la, hold, wagaba signifies literally move-bearing, and wagla is move-having. Then V or as as and Th S and lations of the same organs, D, T, B, F, M, P, jcagafcn contracted into wubba, to wave, lo weave, and !co;?/<7 into or as G, C hard, K and Q R, L and D. Some exceptions to this rule must wala, to turn. From dag, to wet, bedew, comes damp ; from ceag, to be admitted, but not without collateral evidence of the change, or some evi- chew, comes cAnm;); /a/, joined, wrought together, from ybo-, lo work, lo dence that is too clear to be reasonably rejected. join; hwal and hal, to hold, and turrt, from hwag ; bat from bngd or bagt ; Secmid. Words in diflijrent languages are not to he considered as proceed- *'§', a bite, from bigt ; bladder from blag; modera, mother, the producer, have the same signification, or one from magd, pioduced bottom from bogd, a stump, root or foundation field ing from the same radix, unless they And on this point, much Irom fagd -dearth from airtha,acertha, from acer, aker, ager ; field, an unclosely allied to it, or naturally deducible from it. knowledge of the primary sense of words, and of the manner in which col- cultivated plain, from fag, to make to fall. It seems that in order to maintain his from one radical idea, is necessary to secure the lateral senses have sprung theory, it was necessary to make it A competent knowledge of this branch of etymolo- appear that g formed a part of all original words, and that this letter has, in inquirer from mistakes. gy cannot be obtained from any one, or from two or three languages. It is modern words, been dropped. The author then introduces this letter into almost literally true, that in examining more than twenty languages, I have words where it never had anyplace, such as field, earth, bat, &c. The aufthor's work presents one of the most found eaeh language to throw some light on every other. singular me
ion with
:
;
W
;
;
;
;
;
,
;
;
to
sUde from one form into another.
The
following examples will illustrate this subject.
Labial letters commuted for other labials. English bear, hat.fero,pario, G. ip£pu>, (popso), D. voeren, G.ftihren. Here is the same word written in different languages, with five different
initial letters.
German wahr,
true, L. verus. Celtic lamh, lav, the hand, Goth. lofa. L. guberno, Fr. goiwerner, Eng. govern.
Dental letters
Eng. Eng. Eng. Eng. Eng. Eng.
commuted
for other dentals.
dew, G. thau. good, G. gut. (iarc,
Gr.
fiuppsw.
day, G. tag. thank, D.danken. brother,
D. broeder.
Palatal letters comnuited for other palatalB.
W
galw, Gr. kcHiu. Eng. call, Eng. get, It. catlare. Greek xfiMt", ^- hiems, winter. .
Dentals converted into sibilants. Eng. water, G. wasser. Lat. dens, a tooth, (!. zahn.
Eng. let, Fr. lai.^ser. Ch. no, Heb. WDSax. tid, time, G.
Vol.
I.
zeit.
G.
purpose but contempt.
to
confound the student and bring the study of etymology into
ACCENTUATIOX. Accent is
the more forcible utterance of a particular syllable of a word, by which it is distinguished fiom the others. The accented syllable of a word serves therefore as a kind of resting place or support of the voice, which passes over the unaccented syllables with more rapidity and a less distinct utterance.
Accent is of two kinds, or rather of two degrees of force, primary and Words of one syllable can have no accent. Words of two sylWords of three and four syllables may lables have the primary accent only. have the primary and secondary accent; but many of them have no secondary accent that deserves notice; suchare dignity, enemy, annuity. fidelity. In words of four, five or more syllables, a secondary accent is often essential secondary.
Thus heterogeneous to a clear distinct articulation of the several syllables. cannot be well uttered without two accented syllables; the fourth syllable receiving the principal stress of the voice, and the first clearly distinguished by more forcible utterance, than the second, third, fifth, and sixth. The accent of most English words has been long established ; and evidently, it has been determined by the natural ease of speaking, without the If any man should ask, why we lay the accent aid of rules or instruction. of such words as elocution, meditation, relation, congratulation, on the last syllable, except one ; the answer is, tliat such accentuation renders the pronunciation more easy to the organs of speech and more agreeable to the ear, than the accentuation of any other syllable. The ease of speaking, and a kind of prosaic melody, resulting from a due proportion of accented and unaccented syllable-, which enables the speaker to bound with ease from one accented syllable to another, without omitting those which are unaccented, are the two great principles by which the accentuation of words has been
INTRODUCTION. And
be extremely regretted that these principles should,
-porous, as carniv'orous, graniiniv'orous. -tomy, as anat'omy, lithot'omy. any instances, be neglected, or forced to yield to arbitrary reasons of deriWhen we know vation, or to a pedantic atTectation of foreign pronunciation. -raphy, as gcog'raphy, orihog'raphy. that the great mass of a nation naturally fall into a particular manner of proCompound words, as book-case, ink-stand, pen-knife, note-book, usually have a sUght accent, that is, one syllable is distinguished by some stress of rule or we this a without instruction, word, any may rely upon nouncing but as to voice the that their accentuation is other syllable is significant by itself, it is uttered with indication as a certain according tendency pretty the analogies of the language, by which their habits of speal
it is
to
in
;
;
;
;
move it can ever succeed. The words accessory, desultory, exemplary and peremptory would all have the accent on the second syllable, were it not very ditficult, with this
DISSYLLABLES. No
accent, to articulate the three last syllables of the
general rule can be given for the accentuation of words of two syll It is however, worth observing that when the same word is both a adjective and a verb, it happens, in many instances, tliat the noun or adjective has the accent on the first syllable, and the verb on the last Instances of which we have in ab'sent, to absent' ; con'cert, to concert' to The reason is, the preterit and participles of the verbs cx'port, expdrt. require to have the same syllable accented, as the verb; but if the first syl lable of the preterit and participles were to be accented, it would be difficult to pronounce the words, as may be perceived by attempting to pronounce ub'senting, con'certed, con'ducted, with the accent on the first syllable. In a few instances, the word has a different accent when a noun, from that which it has when an adjective ; as Au'gust, august' ; gallant', gaVlant. bles.
noun or an
,
TRISSYLLABLES. Words of three syllables, derived from dissyllables, usually retain the accent of their primitives. Thus Ptiet, pdetess; pleas'ant, plea^'antly ; gra'cious, graciously; relate, rented;
poli'te,poli'test.
In like manner, words of four syllables, formed from dissyllables, generally retain the accent of the primitives ; as in collect'ible from collect', ser'I'iceable from ser'vice. In
all
cases, the preterit and participles of verbs retain the accent of the
cient, have the accent on the syllable preceding that termination as motion, christian, precious, erudition, patient, &c. Words of more than two syllables, ending in ly, have, for the most part, the accent on the antepenult; as gratuity, propriety, prospaity, insensibility. Trissyllables ending in mcnt, for the most part have the accent on the first syllable, as compliment, detriment; but to this rule there are many exceptions, and particularly nouns formed from verbs, as amendment, conunandment. Words with the following terminations have the accent on the last syllable except two, or antepenult. ;
-fluous, as super'fluous, mellifluous. -ferous, as bacciferous, argentifei-ous. -fluent, as circum'fluent.
-cracy, as democ'racy, theoc'racy. -gonal, as diag'onal, sexag'onal.
-gony, as costnog'ony, theog'ony. -machy, as logom'achy, theom'achy. -loquy, as ob'loquy, ventril'oquy. -mathy, as polym'athy. -meter, as barom'eter, hygrorn'eter. -nomy, as econ'omy, astron'omy. -pathy, as ap'athy, antip'athy. —phony, as eu'phony. sym'phuny.
—parous, as ovip'tirous, vivip'arous. —scopy, as
deuteros'copy, aeros'copy. —strophe, as apos'trophe, catas'trophe.
—vomous,
as igniv'o/naus.
effort, al'ternating, dem'onstrating. In extirpate, compensate and confiscate, the accent on the second syllable leaves the last syllables of the participle most miserably weak. What a feeble line is this of Pope :
Each seeming ill compen'sated of course. This evil is remedied by placing the primary accent on the first syllable, and a secondary one on the thiid com'pensate'd ; com'pensating ; ex'tirpating ; ex'tirpated; con'fiscating; con'fiscated; the full sound of a giving ;
due strength
to the last syllables. further to be observed that there are some words which, in poetry and prose, must be differently accented, as the accent has been transferred from one syllable to another within the two last centuries. Nares by usage enumerates more than a hundred words, whose accent has been thus changed since the age of Shakspeare. Of this class of words are aspect, jnocess, sojourn, conve.v, contest, retinue, converse, the noun horizon, which Milton accents on the second syllable, and acceptable, which he accents on the first, as he does attribute and contribute. But the accent of all these words has been changed the seven first have the accent indisputably on the first syllable the two last, on the second syllable and although some difference of opinion may exist, as to the accentuation o[ horizon and acceptable, yet the common popular practice of accenting horizon on the first and acceptable on the second, is according to regular analogies and cannot well be altered. Nor ought it to be the poetic accent, in both, is harsh and unnatural. This difference of accent is a slighl inconvenience but custom is the arbiter in language ; and when well settled and general, there is no appeal from its decisions, the inconvenience admits of no remedy^ It is
'
;
;
;
;
;
INTRODUCTION. Of Tohmon's Dictionary, and of the manner in which the following work is
executed.
Dr. Johnson was one of the greatest men that the En2;lish nation has ever produced and when the exhibition of truth depended on liis own gigantic powers of intellect, he seldom erred. But in the compilation of his dictionary, he manifested a great defect of research, by means of which he often fell into mistakes and no errors are so dangerous as those of great men. The authority created by the general excellence of their works gives a sanction to their very mistakes, and represses that spirit of inquiry which would investigate the truth, and subvert the errors of inferior men. It seems to be owing to this cause chiefly that the most obvious mistakes of Johnson's Dictionary have remained to this day uncorrected, and still con tinue to disfigure the improved editions of the work recently published. In like manner, the opinions of this author, when wrong, have a weight of Tlic sentiment conauthority that renders them extremely mischievous. ;
;
tained in this single line
Quid
esccmptajuvat spinis de pluribus
te
una ?
is of this kind; tliat we are to make no corrections, because we cannot complete the reformation; a sentiment that sets itself in direct opposition to all improvement in science, literature and morals; asentiment, which, if it had been always an efficacious principle of human conduct, would have condem-
7. The mistakes in etymology are numerous; and (he whole scheme of deducing words from their original is extremely imperfect. 8. The manner of defining words in Johnson, as in all other dictionaries, is In a great part of the more important words, susceptible of improvement. and particularly verbs, lexicographers, either from negligence or want of knowledge, have inverted the true order, or have disregarded all order in the definitions. There is a primary sense of every word, from which all the other have proceeded; and whenever this can be discovered, this sense should stand first in order. Thus the primary sense of make is to force or compel; but this in Johnson's Dictionary is the fifteenth definition; and (bis sense o{ facia in Ainsworth, the nineteenth. 9. One of the most objectionable parts of Johnson's Dictionary, in my opinion, is the great number of passages cited from authors, to exemplify his definitions. Most English words are so familiarly and perfectly understood, and the sense of them so litlle liable to be called in question, that they may be safely left to rest on the authority of the lexicographer, wKhout examples. Who needs extracts from three authors, Knolles, Milton and Berkeley, to prove or illustrate the literal of hand ! Who needs extracts from meaning Shakspearc, Bacon, South and Dryden, to prove hammer to he a legitimate EngUsh word, and to signify an instrument for driving nails? So under household, we finil seven passages and nearly thirty lines employed to exemplify the plain interpretation, a family living together.
In most cases, one example is sufficient to illustrate the meaning of a word and this is not absolutely necessary, except in cases where the signed not only our language, but our manners and our knowledge to everlast- nification is a deviation from the plain literal sense, a pardcular application a And hence whenever or in a case, where the sense of the word may be doubtful, pioposition is made to conect the of the term ing rudeness. orthography of our language, it is instantly repelled with the opinion and and of questionable authority. Numerous citations serve to swell the size Thus while the nations on the Euj'opcan continent of a Dictionary, without any adequate advantage. Bu( this is not the onlv ipse dixit of Johnson. have purified their languages and reduced the orthography to a good de- objection (o Johnson's exemplifications. Many of the pa-ssages are taken whose style is now antiquateil, gree of regularity, our enemies of reform conteml most strenuously for re- from authors now little read, or not at all taining the anomalies of the language, even to the very rags and tatters of and by no means furnishing proper models for students of the present age. barbarism. But what is more extraordinary, the very persons who thus In the execution of this work. I have pursued a course somewhat dillerstruggle against the smallest improvement of the orthography are the most ent; not however without fortifying my own opinion with that of other genready to innovate in the jironunciaiinn, and will, at any time, adopt a tlemen, in whose judgment I have confidence. In many cases, where tho change that fashion may introduce, though it may infi'ingc the regularity of sense of a word is plain and indisputable, I have omitted to cite any authorithe language, multiply anomalies, and increase the difficulty of learning it. I have done the same in ty. many instances, where the sense of a word is Nay, they will not only innovate themselves, but will use their influence to wholly obi^lete, and the definition useful only to the antiquary. In some propagate the change, by deriding those who resist i(, and who strive to re- instances, definitions are given without authority, merely because I hail tain the resemblance between the written and spoken language. to note the author, or had lost the reference. In such cases, I A considerable part of Johnson's Dictionary is however well executed neglected must stand responsible for the correctness of the definition. In all such and when his definitions are correct and his arrangement judicious, it seems cases, however, I have endeavored to be faithful to (he duty of a lexicoIt would be mere aflectationor to be expedient to follow him. folly to alter and if in any instance, a mistake has escaped me, I shall be happy grapher what cannot be improved. to have it suggested, that it may be corrected. In general, I have illustrated the significations of words, and proved theni The principal faults in Johnson's Dictionary are to be legitimate, by a short passage from some respectable author, often 1. The want of a great number of well authorized words to the belonging In many cases, I have abridged from the whole passage cited by Johnson. This detect has been in Mason and T"odd but language. part supplied by brief sentences of my own; using the phrases or sentences in which their supplemental list is still imperfect even in common words, and still given the word most frequently occurs, and often presenting some important more defective from the omission of terms of science. or sentiment in religion, morality, law or civil policy. maxim Under words 2. Another great fault, that remains uncorrected, is the manner of noting which occur in the scriptures, I have often cited passages from our common the accented syllable the accent being laid uniformly on the vowel, whethnot only to illustrate the scriptural or theological sense, but even er it closes the syllable or not. Thus the accent is laid on e in te'iiaiit as version, the ordinary significations of the words. These passages are short, plain, well as in te'acher, and the inquirer cannot know from the accent whether and familiar to most readers. In a few cases, where the sense the vowel is long or short. It is surprising that such a notation should still appropriate, of a word is disputed, I have departed from the general plan, and cited a be retained in that work. ;
;
;
;
;
;
;
number of authorities. considered as a material fault, that in some classes of words, JohnIn the admission of words of recent origin, into a Dictionary, a lexicois either not correct upon principle or not uniform in the writes heedlessly, with .ss, but grapher has to encounter many dilficulties; as it is not easy, in all cases, to carelesly, with one s , dedetermine whether a word is so far authorized as to be considered legitimate. fence, with c, but defensible, defensive, with s; rigour, iiiferiour, with u, Some writers a licentiousness in coining words, which good sense but rigorous, inferiority, without it; publick, authentick with k, hut pub- would wish to indulge At the same time, it would not be judicious to rerepress. lication, authenticate, without it; and so of many other words of the same classes. ject all new terms; as these are often necessary to express new ideas; and the progress of improvement in arts and science would be retarded, by de4. The omission of the participles or most of them, is no small defect, as a in to terms given to things newly discovered. dictionaries, of them by use have become proper adjectives, and require distinct nying place many definitions. The additions of this kind in this work are very numerous. It But the lexicographer is not answerable for the bad use of the privilege of new words. It seems to be his duty to insert and explain all words is also useful both to natives and foreigners, to be able, by opening a ilictioa- coining which are used by respectable writers or speakers, whether the words are ary, to know when the final consonant of a verb is doubled in the participle. The future destined to be received into general and permanent use or not. 5. The want of due discrimination in the definitions of words that arp use must depend on public taste or the utility of the words; circumstances nearly synonymous, or sometimes really synonymous, at other Umes not, is which are not within the lexicographer's control. a fault in all the dictionaries of our which I have seen. Permeate, language, sometimes censured for in are their Johnson, to and inserting vocabularies, says signifies, pass through, Lexicographers permeable, such as may be passed through. But we pass through a door or gate; although we do not vulgar words, and terms of art known only to particular artisans. That this permeate it, or say that it is permeable. Obedience, says Johnson, is obse- practice may be carried too far, is admitted ; but it is to be remarked that, in quiousness, but this is rarely the present sense of the word ; so far from it general, vulgar words are the oldest and best authorized words in language; and their use i| as necessary to the classes of people who use them, as elethat obedience is always honorable, and obsequiousness usually impliesj meanness. {Peculation, says Johnson, is robbery of the public, theft ot gant words are to the statesman and the poet. It may be added that such pubUe money. But as robbery and theft are now understood, it is neither. words are often particularly useful to the lexicographer, in furnishing him with the primary sense, which is no where to be found, but in popular use. Inaccuracies of this kind are very numerous. so far as John.Jon and Todd have done, in 6. There are in Johnson's Dictionary, some palpable mistakes in orthog- In this work, I have not gone quite raphy, such a.s comptroller, bridegroom, redoubt, and some others, there admitting vulgar words. Some of them are too low to deserve notice. The catalogue of obsolete words in Johnson has been considerably augbeing no such legitimate words iu the language. In other instances, the author mistook the true origin of words, and has erred in the orthography, as mented by Mason and Todd. I have, though somewhat reluctantly, insertin chymistry and diocess. ed nearly the whole catalogue, which, I presume, amounts to seven or eight. 3.
It is
son's orthography class.
Thus he
INTRODUCTION. Most of these may be useful to the ten thousand words. antiquary but to the great mass of readers, they are useless.* I have also inserted many wonis which are local in England; being retained from the diHercnt languages that have been spoken in that country, but which are no more a part of our present language in the United States, than so many Lapland words. These however occur in books which treat of books which are occasionally road in this country. agriculture and the arts ; Law-terms, which are no part of the proper language of the U. States, and never can be, as the things they express do not exist in this country, are however retained, as it is necessary that the gentlemen of the bar should understand them ; and it will be time to dismiss them from books, when and perhaps,
to
;
they are obsolete in practice. As to Americanisms, so called, I have not been able to find many words, These I have admitted in respectable use, which can be so denominated. and noted as peculiar to this country. 1 have fully ascertained that most of the new words charged to the coinage of this country, were lirst used in England. In exhibiting the origin and afiinilies of English words, I have usually placed first in order the corresponding word, in the language from or through which we have received it then the corresponding words in the languages of the same family or race ; then the corresponding word in the languages of other families. Thus, for example, the word break we have from our Saxon ancestors ; I therefore give the Saxon word first then the same word in the other Teutonic and Gothic languages then the Celtic words; then the Latin ; and lastly the Hebrew, Chaldaic and Arabic. This order is not followed in e\ery instance, even of vernacular words, but it is When there can be no rational the more general course I have pursued. doubt respecting the radical identity of words, 1 have inserted them without any expression of uncertainty. When there appears to be any reason to the probability only of an affinity question that identity, I have mentioned ;
;
;
regular form of orthography in English, that wc are perplexed with such words as burlesque, soup, group, tour, corps, depot, suite, pacha, ennui, and many others. In this respect, modern writers manifest less taste than the writers of former centuries, who, when they borrowed foreign words, wrote them in conformity to English analogies. This practice of blending with the English many words of an orthography, which in our language is anomalous, is very embarrassing to readers who know only their vernacular tongue, and often introduces an odious difference between the pronunciation of different classes of people ; an evil more sensibly felt in this country, than in Great in short, it multiplies the irreguBritain, where differences of rank exist larities of a language, already so deformed by them as to I'ender it nearly impracticable for our own citizens ever to overcome the difficulties of its which ; orthography irregularities foreigners deem a reproach to the taste of a literary nation. Where is the good sense which should dictate a manly firmness in preserving the regular analogies and purity of the language ? Where is there a due attachment to uniformity which constitutes the principal beauty and excellence of a language, and beyond all other means facilitates its acquisition ? I would not refuse to admit foreign words into the language, if necessary or useful ; but I would treat them as our laws treat aliens ; I would compel them to submit to the formalities of naturalization, before they should be admitted to the rights of citizensliip I would convert them into English Nor would I permit the same word to be written words, or reject them. and pronounced in two different ways, one English, the other French. The French suite in English is suit, whether it signifies a set of clothes, or of apartments, or of armor, or of attendants. In the orthography of certain classes of words, I have aimed at uniformity; but I have not proceeded so far in this desirable reformation of the common spelling, as my own wishes, and strict propriety might dictate. Thus if vicious, from the Latin vitium, is written with c, the verb vitiate should regularly be written with the same letter, and we have precedents in the words appreciate and depreciate, from the Latin pretimn. In like manner, expatiate shouXA be conformed to the orthography of .t/jaciotts ; exceed, proceed, and succeed, should follow the analogy of concede, intercede, and reThese are points of minor importance, but far from being unimportant. cede. In writing the termination of such verbs as civilize, legalize, modernize, there is a diversity which may be corrected without inconvenience. indeed have some of the verbs of this class from the French in which language iser is the termination ; but most of them we have borrowed directly from the Latin or Greek, or perhaps from the Spanish or Italian, or they are As the termination ize is conformable to the Greek of our own coinage. original, and as it expresses the true pronunciation in English, it seems expedient to reduce the whole class to a uniformity of orthography. :
;
Vet I am aware that or inserted a query, to invite further investigation. many things, which, in my view, arc not doubtful, will appear so io persons not versed in this subject, and who do not at once see the chain of evidence which has led me to my inferences. For tliis there is no remedy but further investigation. In regard to words, which have been introduced into the language in modern days, I have generally referred them to the language, from which A great part of these are from the the English immediately received them. Latin through the French; sometimes probably through the Italian or Span In some instances however the order is reversed ; indeed it cannot al ish. ways be known from which language the words have been received, nor is it a matter of any consequence. One circumstance however deserves to be particularly noticed; that when 1 refer a vernacular word to the corresponding word in one of the Shemitic Enterprise, devise, comprise, revise, compromise, and surprise, belong to languages, I would not have it understood that the English word was deriv ed or borrowed from that oriental word. For example, I have given the a different class and retain the orthography of their originals. There is a fact respecting the pi'onunciation of gn, in cognizance, and reShemitic pl3 as the verb corresponding with the English break, that is, the which seems to have escaped observation ; this is, that g was same word in those languages; not intending by this that our ancestors bor- cognizance, introduced to express a nasal sound, as in the French gn, or Spanish)!, but rowed or received that word from the Chaldean';, Hebrews or other Shemi This is not the fact. It would be just as correct for the com not for the purpose of being pronounced as g. It is probable that the Latins tic nation. con before nosco into changed cog for this reason; and it may be inferred piler of a Chaldee or Hebrew lexicon to derive pl3 from the English break from the modern pronunciation of these words, that the Greeks omitted or So when I deduce coin, through the French, Spanish or German brechen. softened the sound of 7 in yiYvwcrxco and 7i7vc|iai. However this may be, the old pronunciation of the words was undoubtedly conusance, or conizance, or Italian, from the Arabic ^^Lj , I do not consider the word as borrowed reconizance, and hence in the old writers on law, the letter g was omitted. from the Arabic but as proceeding from a couimon radix. With regai'd to Indeed there is a harshness in the pronunciation of g in these words, that vernacular words, in any European language, such deduction is always in- offends the organs both of the speaker and hearer, and which well justifies Yet errors of this kind abound in every book I have seen, which the pronunciation of the old lawyers; a pronunciation which we frequently correct. treats of this subject. The truth is, all vernacular words in the languages hear, at this day, among gentlemen of the bar. of Europe, are as old as the same words in Asia; and when the same words Whether the Latins pronounced the letter g in such words as benignus, are found in the Shemitic and Japhetic languages, it is almost demonstr;ibly condignus, malignus, it is of no moment for us to determine. In our mode certain that these words were in use before the dispersion ; the nations of of writing benign, condign, maUgn,iho sound of g must be dropped; but it both families have them from the conmion stock, and the words, like the fami- is resumed in the derivatives benignity, condignity, malignity : so in delies of men, which use them, ai-e to be considcied as of the same antiquity. sign, designate ; resign, resignation.* When therefore I state the words of another language as corresponding In noting the obsolete words which amount to some thousands, I may have with vernacular words in the English, they are offered as affinities, or the committed mistakes for words obsolete in one part of the British dominions, same word, varied dialectically perhaps, in orthography or signification, but or in some part of the United States, may be words in common use, in some from the same words root as the English. Thus under the word bright, 1 other part of such dominions, not within my knowledge. The rule I have state the Saxon word, and then the corresponding word in the Ethiopic, the generally observed has been to note as obsolete such words as I have not participle of a \e\\) ; not that our ancestors borrowed the word from the heard in colloquial practice, and which I have not found in any writer of the The notation of such words as are disused may be of use to Ethiopians, but that the verb, from which iri'g/if was derived, though lost last century. in the Saxon, is still retained in the Ethiopic. This fact proves that the an- our own youth, and still more to foreigners, who learn our language. cestors of the Saxons once used the verb, but sufi'ored it to Under the head of etymology, in hooks, the reader will observe referengo into disuse, ces to another vvoik, for a more full explanation or view of the affinities of substituting shine, scinan, in its place. It is much to be regretted that British authors and travelers admit into the woids under which these references occur. These are references to a
We
;
their writings foreign words without conforming them, in orthography, to Synopsis of the principal uncompounded words in twenty languages ; a work regular English analogies. It is owing to this disregard of the purity and that is not published, and it is uncertain whether it will ever be published. But if it should be, these references will be useful to the philologist, and 1 * There is, among some poets of the present day, an affectation of reviv tliought it e.vpedient to insert them. Some of these may perhaps be revived to ing the use of obsolete words. but when this *The Spanish 7)(oio is the Latin;)i(g)J«s,-and our word ;)a«'«,theD.7)a)irf, to so far as make a neadvantage; practice proceeds glossary So we pronounce mi;)»Hf, (or impugn, French imcessary to the understanding of a poem, it seems to be a violation of good is the Latin ;j(>;i»s. taste. How different is the simple elegance of Oryden. Pope, Gr.iy, Gold- pugner, from the Latin pugno, pugna. How far these facts tend to show smith and Cowper the Latin pronunciation, let the reader judge. !
PHILOSOPHICAL AND PRACTICAL
GRAMMAR
OF THE
ENGLISH LANGUAGE,
ADVERTISEMENT. In the year 1 803, of the Letter. " I take the
I
received a Letter from Lindley Murray, with a copy of his
Grammar.
The following is a copy
author of Dissertations on the English Language,' will do me the favor liberty of requesting that the character. copy of the new edition of my grammar, as a small testimony of my respect for his talents and At the same time, I hope he will permit me to thank him for the pleasure and improvement, which I have derived '
to accept a
from perusing his ingenious and sensible writings. " should occur to him, by which he thinks the work may be further imIf, on looking over the Grammar, any thing favor and will give it an attentive and respectful conproved, I will take "the communication of it, as a particular ;
Should he prepare any remarks, he will be so good as to send his letter to my brother John Murray, I am very respectfully, &c. Pearl Street, New York, who will carefully forward them to me.
sideration.
jun.,
LINDLEY MURRAY." Holdgate, near York, 1803." with Twenty years before the date of this letter, 1 had prepared and published a Grammar, on the model of Lowth's, some variations, and on the same principles, as Murray has constructed his. This work passed through many ediBut before this period, my researches into the structure of tions, before Murray's book appeared in this country. Grammar wanted malanguage had convinced me that some of Lowth's principles are erroneous, and that my own it to be immoral to publish what appeared to be false the public continued to actually did so although As I had the same objections to the call for it, and my bookseller urged for permission to continue publication of it. which was executed in 1807 ; Murray's Grammar, as I had to my own, I determined on the publication of a new work, and with a view to answer Lindley Murray's request, but in a different manner, I sent him a polite letter? with a copy of Grammar. I have understood from his friends in New York, that these never reached him ; but he received a
terial corrections.
rules
and
In consequence of this conviction, believing
principles,' I
determined to suppress
my Grammar, and
;
my
new edition of his own Gramcopy of my Grammar from his friends, and soon afterward prepared for publication a " mar, in the octavo form. In the preface to this edition, dated in 1808, he informs his readers, that, in preparing for the octavo edition, the author examined the most respectable publications on the subject of grammar, that had reextend and improve his work." On carecently appeared ; and he has, in consequence, been the better enabled to were selected from my book. fully comparing this work with my own Grammar, I found most of his improvements
ADVERTISEMENT. In the
first
edition of this work, the compiler
gave
me
credit for
one passage only, (being nearly three pages of
my
Grammar,) which he acknowledged to be chiejly taken from my work. In the later editions, he says, this is in part taken from my book, and he further acknowledges that a.few positions and illustrations, among the syntactical notes and observations, were selected from my Grammar. Now the fact is, the passages borrowed amount to thirti/ or more, and they are so incorporated into his work, that no person except myself would detect the plagiarisms, without a particular view to this object.
It
may be
further observed that these passages are original remarks,
some of them
overlooked by all British writers on the subject. This octavo edition of Murray's Grammar, has been repeatedly published in this country, and constantly used in our higher seminaries of learning ; while the student probably has no suspicion that he is learning my principles in
illustrating principles
Murray's Grammar.
For the injustice done to me, by this publication, in violation of the spirit, if not of the letter of the law, for securing to authors the copy-right of their works, I have sought no redress but while I submit to the injury, it seems to be my duty to bear testimony against this species of immorality. A man's reputation, and character, and writings, are ;
much
his property, as his land, and it is to be hoped that correct morality will, in due time, place the protection of the former on as high ground as that of the latter. Being perfectly satisfied that some principles of Lowth's Grammar, which constitutes tlie body of Murray's, are
as
entirely erroneous, I
have prefixed a brief
the mature result of
all
subject.
The
It
investigations.
Grammar It
is
to this Dictionary ; which is committed to my fellow citizens, as the last effort I shall make to arrest the progress of error, on this
needs the club of Hercules, wielded by the arm of a giant, to destroy the hydra of educational prejudice. I pretend not to possess, and my efforts may be fruitless ; but it will ever be a satisfaction to
club and the arm,
reflect that I
me
my
have discharged a duty demanded by a deep sense of the importance of
truth.
It
is
not possible for which is not
to think with indifterence, that half a million of youth in our schools are daily toiling to learn that It has been justly observed that ignorance is preferable to error.
true.
Some of the more prominent errors of the English Grammars, are, 1. The admission of the ar/«fZe, as a distinct part of speech, and an entire The word article signifies, if any thing, joint ; but there indefinite article. a.
the conjunctions, which can, with a
shadow of propriety, be brought under
mistake respecting what is called the no class of words, unless it may be
is
that denomination.
The words
called
languages, adjectives ; words limiting or in some way qualifying the sense of names or nouns. most languages, they are varied like the nouns which they qualify, and attached to them like other adjectives. articles, are, in all
In
2. The arrangement of words in a class to which they do not belong. Thus, that is called sometimes a pronoun, and sometimes a conjunction, when in fact it is always a pronoun or substitute, and never a conjunction. So also if, though, unless, notwithstanding, are called conjunctions which is a most palpable mistake. Notwithstanding, ;
placed by Murray among the conjunctions. But after he procured my Grammar, he inserted, under his twenty-first " It is rule of Syntax, the following remark. very frequent, when the word notwithstanding agrees with a number of words, or with an entire clause, to omit the whole, except this word and in this use of notwithstanding, we have a striking proof of the value of abbreviations in language," &c. The whole passage, taken from my Grammar, and is
;
The remark to be made here is, that the author, by the two subsequent passages, are too long to be here recited. attempting to patch a defective system, falls into the absurdity of making notwithstanding a conjunction, in one part of his book, and in another, he makes it a word agreeing tvith a number of words, or with an entire clause ! There
3.
The is
is
no correct and complete exhibition of the English verb in any British Grammar which I have seen. which are as important as the indefinite, are wholly wanting and the second future in Murray It seems that he had in his first editions inserted this form, thou shalt, or yc shall hare loved, but in his
definite tenses,
imperfect.
;
To prove this, he in the second and third persons is incorrectly applied. " Thou " He shalt have served thy apprenticeship, before the end of the year." gives the following examples. but author true the shall have completed his business, when the messenger arrives." ; forgot that by placing Very octavo edition, he informs us that shall
when
or after, as an introduction to the sentence, the use o{ shall is not only correct, but in many cases, necessary. shalt or you shall have served an apprenticeship, after he shall have completed his business, are perfectly
When thou
correct expressions.
paradigm.
But
in
consequence of this oversight, Murray's second future
is
defective throughout the whole
ADVERTISEMENT. Grammar
that I have seen, is extremely imperfect. There are many English which are not brought witliin the rules; and of course they phrases which are perfectly well established and correct,
The Syntax
4.
of every British
cannot be parsed or resolved by the student.
There are several
5.
false rules
of construction which mislead the learner
;
rules
which are
in direct
opposition to
the practice of the best writers. 6. There are some phrases or modes of expression, frequently used by authors, which are not good English, and which it is the business of the Grammarian to correct, but which are not noticed in any British Grammar. Some of these have been considered in tlie preceding Introduction. There is a great difficulty in devising a correct classification of the several sorts of words and probably no classiThere are some words fication that shall be simple and at the same time philosophically correct, can be invented. ;
that
do not
making
to
strictly fail
remedy
this
under the description of any class yet devised. but such schemes as I have seen, do not, evil ;
old schemes, nor simplify the subject. the subject, by substituting
On
the other hand,
new arrangements and new
all
that
I
Many attempts have been made and are still in my apprehension, correct the defects of the have seen, serve only to obscure and embarrass
terms, vrhich are as incorrect as the old ones, and less intel-
ligible.
the subject of the tenses of the verbs, for example, we may attempt philosophical accuracy, and say that there and there can be three tenses only, to express the natural division of time mto past, present, and future. But a language which should have words to express these three divisions only, would be miserably imperfect. We want to with respect to ourselves or the time of speaking and writing, express not only the past, the present, and the future,
On
are,
but the past with respect to other times or events. When we say, the mail will have arrived before sun-set, we extime of speaking, but an event to be 2)ast before another event, the setting of the press not only a. future event, at the Hence I have given to that form of words, the denomination o( the priorfuture. So of the past time. He sun. had delivered the letter, before I arrived, denotes an event not only pas?, as to the time of speaking, but past before another event, istry,
my
This tense
arrival.
define themselves.
or beyond more than
The
old
I call
the prior-past.
names of the
finished or past,
I
These denominations,
like the
latter tense, pluperfect or preterpluperfect,
have discarded.
These small
terms of the new chim-
more than
finished or past,
alterations of the old system will,
I
hope, be
well received. If it should be said, that our verbs have not tenses, because they have not variations of termination to express them would reply, that this may be considered as a mistake, proceeding from an early bias, impressed upon us by the Greek and Latin forms of the tenses. A tense is a term intended to denote a form of verbs used for expressing time or some division of it, and it is just as properly applied to a combination of words for that purpose, as to a modification of the simple verb. The use of it is entirely arbitrary. Locutus sum are not the less a tense, because two words It is ihe /me and not the form of words used to express it, which stamps propriety on the denomare employed.
;
I
ination.
we attempt
some of the English tenses, by analyzing them, and resolving them into their primaparsing the words composing them, each distinctly, we shall meet with insuperable difficulties. Let a man attempt to make out the sense of this phrase, he had been writing, by analysing it. Had alone denotes " he had an estate in New York." Then in the held, possessed, as in the phrase, phrase above, it will signify, he held or 2yossesscd been writing. If
to dispense with
ry elements, that
is,
The point It is alledged that the auxiliary verbs are not secondary, but the most important verbs in the language. of importance must be determined by this fact, that by themselves they do not make complete sense they leave the sense or affirmation imperfect. He may, he can, he will, he shall, are incomplete sentences, without another verb expressed or understood. They express nothing definite which is intended to be affirmed. When I ask, whether you can lend me a sum of money, and you reply, I can, the verb lend is understood. Not so with the verbs consid;
When I say, / write, I walk, the sense or affirmation is complete without the use of another verb. with perfect propriety, that such verbs as can be used only in connection with others, should be considered as of a secondary character, and being used to aid in forming the tenses, they may very justly be denominated auxered as principal.
Hence
it is
iliars or auxiliaries.
Some
of our verbs are used either as principal or as auxiliary, as have and ivill ; and will takes a different and regwhen principal I will, thou wiliest, he willcth or wills an estate or a legacy ; but when auxiliary, thou wilt,
ular form
he will bequeath
;
his estate.
ADVERTISEMENT" I loill walk or ride ; but as an auxiliary, it Will, indeed, in its primary use, expresses volition, as when we say, When it is said, " it will rain to-morrow," what relation has will to volition ? often loses this signification. To show the utter futility of attempting to explain phrases by the primary signification of the auxiliaries, take the May and might express power, liberty or possibility have and had express holding or possession. following example. On this plan of explanation, resolve the following sentence. " He might have had more prudence than to engage in speculation ;" that is, he was able, or had power, to hold or possess, held or possessed more prudence than to engage ;
in speculation.
So
the following.
" It
may have
rained on the land." That
is, it
has power or
is
possible, to hold or possess, rained
on the land. All attempts to simplify our forms of the tenses by such resolution, must not only fail, but prove to be perfectly ridicIt is the combination of words only that admits of definition ; and these must be exhibited as tenses ; forms ulous.
of expression presenting to the hearer or reader the precise time of action. This is necessary for our own citizens ; but for foreigners, indispensable, as they want to know the tenses in Enghsh which correspond with the tenses in their
own
Nor
languages.
shall
we succeed much better in attempting
fo detect the
primary elements of the terminations which form the
We
variations of the simple verb. may conjecture any thing ; we may suppose loved to be a contraction oHove-did but in opposition to this, we find in our mother tongue, this termination ed, was od, or ode. Ic liifode, I loved
; ;
same as that in the early Roman laws, Besides, lufodon, in which esto was written estod ; and I believe we have no evidence that do and did ever belonged to the Latin language. But what settles this question, is, that did itself is formed of do and this same termination, do-ed. Here
we
we
the question
We
loved.
may
if I
mistake not,
this
termination
is
the
rest.
conjecture that the personal terminations of the verbs were originally pronouns, and this conjecture is certainly better founded than many others ; but we find in our mother tongue, the verb lore, in the plural number, is written, we lufiath, ge hifiath, thi lufiath, all the persons having the same termination ; but certainly the same word
may
to express we, you or ye, and they. have attentively viewed these subjects, in all the lights which my opportunities have afforded, and I am convinced that the distribution of words, most generally received, is the best that can be formed, with some slight alterations
was never used 1
adapted to the particular construction of the English language. Our language is rich in tenses, beyond any language and I have endeavored to exhibit all the combinations of words forming them, in such a manner that in Europe students, natives or foreigners, may readily understand them. ;
all the observations I have been able to make, I am convinced the dicand grammars which have been used in our seminaries of learning, for the last forty or fifty years, are so and imperfect, that they have introduced or sanctioned more errors than they have amended in other words, had the people of England and of these States been left to learn the pronunciation and construction of their vernacular language solely by tradition, and the reading of good authors, the language would have been spoken and written with more purity than it has been and now is, by those who have learned to adjust their language by the rules which dictionaries and grammars prescribe.
I
close with this single remark, that from
tionaries
incorrect
;
PHILOSOPHICAL. AND PRACTICAL GRAMMAR,
A<
The Granimni- of a language is a colleelion of principles and rules, taken At the beginning of words, y may be considered a consonant, as in year. Wis properly a vowel, having the same sound as 00, in wool, the French from the established usages of the nation using that language in other words, an exhibition of the genuine structure of the language. These principles o«, the Italian, German, and Spanish u. It is the same in English as iu and rules are derived fiom the natural distinctions of words, or they are ar- the Welsh. Thus dwell is pronounced dooell. When initial, it has been considered to be a consonant, as in u
—
X
;
;
— M m— :
N n— o— P p— Q q— R r— S s—T t— U u— V v— W w— X x— Y y— Z
The articulations in English may all be thus expressed eb, ed, ef, eg, ek, Of these, three, a, e, and o, are always vowels ; i and it are either vowels el, em, en, ep, er, es, et, ev, ez, eth, aspirate and vocal, esh, ezh, ing. or diphthongs ; and 1/ is a vowel, diphthong, or consonant. To these may be These articulations may be named from the organs whose junctions they added U', wliich is actually a vowel. His an aspirate or mark of breathing represent Thus and the rest are consonants, or articulations. Labials, or letters of the lips, cb, ef, ev, ep, em. A vowel is a simple sound formed by opening the mouth, in a particular Dentals, ed, et, eth, es, esh, ez, ezh, en. manner. This may be known by the power we have of prolonging the Palatals, eg, ek, el, er. sound, without changing the position of the organs, as in uttering a, e.and 0. Nasals, em, en, ing. When the position of the organs is necessarily varied, during the utterance, The letters « and z, are also called sibilants, or hissing letters to which the sound is not simple, but diphthongal; as in uttering i and u. may be added, esh, and ezh. The vowel characters in English have each several different sounds, Qis precisely equivalent to Ar,but it differs from it in being always follow.f has four .sounds ; First or long, as in/a(e, ale. ed by u. It is a useless letter; for qitest might as well be written kuest or 2. Short, as in at. bat. bati. This is nearly the fourth sound shortened. kwest, in the Dutch manner. 3. Broad, as in all, fall, and shortened, as in what. A diphthong is a union of two vowels or simple sounds uttered so rapidly 4. Italian, as in father, calm, ask. and closely, as to forui one syllable only, or what is considered as one syllahas two sounds; First or long, as in mete,me, meter. as oi and oy in voice and joy, ou in sound, and ow in vow. ble 2. Short, as in met, bet, pen. This is nearly the first sound of a shortened. A triphthong is a union of three vowels in one syllable ; as in adieu. has also the sound of a long, as in There are many combinations of vowels in English words, in which one prey, vein ; but this is an anomaly. rhas two sounds; First or long, and diphthongal, as in fine, wine, mind. vowel only is sounded as ai, ea, ie, ci, oa, ui, ay, ey, &c. These may be 2. i^horl, ns inpit, This is the short sound of e long. called digraphs. ability. They can be reduced to no rule of pronunciation. O has three sounds ; First or long, as in note, roll. The combinations au and aw have generally tlie sound of the broad a, as in 2. Short, as in not, nominal. This is the short sound of broad aw, as in: fraud, and law. The combination ew has the sound of u long, as in pew, what, ivarrant. new, crew; and sometimes at the beginning of words the sound oiyu, as in 3. The sound of 00, or French on, as in move, tomb, lose. eucharist, euphony. 17 has three sounds; First or long, as in cuJe, rwrfc, enumerate; a diph The letters cl, kl, at the beginning of a word, are pronounced as tl, as in clear. Gl at the beginning of words arc pronounced as dl, as in glory. thongal sound. 2. Short, as in cub, but, number. 3. The Italian u, as in bush, bullet; the short sound of 00. has two sounds the first and long is the same as tliat of long, as in z.
:
—
—
E E
;
:
DmsiON or SYLLABLES.
V
)'
;
dffy, rely, try, chyle. 2. Short, as in symptom, pitu
Vol.
I.
The ;
H.
the same as the short sound of
i.
Ithat
first
belong
and principal rule to the
same
in dividing syllables, is not to separate letters syllable, cscejjt iu cases of anomalous pronunciation.
GRA3IMAR OF THE best division of syllables is that which leads the learner most easily to a| individuals have a common character, or predominant qualities which create Thus, hab-it, ham-let, bat-ter, ho-Ii/, lu-cal, en-gage,\ a simihtude between them, this common character becomes in the mind o just pronunciation. and the proper name of an individual possessing this character, adaii-i-?>ial, al-i-ment, pol-i-cy, eb-o-ny, des-ig-nate, lam-ent-a-bk. jn'ef-, species, mits of the definitives and of plural number, like a common name. Thus a ei-a-ble. An exception to this rule occurs in such words as vicious, ambition, in conspirator is called a Calaline ; and numbers of them Catalines or the Catawhich the ci and ti are pronounced like sh. In this case, it seems jirel'era- lines of their country. A distinguished general is called a Cesar an eminent orator the Cicero of his age. hle todinde the words thus, vi-cious, am-bi-tion. But names, which are common to a whole kind or species, require often In dividing the syllables of derivative words it seems advisable to keep the to be limited to an individual or a certain number of individuals of the kind original entire, unless when this division may lead to a wrong pronunciation. Thus aet-or, kelp-er, op-jii-css-or, may he considered as a better division than or species. For this purpose the English language is fuinished with a numto deviber of words, as an, or a, the, this, that, these, those, and a few others, in But it be cases, ac-ior, Itel-per, op-pres-sor. many may eligible Thus op-pres-sion seems to be more convenient both which define the extent of the signification of common names, or point to ate from this rule. the particular things mentioned. These are all adjectives or attributes, for children in learning and for printers, than op-jiress-ion. having a dependence on some noun expressed or implied.
The
—
RULES FOR SPELLING.
—
Rule L A noun or name, without a preceding definitive, is used either in an unlimited sense, extending to the whole species, or in an indefinite 1. Vcrbsof one syllable, ending with a single consonant preceded by a a number or quantity, but not the whole. short vowel, and verbs of more syllables than one, ending with an accented sense, denoting *' The proper study of mankind is man.^^ Pope. in the double the final consonant a short consonant preceded by vowel, parHere man comprehends the whole species. a vowel. Thus, ticiple, and when any syllable is added beginning with " In the first jilace, woman has, in general, much stronger propensity than Permit, Sin, Abet, to the perfect discharge of parental duties." man Life of Cowper. Permitted, Sinned, Abetted, Here woman and 7nan comprehend each the whole species of its sex. Permitting, Sinning, Abetting, Permitter. Sinner. Abettor. Note. The rule laid down by Lowth, and transcribed implicitly by his 2. When the final consonant is preceded by a long vowel, the consonant " A substantive without any article to limit it, is taken followers, is general. is usually not doubled. Thus, The examples alin its widest sense; thus man means all mankind.^'' Defeat, Seal, Repeal, ready given prove the inaccuracy of the rule. But let it be tried by other Defeated, Sealed, Repealed, examples. Defeating, RepeaUng, Sealing, "There are fishes that have wings, and are not strangers to the airy reDefeater. Sealer. Repealert Locke, h. 3. ch.6. 12. If the rule is just, tliat ^sAes is to be gions." 3. AVhen the accent falls on any syllable except the last, the final conso- " taken in its widest sense," then all fishes have wings nant of the verb is not to be doubled in the derivatives. Thus,
—
—
'.
Equal, Worship, Rule lI.^The definitive an or a, being merely one, in its English orEqualed, Worshiped, Biased, thography, and precisely synonynjous with it, limits a common name to an Equaling, Its sole use is to express unity, and with respect Worshiping, individual of the species. Biasing, Biaser. Equaler. Worshiper. to number, it is the most definite word imaginable; as an ounce, a church, « The same rule is generally to be obsci-ved in nouns, as in jeweler, from ship, that is, oHeship, o?if church. It is used before a name which is indefias jewel. nite, or applicable to any one of a species ' He bore him in the thickest These are general rules though possibly special reasons may, in some troop. instances, justify exceptions. As doth a lion in a herd of neat." Shakspeare. word of the a limits the sense but Here lion, and that of herd to o7te " CLASSIFICATION As a?iy lion does or would do in does not specify the particular one herd." any Words are classified according to their uses. Writers on grannnar ai-e not This definitive is used also before names which are definite and as specific But I shall, with as "The Lord God planted a garperfectlv agreed in the distribution of words into classes. as, "Solomon built a temple." possible one exceptTon, follow the common distribution. Words then may be distrib- den eastward in Eden." London is a great commercial city. M decisive 2. The 1. 'V\ic nume ornoun. uted into eight classes or parts of speech. The English obtained a signal naval vicbattle was fought at Marengo. Quarrel, Quarreled, Quarreling, Quarreler.
Bias,
;
;
—
—
OF WORDS.
:
pronoun or substitute. 5. The adverb. verb.
3. 6.
The The
or attributive. adjectii^c, attribute
preposition.
7.
The
4.
The
connective or con-
tory
at
the
mouth
of the Nile.
—
Note. When the sense of words is sufficiently certain, by the construc" a de- Uon, the definitive may be omitted ; as, The participle is sometimes Duty to your majesty, and regard rivative from the verb, and partalces of its nature, expressing motion or ac for the preservation of ourselves and our posterity, require us to entreat lion. But it sometimes loses its verbal character, and becomes a mere ad your royal attention." It is also omitted before names whose signification is general, and requires jective, expressing quality or habit, rather than action. no linutation as "wisdom is justified of her children" "anger resteth in
junction.
8.
The exclamation
or interjection. treated as a distinct part of speech;
it Is
—
—
the bosom of fools." A'ames or JVouns. The definitive a is used before plural names preceded by few or many or noun is that by which a thing is calle
—
A name
—
—
—
of common, or those which
N.\MF.s are of two kinds; represent the ideaofj whole kind or species and proper or appropriate, which denote individuThus animal is a name common to all beings, having organized bodies motion. Plant and vegand with and endowed life, digestion, spontaneous etable are names of all beings which have organized bodies and life, ivithont the power of spontaneous motion. J<'owl is the common name of all fethereil animals which f\y—fish, of animals which live wholly in water. On the other hand, Thomas, John, William, arc proper or appropiiate names, each denoting an individual of which there is no species oi* kind. London, Paris, Amsterdam, Rhine, Po, Danube, Massachusetts, Hud.son, Potomac, are also proper names, being appropriate to individual things. Proper names however become common when they comprehend two or more individuals as, the Capets, the Smiths, the Fletchers. " Tu-o Hoole's Tosso, b. 20. Hoberts there the pagan force defy'd." a
lar
number " Full ••
;
;
as
many
;
Limitalion of JVames. are sufficiently definite wiihout the aid of another word Yet when certain to limit their meaning, as Boston, Baltimore, Savannah.
Proper names
a
Rule.
III.
of purest ray serene." rose bud rears its blushing head."
gem
Where many a
als.
—The definitive the
is
employed before names,
of signification to one or more specific things Hence the person others of the same kind. eader or hearer, as the twelve Apostles, the good breeding. This definitive is also used with names of which we consider as single, as the Jews, the
and
also
before words
when used by way
Gray. Seattle. to limit their
the kind, discriminated from or thing is understood by the laws of morality, the rules of
things which exist alone, or Sun, the Globe, the Ocean; of distinction, as the Church,
the Temple.
Rule IV.— The is used rhetorically before a ber, to denote the whole species, or an indefinite
name in the singular numnumber; as, '-the fig-tree Sol.
Song. pulteth forth her green figs." " The almond tree shall Houri4i, and the grasshopper shall be a burden." " Or ever the sihe>- cord shall be loosed, or the golden bou-t be broken," &c. Kcclenifistes.
ENGLISH LANGUAGE. of the the words radius, focus, index, &.C. which now begin to be used with reguTlie Christian, who, with pious honor, avoided the abominations infernal snares," &c. lar English plural terminations. This tendency to regularity is, by all means, circus or the theater, found himself encompassed w ith Gib. Bom. Einp. ch. 15. to be encouraged ; for a prime excellence in language is the uniformity of The facts here stated will be evinced by a few authorities. its inflections. " The heart likes naturally to be moved and affected." " Vesiculated corallines are found adhering to rocks, shells andyucMses." Campbell's Rhet. ch. 2. Encyc. art. Corallines. " Note 1.—This definitive is also used before names employed figuratively Many /etuses are deficient at the extremities." Dar. Zoon. Sect. 1, 3, 9. in a general sense; as, i -, 2. " His mates their Lusiad, Baker's Livy, 4. 491. "Five hundred Jenariiiscs.'' .safety to the waves consign." " The radiations of that tree and its Here waves cannot be understood of any particular wanes; but the word fruit, the principal focuses of which is a metaphor for a particular thing, the oceait. are in the Maldivia islands." Hunter's St. Pierre, vol. 3. of metallic calxes into metals." "Tlie reduction is selected which an before attribute, Note 2. The definitive the is used " The Ency. art. Metallurgy. very frame of spirit from others belonging to the same object; as, See also J/eJiunw, Campbell's Rhetoric, 1, 1.50 Co/^ies, Darwin's Zoon. in objects, is so difierent from proper for being diverted with the laughable Caudexes, Phytologia, 2, 3 Irises, Zoon. 1. 444. Reguluses and 2. 1,74 that which is necessary for philosophizing ou them." Campbell's Rhet. 1. residuums. Ency. art. .Metal. In authorities equally respectable, we find stamens, stratums, funguses ; Kiimher. and in pursuance of the principle, we may expect to see lamens for lamina ; for lamellae; barytc for barytes; pyrite for pyrites; strontite for lamels indior more or of two of a to occasion have As men single object, speak iov the plural stalactites. These reforms are necessaviduals of the same kind, it has been found necessary to vary the noun or strontites; stalactite to enable us to distinguish the singular from the plural number. name, and usually the termination, to distinguish plurality from unity. The ry difierent forms of words to express one or more are called in (Grammar, num3. The third class of irregulars consists of such as have no plural Class bers ; of which there are in English, two, the singulnr and the plural. termination; some of which represent ideas of tilings which do not admit of The singular denotes an individual, or a collection of individuals united in a plurality ; as rye, barley, flax, hemp, flour, sloth, pride, pitch, and the names a dozen. The plubody as, a man, a ship, an office, a company, a society, of metals, gold, silver, tin,zink,anUniony, lead, bismuth, quicksilver. When, ral denotes two or more individuals, not considered as a collective body; as, in the progress of improvement, any thing, considered as not susceptible of men, ships, offices, companies, societies. The plural number is formed by plurality, is found to have varieties, which are distinguishable, this distincthe addition of s or es to the singular. Thus in early ages our ancestors tion gives rise to a plural of the term. Rule 1. When the terminating letter of a noun will admit the sound of took no notice of different varieties of wheat, and the term had no plural. in agriculture have recognized varieties of this s to coalesce with the name or the Last syllable of it, .f only is added to foim But modern improvements the The same remark is apwhich have name a plural form. given the plural; as sea, seas; hand, hands; pen, pens; grape, grapes; vale, grain, plicable to fern, clay, marl, sugar, cotton, &c. which have plurals, formerly vales ; vow, vows. unknown. Other words may hereafter undergo a similar change. 2. When the letter .s does not combine in sound with the word or last sylOther words of this class denote plurality, withouta plural termination as lable of it, the addition of s increases the number of syllables; ius, house, mazes. cattle, sheep, swine, kine, deer, hose ; trout, salmon, carp, perch, and many houses; grace, graces; page, pages; rose, roses; voice, voices; maze, other names of fish. Pish has a plural, but it is used in the plural sense 3. When the name ends in.r, s.«, sh, or ch with it-s English sound, the pluwithout the termination ; as, ral is formed by adding es to the singular; for a single s after those letters " are to blame for eating these fish." Anacharsis 6. 272. cannot be pronounced; as, fox, foxes; glass, glas.ses; brush, brushes; " The^sA reposed in seas and crystal floods, church, churches. But after ch with its Greek sound, like k, the plural is " The beasts retired in covert of the woods." Hoole T. 2. 726. formed by s only ; as monarch, monarchs. Cannon, shot and sail, are used in a plural sense ; as, 4. When a name ends with y after a consonant, the plural is formed by " One hundred cannon were landed Itom the fleet." has a Alkali as vanities. vanity, regular pludropping t/ and adding tcs; JVaval Hist. 732. <•
—
—
—
—
;
;
We
ral, alkalies.
But
after ay,
leys; joy, joys;
ey,
and oy,
s
only
is
added
;
as,
delay, delays; valley, val-
money, moneys.
Note. — A few
Burchett,
Ibm.
fired." ''
—
is
here used,
rules in the ending.
Under
this class
45.'i.
TZim. 426.
ships."
In the sense in which sail
English nouns deviate from the foregoing formation of the plural number ;
" Several shot being " SCTera^saiV of
may be noticed
a
number
it
does not admit of a plural
of words, expressing time, dis-
tance, measure, weight, and number, which, though admitting a plural termination, are often, not to say generally, used without that termination, even ivhen used with attributes of plurality; such are the names in these expresselves, lives, sheaves. self, sheaf, Ufc, sions, two year, five mile, ten foot, seven pound, three tun, hundred, thouknives, half, halves, shelf, shelves. Yet the most unlettered knife, sand, or million, five bushel, twenty weight, &c. wives, beef, beeves, wolf, wolves. wife, people never say, two minute, three hour, five day, or week, or month ; nor leaves. staff, staves. wharves. leaf, wharf, two inch, yard or league nor three ounce, grain, dram, or peck. calves. loaf. loaves. thief. thieves. A like singularity is observable in the Latin language. " Tritici quadracalf. medium." Liv. lib. 26. 47. Forty thousand medium of wheat. Class 2. The second class consists of w^ords which are used in both ginta millia Ibm. 27. 10. millia pondo auri," four thousand pound of gold. Quatuor with numbers, plurals irregularly formed; as. Here we see the origin of our pound. Originally it was merely weight children. child, hypothesis, hypotheses, From denoting weight generally, pondo four thousand of gold by weight. feet. brothers or brethren, brother, foot, became the term for a certain division or quantity; retaining however its teeth. tooth, pennies or pence, penny, in Lat'm. Twenty signification of unity, and becoming an indeclinable men. dies or dice, die, man, pound then, in strictness, is twenty divisions by weight ; or as we say, with women. woman, pea, peas or pease, a like abbreviation, twenty weight. oxen. criterions or criteria, ox, criterion, The w Olds horse, foot and iifantry, comprehending bodies of soldiers, are lice. focuses or foci, louse, focus, used as plural nouns and followed by verbs in the plural. Cavalry is someradiuses or radii, radius, geese. goose, times used in like manner. beaux. indexes or indices, beau, index, Class 4. The fourth class of irregular nouns consists of words which theses. calxes or calces. thesis, calx, have the plural termination only. Some of these denoting plurality, are alemphases. €mpba.sis, phenomenon. phenomena. as the following antitheses. joined with verbs in the plural ;
—In
some names, utterance, changed into v ; as.
Class
1.
/
in the singular,
for the
convenience of
;
—
—
—
:
ways
antithesis.
Pennies is used for real coins ; pence for their value in computation. Dies denotes stamps for coining; dice, pieces used in games. Peas denotes Brothers is the the seeds as distinct objects ; pease the seeds in a mass.
Annals,
drawers,
archives, ashes,
downs, dregs,
plural used in common discourse; brethreti,iD the scripture style, but is not restricted to it. Cherubim and Sernphim are real Hebrew plurals; but such is the propensity in men to form regular inflections in language, that these words are used as in the singular, with regular plurals, cherubims, seraphims. In like
assets, betters,
entrails,
manner, the Hebrew singulars, cherub and seraph, have obtained regular
calends,
goods, hatches,
breeches.
ides.
— —
plurals.
The influence of this principle is very obvious in other foreign words, ivhich the sciences have enlisted into our service; as may be observed ia'
bowels, compasses, clothes,
embers, fetters, filings,
lees.
GRAMMAR OF THE Other words of
this class, thougli ending in s, are used either wholly in number, or in the one or tlie other, atthe pleasure of the writer.
the singular
Amends,
wages,
alms, bellows,
billiards,
catoprics,
fives,
dioptrics, acoustics,
conies,
sessions,
gallows, odds,
means, pains,
news, riches,
economics, mathematics, mechanics, hydraulics,
measles, hysterics, physics,
statics,
hydrostatics, analytics,
statistics,
politics.
ethics,
spherics,
optics,
tactics.
pneumatics,
Of ral ral
these, pains, riches, and ivages,* are more usually considered as plu — news always singular — odds and means are either singular or plu— the others are moie measles the name of a singular is
strictly
;
for
dis-
is
no more plural than gout or fever. Small ^jw, for is sometimes considered as a plural, but it ought to be used as singuBilliards has the sense of game, containing unity of idea; and ethics, physics and other similar names, comprehending each the whole system of a particular science, do not convey the ideas of parts or particular branches^ but of a whole collectively, a unity, and hence seem to be treated as words belonging to the singular number. ease, and in strictness,
pocks, lar.
AUTHORITIES. Pre-eminent by so rnuch odds. With every odds thy prowess I defy. Where the odds is considerable.
Milt. P. L. Hoole Tas. 6.
1.
474.
19.
40
Camp. Rhet, ch. 5 death. Bible Much pains has been taken. Enfield Hist. Phil. ch. 2, Let a gallows be made of fifty cubits high. Bible Here he erected a fort and « gallows. Lusiad 1. 134 The riches we had in England was the slow result of long industry and wisdom, and is to be regained, &c. Davenant, 2. 12.
The wages
of sin
is
Mathematics informs Politics
us.
Encyc.
art. strength
of Materials.
the art of producing individual good by general measures.
is
Beddoes' Hygeia. 2. 79. Locke, vol. 2. 408.
Politics contains two parts. Locke however uses a plural verb with ethics. are conversant about." B. 4. 12. 8.
"The
—
ideas that ethics
Pains, when preceded by much, should always have a singular verb. Means is so generally used in either number, every means, all means, this means, and these means, that authorities in support of the usage are
deemed
superfluous.
Gender.
Gender,
in
grammar,
is a
difference of termination, to express distinc-
tion of sex.
There being two sexes,
tnale cinA female, words which denote males are masculine gender those which denote females, of the/e;HWords expressing things without sex, are said to be of neuter There are therefore but ftco genders; yet for convenience the
said to be of the
;
Miine gender.
gender. neuter is classed with the genders ; and we say there are three, the masculine, feminine and neuter. The English modes of distinguishing sex are these 1. The regular termination of the feminine gender, is ess; which is added to the najne of the masculine as lion, lioness. But when the word ends in or, the feminine is formed by retrenching a vowel, and blending two syllables into one ; as actor, actress. In a few woi'ds, the feminine gender is represented by ix, as testatrix, from testator and a few others are irThe following are most of the words which have a distinct termiregular. nation for the feminine gender :
;
;
:
Actor,
ENGLISH LANGUAGE. a relative or personal pronovin, used to introduce a new clause or affirmation into a sentence, whieli clause lias an immediate dependence on; IVho is also used to ask questions, and hence it is called the preceding one.
WTio
\s
an interrogative. ll^ich is also a relative, but is of neuter gender. It is also interrogative. These pronouns have two cases the nominative which precedes a verb, and the objective which follows it. Tlicy arc inflected in the following manner. ;
^ing.
Nominative Objective
Nom. -
Obj.
Noni. Olij.
Nom. Obj.
—
jjoTE. Mine, thine, his, hers, yours and theirs, arc usually considered But the three first are cither attributes, and used as the possessive case. with nouns, or they are substitutes. The three last are always substitutes, of names which are understood, as may be seen in the note used in the place
below.* Its and whose have a better claim to he considered as a possessive case; but .as they equally well fall under the denomination of attributes, I have, for the sake of uniformity, assigned them a place with that part of speech.
GRAMMAR OF THE U
—
also a sulislitute for the
Such is the true construction of sentences the definitive that, fnstead of preceding clause of the sentence, and it hecomes redundant. The use then of the inceptive it appears to be to enable us to being a conjunction, is the representative of a senlence or distinct clause, begin a senlence, without placing a verb as the introductory word and by preceding that clause, and pointing the mind to it, as the subject which folthe use of it and that as substitutes for subsequent members of tlie sentence, lows. And it is^as definite or demonstrative in this application to sentences, the order is inverted without occasioning obscurity. as when it is applied to a name or noun. It is to be noticed also that this neuter substitute, it, is The following sentence will exhibit tlie true use of that as a substitute equally proper to " It " He recited his former calamities ; to which itas now to be added that he begin sentences, when the name of a jyersoti is afterwards used ; as, was John who exhibited such powers of eloquence." But if we transpose was the destroyer of the man who liad expiated him. the words, and place wAo or that, the substitute which bes;ins anew clause, Beloe's Herodotus, Clio, 45. next after the inceptive word, we must u.se he for the inceptive " He, who According to our present grammars, that is a conjunction if so, the preor that exhibited such powers of eloquence, was .John." " to which ceding verb teas, has no nominative word. But the sense is, In interrogative sentences, the order of words is changed, and it follows was to be added that" which is related in the Iblloning words. the verb. Who is it that has been tlius eloquent The use and importance of this substitute are more clearly manifest, when There is a sentence in Locke, in which the inceptive it is omitted. it denotes purpose or elTect as in this passage, "And he came and dwelt in " Whereby cornes to pass, that, as long as any uneasiness remains in the a city called Nazareth; that it might be fulfilled a-hich was spoken by the mind. B. ch. 21. In strictness, this is not a' defective sentence, for that prophets, ' He shall be called a Nazarine.' " Matt. ii. 23. Here that is may be considered as the nominative to comes. W^hereby that conies to equivalent to that purpose or effect. He came and dwelt in Nazareth, /o)Or the whole subsequent sentence may be considered the jmrpose expressed in u^hat follows. It and ivhich pass which follows. represent the last as the nominative for all that comes to pass. But the use of the inceptive clause in the sentence " He shall be called a Nazarene." The excellence it is so fully established as the true idiom of the language, that its omission and utility of substitutes and abbreviations are strikingly illustrated by this is not to be vindicated. use of that. This substitute has a similar use in this introductory sentence. That ue This and that, these and those. may proceed that here refers to the following words. The true construcThis and that are either definite attributes or substitutes. As attributes, tion is. But that ire tnay proceed bat, as will hereafter be shown, denoting they are used to specify individuals, and distingufsh them from others ; as. siipjdy or something more oi- further So that the literal intepretation of the *' '* is .More that or further that, we ma;/ proceed. It is the simTttis my son was dead and is alive again." Certainly this was a right- expression eous man." " The end of that man is peace." " Wo to that man by whom ple mode our ancestors used to express addition to what has preceded, equivthe son of man is betrayed." This and thai have plurals, these and those. alent io the modern phrase, let us add, or we may add wlrat follows, by of The general distinction between this and that, is. this denotes an object way illustrating or modifying the sense of what has been related. to be presenter near in time or place That, like icho and which, has a connecting power, which has given (o But this distincthat, to bo absent. tion is not always observed. In correspondence however with this distinc- these words the name of relative ; in which character, it involves one member of a sentence within another, by introducing a new verb; as, *' He. tion, when, in discourse, two things are mentioned, this and the.^e refer to In this passage, that the last named, or nearest in the order of construction; that and those to that keepcth his mouth, keepeth his \i(e."Prov. xiii. the most distant keepeth his mouth, is a new atSrmalion, interposed between the first nomas, " inative and its verb, but dependant on the antecedent nominative. and to one end reason Self love aspire, "The of the titat waited knew flock, Pain their aversion, pleasure their desire ; that, it was the word poor upon me, of the Lord." Zech. xi. 11. In this passage we have that in both its charBut greedy that [self love] its object would devour, acters the first that is a substitute for poor of the flock the second, for the TTiis [reason] taste the honey and not wound the flower." Pope. '' last clause of the sentence, it was the word of the Lord. Some place the bliss in action, some in ease. This exposition of the uses of that enables us to understand the propriety Those call it pleasure, and contentment these." Ibm. The poets sometimes contrast these substitutes in a similar manner, to de- o( "that M(j( joined in construction. Let me also tell you that, that faith, which proceeds from insufficient or note individuals acting or existing in detached parties, or to denote the bad piinciples, is but little better than infidelity." In this passage, the first whole acting in various capacities ; as, " 'Twas war no that is a substitute for the whole subsequent part of the sentence ; the semore, but carnage through the field. cond that is an attribute agreeing with faith " That faith which proceeds Those lift their sword, and these their bosoms yield." Hoole's Tasso. b. 20. from bad principles is little better than infidelity let me tell you that." •' Hence it might be well always to separate the two words by a comma. We Nor less the rest, the intrepid chief retain'd ; These urged by threats, and those by force constrain'd." /J;n. now distinguish these words by a stronger emphasis on the l.xst. " He, wliom thou now hast, is not thy husband ; in that saidst thou truly." There is a peculiarity in the use oi that , for when it is an attribute, it is ;
—
—
;
.'
;
—
—
—
— —
—
—
—
;
;
—
;
—
—
That is, in that whole declaration. in the singular number but as a substitute for persons or things, John iv. 18. From these passages and the explanation, we learn that that is a substiplural as well as singular, and is used for persons as well as things tute, either for a single word or a sentence ; nor has it any other character, in the language ; as, when an attribute. I knew a man that had it for a by-word, when he saw men"hasten to except This is much less frequently a substitute for sentences than that, but is a conclusion, Stay a little that we may make an end the sooner.' " Bacon on Dispatch. used in this character, as well as in that of an attribute as, Let no prince Here that is the representative of man, and it stands for the last clause measure the danger of discontents by this, ivhtther they be just or unjust ; for that were to imagine people to be reasonable, who do often spurn at their of the sentence or by-word. " Let states that aim at nor own whether the this, take heed how by their nobility and genyet good; griefs whereupon they rise be in greatness Bacon on Kingdoms. tlemen multiply too fast." Bacon. fact great or small." Here this, in each part of the sentence, is the representative of the clause Here that is a substitute for a plural name. So also in the following. " that are whole need not a physician, but they that are sick." in Italics succeeding. They ' " Can we suppose that all the united powers of hell are able to work such had eaten were about four thousand" " they that are in the They that '* " bless them that curse flesh" astonishing miracles, as were wrought for the confirmation of the christian they that weep" yon." Can we suppose that they can control the laws of nature at pleasAnother very common use of this and that, is to represent a sentence or eligion and that with an air of sovereignty, and professing themselves the lords ure, of a sentence as, part ** If we can believe this, then we It is seldom known ttiat, authority thus acquired is possessed without of the universe, as we know Christ did? &c. observe here, this represents a series of sentences. insolence, or that, the master is not forced to confess that, he has enslaved deny," In some cases, this represents a few words only in a preceding sentence, himself by some foolish confidence." Rambler, J^o. 63. In this sentence, the first that represents the next member " Authority as in the following—" The rule laid down is in general certain, that the thus acquired is possessed without insolence, tliat is seldom known." It rep- king only can convoke a parliament. And this, by the ancient statutes of resents the same clause. The second that represents all which follows, in- the realm, he is bound to do, every year or oftenor, if need be." Blacks. Comment. B. 1. ch. 2. cluding two clauses or members. The third that is the substitute for the last If we ask, what is the king bound to do ? The answer must be, convoke a clause. In strictness the comma ought always to be placed after that ;' which punctuation would elucidate the use of the s\ibstitute and the true parliament ; for which words alone this is the substitute, and governed do. construction; but the practice is otherwise, for Mrt^ in this and like sen- by The plurals, these and those, are rarely or never used as substitutes for The first that in the foretences, is either a nominative or an objective. going sentence is the nominative, coinciding with ((, or in apposition to it ; sentences. and when the clauses are transposed, the inceptive it, being redundant, is Which. dropped, and that becomes the nominative. The same remark is applicable to the second that ; the verb and first clause, it is seldom known, llliich is also a substitute for a sentence, or part of a sentence, as well as being " if there can be understood. The third that is the objective after confess. " The master for a single word ; as, any other way shown, how men may has enslaved himself by some foolish confidence he is forced to confess that come to that universal agreement, in the things they do consent in, always
it
;
is
more frequently than any word " '
;
—
—
—
.'
;
We
—
—
—
all
that is
seldom known."
which
I
presume may be done"
Locke on Und. B.
1. 2.
ENGLISH LANGUAGE. —
In prose we would say, " such contest and rage as." TVhich, in this passage, represents all which precedes ivhicli or nil that .is sometimes refers to a sentence or member of a sentence, and someis above related, may be (lone. " Anoih.r reason that makes me doubt of any innate practical principles, limes its place may be supplied by which. "On his return to Egypt, os I rule be proposed, whereof a man learned from the same authority, he levied a mighty army." Beloe, Herod. is, that 1 think there cannot any one moral Jfhich I learned. "On his return to Egypt, he levied a mighty army, may not justly demand a reason; ivlikli would be perfectly ridiculous and absurd, if they were innate, or so much as self-evident, wliicli every innate ivhich [fact] I learned from the same authority. " :!. Ibm. Jls often a sentence. Jls to the three orders of pronouns already Clinp. begins principle nuist needs be." In this passage, the first which represents the next preceding part of the mentioned, they may be called prepositive, as may indeed all sub.stantives." which juxvir of deinatidin^ Harris. That is, concerning, resjiecting the three orders, or to explain that .sentence, anum may justhj demand a reason a reason would be ridiculous The second which is a substitute for self- which respects the three orders, &c. evident ; which, that \^, self-evident, every piinciple must be. " Judas declared him innocent, which he could not be, had he, in any reBoth. Led. 2. Here which represents spect, deceived the disciples." Portcus, Both is an adjective of number, but it is a substitute also for names, senthe attribute innocent. and tor of attributes. tences, sentence-, with a parts connective. That would eipially well represent the same word, "Abraham took sheep and oxen, and gave them unto Abimelech, and "Judas declared him innocent, and that he could not be," &c. io
—
—
—
What.
This substitute has several uses. Firs*, it has the sense of that which ; as, have heard what has been alledgcd." Secondly VIHial stands for any indefinite idea; as, "He cares not what he says or does." " We shall the better know what to undertake." Locke on Und. 1. 6. IVhat U an attribute, cither in the singular or plural number, Thirdly " In what and denotes something uncertain or indeterminate as, character, Butler was admitted into that lady's service, is unknown." Juh}is^n''s Life of Butler. " It is not material tehat names are to them." assigned Camp. Rhet. 1.1. •' I know not what impressions time may have made upon your person." Life of Cowp. Let. 27. " To see what are the causes of Locke 2. 21. wrong judgment." Fourthly What is used by the poets preceding a name, for the or that which, but its place cannot be suppHed by these words, without a name be**
I
—
—
;
—
tween them
;
as,
" IVhat time the sun withdrew his cheerful light. Hoole's Tasso. b. 7. And sought the sable caverns of the night." That is, at the time when or in which. " Jiliat will be Fifthly \ principal use o( what is to ask questions as, the consequence of the revolution in France ?" This word has the singular property of containing tiro cases ; that is, it in and of another in the objecoffice of a word the the nominative, performs '* 1 have, in what tive case as, goes betbre, been engaged in physical inLocke 2. 8. Here what contains the obquiries farther than I intended." ject after in and the nominative to ^oes. What is used with a name as an attribute and a substitute as, " It was agreed that whet goods were aboard his vessels, should be landed." .Mick-
—
;
;
;
Discovery of India. 89. \\e\'i^ what goods, are equivalent to the goods ivhich ; for what goods include the nonjiuative to two verbs, were and should be landed. This use of the word is not deemed elegant. le's
As.
In the
last
Bating, on Ex-ile. example, both represents the parts of the sentences in italics. and usually does precede theiri ; both disadvantageous and iid'a-
When it represents two atliibutes, it may " He endeavored to render commerce as, nious."
jMickle.p.
1.59.
As an attribute, it has a like position before names ; as, " Tousa confessed he had saved both his life and his honor." Ibm. 160. " It is bulk more and no inconsiderable aid to the
accurate, proves tight understanding of things, to discriminate by different signs such as are truly
Campbell's Rhet. 1. 33. In this pa.ssage, both represents more accurate, and the following member of the sentence ; but the construction is harsh. •' The necessity which a speaker is untler, of suiting himself to his audience, both that he may be understocl by them, and that his words may have an influence upon them." Camp. Rhet. ch. 10. Here both represents the two following clauses of the sentence. The definitive the is placed between both and its noun ; as, " To both the prethe term is ceding kintjs, burlesque ap|)lied." Camp. Rhet. 1. 2. difibrcnt."
Same.
The attribute same is often used as a substitute for persons and sentences or parts of a sentence ; as, " Nothing appears so clearly an object of the mind or intellect only, as theyii/t/re does, since we can find no place for its existence any where else. Not but the same, if we consider, is equally true of the ;)a.s(." Hermes, p. 112. In this ill constructed sentence, same has reference to all which is predicated of the future tense that is, that it is an object of intellect only, since we can find no place for its existence any where else The same, all this, is true of the past also. " For iraeeaud Lusiad, 1. generous ever are the same."
—
—
Many., few, all, any. These words we often find used as substitutes for names. " For many shall .Matt. come in my name, saying, I am Christ, and shall deceive many." " .ill that come " xxiv. 5. .Many are called, but file chosen." xx. lli. into the tent, and all that is in the tent shall be unclean seven days." A'um. " If a soul shall sin xix. 14. against any of th? commandments." Lev. iv. 2.
.?s, primarily signifies like, similar; the primary sense of which is even, equal. It is used adverbially in the phrases, as good, as great, as probable ; Hence it frethe sense of which is like or equally good, great or probable. " Neither is there quently follows si/('?(. "Send him such books as will please him." I5ut in any, that can deliver out of my hand." l>eut. xxxii. 3?. this and similar phrases, as must be considered as the nominative to «.(7/' " Senil him .sucli several or we must an of words. ; please supjjose ellipsis First, last, former, latter, less, least, more, most, books as the books which will please him, or as those which will please him." So in the following sentences. are often used as substitutes. " The victor's " have been accustomed to repose on its veracity with such humble laurel, as the martyr's crown, Hoole's Tasso. 6. S. confidence as suppresses cuiiosity." The first 1 hope, nor less the last I prize." Johnsoji'*s Life of Cowley. " All the " The last shall last." Matt. xx. IB. to see inthcted on sin is onpunishment which (iod is concerned be,/irs(, and lUe first ' " It will not be amiss to inquiic into Ihe cause of this strange phenomely such as answers ihc ends of government. " Many wise men contented themselves with such probable conclusioivs non ; that, even a man of discerinnent should write without meaning, and as were sutlicient for the practical purposes of life." not be sensible that he hath no meaning ; and that judicious people should Enfield, Hist. Phil. 2. 11. read what hath been written in this way, and not discover ihe defect. Both " The malcontents made such demands as none but a than the last." Camp. Rhet. 2. 7. tyrant could refuse." are surprising, but Ibe first much more Here both represents the two clauses of Ihe sentence, preceded by that Bolingbroke on Hist. Let. 7. In the last example, if ns is to be considered as a pronoun, or substitute, both of those propositions arc surprising. First and last stand in the place it is in the objective case. of the same clauses. " These and similar phrases are anomalous ; and we can resolve them only Sublimity and vehemence are often confounded, the latter being conCamp. Rhet. 1. 1. liy supplying the ellipsis, or by considering as in the nature of a juonoun, sidered as a species of the/urmcr. " Leonis refused to and the nominative to the verb. go thither with less than the appointed equipment." In the following form of expression, we may supply it for the nominative. .1/(cA/e, 1. 181. Here/es.s- supplies the place of egl^i/lm«i^ and prevents •' Do every thing as was said about mercury and sulphur." Encyc. llie necessity of its repetition. 'As it was said." "To the relief of these, Noronha sent some supplies, but while he was In poetry, as supplies the place o( such. Mickle, 1. 180. preparing to send more, an order from Portugal arrived." "From whence might contest spring and mutual rage, Here more is sufficiently intelligible without a repetition of the name " .is would the camp in civil broils engage." Hook's Tasso. supplies.
We
—
—
GRAMMAR OF THE •
And
the cliilJicn
•I cannot go beyond
"Then began he were done." "
Israel did so, and gathered
ol'
tlie
word of
upbraid the
to
Was
not
tliis
Lord,
tlie
my
are
God,
to
wherein most of
cities
love indeed
?
Wc men say ?nore, Our shews
some more, some less." Exod. xvi. 17.
swear more, but indeed more than will."
do less or more.'
One, when contrasted with other, sometimes represents plural names, and joined with a plural verb, as in this passage, "The rea,son why the one are ordinarily taken for real qualities, zuiitie other, only lor bare powers, is
A'mnb. xxii. 18. seems to be," &c. Locke, b. 2. ch. 8. 25. One and another, have a peculiar distributive use in the following and the mighty works Malt. xi. 20 like expressions; "Brethren, let us love one another." The effect of these words seems to be, to separate an .ict allirmed of a number collectively, and
his
distribute it the other."
Shaks. Twelfth A'ight
among " If
the several individuals
ye have love one
to
— "Let us love— each one love — " by love serve one anothlet
another"
One another, in this phraseology, have the comprehensive sense of " By love serve" every one serve the other. Each is used in every one. a like sense They loved each other that is they loved each loved the er."
Such.
—
—
' Jabal was the father of
—
—
—
s)«-ft as dwell in tents." Gen. iv. other. Thou shalt provide able men such as fear God." E.c. xviii. Several. "Objects of importance must be portrayed by objects of importance; such as have grace, by things graceful." Several is an attribute, denoting originally one thing severed from others. 1. 2 Rhet. Camp. Such here supplies the place of a name or noun, but it retains its attribu- But this sense seems to be now confined to technical law language as a tive sense and the name may be added. In common use, it is always plural, expressive "joint and several estate." of an indefinite number, not very large. It is frequently a substitute as, ••
;
" Several of
Self and own. Self tensive
is
said to
word
to
;
my unknown
Spectator, 281.
correspondents."
have been originally an attribute, but is now used as an inSometimes it is give emphasis to substitutes and attributes.
Some.
In the plural, it Ibrms selves. It is added to the attributes The attribute some is often used as a substitute ; as, " Some talk of subas myself, yourself,' ourselves; and to him, her, thcjn, as others praise virtue who do not practice it." jects they do not understand And though annexed to suljstitutes in the obhimself, herself, themselves. Johnson. jective case, these words arc inditfereutly in the nominative or objective. Each, every, either, neither. Self is never added to his, their, mine, or thine. Each is a distributive attribute, used to denote every individual of a numThe compounds himself, herself, thyself, ourselves, themselves, may be " The of Israel and the placed immediately after the personal'substitute, as he himself wrote a let- ber, separately considered ; as, king of Judah sat " Thou also andking each on his throne." ter to the minister, or immediately after the Aaron, take each of you his censer." following verb or its object, as "He wrote a letter himself." "he went himself to the admiralty." In " The /o»r beasts had cocftof them six wings." In these passages, each is a substitute for the name of the such phrases himself not only gives emphasis to the affirmation; biit gives persons or ob" He went to an impUed negative, the Ibrce of one himself to jects, one separate from the other.* expressed. the minister," carries with it a direct negation that another person went. In Every denotes all the individuals of a number considered separately. It is " attribute, but sometimes a substitute, chiefly in the He did not write the letter therefore a distributive negative sentences, it has a different eli'ect. " every of the clauses and conditions." It is generally followhimself," implies strongly that he wrote it by an agent, or had an agency in law style ; as, ed by the name to which it belongs, or by the cardinal number one. procuring it to be written. sometimes see every separated from its name These compound substitutes are used after verbs when reciprocal action by the definitive the and " an attribute of the superlative degree ; as, " is expressed ; as, They injure themselves." every the least variation." " this is the book itself." Locke. Itself is added to names for emphasis as, Either and neither are is an attribute usually classed with the conjunctions; but in denoting property, used with names to render the sense emphatical; as, "this book is my own." strictness, they are always attributes or substitutes. Their correlatives or Own is sometimes a substitute; as, came unto his own and his own and nor, though considered as conjunctions, belong to the latter class of words ; or being merely an abbreviation of other, and nor received him not." Johni. 11. being the same word " This is an invention of his with the Saxon negative prefixed, as will be hereafter shown. own." Either and or denote an alternative ; as, " I will take either road at your That I will take one road or the other. pleasure." is, In this use, either is none. One, other,
used as a noun.
my, your, own,
;
—
We
;
.
Oum
"He
another,
an attribute.
" Either of the roads is The attribute one is very often a substitute other is used in the same Either is also a substitute for a name as, good." manner, and often opposed to o/ie. "All rational or deductive evidence is It also represents a sentence or a clause of a sentence as, " No man can derived from one oi- the other of these two sources." Camp. Rhet. ch. 5. serve two masters, for either, he will hate the one and love the other, or To render these words more definile, and the specification of the alternative else," &c. Matt. vi. 24. To understand the true import of either, let or be more explicit, the definitive fAe is placed before them; as, "either he will also reduced back to its original orthography, " for either, he will hate the hate the one and love the other." one and love the other; other else he will hold to the one and despise the jinother has sometimes a possessive case as, "the horse is another's •" other." Here we are presented with the sentence as it would have stood but this form of speech is but little used. in the Saxon and we see two distinct athrmations, to the first of which is Another is the Saxon an, one, and other one other. It is an attribute prefixed either, and to the last other. These words then are substitutes for but often used as a substitute. " Let another praise thee and not thine own the following sentences when they are intended to be alternative. Either mouth." p,.OT,, xxvii. 2. and or are therefore signs of an alternative, and may be called alternatives. J\'one [no one] is often a substitute as, " Ve shall lie down and Either is used also for each ; as, " Two thieves were crucified^on either none shall make you afraid." Lev. xxvi. 6. It is used in the This use of the word is constantly condemned by critics, and as plural as well as the|! side one." singular number. constantly repeated by good writers but it was the true original sense of The cardinal numbers are all used as substitutes, when the things to the word, as appears by every Saxon author. which they refer are understood by the train of discourse, and no is Either used also to represent an alternative of attributes as, " the emoambiguity " The rest of is created by the omission of the name as, the people also cast tion must be either not violent or not durable." Camp. Rhet. 1. 2. JYcither is not either, from the Saxon ne-either ; and nor is ne-othcr, not lots, to bring ojieof (en todwell in Jerusalem." J\'eh. xi. 1. One has sometimes the possessive form as, •' One's person is to be other. As cither and or present an alternative or a choice of two protected things, so bylaw;" and frequently the plural number; as, "I have commanded my neither and nor deny both or the whole of any number of particulars as, sanctified ones, and I have called my mighty ones." ha xiii ^ " Fight neither viHh small nor great." 1 Kings, xxii. 31. Which sentence " ;
;
;
;
'
—
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
when
resolved stands thus Fight not either with small, not other with Such is tlie curious machinery of language great." Meilher is also used as an attribute and as a substitute for a name; as, " have alled"-JVeither otiicc is filled, but neither of the offices will suit the candidate." ;
!
*
In this compound,
we have
a strong confirmation of what I in the singular number, when used of Note. Or, either, nor and neither are here explained in their true origiSelf invariably in the singular— s<;7«e« in the plural ityoii is to be classed with plurals in all cases, we must, to be consist- nal character ; but when they stand for sentences, it is more natural to conent, apply yourselves to a single person. Yet we make the proper distinc- sider them as connectives, under which head I have arranged them. tion—i/ourse// is applied to one person— In general, any attribute [adjective] which describes persons or But upon the j/ou
ed respecting the arrangement oS you a single person.
—
is
Now
saying yourself were," when address a single person— which is false construction. Whatever verb therefore is used with you when applied to an individual, must be consideredj! »s a verb in the singular number.
we
I
* Each is as applicable to a hundred or thousand as to two. " The prince had a body guard of a thousand men, each of whom was six feet high."
ENGLISH LANGUAGE. "
"
The rich liavc many fi iends"— As.sociulc be used as a substitute as, with the wise and good"—" The future will resemble (he past"—" Such is the opinion of the learned." ;
Attributes or Adjectives, in grammar, are words wliich denote the quali a splendid equip as, a bright sun lies inherent in, or ascribed to things house an honest man; an amiable age; a mi,ierab! ehnt; a magnijicent woman liberal charity false honor a quiet conscience. be compared with As qualiUes may exist in difl'ercnt degrees, which may each other, suitable modes of speech are devised to express ihcue comparaIn English, most attributes admit of three degrees of compartive degrees. There are therefore four degrees of comand a few admit of ;
;
;
;
;
ison,
;
.'
;
From
the various uses and significations of verbs, have originated several The only one in English which seems to be correct and sufficiently compiehensivc, is, into transitive and intransitive. To these may be added a combination of the verb be, w ith certain auxiliaries and participles, which is called a passive verb." 1. A transitive verb denotes action or energy, which is exerted upon some object, or in producing some effect. In natural construction, the w'ord expressing the object, follows the verb, « ithout the intervention of any other " word, though the order may be sometimes varied. Thus, ridicule provokes anger," is a complete proposilion ridicule is the agent or nominative word, which causes the action ; provoke is the verb, or alfirmation of an act anger is the object or effect produced, following the transitive verb provoke. " The wind propels a ship," is the affirmation of an act of the wind exerted and ship, the object. on a ship, li^ind is the agent ; propels, the verb 2. An intransitive verb denotes simple being or existence in a certain state, as to be, to rest ; or it denotes action, which is limited to the subject. " .Tohn to Thus, sleeps," is an affirmation, in which John, the nominative sleeps, is the subject of the affirmation ; .ileeps is a verb intransitive, affirming a particular thing o( Johrt, which extends to no other object. 3. The passive verb in English is formed by adding certain auxiliaries and It denotes pa.ssion orsnflering; that is, thattlic participles to the verb be. subject of the affirmation or nominative is affected by the action affirmed; as, divisions or classes.
JIttributes or Adjectives.
;
2(1. To command, exhort or invite; as go, attend, let us observe. 3d. To |iray, request, entreat as, may the spirit of grace dwell iu us. 4tb. Toinquirc, or question as, docs it rain ? Will he come
/win-.
parison.
and is expressed by tlie The/)-6Y denotes a slight degree of the quality, termination ish ; as reddish, brownish, yellowish. This may be denominated the imperfect degree of the attribute. The second denotes such a degree of the attribute as to constitute an absoThis is as red, brown, great, small, brate, wise. lute or distinct quality called the positive degree. The third denotes a greater or less degree of a quaUty than exists in another object, with which it is compared ; as greater, smaller, braver, ;
This is called the comparative degree. tviier. The fourth denotes the utmost or least degree of a quality ; as bravest, unsest, poorest, smallest. This is called the superlative degree. The inqieil'ect degree is formed by adding ish to an attribule ; as yellow, vowel is omitted ; as white, whitish. yellowish. If the attribute ends in e.'tbis The comparative degree is formed by adding r to adjectives ending with e, as wise, wiser ; and by adding er to words ending with an articulation, as cold, colder ; or by prefixing more or less, as more just, less noble. The superlative degree is'lbrmed by adding st to attributes ending with f, as wise, ivisest ; and est to those which end with an articulation, as cold, coldest ; or by prefixing most and least, as most brave, least charitable. Every attribute, susceptible of comparison, may be compared by more and
;
;
;
" Laura is loved and admired." is convinced ;" In the tranIn this form of the verb, the agent and object change places. agent precedes the verb, and the object follows; as, "John In the passive form the order is changed, and the has convinced Moses."
John
sitive fbrni the
" Moses is convinced agent follows the veib preceded by a preposition ; as, by John." To correspond with their nominatives, verbs are used in both numbers, and W'ith the three persons in each. .\s action and being may be mentioned as present, past and future, verbs
have modifications to express time, which arc called tenses. .\nd as action and being maj^be represented in various ways, verbs have various modificaless and least. Hence to verbs beAll monysyllables admit of er and est, and dissyllables when the addition tions to answer these purposes, called modes or moods. loftiest. long person, number, tense and mode. easily pronounced as happy, happier, happiest ; lofty, loftier, The persons, which have been already explained, are I, thou or you, he. But few words of more syllables tlian one will admit of er and est. Hence most attributes of more syllables than one are compared by more and most, she, it, in the singular number; in the plural, wc, ye or you, they. The less and least ; as more fallible, most upright, less generous, least splendid. numbers have been before explained. When attributes end in y after a consoriant, this letter is dropped, and i substituted before er and est ; as lofty, loftier, loftiest. Tenses, A few attributes have different words or irregular terminations for-expresbad or evil, worse, There are six tenses or modifications of the verb to express time. Each sing the degrees of comparison as good, better, best ; worst ; fore, former, jirst ; less or lesser, least; much, more, most; near, of these is divided into two forms, for the purpose of distinguishing the definearer, nearest or next ; old, older, oldest or eldest ; late, later, latest or last. nite or precise time from the indefinite. These may be thus explained and When qualities are incapable of increase or diminution, the words which exemplified. them do not admit of comparison. Such are the numerals, first,
most,
may be
;
;
express second, third. Sac, and attributes of mathematical figures, as square, spheror square, ical, rectangular; for it will readily appear, that if a thing is^rs( it cannot be more or less so. The sense of attributes however is not restricted to the modification, exin an indefibe varied but of the common may comparison, by pressed signs Thus the attribute very, which is nite number of ways, by other words. the French vrai, true, formerly written veray, is much used intensively to express a great degree of a quality, but not the greatest; as very wise or In like manner are used ?>nich, far, extremely, exceedingly, and learned. most of the modifiers in ly. Some attributes, from particular appropriate uses, have received names, by which they are distinguished. But the usual classification is by no means correct. The following distribution seems to result from the uses of the
words named.
An
Present Tense., indefinite. This form of the present tense afBrms or denies action or being, in present It expresses also time, without limiting it with exactness to a given point. facts which exist generally, at all limes, general truths, attributes which are without reference to a permanent, habits, customary actions, and the like, is man and God is imperfect and deas, just; infinitely great specific time fishes sii'im. plants sprmo- from the earth ; birds/y; ;
pendent;
Present Tense,
rJefinite.
This form expresses the present time with precision usually denoting aclam wribeing which corresponds in time with another action; as, ting, while yoic are waiting. ;
tion or
or a, the, this, that, these, those, other, another, one, none, some, may he called definitives, from their office, which is to limit or define the extent Past Tense, indefinite. of the name to which they are prefixed, or to specify particulars. took place at a given This form of the past tense represents action which My, thy, her, our, your, their, and mine, thine, his, when used as attri" In six and completely past ; as, days, God creabutes, with names, are possessive attributes, as they denote possession or time past past, however distant .\lexander conquered the Persians." ownership. Its and it'hose, if ranked with attributes, belong to the same class. I(«nhc heavens and the earth.' ' The Earl of Chatham v;as an eloEach and every are distributives, but they may be classed with the de- " Scipio was as virtuous as brave."
quent statesman."
finitives.
Either
is
an alternative, as
is
which
or,
is
now
considered merely as a
connective.
Own is an intetisive adjective. The words to which self is affixed, himmyself, themselves, yourself yourselves, ourselves, thyself, itself, may be denominated intensive substitutes, or for brevity, intensives. Or they self,
may
be called compound substitutes.
Past Tense, definite, [imperfect.] This form represents an action as taking place and unfinished in some spetime as, " I was standing at the door when the proces-
cified period of past
;
sion passed."
Verb.
*The common distribution into active, neuter and passive, is very objecof The verb is a primary part of speech, and next to the name or noun tionable. Many of our neuter verbs imply action in a pre-eminent degree, the most importance. The uses of the verb are, and the young learner cannot easily cbnceive why 1st. To affirm, assert, or declare; as, the sun shines ; John loves study ; as to run, to irdlk, tofiy ; such verbs are not called active. God is just and negativelv, avarice is not commendable. " ;
Vol.
I.
I.
GRAMMAR OF THE 3. It gives great life and effect to description, in prose or verse, to represent past events as present ; to introduce them to the view of the reader or Hence the frequent use of the preshearer, as having a present existence. ent tense for the future, by the historian, the poet and the orator: " She spoke ; Minerva burns to meet the war And now heaven's enipi ess calls the blazing car ; At her command rush forth the steeds divine. Hiad, 5. Rich with immortal gold, the trappings shine." The definite tenses, it will be observed, are formed by the participle of the This participle always expresent tense, and the substanfive verb, be. a past or future tense common than a mistranslation of this tense. for, / presses present time, even when annexed to It is to be noted however that this perfect indefinite tense is th.at in which was tvrillns, denotes (hat, at the past time mentioned, the action was preslather has lived about ent; I shall be writing, denotes future time, but an action then to be present. we express continued or repeated -Mlion ; as, " " He has " The The past tense of every regular verb ends in eil ; d being added to a verb eighty years." king has reigned more than forty years. as hate, hated ; look, use it also when a been frequently heard to lament." Life of Couper. ending in f, and eii to a verb with other terminations; the looked. specified past time is represented, if that time is expressed as apart of " have been together The future tense is formed by the present tense of shall and will; for, I present period. Thus, although we cannot say, " have been together this morning, or this shall go, he will go, are merely an appropriate use of / shall to go, I will to yesterday," we usually say, evening." AVe even use this tense in mentioning events which happened go. See an explanation of these words under the head of auxiliaries. " I am at a greater distance of time, if we connect that time with the present ; as, There are other modes of expressing future time ; as, going to " He has not seen " His brother has vifited him once within two write" " I am about to write." These have been called the inceptive fuyears." his sister, since the year 1800." ture, as they note the commencement of an action, or an intention to com-
Perfect Tense, huhfiniie. This form of the perfect tense represents an action completely past, and often at no great distance, but the time not specified as, "I have accomplished my desif;n." But if a particular time is named, the tense must be "I have seen the past; as, "1 accomplished my design last week." is not correct In this last friend week," respect, the French English. my idiom is different from the English, for "J'ai vu mon ami hier" is good French, but "I have seen my friend yesterday" is not good English. The words must be translated, "1 saw my friend yesterday." No fault is more ;
;
;
My
We
We
We
;
action without delay. have another mode of expression, which does not strictly and posia necessity of performing an act, and tively foretell an action, yet it implies For example, "I have to pay & clearly indicates that it will take place. sum of money to morrow." That is, I am under a present necessity or obli-
mence an
We
Perfect Tense, definite. This form represents an action as just finished; France."
as,
"
I
have been reading
a history of the revolution in
2i act. gation to do future The substantive verb followed by a radical verb, forms another idiomatic Prior-past Tense, indefinite, [pluperfect.] " Eneas " John is to command a regiment." expression of future lime as, This form of the prior past tense expresses an action which was past at or went in search of the seat of an empire which was, one day, to command before some other past time specified; as, " he had received the news before the world." The latter expression is a future past that if, past to the narthe messenger arrived." rator, but future as to the event, at the time specified. ;
;
Modes.
Prior-past, definite.
This form denotes an action to be just past, at or before another time speMode, in grammar, is the manner of representing action and being, or the " I had been as, reading your letter when the messenger arrived." wishes and determinations of the mind. This is performed by inflections of the verb, or by combinations of verbs with auxiliaries and participles, and
cified
;
Future
by
Te7ise, indefinite.
their various positions.
As there are scarcely two authors who are agreed in the number and deThis form of the future tense gives notice of an event to happen hereafter nominations of the modes in English, I shall offer a distribution of the verbs, " Your son will obtain a commission in the navy." " We shall have a and a display of their inflections and combinations, somewhat different from fine season." any which I have seen. 1. The first and most simple form of the verb, is the verb without inflecFuture Tense, definite. This form usually has the prefix to; tions, and uncomiected with persons. This form expresses an action which is to take place and be unfinished at as to love. " He loill be a specified future time as, This form of the verb, not being restricted to person or number, is usually preparing for a visit, at the time ;
as,
;
I
you arrive." This form of the future tense denotes an action which will be past at a fu ture time specified as, " They will have performed their task, by the ap pointed hour." ;
Prior-Future, definite. This form represents an action which will be just
past at a future speci" shall have been making preparafions, a week before our as, friends arrive."* In the use of the present tense, the following things are to be noticed. 1. The present tense is customarily used to express future time, when by any mode of expression, the mind is transported forward to the time, so as to conceive it present ; as, " I cannot determine, till the mail arrives." " As
fied time
;
We
soon as it is light, we shall depart." " When he has an opportunity, he will write." The words till, when, as soon as, carry the mind to the time of an event to happen, and we speak of it as present. 2. By an easy transition, the imagination passes from an author to his writings; these being in existence and present, though long after his decease, we substitute the writer's name for his works, and speak of him as living or in the present tense thus, Milton rese>nbles Homer in sublimity and invention, as Pope resembles Virgil, in smoothness of versification. Plato is ;
fanciful
;
the Infinitire .Mode. 2. Another use of the verb is to affirm, assert or declare some action or existence, either positively, as he runs, or negatively, as you are not in 'This form is called the Indicative Mode. 3. Another othce of the verb is to command, direct, ask, or exhort; as This is called the Imperative Mode. arise, make haste, let us be content. 4. Another form of the verb is used to declare the power, liberty, possiof certain words called auxbility or necessity of acting or being, by means This form is called the Potential Mode ; as, iliaries, as may, can, must, &c. / may or can ivrite ; he must wait.' 5. Another use of verbs is to represent actions or events which are uncertain, conditional or contingent; as, if he shall go; if they would attend. This is called the Subjunctive Mode, but would better be denominated the The Indicative and Potential become cmiditional, by means Conditional. of words used to express condition; as if, though, unless, whether. The Modes then are five the Infinitive, the Indicative, the Imperathe Potential, and the Subjunctive. jtive, It may also be observed that the combinations and arrangements of our verbs and auxiliaries to express negative and interrogative propositions, are the verb for each really modes of the verb, and a place might be assigned to For purpose, were it not for the inconvenience of having modes of modes. the sake of distinction, 1 denominate these verbs interrogative and negative, and have exhibited the conjugation of each.
jcalled
Prior-Future, indefinite.
'health. 1
;
Aristotle is profound.
Participles. Participles are derivatives from verbs, formed by particular terminations, distribution of the tenses, are so and having the sense of verbs, attributes or names. utterly incor reet and incompetent to give a just idea of their uses, that I have ventured There are two species of participles; one denoting present time, and to offer a new division, retaining the old names, as far as truth will warrant. formed to the verb, as turn, turning, or when the verb ends The terms prior-past iiud prior-future, are so perfectly desciiptive of the with by adding ing But e is as that letter and
*The common names and
place, placing. e, by dropping adding ing, tenses arranged under them, that I cannot but think they will be well reThe distinction of indefinite and definite is not wholly new ; but I ceived. * have never seen the definite forms displayed, though they are as necessary This mode is inserted in compliance with the opinions of many Gramas the indefinite forms. Indeed, I see not how a foreigner can learn our lan- marians, but in opposition to my own. It is in fact tlie indicative mode, afguage, as the tenses are commonly distributed and defined. firming the power, &c. of acting, instead of the act itself. ,
ENGLISH LANGUAGE. When a man expres^^cs his own determination of mind, I will, we are acretained in dyeing from dye, to color, to distinguish it from dying, the partiused to prevent the diiplicalion of /. In customed to consider the event, or act willed ascertain; for we naturally ciple of (
;
—
ing
participle
a superior couunands with authority, you shall go ; oi' implying a right in the second and third person to expect, and hence denoting a promise in the " speaker ; as, you shall receive your w.ages." This is radically sayin"', •' you ought to receive your wages ;" but this right in the second person to receive, implies an obligation in the person speaking to pay. Hence shall in the second, /);o;nisf.'i, commands, or in the first person foretells eipressff determination. When shall in the second and third persons, is uttered with combination, is called passive. determination it in the and formed from a.nintransitive verb, cannot, except emphasis, expresses But this participle, when speaker, implies an authority " Vou shall enforce the act. to go." in a few instances, be joined to the substantive verb, or used in a passive Must expresses necessity, and has no variation for person, number or sense; but it unites with the other auxiliaries. This participle often loses its verbal character, and becomes an attribute ; tense. Do is a principal and a transitive verb, si/fnifying to act or make; but is In this character it admits of comparias a concealed plot, a painted house. " a most " resjiected magistrate ;" and a few of used in the present or past tenses as an auxiliary to give emphasis to a decson, as a more admired artist," these verbal attributes receive the termination ly, and become modifiers, as laration, to denote contrast, or to supply the place of the principal verh. " It would have been impossible for Cicero to inflame the minds of the pointedly, more conceitedly, most dejectedly. to so high a pitch against oppression, considered in the abstract, as he tense anil Those verbs, whose past participle end in ed, are deemed regu people All which deviate from this rule, are deemed irregular, anil their par actually did inflame them against Verres the oppressor." lar. Camp. Rhet. 1. A list of them will be 10. Here did expresses emphasis, tense end mostly in t, n and g. ticiples of the perfect " It was hardly possible that he should not distinguish you as he has done." found in the sequel. Coup. Let. 40. Here done stands in the place oi distinguished you. For Auxiliaries. it must be observed that when do is the substitute for another verb, it supIn English, a few monosyllabic verbs are chiefly employed to form the plies the place not only of the verb, but of the object of the verb. "He loves not plays modes and tenses of other verbs, and from this use, are denominated auxiliaThese are followed by other verbs, without the prefix As thou dost, Anthony." ries or helping verbs. " he That is, as thou lovest plays. to, as may go ;" though they were originally principal verbs, and some Do is also used in negative and interrogative sentences; the present and of them still retain that character, as well as that of auxiliaries. The verbs which are always auxiliary to others, are may, can, shall, must past tenses of the Indicative Mode being chiefly formed by this auxiliary; " I do not reside in Boston." "Does John bold a commission ?" those which are sometimes auxiliaries, and sometimes principal verbs, arc as, To these may be added need and dare. Have is also a principal and transitive verb, denoting to possess ; but much will, have, do and be. or permission as, " he may go, if he will used as an auxiliary, as " He has lately been to ATay conveys the idea of liberty Hamburg." It is often useil " to supply the place of a principal verb, or Or it denotes possibility ; as, he may have written or not."" preventing a repetition " I have notparticiple, of it, and the object after it Can has the sense of to be able. seen Paris, but my brother has," as, to denotes be with that has seen Paris. is, Shall, in its primitive sense, obliged, coinciding nearly But this signification, though in the German. Equally common and extensive is the use of be, denoting existence, and otight ; which sense it retains of this word, is much obscured. The hence called the substantive verb. Either in the character of a evidently the root of the present uses principal verb, or an auxiliary, it is found in almost every sentence of the following remarks will illustrate the several usesof H'iW and shall. language. Hence the German wolThe inflection of a verb, in all the modes, tenses, numbers and persons, is IVill h.is a common origin with the Latin volo. The English verbs have few inflections, or len, the old English woU,^ni\ the present contraction won't, that is, woll-not.i termed Conjugation. changes This was originally a principal verb, and is still used as such in our Ian of termination ; most of the tenses and modes being formed by means of the guage. It denotes the act of the mind in determining, or a determination ; auxiliaries. ifbr he tcills to go, and he will go, are radically of the same import. Note.— In the following conjugations, a small n in an Italic character, is inserted in the place where not should stand in negative sentences. The * The primitive idea expressed by tnay was power ; Sax. magan, to same place is generally occupied by never, but not in every case. It is believed this letter will be very useful, he able. The learner especially to foreigners. that the Roman c was 1 1 is as our wolo. the verb with or without at tc, supposed pronounced may conjugate not, pleasure.
termination ness; as willingness, from willing. The other species of participle is formed from the verb, by adding dor erf, a,s loved, in regular verbs, it corresponds exactly with the past time of the petfect tense. preceded. This may be called the participle This participle, when its verb is transitive, may be joined with the verb the in such and a to form in all its verb, participle, inflections, passive he,
and
;
;
;
;
!
CONJircATION OF TtlE AUXILIARIES. May. — Present Tense. Singular. I may n Person, Thou mayest 2d M. Person 1 erson, < ^
^^^ ^^^
^^^
Singular. C mas.
Plural.
We may
1st.
n
C (
n
3d. Person,
( neut.
Ye niay n Vou may n
Plural.
He may n It
i
grammar,
glish
that
Plural.
Singular.
may n
he meets with you in the pluIt may be remarked once for all, that thou and ral number only, though he finds it the represenye are the second person used in the sacred stylo, tative of an individual. Now if you is always pluand sometimes in other grave discourses. In all ral, then you yourself is not grammatical, but abother cases, you is the second person of the singu- surd the true expression then must be, yon yourThen I must say lar number, as well as of the plural. It is not one of selves, applied to an individual. the most trivial absurdities which Uie student mustl to a friend, who visits me, please to seat yourselves. now encounter at every step, in the stttdy of En-j Sir. This is equal to the royal style, we Ourself' *
Past Tense
They may n
She may n
(
I might n Thou mightest n You might ;i
He
5 I
(
might n
Can.— Present
;
We might J
I can n Thou canst n You can Ji He can n
Ye
miglit
n )i
You might ti They might n
Tense.
We ^
I
can n
Ye can ti You can n They can «
GRAMMAR OF THE Perfect Tense.
Past Tense
Plural. could n Ye could n Thou couklst n You could 11 You could u He could II They could n SQUALL.- -Piesent Tense. .Singular.
1 C I
could
I shall
y y
We
V/e have re had (Ye have re had ( Thou hast re had had have re had ( You have re ( You He has or hath n had They have re had Prior-past Tense. We had re hail I had re had Thou hadst re had (Ye had re had had You had »» had ( You had n He had re had They had re had Note. In these tenses, the perfect and priortransitive. past, this verb is always principal and
((
I
n
shall
Ye shall ?i You shall u They shall «
Thou shalt a You shall « He shall n I
I
should
We should n
?i
Thou shouldst n You should « He should «
Will. I
i (
will
Thou
(
Ye should » You should n
They — Present Tense.
will
n
C
re
I
re
will n Ye will n You will « They will re
C
would
We
re
Thou wouldst
<
re
would )* would re
^ Y'ou
He
Note.
—
(
when
IVill,
a principal verh,
is
I
Pa-st
We
Thou shalt re have You shall re have
C I
He
reRii-
shall
re
( (
have
re
(
He does
or doth
^ ( re
love
I did
n
love
Thou didst re love You did n love He did n love
\
( (
Infinitive Mode. To do.
Note.
Let us re have Let them n have
We
Note. A command, request or exhortation, must, in the nature of things, be addressed to the second per.son nor can these phrases, let me have, let MS have, be considered, in strictness, as the first person of this mode, nor/e( Aim Aaue, as the third but they answer to the first and third persons of this mode in other languages, and the mere nam ing of them is wholly immaterial. The true force and effect of the verb, in this mode, depend on its application to characters, and
'"^'^
did
—
n love
Ye did re love You did re love They did re love
This verb,
is
done.
used in sacred and solemn lan-
common and
when
familiar language.
principal and transitive, has
the tenses and modes, I have done, will do, &c. Have. -Infinitive
I
all
had done,
1
might
re
C (
—
re
have had
Ye may re have had You may n have had They may re have had
Tense the principal verb only. We have had
Ye
Thou mightest re have
might n have had
You
|
Conditional or Subjunctive Mode, Conditional or Subjunctive Mode
The
is the with some preceding word expressing condition, supposition or contingency. These words are, )/, though or although, unless, except, whether, lest, albeit. If is n corruption of gif, the imperative of gifaii, the Saxon orthography of give. Though, the Saxon theah, signifies permit, allow. Although is a compound of all and though, give or allow all. The old word thof, still used in some parts of Eng-
same
as the Indicative,
is the imperative of the Saxon thafinn, to alUnless is the imperative of the Saxon oreExcept is the imperalysan, to loose or dissolve. Lest is from lesan, to lease or tive of that verb. Albeit is a compound of all, be and it, dissolve.
land,
low.
let
be
it
so.
These words,
if,
and use,
though, answer in signification
to the following admit, grant, allow, " If \suppose, as signs of a condition or hypothesis. :
shall go," is simply, "give, that is, give that condition or fact
you
;
Participles.
done, having — In the thirdDoing, person singular of the pre-
sent tense, doth guage; does in
n
Do re you have
love
"
Past Tense. C
Imperative Mode. Plural. Singidar. Have ye n, have you
have Let me n have Let him re have
re
You may re have had He may re have had
the
You do re love They do re love
^'"^ '^°
Thoumayestrehavehad
I
the indicative mode.
when
Have re or have thou re Have you n or do re you
We do
n love Thou dost re love You do re love
We may
may re have had
(
had ^ You might re have had He might re have had
;
do
Perfect Tense. In this tense, have is a principal verb only.
Prior-past
1
I
They might n have They should n have They could n hav'e They would n have
You would re have
re
I
—
C
He might have He shonld have He could have He would n have
<
J
He must )i have loved They must re have loved Do. — Indicative Mode — Present Tense.
\o\i might re have You should re have You could re have
might re have! should '>i have
Ye could re have Yc would n have
have They [ In the same manner with should, could and Ye shall re have You shall n have tvould. There is no future tense, distinct from that of They shall re have will
Prior-Future. This tense foretells, and is used only
loved
You might re have You should n have You could re have You would n have
Ye
re
C
Must. verb is principal. Must has no change of termination, and is joinWe shall n have had I shall re have had ed with verbs only in the following tenses. fThou shalt or wilt re Y'e shall or will re have Present Tense. had have had We must n love I must n love You shall or will re have 1 You shall or will re ( Yc must re love Thou must n love had have had ^ [ re love re love He shall or will n They shall or willre \ You must ( Y'ou must He must re love They must re love have had have had Perfect Tense. TVill is not used in the first person of We must re have loved thisNote. I must n have loved it tense being incompatible" with the nature ("Thou must n have We cannot say, I will have had Ye must n have loved of a promise. loved J a year, on the first of October next;" possession You must n have You must re have loved but ) I shall have had, is a common expression. ^
Ye
re
(
n have
will
Thou mightest n have Thou shouldst re have Thou couldst re have Thou wouldst re have
I
You will re have They will n have form promises, commands or de
will re have will re have
He
The following termines.
wonld re
Ye would re You would /( They would re
conjugated; I will, thou wiliest, he wills. tense, / willed.
larly
had
You
(
Past Tense. I
re
Future Tense. In this tense the verb is principal or au.-ciliary with the same form of conjugation. The following form foretells. We shall re have I shall re have ( Yc willre have C Thou wiltn have
should re
We
II
wilt
Y'ou will
He
J
have
—
Past Tense.
J
Plural.
Singular.
We
;i
you
shall
go;"
allow or sup; to be so. has been, and is still customary for authors the second of to omit the personal terminations and third persons of the verb in the present tense, to form the subjunctive mode ; if thou go, if he it
pose It
write.
The
construction of the subjunctive precisely the same as that of the indicawhich has it is used in popular practice, idiom of the language; if thou the true preserved go, hast, if he has or hath ; to denote present uncer-
the manner of utterance. C'uine, go, let him if uttered with a respectful address, or in a civil
correct
mode
is
tive
as
;
tainty.
But
a
future contingency may be
ex-
Mode, Present Tense.- To Aare. manner, may express entreaty, request or exhort- pressed by the omission of the personal terminaTo have had. ation. On the other hand, such words uttered tions if he go, that is, if he shall go. Perfect Tense.
—
—
;
Having. Participle of the Present Tense. Of the Perfect Tense.— Had.
— —
Compound. Having had. Mode. Present Tense.
Indicative I ^ (
have
He I
5 (
We
re
Thou hast re You have re has or hath re* Past Tense.
had
had
—
{
You have re They have n
We re
re
Ye have re
re
Thou hadstn You had re
He
have
(
had re had re
C
Ye
I
You had re They had re
Note. In the foregoing tenses, this verb used either as a principal verb or an auxiliary. »
Hath
familiar.
is
used
in the
solemn style
;
has
in the
with a tone of authority, and addressed to inferiors, Be. express comitiand. Be is a verb denoting existence, and therefore It is very irregular, Present Tense. Potential Mode. called the substantive verb. In the following tense, this verb is either auxil- being derived fi'om dilterent radicals, and having undergone many ilialectical changes. iary or principal. To be. We may or can re have Infinitive Mode, Present Tense. I may or can re have To have been. Ye may or can re have Perfect Tense. C Thou may est or canst re < have Being. Participle of the Present Tense. You may or can re have Of the Perfect.— £f(;re. ( You may or cann have He may or can re have They may or can n Having been. ConipoiMid. Present Tense. have Indicative Mode. We are re Must is used in the foregoing tense, and in the I am n
—
—
—
—
— —
perfect also.
^
Past Tense. In this tense, the verb is principal or auxiliary.
have
I
might
I I
should n have could re have
1
would
re
re.
have
We might 7i have We should have We could have Wu would have re
re
re
(
^
Thou art ra You arc n
He
? She isn (
(Y'e are l
You
re
are
re
is re
They aren
It is re
The foregoing form of the present tense is now But the followgenerally used by good writers.
I
ENGLISH LANGUAGE. ing form is (lie most ancient, and ual in popular practice.
Wc
lie
n
Vou be n
Ve
or
you be n
He Thou
second person, Past Tense.
is
Thou wast n You was or were » He was n
( (
\
The
not in use.
"W^e
l
C
(
{
shall or will
I
^
/?
We
be
I
But
He
tional future
—
the future
The
\
I sliall II
»i
f
;
if
1
You
will
or
shall
You
n
We
were
I
He were
n be
He
Love.
will
or
shall
They
will
Exhortation
»»
(Th Thou
,•
may or can ?i be Thou mayst or canst n
ou
^ 1 .,
,
I
Past Tense. ^
I
We might n be
might n be
Thou mightest n be You might n be He might n be
^ I
Ye nnght n be You might n be They might n be
j
In the same manner witli could, should and
may
Perfect or can have n
Tense
L
71
can n have
Ye may
or canst
have been ii
or can n
|_
or can
n have
havej
or can n' have been Prior-past Tense. I might n have been We might n have been i Thou mightest n have C Ye might nhave been J You might >l have been < You n have been been might ^ (_ He might (i have been They might n have been In the same manner with could, would and There is no future tense in this mode.
Subjunctive Mode.
(
\
Thou art You are
He
is
are I Ye ate \ You are They aie
71
love
We
n
shall or will
been
You
be
ii
(
\
did
n
Thou
You have
71
have
Ye
71
have
You
hast
n been loving 71
love
We shall n have been
have loved
loving
shall or will
been loving iThou He shall or will
have
Ye
n have
You
me
Let
Love 77
That
have
They shall or will 7t have been loving
Imperative Modt. Let us
Love
77
been
lov-
71
been
lov-
had
71
the lore perish.
is, let
Be ignorance thy choice, where knowledge leads to woe." Ibm. Potential Mode. Present Tense, indefinite. I may or can 7t love We may or can 71 love Thou mayst or canst 71 C Ye may or can 77 love love < You may or can 7i You may or can n love ( love He may or can 71 love They may or can 71
—
'
'
\
love
Must I
is
used in
may
or can
TTbou mayst J
77
and
this tense
loved Thou hadst 77 loved Sv ou had 71 loved He had n loved
We
C (
in the perfect.
We may
be loving
or canst
had 7i loved Ye had n loved You had it loved They had 77 loved
Ye may
n be
loving
You may
J
or can
be lov--
77
I
He may or
been
loving
7!
love
or can
77
be
77
be
loving
Prior-past, indefinite. I
n
77
Do 77 love Do ye or you
love
Definite. 77
They have
loving
n
shall or will
have been loving 71
love
7i
n
shall or will
have been loving
been loving
"
ing
been
n
Definite. lov-
have been
77
loving 71
Ji
shall or will
thou 71 love 77 love Do you 71 love Let them 71 love Let him 71 love In the place of let, the poets employ the verb without the auxiliary " Perish the lore that deadens young desire." Beat. Minst.
You have n been
been loving
n
or
They
shalt or wilt7i
Do Do
will
shall or will
shall
n have
been loving
You
)l
have loved
have loved
shall or will
shall
71
loved
shall or will
ing
were n loving
We have
lovin.
has or hath
71
shall or will
We shall
loved I
I
He
be
will
be lovins Prior-future, indefinite
have loved
7J
ing
(
shall or
They
loved
You
He
Ye were n loving You were n loving
Ye have (
be
7i
he loving
be lov-
71
Definite. 71
/i
shall or will
loving
[
will
shalt or wilt
We
have
We shall or will Ye
r
loved {Thou
loving They were 7i loving Perfect Tense, indefinite. I have n loved have n loved C Ye have n loved ^ Thou hast 7^ loved ' \ You have 7i loved \ You have n loved He has or hath n loved They have ii loved I
n be
or wilt
I
ing
Ye did n love You did »j love They did n love
We
loving
He was n
Present Tense.
We
\
n love n love C did n love I did » love Definite.
was
?i
loving
I shall
Ye love rf* You love ti They love n
did
He I
They may
This Mode is formed by prelixing any sign of condition, hypothesis or contingency, to the indie ative mode in its various tenses.
am
f
Thou wast 7) loving You was ri loving
been
been
If I
n
You
|
You may or can n have
have
been
He may
(
been
You may or can
Wc
lovest love n
shall or will
You shall 71 love They shall n love
(
Definite. be lov-
loving
—
—
( 'i'hou didst
been
TThou mayest )
j
I
We may or
been
— —
love love
71
n
loving iThou He shall or
Past Tense, indefinite. I loved )i We loved 7i ( Tliou lovedst n ( Ye loved n \ You loved J^ ( You loved n He loved M They loved n With the auxiliary did.
would. I
(
I
We
or can n be the perfect
also.
I
shall n love Ye will ;i love You will 71 love They will ;i love
C
ing
We
can n be ye may or can n be You may' or can n be
V ou may or can n be He may or can n be They may Must is used in this tense, and in "^
I
were
lovcth or loves n With the auxiliary do. do n love I do )! love ( Thou dost n love ( Ye do n love ( You do n love ( You do )! love He dotli or docs n love They do n love Definite. I am n arera loving loving Thou art 7i loving C Ye are n loving You are » loving \ You are n loving He is n loving They are n loving
We may or ,
I
You
He
them n be. Potential Mode.
I
"if
as in the indica-
Compound. Having loved. Mode. Present Tense, indefinite.
Indicative I love n
be, let
Entreaty
;
shall
shall
shalt
same
—
have been
;
7iot
He
Participle of the Present Tense. Loving. Of the Perfect. Loved.
Imperative .Mode. Be n ; be thou 7i ; do 7i thou be, or' do n be be ye n do n you be, or do you « be, or do ;i be. Let me n be, let him n be, let us n
Command
You were They were
am
You
(
Ye were
(
—
7!
[
have
shall or willn
been
(_
or
shall
were
(
The Conj\igation of a Regular Verb. Infinitive Mode, Present Tense. To love. To have loved. Perfect Tense.
« have
have been
have been
Thou wilt n love You will 71 love
He will 71 love that is, the verb without the sign of, The form of promising, commanding and deterhe be, for if he shall be. is the form of expressing supposi- mining. I will 71 love and may be called the ^Ve will 71 love C Thou shall II love C Ye shall 77 love Hypothetical Tense.
Thou wert You was or were
i
(
shall or will
We
following
If
been
have been
J
Ye
Future Tense, indefinite. The form of predicting.
tion or hypothesis,
We shall n have been
have been
Theyhad7ibecnlov-
n love
shall
I
They be
" If I were," supposes I C Ye shall or will »! be not," supposes I am. sh.nll or will n be ( You The other tenses are the shall or will ii be They shall or will n be mode. tive Prior-future Tense.
or wilt ("Thou shall
ing ou had K been lov-
been loving
7i
be
more properly the form of the condi-
Thou shall or wiltn be You shall or will n be
He
had
ing
We
Ye be You be
C
be
this is
Ye had n been You hadn been They had n been shall or will
He
lov-
n been lov-
1" ing
;
Thou be You be
have been
Future Tense. ^
(
been
71
had
e
Thou hadst n been loving You had n been loving
i
:
i
Ye have been You have n been
<
We had
had n been loving
I
tenses express uncertainty or they admit exists or existed following form is used for the like
fact
The
purposes If I be
I ha
Thou hadstn been You haiUi been He had n been
(
foregoing
the fact.
hath or has n been They have n been Prior-past Tense. ^Vc had n been )! been
He
were
Ye were You were They were
(
He was
whether a
were n Ye were n You were n They were n
Perfect Tense.
have n been
I
Thou hast « been You have ;i been
<
Thou wast You was or were
V
We
was n
Definite.
We
If\ was
They hen
isn
beest, in tl-e
I
Past Tense.
very gen-
n
lie
1
5 5
if still
l_
can n be lov--
or can
loving
You may or can n be loving
They may
or can
be loving Past Tense indefinite. I might 77 love We might 77 love C Thou mightest 71 love Ye might 77 love ing
\
You might
He
might
love love
77
71
You might 77 love They might 7t love
71
GRAMMAR OF THE "
when
I say, If it rained, we should be obliged] to seek shelter," it is not understood that I am uncertain of the fact; on the contrary, it is underI might »! he loving might >! he loving stood that I am certain, it does not rain at the time Ye might nhe loving of speaking. Or if I say, " if it did not rain, I C Thou mightest n be lov You might n be lev would take a walk," I convey the idea that it does \ ing This form of our You 71 he loving ( ing [ing rain at the moment of speaking. might He might n be loving They might n be lov tenses in the subjunctive mode has never been thej With could, would and should in the same man- subject of much notice, nor ever received its due
With couUI, would and shovld
in
tliesame man-
ner.
Definite
We
ner.
Perfect Tense, indefinite
—
canst n ( You may can n He may or can n
<
—
Definite I
may
We may
n have
or can
or can
n have
been loving been loving C Thou mayest or canst C Ye may or can n have n have been loving j been loving 1 You or can n You may may or can n have J J ' have been loving been loving f He may or can n have They may or ran n been loving have been loving Prior-past Tense, indefinite.
I We might n have loved might n have loved f Thou mightest »i have C Ye iiiight n have
J J
(
loved
loved
You might n have
You might n have
I
loved
He
loved
I
[loved
They might n have
might nhave loved
Definite,
We might nliave
might n have been loving
been
—
—
loving
Thou mightest n have
Ye might Jihave been loving J been loving You might n have You might n have J ' been loving been loving He might n have been They might n have been loving been loving With could, would and should in the same man ner, in the two last forms. C
explanation and arrangement. For this hypothetical verb is actually a present tense, or at least init definite certainly does not belong to past time. It is further to be remarked, that a negative sentence always implies an affirmative " if it did not On the contrary, rain," implies that it does rain. an affirmative sentence implies a negative " if it did rain," implies that it does not. In the past time, a similar distinction exists ; for "if it rained yesterday," denotes uncertainty in the speaker's mind but "if it had not rained yesterday," implies a certainty, that it did rain. Passive form of the Verb. Indicative Jilode. Present Tense. I am n loved We are 71 loved C Thou art ;i loved C Ye are 71 loved \ You are n loved \ Vou are n loved He is n loved They are n loved Past Tense. I was »i loved We were »j loved C Ye were n loved Thou wast 71 loved J n loved ( Y'ou were n loved ( \'ou was or were He was 71 loved They wei'e u loved Perfect Tense. I have n been loved We liave 71
—
I may or can « C Thou mayest or
i
I
(
Tliou hast
J!
been loved
You have » been
loved
I
He
n been
has or hath loved
Prior-past Tense. I
though, unless, &c. prefixed to its tenses, without any variation from the foregoing inflections. This may, for distinction, be called the Conditional Potential. if,
—
I
been loved
With
love.
this
— (/ thou
love,
which
single variation,
I
if he
deem
contrary to the principles of our language, the subjunctive mode differs not in the least from the indicative, and to form it the learner has only to prefix a sign of condition, as if, though, unless, &c. 10 the indicative, in its several tenses. With this exception, however, that in the future tense, the Thus auxiliary may he and often is suppressed. instead of shall or will love If I shall or will love Thou shaltor will love 5 Ye shall or will love 5 You shall or will love I You shall or will love I He shall or will love They shall or will love
We
Authors write. If, Sfc. I ^
We
love
Thou love You love
<
Ye
love love
You love They love This form is properly used, when shall or will may precede the verb, and when the verb is preceded by a command or admonition as, " See that \
He
\
love
;
none render
e\ii for evil to
any man."
1 Thess. V. 1.5. In the subjunctive mode, there is a peculiarity in the tenses which .should be noticed. When I it it is understood that I am uncerrains, say, if tain of the fact, at the time of But speaking.
Vou
They had n been loved
Future Tense. shall or will
»i
be loved
We
shall or will )!be
loved
Ye
shall or will
n be
loved
You
'1
the second and third persons
71 been loved loved had?? been loved
Ve had n been
(
He had n I
Subjunctive Mode. Present Tense. If, though, unless, whethn; suppose, admit, fyc. I love n Wc love 7i Thou lovest « ( Ye love n You love n ( You love n He lovethorlovesfi They love » Some authors omit the personal terminations in
We had
had n been loved
The potential mode becomes conditional by means of the modifiers,
shall or
will
?i
be loved shall or will
They
?!
be loved Prior-future Tense,
have
been
We shall
?i
have been
loved
Ye
shall
or will
?i
have been loved
You
shall or
will
n
have been loved
They
or will been loved
.shall
have
?i
ENGLISH LANGUAGE. be
If, S(C. I (
We
loveil
11
Thou be n loved You be 71 loved
\
He
{ (
be n loved
be n loved Ye be n loved You be n loved They be n loved
Have
An exhibition of the verb in the interrogative form, with the sign of the negative. Present Tense, indefinite. Indicative Mode.
—
Love In?
n
t Lovest thou \
Love you n
?
S
?
\
Love we n 7 Love ye n ? Love you n ? Love they n ?
The
fol-
J ^
I 7J
loving ? Art thou n loving Are you n loving Is he n loving
(
? .'
(
.'
Pa.st
we
loving ? ye n loving ? you n loving ? n they loving
I
n love
7i
?
Was
71
Tense, indefinite.
?
loving
.'
were you
or
^
? ;
;»
Were Were
loving
Was he n
Were we n loving Were ye n loving
loving.'
yoti
n
loving
n
Have we n been
lov-
<
lov-
loving
ing
<
?
\
lov-
Had Had Had Had
have loved ? Shall or will you have loved ? Shall or will he have loved ?
7
?
\ ' "
we n
loved
?
ye n loved ? you n loved ? they n loved
The
Had we n been loving 'Hadst thou n been < Had ye Ji been loving? ' Had you n been loving? J loving? Had you n been loving? Had they n been lovJ Had he n been loving ing? Had
?
they n loving?
I
n been loving
loving
?
Shall I nhave loved ? Shalt or wilt thou n
'
n been Have they n been
?
will
loving
?
ye n be
n be n be
?
Prior-future, indefinite.
'Dg
(
wen be
n be f Shall or
1 loving ? loving ? Shall or will you Shall or will you n be J j f loving ? f loving ? Shall or will they Shall or will he n be
Have yen been loving? Have you n been lov-
?
Definite. ? Shall
loving
?
ing C
n be
I
1
Definite. ?
?
n loving
I
?
lov-
I n loved Hadst thou n loved Had you n loved ? Had he n loved ?
?
?
)
n I
n
Shall we n have loved? Shall or will ye n have loved ? Shall or will you n have loved ? Shall or will they n
have loved
definite form of this tense
JVill, in this tense, is not first
?
is little
used.
elegantly used in the
person.
The interrogative form is not used in the impermode a command and a question being in-
ative
;
?
Future Tense,
.'
Was
(
Shall
C Shalt or wilt thou
Prior-past, indefinite.
.'
C Wast thou
n loved ? Have ye Ji loved ? Have you n loved ? Have they n loved ?
<
loving? [ing ?
been been
'ig or hath he
Had
n
Didst thou
Ji
Has
I
Did we n love ? love ? < Did ye n love ? »i love ? Did you 7» love \ Did you \ Did they Ji love Did he n love ? The oilier tbrni of this tense, loved he ? is selDefinite. dom used.
Did
<
n been
Hast thou Have you
!
I
Are Are Are Are
I
loving
Definite.
Am
Perfect Tense, indefinite. Have we n loved?
Definiti!'.
Have '
or loves he n ? used. The foregoing form is but little lowing is the usual mode of asking questions. Do we n love ? Do I n love ? ? ( n love ? Do love n < Dost thou ye Do you n love ? n love ? < I Do you Does or doth he n love ? Do they 7i love ?
Loveth
I
Hast thou n loved ? Have you n loved ? I Has or hath he n loved <
Shall I n love ? r Shalt or wilt thou love ? ) (Shall or will you love ? Shall or will he love ?
;(
compatible.
indefinite.
Shall we n love ? ( Shall or will ye »i love 'Shall or will you love ? [ Shall or love ?
not necessary to exhibit this form of the Let the learner be verb in the potential mode. only instructed that in interrogative sentences, the nominative follows the verb when alone, or the first auxiliary when one or more are used; and the sign of negation not, (and generally never,) immediately follows the nominative. It is
?i
they
IRllEGULAR VERBS. All verbs
deemed
whose
and perfect participle do not end in ed are Infin. of tliese is about one hundred and seventy Cleave, I Cleave, I of the perfect are the .same as Cling hit, hurt, let, put, read, rent, Clothe Wet has Come thrust, sweat, wet. the practice is not respectable. Cost and quit in the past time and participle, but they Crow
'
past tense
iri-egular.
The number
aie of three kinds. 1. Those whose past tense, and participle the present; as, beat, burst, cast, cnxt, cut, rid. set, shed, shred, shut, slit, sjtlil, spread, sometimes tvetted ; heat sometimes het ; but
seven.
They
present;
meet, met ;
Dare Deal Dig
sell, sold.
3. Verbs whose present and past tense and participle are all different ; as, hnoiv, kneiv, knotcn. A few ending w ith ch, ck, x,p. It, ess, though regular, suffer a contraction Do of ed into t ; as, snatcht for snatched, checkt for checked, snapt for snapped, Draw mixt for mised, dwelt for dwelled, past for passed. Others have a digraph Drive
shortened ; as, dream, dreamt ; feel, felt ; mean, meant ; sleep, slept ; deal, Drink Dwell In a few, v is changed into/,- as bereave, bereft ; leave, Itjt. dealt. As some of the past tenses and participles are obsolete or obsolescent, it is Eat
deemed proper
to set
student.
these in separate columns for the information of the Engrave Fall
IRREGULAR VERBS Past
Past tense obs. Part.
obs.
crowed crept cut
durst, dared'
dared
dealt, dealed
dealt, dealed
dug, digged
dug, digged done
did
drew
drawn
drove drank dwelt, dwelled
driven, drove
begun
Bend Bereave Beseech
begun, began bended, bent
bended, bent bereaved, bereft bereaved, bereft besought besought
Li^ht and quit have lit Creep are also regular. 2. Verbs whose past time and participle are alike, but different from the Cut as,
Past
stick
verb
is
always regular
;
as,
" he dared him.'
GIRAMMAR OF THE Jnjin.
ENGLISH LANGUAGE. the fact with our participles in fil ; the e being suppressed in pronunciation, we have tlie words spiikn, writtn, holdn, in actual practice. than this nasal Notliinjr can be more weak, inefficient and disagreeable sound of the half vowel n ; it is disagreeable in prose, feeble inverse, and Were it possible to banish every sound of this kind in music, intolerable. from the language, the change would be desirable. At any rate, when of these sounds, writers, who value people in general have laid a.side any the beauties of language, should be the last to revive them.
Such
is
Defective Verbs. Verbs which want the past time or participle, are deemed defective. Of we have very few. The auxiliaries moi/, can, will, shall, immt, class. Ought is used in the present and having no participle, belong to this these
—
with the regular inflection of the second person only / past tenses only, he onght, Wc, you, they ought, quoth is wholly obought, thou oughtcst, It has no infleclion, and is used solete, except in poetry and burlesque. the nominative following it, qnoth he. chiefly in the third person, with Wit, to know, is obsolete, except in the intinitive, to introduce an explanation or enumeration of particulars; as, "There are seven persons, fo iei(, H'ot and unst are entirely obsolete. four men and three women."
Adverbs or Modifiers. Adverbs are a secondary part of speech. Their uses are to enlarge, re strain, limit, define, and in short, to modify the sense of other words. Adverbs may be classed according to tiicir several uses. 1. Those which qualify the actions expressed by verbs and participles; Here furnished." as, "a good man lives ^ioit-sd/ ;" "a room is fZcifanWy piously denotes the
manner of
living
;
elegantly denotes the
manner of be-
In this class may be ranked a number of other words, as when, soon, then where, whence, hence, and many others, whose use is to modify verbs. 2. Another class of adverbs are words usually called prepositions, used with verbs to vaiy their signification; for which purpose they generally follow them in construction, as to fall on, give out, bear with, cast up; or as overcome, underlay. (hey are prefixed and become a part of the word, In these uses, these words modify or change the sense of the verb, and when prefixed, are united with the verb in orthography A few modifiers admit the terminations of comparison; as soon, sooner, Most of those which end in ly, may be soonest ; often, oftcncr, oftcnest. compared by more and most, less and least ; as more justly, more excellent ;
by or, the verb and predicate belong to one only. One very common use of or, is to join to a word or sentence, something added by way of explanation or definition. Thus, " No disease of the mind can more fatally disable it from benevolence, than ill-humor or peevishness." Rambler, J\'o. 74. Here peevishness is not intended as a distinct In this case, thing from ill-humor, but as another term for the same idea. or expresses only an alternative of words, and not of signification. As either and or are aflirmative of one or other of the particulars named, " For I am so neither and Jior are negative of all Ihc pariiculars. Thus, persuaded that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalilies, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor highth, nor depth, nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God." Rota. Here neither is in fact a substitute for each of the following viii. 38, .39. not particulars, all of which it denies to be able to ctfect a certain purpose either of these which follow shall separate us from the love of God. It is laid down as a rule in our gi'ammars, that nor must always answer to neither; but this is a great mistake, for the negation o{ neither, not either, extends to every one of the following alternatives. But nor is more generally used, and in many cases, as in the passage just recited, is far the most
[thus joined
—
eiiiphatical.
iut is used for two Saxon words, originally by mistake, hut now by esbet or bote, the radical of our modern words better, boot, and denoting st(/^cie;!cj/, compensation, mure, further, or something addiand baton or butan, equivalent to without tional, by way of amendment tablished custom
;
;
or except.
In the former sense, we have the word in this sentence *' John resides York, but Thomas resides at Bristol." The primitive sense here is, John resides at York It does moi'e, add or supply, Thomas resides at Bristol. not signify opposition, as is usually sujiposed, but some addition to the sense ;
at
ingfurnished.
ly
as connectives. Their use is to express an altarnative, and I shall call thcnj " alternatives. Thus, Either John or Henry will b;; at the Exchange," is an alternative sentence ; the verb or predicate belonging to one or the other, but not to both ; and whatever may be the number of names or proposition*
less honestly, least
criminally.
Prepositions. serve Prepositions, so called from their being /)«f before other words, connect words and show the relation between them, or to show the Thus a man of benevolence, denotes a man who pos condition of things. Christ was crucified between two thieves. Receive sesses benevolence. to
the book/ro?» John and give it to Thomas. The prepositions most common, are to, for, by, of, in, into, on, upon
We
;
of
what goes
before.
In the latter sense, or that of butan, it is used in this passage, " He hatli not grieved me, but in part." 2 Cor. ii. 5. That is, " He haSi not grieved me, except in part." The first assertion is a complete negation the word " but, (butan,) introduces an exception. Nothing, but true religion, can Here also is a complete negation, with a saving give us peace in death." introduced by but. Nothing, except true religion. These were the only primitive uses of Jut, until by means of a mistake, a third sense was added, which is that of oii/^y. Not knowing the origin and true meaning of but, authors omitted the negation in certain phrases where it was essential to a true construction ; as in the following passages, " Our 2 Cor. iv. '• If they light aflliction, which is but for a moment." kill us, we shall 6uf die." 2 Kings, vii. The but, in these passages, is baton, be out, except ; and according to the true original sense, not should precede, to give the sentence a negative " Our " turn. shall light affliction is not, but (except) for a moment." As they now stand, they would in strictness signify. Our not, bid die." can except die, which would not light affliction is except for a moment be sense. To correct the sense, and repair the breach made in the true English idiom, by this mistake, we must give but a new sense, equivalent to only. Thus we are obliged to patch and mend, to prevent the mischiefs of innovation. The liistory of this word but should be, as Johnson expresses the idea, " a guide to reformers, and a terror to innovators." The first blunder or innovation blended two words of distinct meanings into one, in orthography and pronunciation. Then the sense and etymology being obscured, authors proceeded to a further change, and suppressed the negation, which was essential to the buton. have now therefore one word w itli three diflTerent and unallied meanings and to these may be reduced the whole of Johnson's eighteen detinitions of 6»i. Let us however trace the mischief of this change a little further. As the word but is now used, a sentence may have the same meaning with or with" he hath not out the negation. For example grieved me, but in part," and " he hath grieved me, but in part," have, according to our present use Or compare different passages of of but, precisely the same meaning. scripture, as they now stand in our bibles. He hath not grieved me, but in part. Our light affliction is but lor a moment. ;
We
— We
We
Connectives or Conjunctions.
Connectives are words which unite words and sentences in construction, joining t^vo or more simple sentences into one compound one, and eontinu ing the sentence at the pleasure of the writer or speaker. They also begin sentences after a full period, manifesting some relation between sentences in the general tenor of discourse The connectives of most general use, are and, or, either, nor, neither, To which may be added because. hut, than. And is supposed to denote an addition ; as, " The book is worth four shil That is, it is worth four shillings, add sixpence, or lings and sixpence." with sixpence added. " John resides at York, and Thomas, at BosThis however is not all ; for the innovation being directed neither by ton." That is, John resides at York, add, [add this which follows,] Thomas resides at Boston. From the great use of this connective in join- knowledge nor judgment, is not extended to all cases, and in a large proof phrases to which but belongs, it is used in its original sense with of which the same is words atiirmed or thing predicated, it may be just- iporlion ing " There is none !a preceding negation, especially with nothing and none. of eminence ly called the copulative by w^ay but one, that is God." Matt. xix. 17. This is correct— there is none Thedistingmshing use "of the co'nne'cTive is to save the repetition ofllgood, ' He saw a fig-tree in the way, and found words ; for this sentence, John. Thomas and Peter reside at York," con-! good, except one, that is God. *' This is also correct .Matt. xxi. 19. tliereon but leaves only." Thomas resides nothing tains three simple sentences ; ''John resides at York," " It amounts " he found •* nothing, except leaves ;" the otily is redundant. at York," Peter resides at York ;" which are all combined into one, to no more but this." Locke, Und. b. 1. 2. This is a correct EngUsh with a single verb and predicate, by means of the copulative. " it amounts to no more, excci^t this;" but it is nearly obwlete. or have been already explained under the head of substitutes,', Phrase; Either Hence the propriety of these phrases. "They could not, but be known for in strictness they are the representatives of sentences or words; but as or has totally lost that character, both these words will be here considered |before." Locke, 1. 2. " The reader may be, nay cannot choose but be ;
:
New
New
—
—
mA
Vol.
I.
J.
—
GRAMMAR OF THE 4. Verbs formed from nouns and adjectives by the termination ize ; a= understanding of it." Lncke, 3. 9. Here but is used inl its true ronse. They could not, except this, be known before. That is, thei method, methodize ; system, systemize moral, moralize. When the primcontraiy was not po.ssible. The other phrase is frequently found in Shaks-I iiive ends with a vowel, the consonant t is prefixed to the termination ; as peare and other old writers, but is now obsolete. They cannot choose but,] stigma, stigmatize. that is, they have no choice, power or alteruative, cixcpt to be very fal-I 5. Verbs formed from nouns and adjectives by the addition of en or n ; lible. ;is lengthen, widen, from length, wide. But is called in our grammars, a disjunctive conjunctton, connecfingi 6. Verbs formed byfy; as brutify, stratify, from brute, stratum. To illustrate the use ofj 7. Nouns foi-med from adjectives by 7icss : as goodness, from sentences, but expressing opposition in the sense. good ; grathis ex-l ciousness, from gracious. this word which Joms and difjoins at the same time, Lowlh ^ivcs " You and I rode to Here the! 8. Nouns formed by dom and ric, denoting jurisdiction; as kingdom, London, but Peter staid at home. ample; Bishop supposed the but (o express an opposition in the sense. But let but\ bishopiic, from king and bishop, i'o/n and ric, are nouns denoting jurisdicbe omitted, and wdiat diflerence will the omission make in the sense ? "You! tion or territory. and I rode to London, Peter staid at home." Is the opposition in the sense 9. Nouns formed by houd and ship, denoting state or condition ; as manles-:; clearly marked than when the conjunc'ion is used ? By no means. hood, lordship, from man, lord. And the truth is, that (he opposition in the sense, when there is any, is never 10. Nouns ending in ment and age, from the French, denoting state or expressed by the connective at all, but always by the following sentence or act ; as commandment, parentage, from command, parent. " 11. Nouns in er,oraud ec, used bj' way ofopposiiion, the former They have mouths, but Ihey speak not; eyes have they,6ut see phrase. denoting not." Psalm cxv. 5. I.ct but be ondttcd. " They have mouths, they speak the agent, the latter the receiver or person to whom an act is performed ; as not ; eyes have they, they see not." The omission of the connectives makes assignor, assignee; indorser, indorsee. not the smallest alteialion in the sense, so far as opposition or difference of 12. Adjectives formed from nouns by the addition of y ; as healthy, from idea in the members of the sentence is concerned. Indeed the Bishop is [health ; pithy, fiom pith or ly added to the noun; as stately, from statemost unfortunate in the example selected to illustrate his rule ; for the cop- \Ly is a contraction o( like. ulative and may be used for but, without the least alteiation in the sense 13. Adjectives formed from nouns by the addition oSful; as hopeful, from " You and I rode to London, and Peter staid at liome." In this sentence hope. which proves the opposition is as completely expressed as if bat was used 14. Adjectives formed from nouns or verbs by ible or able; as payable, that the opposition in the sense has no dependence on the coimective. from creditable, from credit ; compressible, from compress. Able de" Man notes pay Nor is it true that an in the sense always follows but. or
very
fallible in the
;
'
—
:
—
;
;
oppo-ition capacity. power 15. Adjectives formed from nouns or adjectives by i^A; as whitish, from by bread alone, but by every word which pioceedeth out ofj Here the last clause expresses no oppo- white blackish, from black waggish, f -om wag. the mouth of God." Matt. iv. 4. for sense o{ used an fact. The true but when bvit additional 16. sition, merely Adjectives formed from nouns by less, noting destitution as fatherless, from lather. bote, is supply, more, furtlier, something additional, to complete the sense In 17. Afljectives formed from nouns by ous; as famous, from fame it may be in opposilion to what has preceded or in continuation only. grais appropriately used before a clause of a cious, fiom grace. general, however, the word but 18. Adjectives formed by adding some to nouns; as delightsome, froi:; sentence, intended to introduce a new anil somewhat difte'rent idea, by way shall not live
;
;
;
;
;
This use is very naturally
—
;
;
phuric, from sulphur. 24. Nouns formed by ate, to denote the union of substances in salts ; as carbonate, in the chimical nomenclature, denotes carbonic acid combined with another body. 25. Nouns ending in ite, from other nouns, and denoting salts formed by the union of acids with other bodies; as sidphite, fiom sulphur. 26. Nouns ending in ret, formed from other nouns, and denoting a substance combined with an alkaline, earthy or metallic liase ; as sulphuret, carburet, from sulphur and carbon. 27. Nouns formed from other nouns by adding cy ; as ensigncy, captaincy, from ensign, captain. Words are also formed by prefixing certain syllables and words, some of them significant by tliomselves, others never used but in composition; as re, pre, con, mis, sub, super; and great immbers are ibrmed by the uiuon
Exclamations. Exclamations are soimds uttered to express passions and emotions usutho-e which arc violent or sudden. They are called interjections, words throivn in between the parts of a sentence. But this is not always the fact, and the name is insignificant. The more appropriate name is, exclamations ; as they are mere irregular sounds, uttered as passion dictates ;
ally
and not subject lo rules. A few of these sounds however become the customary modes of expressing particular passions and feelings in every nation. Thus in English, joy,' surpiise and grief are expressed by oh, uttered with a diiferent tone and, countenance. Jllas expresses grief or great sorrow pi.*ih, ]ishau\ express contempt. Sometimes verbs, names, and attributes are uttered by way of exclamation in a detached manner as, Hail! Welcome.' Bless me! Gra-; cious heavens of two words; as bed-room, ink-stand, pen-knife. In (wo or three instances, exclamations are followed by names and substitutes in the nominative and objective; as, O Mok, in the nominative; Syntax. ah 7ne. in the objective. Sometimes that follows O, expressing a wish But in such eases, we may consider that the Lord would guide my ways." of sentences. Syntax teaches the rules to be observed in the construction wish or some other verb to be understood. A sentence is a number of words arranged in due order, and forming a a sentence complete affirmation or pioposition. In philowphical language,
—
;
!
I
;
"O
Derivation. Thus, consists of a subject and a predicate, connected by an aifirmation. " God is of God, omnipotent," a complete propo lition or sentence, composed the wonis in a language, the number of radithe predicate or thing affirmed, cormected by the words is small. Most words are formed from others by addition of cer-' the subject, omnipotent, verb is, which forms the affirmation. tain words or syllables, which were originally distinct words, but which " The predicate is often included in the verb as, the sun shines." have lost their distinct character, and are now used only in combination! A simple sentence then contains one subject and one personal verb, that with other words. Thus cr in lover, is a contraction oiircr, a Saxon word' the noun and the I'crb ; and without these, no proposition can be formed. denoting man, [the Latin I'ir ;] ness denotes state or condition ly is an ab- lis, or more of two consists A compound sentence simple sentences, joined by breviation of like or liche ; fy is homfacio, to make, &c. The divisions of a compound sentence may be called inemMost of the English derivatives fall under the following heads (connectives. 1. Nouns formed from noun=, or more generally from verbs, by the addi-| jbers or clauses. Sentences are declaratory, as, I am wriUng, the wind b}oni— imperative, tion of r, er or or, denoting an agent; as lover, hater, assignor, flatterer, ? who art thou ?— or from love, hate, assign. Hatter. In a few instances, words thus formed are as, go, retire, be quiet— !H(f/)-o^a(tDe, as, where am I as glazier, from glass; courtier, from court; parishioner, from; iconditional, as, if he should arrive. less regular The rules for the due construction of sentences fall under three heads parish. TAiri/, arrangement or concord Second, to as from government— 2. Nouns converted into verbs by tlie prefix water, cloud, to, \First, ; agreement— and punctuation. water, to cloud. In agreement, the name or noun is tlie controlling word, as it carries with 3. Adjectives converted into verbs in the same manner; as to lame, to In government, the verb is lit the verb, the substitute and the attribute. ool, to warm, from lame, cool, warm.
However numerous may be
cal
;
;
:
—
I
;
:
;
I
I
I
ENGLISH LANGUAGE. —
Note 8. We sometimes see a nominative introduciog a sentence, the sense suddenly intonuptcd, and the nominalive left without its intended verb; as, "The name of a procession; what a great mixture of independent ideas of persons, habit.*', tapers, orders, motions, sounds, does it conA'rrecmcnt or Concord. This form of expression is often very striking in tain," Si.c. Locke, 3. 5. 13. Rule I.- -A verb must agree with its nominative in number and person [animated discourse. The first words being the subject of the discourse and invite attention; and the Examples. llirnpoiiant, are made to usher in the sentence, to " i. 9-: Heb. in the fervor of animation, quitting the trammels of a loved niiivd of the speaker, Thou hast In solemn style. righteousness. " Thou shall not steal." Commn/!(/men<. fo,.,„ai arrangement, rushes forward to a description of the thing mentioned. 1 Co»". vii. "Jlrt thou called, being a servant ?" 21.j|jnj presents the more striking ideas in the form of exclamation. 1 Cor. vi. \ name, a nominative case, or a sentence, joined with a par Rule II. .\ But ye are washed, but ye are sanctified." llji IJ] I ivrite; John reads; JVcwton was the 0rst "'' ticiple of the present tense, may sl.mri in construction without a verb, form In familiar language " Jesus had or clause independent ; as, conveyed astronomers. ing the case absolute, i Note 1.— The noniin.itive to a verb is "found by young learners, by askmg himself away, a multitude beinx in that place." John v. 13. Here mulEumcucs, a young man of great titude, the noun, joined with being, stands without a verb. who or what does what is affirmed. with harassed His father the his father. or or from heat sweet, object be liglit, yellow abilities, inherited a large estate By memory we conceive with a multiplicity of business, recoinmendcd ing removed." Locke, 2. 10. competitions, and perplexed " I the quiet of a private station." Let the question be asked, who inherited have, notwithstanding this discouragement, attempted a dictionary the of the Johnson's Preface. a large estate ? The answer is Eumeiies, which i.s the nominative to English language." " Whatever substance His neverb inhtriliil. Who recommended the quiet of a private station begins to exist, it must, during its existence, to the verb recommended. Locke, 2. 27. 28. cessarily be the same." father, which is therefore the nominative Note 2.— Let the following rules be observed respecting the position of " The penalty shall be fine and imprisonment, any law or custom to the the nomin.ative. contrary notwithstanding." as The latter phraseology is peculiar to the technical law style. In no other I. The nominative tisually precedes the verb in declaratory i)lirases; " God created the world ;" " the law is a rule of right." But the nomina. case, does notwithstanding follow the sentence. But this position makes " as, Liberty no difl'erence in the true construction, which is, "any law or custom to the tive may be separated from its verb, by a member of a pei iod can only be found inademocra-, contrary not opposing" the real clause independent. say the fanatic favorers of popular power, Jltiarcharsis, ch. 62. It is very common, when this participle agrees with a number of words, cy_" II. The nominative often follows an intransitive verb, for such a verb ora wbole'elause, to omit the whole except the participle; and in this use can have no object after it, and that position of the nominative creates no of notwithstanding, we have a striking proof of the v.alue of abbreviations " Gradual sinks " .\ hove it stood the /s. vi. For example " Moses said, let no man leave of it till the in language. Seraphim." ambiguity; thus, not unto Moses." Jix. xvi. the breeze." Thomson. morning. JVotwithstanding, they hearkened Here notwithstanding stands without the clause to which it beIII. When the verb is preceded by here, there, hence, thence, then, thus, 19. 20. the same, herein, therein, vhtrein, and perhaps longs; to complete the sense in words, it would be necessary to repeat the yet, so, nor, neither, such, " Moses the verb, especially ie said, let no man whole preceding clause or the substance of it by some other words, Ibe nominative may follow sent from God ;" leave of it until the morning. jYotioithstanding this command of Moses , as, "here are five men;" "there was a man " then came the"hcncCj " thence heararise wars ;" scribes] or notwitkslanding Moses said that which has been recited, they proceed our vicious "habits ;" Yet required not I bread of the kened not unto Moses." and Pharisees ;" " thus saitb the Lord." " So O Lord." Psalm " Folly meets \^ ith success in this world ; but it is ti'ue, notwithstanding. panteth my soul after thee, governor." J\'eh. v. 18. "Such is. John This that it labors under disadvantages." Porteus, Lecture 13. "Neither hath this man sinned nor his parents." xlii. passage at " Herein consists the excel-l " were the facts;" " the same was the fact." Folly meets with success in the world ; but it is length would read thus BlacUstone's Comm. b. 1. true, notwithstanding folly meets with success in the world, that it labors IcDcy of the English government." IV. When anemphatical attribute introduces a sentence, the nominative under disadvantages." By supplying what is really omitted, yet perfectly " and well understood, we learn the true construction; so that notwithstanding may follow the verb ; as, Great is the Lord, glorious are his works, is a participle always agreeing with a word or clause, expressed or underhappy is the man who has an interest in his favor." V. In certain phrases, which are conditional or hypothetical, the sign of^ stood, and forming the independent clause, and by a customary elhp^is, it after the nominative and the auxilia-||gtands alone in the place of that clause. the condition may be omitted, placed " " Did he but know Had I know Such is its general use in the translation of the Scriptures. In the folmy anxiety," for if he did but ry ; as, " known the fact," for if I had known " Would they consent," for if they lowing p
ence
but names and jirepojitions hove their share of ioflu
I
also.
I
I
—
i
;
•
1
—
;
:
—
,•
—
—
—
—
—
;
—
e-HfiessKi—" concerning vapor.' In poetry, the verb in certain phrases is omitted, chiefly such pursue happiness." It is not uncommon to omit the participle of the present tense, when a verbs as express an address or answer; as, "To whom the monarch" that " The son of God, while cloththe of said or perfect tense is employed. is, replied. participle Note 6. When a verb is placed between two nominatives in different ed in flesh, was subject to all the frailties and inconveniences of human nanumbers, it may agree with either, but generally is made to agree with tliejture, sin excepted." Locke, 3. 9. That is, sin being excepted the clause " His tneat was locusts jindependent. first, and this may be considered as preferable ; as, This omission is more frequent when the participle provided is used, than and wild honey." " It [piracy] is the remains of the manners of ancieni " In the one case, Anarch, ch. 3B. in any other case. provided the facts on which it is Greece." Note 7. Veibs follow the connective than, without a nominative ex- founded be suftlciently numerous, the conclusion is said to be morally cer" Not that Here being is omitted, and the whole late los-. tain." Campbell on lihet. 1. in. of our occurs in ; as, thing consequence any pressed " The on which it is founded are 62, lelause in it.dics is independent Let. facts more afflictive than ivas to be expected." Life of C'owper, " He felt himself addicted to with more ardor \sufficiently numerous, that being prosiiled, the conclusion is morally cer-
tion; as,
Note
5.
—
—
—
—
—
—
philosophical speculations, Roman and a senator."
than consisted with the duties of a
jtain."
Murphy's Tacitus,
"All words
that lead the
mind
to
These forms of
expres.sion
seem
to
be
That
\
in
such cases,
is
equivalent
to
given, admitted or sup-
posed.
" In mathematical rea-soning, provided you are ascertained of the reguideas, than are supposed really Locke, 2. 25. lar procedure of the mind, to affirm that the conclusion is false, implies a " more afflictive than contradiction." Jbm. 134. elliptical ; In this phrase, that may I'ollow provided provided that, you are ascerti-hich or those ivhich will
any other
to exist in that thing."
that ifhich was to be expected." ally supply the ellipsis.
4. 57,
Provided,
i
gener-
—
I
'tained, &c., as intiie case o( nolwithstaruling, before
mentioned; that be-
GRAMMAR OF THE —
Is not the distributive effect of either and every, such a* to demand a singu' The lar verb? So in the following: judicial and every other power is accountable to the legislative." Palet), Phil. 6. 8. NoTK 2. Wiien names and substitutes belonging to different persons, are thus joined, the plural substitute must be of the first person in preference to the second and third, and of the second in preference to the third. /, you and he are represented by ive ; you and he, by you. Pope in one of " Either hi, letters makes you or / to be represented by ice or you. you or j ^j.^ ijQj jij JQ^jg ^^.j([j jj^j, Qtij(.r." The sentence is an awkward one, and not to be imitated. Rule VU. When an affirmation or predicate refers to one subject only among a number, which are separately named in the singular number, the subjects are joined by the alternative or, or nor, with a verb, substitute and name in the singular number; as, " Either John or Peter was at the Exbut neither John nor Peter is there to day." change yesterday; Errors. " A circle or square are the same in idea." Locke, 2. 8. '• But whiteness or redness are not in the porphyry." Ibm. " Neither of them [Tillotson and Temple,] arc remarkable for precision." £lair. Substitutes for sentences, whether they represent a single clause, or the Locke, 1. 2. parts of a compound sentence, are always in the singular number; as, "It is covery." That any thing can exist unthout existing in space, is to my mind in true indeed that fnany have neglected opportunities of raising themselves honor and to wealth, and rejected the kindest offers of fortune." Ramcomprehensible." Darwin, Zoon. sect. li. Here the definitive suhstitutePto " It is " Any thing can exist bier, jVo. 58. Here it and that refer to the clauses which follow may be transferred to a place next before the verb true that, many have rejected the kindest offers," &c. without existing in space," that [whole proposition] is incomprehensible. Rule IV. The infinitive mode may be the nominative to a personal Rule VUl. Collective or aggiegate names, comprehending two or verb ; as, *' to see is desiraldo ;" " to 'lie is the inevitable lot of men." Sonie- more individuals under a term in liio singular number, have a verb or sub" to be blind is calamitimes an attribute is joined with the infinitive ; as, stitute to agree with them in the ..iingular or plural ; as, the council is or In this case the attribute has no name expressed to which it refers are unanimous ; the company was or ivere collected ; this people, or these tous." The proposition is abstract, and applicable to any human being, but not ap- people. No precise rule can be given to direct, in every case, which number is to plied to any. Rule V. In some cases the imperative verb is used without a definite be used. Much regard is to be had to usage, and to the unity or plurality nominative ; as, " I will not take any thing that is thine— sauc only that of idea. In general, modern practice inchnes to the use of the plural verb Gen. xiv. 23. 24. and substitute; as may he seen in the daily use of clergy, nobility, court, which the young men have eaten." " Israel burned none, save Hazor Josh. xi. 13. council, commonalty, audience, enemy and the like. only." " I would that all were such as I am, "The clergy began to withdraw themselves from the temporal courts." except these bonds, .ficts xxvi. 29. " Our ideas are movements of the nerves of sense, as of the Blackstone's Comni. Introduction. optio nerve in " Let us take a view of the recollecting visible ideas, suppose of a triangular piece of ivory. principal incidents, attending the nobility, exDarwin. Zoon. sect. 39. clusive of their capacity as hereditary counselors of the crown." This use of certain verbs in the imperative is very frequent, and there is a Blackstone's Comm. 1. 12. " The Ibm. peculiar felicity in being thus able to use a verb in its true sense and with commonalty are divided into several degrees." for the verb is thus left its proper object, without specifying a nominative "The enemy were driven from their works." or I may sa\'e or except, or you third to the second first, person. applicable Portuguese Msia. .Mickle. ](>3. these we shall If we examine or we sentences, "The chorus resistance at his first the chorus may suppose. may except, /)re/)a>e approach smgs be convinced of the propriety of the idiom; for the ideas require no appli- of the battle the chorus entertains the stage." Johnson's Life of JUilton. " The carion to any person whatever. nobility are the pillars to support the throne." Rule VI. When the .same thing is affirmed or predicated of two or Blackstone's Comm. 1. 2. more subjects, in the singular number, the nominatives are joined by the Party and army, in customary language, are joined with a verb in the Constitution cannot be plural. Church may be singucopulative and, with a verb agreeing with them in the plural number; as,] singular number. " John and Thomas and Peter reside at Oxford." In this sentence, rm-| lar or plural. JUankind is almost always plural. dence at Oxford is a predicate common to three persons ; and instead of The most common and palpable mistakes in the application of this rule, octhree affirmations John resides at Oxford, Thomas resides at Oxibrd, Peter cur in the use of sort and kind, with a plural attribute these sort, those resides at Oxfoid, the three names are joined by and, and one verb in the kind. This fault infects the works of our best writers; but these words are plural applied to the whole number. strictly singular, and ought so to be used. " Reason and truth constitute intellectual When a collective name is preceded by a definitive which clearly limits gold, which defies destrucJohnson. " Why aie whiteness unA coldness snow?" Locke. the sense of the word to an aggregate with an idea of unity, it requires a verb tion." "Your /o( and minf, in this respect, have been very different." Cowp. and substitute to agree witii it in the singular number; as, a company of Lei. 38. t rt fA/s people i.< become troop of cavalry i/'os raised troops teas detache(l Note 1. The rule for the use of a plural verb with two or more names a great nation ; that assembly was numerous ; " a government established in the singular number, connected by and, is laid down by critics with tool by that people." Blackstone's Comm. 1. 2. and On much positiveness Yet our language seems to be averse to the use of if, as the substitute for universality. original principles, all the names, " How except the first, are in the objecMve case for it is probable that and contains names, even thus limited by a, this or that. long will this people " John and Thomas and Peter reside at in it the verb add. York," on prim- provoke me, and how long will it be ere they will believe me for all the itive principles must be thus resolved "John, add Thomas, add Petei- re-i signs that I have shewed among them ?" ,\'um. xiv. 11. " Liberty should But without resorting to first principles, which arc now lost each every individual of a people ; as they all share one common nature." side at York." or obscured, the use of the singular verb may be justified by considering the; Spectator, JVo. 287. In these passages, it in the place of they, would not be verb to be understood after each name, and that which is expressed, agree- i-elished by an English ear nor is it ever used in similar cases.* " Nor were the ing only with the last as, young fellows so wholly lost to a] Rule IX. When the nominative consists of several words, and tlie last sense of right, as pride and conceit has since made them affect to be." Ram-i of the names is in the plural number, the verb is commonly in the plural That is, as pride has and as conceit has. " Their safety and bier, JVo. 97. "The number of also; as, "Apart of the exports consist of raw silk." w^elfare is most concerned." Spectator, JVo. 121. In our best authors the "Of which seeming oysters increase." Golds. Anim. JVat. vol. 4, ch. 3. singular verb is fiequent in such sentences.} we have no other measure, but such as the train of our ideas equality " Tlie What will the hypercritic say to this sentence, " Either sex and every age have '2. 14.21. in our memories." Locke, greater part of lodged j/'os engaged in the pursuits of industry." Cribbon, Rom. Emp. ch. 10. philosophers have acknowledged the excellence of this government." Anarch, vol. 5. 2T2. Rule X. Pronouns or substitutes must agree with the names they rep^ Provided that, says Johnson, is an adverbial expression, and we some resent, in number, gender and person ; as, times fee provided numbered among the conjunctions, as its correspondent word is in French. What strange work has been made with (irunmar!
the following sentence that which ing a definitive substitute, pointing to follows being pforrdrd* It is not t:n'07nmcn for authors to carry the practice of Abridging discourse An instance freso far as to obscure the common regular construction. the nominative and the participle in quently occurs in the onii-^sion both of " Conscious of his own weight and\ For example the case independent. be directed by nothins; but the •importance, hir. conduct in pai liauient would is no noun expressedi Here of a peer." .hmius. Let. 19. constitutional duty " \Ve are therefore to supply the necesto which conscious can be referred. " He being conscious" forming! sary words, to complete the construction the clause independent. Rule Hi. A sentence, a number of woids, or a clause of a sentence may be the nominative to a verb, in which case the verb is always in the third person of the singular number; as, "Jill thai is in a man's power in this case, is, oidy to observe what the ideas are which take their turns in Here the whole clause in italics is the the understanding." Locke 2. 14. nominative to is. " To attack vices in the abstract, imthout totiching persons, may be safe Pope, Let. 48. fighting indeed, but it is fighting with shadows." •' I deny that men's coming to the use of reaso>i, is the time of their dis-
—
:
.
'
.
.
—
—
—
—
—
'
—
—
—
—
—
;
—
—
—
—
—
m
'
—
;
;
;
—
]
1
;
—
;
—
* example an evidence that mine is in the possessive case The Romans used a greater laUtude in joining plurals with collective " also a very common practice with the best Greek and Roman names, than we can. Magna j^ars in villis repleti cibo vinoque." Liv. 2. J\Iens enim, et ratio, et consilium, in senibps esf. Cicero, de 26. Here is an attribute plural of the masculine gender, agreeing with a, " Scd etiam ipsius terra vis ac natura delected. Senec. ca. V). Ibm. 15 noun in the singular, of the feminine gender. t
Is this last
i
This was
writers.
I
ENGLISH LANGUAGE. 1 Cor. ix. 13. iheiu that do examine me is this." •' Soul. ix. 8. These arc not the children of God." ' Speak to the children of Israel and say to them, when ye come into the A'unih. xv. 18. land whither 1 bring i/ou." "This is the heirVcome, let u5 kill him, and let us seize on his inherit.Matt. xxi. 38. ance." " Ksther put on her royal apparel she obtained favor in his sight then '•
Mine
verb, and the other is governed by the verb or a preposition in the " objective case, or by a noun in the possessive as, Locke, whom there is no reason to suspect of favoring idleness, has advanced." Ramb. 89. Here reason is the nominative to is, and whom is governed by suspect. " Take Geti. xxii. Here are thy only son Isaac, uJhoiu thou lovcst." two substitutes, one the nominative to the verb, and the other governed by it in the objective. " God is the sovereign of the universe, whose majesty ought to fill us Esth, v.
ttiitiwcr to
king said unto her." river went out of Eden
"A
to
;
'
—
—
tile
to the
water the garden, and
it
The woman ii-kom thou gavest to be with me." •'Ignatius, who was bishop of Antioch, conversed with
—"
was parted Gen. ii. Gen. in.
with awe, to whom bound to obey."
10.
It is not unusual cond, as a second
we owe
all
possible reverence,
whom we
and
are
sec in periods, a third clause introduced within a setirst, each with a distinct substitute for a " Paley, Evid. sect. 3. nominative; as, Those modilications of any simple idea, which, as has been said, I call simple modes, are distinct ideas." •A letter, which is just received, gives us the news." Locke, 2. 13. Involution to be this extent may used with caution, without embarrassing thou who rtilest in the heavens." H'lio and whom arc exclusively the substitutes for persons; whose is of a period ; but beyond this, if ever used, it can hardly fail to occasion obscuIndeed the third member included in a second, must be very short, »11 Renders, and as correctly applied to things as to persons. rity. '• The question whose solution I require." Dryden. or it will perplex the reader. " When " That (brtjidden .Milton. .Substitutes are sometimes made to precede their )irincipals thus, fruit ji'/iose mortal taste." a rnan declares in autunni, when he is eating them, or in (Joldsmith. suns." whose system imagined spring when there " These are the arc none, that he loves grapes ." Locke, 2. 20. But this arrangement is charming agonies of love, awkward and Thomson. seldom allowable. Whose miseries deligh." usually Rule XIII. When there are antecedents in difTcrent persons, to which It, though neutei-, is used as the substitute for infant or child ; the disa nominative substitute I'efers, the substitute and verb following tinction of sex in the lirst period of life being disregarded. may "agree Formerly which was used as a substitute ia: pensons ; as appears "from old with either, though usage may sometimes oH'er a preference as, I am authors, and especially in the vulgar version of the scriptures mighty! the Lord that make "" things; that stretch forth the heavens alone; that men which were of old." But this use of the word is entirely discarded, jspread abroad the earth," &c. Isa. xliv. Here /and Lord are of di(li;rcnt W?i.<:A however represents persons, when a question is asked or discrimina-Hpersons, and (A«( may agree with either. If it agrees with /, the verbs " I am the Lord that make." If that 1 know not which tioi: ;niended ; as, which of the men was it person it was, must be in the first person: agrees IVho is sometimes used as the substitute for thinp;s, but most unwarrant- with Lord in the third person, the verb must be in the third person " I " The countries wno ." JJavenant on Rev. 2. 13. ' Tlie towns am the Lord that makrth." But in all cases, the Ibllowing verbs should all ably. who—." Hume Cnntin. 11. ch. 10. "The faction or party who ." Equally be of the same person. " the birds who ." Rule XIV. The definitive adjectives, thi.': and WiaY, the only attributes faulty is the use of u-ho and tvhom for brutes ; The use of it for a sentence, seems to have given rise to a very vague ap- which are vaiied to express number, must agree in number with the names si, all 1 contrive it to attend to which they refer ; as, this city, that church these cities, those plication of the word in phrases like this: How 12.
the apostles."
to
within the
is
O
:
"A
—
—
—
;
;
—
:
— —
—
;
How
fares iV with you? But such phrases, whatever may have churches. This and tha^ are often used as substitutes for a name in the .singular them, are used chiefly in familiar colloquial language, and are iieeiued inelegant in any other style. number, which is omitted, but the same name in the plural immediately A more justifiable use of it is seen in this sentence: "But it is not this follows after a connective; as in this example, "The mortality produced rtis and other diseases." real e.ssence that distinguishes them into species; iMs men who That is, by this Life of Washington, Z. S. rangejlby them into sorts," &c. Locke, 3. 6. 3().l|disease and other diseases. The sentence may be varied thus, by this disHere it is in the singular, though referring to men in the plural. The eoise and others; but the first form is the most common, and it occasions no cause or origin of this, in otu' language as in others, may perhaps be found obscurity. in the disposition of the mind to combine the particular agents etiiployeil in Other adjectives and participles, used as adjectives, are joined to the performing an act, into a single agent. The unity of the act or effect 'names which they qualify without inflection as, a wise man, wise men an seems to predominate in idea, and control the grammatical construction of amiable child, or amialile children a received truth, or received truths a
conn?
rise to
given
j
;
;
;
the substitute.
Rule XL — In
substitute or relative, who, which or that, employed to introduce anew clause, is the nominative to the verb or verbs belonging to that clause, and to others connected with it; as, " The thirst after curiosities, which often draws contempt." Rambler, J\"o. ivho suffers not his faculties to lie torpid, has a chance of doing 83. good." Ibtn. "They that are after the flesh, do mind the things of the Rom. viii. .5. " Among those who are the most richly eyidowed flesh." by nature, and [are] accomplished by their own industry, how few are there whose virtues are not obscured by the ignorance, piejudice or envy of their beholders." Sped. A'o. 2.53. In a few instances, the substitute for a sentence or a clause, is introduced as the nominative to a verb, before the sentence or clause, which it repre"There was is all that we tr/iicA therefore, sents; as, assert, a course of life pursued by them, different fioin that which they before led." Paley's Evid. ch. I. Here which is the representative of the w hole of the last part of the sentence, and its natural position is after that clause. The substitute what combines in itself the otiices of two substitutes,
compound sentences, asingle
"He
;
Ishining character, or shining characters. Adjectives are often used as substitutes for the names of men and things which they describe by their qualities ^s,few were present the wise are the bravest are not always victorious. respected In this character, adjectives take the plural form, and are qualified by other adjectives as (Ite goods of fortune, two Jinites or infinites, univer" The sals, generals, the chief good, a happy feio. extraordinary great." Burke on the Sublime, 304. " The blue profound." Akenside. W'hen nouns are joined by a copulative, an adjective preceding the first is " From applied to the others without being repeated ; as, great luxury and Enlicentiousness, converted to strict sobriety and frugality of manners." Here great belongs to licentiousness as well as to luxury. Held. Rule XV. Adjectives are usually placed before the nouns to whicli a ici«e An obedient subject; a pious clergjTnan jirince ; they belong as,
I
;
;
;
'
;
—
:
;
a
brave soldier.
Exception it
1.
When some
word or words are dependent on an adjective, knowledge requisite for a statesman furniture
noun ; as, for a family.
follows the
convenient
;
which, if expressed, would be the nominatives to two verbs, each in distinct Exception 2. When an adjective becomes a title, or is emphatically ap" Add to as Charles the Great this, ivhat, from its antiquity is but little plied to a noun, it follows it subsequent clauses; as, Henry the First ; Lewis known, has the recommendation of novelty." Hermes, pref. 19. Here the Gross Wisdom incomprehensible. for stands what that, which ; and the two Ibllowing verbs have no other Exception 3. Several adjectives belonging to the same noun, may prenominative. cede or follow the noun to which they belong as a learned, wise and marThis use of what is not very common. But tchat is very frequently used tial prince, or a prince learned, wise and martial. as the representative of two cases one, the objective after a verb or prepoException 4. The verb be often separates the noun from its adjective : sition, and the other, the nominative to a subsequent verb. as, w-ar is expensive gaming is ruinous. Examples " I heard what was said." " He related ichat was seen." Exception 5. An etnphatical adjective is often useil to introduce a sen" We do not so love what has in which case it precedes the notin which it qualifies, and sometimes done us tence, good." constantly Locke. 2. 20. 14. jat a considerable distance as, '-Great is the Lord ;" auspicious will be that " .Agreeable to what was afterwards directed." Black. Com. b. 2. ch. 3. 'event fortunate is that young man who escapes the snares of vice. " Pridcaux, p. 2, 6. 3. Exception 6. The adjective all may be separated from its noun by the. Agreeable to what hath been mentioned." " There is something so overruling in whatever inspires us w iih awe." which never precedes it in constrticiion as, "all the nations of Europe." Burke on the Sublime, 304. In these sentences what incluiles an object ^f>iich and many are separated from nouns by a; as, "such a character is " I have '• after a verb or preposition, and a nominative to the following verb. irare;" many a time." heard thai, which was said." All adjectives are separated from nouns by a. when preceded by so and Rule Xll. When a new clause is introduced into a sentence, with two \as, as "so rich a dress," " as splendid a retinue ;" and they are separated " how or one willi of and a one them is the nominative noun, pronouns, pronoun distinguished on 'by o or the, when preceded by how and however, as ;
;
;
;
1
;
:
;
j
;
;
I
;
—
I
GRAMMAR OF THE Hcl of bravery,"
"
how
brilliiint
the
prize,"
" however just
tlie
com-
plaint."
Tlu;
"
word soever may be interposed between t)ie adjective and the noun " liow remote soever it clear soever this idea of
;
In the first of these examples, relatively is used very awkwardly for ag relative, or as relating, or as it relates, or in relation ; (or the word has a direct reference to government.
how
In the second exajuple, independently is used as if it had been intendecl as, may infinity ;" Locke. to modify the verb ei'alt the perceptions are independently exalted. But seem." the manner of e-calting is not the thing described. If is not that the perDouble is separated from its noun by the ; as " double the distance" But a precedes double, as well ceptions are exalted in an independent manner, nor in a manner independent the in such cases, never preceding double.
—
—
but the fact, tliat the perceptions are exalted into a source of exquisite pleasure, is independent of every relation of interest. Equally faulty is the following sentence ^^ to this children are bound to support their parents." law, Agreeably Paley, Phil. Rule XVIII. Adjectives arc used to modify the action of verbs, and to express the qualities of things in connection with the action by which they are produced. Examples " Deut. xv. 8. Open thine hand wide." We observe in this passage, that wide, the attribute of hand, has a connection with the vei'b open ; for it is not " open thy wide hand," but the atclause, tv be blind, Sfc. Pule XVII. Adjectives belong to sentences, or whole propositions. tribute is supposed to be the effect of the act of opening. Nor can the modfor it is not simply the manner of the act which is ifier, tvidely, be used Examples: " but the effect. Agreeable to this,M-e read of nanus being blotted out of God's Hook." intended, '• Let us write slow and e.vact." Guthrie's Quintilian, 2. 375. liurder'.i Oriental Customs, 375. We might perhajts sub-.litute slowly for slow, as describing only the manWhat is agreeable to this ? The answer is found in the whole of tlie last ner of writing but exactly cannot be substituted for exact, for this word is clause of the sentence. " Antiochus to intended to denote the effect of wi iling, in the correctness of what is writDanof him the character by prophetically given verify The adjective expresses the idea with a happy jtrecision and brevity. iel, acted the part of a vile and most detestable person, agreeable to what ten. As this is one of the most common, as well as most beautiful idioms of hath been aforementioned of him." Prideaur,part 2. b. 3. " Her our language, which has hitherto escaped due oi)Scrvation, the following aumajesty signified her pleasure to the admiral, that as soon as he had he should thorities are subjoined to illustrate and justify the rule. left a squadron for Dunkirk, agreeable to what he had proposed, " We could hear which sounded sweetly soft and Burchet's .A'tro. Hist. 439. distinctly the bells proceed with the fleet." " Chandler's Travels, ch. 2. Independent of his person, his nobility, his dignity, his relations and pensive." " A Ibm. vol. 2. 3. Guthrie's Quintilian. southernly wind succeeded blowing/cesA." friends may be urged," &c. " His " No were shoit." made a Burchet's .Vac. Hist. 3.57. mixed modes are that ideas can doubt but these provisions very of grown by body *' When the caloric exists with the w'ater of solution." combined fioiii in the collection ideas mind, ready independent of put together voluntary Trans, ch. 5. 3. 5. Lavoisier, Locke, any original patterns iu nature." " The " purest clay is thai which burns white." Encyc. art. Chimistry. Whereupon God was provoked to anger, and put them in mind how, " Johnson's Diet. Bray, to pound or grind small." contrary to his directions, they had spared the C'anaanites." " When death Beattie's JUinsf. Winston's Joseplnts, b. 5. eh. 2. lays waste thy house." " All which looks " Greece, which had submitted to the arms, in her turn, subdued the uniicry little like the steady hand of nature." Paley, Phil. ch. 5. derstandings of the Romans, and contrary to that which in these cases comfeels smooth; calcarious earths feel dry; lithomarga feels and manners the the the "Magnesia of conquerors adopted opinions monly happens, Enfield, Hist. Phil. 6. 3. 1. very greasy or at least smooth, yet some feels dry and dusty." conquered." " This letter of Kirwan.vol. 1.12. 189. Pope Innocent enjoined the payment of tithes to the par** sons of the respective parishes, where any man inhabited, agreeable to By this substance, crystals and glasses are colored blue." what was afterwards directed by the same Pope in other count lies." Chaptal, Trans. 299. " There is an Bluckstone's Comm. b. 2. ch. 3. apple described in Bradley's work, which is said to have one side of it a sweet fruit, which boils soft, and the other side a sour fruit, "Agreeable io ih\a, we find some of the Angto-Saxoyi ladies were adwhich boils hard." Darwin, Phytol. 105. mitted into their most august assemblies." " Drink Pope. deep or taste not the Pierian spring." Henry, Hist. Brit. b. 2. ch. 7. and b. 4. ch. 1. sect. 4. " Heaven '* Milton, P. L. 7. As all language is composed of significant words variously combined, a opened wide her ever during gates." ** The victory of the ministry cost them dear." Hume, Contin. 11. 9. knowledge of them is necessary, previous to our acquiiing an adequate " And idea of language." Pope. just as short of reason he must fall." Kncyc. art. (Grammar. *' " His Thick and more thick the steely circle grows." Hoole's Tasso. b. S. empire could not be established, previotis to the institution of pret" Ancus marched strait to Fidenae." Hooke, Mom. Hist. 1. 6. Smellie, Phil. J\'al. Hist. 3.39. ty numerous .societies." " The cakes eat short and " Suitable to I'icar of TVaktfield. crisp." this, we find that men, speaking of mixed modes, seldom " A steep ascent of steps which were cut close and deepinto the lock." Locke, 3. .5. 11. imagine. &c. " At? such Hampton's Polybius, 2. 2<;5. original convention of the people tvas ever actually held, an" It makes the tecedent to rtie existence of civil government in that country." Encyc. art. Agriculture. plow go deep or shallow." " The Lusiad, 1. 91. king's ships were getting ready." Paley, PhU. b.6.ch. 3. " After Sped. JVo. 282. Note. Writers and critics, misapprehending the ti-ue construction ofj growing old in attendance." " The sun shineth Bacon. Apoph. these and similar sentences, have supposed the attribute to belong to the watery." " Thomson, Spring. But a little attention to the sense of Soft sighed the flute." verb, denoting the manner of action. " I made him Milton, 3. i)8. such passages will be sufficient to detect the mistake. For instance, in the J«si and right." " He drew not /Jni. 645. nigh unheard." example from Enfield, the attribute contrary cannot qualify the verb adopt" When the vowel of the ed ; for the conquerors did not adopt the opinions of the conquered in a manpreceding syllable is pronounced short." the manner the act is not the ner contrary to what usually happens Murray's Grammar. of " Is not that trim .'" is and rolled smooth. cut close Here grass gravel thing affirmed, nor does it come into consideration. The sense is this, the Boswell, Johnson, 3. fact, that the conquerors adopted the opinions and manners of the con" Slow tolls the deep mourns the turtle." village clock quered, was contrary to what commonly happens in like cases. The atBeattie's Minstrel. The same explanatribute belongs to the whole sentence or as other adjectives.
—
of a relation to interest
Jill and singular or every precede the before the noun in these phrases " All and Ail and sintjular the articles, clauses and conditions" every of articles" phrases of the law style. Rule XVI. Adjectives belong to verbs in the infinitive mode ; as, " to " " to calumniate see is pleasant ;" to ride is more agreeable than to walk ;" is detestaide." Sometimes the adjective belongs to the infinitive in union with another " to be a coward is *' to be blind is unfortunate ;" adjective or a noun as, Here the attribute unfortunate is the attributive of the first disgraceful."
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''
—
tlie
;
:
—
—
—
;
;
—
;
—
;
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'
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proposition. " If is applicable to every similar sentence. Pope, Let. you would try to live independent." " He In consequence of not attending to this construction, our hypercritics, obliged the Nile to run bloody for your sakes."" Whiston's Josephus, 3. 5. are very apt to distrust popular practice, and substitute their own rules " Correct the heart and all will Leet. 3. Porteus, for customary idioms founded on common sense, have condemned this use go right." The poets sometimes use adjectives in this manner, when modifiers of the attribute and authors, sutfeiing themselves to be led astray by these would express the idea. Sometimes they are induced to it by the measure, rules, often use an adverb in the place of an adjective. " The and not unfrequently by the obvious superiority of the adjective in expresgreater part of philosophers have acknowledged the excellence of this government, which they have considered, some relatively to society, sing the idea with force and precision. and others as it has relation to the general system of nature."
tion
who
;
Anarch, " The perceptions are exalted into
a source
of exquisite
pendently of every particular relation of interest."
eh. 62.
pleasure inde-
*
" Cruentam etiam fluxisse aquam Albanam, quidam auctores erant." lib. 27. 11. Some authors related that the Alban river ran bloody.
Studies ofJVature, 12. Liv.
ENGLISH LANGUAGE. When
two qualifying words are wanted,
tJiough applied to a verb
;
as,
"He
tlie latter
may be an
beat time tolerably exact."
GoUhmith, " Tlie
air will
be found diminished
in
Jin.
—
do not a little encourage me." adjective, sons of the best sense is a great deal better ;" a trifle stronger ; the last of
It is
RuLC XXI. —The
what the
adjectives each, every, either and neither, have verbs Laiwi.iier. ch. 3. and substitutes agreeing with them in the sirjgular number as, ' (intdsmith. Each one leus a head of the house of /lis fathers." Josh. xxii. 1-1.
weight exactly equal
to
iron has gained." " Horses are sold extremely dear." " And Thmmon. Spring. greatly independent lived." "This was applying a just principle very ill." I'alltl, Trans. 2. 7. It will be reniaiked that we have no adverbial form of the adjective in (he comparative and superlative degrees, except ibat of mure and most, less
;
' ' * '
^md least, preli.wd. But we use the adjectives with llie regular terminations, in thc
" Spectator, 124.
which expressions
ch. 12. colloquial.
J\/'at.
Gen. iv. 14. Every one t]td,t fimlcth me, shall slay me." And take every mnnhis censer." JVum. xvi. 17. Nadab and Abihu took either of them his censer." Z,ev. x. 1. J\'eithcr of the ways of separation, real or mental, is compatible to pure
Locke, 2. 13. space." Errors. " Let each esteem others better than thentselves." It ought to be hinisetf. " There arc bodies, each of which are so small." iMcke, 2. 8. It ought
Then
the ple.ising fujce Of nature and her kind parental care. Worthier I'd sing." jlkenside. Pleas, oflmag. 1. 323. " So while «'e taste the fragrance of the rose. lim. 2. 77. Glows not her blush the fairer ?" " When we know our what to understrengtii, we shall the better know Locke, 1. (>. take with hopes of success." And he that can invst inform or best understand bim. will certainly be welcomed." J!amt)ler,JVo. 99.
to
he
is.
Note.
—
.\ plural verb, which affirms something of a nundier of particufollowed by a distributive which assigns th(^ affirmation to the " Thus, If metals have, each a peculiar particular objects or individuals. earth." Hence we may consider each as the nominative to has understood " If metals have, if each metal has a peculiar earth." There is no other
lars, is often
—
way of resolving the phrase. This" manner of expression is common, though It has if each metal has," is sufficient. quite useless; as the la.st clause, This phrase, " Let us love one another," !not the merit of an abbreviation. ranch nearer be approaches to his end." " I have dwelt the lis of a similar construction, but it is not easy to find a substitute of equal longer on the discussion of this point." Junius, Let. 17.i;brevit5-. "The next contains a spirited command and should be pronounced much!! Rule XXII. Nouns of measure or dimension stand without a govcrn" a wall seven feet high and two higher." ,Murrai/s Grammar." ing word, followed by an adjective ; as. :feet thick ;" "acarpet six yards wide ;" "a line sixty fathoms long;" "a "Leviathan, which God of all his works " water ten feet Created htigest that swim th' ocean's stream." .Wilton, 1. 201. kingdom five hundred miles square ;" deep." *' " But is a similar phrase. Ibm. 3. 134. An thousand shall shine." first and last army forty strong," mercy brightest • Such Note. Double comparatives and superlatives, most straitest, most higJiopinions aa seemed to approach nearest [loj the trulh." Enfield, Hist. Phil. 2. 59. ''est, being improper and useless, are not to be vised. The few which were " Her JVorser, a mistake in spelling wyrsa, is obsosmiles, amid the blushes, lovelier show ; formerly used arc obsolete. Amid her smiles, her blushes lovelier glow." Hoole's Tasso. b. 1.5. lete ; but lesser, a mistake for lessa, is still used, as well as its abbreviation. Authors, ndsguided by Latin rules, and conceiving that every word! /fs.?. which is used to qualify a verb, must be an adrerb. have pronovinced manyj The superlative form of certain attributes, which in the positive degree, of the passasres here reeled and similar ones to be incorrect; and in such' contain the utmost degree of the quality, as earfremcsf, chirfest, is improper But authors indulge in a most unwarrantable license of anas arc too well cs'ablishcd to bear censure, they call the adjective an drf-'.and obsolete. Were it not for this influence in early education, which impresses al'nexing comparison to attributes whose negative sense precludes increase or vcrb. notion that all languages must be formed with the like idioms, we shouldj|diminution ; as in these sentences, "These arc more formidable and mor^ never have received an idea that thcsanxe word may not modify a noun, an impassable than the mountains." Goldsmith, Jin. A''at. ch. 2. "This difwas rendered still more insurmountable by the licentious spirit of adjeclivc and a verb. pficulty So far arc the words here used from being adverbs, that they cannot be our young men." .Murphy, Tacit. Oral. 3.i. "The contradictions of imJtTassiUon. Serm. to the Great. changed into adverbs, without impairing the beauty, weakening the force, piety are still niore incomprehensible." Let the sentences be put to then Similar to these are numerous expressions found in good authors more or destroying the meaning of the passages. test Magnesia feels smoothly the calces eat shortly and crisply the ap-i!impossible, more indispensable, less universal, more uncontrollable; and is not only improper, but rather enor not her blush the more in which the of fairly. comparison hardly glows sign pies boil softly Everyj others, English ear rejects Ibis alteration at once ; the sentences become nonsense. feebles the epithet; for the word itself expresMug tlie full extent of the Korean the adjective he separated fioui the verb " Amid her smiles, her idea, ought to bear some emphasis, which, if a qualifying word is prefixed, blushes, being lovelier. glow"^tbis is not the sense ; nor will it answer to, will naturally be transferred to that word.* " Her lovelier blushes In a few instances, this usage seems to be too well established to be alglow" this is not the idea. The sense is, tliat 6ay, the attribute expressed by lovelier, is not only a quality of blushes, but a! tered, and particularly in the use of more and most, less and least perfect. In general, it would indicate more precision of thought to apply a term of quality derived, in a degree, from the aclion of the verb, glow. burns white be seen double rise diminution to the aflirmative attribute less pos.sifr/f. less surmountable, less Thus, clay objects may may high fall low grow strait, or thick, or thin, or fat, or lean one may .speak loud, 'Controllable, rather than a term of increase to a negative attribute, to ^row wiser,' the sun shines c/ert/" the ^^ner a substance is pulverized Note 2. In English, two nouns are frequently united to form a new and similar expressions without number, noun; as earth-worm, drill-plow, itik-stand, book-case. In some cases, to plunge deeper, spread under constitute a well established idiom, as common as it is elegant. these compounds are by custom eflectually blended into one term ; in other Rule XIX Some adjectives are vised to modify the sense of others and cases, they are separated into their component parts by a hyphen. In other of participles ; a.s, a very clear day ; red hot iron a more or mj)st excellent cases, words are united, and the first term forms a sort of occasional adjeccharacter ; moj-e pressing necessity ; i7iost grating sound. " Without com- tive to the second; n^ family-use, or famdy-consumption. " .V closer Note 3. From a disposition to abridge the number of words in discourse, Lavoisier, TVans. ing atiy nearer." Locke grained wood." ** Eull many a gem of purest ray serene." Gray. we find many expressions which are not reducible to any precise rule, " Some deem'd bim wondrous wise." Such are, at first, at last, at best, at Bcaltic's .Minstrel. formed at first by accident or ellipsis. In these expressions the last attribute belongs more immediately to the wor.':t, at most, at least, at farthest, at the utmost. In these expressions noun expressing its quality and the first attribute qualifies the second. there may have been an ellipsis of some noun; but they are well establishthe ^Hmoas ofJUerNot unfrequently two attributes are used to modify a third, or the princi 1, brief and significant, and may be numbered among " The manner in which external force acts upon the body is:icury. pal one; as, N(OTE 4. We have certain adjectives which follow a verb and a noun to Rambler, .Vo. 7S. very little subject to the will." Rule XX. .Adjective; are used to qualify the sense of adverbs ; as, allwhich they belongr, but never precede the noun. Such arc, adry, afeared. city was very bravely defended ; the soldiers were most am nply rewarded a'afraid, alone, alike, aware,akin,aliKe,a.sIeep, awake, alhirst, aloft, aghast, worth ; to which may be added, donation moce beneficially bestowed; a house lc.is elegantly furnished afloat, askew, ashamed, pursuant, plenty, man the least peaceably disponed. amiss, aground, a.ihorc, aside, and a few others which may be used as atWe have a few other words which are often used to modify adjectives as tributes or modifiers. We saj', one in adry. ashamed, alive or awake; but We say, "A proclamation well as verbs as, a little; a great deal ; a trifle. " Many letters fiom per- ne\'er an atlry person, an ashamed child, ^c. But wc can in no case place w;is issued pursuant to advice of council." ^pursuant before a noun. "
How
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,
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11
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I
1
—
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—
;
—
;
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;
;
_^
In remarking upon such phrases as "The vices which enter deeper orl deepest into the soul," Murray says, deeper and deepest, should be more^ "This effect may proceed also from another consideration. If the adjeccideeply, most deeply. Change the atlriinite in the two p;issages I have " fhe' five alone is ted " The vowel of the preceding syllable is pi-onounced shortly" used, its sense precludes the idea of increase or diminution it next should be pronounced much more highly.'" This alteration will put' expresses all that can be expressed. But admit comparison, and it ceases bis lule to the test. to exivress the utmost extent of the quality. **
^
—
—
—
I
GRAMMAR OF THE not only follows the noun wUicli it qualifies, but is followed by ai noun denoting price or value as, a book worth n dollar or a guinea ; it is well ivorth the money. " It is worth obscrvatlaa." Peioe's HerodotusJ Erato. 98. If a substitute is used after woi'th, it must be in the objective case. It is worth them or it. But worthy, the derivative of ivorth, follows the usual construction of adl-J'orth
;
jectives,
and may precede the noun
Rule XXIII. —One
it
qualifies
;
as, a
worthy man.
Regimen or Government. noun
signifying the
same thing with another, or de-
scriptive of it, may be in apposition to it ; that is, may stand in a like character or case, without an intervening verb; as, Paul, the apostle; John, the baptist; Newton, the philosopher; Chathauj, the orator and statesman.
—
Note
1. In the Ibllowing sentence, a noun in the plural stands in appotwo nouns in the singular, joined by an alternative. "The terms of our law will hardly find words that answer them in the Spanish or Ital-
sition to
ian, no scanty languages." Locke, 3. 5. 8. Note 2. Nouns are not untrequently set in apposition to sentences ; as, " Whereby if a man had a positive idea of infinite, either duration or space,
—
which are much better authority, guage by grammar, and neglect usages and the basis of correct grammar. " Pieces of iron arranged in such a way as seemed most favorable for the combustion being communicated to every Lavoisier, Trans. There is no reason for hydrogen being an exception." Ibm. These expressions are not English. Rule Vf. Transitive verbs and their participles require the objective case or the object of action to follow them : as, " In the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth." " If ye love >nf , keep iny commandments." "0 righteous father, the world hath not known thee." Sometimes the object and often the objective case of substitutes precedes " The the goveining verb as, spirit of truth, whoin the world cannot rf" fVhoni ceive." ye ignorantly worship, him declare I unto you." Whom and u-hieh, when in the objective case, always precede the verb. In verse, a greater license of transposition is used, than in prose, and nouns are often placed before the governing verb. " But through the heart part." '
XX
—
;
Should jealousy its venom once diffuse." Thomson. " She with extended arms his aid TbTU. implores." infinites together ; nay, make one infinite infinitely bigA noun with whatever, ichatsoever or whichei^er, preceding, is placed beger than another: absurdities too gross to be confuted." Locke, 2. 17. 20. fore the governing verb as, "whatsoever positive ideas we have." Here the absurdities are the whole preceding propositions. 2. 17. Locke, " You are too humane and considerate; things few people can be charged Note 1. We have some verbs which govern two words in the objective with." Pope Let. Here things is in opposition to /iHmnnf and considaate. case ; as, " Did I Such a construction may be justified, when the ideas are correct, but it is request thee, maker, from my clay not very common. To mould me man?" Milton, 10. 744. " The Dutch were "God seems to have made him what he was." formerly in possession of the coasting trade and freight Life of Cowper. of almost all other trading nations; they were also the bankers for all Eu"Ask him his opinion." " Vou have asked me the neits." Will it be said that the latter phrases are elliptical, for "ask oj him his rope advantages by which they have gained immense sums." Zimmerman's Survey, 170. Here advantages is put in apposition to the two first opinion ?" I appiehend this to be a mistake. According to the true idea ol members of the sentence. the government of a transitive verb, him must be the object in the phrase Rule XXJV. When two nouns are used, one denoting the possessor, under consideration, as much as in this, " Ask him for a guinea ;" or in this. the other the thing possessed, the name of the possessor precedes the otberl " ask him to go." " in the possessive case In my Father's house are many mansions." This idiom is very ancient, as we often see it in the Latin. " Intcrrogaas, Men's bravery ; England's fleet ; a Christian's hope ; Washington's pru- tus sententiam." Liv. 26. 33. " Se id Scipionem orare." Ibm. 27. 17. "Auxilia regem orabant." Ibm. lib. 2S. 5. The idiom in both languages dence. Note 1. When the Oiing possessed is obvious, it is usual to omit the had a common origin. '' He is at the PresiNote 2. Some verbs were formerly used as transitive, which are no noun ; as, " Let us go to St. Paul's," that is, church ; " he him" " flee thee away" longer considered as such ; as, dent's," that is, house. " he was swerved" " the sum was repented " Nor think a lover's are but fancied woes." amounted," &c. which are held imC'owper. " Whose book is this ? William's." That is, a lover's woes. proper. " Cease nouns, the Note 2. When the possessor is described by two or more Cease, however, is used as a transitive verb by our best writers. • Edward, the this impious rage." Miltmi. " Her lips their music cease." Hoole's Tasso. sio'n of the possessive is generally annexed to the last; as, Bacon on Empire. Rule XXVII. Intransitive verbs are followed by the name of the act se'cond of England's Queen." " In Edward the third's time." Blackstone's Comm. b. 1, ch. 2. or effect, which the verb expresses in action ; as, " to live a life of virtue ;" " John the Baptist's head." Matt. xiv. " to die the death of the righteous ;" " to dream dreams ," " to run a race ;" " jj member Burke. " to sleep the sleep of death." of parliament's paying court to his constituents." as We observe, in these examples, life is the name of living supposed to be is But if the thing possessed represented belonging to a number sever" He of the possessive is repeated with each ; as, complete, as race is the name of the act of running when accomplished. ally specified, the sign " Note. Nearly allied to this idiom is that of using, after verbs transitive It was my father's, mothhas the surgeon's and the physician's advice." or intransitive, certain nouns which are not the objects of the verb, nor of er's, and uncle's opinion."* Note 3. When of is used before the possessive case of nouns," there is precisely the same sense, but which are either the names of the result of "A Vital air the verb's action, or closely connected with it. a double possessive, the thing possessed not being repeated; as, Examples guinea *' " a crown Combustion, as now understood, was a weighs five penny weight, six grains;" was a discovery o/i-*)"ics?/ey's." weighs nineteen penny " a piece of cloth measures ten yards." discovery of Lavoisier's." The sense of which is, that vital air was one of weight;"* "And on their This idiom prevents the repetition of the the discoveries of Priestley. hinges grate harsh thunder." "And rivers run potable " The "Groves whose rich trees wept same word. crispid brook ran nectar." gold." Milton. Note 4. The possessive may be supplied by of, belbre the name of the odorous gums and balm." "Grin a ghastly smile." " Her But (/ does not always denote of a christian." Thomson. lips blusli deeper sweets." possessor; as, "the hope "To ascend or descend a flight of stairs, a ladder, or a mountain." or in, concerning, &c. and in these possession it denotes also consisting of, " To cost a Thus cloth of guinea." cases, its place cannot be supplied by the possessive case. Under this rule or the following may be arranged these expressions. wool, cannot be converted into wool's cloth ; nor a cup of water, into water's "When matters have been brought this cup ; nor an idea of an angel, into an angel's idea; nor the house of Lards, "Let them go their way." " We turn our into the Lord's house. length." Lavoisier, Translation. eyes this way or that Rule XXV. Participles are often used for nouns, and have the like way." " Reckoning any tvay from ourselves, a yard, a mile, &c." Locke, 2. 17. effect in governing them in the possessive case; as, "A courier arrived Similar to this idiom are tlie phrases, to go west or east pointing north from Madrid, with an account of his Catholic majesty's having agreed to " In case of his Catholic the neutrality." majesty's dying without issue." or south, north-west or south-east, and the hke, which I find to be Saxori " Averse to the nation's and in ancient. itself another war." Contin. Hume, very phrases involving " Who can have no notion of the same In some instances verbs of this sort are followed by two objects; as, "a vol. 7, 6.2, ch. I. person's possessSpectator, JV'u. 150. ring cost the purchaser an eagle." ing different accomplishments." Rule XXVIII. Names of certain portions of time and space, and espeThis is the true idiom of the language ; yet the omission of the sign of the possessive is a common fault among modern writers, who learn the Ian cially words denoting continuance of time or progression, are used without a " governing word ; as, Jacob said, I will serve thee seven years for Rachel.'" " And dust shalt thou eat all the " And he abode with * days of thy life." The contrary rule in Murray is egregiously wrong as exemplified in " This was my father, mother and uncle's advice." This is not this phrase, * The radical idea of weight is carry, bear or sustain, fiom the Saxon When we s
he could add two
;
—
:
—
;
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
:
—
;
—
—
—
;
—
—
But when two or three distinct nouns are used, the article pos- guinea weighs five penny weights, six grains that is, carries or sustaijis " It was is described as my father's advice, my that weight in the scales. How much of the propriety, and even of the belonging to each. mother's advice, and my uncle's advice." We can omit advice after the beauty of language is lost, by neglecting to study its primitive state and two first, but hy no means, the sign of the possessive. principles
possessive.
sessed
!
ENGLISH LANGUAGE. him the upace of a month." " The tree of life yielded her fruit everi/]^ Rule XXXI.— Tlie inriniiivc mode follows, first, another verb or partimonth." "In those days I DyiiicI was mourning three full weeks." ciple as, "he loves ^l (//ms/i tli" social affections ;" "he -- persua persuaded /n " Whosoever shall " To walk afconi/on a vicious " h,; is lit.';" to encounter urge thee to go a mile, go with hiin twain." "he was ;
a mile, or a league." " Effects occurring ri-ert/ moment to ourselves." " Vou have asked me news a hunttrett times." Pope. Words expressing particular or preci.se points of time, are usually preceded hy a pieposition as, " at that hour ;"" ou that day." But to both these rules there are exceptions. ;
Rule XXIX. — The
danger;"
willing
proceeding
to relate]\\?.
The
adventures."
"
noun ; as, The next thing natural for the Locke. " He has a task fopofbrm." 3dly. It follows an ailjeclivc or vcrb.il attribute; as, " a question difficult " it is ' to be solved." delightful to contemplate the goodness of Providence. " God is worthy to be loved and trusted." " Be prepared to receive your 2dly.
mini
to
infinitive follows a
do."
friend."
verb he has (he same case after it as before it; or " an " a 4thly. It follows as ; thus, " Jt object so high as to be invisible ;"' in construction are in the same case. .so obscure as to perplex the understanding." be not afraid." " Thuji art she." " // is Ac." " IVho was he?" question " llHio do men " fVhom do 5thly. It follows Mon after a comparison: as, "Nothing makes a man sussay that / am .-"" they represent me to be." pect much, more than to know little." Bacon on Suspicion. But " fVhom do men say that I am," is incorrect. " What 6thly. It follows the preposition /or, noting cause or motive as, Rule XXX. Transitive verbs and their participles admit of a sentence, went ye out for to see?" Matt. xi. " This is the true original idiom, but it is usual now to omit a clause or number of words as their object as, " He is not alarmed so far, /or; as, he went to see a reed shaken with the wind." In as to consider how much nearer he approaches to his end." of this every phrase soH,for
two substitutes connected with be
is /,
—
;
;
is
Rambler, JVo. Consider what
?
The whole
following clause,
which
is
78. the object of the
implied in the sense
The
verb.
infinitive
phrase
"If he escapes being banished by
;
as,
"
;
mode
It is
but the is
u.se of
the
word
is
viilg.ir.
independent, standing as a substitute for a whole ten attempts that you can find the case you say nothing of those numerous points of conduct
not once in
himself" seek, in any law book to Pope, Let. to Swift., concerning which the law professes not to prescribe." J'tdei/. Phil. ch. 1. Rule XXXII. The verbs, bid, make, see, hear, feel, lit, with the auxilHere being banished stands in the place of a noun, as the object after! aries, may, can, 7nusl, shall and will, and dare and need, when used as auxescapes. " Add to this, what, from itg antiipiity is but little known, has from Ihntl iliaries, are followed by the infinitive without the prefix to; a-s, "he bids " we cannot make them uiuierstniul ;" " let me see you write ;" very circumstance, the recommemlation of novelty." Hermes, Preface. me come ;" In this sentence the whole of the clauses in italics, is what is to be "we heard him relate the story ;" " we felt the earth tiemble." " Which added, " and is the actual object governed by the verb add. He may go, can gw. must g», shall go, will go." they let pass." Locke. " I dare " He need not be "Suppose then the world we live in to have had a creator" " Suppose anxious." engage; I dare say." the disposition ivhich dictated this council to continue." Note 1. In the uses otdare and need, there are some peculiarities which Paley, Ev. 1. " For that mortal deserve remark. dint. When dare signifies to defy or challenge, it is regular in the tenses and Save he who reigns above, none can resist." 2. 815. .Milton, " I wish I could give you any good reasons for your coming hither, ex- persons, is a transitive verb, and is followed by the infinitive with the usual " he dares me to enter the list." But when it is intransitive, cept that, J earnestly invite you." Pope, Let. prefix as, ' Lord Bathiirst is too great a husbandman to like barren hills, except denoting to/iarccourao^e,it more generally drops the personal terminations, they are his own to improve." Pope, Let. Sept. 3, 172t>. has an anomalpus past tense, and is followed by the infinitive without to; in short it has the form of an In these and similar piissages, the object of the verb is a whole auxiliary, and in the German, it is classed with proposi-! " 1 dare tion or statement, in a sentence or clause of a sentence. In this passage,! the auxiliaries. Examples; engage." Pope's Works, Letter to " I dare not confess." " I dare "Except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish," the fact excepted is af- Gay. Swift to Gay. say." Locke. "But firmed in a single verb. Take away this fact " that you shall repent," and my Lord, you dare not do either." Junius, Let. 28. "Durst I venture to the consequence must be, you will perish.' This is oiie of the modes of ab-' deliver my own sentiments." Hume. Es. 7 breviation in language which I have .so frequently mentioned, and which The past tense, when regular, is followed by the infinitive with the usual " You have (/aicd to constitutes a principal excellence of the throw more than a suspicion upon mine." iprefix. English. We observe, in some of the passages here cited, the pronoun that, after !-^"»""*' i*''- 20- The same remark may be extended to the future tense. the verb. This is probably the true He will not dare to attack his adversarj-." original construction ; the substitute, In like manner, need, when a transitive verb, is that, poinfing to the whole following clause. " He could do no regular in its inflections mighty works " A man needs more " The there, save that, [except that single fact which follows,] he laid his hand as, prudence" army needed provisions." But on a few sick and healed them." when intransiUve, it drops the personal terminations in the present tense, is formed like an auxiliary, and is followed by a verb, without the Note. It may be here observed that in some of the prefix ^oy passages cited the as. " verb has no definitive nominative; the rerhs save, Nobody need be afraid he shall not have scope enoiiub." Locke, 2. 22. 9. except, suppose, add, ^c. "I need not y^o any farther." ]bm. " Nor need we uonrffr." Ibm. "The are in the imperative mode, but the address is not made to any particular " There need be no dilfiperson or persons. .And this probably has led authors to cla.ss save and ex-\ lender need be under no fear." Anarch, ch. 69. " She need dig no more." Spectator, Bcddoes, Hygeia,l. 21. cept among conjunctions, preposifions or adverbs, or to consider them .is culty." " A man need not be used adverbially for it has been already observed that the class of adverbs .Xo. 121. uneasy on these grounds." Boswell, 3. 41. " He need not has been a sort of common sink to receive all words which authors have urge to this honorable court." Judge Chase. not! In the use of this verb, there is another been able to comprehend. irregularity, which is pecuhar. ^eib being without a nominative, expressed or implied. "Whereof here Is it not strange that suppose, add, admit, allow, and other verbs which 's"'* »ieerfsno account." are constantly used in the same manner, should have hitherto "There is no evidence of the JUilton, P. L. 4. 235. escaped the This is an established use oi need. same doom? In the passages above cited from fact, and there needs none." Paley, suppose is used pre Note 2, The infinitive mode has. in its sense and use, a near affinity to ci.sely in the same manner, as except and save in others. Indeed nothin; a noun and often has the construction of one. but the most inexcusable It is much employed to intronegligence could have led critics to this classifica' duce sentences which are the nominatives to verbs, as well as the objects lion oisave and except for in many passagesof scripture, these very words them as, " To tmll is present with me, but to perform that which in the sense in which they are called conjunctions or adverbs, have an ob following ^"^ '^'^ ''.''** |n'J"''J^'^ is the nondnative to is, and the ject following them, like other transitive verbs as, " Israel burned none ofl'* ^"°^ ' ''"'' °°'" them, .sfltie Hazor only." Josh. xi. 13. Ye shall not come into the land, second begins the sentence which is the object after^'nd. Note 3. A common mistake in the use of the infinitive is, to use the ,save Caleb and Joshua." JVum. xiv. 30. I would that all were as I am perfect tense after another verb in the past time, when in fast one of the except these bonds." Jlcts, xxvi. verbs in the past time would correctly express the sense thus, " It would This use of verbs without a definite nominative occasions no inconvenhave been no difficult matter to have compiled a volume of such amusing preience; for the address is not made to any particular person, but is equally Cowper to Hill, Let. 29. Here the first verb states the time apphcable to any one who will apply it. See the subject further expl.iined cedents." under rule 38. The following passage in Locke, 2. 27. 2. contains another past when it was not difTicult to compile a volume at that time the compilation could not be past; the verb therefore should have been to verb used in the same manner " Could two bodies be in the same compile, place at which is the same time, then those two parcels of matter must be one and the present and always indefinite. same, In the following passage, we have a like use of verbs which is correct. take them great or little." The error of con.sidering .wre as an adverb or conjunction, has however j" A free pardon was granted to the son, who was known to have offered inproduced a multitude of mistakes in construction, "as in these passages; jdignities to the body of Varus." Murphy's Tacitus, ti. I. Here the offer" Save he who " Which no man was a fact precedent to the time stated in the verb was reigns above." Milton. knowcth, saving ing of indignities he that receiveth it." Hev. ii. 17. The nominative he cannot be reconciled to •known ; a!id therefore the verb, to have offered, is well employed. any principle of true construction. He ought to he him, the obitc' after the Rule XXXIII. The infinitive signifying motive or purpose, oflen inVerb. Except might have been used, anri'this word beine called a prcposi troduces a clause or sentence which is not the no.ninative or objective to any tion, would have required after it the " To see how far this But both words are objective case, reaches, and what are the causes of w'roiij, Jyerb; as, verbs, and ought to have the same construction. I'judgment, we must remember that things are judged good or bad in a double others,
I
fear lie will banish
;
—
—
—
;
[|
—
;
i
—
;
—
—
;
;
—
;
;
:
I
I
.
I
Vol.
I.
K.
—
GRA3IMAR OF THE "
To pretenl property from being too unequally Locke, 2. 21. 61. distributed, no pei-son should be allowed to dispose of his possessions to the sense."
prejudice of his la^vful lieirs." Anarch, eh. 62. Note. This ionn of sentence seems to be derived from the use oi for before the verb,y'()r to set. The modern practice is to prefix some noun, as " With a view to ill order to see, or prevent." Rule XXXIV. In the use of the passive form, there is often an inversion of the order of the .--uhject and object ; thus, "The bishops and abbots were allowed their seats in the house of Lords."
—
—
" Thus
shalt thou do unto the Levitcs, touchiiig their charge."
A'arn. viii. 26. stand without a noun, sentence or referable to either of not possible to act otherwise, considering
Rule XXXVIII. —Participles often substitute, on
which they immediately depend, being
the persons indefinitely ; as, " It the weakness of our nature."
Note.
— — Johnson,
is
in his Dictionary,
Spectator. calls
this
a
kijid of conjunction,
" It had been more granmiatically written considered ; vu, French; but considering isahvays used." This criticism indicates an incorrect view of the subject. Blackstone, Comm. b. 1, ch. 2. Considered, " Here the true construction would be, Seats in the house of Lords were cannot be used without a change in the structure of the sentence "The weakness of our nature being considered." But to make this form of exallowed to the bishops and abbots." "Theresa was forbid the presence of the emperor." Murphy's Tacitus, pression correspondent to the other clause, that ought also to be varied, and "
and adds
—
2.
NoTK.
510.
—This
is
a
common
phiaso.
It
may
—
be resolved thus
:
Th
presence of the emperor was forbid to Theresa or, Theresa was forbid to approach the presence of the emperor. KuLE XXXV. The participle of the present tense without a definitive a or the, or with any jjossessive attribute, usually retains the sense of its " The clerk is verb, and has the objective case after it; as, engrossing the "The love we bear our friends is generally caused by our finding bill."
—
the
same
dispositions inthcui,
which we
feel in ourselves."
Pope's Letters. to your inviting me to your forest." fbm. But when the participle is preceded by a or the, it takes the character and government of a noun, and in most cases, must be tbllowed by of; as, "The middle station of life seems to be most advantageously situated for the gaining o/* wisdom. Poverty turns our thoughts too much upon the supplying of our wants, and riches, upon enjoying our superfluities."
"In retuin
Spectator, JVo. 464.
In many cases this participle becomes a noun, without n or the ; as, " It more properly talking upon paper, than writing." Pope, Let. Note. Tlio foregoing rule is often violated by our best writers, and to make it universalis to assume an authority much too dictatorial. "Some were employed in blowing of glass others in weaving of linen." is
—
;
Gihbmi,
—
Rule
Rom. Emp.
ch. 10.
It docs not uppear (to us) possible to act thus, person introduced otherwise, the weakness of our nature tieing considered." But this amendment would be of no advantage. To comprehend the use of such expressions, we should consider that men find it useful to deal in abstract propositions and lay down truths without reference to persons. This manner of di.scoursing is often less invidious than to apply propositions or opinions to persons. To accomplish this purpose, men have devised words and modes of speech which enable them thus to communicate their ideas. In the passage cited, the first clause contains a *' It is not general abstract proposition, equally applicable to any person That is, it is not possible for me, for you, for possible to act otheiwise." btit it might be invidious to specify persons. It is not poshim, or for her sible for John or Thomas to act otherwise, he considering the weakness of his nature. Hence the proposition is left without application; audit follows naturally that the persons who are to consider the cause, the weakness of our nature, should be lef~t indefinite, or unascertained. Hence considering is left without a direct application to any person. Whatever foundation there may be for this explanation, the idiom is common and well authorized. " Generally speaking, the heir at law is not bound by the intention of the testator." Paley, Phil. 23. " Supposing that electricity is actually a substance, anil taking it for granted that it is dilfeient from caloric, does it not in all probabililv contain caloric, as well as all other boilies ?" Thomson, Chim. art. Caloric. a definite
;
—
;
XXXV'I. Particij)les of the present tense, either single or in union with the participle of the perfect tense, often perform, at once, the office Here is no noun expressed or implied, to which suppiosing and taking of a verb and a noun ; as, " The faking from another what is his, without his Locke, 2. 28. 16. can he referred ; we would be most naturally understood. knowledge or allowance, is called stealing." " " By the tnind's changing the object to which it compares any thing." Supposing the first stratum of particles to remain in their place, after Locke, 2. 25. their union with caloric, we can conceive an affinity, &c." Ibm. Here " To save them from other people's damning them." Wycherley to Pojie. supposing may be referred to tec, but is this the real construction ? " " Such a For supposing parliament had a right to meet spontaneously, witboiii plan is not capable of being carried into execution." Anarch, ch. 62. being called together, it would be impossible to conceive that all the mem" bers would agree," &c. Blackstone, Comm. B. 1. 2. They could not avoid submitting to this influence." " The articles of this on Hist. Let. 8. charge, considering by whom it was brought, were Baling, Note 1. The participle inm^, though strictly active in its signification, not of so high a nature as might have been expected." " a modern authors in sense More is not unfrequently u.^ed by as, ; passive Henry, Brit. B. 4. ch. 1. " It is most reasonable to conclude than are necessary for nutrition or for the that, excepting the assistance he may living particles are produced restoration o( decomposing organs," that is, organs suffering decomposition. be supposed to have derived from his countrymen, his plan of civilization " From which caloric is Darwin, Zoon. sect. 39. 9. Enfield, HiM. Phil. 1. ch. 9. disengaging," that is. was the product of his own abilities." " None of us put ofl'our clothes, saving that every one put them ofl" for undergoing the process of separation. Lavoisier, Translation. "The number is augmenting daily." Ibm. "They seemed to think Cesar was slay- washing." J\"eh. iv. 23. " And he said unto before their rather than he was slain." Gnth. 2. 18. that hinder me Quin. them, not, ing eyes seeing the Lord hath prospered " The nation had cried out Geyi. xxiv. 56. loudly against the crime while it was commit- my way." " " on 8. Lie Hist. Let. lives are re-printing." Johnson not one to another, seeing that ye liave put off the old man with his Baling, titig." deeds." Col. iii. 9. to Bosu'cll, 1782. " Many of this kinarticiples in the place of a noun is one of the most fi'oqucnt practices of our best writers as, " This did not prevent John's words whose signification they are intended to affect. First. They are placed before adjectives as, truly wise ; sincerely upbeing acknoicledgcd and solemnly inavgvrated Duke of Normandy." HenThe participle being with an attribute, supplies the right ; unaffectedly polite. ry, Hist. Brit. b. .3. " As to the difference of Secondly. They usually follow a verb when single ; as, he spoke elobeing mure general, that place of a noun also.
—
—
My
—
XXXIX. —
;
:
maxim more remote from being innate.'' Locke, 1. 2. 20. Rule X.XXVll. Participles, like attributes, agree with a sentence,
makes
and
verb
transitive with an
object following, the adverb a follows the object; a-s, "John received the present gratefully." " To this rule, the exceptions are very numerous, and not to be classed part of a sentence, or a substitute for a sentence; as, Concerning relation " So it " Men in general, these things may be cunsidei-ed." Locke, 2. 25. under general heads. often deceive frequently happens." Here concerning relates to the whole of the last clause of the sentence themselves." Indeed, in many cases the position of the modifier makes no " These all which is concerning relation in difference in the sense, and may be regulated entirely by the preference of things may be considered" sound, in the general structure of the period, provided it is not such as to general. ^' This criterion will be different, according to the nature of the object mislead the reader, in the application of the word. When one auxiliary and a participle are used, the modifier is which the mind contemplates." Thirdly. Enfield, Hist. Phil. 2. 15. That is, the ditTerence of criterion will accord with the nature of the ob- usually placed between them or it follows the participle ; as, " he was gra" he was received ciously received," or graciously." The first is the most ject. this
—
According
to
Hierodes, Ammonius was induced
to
a distinct eclectic school," Sic.
Here
the whole statement of facts in the last clause
if
a
execute the plan of elegant. Ihm.p. 63. Fourthly.
is
When two auxiliaries are u.sed, the adverb is usually placed " have been kindly treated." But it may follow as, the participle, as " have been treated kindly ;" and in some cases it Oen. 19. may precede the auxiliaries, as " .\.nd certainly you must have known." .funius. Letter S. Kph. v. 32
was according
rodes ; that is, it accorded with his testimony. " I have accepted thee, concerning this thing also." " I Christ and the church." speak concAning
:
—
—
"
quently
-
to
Hie- after the second
We
;
We
ENGLISH LANGUAGE. The preposition is someliiuLS separated from the word which governs ; as, adverbs are emphatical, they may introduce a sentence, Fifthly. " How With a longing for that state which he is charmed with," instead of with and be separated from tlie word to whiih they belong ; as, compltle-^ of human virtues had taken possession of his soul!" which he is chainied. ly this most amiable In many cases, the relative pronoun may bo suppressed, as " I did not Port. Lect. 8. This poiitiou of the modilier is most frequent in interrogasee the person he came with," that is, unth whom he came ; and in other tive an
When
—
—
—
Pope, Let. tuting short words of easy pronunciation for those which are more difficult. tion." " and Ambition, envy, will take up our minds, without we can possess ourAgainst this disposition and its efiects, the critic remonstrates in vain ; Spectator, wVu. 143. we may rest assured that common convenience and utiUty are better guides selves with sobriety." Note. obsei-ve, in the foregoing passages, the preposition has two in whatever respects the use of words, than the opinions of men in their No word or syllable in a language, which is essential, or very use- uses. One is to precede a word"to which other words are annexed as neclosets. about the beginning." Here the .sense is ful, is ever lost. cessary to complete the sense Undle is a noun denoting time, and not a modifier. In this phrase, " I not complete ; the time is not designated. To define the time wliich is the " of the will go lehile you stay," the word is used in its primitive manner, without object of the prepor^ition about, it is necessary to add the words eleventh century" about that time. So that the whole clause is really a month, a leeek. like many other names of portions of time government, W^e are accustomed to use, as modifiers, a little and a great deal. '* The the object after the preposition. The other use of the preposition is to precede nouns, verbs or other words many letters I receive, do not a little encourage me." Spectator, JVo. 121. not the object of the preposition, but which have a construction IVIany names are used in like manner, as modifiers of the sense of verbs. which are " You don't care Johnson. independent of it as, " after men became christians." Here men is the six-pence whether he was wet or dry." Rule XL. In polite and classical language, two negatives destroy the nominative to became ; yet the whole proposition is ;is really the object gov" " A''or did he not as the word hour, in the phrase, after that hour. erned an and after, as, Against affirmative; them," by perceive express negation This phraseology is not common nor agreea- 1 see you," is a phrase of like construction. No single word is an object or that is, he did perceive them. affirmation the whole is the but after in the case of our to the ble object. against ; objective tongue. genius The following is a common and well authorized use of negatives. " His " Without we can possess ourselves," has a like construction, and though manners are not inelegant," that is, are elegant. This manner of expres- superseded, in a degree, by unless, a word of similar import, is a true EnAfter [this fact] men became christians— Against [that time sion, however, when not accompanied with particular emphasis, denotes a glish phra-se. moderate degree of the quality. when] I see you Without [this fact] we can possess ourselves. Rule XLIII. The modifiers of sentences, if, though, unless, and lest, Note. In popular language, two negatives are used for a negation, acthe usual auxiliaries, cording to the practice of the ancient Greeks and the modern French. This may be followed by verbs in the future tense, without idiom was primitive, and was retained in the Saxon; as, *' Oc se kining shall, will or should; as, "If his son ask bread, will he give him a " Peada ne rixade none while." Saj:. Chron. p. 33. And the king Peada did stone ?" " If he ask a fish, will he give him a serpent ?" Though he slay the not eat of not reign none while, that is, not a long time. The learned, with a viewl me, yet will I trust in him." "He shall holy things, unless " Lest thou to philosophical correctness, have rejected the use o( two negatives for one, he wash his flesh with water." say I have made .-Vbram rich." " The consequence is, we have two modes of speaking directly opExcept has a like eflect upon the following verb as, I will not let thee negation. " He did not owe Whether has been numbered also among the posite to each other, but expressing the same thing. go, except thou bless me." " and be owed the conditional mode, but by an egregious misnothing," in vulgar language, nothing," in the style of the conjunctions, which require It is not a connective, nor does it imply a condition or hypothesis, but take. learned, mean precisely the same thing. Rule XLI. Prepositions are followed by the names of objects and the an alternative. Rule XLIV. ConnecHves join two or more clauses or members in a as,/)o(H New \ ork to Philadelphia; across the Delaware objective case or#?rland; 6i/ water; (/iroi/gA the air ; with us ; for me ; to them; myou; compound sentence; as, "Keep thy tongue from evil, and thy lips from among the people ; toward us. speaking guile." Here are two clauses united by and, which continues the sense and preThe preposition to is supposed to be omitted after verbs of giving, yield" give tliem bread," instead of give bread vents the repetition of the verb keep. ing, affording, and the like as, "I sought the Lord, an(/ he heard me, and delivered me from all my fo them. "Aflbrd him protection;" "furnish her with books." But this Here are three clauses combined into a sentence or period by the fears." idiom seems to be primitive, and not elliptical. From is sometimes suppressed ; i>s in this phrase, " He was banished the help of ami ; but a new verb is introduced in each, and the second connective prevents the repetition of the substitute he only. Icingdom." wise son hcareth bis father's instruction ; but a scorner heareth not Home, after a verb denoting motion to, is always used without to ; as, " are going home." rebuke." Here but joins the two clause-', but anew character i.^ the nomiAfter the attribute near, to isof^en omitted; as, "To bring them nearer tlic native to a distinct verb, in the second clause, which exhibits a contrast to truth." Massilloti. Aho akei adjoining ; as, " a garden adjoining a river." the first, and no word is omitted.
—
— We
—
—
—
—
—
;
— —
—
;
—
—
;
;
;
"A
We
GRAMMAR OF THE Rule XLV. — Connectives join
A
single words, which are the nominatives simple .sentence or clause contains an affirmation, a command or a to the same verb, expressed or understood, or words which tbl!ow a transi- question, that is, one personal verb, with its nominaiive and adjuncts. By tive verb or a preposition in tlie same case. Connectives also join verbs, adjunct^h meant any phrase or number of words added by way of modifyKxample: adjectives, and adverbs. ing or qualifying the primary words. Thus when it is said, "" Cicero was " Peter and John went into the an orator a "le latter a up Temple." words, of diffuse style, are the adof diffuse ,(/'<'.'" Connectives join attiibutes and modifiers; as, is wise art(/ virtuous." junct of orator, and the whole lorms a complete simple sentence, with one *' An orator pleads eloquently and plausibly." verb or athrmation. The connectives perform a very important office in abridging language, phrase contains no assertion, or does not amount to a proposition. by enabling us to omit words which must otherwise be repeated. Thus " when 1 say, I esteem religion and virtue," two affirmations," I esteem reCoinma. ligion, 1 esteem virtue," are actually included in the sentence. I. In general the parts of a simple sentence or clause are not to When several words or clauses succeed each other, it is not uncommon to
"He
A
Rule
omit the connective ; as, " We hear nothing of causing the blind to see, the be supaiated by any point whatevei- ; as, " Hope is necessary in every condition of life." But when a simple sentence is long, or contains a distinct lame to walk, the deaf to hear, the lepers to be cleansed." Paley, Evid. After the connective than, there may be and usually is an ellipsis of a phrase or phra.ses, modifying the alfirmation, it may be divided by a comma " There is none "To be very active in laudable puisuits, is the'distinguishing' characterverb, a noun, or other words as, greater in this house than as, " istic of a man of merit." I." Gen. xxxix. 9. That is, than 1 am. By revenging an injury, a man is but even with "Only in the throne will I be greater than thou." Gf(t. xli. That is, his enemy." In mo-it cases, where a short pause will give distinctness to than thou shalt be. ideas, a comma is well placed after an important word; as, " To mourn with" He loves his money more than his honor," that is, more than he loves out measure, is folly not to mourn at all, insensibility." The pause after measure, in this sentence, is essential to the sti his honor. ength of the expression. "The king of the north shall return and set forth a multitude greater "The idea of beauty is vague and undefined, dilferent in dilTerent minds, and diversified by lime or place." than the former." Dan. xi. 13. That is, than the former nniltitude. Rambler. " I will Rule II. When a connective is omitted between two or more words, That is, pull down my barns and build greater." Luke xii. whether names, adjectives, pronouns, verbs or modifiers, the place is .supgreater barns Sometimes other words may be suppressed without obscuring the sense ;;|Pl'6'^ by a comma ; as, " Love, joy, peace and blessedness are reserved for ' • _.. " It is better for me to die than to live." Jonri/i iv. That is, better than [the good." "The miseries of poverty, of sickness, of captivity, would. as, without hope, be insupportable." Rambler. " We hear for me to live. nothing of causto see, the lame to walk, the deaf to hear, the Precise rules for the ellipsis of words, in all cases, cannot be given. In ing the blind lepers to be "' " " " Ho who a writer will be governed by a regard to perspicuity, and omit nol;'^'^''"^*^'^ loves, serves and obeys his maker, is a piPaley. general, " and Industry steadily, prudently word, when the want of it leaves the .sense obscure or ambiguous, nori|°"^ "i™, vigorously pursued, leads to wealth." "David was a when it weakens the sti'ength of expression. But the following remarks biave, martial, enterpii^in" prince." "The most innocent pleasures are the most rational, the most and examples may be of use to the student. deUghtful and the 1. When a number of words are joined in construction, the definitive most durable." Rule 111. Two or nM)re simple sentences closely connected in sense, ilitiy be omitted, except before the tirst ; as the sun, moon and stars ; a house and' garden. So also when two or more attributes agree with the sanieii"'' dependent on each other, are .separated by a connna only ; as, " When name ; as a great, wise and good prince. But when attributes or names are our vices leave us, we flatter ourselves we leave them." "The temperate " That all man's pleasures are durable, because they are the particularly emphatical, the definitive should be expressed before each; as regular." duties of morality ought to be practised, is without the sun, the moon and the stars. difficulty discoverable, " because ignorance or uncertainty would immediately involve the world in 2. The repetition of names adds emphasis to ideas as, Christ, the power of God and the wisdom of God," is more emphatical than " Christ, the confusion and distress." Rambler. Rule (V. The sentence independent or case absolute, detached affirpower and the wisdom of God." mations or phrases involved in sentences, and other important clauses, must 3. An to two or moi'e nouns joined by a connective adjective belonging before the first; as »ii/ house and garden; separated from the other parts of a sentence, by a comma; as, " The may be omitted except ;^o()rf,jbe " Their interest and solicitation " has returned, his business being accomplished." The and actions. envoy 56. Nor qualities Rambler, envoy, havdoes it make any difference that the nouns are in different immbers, as our ing accomplished his business, has returned." " Providence has, I think, " The decision of adjectives have no distinction of number, the same word may be applied to displayed a tendeiness for mankind." Rambler. patronthe singular number and the plural as a age, who was but half a goddess, has been sometimes erroneous." Ibm. magnijicent house and gardens; " The sciences, after a thousand indignities, retired from the palace of pathis house and lands. But when a precedes the hrst adjective, this construe " It tion is not elegant. is, in many cases, apparent." Jbm. ronage." Ibm. Rule V. A comma is often required to mark contrast, antithesis, or re4. In compound sentences, a nominative pronoun or noun may be omitted markable points in a sentence, and sometimes very properly separates words before all the verbs except the first as, I love, fear and respect the magistrate instead of, 1 love, 1 fear and I The substitute may some- closely dependent in construction as, " a good man will love himself too respect. well to lose, and his neighbor too well to ivin, an estate by times be suppressed ; as the man I saw, fdi- the man whom 1 saw. gaming." " " It is 5. An adverb need not be harder to Prospciity gains friends, and adversity tries them." repeated with every word which it qualifies, avoid censure, than to gain applause." the connective and rendering it uimecessary ; as, he spoke and acted graceHere gracefully belongs to speaking as well as to acting. "Though deep, yet clear; though gentle, yet not dull." fully. Rule VI. A single name in apposition is not separated by a comma ; A preposition may be omitted after a connective ; as, he walked over the " the hill' and the valleys, that is, oner the as, Apostle Peter :" but when such name is accompanied with an advalleys. " it should be separated ; as, After like and near, to is usually omitted as, " Like three distinct Parmenio, a friend of Alexander's, hearpowers junct, in mechanics." Blackstone's Comm. 1. 2. That is, like to three. " Such ing the great offers that Darius had made, said, " Were I Alexander, I " So would " were I Paras would seemed to nearest the truth." I," replied Alexander, accept them." opinions approach That is, Enfield, 2. 59. to menio." the truth. nearest Rule VII. Terms of address, and words of others repeated, but not inLikewise- after join and adjoin, to is sometimes omitted; as, " a garden " troiluced as a quotation, are separated by a comma as, adjoining the river." Wherefore, Sirs, " be of good cheer." For is onutted by the poets after mourn. My son, hear the counsel of thy father." "Thus " He mourn'd no recreant hath sent me unto you." friend, no mistress coy." Beattie. shalt thou say unto the children of Israel, I ;
;
;
'
.
•
_
;
—
;
—
;
;
;
;
AM
Exodus.
PUNCTUATION.
Rule
Vlll.
Mollifying words and phrases, as however, nay, hence, be&c. are usually separated by a comma as, however, the task of criticism to establish principles." Rambler.
sides, in short, finally, forjuerly
"
It is,
.
;
Punctuation is the marking of the several pauses which are to be observed, in reading or speaking a sentence or continued discouise. By Semicolon. means of pauses, a discourse is divided into periods or complete sentences, and periods into clauses or simple sentences, and these, into The semicolon is placed between the clauses of a period, which are less phrases. A period is a sentence complete, making perfect sense, and not connectclosely connected than such as are separated by a comma. ed in constniction with what follo»-3. The pause after the First. When the first division of a sentence completes a proposition, so period is marked by a point [.] and in speaking, is distinguished by a cadence or fall of the as to have no dependence on what follows ; but the following clause has a voice. dependence on the preceding, the two parts are separated generally by a The members of a period, or clauses and phrases, are all more or less con- semicolon " It as, may be laid down as a maxim, that it is more easy to nected in sense, and according to the nearness of the connection, are mark- take away superfluities than to supply defects ; and therefore he that is culed by a comma [,] a semicolon [;] or a colon [:] because he has passed the nuddle point of virtue, is always accounted The comma is the shortest pause, and is often used to mark the construc- pable, a fairer object of hope, than he who fails by falhng short." Rambler. In tion, where very little interruption of voice is allowable this sentence the part of the sentence preceding the semicolon is a perfect ;
ENGLISH LANGUAGE. period in itself,
thor has added another division, by
on
It closes a discourse full point ; but the au- voice, and the longest pause used between sentences. of inference, and this is dependent also, or marks a completion of a subject, chapter or section. full point is used also after initials used alone, as after N. S. one has all that
and miglit have beeu closed with a
tlie first division.
The
autlior
way
1
when
The
proceeds— "The
perfec-^ for Style ; and after abbreviations, as Croc. Anglic, for Crocus An; the other, tion requires, and more, but the excess may wants the qualities requisite to excellence." Here the first division makes glicanus. To these may be added. a complete proposition but the antithesis begun by the numeral one, is not The dash [ ] which marks a break in the sentence or an abrupt turn; as, complete, without the last division. ** but O how fallen !" If thou art he ' to outEconomy is no disgrace ; for it is better to Uve on a little, than The interrogation point [.'] that closes a sentence which asks a question; live a great deal." " Be in one counselor of a as, " have but nevertheless, long, ye simple ones, will ye love sinipUcity ?" with many; peace The exclamation point [I] which is used after sudden expressions of surthousand." ad- prise, or other emotions; as, "O happiness Our being's end and aim !" " A friend cannot be known in prosperity ; an enemy cannot be hid The parenthesis ( ) and hooks [ ] include a remark or clause not essential versity." In general then, the semicolon separates the divisions of a sentence, to the sentence in construction, but useful in explaining it or introducing an when the latter division has a dependence on the former, whether the for- important idea. They mark a moderate pause, and the clause included is read with a depressed tone of voice ; as, on the latter or not. has a
New
be easily retrenched
li
—
;
—
How
m
'
!
I (
mer
dependence
"Know then this truth (enough for man to know) several members of a sentence have a dependence on for the same principal word, and the Virtue alone is happiness below." Pope. constitute distinct propositions, the semicolon It will be readily seen that the sentence is not at all dependent on the " may be used; as, Wisdom hath builded her house; she hath hewn out; parenthetical clause but the converse is not true, for that clause ha.s a deher seven pillars; she hath killed her beasts; she hath mingled her wine;; pendence more or less remote on the sentence. Thus, enough for man to she hath also furnished her table." Prov. ix. know, is not intelligible without connecting it with the parts of the sentence " If preceding and following. So in this passage any one pretends to be so Colon. sceptical, as to deny his own existence (for really to doubt of it, is manifestThe ly impossible) let him enjoy his beloved happiness." Locke, 4. 10, 2. The Colon is used when the sense of the division of a period is complete, included clause here is connected with the preceding part of the sentence, so as to admit of a full point, but something is added by way of illustration and it is a substitute for existence. " A brute arrives at a in a point of perfection that he can never pass as, With regard to the duration of the pauses, it may be observed that the to and were he five is few years he has all the endowments he capable of, comma, semicolon, colon and full point, may bear to each other the proporten thousand more, would be the same tiling he is at present." tion of one, two, four and six; and the interrogation point and exclamation Spectator, A''o. Ul. But point may be considered each as equal in time to the colon or period. no precise rule can be given, which shall extend to every case the length Period. of the pauses must depend much on the nature of the discourse, and their reThe Period or full point marks a completion of ths sense, a cadence of the spective proportions may be often varied to advantage by a judicious speaker^ Secondly.
j
When
each other, by means of a substitute clauses, in other respects,
;
;
;
:
;
DIRECTIOiVS FOR THE
PRONUNCIATION OF WOMD8. The principal sounds of the vowels are the first or long, and the second or short. X.
Examples of the second
Examples of the first or long sound.
i
u y
or short
gle, kle, pie, tie, zle
sound.
a in make, fate, grace. in me, mete, meter.
wrinkle, supple,
a in mat, ban, grand. e in bet, men, send,
e
in pine, bind, strife.
i
o u
in note, hold, port. in true, duty, rude.
in bit, pin, miss, in not, boss, bond, in dun, must, refund,
XH. The ns
XIII. y in pity, cycle, synonym, imply. The principal things to be regardet in learning the pronunciation of Eng lish words, are the accent and the sound of the vowel of the accented syllable. II.
This mark called an accent, designates the accented syllable. The accent placed immediately aiter a vowel indicates the vowel to have its first or long sound, either at the end or in tlie middle of a '
I.
IV.
An
lable,
unpointed,
short; as in hab'it, ten'et, con'duct,
ul'cer,
sym'bol; adapt', intend', predict', despond', abrupt'. Exceptions. 1. A pointed vowel has the sound designated by the point or as in full'ness, al'terable, book'ish, convey'. a before //, Id and Ik. in monosyllables or accented syllables, has its broad sound like aw; as in befall', bald'ness, walk'ing. 3. before // is long ; as in enroll'. V. An accent immediately after a diphthong, or after a syllable containing one. designates the accented syllable, but the diphthong has its proper sound as in renew', devour', avow', appoint', annoy'. VI. This mark called in Greek the grave accent, i)laced before a vowel, indicates that vowel to have its Itahan sound, as in ^ask, h*ar, faIn words of two or niore syllables, when no other acther, m^ask. cent is used, this designates the accented syllable ; as in \mswera-
points
;
2.
;
^
ble, b'argain.
VII.
Two
accents immediately before c, ( or s, indicate that c, t or s, in pronunciation, coalesces with the following vowel, and forui the sound of sh or zh, which closes the syllable, and of course the preceding vowel is short. Thus, vi"cious, ambi"tion, are pronounced vi'sion is pronounced vizh'un. vish'us, anibish'on before a, o and u. and in some other situations, is a close articulation, like k, and in the vocabulary of this work, whenever it is equivalent to k, it is marked thus Before e, i and y, c is precisely equivalent to s, in same, this ; as
C
C
E
otis in adjectives and their derivativesis pronounced as in gracious, pious, pompously. ce, ci. ti, before a vowel, have the sound of sA; as
in cetaceous, gracious, motion, partial, ingratiate, pronounced cetashus, grashus, moshon, parshal, ingrashate. But ti after a consonant have the sound of ch ; as in christian, bastion, mixtion, pronounced chrischan, baschan, raixchun. So in
;
as in
Ephe-
pronunciation,
both in the middle and at the end of words, are silent ; as in pronounced caut, baut, frite,
caught, bought, fright, nigh, sigh ni,
;
si.
—
Exceptions. In the following words gh are pronounced as/ cough, chough, dough, enough, hough, laugh, rough, slough, tough, trough. XV. When wh begin a word, the aspirate h precedes in pronunciation, as in what, wliifi', whale, pronounced hwat, hwif, hwale jc having precisely the sound of vo, French (ni. In the following words, i<> is silent who, whom, whose, whoop, whore. whole, XVI. /falter r has no sound nor use as in rheum, rhyme, pronounced reum, ryme. XVII. and g before n are silent ; as in know, gnaw, pronounced no, naw. XVIII. IK before r is silent ; as in wring, wreath, pronounced ring, reath.
w
;
—
;
K
XIX. B
after
XX. L
m is silent
before tank.
k
is
;
silent
as in dumb, numb, pronounced dum, num. as in baulk, walk, talk, pronounced bauk, ;
wauk,
XXI. Pli have the sound of as in philosophy. XXII. The combination n^ has two sounds; one, as in sing, singer The latter is the more close other, as in finger, linger, longer. /",-
in cedar, civil, cypress, capacity.
IX.
termination ;
nunshashon.
;
atal
sound
XXIII. The
;
but the distinction can only be learned by the ear. answering to kl, are pronounced as if written
letters c/,
clear, clean,
;
VIII.
mangle, man'acl.
broken, pro-
The combinations
XIV. Gh,
suitable.
a'bl,
negotiation, they may be pronounced ce, instead of she, to prevent a repetition of the latter syllable ; as pronunciashon, instead of pro-
cented syllable; as in discourse, encroach, bestow, enroll, courser,
is
which are pronounced
When
accent placed immediately after a consonant, or combination of consonants in the same syllable, indicates that the vowel of that sylif
able, manacle, cradle, ruffle,
puzzle,
combustion, digestion.
;
A
as in
Si after an accented vowel are pronounced like zh sian, confusion, pronounced Ephezhan, confuzhon. ci or ti precede similar combinations, as in
desyllable ; as in sa'cred, pre'cept, ri'ot. po'et, mu'sic, cy'press gra'de, reple'te, divi'de, explo'de, intru'de. horizontal mark or point over a vowel shows it to be long, and when no accent is found in the word, this mark designates the ac-
III.
;
rattle,
cra'dl, ruPfl, nian'gl, wrin'kl, sup'pl, puz'zl. e is usually silent ; as in token,
XI. In the termination en, nounced tokn, brokn.
in dry, defy,
Rule
In a lew words of foreign origin, e final forms a syllable ; urin syncope, simile. These are noted in their place. is silent after / in the following ternnuations, ble, cle, die, fle,
E final
ai'c
pronounced
the paltl ;
tlear, tlean.
Gl are pronounced as dl ; glory is pronounced diory. .XXIV. jVafter m, and closing a syllable, is silent as m hymn, condemn. XXV. P before s and t is mute as in psalm, pseudology, ptarmigan, pronounced sam, sudology, tarmigan. ;
;
The
unaccented and terminating words of more syllables than one // tinal answers the following purposes. is short, like in pity and ability. This letter, in the plural number of nouns 1. It indicates that the preceding vowel is long; as in hate, mete, and in the third person singular of the present tense of verbs, is dropped, and sire, robe, lyre abate, recede, invite, remote, intrude. ie substituted and followed by s. The termination thus foi-med is pronoun2. It indicates that c preceding has the sound of s, as in lace, ced iz as from is formed vanities, pronounced vanitiz; from the verb ; vanity, and that has of the sound as in charge, lance, g preceding j, to pity is formed pities, pronounced jutiz. page, challenge. 3. In proper English words, e final never forms a But when y hi monosyllabic verbs, and accented y in other verbs ends the syllable, and in most words, in the terminating unaccented syllabic, it is si- word, the termination its in the third person is pronounced izc ; as in flies lent and useless. Thus, motive, genuine, exandne, juvenile, from fly, defies from defy. So cries, both the verb and noun, is pronounced reptile, granite, are pronounced motiv, geuuin, examin, juve- crize. nil, reptil, granit. S has two sounds its proper sound as in sec, and that of z as in his. It letter
(
;
;
PRONUNCIATION OF WORDS. which English characters, according to our use of them, will not t, k, C, ami '/' as-j guages, Hut in regard to etymology, such exact expression final ; as in express with precision. rliiefs.j For exam|)le, in regard to the affinity of words, It has of sounds is not necessary. caps, streets, franks, hates, hopes, fates, flakes, breaths, wreaths. the sound of z, after 6, c followed by e final, d, g, gh, I, m, n, n, r, s and ss, it is wholly immaterial whether the Hebrew 3 is expressed by 6, v, or bh; both in novins th and whether T is expressed by d, th, or dh ; whether n is expressed by h or z, r, aw, ay, ew, ey, ow, oy, sh, ng, vocal, ch, oe, ie, verbs, and whether these letters end the word or arc followed by e final eh ; and whether is expressed by k, q, or qu. So in .\rabic it is immatep in robs, robes, races, rods, lides, rags, rag"es, toils, dreams, sighs, rains, bars, rial whether j^ is expressed by th or ds, and .^ by ^ or kh. waves, roses, passes, mazes, laws, days, news, preys, vows, joys, brushes, The Arabic vowel/aWia, I am informed, is differently pronounced by Die #ings, breathes, churches, foes, goes. Hies. Sc before e, i and y, have oidy the sound of the single letter s or c. Thus Persians and Arabians; the one nation pronouncing it as the English a in scene is pronounced ,scrte; scialist, siolist, mate; the other, generally, as a in fall. I have expressed it by a or aw. S before m, in the ternjinations, asm, earn, ism, has the sound of «,- as ni It was desirable that the Russ, Saxon, Swedish, and German words should be printed with the appropriate types; but the utility would have hardly .spasra, telesin, bapli-^ni. The pronunciation of the word which is radical or primitive in English is compensated for the expense of suitable fonts, and no essential inconveniThus the letter s is directed to lie pro ence can result from the want of them; the English characters being suffi(0 be observed in the derivatives. nounced as z in bniise, and tiiis direction is to be observed in all its deriva- cient to express the sounds of the letters, with all the exactness which etytives. Earth being directed to be pionounced erth, all its derivatives and mology requires. compounds are to follow the same direction. So freight is pronounced y'ra^e proper sound after the following; consonants_/", p, pirate, whether they end llie word or are followed by c iias its
ABBREVIATIONS EXPLAINED.
POINTED LETTERS. A
has the short sound of aw; as
€
in alter, what.
[tc] is the same as k ; as in cape, access. wl)etlier by itself or followed by i or y, lias the as in where, there, rein, ,
E
adv. con.
sound of a
has
tlie sound of the sound of has the sound of
I
QO
liave the sliort
e
long, or ee
;
exclam. n. Obs.
;
O has
stands
a.
as in machine.
French ou ; as in move. u; as in come, wonder. sound of oo ; as in hook. look. oo, or sliort
has tlie sound of oo ; as above, as in full, pull. have tlie Freiiidi sound, like sh ; as in chaise. has the sound of j. TH have their vocal sound as in thou, this. has the sound ofyu ; as in unite, use. pronounced ymiHe,yuse. In digraphs or combinations of vowels, of which one only is pronounced the mark over one vowel designates the sound, and the other vowel is quiescent as in bear, bijat, cilur.se, soul, blood, bow, low, crow, bestow.
for
„ „
for
,,
„
prep. pp. ppr.
,,
,, ,,
pret.
G
;
V
;
The digraphs ea,
ee, ei, ie
feet, seize, siege. Before the letter r,
there
have uniformly the sound of long
e
;
as in
meat j
a slight sound of e between the vowel and the consonant. Thus bare, parent, apparent, mere, mire, more, pure, pyre, are pronounced nearly baer, paerent, appaerent, me-er, mier, moer, puer, pyer. This pronunciation proceeds from the peculiar articulation r, and it occasions a slight change of the sound of n, which can be learned only by the ear. The vowels in unaccented syllables are either short, or have their is
they first sound slightly pronounced. Thus in the words produce, domestic, o has its first sound, but pronounced rapidly and without force. In syllables which have a secondary accent, the vowel is often long, and little distin-j guishable from that in syllables liaving the primary accent as in legislature, in which a in the third" syllable has its long sound. In syllables wholly unaccented, the sounds of the vowels are so rapidly uttered, that they cannot be designated by written characters; they are ail sounded nearly alike, and any attempt at a proper notation of such evanescent sounds serves only to perplex or mislead the learner. Words of anomalous pronunciation, not falling under the foregoing rulesare printed in an ortliography which expresses their true ;
|
pronunciation. z has the sound of the vocal th, in thou. In the expression of the sounds of foreign words in English character's there is often an insurmountable difficulty, as there are sounds, in some lan-
The Welsh
»
i.
1'.
I.
Jlrm.
•
for obsolete.
for preposition. for participle passive. for participle of the present tense. for preterit tense. for pronoun.
,,
Ch.
adverb. connective or conjunction. exclamation, or interjection. name or noun.
for
„
./Ir.
for
,,
,,
prffil.
for
„
__\J
OH
for adjective.
„
„
„
for
verb intransitive. verb transitive.
for
Arabic.
for for
Armoric. Chaldec.
Com.
„
for Cornish.
Dan. D. Eng.
„ „
for
Danish.
for
,,
for
Dutch or Belgic. England or English.
Eth. „ Fr. „ G. or Ger. „ Gr. „ Goth. „ Heb. ,,
for Ethiopic. for French.
Ice.
for Icelandic.
If. /'.
Lat. or L. Per. Port.
Russ.
Sam. Sans. ^<"^.
Sp.
„ „ ,,
„ „ „ „ „ „ „ „
Sw.
„
Syr.
„
TV.
„
for for
German. Greek.
for Gothic. for
Hebrew.
for Irish, Hiberno-Celtic, for Italian.
and Qaelip.
for Latin. for Persic or Persian. for Portuguese. for the
Russ language, or Russian.
for Samaritan. for Sanscrit. for
Saxon, or Anglo-Saxon.
for Spanish. for Swedish. for Syriac. for Welsh.
ALPHABETS. Hebrew
AN
AMERICAN DICTIONARY OF THE
ENGLISH LANGUAGE.
tions, as well as vowels, as, an tid, a timedenm ; and .V the first letter of the Alphabet in most for non liquet, it is not an gear, a year [See An.] of the known languages of tlie earth in evident and the judges voted by ballots the Ethio])ic however it is the thirteenth, This letter serves as a prefix to nmny Engthus marked. In stands for inscrijitions, lish words, as in and in the Runic the tenth. It is naturally asleep ; awake ; afoot or for ; Augustus ager, aiunt, aurum, arthe first letter, because it aground ; agoing. In some cases, this is gentum, &c. represents the contraction of the Teutonic ge, as in asleep, i is also used for n?!7io, or ante ; as in Anfii-st vocal soiuiil naturally formed by the human organs being the sound uttered aware, fi-oni the Saxon geslapan, to sleej) no Domini, the year of our Lord anno gewarian, to beware the Dutch getvaar. with a mere opening of the moutli witliout mundi, the year of the world ante meridSometimes it is a corruption of theSaxon iem, before noon and for arts, in artium constraint, and without any effort to alter as from on, the natural position or configuration of the again ongean, awake from on magister. master of arts. Among the Rowacian, to watch or wake. Before parti Hence this letter is iound in many l/C stood for anno ab urbe condilips. mans, words first uttered by infants ciples, it may be a contraction of the Celtic which ta, from the building of the city or Rome. words are the names of the objects with (ig, the sign of the participle of the present In algebra, a and the first letters of the altense as, ag-radh, which infants are first concerned, as the saymg a saying, ago phabet represent known quantities the Or this may be"a contraction of on, ing. last letters are sometimes used to breast, and the parents. Hence in Herepreor what is equally probable, it brew DX am, is mother, and 3N ah, is father. may have sent unknown quanthies. In Chaldee and Syriac abhn is father in proceeded from a mere accidental sound In music, is the nominal of the sixth note jiroduced by neghgcnt utterance. In in the natural diatonic scale Arabic, aba ; in Ethiopic, ab{ ; in Malacalled by some words, a may be a contraction of Guido la. It is also the name of one of yan and Bengalese, bappa ; in Welsh, tad, at, of in, to, or an. In some words of Greek whence we retain daddy ; in Old Greek and the two natural moods and it is the open in Gothic atta ; in original, a is privative, giving to them a note of tlie 2d string of the violin, by which Irisli, atfhm'r ; in Cannegative sense, as in anonymous, from a the other strings are tuned and regulated. taljrian, aita ; in Lapponic, nfki ; in Abysand ovofia name. In a or aa, abbreviations of the sinian, abba ; in Amharic, aba ; in Shilhic pharmacy, and Melindane, African dialects, baba : Among the ancients,^ was a numeral (
L
*fi- is
I
;
;
:
—
A
;
;
;
;
;
A
;
;
—
;
A
;
—
;
;
A
;
AAA
;
A
E
;
—
i
A
;
;
A
—
U
—
A
;
;
—
A
:
A
B
ABA
ABA
" a landlord has a hundred phraseology a year," " llie sum amounted to ten dollars a man," a is merely the adjective 07ic, and this mode of exprerfsion is idiomatic a ;
hundred in a [one] man.
[one]
year
ten dollars to a
;
in the
Doric orders.
anil
n. [Ch. nnx, or non a cuhit, a measure A measure of containing 5 or palms.] liquids among the Dutch equal to 288
pints.
Tus^
Encyc.
ABAN'DONER, n. One who abandons. ABAN'DONING, ppr. Forsaking or
ABACUS PYTHAGORICUS, The muhi- serting wholly renoimcing one's self without restraint. plication table, invented by Pvthagoras. ABACUS HARMONICUS, The structure ABAN'DONING, n. A forsaking ;
and disposition of the keys of a
AAM,
English
can
ABA
phnth above the bouhin
to the
de-
yielding
;
;
total de-
sertion.
tnusical
He hoped
instrument.
his past meritorious actions
might
ABACUS MAJOR, A trough used in mines, ovitweigh his present abandoning the thought of future actions. Clarendon. to wash ore in. Encyc. AB'ADA, n. A wild animal of Africa, of the ABAN'DONMENT, n. A total desertion a ;
•A'VRON'l€. ti. rert&ining to Aaron, the Jewish High P) icst, or to the priesthood of which he was the head. Doddridge. A2, In Engl;? h nranes, is an abbreviationof Abbey or Abbot as Ahbingdon, Abbey-
of a steer, or half grown colt, having its forehead and a third on the nape of the neck. Its head and tail resemble those of an ox, but it has cloven feet, like the stag. Cyc.
two horns on
;
town, Abbeyhill, Abbol-town. AB, a prefix to words of Latin origin, and a Latui preposition, as in abscond, is the Greek arto, and the Eng. of, Ger. ab, D. af, Sw. Dan. af, written in ancient Latin af It denotes from, separating or departure. AB, The Hebrew name of Father. SeeAbba. AB, The eleventh month of the Jewish civil year, and tlie firth of the ecclesiastical
state
size
tree.
1.
The ady
71.
A
;
a species of
Palm-
[See Adi/.]
ABANNI'TION,
[keb. Ch. Syr. Sam. n3N, to be lost, or destroyed, to perish.] The destroyer, or angel of the bottomless Rev. ix. pit. The bottomless pit. Milton
ABAD'DON,
of being forsaken.
ABAN'GA,
banishment
n.
[Low
Lai.]
one or two years
for
for
man-
Diet. [JVoi used.'] n. The perforating part of the trephine, an instrument used ui tre-
n.
slaughter.
ABAPTIS'TON,
Coxc.
panning.
ABA'RE, V. t. [Sax. abarian. See Bare.'] AB" AFT, adv. or prep. [Sax. eft or afl, again. To make bare to imeover. [jVb< in use.] Hence efler or cefter, after, subsequent ABARTICULA'TION, n. [See Articulate.] Sax. (cftan, behind in place to which In anatomy, that species of articulation or word be is prefixed beaflan, behind, and structure of joints, which admits of manithis word is corrupted into ab(ft.] fest or extensive motion called also diaryear, answering to a part of July, and a A sea-term signifying in or at the hinder of In the throsis and dearticnlation. part August. Syriac Calendar, Encyc. Coxe. ab is the name of the last summer month. part of a ship, or the parts which lie to- [ABAS', n. A weight in Persia used in wards the stern oppfised to afore. RelaAB' AGIST, n. [from abacus.] weighing pearls, one eighth less than the 2.
;
;
—
;
;
;
One
that
[JVot
casts
ABACK'
accounts
;
a
denotes further aft or towards the as abaft the mainmast. Abaft the that arch of the horizon whicl beam, is between a line drawn at right angles with the keel, and the point to which the stern is directed. It is often contracted
iised.]
and back. Sax. on bctc ; at, on or tow ards the back. See Back.] Towards the back on the back part backward. In seamen's language it signifies ;
;
when
pressed back against the mast by the wind. Taken aback, is when the sails are carried liack suddenly by the wind. Tjaid aback, is when the sails are purposely placed in that situation to give the ship Mariner's Diet. sternway. sails,
Mar.
into aft.
AB AGUN, word
ABAISANCE, [See AB.VLIENATE v.
t.
n. [Latin
from abigo, ab and
In law, one that feloniously drives aw-ay or steals a herd or numbers of cattle at once, in distinction from one that steals a sheep or two.
AB'ACUS
n. [L. abacus,
any thing
flat,
Crabbe.
Obeisance.] [See Alienate, Aliene
n.
laiv proceedings.
The
2.
;
t.
Encyc.
[Fr. abaisser, W. hais ;
Eng. base ; See Abash.]
things. To cast down to reduce \ow ; to de])ress ; to liunible ; to degrade applied to ;
transferriug of
the passions, rank, oflice, and condition in hfe.
Those that « alk in pride he Dan. iv. Whosoever exalteth himself Mat.
[See Alienation.]
xxiii.
Job,
xl.
Among the Romans, a cupboard orbufi^et. An instrument to facilitate operations in are drawn lines a counter on the lowest line, is one ; on the next, ten ; on the third, a hundred, &c. On the spaces, counters denote half the number of the line above. Other schemes are called by the same name. The name is also given to a table of numbers cast vip, as an abacus of addition and by analogy, to the art of numbering, ^ as in ICnighton's ;
on
this
i.
able to abase.
shall
be abased.
[Fr.
;
God shall be abandoned. Dr. .Masnn. To renounce and forsake to leave with a view never to return to desert as lost or desperate as to abandon a country to abandon a cause or party. To give up or resign without control, as when a peison yields himself, without res;
ABA'SEMENT,
n. ;
;
;
;
;
4.
;
;
over entirely. Verus abandoned the wiser colleague.
ABASH'ED, cares of empire to his
Gibbon
71. One who totally forsakes Obs. Karnes. relin(|Mishment. [JVot used.] ABAN'DONED, pp. Wholly forsaken orl deserted. 2. Given up, as to a vice ; hence, extremely wicked, or sinning without restraint ; irre-
ABAN'DON, or deserts.
•7.
Cha7Jibers. Bailey. act of humbling
The
or bringing low also a state of depression, degradation, or humiliation. ABASH', V. t. [Ileb. and Ch. tyU bosh, to be confounded, ov ashamed.] To make the s]>irits to fail to cast down the countenance to make ashamed to conas to abandon traint, to a propensity fuse or confoiuid, as by exciting suddenly a one's self to intemperance. Abandoned over and abandoned of are obsolete. consciousness of guilt, error, inferiority,&c. To resign to yield, relinquish, or give Afilton.. They h,'ard and were abashed. ;
3.
;
Chronicon. Encyc. In architecture, a table constituting the upper member or crowning of a colinnn and its capital. It is usually square, but sometimes its sides are arched inwards. The name is also given to a concave molding on the capital of the Tuscan pedestal ; and
is
xi.
abandonner ; Sp. and ABASED, pp. Reduced to a low state, Von. abandonar ; It. abbandonare ; said to humbled, degraded. be from ban, and donner, to give over to In heraldry, it is used of the wings of eagles^ the ban or proscription or fi'om a or ab when the tops are turned downwards toand bandiim, a flag or ensign.] wards the point of the shield or when the To forsake entirely as to abandon a wings are shut, the natural way of bearing them being spread, with the top pointhopeless euterprize. Wo to that generation by which the te^itimony ing to the chief of the angle. V.
of
;
3.
2 Cor.
;
grams.]
arithmetic
has, low,
;
The literal sense of abase is to toiver or depress, to throw or cast down, as used by Bacon, "to abase the eye." But the word is seldom lused in reference to material
;
1.
from
Latin and Gr. Abbassare ; Sp. baxo,
;
1.
p^N cause the ancients used tables covered with dust for nialdng figures and dia-
2.
It.
;
—
common
to property.
ABANDON,
as a
cupboard, a bench, a slate, a table or board for games; Gr. aSol. Usually deduced from the Oriental, abak, dust, be-
fowl in Ethi
Abbot.
title
ABALIENA'TION, title
low. 1,
Diet.
of property from one to a term of the civil law rarely or
the
never used in
two crowns.
basis
beauty and for a The its head.
its
V.
or the bottom
growing on
signifies statelv
—
ago, to drive.]
The name of a
sort of horn,
The cap of State, formerly To transfer AB'ACOT, another used by Enghsh Kings, wrought into the figure of
n.
remarkable for
oi)ia,
n.
ABACTOR,
Eurojieau carat.
ABASE,
;
is in
adv. [a
the situation of the
it
tively
calculator.
stern
much
A
claimabJy wicked.
pp. ;
Confused with shame followed by at.
;
confounded put
ABASHING,
to silence
ppr.
;
Putting to shame or
confusion.
ABASII'i^IENT,
n.
Confusion from shame.
[Little used.]
AB.\'S1NG,
ppr. bringing low.
Iliuribling,
ABAS'Sl,or ABASSIS,
n.
A
depressing, silver coin
of Persia, of the value of twenty cents, about ten pence sterUng. Encyc^
ABB
ABA ABATABLE, ted
That may or can be aba-«ABATTIS,
a.
V.
Port, bater, abater;
Heb. Ch.
£33n, to
Saxon has
abbattere
;
«'•
^a.*^
down,
to prostrate.
sunk to a in abate, and See Class Bd. No. 2.3, :?3.] is
To beat down in
battere,
VB'ATURE,
The
lost in
to pull down ; to destroy to abate a nuisance.
;
down.
I
Fr. abattre.]
In fortification, piles of trees, or branches of trees sharpened, and laid with the points outward, in front of ramparts, to prevent assailants from mounting the walls.
the participle gebatod, abated.
prefix
beat. 1.
;
i-lI-*A^b Rabata, to beat, and
>**•=>•
kabatiia, to beat
The
It.
beat; Syr.
;
abatir
S|i. batir,
;
A B D
any manner; as
n.
or trampled
Encyc. Grass beaten
[from abate.] a stag in passing.
down by
;
Encyc.
AB'BOTSHIP,
n. [Sax. ab or ob.] yarn for the warp.
ABB,
wool
ABBA,
Among
and
is
Sp. abreviar abbrevio,
Bishops bestow the title, by way of distinction, on the Bishop of Alexandria. To overthrow to cause to fail to frus Hence the title Baba, or Papa, Pope or as to abate a trate by judicial sentence great father, which the Bishop of Alexanwrit. To deject to depress as to abate the dria bore, before the Bishop of Rome. 4|AB'BACY, n. [from abba. Low Lat. abbasold. Oba.
break,
;
6.
1.
;
;
To
2.
The dignity, riglus and privileges of an abbot. It comprehends the government and revenues.
tia.]
add and nothing to abate. Pope 7. To cause to fail ; to annul. By the English law, a legacy to a charity is abated by
Nothing
to
a deficiency of assets.
ABBAT'ICAL.
^
\BBATIAL,
\
" „ Bclongmg .
,
AB'BE, n. M'by, [from abba.] In Connecticut, to remit, as to abate a tax. In a monastic sense, the same as an ahbol; ABA'TE, V. i. To decrease, or become less but more generally, a title, in Catholic as pain abates ; a in strength or violence coimtries, without any determinate rank, office or rights. The abbes are numerous storm abates. and generally have soyie literary attain2. To fail to be defeated, or come to naught; as a writ abates. ments they dress as academics or scholBy the civil law a legacy to a charity does not abate by lieficiency ars, and act as instructors, in colleges and of assets. or as tutors to young private families 3. In law, to enter into a freehold after tlie gentlemen on their travels and many of death of the last occupant, and before the them become authors. heir or devisee takes possession. AB;BESS, n. [from abba.] Blackstone. A female superior or governess of a 4. In horsemansliip, to perform well a down nery, or convent of nuns, having the ward motion. A horse is said to abate, or authority over the nuns which the abbots take down his curvets, when, working have over the Monks. [See Abbey.] upon curvets, he puts both his hind legs AB'BEY, n. ptu. abbeys, [from abba.] to the ground at once, and observes the A monastery or society of persons of either same exactness in all the times. sex, secluded from the world and devoted Encyc to refigion. The males are called monks. ABATED, pp. Lessened decreased and governed by an abbot; the females defeated remitdestroyed mitigated are called nuns, and governed by an abbess. ted overthrown. ;
;
;
;
;
mm
;
;
;
which
;
see.]
To shorten to make shorter by contracting the parts. [In tliis sense, not mucft used, nor often applied to material sub;
To shorten to abridge by the omission or defalcation of a part to reduce to a smaller compass as to abbreviate a ;
;
;
writing. 3. In matlicnialics, to reduce fractions to the , ,, to an abbey. lowest terms. Wallis.
8.
;
v. t. abbreviare ; [It. Port, abbreviar ; from L. fioni breris, short con-
;
brevio,
stances.]
;
deduct;
;
tracted from Gr. Rpa;tvj, from the root of
;
5.
id.
ABBREVIATE,
demand
or sorrow. 4.
from from
abreuvoir,
masons, the joint between stones in a wall, to be filled \vith mortar. Did. [I know not whelher it is now used.]
;
;
state of an abbot.
[Fr.
Sp. abrevar,
;
Among
Encyc.
Chaldee and Syriac, a Sans, figuratively a superior.
The 7!.
water
abreuver, to Gr. Bpf j;u.]
weavers,
Hence abb-wool
for the abb. n. In the
n.
ABBREUVOIR,
Diet.
To lessen ; to diniinisli to moderate as father, appen. to abate zeal ; to abate pride ; to abate a In the Syriac, Coptic and Ethiopic churches, to abate courage. ; it is a title given to the Bishops, and the 3. To lessen ; to mitigate ; as to abate pain 2.
the habit of the order; ant\ commendatory, such as are seculars, but obliged, when of The title is suitable age, to take orders. borne also by some persons, who have not the government of a monastery as bishops, whose sees were formerly abbeys.
[from beating or pulling,
down Rubbish.
[Fr. abattre, to beat
t.
baitre, to beat, to strike
Ar.
AB'ATIS,
as an abaiaUe writ or nuisance.
;
ABA'TE,
n.
}
;
ABBREVIATED,
pp. Shortened reduced abridged. In botany, an abbreviated perianth is shorter than the tube of the corol.
in length 2.
;
;
ABBRE'VIATING,
;>;)/•.
Martyn. Shortening; con-
tracting in length or into a smaller
com-
pass. n. The act of shorteuing or contracting. 2. A letter or a few letters used for a word as Gen. for Genesis U. S. A. for United States of America. 3. The reduction of fractions to the lowest terms. ABBRE'VIATOR, n. One who abridges or reduces to a smaller compass. ABBRE'VIATORS, a college of .seventy-
ABBREVI.VTION,
:
;
two persons whose duty
in tlie is
to
chancery of Rome, draw up the Pope's when granted,
briefs, and reduce petitions, to a due firm for bulls.
;
ABATEMENT, n. The act of abating the state of being abated. 2. A reduction, removing, or pulling down, as of a nuisance. 3.
Blackstone
Diminution, decrease, or mitigation, as of grief or pain.
sum withdrawn,
4.
Deduction, account.
3.
Overtlirow, failure, or defeat, as of a writ Blackstone The entry of a stranger into a freehold after the death of the tenant, before the heir or devisee. Blackstone.
G.
7.
In heraldni, a
of arms, for
mark of dishonor
stain
a coat
its dignity is debased on the character of the
wearer.
ABATER,
n.
The person
or thing that
abates.
ABATING,
ppr.
Pulhng down, diminish-
ing, defeating, remitting.
ABATOR,
n.
A
person
who
freehold on the death of the before the heir or devisee.
exist in Catholic countries. n. name given to monks, in contempt for their idleness.
A
ABBEY-LUBBER, ABBOT,
71.
ABBREVIATORY,
a.
tracting.
ABBRE VIATURE, ter
for
shortening
n. ;
Shortening, con-
A
letter or characan abridgment, a
compend.
[formerly ahbat, from abba, A. B. C.
The
three
first letters
of the alpha-
from Heb. jilnral nUN^ Also a bet, used for the whole alphabet. The superior or governor of an abbey or little book for teaching the elements of Sliak. monastery. Originally monasteries were reading. foiuided in retired places, and tlie religious AB'DALS, n. The name of certain fanatics hail no concern with secular aftairs, bein in Persia, who, in excess of zeal, sometimes run into the streets, and attr'inpt to But the entirely subject to the prelates. kill all they meet who are of a diflerent abbots possessing most of tlie learning, in and if they are slahi for their religion ages of ignorance, were called tioni their seclusion to aid the cluirches in op|>osing madness, they think it meritorious to die, heresies monasteries were lijuudcd and by the vidgar are deemed martyrs. latinized abbas, or
;
in
whicli
liy
some
as from an
These instit\itions were snj)pressed in England by Henry VIII.; but they still
enters into a
last i)ossessor.
Blackstone.
;
abbots became aml)itious and set themselves to acquire wealth and honors; some of them assumed
the vicinity of cities
;
tlie
the miter, threw ott" their dependence on the bishops, and obtained seats in parlia ment. For many centuries, ])rinces and noblemen bore the title of abbots. At present, in catholic coiuitries, abbots are regular, or such as talcc the vow, and \\ear
AB DEIilTE, a mariliiue
n.
An
town
in
Encyc. inhabitant of Abdera, Thrace. Democrittis
so called, from being a native of the As he was given to laughter, foolplace. ish or incessant laughter, is called abdeis
rian.
ABOIeANT, a. [See Abdicate.] renouncing.
Wliitaker.
Abdicating ;
ABE
A B D AB'DICATE,
V.
[L. abdico
t.
;
ab and
dieo,
to dedicate, to bestow, but the literal ])rimary sense ot'dico is to send or thrust.] 1. In a g-enfraZ sense, to relinquish, renounce, or abandon. Forster. Q.
To abandon an a formal red
it,
without
office or trust, resignation to those
who
or without their consent
;
conferalso to sur-
abandon a throne, without a formal
render of the crown. Case of Ki7}g James, Blacksione.
argentine, atherine, herring and carp.
ABDOMINAL
ABE
mullet,
and in morals, a fault, a deviation fiom rectitude. Brown. error, mistake
flying fish, Enci/c.
or INGUINAL RING, an oblong tendinous ring in both groins, through whicii pass the .sjiermstic cord in men, and tlie round ligaments of
women.
tlie iiferns in
the
Cowper.
[L. abduco, to lead away, of at and duco, to lead. See Duke.] 3. To relinquish an oflice before the expira- To draw from ; to withdraw, or draw to a tion of tlie time of service. different part ; used chiefly in anatomy. Case of Diocletian, Gibbon; also Case of ABDU'CENT, a. Drawing from, pulling
Paul 4.
To
reject
;
Core's Russ.
III.
to renoiuice
Burke.
right. 5.
To
cast
cate
away;
our mental
renounce; as to abdi-
to
faculties.
[Unusual.']
J. P. Smith. In the civil lata, to disclaim a son and expel him from the family, as a father; to disinlierit during the Ufe of the father. Encyc. AB'DI€ATE, V. i. To renoimce to abandon to cast off; to relinquish, as a right, power, or trust. 6.
;
;
Though a ICing may abdicate for his own person, he cannot abdicate lor the monarchy. Burke
AB'DICATED, pp. Renounced;
rehnquish-
ed without a formal resignation; abandoned. ABDICATING, ppr. ReUnquishing with out a formal resignation abandoning. ;
The act of abthcating n': the abandoning of an office or trust, witli out a formal surrender, or before the usual or stated time of expiration.
ABDICA'TION,
2.
A
back used of those muscles which pidl back certain parts of tlie body, for sepaThe rating, opening, or bending tlieni.
3.
;
abandon as a
to
;
casting off; rejection.
abducent
opposed
called abductors,
muscles,
to the adducent
VVandermg, strayuig from [Rarely used.] n. [L. abeirntio.]
The
act
;
t.
('.
way.
of wandering fiom the right way; deviation from truth or moral rectitude deviation from a strait line. In astronomy, a small apparent motion of the fixed stars, occasioned by the progressive motion of light and the earth's annual motion in its orbit. By this, they sometimes appear twenty seconds distant from
to the abdo-
;
risrht
ABERRATION,
Med. Diet.
AEiJOM'INOUS, a. Pertaining men having a large belly.
ABDU CE,
;
ABER'RANT, a.
RING,
their true situation. Lunier. In optics, a deviation in the rays of light, when inflected Vjy a lens or speculum,
by which they are prevented from uniting in the same point. It is occasioned by the figure of the glass, or by the unequal re-
are
muscles or adduc
Med. Diet. frangibility of the rays of light. Encyc. In a general sense, the Crown of abeiration, a luminous circle surrounding the disk of the sun, depending on the aberration of its rays, by wliicli its the broken parts recede from each other ajipareut diameter is enlarged. Cyc. 3. In logic, a kind of argumentation, called ABER'RING, part. a. Wandering going Broum. astrav. by tlie Greeks apagoge, in which the major is evident, but the minor is not so ABERRUNCATE, i>. t. [L. arerrunco.] To As to extirpate utterh . clear, as not to require farther proof. pull up by the roots Diet. in this syllogism, "all whom God absolves [Xot used.] are free from sin God absolves all w ho ABET', c. t. [Sax. hetan, gebetan ; properly to push forward, to advance ; hence to are in Christ ; therefore all who are in Christ are free from sin." amend, to revive, to restore, to make betEncyc. 4. In law, the taking and carrying away of a ter; and applied to lire, to increase the Hence to flame, to excite, to promote. child, a ward, a wife, &c. either by fraud, aid by encouraging or instigating. Hence persuasion, or open violence. in Saxon, " Na bete nan man that fy'r." Blackstone ABDUCTOR, n. In anatomy, a muscle Let no man bet, [better, excite] the fire, LL. Ina. a or back which serves to withdraw, pull 78.] certain jiart of the body as tlie abductor 1. To encourage by aid or countenance, but " To now used in a bad sense. outwards. the tors.
ABDUCTION,
n.
act of drawing apart, or carrying away 2. In surgery, a species of fracture, in which
;
;
;
;
ocuii,
which
eye
pulls abare,
chiefly
T
abet an opinion," in the sense of suppoti, abaran.] is used by Bishop Cumberland but this Spenser. use is hardly allowable. hide ; ab and ABEA'RANCE, n. AB'DITIVE, [from abear, now disused do.] Having the power or quality of from bear, to carry.] Behavior, demeanor. 2. In law, to encourage, counsel, incite or assist in a criminal act. Diet. [Little used.] Blackstone. hiding. [Little used.] n. The act of aiding or encouraging AB'DITORY, n. place for secreting or ABECEDA'RIAN, n. [a word formed from ABET', in a crime. [JVot used.] Cowel. preservi)ig goods. the first four letters of the alphabet.] One /!. The act of n. [L. per ABET'MENT, AB'DOMEiSf, or abetting. who teaches the letters of the alphabet, or pp. Incited, aided, encourhaps abdo and omentum.] a learner of the letters. i. The lower belly, or that part of the body aged to a crime. a. Pertaining to, or formed which hcs between the thorax and the TING, ppr. Counselling, aiding or by the letters of the aljihabet. bottom of the pelvis. It is lined with a encouraging to a crime. On or in bed. adv. One who abets, or incites, n. membrane called peritoneum, and eon- ABED', or [See Bed.] n. An obsolete ABE'LE, ABEL-TREE, or aids tains the stomach, hver, spleen, pancreas encourages another to commit a name of the white poplar. [See Poplar. crime. In treason, there are no abettors; kidneys, bladder and guts. It is separated or A LIANS, all persons concerned bemg principals. Irom the breast internally by the diaITES, in Church history, a sect in Africa ABEVA€UA'T10N, ?i. [ab and c acvMtion.] phragm, and externally, by the extremi Ill medicine, a ])artial evacuation of morOn its outer surface it is which arose in the reign of Arcadius ties of the ribs. but lived in continence, bid humors of the body, eitlier by nature they married, divided into four regions the epigastric, after the manner, as they pretended, of or art. the umbilical, the hypogastric and lumbar. Cyc. Abel, and attempted to maintain the .sect .\Bl:;Y'ANCE, n. ]iron. abayance. [Norm. Qitincy, by adopting the children of others. abbaiaunce, or abaizance, in expectation ; 2. In insects, the lower part of the animal Enryc. united to the corslet by a thread. In some boyance, expectation. Qu. Fr. buyer, to trivial name of a sjieA'BELMOSK, n. gape, to look a long time with the mouth species, it is covered w ith wings, and s The cies of hibiscus, or Syrian mallow. case. It is divided mto segments and open to stand looking in a silly manner a herbaceous three or rises on stalk, plant It. bndare, to amuse one's self, to stand of which are small rings, on the sides " tenere a out or three .side two four feet, sending bada," to keep at bay ; trifling spiracles by which the insect respires. branches. The seeds have a musky odor, D. .Yat. Hist "Starabada," to stand trifling. If
AB'DI€ATIVE, abdication.
Causing or implyin
a.
[LAttte used.] a. [L. abdo, to
Diet.
ABEA'R, bear
;
V.
[Sax. to behave. Obs. t.
;
;
A
ABDOMEN,
ABETTED,
ABECEDARY,
ABET
ABETTOR,
BEL
ABELONIANS
ABE
:
—
A
;
;
;
ABDOMINAL, o.
Pertaining to the lowei
bellv.
In re. plu. abdominals. ichthyology the abdominals are a class of fish whose ventral tins are j)laced behind the to tlie pectoral, and whicli belong division of bony fish. The class contains nine genera the loche, sahnon, pike
ABDOM'INAL,
—
(whence
its
name,
noaxoi,) for
which rea-
son the Arabians mix them with coffee.
ABER'RANCE, ABER'RANCY,
}
n.
aberro.
[L. abcrran.^
from of ab I to wander and erro, to wander.] A wandering or deviating from the right way, hut rarely used in a literal sense. I a figurative sense, a deviation from truth. ;
Bd
are the radical letter.s, it seems to belong See Bay.] to the root of abide. In expectation or contemplation of law. The fee simple or inheritance of lands and tenements is in abeyance, when there is no person in being in whom it can vest ; so that it is in a state of expectancy or waiting until a proper person shall appear.
A B
A B
1
A B L
J
the consequences, as to abide by the event, Thus if land is Iisased to a man for life, that is, to be fixed or permanent in a parretiiaiiidoi- to another for years, the reticuhir condition. mainder for years is in abeyance, till the Blackstone. ABI'DER, ?i. One who dwells or continues. death of the lessee, for life.
ABHOR', to set
v.t.
up
ah and horreo, to look shiver or shake dl"
[L. abhorreo,
bristles,
hate extremely, or with contempt to Sliak. lothe, detest or abominate. Ps. xxii. 24. Amos 2. To desi)ise or neglect.
residence
;
Ps. Ixxxix.
cast off or reject.
ABHOR'RED,
tinue
tested.
1.
ABHORRENCE,
)
ABHOR'REiNCY,
S
n.
Extreme
hatred, de-
2.
[Vr.habilelf ; ll.abilita; Sp. h. habititas, ableness, fitness,
ABJU'RER,
with abliorrcuce. Contrary, odious, inconsistent with, ex " Slan pressive of extreme opposition, as, In tier is abhorrent to all ideas of justice." this sense, it should be always followed
—
by to abhorrent from the English idiom.
ABHORRENTLY, adv. ABHOR'RER,
n.
is
ABLAC'TATE, and
One who
Tliey gave after their ability to the work. Ez. ii. a aversion, 3. 3Ioral power, depending on the will in Isaiah metaphysical and theological sense. "An abhor- 4. Civil or legal |iower the power or right to do certain things, as an ability to trans
abhors.
—
Ixvi. for the object
ring to
A'BIB,
of hatred
—
all flesh."
;
to ])roduce the first or early fruit
grown car of corn.] first month of the Jewish ecclesiastical It begins at the year, called also Nisan. spring equinox, and answers to the latter a'^N, a tun
The
March and beginning of
part of
1.
2.
April.
Its name is derived fi'oia the full growtl of wheat in Egypt, which took place an cieiitly, as it does now, at that season.
Cyc a. [L* ab and intcstawithout a will, fi-om in am W. tyst ; Arm. bear witness
ABINTESTATE, tus
—dying
testor, to
breast.
and lac, milk.
weaning of a
ancient gardeners, a Tnethod of grafting in which the cion was not separated fi-oiu the ]iarent stock, till it wa.s united to that in which it was infirmly
Among
ablnqucatio,
from
laijucar, a roof or covering.] laying bare tlje roots of trees to expose thcin to the air and water a practice among gardeners.
—
A
[h.ab and lalio, a carry-
n.
ing-]
carrying away. In medidne, the taking from the body whatever is hurtful evacuations in general. In rhimistry, the removal of whatever is finished or no longer necessary. ;
AB'LATIVE,
will.
To throw away;
[L. ab
Lacto, to suckle.] In medical autltors, the child from the breast.
ABI^.V'TIUN,
witness. See Test and Testify.] In the aril law, inheriting the estate of one v.t.
n.
ab and
A
;
dying without a
from ab
;
tlie
serted. This is now called grafting by approach or inarching. [See Graft.] Lncyc.
test,
ABJEC'T',
[L. 'ablaelo
ABLAQUEATION, "[L.
—
fir property or dis])Ose of effects ability It is opposed to disability. to inherit.
[Hcb. 3N, sweUing, protuberant
?i.
Ch. 33X,
t.
To wean from
ABLACTATION,
With abhorrence
ABHOR'RING,^^;-. Having great As a noun, it is used detesting.
v.
lac, milk.]
[Little u.sed.]
;
not agreeable to
Shah.
upon oath;
»t. One who abjures. ppr. Renouncing upon oath; disclaiminir with solemnity.
mind, and acquired qualifications. Franklin. Riches, wealth, substance, which are the means, or which furnish the poiver, of certain acts. doing
algure
;
ABJURING,
standing;
Hating, detesting, struck
en-ors
Renounced pp. solemnly recanted.
is
ABHORRENT, a.
;
;
ABJURED,
;
deny upon
;
as to abjure reason. To recant or retract. To banish. [.Vo? used.]
Haioeia.
;
to
abjuro,
To renounce upon
to reject 3.
n. ;
[L.
and juro,
to swear.] oath to abandon as to abjure allegiance to a prince. To renounce or reject with solemnity ;
;
from habeo, to have or hold.] Physical power, whether bodily or men tal natural or acquired force of under-
t.
oath, from a6 1.
to con- 4.
skill in arts or science. Ability active power, or power to perform ; as o]iposed to capaciti/, or power to receive. In the plural, abilities is much used in a like sense and also for faculties of the
[F. ablatif; h. ablativo ; L. ablafus, from avfero, ti>
carry away, of at and /fro.] ABI'DE, V. {. pret. and part, abode. [Ar. ^x j 1 ABJECT, a. [L. abjectus, from abjicio, to' A word applied to the sixth case of nouns in the Latin language, in which case are used throw away, from 06 nndjacio, to throw abada, to be, or exist, to continue W. W(jrds when the actions of a low Sunk to condition to 1. Sax. bidan, abidnn; Sw. bida ; applied pci carrying away, hod, to be or taking from, are signified. sons or things. Hence, D. beiden ; Dan. bier; Russ. vitayii, to 2. Worthless, mean, despicable, low in esti- Ablative altsolute, is when a word in that dwell, rest, contiiuie, stand firm, or be is without or in mation, case, for hope regard. independent, stationarv construction, of anytime indefinitely. Class the rest of the sentence. AB'JEt'T, n. A person in the lowest con Bd. No Obs.
out.
Spenser.
;
;
;
7.]
1.
2.
3.
To rest, or dwell. Gen. xxix. 19. To tarry or stay for a short time. xxiv. 55. To
ABJECT EDNESS, picable condition.
continue permanently or in the same be firm and innnovable. Ps
ABJECTION,
state to cxix. 90. ;
•I.
To
remain, to continue. Eccles. viii. 15.
ABIDE, for
;
V.
t.
To
wait for
Acts, xxvni. 31
To
To 3.
To
tlic
to
be prepared
;
Acts, xx. 23
n.
n.
A
ABLE, 1.
hence a low state adv.
;
;
servilelv. n. The
meamiess
;
state
man
to bear patiently.
" I cannot abide his impertinence." This verb when intransitive, is followed bv in or at before the i>lace, and with before the person. "Abide u-ith me «f Jcrusa lem or in this land." Sometimes by on
—
2.
of being
;
;
;
;i
h.-ivitig
Having strong or imusual powers of mind, or intellectual qualificafions ; as an Provide out of
;!.
;,
A
ahlez.] ;
able minister.
n.
that is their lives by abjuring the realm the sv.ord shall abide on his cities ; aiuj by takijig an oath to quit the kingdom forin the sense ol'ivait, by for, abide/or jne. ever. Hosea, iii. 3. Sometunes by by, abide 61/ 2. rejection or denial with solemnity the crib. Job, xxxix. total abandonment; as "an abjuration of In general, abide by signifies to adhere to, heresy." maintain, defend, or stand to, as to aliidc \BJURATORY, a. Containing abjuration. by a promise, or by a fi-iend or to sufier Encyc.
Norm,
;
;
Joel x.
;
abstract subjects.
servility.
[See Abjure.] The act of jibjuring a renunciation upon oath as " an abjuration of the realm," In which a person swears to leave the coiuiIt is used alst try, and never to return. for the oath of reiuinciation. Formerly in England, felons, takuig refuge in church, and confessing their guilt, couhi not be arrested and tried, but might sav(
[L. kahilis
—
meanness of
In a contemptible
a. a'bl.
Having physical power sitfficient
competent power or strength, bodily or mental as a man able to perform miUtary service a child is not able to reason on
of being cast
state
baseness.
ABJURATION, 1.
Ps. xxxv.
A very low or des-
[Little used.]
ABJECTNESS, abject;
indignation of the Lord.
bear or endtn-e;
;
nor; nieanlv ;
cntlure or sustain. abide
away sjiirit
ABJECTLY,
to await.
Bonds and afflictions abide me. [For is here understood.] 2.
and despicable.
dition
Gen;
Kvcry man I.
5.
Israel able
men.
Ex.
xriii. ;
or
shall give as lie is able.
Dcut. xvi. Having competent strength or fortitude. He is not able to sustain such pain or alfliction
Having sufiicient knowledge or He is able to speak French. .She
G.
all
Having large or competent property simply having property, or means.
is
skill.
not able to play on the piano.
Having competent moral power or
quali-
fications.
An
illeai'iinato
son
is
not aile to take by mher-
if.inre.
\'BLE-BODIED,(i. Having a sound, strong body, or ;i body of competent strength for In marine language, service. skill in seamauship.
it
dene tcs
Mar. Did.
v
ABO -
or
AB'LEN, water
AB'LET,
AB'LEPSY, sight
;
Ability of body or
)i.
vigor
;
small fresh
n.
[Gr.
Want
otf^t^-ia.]
ABO'DING, of
superl.
of able. to let out.]
[L. abloco, ab let out ; to lease. t.
To
ABLOCA'TION,
A letting
n.
and
Calvin.
;
wash
to
;
or lua,
Ix. lo
water.]
clean
Washing
cleansing by water or U-
;
[Litlk used except as a noun.] n. In medicine, that which thins, purifies or sweetens the blood. quids.
AB'LUENT,
Qiiincy.
[See Diluent and Abstergent.] n. [L. abhitio, from ab and luo or lavo to wash.] 1. In a general sense, the act of washing a cleansing or purification by water. 2. Apjjropriately, the washing of the body as a preparation for religious duties, enjoin-
ABLUTION,
;
ed by Moses
;uid
practiced in
still
many
countries. 3.
(^uincy.
In medicine, the washing of the body fxas by baths or internally, by
fernally,
;
diluting fluids. 5.
The cup
to
void;
Isa.
idols.
Tim.
prognosticaaboleo
deny.
\_Mt used.]
[L.
W.
;
;
A
;
niuiciation
;
);.
One who
denies, re-
nounces, or opposes any thing. Saytdys. n. [L. abnodo ; ab and The act of cutting away nodus, a knot.] the knots of trees. Diet.
ABNODA'TION,
ABNORMTTY,
n.
ab and norma, a fiirmity.
[L. al»o;»()s, irregular; rule.]
[hittle used.] a. [L.
ABNORM^OUS,
Irregularity
;
To
ii.
This sense
i.
is
Diet.
;
the genus, anas.
ABORIG'INAL,
abolish
not
a.
[L. ab and origo, orighi.
;
;
;
common.
n. The act of annuldestruction. Hooker. n. abolishun. The act of or the state of being abolish abolishing ed an annulhng abrogation utter des truction; as the abolition of laws, decrees ordinances, rites, customs, debts, &c. The application of this word to persons and To things, is now umisual or obsolete. abolish persons, canals and senses, the Ian guage of good writers formerly, is no lon-
VBOL'ISHMENT, ling
;
abroeation
;
ABOLI "TION, ;
;
;
Aborigincd.]
ABORSEMENT, Abortion.
hateful 2.
o.
detestable
;
[See Abomitiate.] Very lothesome.
1.
2.
Levit. vii
The
3. quality or
;
;
1
sinfidly.
Kings
;
2.
ABOM'INATE,
V. t. [L. abomino, supposed to be formed by ab and omen ; to depre- 3. cate as ominous ; may the Gods avert the
4.
evil.]
hate e.xtremely
to
;
abhor
;
VBOM'INATED, tested
;
pp.
abhorred.
Hated
The fetus brought forth before fectly formed. a. Brought forth in ture state failing, or before it is comjdete.
xxi.
sively.
To
usually deduced from ab and orior.] The act of miscarrying, or producing tune, or before the fetus is perfectly formed. In a figurative sense, any fruit or produce that does not come to maturity, or any thing which fails in its progress, before it is matured or perfect, as a design or pro-
ABOR'TIVE,
vulgar language, extremely, exces
In
[JVotimise.] Btirton. n. [L. ato?'
ject. n.
state of being very odious; hatefulness. ABOMTNABLY, adv. Very odiously de
testably
All abortion.
young before the natural
;
JABOM'INABLENESS,
2.
»i.
ABORTION,
Milton.
Unclean.
orior.]
Herbert.
ABORT',
This word is apphcable to whatever is odious to the mind or offensive to the
3.
n.uborsment. [See Abort.]
[JVot in use.]
ABORT', V. t. [L. aborto ; ab and ortus, To miscarry in birth. [JVb< in use.]
ger legitimate.
de-
abnormis, supra.]
Edwards, the black-belhed whistling duck. This fowl is of a reddish brown color, with a sort of crest on its head the belly is spotted with black and white. It belongs to
—
;
Hammond.
self-denial.
AB'NEGATOR,
ABO'RD, v.t. To accost. [M'otinuse.] ABO'REA, n. A species of duck, called by
;
;
abnego, to deny, net;o ; naca, nacau ; Sw neka, to deny W. nac, no Eng. nay; L. Ir. itach, not.] denial a renee, not n.
from ab and
Hall from
;
annul; to abrogate;
senses.
To
v. I.
ABNEGATION,
Shak.
[Fr.
.
ability.
AB'NEGATE,
See Border.] Literally, arrival, but used for first ajipcarance, manner of accosting, or address, but not an word. English Chesterfield.
secret
71.
See Origin.] death, 2 First original jiriniitive aboriginal people To are the first inliabitants of a country. abolish posterity, in the translation of PauAboriginal tribes of America. President Smith sanias, Lib. 3. Ca. 0. is hardly allowable. ABOL'ISHABLE, a. That luay be annul- ABORIG'INAL, n. An original, or primitive inhabitant. The first settlers in a country led, abrogated, or destroyed, as a law, rite, are called aboriginals ; as the Celts in Eucustom, &c. rope, and Indians in America. ABOL'ISIIED,;);). Annulled; repealed; abPresident Smith. rogated, or destroyed. ABORIGINES, n. plur. Aboriginals but ABOL'ISHER, n. One who abohshes. ABOLISHING, ppr. Makuig void; aimul- not an English word. It may be well to let it pass into disuse. [See ling destroying. ish
ABOM'INABLE,
given to the laity without conseJohnson with great
cration, in po|)ish churches. A'BLY, adv. In an able mamier
;
ABO'RD,
—
Pope has used ablution for the water used in cleansing.
6.
To make
;
In chimistry, the purification of bodies by the affusion of a proper liquor, as water to dissolve salts.
4.
A
[from bode.]
Presentiment
applied chiefly and apjjropriately to established laws, contracts, rites, customs and institutions as to abolish laws by a repeal, actual or virtual. To destroy, or put an end to; as to abol-
to hire.
;
n.
tion.
loco,
ABLU'DE, i'.(.[L. abludo, ab andludo, to play.] To be unlike to differ. [JVot used.] Hall. AB'LUENT, a. [L. abluo, to wash away luo, or lavo,
n.
Dryden.
ABOL'ISII, V. t. [Fr. abolir; " L. ab and oleo, olesco, to grow 1.
V.
ABO
To be an omen.
anticipation of soiuething future.
bliiulnes.s.
AB'LOCATE,
v.i.
ABO'DEMENT,
mmd
capability.
;
A'BLER, and A'BLEST, Conip. and
ab and
ABO'DE,
the bleak.
fisli,
A'BLENESS, force
ABO A
n.
to detest. Southern.
Failing in
its
it
is
per-
an imma-
to naught,
coming
miscarrying; pro-
effect;
ducing nothing as an abortive scheme. Rendering abortive as abortive gulf, in Milton, but not legitimate. Pertaining to abortion as abortive vellum, made of the skin of an abortive calf ;
;
;
5. In botany, an abortive flower utterly; defalls without jiroducing fruit.
That which
is
Encyc. one which
Martyn.
brought [hittle used.] Diet. ppr. Abhorring ; Iiatin; ABOR'TIVE, forth or l>orn prematiu'ely. [LAttle used.] board. See Board.] extremely. Within a ship, vessel, or boat. ABOMINA'TION, n. Extreme hatred de ABOR'TIVELY, adv. Immaturely ; in an manner. untimely To SCO aboard, to enter a ship, to embark. testation. Su-ift^ n. The state of being To fall aboard, to strike a shi]j's side. 2. The object of detestation, a common signi- ABOR'TIVENESS, abortive a faihng in the progress to perMoard main tack, an order to draw a corner fication in scripture. fection or maturity a failure of producing of the main-sail down to the chess-tree. The way of tlie wicked is an abomination to the intended eflect. the ,._ Lord. Prov . ._ Encyc. Mar. Diet. n. [from bode.] An omen. 3. Henc"e,'defilement, pollution, in a phvsicaJlJABORT'iMENT, n. An untimely birth. Irregular
ABOARD,
ABOMINATING,
deformed,
;
adv. [a
n.
is
and
;
;
;
ABO'DANCE, [Ao/
pret. ?i.
in a i)lace ter time. 2.
A
Johnson.
used.]
ABO'DE, ABO'DE,
;
c^f
abide.
[See Abide.] Stay: continuance residence for a longer or shor-
place of continuance
;
a dwelling
;
a
habitation.
To make abode, to dwell or reside. ABO'DE, v.t. [SeeBorfe.] To foreshow.
3.
Sliak.
sense, or evil doctrines and which are moral defilements,
|)ractices,
idols
and
The called abominations. idolatry, Jews were an abomirialion to the Egy|.)tians; arid the sacred animals of the Egyptians were an abomination to the Jews. The Roman army is called the abomination of desolation. Mat. xxiv. l.'J. are
is an object of extreme an abomination.
In short, whatever hatred,
is
called
Bacon. v.i. [L.abundo ;Fr. abonder; It. abbondare ; Sp. abundar. If this word is from L. unda. a wave, the latter has probably lust its first consonant. Abound may naturally be deduced from the Celtic. Ann. fonn, plenty; fo7ina, to aliound; W. to produce, to generate, to abound, fyniai'c, from fwn, a source, the root of fynon. L. fu7ts, a fountain.]
ABOUND',
To have or possess in great quantity; to be copiously supplied; followed by icith or in ; as to abound ivith provisions to abound in good things. To be in great plenty to be very prevalent. Where sin abounded, grace did much more abound. Rom. v.
1.
ABO
ABO
A B G 4.
The weight is above a tun. More in degree in a greater degree. Hannaniah feared God above many. Neh.
ABRIDGE',
vu. 2.
1.
;
;
V.
abridj', [Ft. ahrigtr,
t.
from
Gr. ^^axvf, short, or its root, from the root of break or a verb of that fam.ily.] To make shorter to epitomize ; to contract by using fewer words, yet retaining used of writings. the seiise in substance Justin abridged the history of Trogus Pom;
Gen. m. serpentis cursed above all cattle. in excess. In stripes above measure. 2 Cor. xi. God will not suffer you to be tempted above peius. in great plenppr. Having what ve arc able, 1. Cor. X. 13. 2. To lessen ; to diminish ; as to abridge ty; being in great plenty; being very pre- 6. Beyond ; in a state to be unattainable as labor ; to al/ridge jiowcr or rights. Smith. valent generally prevaiUng. above To deprive ; to cut ort'from followed by 3. comprehension. things South 7. Too n. Increase. or enjoyproud for. of; as to abridge one of his rights, This man is above his business obsolete ments. To abridge from, is ABOUT', prep. [Sax. abutan, onbutan, emaround ; on or emb, coincid 8. Too elevated in mind or raiili ; having too or
2.
;
The
5.
Beyond
—
;
ABOUND'ING,
;
;
;
ABOUND'ING,
now
butan, about, without, [see ing with Gr. a/if, and butcin, but,] Uterally,
1.
around, on Iht outside.] exterior part or surface
much
4. In algebra, to reduce a cortipound quantity dignity for as This man is above mean actions or equation to its more simple expression. often used elUptically, for heaven, or The eipiatiou thus abridged is called a forthe celestial regions. mula. Let not God regard it from above. Job, iii. ABRIDG'ED pp. Made shorter ; epitomized ; above.
j
I
;
It is
Around on the ;
improper.
Bind them about thy neck. Prov. iii. 3. 1. Hence, to in place, with the sense of circula
Isa.
The powers 10 In a book or writing,
reduced to a smaller compass ; lessened ; it denotes before or deprivefl. a former place, as what has been said one n. One who abridges This mode of sjieakiiig ABRIDG'ER, above; supra. who makes a com])end. in the ancient manner of writoriginated time. to in 3. Near lessening; /)p-. Shortening '^('{ABRIDG'ING, of Mat.xxi.3 on a hour. beginnin tliird the parchment, strip He went out aftwut ing, deprivinif debarring. one end and jnocecding to the other. The 4. Near to, in action, or near to the performABRIDG'MENT, n. An epitome a combeginning was the upper end. ance of some act. pend, or siunmaiT of a book. adv. Overhead in a higher place. ABOVE', mouth. his to about Paid was reduction as open contraction Bacon. 2. Diminution ; Acts, They were about to flee out of the ship. an abridgment of expenses. Before. xwii. 30. Dnjden. xviii. 14 |3. a debarring or restraint as 3. Deprivation to the clothes. :i. Chief in rank or power. Deut. xxviii. 5. Near to tlie person ; appended an abridgment of jileasures. Is 'Ibove cdl is order. elliptical; above all consideraEvery tiling about him is in adv. [Sec Broach.] ? tions chiefly in preti lence to otherthings. ABROACH, or your snuft'box about you ' Broached ; letting out or yielding liquor, in transition or table the e board the ail abc)\ Move board ; sides, From nearness on as a cask i.s in a posture for letting out Hence, is easy to a concern with. open sight without trick, concealment abroach. Figuratively used by Shakes]icare reor deception. This ex])ression is said by C. Concerned in, engaged in, relating to, diffor setting loose, or in a state of being Johnson to be borroweel from gamesters, " Set miscliief abroach specting. ;" but this fused, business. Luke, I must be about my father's who, when they change their cards, put sense is unusual. The painter is not tn tal
2.
Near
rity.
Get you up from about the tabernacle. Num.
in
;
xvi.
;
;
;
— —
;
;
—
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
:
;
— We
;
;
A
—
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
To go
about, signifies to enter upon to prepare ; to seek the means. W hy go ye about to kill me. John,
;
also
ABOVE', D. 1.
prep. [Sax. abufan, bufan, bufon
;
tlie
earth.
Gen.
More in number or quantity. He wa.s seen by above live hundred at once, 1. Cor. xv. 6.
abra'zhun. ofl";
The act of also substance! quincy.i
a and
breast.] the breasts in a line.
[fi-om
Side by side with rode abreast. Ill marine language, ships are abreast. when their heads are equally advanced and they are ahrcnst of obje.ts when the! witli the bcam.objects "are on a line ;
2. Figuratively, superior in any respect. tsaw a light above the brightness of the Sun. Acts, xxvi. The price of a virtuous woman is above rubies, Prov. x\xi. 3.
ABRA'SION,
wearing or rubbing
™
"
brethren
2.
;;
Hence, 3.
Opposite ship
was
seaman's
;
establi>ibed
line
;
annulled by
\B'ROGATING, ppr. Repealing itv
;
by author-
[liakiiig void.
.'iiROGA'TION,
n.
The act of abrogating;
a repeal by authority of the legislative
power.
VBROOD'
adv. [See Brood.] In the action Sanrrofl. [.Vot t)i !i.?e.]
of brooding.
ABROOD
l\G,
n.
A
sitting
abrood.
[Xot Basset.
in use^,
in use. phrasi:.
&:c.
an act of uiitboritv.
with — as against on a abreast of Montauk point. — Ai ABRyQIv', ;
customs
AB'ROGATED;>p. Repealed
V.
t.
To brook,
Pec Brook.]
to endure.
[Xot Shak.
A B
A B
S
ABRO TANUM, n. [Gr. Agpoforo..] A species ol" jilant arranged under the GenusArtemisia; called also soiitliern wood. a. [L. ahriiptus, from abrumpo, to See Ruptwe.] off, of 06 and rumpo. Literally, broken off, or broken short.
ABRUPT', break 1.
Hence, 2. Steep,
craggy
;
applied to rocks, precipi
ces and the hke. 3. Figurative/}/,
without notice to
;
;
as an ab
Unconnected having sudden transitions from one subject to another as an abrupt ;
;
Ben Jonson.
style.
In botany, an abrupt pinnate leaf
5.
which has neither
leaflet,
the end. ~-
ABRUPT' sides.
"
is one nor tendril at
Martyn.
n. A chasm or gulf with steep Over the vast abrujit." Milton.
[Tliis vse
of the word
^ABRUP'TION,
A
n.
is ivfreqvent.]
sudden breaking
off;
of bodies. fVoodward. adv. Suddenly; without giving notice, or without the usual forms ; as, the Miifister left France abruptly. a violent separation
ABRUPT'LV,
n. A state of being brok craggedness stee]>ness. suddenness imccremonious
ABRUPT'NESS, en
;
;
9. Figuratively,
;
haste or vehemence.
ABSCESS,
n.
[L. abscessus,
from ab and
cedo, to go from.] A collection of morbid impostluuue. matter, or pus in the cellular or adipose membrane matter generated by the suppuration of an intlannnatory tumor. Quinc'i/. Hooper. ABSCIND', vt. [L. abscindo.] 'To cut off.
Au
;
[L/iltle
used.]
AB'SCISS, n. [L. abscissus, from 06 and Gr. ff;iifw. See Scissors.] seindere, to cut In conies, a part of the diameter, or transverse axis of a conic section, intercepted between the vertex or some other fixed point, and a semiordinate. Encye. ;
'
ABSClS"SION,
A
:
:
;
;
n.
[See Absciss.] cutting off, or a being cut off. In surgery, the separation of any corrupted or useless part of tlie body, by a sharp instrument
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
words, he does not wish to be disturbed by company. ABSENT', V. t. To depart to such a distance as to prevent intercourse to retire or withdraw to forbear to appear in ])resence used with the reciprocal pronoun. Let a man absetit himself from the company ABSENTEE', n. One who withdraws from his coimtry, oflice or estate one who removes to a distant place or to another country.
sent.
Barroiv.
ABSINTH'IAN,
a.
[from absinthium.] Of Randolph. a. Impregnated with Diet
the natuie of wormwood.
\BSINTH'IATED, wormwood.
ABSINTHIUM, o
^i daic.
n.
[Gr.
o^weio,'
;
.-
\
afsinthin
Budwus
in
his
;
the
same
in
;
pleteness in itself Despotic authority, or that
no extraneous
ject to
which
is subrestriction, or con-
trol.
;
;
;
lute declaration.
used.]
3. 4.
Unconditional, as an absolute promise. Existing indeitendent of any other cause, as
God
is
person
law, a remission of sins
pronounced by a
])riest
ABSOLV'ATORY,
;
absolute.
ABS€OND'ING,
Withdrawing pri- 'i. UnUmited by extraneous power or control, ppr. as an ab.iolute goverinnent or prince. vately from public view as, an absconding rfeJ/or, who confines himself to his apart- G. Not relative, as absolute sjiace. Stillingfleet. himself to avoid the nii- In ments, or absents grammar, the case absolute, is when In the latter sense, it is word Ol- member of a sentence is not imjnsters of justice. ;
mediately dependent on the other parts of the sentence in government. AB'SENCE, n. [L. ulisens, Absolute equation, in astronomy, is the agab and sum.] abesse, to be away 1. A state of being at a distance in place, or gregate of the optic and eccentric equa;
2.
Chal
comiuentaries on
from luiblic view, or from the ental word.] place in which one resides or is ordinarily Theconnnon wonnwood; a bitter plant, usto be found to withdraw, or absent one's ed as a tonic. A species of Artemisia. self in a private manner to be concealed AB'SIS, In astronomy. [See Apsis.] appropriately, used of persons who secrete AB'SOLUTE,a. [h.a'bsolutus. St-e Absolve.] themselves to avoid a legal process. 1. Literally, in a general sense, free, indepenTo hide, withdraw or be concealed as, dent of any thing extraneous. Hence, "the marmot a6sfo«rf.5 in winter. [Little 3. Complete in itself; positive as an abso-
front ahsum,
nie Milton.
in favor of a penitent. Among protestants, a sentence by which an exconimiinicated person is released fiom his liabihty to piniishment. Ayliffe. South. Per. AB'SOLUTORY, a. Absolving; that ab-
Theophrast, supposes the word composed of a priv. and ^ti-Soj, deUght, .so named from its bitterness. But it may be an Ori-
place.] 1. To retire
properly an adjective.
command
Independence com-
AB'SOLU^ENESS, n.
n. In the civil law, an ABSENt'ER, n. One who absents himself ABSOLU'TION, acquittal or sentence of a judge declaring ABSENT'MENT, n. A state of being ab an accused innocent. In the canon
abs and condo, to hide, i. e. to withdraw, or to thrust aside or uito a corner or secret
Ray. n. One who withdraws from pubhc notice, or conceals himself from public view.
peremptorily, as
Positi\'ely,
absolutdi/ not to go.
;
ABSCOND',
ABSeOND'ER,
reigns absolutely. Without condition, as God does not forgive absolutely, hut upon condition of faith
and repentance.
;
:
;
4.
;
;
applied to the sotl ]iarts, as amputation is to the bones and flesh of a limb. (^uincy. f.i. [L.abscondo, to hide, of
2.
S
;
sudden
pre|»are the mind for the event rupt entrance and address. 4.
A B
S
not in company. It is used to denote an}' tions. The apparent inequality of a distance indefinitely, either in the same planet's motion in its orbit, arising from its unequal distances from the earth at town, or coiuitry, or in a foreign coimtry and primarily supposes a prior presence. different times, is called its optic equation " the eccentric inequahty is caused by the Speak well of one in his absence." Want destitiuion implying no previous uniformity of the planet's motion, ui an " In the absence of conventional presence. elliptical orbit, which, for that reason, law." Ch. Kent. apjiears not to be luiiform. •3. In law, non-appearance a not being in .Absolute numbers, in algebra, are such as court to answer. have no letters annexed, as 2a-|-3(i=48. 4. Heeillessness inattention to things jireThe two latter numbers are absolute or sent. Absence ofmindisthe attention of ])ure. Encyc. the mind to a subject which does not occu- Absolute space, in physics, is space considered witlioiu relation to any other object. py the rest of the company, and which draws the mind from things or objects Bailey. which are present, to others distant or for- Absolute gravity, in philosophy, is that propeign. erty in bodies by which they are said to AB'SENT, a. Not present not in compa- weigh so much, without regard to circumstances of modification, and this is always ny at such a distance as to prevent communication. It is used also for being in a as the quantity of matter they contain. foreign country. Bailey. A gentleman is absent on his travels. AB'SOLUTELY, adv. Completely, wholly, as a thing is absolutely uuinteUigible. Absent from one iinother. Gen. xxxi. 49. in a Heedless inattentive to persons pre- 2. Without de|)eiidence or relation state unconnected. sent, or to subjects of conversation hi comAbsolutely we cannot discommend, we canpany. not alKolutely approve, either willingness to An absent man is uncivil to the company. Hootter. live, or forwardness to die. 3. In familiar language, not at home as, the master of the house is absent. In other 3. Without restriction or limitation as God
a.
[from absolve.] Conor release ;
taining absolution, pardon, to absolve.
having jiower
Cotgrave.
V. t. abzolv', [L. absolvo, from ab solvo, to loose or release ; Ch. nSlV, to absolve, to finish ; Heb. '7!^, to loose or
ABSOLVE', and
See
loosen.
Solve.]
To
set fi-ee or release from some obligation, debt or responsibility or from that which subjects a person to a burden or penalty ; as to absolve a person from a promise to absolve an oftender, which amoinits to an acquittal and remission of his punishment. Hence, in the civil law, the word was used for forforoC(;«t<,- and in the canon law, In ordigive, or a sentence of remission. nary language, its sense is to set free or ;
;
release fi-oni
an engagement.
Formerly,
good writers used the word in the sense of fnish, accomplish ; as to absolve work, in "Milton but in this sense, it seems to be ;
obsolete.
ABSOLVED,;?;). Released; mitted
:
acquitted; re-
declared innocent.
ABSOLV'ER,
One who
absolves; also one that pronounces sin to be remitted. J!.
[Seo Absonous.] Wide Croin the purpose contiuiy to reason. AB'SONOUS, a. [L. absomis; ah and sonus,
AB'SONANT,
A B
S
belonging to abstinence; as an abstemious diet; an abstemious life.
a
ABSTE'MIOUSLY,
a.
adv.
Temperately
;
with a si)aring use of meat or drink.
;
ABSTE'MIOUSNESS,
n.
The
quality of
being temperate or sparing in the use of food and strong drinks. This word expresses a greater degree of [L. absorbco, ab and sorbeo, abstinence than temperance.
sound.] Unimisical, or iintimahlo.
Fotherhy.
ABSORB', to drink
V-
I.
Ar.
in;
sliaraba
c^^^
;
ABSTERciE',
Eth.
;
;
;
;
;
or swallowed. ;
;
h
pp.
;
;
;
wasting. n. The act or process ofl imbibing or swallowing either by water which overwhelms, or by substances,which drink in and retam Uquids as the absorption of a body in a whirlpool, or of water by the earth, or of the humors of the body by dry powders. It is used also to express the swallowing up of substances by the earth in chasms made by earthquakes, and the sinking of large tracts in violent commotions of the earth. 2. In chimistry, the conversion of a gaseous tluid iiUo a liquid or sohd, by union with another substance. Ure. ABSORPTIVE, «. Having power to imbibe. Darwin. ABSTA'IN, V. i. [L. eibstineo, to keep from
ABSORPTION,
;
;
abs and teneo, to hold. See Tenant.] In a general sense, to forbear, or refi'ain from, voluntarily but used chiefly to denote a restraint upon the jiassions or ;
api)etites ; to refrain from indulgence. Mxtain from meats oft'eied to iilols. Acts, xv. abstain from the use of ardent spirits ; to abstain from luxuries.
To
ABSTE'MIOUS,
ahstcmius : from uhs and temetum, an ancient name of strouii wine, according to Fabius and Gellius a.
[L.
But Vossius supposes it to be from absliIt may be neo, by a change of n to m. from the root of fimeo, to fear, that is, to refrainiu withdraw.] Sparing in diet from a free use of food and strong drinks. ;
Instances of longevity are chiefly among the ahftemiovs. .Irbuthnnt. 2.
3.
10 men, they become concrete. cleanse by resolving obstructions in the Abstract or pure mathematics, is that body. \Vsed chiejiy as a mediced term.] which treats of magnitude or quantity, ABSTER(i'ENT, o." Wiping; clean.sing. without restriction to any species of parn. A which fi-ees medicine ABSTERti'ENT, ticular magnitude, as arithmetic anil the body from obstructions, as soap but geometry opposed to which is mixed the use of the word is nearly supersedeil nuithematics, which treats of simple propby detergent, which see. erties, and the relations of quantity, as n. ABSTER'SION, [t'rm\L.aJ)stergeo,abster- applied to sensible objects, as hydrostator a cleansus.] The act of wi])ing clean ics, navigation, optics, &'c. Encyc. sing by medicines which resolve obstruc- 2. Separate, as existing in the mind only tions. Bacon. [See Deterge, Delersion.] an abstract sulyect an abstract question a. the ABSTERSIVE, Cleansing; having and hence flifficult, abstruse. quality of removing obstructions. [See AB'STRACT, ?!. A summary, or epitome, Detcr.nve.] containing the substance, a view, ABSTINENCE, n. [L. abslinentia. See or tlu' jnincipal heads of general a treatise or In the act or Abstain.] general, jiractice iyall.
/icn's Lavoisier.
ABSORPT',
or
;
in
;
;
swallowed wasted engaged lost study wholly engrossed. ABSORB'ENT, a. Imbibing; swallowing. ABSORBENT, n. In anatomy, a vessel which imbibes, as the lacteals, ijniphatics, and iidialing arteries. In medicine, a testaceous powder, or other substance, which imbibes the humors of the body, as chalk or magnesia. Eneyc ABSORB'ING, /)/?(•. Imbibing; engrossing; bibed
[L. abstergeo,
Encyr.
which express ab-
:
A
ABSORB' ED,
absterj'.
color or figure. terms arc those
stract ideas, as beauty, whiteness, roundness, without regarding any subject in which they exist or abstract terms arc
;
That may be imbibed
a.
t.
its
.Ibstract
;
;
ABSORBABLE,
V.
else. An abstract idea, in metaphysics, is an idea separated from a conq)lex object, or fioni other ideas which natin-ally accompany it, as the solidity of marble contemplated apart fi-om
the names of orders, genera, or of abs and tergeo, to wijie. Tergeo may species of have a conuuon origin with the Sw. lorcka, things, in which there is a combination of similar qualities. Stewart. G. trockncn, D. droogen, Sax. drygan, to Abstract nmubers are numbers used willifor these Teutonic verbs to dry signify oiu application to things, as, 6, 6, 10 wipe, as well as to dry.] To wipe or make clean by wiping to but wlien applied to any thing, as 6 feet,
or lU/jn, id. Rab. tjlB^, to draw or wlieuce simp, sherbet, shrub.] drink in a? to imbibe to suck up 1. To drink in a s])unge, or as tlie lacteals of the body. 2. To drink in, swallow up, or overwliehn with water, as a body in a wliirlpool. to 3. To waste wholly or sink in expenses exhaust; us, to absorb an estate in luxury. 4. To engross or engage wholly, as, absorbed in study or the piu-suit of wealth. state or quality NABSORBABIL'ITY, n. of being absorbable. f\i(\
S
from something
Sparing in the enjoyment of animal pleasures of any kind. [TViis sense is less common, and perhaps not lescilimate.] Sparingly used, or used with temperance
;
;
;
;
ABSTRACTED, ;
;
Dryden.
than temperance. Besides, ABSTRACTEDNESS, n. The state of beimplies previous free indulBarter. ing abstracted. temperance does not. ABSTRACTER, n. One who makes an AB'STINENT, a. Refraining from indul- abstract, or summary. in food and the use of gence, especially ABSTRACT'ING,/)/)r. Separating making drink. a summary. AB'STINENTLY, adv. With abstinence. ABSTRACTION, n. The act of separating, AB'STINENTS, a sect which appeared in or state of being separated. France and Spain in llie third century, 2. The operation of the mind when occupied who opposed marriage, condemned the by abstract itleas as when we contemuse of flesh meat, and placed the Holy plate soiue |)articular part, or property of a Spirit in the cla.ss of created beings. conq)lex object, as separate from the rest. ABSTRACT', v. t. [L. abstraho, to draw Thus, when the mind considers the branch from or separate of a tree by itself, or the color of the tiom abs and traho, which is the Eng. draw. See Draw.] leaves, as separate from their size or So 1. To draw from, or to separate as to abstract figure, the act is called abstraction. an action from its evil eftects to abstract also, when it considers whiteness, softness, virtue, cristence, as separate from any paj-spirit from any substance by distillation ticular objects. but in this sense extract is now more genEncyc. The power wliich the understanding has erally used. of separating the combinations which are 2. To separate ideas by the operation of the to is mind to consider one part of a complex it, distinguished by logipresented cians, by the name of abstraction. Stewart. object, or to have a partial idea of it in the Abstraction is the ground-work of clasmind. Home. 3. To select or separate the substance of a sification, by which things are an"anged in book or writing to epitomize or reduce orders, genera, and species. separate in idea the qualities of certain objects to a sunnnary. Watts. which arc of the same kind, from others 4. In chimistry, to separate, as the more which are different in each, and aiTange volatile parts of a substance by repeated the objects having the same properties in a distillation, or at least bv distillation. class, or collected bodv. AB'STRACT, a. [L. absii-actus.] Separate
enjoyments abstinence
gence
;
;
;
;
;
;
:
;
We
;
:
9
•
ABU
ABU A
A C A
separation from worUUj' oljjects u re- It denotes also fidlness, overflowing, as the nftioirfajiff of the heart. Mat. xii Luke, vi cluse life as a lierniit's abslracllon. inattenlion to present ABUND'ANT, a. Plentiful; in great quan4. Absence of miiul as an abundant suptity fiilly suflicient objects. In scripture, abounding having in 5. Ill tlie process of distillation, the term is ply. used to denote tlie separation of the volatile great quantity overflowing with. The Lord God is abundant in goodness ant] are conparts, which rise, coine over, and ti-utli. Ex. xxxiv. densed in a receiver, from those which is one, the It is cliiefly used, wlien a Abundant luimbcr, in arithmetic, are fixed. .«um of whose aliquot parts exceeds the fluid is repeatedly poured upon any subThus 1, 2, 3, 4, (j, the number itself stance in a retort, and distilled ofi", to aliquot parts of 12, make the sum of 1(>. cliansre its state, or the nature of its comThis is opposed to a defcienf number, as 14, J^icholson. position. ABSTRACT'IVE, a. Having the power or whose aliquot parts are 1, 2, 7, the .sun of which is 10 and to a perfect number, " quality of ahstractin?. which is equal to the sum of its aliquot ? a. Abstracted, or ABSTR'A€T'IVE, drawn from other parts, as 6, whose aliquot parts are 1, 2, 3 3.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
In the sense of deceitful, as reproachful. an abusive treaty. [Littk used.] Bacon. ABU'SIVELY, adv. In an abusive manner; nidely re]iroachfully. ABU'SiVENESS, n. lU-usage the quality of being abusive rudeness of language, or violence to tlie person. Barlow. ;
;
;
To [Fr. aboutir. See Aboxit.] border upon ; to be contiguous to ; to meet : in .-itrictness, to adjoin to at the end ; biU
ABUT',
<,
from vegetables,
pubstaiices, particularly
without fermentation. Cyc. Separately absolutemanner unconnected witli ly in a state or any thing else as, matter abstractly con-
AB'STRACTLY, adv.
;
ABUND'ANTLY, tifully
;
;
sidered.
has not always been obThe word is chiefly used in describing the bounds or situation of land, and in popular language, is contracted into but, as butted and bounded. served.
A separate
a state of being in contemplation only, or n.
state
away.
v.
1.
;
n. The head or end; that which unites one end of a thing to an-
ABUT'MENT,
plen-
other chiefly used to denote the solid pier or moimd of earth, stone or timber, which is erected on the bank of a river to siqiportthe end of a liridge and connect it with the land. That which abuts or borders on another. ;
a suflicient degree.
Abuse.
n.
s as
t.
z.
[JVot used.] [Fr. abuser: Sp. abuL. abutor, abusus, of
sar ; It. abusare ; ab and vtor, to use Ir. idh ; W. givcth, use Gr. (Sw, to accustom. See Use.] To use ill to maltreat ; to misuse to use with bad motives or to wrong purposes as, to abuse rights or privileges. They tliat use this worid as not abusing it
thrust or
1
away,
Avktaiada;
;
;
Bryant.
ABUT'TAL,
Cli.TiD,to thrust;
conSyr. Sam. id.; F.nf:. to thrust.] Hid; cealed hence, remote from a}>prehension difficult to be comprehended or understood opposed to what is obvious. [JVot used of material objects.] Metapliyxics is an abstruse science. Encyc. ABSTRU'SELY, adv. In a concealed manner ; obscurely in a manner not to be easily understood. "ABTRiJ'SENESS, n. Obscurity of meaning the state or (juaUty of being ditiiculf to lie understood. Boyle. ABSURD', a. [L. absurdus, from ab and ;
Cor.
3.
To
4.
To
deceive
to
;
Nor be with
all
Spenser.
these tempting words abused.
ABYSS',
with reproachful lan-
priv.
of advantages, &c.
atiise
Liberty may be endanp;ered by tbe abuses of abuses of power. libei-ty, as well as by the deaf, insensible.] Opiiosed to maninconsistent with reason, or the Federalist. .Madison ; sense. An abcommon 2. corrupt practice or custom, as the aiusf» plain dictates of of government. surd man acts contrary to the clear dictates of reason or sound judgment. An ab- 3. Rude speech ; reproachful language ad-
also for hell, Erelius.
That which is immeasurable that in which any thing is lost. Thy throne is darkness, in the abyss of light. ;
.su7-dus,
ifest truth
A
surd proposition contradicts obvious truth. An absurd practice or opinion is repugnant to the reason or common apprehension of men. It is absurd to say six and six make ten, or that plants will take root in stone. VBSURD'ITY, n. The quality of being in consistent with obvious truth, reason, or sound judgment. Want of judgment, applied to men want of propriety, applied to ;
things. 'i.
That which is absurd
;
in this
Johnson. sense it has
a plural; the absurdities of men. adv. In a manner inconsistent with reason, or obvious propriety.
ABSURD'LY,
ABSURD'NESS, and
n.
The same
as absurdity,
less used.
\BUND'ANCE,
n.
See an overflowing
abo7idance.
[F.
Great plenty
Abound.]
;
in strictness
quantity anijile sufliciency applicable to quantity only but customarily used of number, as an abundance of ;
;
:
Mdison. peasants. In scripture, tlie abundance of the rich is great H-eaUii. Eocl. v. Mark, xii. I^uke, xxi. The abundance fish.
Dcut.
x:?xlii.
of the seas
is
great plenty of
dressed to a person contumely reviling Milton. words. Seduction. After the abuse he forsook me. Sidney. Perversion of meaning improjier use or application ; as an abuse of words. ;
4. 5.
oi
is also used for an immense cavern in the earth, in which God is suppo.sed to have collected all the waters on the third day of the creation. It is used
The word
;
;
Shak.
gulf
[Gr. ASvoao;, bottomless, from o bottom. Ion. for 8v6os.
ffuoio;,
before the flood. Darkness was upon the face of the deep, abyss, as it is in tlie Septuagint. Gen. i. 2.
;
;
Spenser. abime.
now
See Bottom.] A bottomless gulf; used deep mass of waters, supposed to have encompassed the earth
To pervert the meaning of; to misapply ; as to abuse words. )!. Ill use; improjier treatment or employment application to a wrong puras an abuse of our natural powers ])Ose an abuse of civil rights, or of rehgiouspri vUeges
;
[Old Fr.,
by some
ABU'SE,
;
n.
and
A
also for a
mocked and almsed them shamefully. .Mac.
5.
;
n. abyzm'.
See Abyss.]
;
lie
;
V.
ABYSM',
impose on.
treat rudely, or guage to revile.
ABY',
;
abide.] by improper sexual main. Obs.
Pope.
;
;
vii.
To violate ; to defile intercourse.
The butting
or boundary of a head-land. Spelman. Coivel. t. or i. contracted from [Probably To endure to pay dearly to ren.
land at the end
;
To
[Infra.]
[L. abstnisus,fromahsiru- 2. to conceal; abs and
o.
do, to thrust
Ar.
t.
[J^ot used.]
ABSTRU'SE, ;
r.
amply
;
;
not connected with any object.
ABSTRU'DE,
trudo
in
;
;
AB'STRACTNESS,
j)ull
;
ABU'SAGE, ABU'SE,
adv. Fully
i.
this distinction
;
ABSTRACTI'TIOUS,
V.
Jildton. 3.
;
4.
Ttie o6^ss of time. Drydtn. In antiquity, the temple of Proserpine, so called from the inmiense treasures it was supposed to contain. In heraldry, the center of an escutcheon. He bears' azure, a fleur de lis, in abyss.
;
ABU'SED,
pp. s as
z.
Ill-used
;
used to
ABYSSINIAN,
a
bad purpose treated with rude language misenqiloyed perverted to bad or wrong ;
;
ends; deceived; defiled; violated. a. Using or practicing abuse abusive. [JVot xised.] Bp. Barlow.
ABU'SEFUL,
n. s as :. One who abuses, in speech or behavior; one that deceives; a ravisher a sodomite. 1 Cor. vi.
ABU'SER,
a.
Ar.
o~.
habashon.
...... Ethiopians, from ^^^j habasha, to collect, or congregate. A name denoting a mixed multitude or a black
Abyssiniaiis,
race.
Litdolf.
Castle.
ABYSSIN'IANS, n. A sect of christians Abyssinia, who admit but one nature
in in
Jesus Christ, and reject the council of Chalcedon. They are governed by a who .'\BU'SING, ppr. s as :. Using ill employbisho]), or metiopohtan, called Abuna, to bad is appointed by the Coptic patriarch of ing purposes; deceiving; violating the person perverting. Cairo. Encyc. .\BU'SION, n. abu'zhon. Abuse ; evil or cor- A€, in Saxon, oak, the initial syllable of names, as acton, oaktown. rupt usage; reproach. [LAttle used.] ABU'SIVE, a. Practicing abuse; offering A€A€'ALOT, } n. A Mexican fowl, the Tantalus Mexicanus, or harsh words, or ill treatment as an abu ACALOT, \ Corviis aquaticus, water raven. See Acalot. sive aiUhor an abusive fellow. 9. Containing abuse, or that is the instni- A€A'CIA, n. [L. acacia, a thorn, from Gr. ment of abuse, as abusive words rude axr;, a point.] ;
;
;
;
;
;
;
A C A
Encyc. ACACIA, ill medicine, is a name given toj the inspissated juice of the imripe fruit of the Mimosa Nilotica, which is brought fi'om Kgypt ill roundish masses, in blailders. it is of a deej) brown color internally, of a reddish or yellowish brown of a firm consistence, but not very
Externally,
;
;
given
among
antiquaries,
is
a
cation.
A
society of men united for the promotion of arts and sciences in general, or of
in the
some
hands of emperors and
A€AMAe'U,
n,
A
bird, the Brazilian
catcher, or Todus. a.
a prickly shrid).] prickles. called acanacew. n.
A
thorn.] In botany, a prickle
Mitne. a spine or
an acute process of the ver-
tebers. les,
Encyc. a.
Armed with
prick-
as a plant.
celero, xtt.iri
or
3.
3.
Sp,
t. t-. [L. accelero, of ad hasten, from celer, quick
to
:
Ileb.
;
be
to
Ch. Syr. and Eth. SSp, nimble Syr. to has-
light,
;
In Ch. and Ar. this root signifies
ten.
also to he small, or minute.] To cause to move faster; to hasten; to quicken motion ; to add to the velocity of a moving Iiody. It unplies previous motion or progression.
To add to natural or ordinary progresas to accelerate the growth of a plant, or the progress of knowledge. To bring nearer in time to shorten the time between the present tune and a future event as to accelerate the ruin of a government to accelerate a battle. sion
A€AN'THARIS,
;
rhp
1.
in zoology, a spine or
;
roll of petitions and some, a pur])le bag of earth, to remind them of their mortal-
jirickly fin
Gr.
class of ])lants are
[Gr. axavOa,
A€ANTHA'CEOUS,
;
and
fly
Cyc. acana'shus. [Gr. axaroj,
Armed with
;
;
terms proposed.
to the
ACCELERATE,
particular art.
A€ANA'CEOUS,
in
ppr. Agreeing assenting becomuig a party to a treaty by agreeing
n. [Contracted from aca^alotl.] Blexican fowl, called by some the aquatic crow. It is the ibis, or a fowl that very much resembles it.
consids. Some take it to represent a handkercliief ndled U]), with which sig nals were given at the games others, a ;
A€CE'DING,
A€'ALOT,
A
Hence
agreeing to the terms of a treaty, or convention.
bers of an academy meet; a place of edu-
name ACANTH'A,
to sonietliing like a roll or bag, seen
onmedals, as
mem
A
and appears with elegance on paper.
A-eACIA,
A C C
A C C
tor teaching a particular art, or particular to terms proposed by another. a negotiation. sciences, as a military academy. 2. To become a hou.se, in which the students or party, by
EgyiJtian thorn, a species of )ilant ranked by Liuiie under the genus mimosa, and by Of the others, made a disthict genns. flowers of one species, the Chinese make a yellow dye which bears washing in silks,
;
;
;
;
In entomology, a spe-
n.
cies of Cimex, with a spinous thorax, and Encyc. a ciliated abdomen, with spines found in Church History, wore cerACA'CIANS, tain sects, so denominated from their lead Jamaica. Cyc. ers, Acacius, bishop of Cesarea, and Aca ACANTII'INE, a. Acanthus.] Some Pertaining to the [See cius, patriarch of Constantinople. The plant, acanthus. of these maintained that the Son was only acanthine garments of the ancients were a similar, not the same, substance with the made of the down of thistles, or embroid Father others, that he was not only a ered in imitation of the acanthus. ity.
in
;
;
distinct but a dissimilar substance. Encyc.
Bacon.
ACCELERATED,
pp. Quickened in moprogress. ppr. Hastening; increasing velocity or progression. ACCELERA'TION, n. The act ofincreasor ing velocity progress the state of being quickened in motion or action. Accelerated motion in mechanics and physics, is Encyc. that which continually receives accessions tion
;
hastened
in
ACCELERATING,
;
ACANTHOPTERYG'IOtS, [Gr axa.9o;, of n. An academy a society of| velocity ; as, a falling body moves toa thorn, and rttifvyiov, a Uttle feather, fi-om wards the earth with an acceleration of ve[Not used.] Ttrifov, a feather.] a. Pertaining to an acadeIt is the opposite of retardation. locity. In zoology, having back fins, which are hard, Acceleration of the moon, is the increase of the my. bony and pricky, a term applied to certain moon's mean motion from the sun, comA€ADE'MIAN, n. A member of an acad Linne. Jishes. a student in a emy; university or col AC.ANTH'US n. pared with the diurnal motion of the earth [Gr. axavOo^, L. acanthus, the moon moving with more velocity now lege. from axai'Sa, a prickle or thorn. See a. than in ancient times a discovery made A€ADEM'IC, Belonging to an I A€ADEM'I€AL, $ academy, or to a col 1. acantha.] by Dr. Halley. The plant bear's breech or brank ursine or as academic studies diurnal acceleration of the fixed stars, lege university a genus of several species, receiving their |Tlie also noting what belongs to the school or is the time by which they anticipate the name from their prickle.s. mean diurnal revolution of the sun, which philosophy of Plato as tlie academic sect. In an ornament resembling A€ADEM'i€, n. One who belonged to the the architecture, is nearly three minutes, fifty-six seconds. fohage or leaves of the acanthus, used school or adhered to the philosophy of Cyc. in capitals of the Corinthian and CompoSocrates and Plato. The latter is consida. Adding to velocity ACCEL'ERATIVE, site orders. Milton. Encyc. ered as the founder of the academic Reid. phiquickening progression. A€AN'TICONE, n. See Pistacite. losophy in Greece. He taught, that matter is eternal and infinite A€ARN'AR, n. A bright star, of the first ACCEL'ERATdRY,a.Accelerating;quickening motion. magnitude, in Eridanus. Bailey. but without form, refractory, and tending v.t. [L. accendo, to kindle; ad to disorder and that there is an intelli- A€ATALE€'TIe, n. [Gr. axara^-jjxTo;, not ACCEND', and candeo, caneo, to be white, canus, defective at the end, of xara and Xyjyu to gent cause, the author of spiritual beinir, white; W. c«u, white, bright also a song. cease Ir. lieghim.] A verse, which has and of the material world. Etijteld. Whence, c«n
A€ADE'ME
;
a.
;
persons.
ACADE'MIAL,
;
—
— —
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
A€ADEMI"CIAN, n. [Fr. A member of an academy,
acadtmicien.] xara^aufforu to comprehend.] or society for Impossibility of conij)lete thscovery or comparticularly, prehension incomprehensibility. [LAttle Whitaker. used.] doctrine of the ACAT'ECHILI, n. Mexican bird, a speacademic pliilosopliy. Baxter. cies of Fringilla, of the size of tlie siskin. EMIST, ?!. A" member of an Acad- A€.\TER, AeATES. See Caterer and Catcs. emy for promoting arts and sciences; also a. and Gr. ) a.
promoting arts and sciences
member of the French A€AD'EjMISM, 71. The a
;
;
academies.
A
A€AD
an academic philosopher.
A€AD'EMY, n.
ACAU'LINE, ACAU'LOUS,
[L.
\
caulis,
priv.
miaos, a stalk
;
W.
haul; D.
[L. academia, Gr. Axo^jjHia.' See Colcwort.] kool, cabbage. it is said, a garden, grove, or villa In botany, without a stem, having flowers near Athens, where'Plato and his follow on the as the Carline
Originally,
1.
ers held their philosophical conferences. school, or seminary of learning, hold ing a rank between a university or col lege, and a common school; also a school
A
ground
resting
;
thistle.
ACCE'DE,
[L. accedo, of ad and cedo, to yield or give place, or rather to move.] I. To agree or assent, as to a proposition, or V. i.
The kindle, L. candidiis, candid, >vhite. primary sense is, to throw, ilart, or thrust ; to shoot, as the rays of light. Hence, throw.
to cant, to
To
kindle
;
on
to set
See Chant and Ca)it.] fire. [The verb is not
used.]
ACCENDIBILITY,
n.
Capacity of being
kindled, or of becoming inflamed.
ACCEiXD IBLE,
a.
Capable of being
flamed or kindled.
ACCEN
infjre.
The
act of kindling or setting on fire ; or the state of being kindled ; inflanmiation.
SION,
n.
Chiniistn/. )i. [h. accentus, from ad and facanu ; Corn, kana : no, cantum,to sing ;
ACCENT, Jr.
canaim.
W.
Sec Accend.]
A C C
A C C I.
Tl]i' iiioilulatioii
of tlie voice
speaking, as practiced by the ancient Greeks, wliich rendered tlieir reliearsal musical. More strictly, in English, "i. A ])articular stress or force of voice upon certain syllables of words, wliich distinguishes tlien) from the others. Accent is of two Idntis, ])rimary and secondary as in as'pira'tioii. In uttenng this word, we observe the_^r.s< and third syllables are distinguished the third by a full sound, which constitutes the primary accent the of force in the voice _first, by a degree which is less than that of the jtrimary accent, but evidently greater than that which falls on the second and fourth syllables. When the full accent falls on a vowel, that vowel has its long sound, as in vo'cat; but when it falls on an nrticidation or con.sonant, the preceding vowel is short, as in hab'it. Accent alone regulates English verse.
A
not good to accept the person of the wicked. Prov. xviii. 2 Cor. viii. It
In theology, acceptance with God iuiforgiveness of sins and reception into
3.
Accept 4.
gratifying as an acceptable present. Agreeable or pleasing in jierson as, a man makes himself acceptable by his services or civilities.
The
tender accents of a
Manner of speaking. A man of plain cucent.
woman's
cry.
Pj-ior.
n.
)
The
used, or not at
adv.
In
a
please, or give satisfaction. Let us have grace whereby we
Heb.
acceptably.
manner may
serve
tion
is fit to
as
;
They
Isa.
altar.
The
work done
shall
l.\.
receiving of a
der, in such a
hear.
to acceptance.
come up with acceptance on my bill of exchange or or maimer, as to bind the ac
ceptor to make payment. This must be and to charge the by express words drawer with costs, in case of non payment, the acceptance must be in writing, under, across, or on the back of the bill. Blackstone. An agreeing to terms or proposals in com-
In music, a swelling of sounds, for the purpose of variety or expression. The principal accent falls on the first note in
the bar, but the third place in conunon time requires also an accent. 8. A pecuhar tone or inflection of voice. A€'CENT, v.t. To express accent to utter a .syllable with a particular stress or mod In poetry, to utter ulation of the voice. or pronounce in general. Also to note accents by marks hi writing. Locke. Wotton pp. Uttered with accent; marked with accent. A€'CENTING, ppr. Pronouncing or marl^ ing with accent. ACCENT'UAL, «. Pertaining to accent. v. I. To mark or pronounce with an accent or \v\i\\ accents.
3.
ACCENTED,
ACCENTUATE,
A€CENTUA'TION,
n.
The
5.
accents in writing, or of pronouncing
them
and
cap-ioj
aceptar ; Port, aceiter ; Lat. capio. Class G. b.] I.
To
It.
accettare.
er's acceptance in jiayment. Formerly, the sense in \vhicli a
;
Bless. Lord, his substance, and
3.
accept the
work of his hands. Deut. xxxiii. He made an offer which was accepted.
in this
faith
Rom. v. Admission
to sexual intercourse. During coverture, access of the husband shall be presumed, unless tire contrary be shown. Slackstone.
NESS. approachable
;
or of admitting access.
ACCESS'IBLE, a. That may be apiiroached reached approachable applied to things ; as an accessible town or mountain. Easy of apjiroach afl'able used ofpersons, or '2.
;
;
;
;
ACCESS'ION, n.
A coming to
[L. accessio.]
an acceding
;
sense acceptableness
is
more
;
accession to 3.
;
;
;
•3.
the improvement provided the tiling is not changed into a different species. Thus the owner of a cow becomes the owner of Blackstone. her calf The act of arriving at a throne, an office, or dignity. That which is added. The only accession which the Roman Emof Britain. pire received, was the province Gibbon. The invasion of a fit of a periodical disease, or fever. It tliftijrs liom exacerbation. Accession imphes a total jirevious intermisexacerbation implies sion, as of a fever only a previous remission or abatement of ;
is
generally used. The meaning or .sense in which a word or expression is understood, or generally re ceiveil as, a term is to be used according to its usual acceptation. Reception in general. Obs. ;
4.
;
ACCESSARY, See ACCESSORY.
.5.
n.
Some things are of great dignity and acceptation with God. Hooker But
take or receive what is offered, with to receive with ap
a consenting mind probation or favor.
;
Approach, or the way by which a thing may be approached as, the access is by a Bacon. neck of land. Means of approach liberty to approach:
ACCESSIBIL'ITY,)!. The quahty of beuig
4.
word
Obs.
gard.
See
;
ACCESSARILY, See ACCESSORILY. ACCESSARINESS, See ACCESSORI-
acceptance of the terms of the lease and binds the party. Larv. In mercantile language, a bill of exchange accepted as a merchant receives anoth-
;
[L. accepto, from accipio, ad to take; Fr. accepter; Sp
See
accede.
;
wealth or territory. Inlaw, a mode of acquiring property, by which the owner of a corporeal substance, which receives an addition by growth, or by labor, has a right to the thing added or
is
[See Acceptation.] Kind reception; a receiving with favor or ajijirobation. This is a saying worthy ol' all acceptation 1 Tim. i. A state of being acceptable favorable re-
(. t.
;
from
admitnear approach admission as to gain access to a to
concluded
understood.
in speaking.
ACCEPT',
n. [L. accessus,
Fr. acch.]
conhng
A:i agreeing to the act or contract of an other, by some act which binds the person in law ; as, a bisliop's taking rent reserved on a lease made by his predecessor, is an
ACCEPTA'TION,
act of placin^
A
(5.
;
6.
to accept. [J^Tot B. Jo7ison.
Ready
to and joining as a king's a confederacy. Increase by something added that which is added augmentation as an accession of
merce, by which a bargain and the parties bound.
;
Hammond.
used.]
Addition; increase by something added;
;
Drifdeyi 7.
a.
as an access of territory ; but in this sense accession is more generally used. The return ol' a fit or paroxysm of disease, or fever. In this sense accession is generallv used.
God
n. A receiving with ap probation or satisfaction favorable recep-
now
5.
xii.
;
heaven alone
4.
to
ACCEPT' ANCE,
;
implying previous obstacles. By whom also we have access by
all.]
ACCEPTABLY,
per-
;
3.
quality of]
I being agreeable to a receiver, or to a person w'nli whom one has uitercourse. [The latter word is little
A
pruice. 2.
;
ACCEPT'ABLENESS,
bear, as
1.
ACCEPTABIL'ITY,
Shak
Obs.
ACCESS',
;
Poetically, words, language, or expressions in general. Words, on your wings, to heaven her accents
Such words
;
[JVot
used.]
tance
In commerce, to agree or promise to pay, bill of exchange. [See Jlcceptance.] ACCEPT'ABLE, a^. That may be received with pleasure hence j)leasing to a receiv
n.
[See Acceptance.] ppr. Receiving favorably; understanduig. )!. The recei^'ed sense of a
ACCEPT'IVE,
as a
er
it.
Accede.
have a particular idea
to
;
with an undulating sound. A modulation of the voice expressive of
])ay
agreeing to
the terms. ;
ACCEPTOR,
or
ACCEP'TION,
of; to receive in a ])articular sense. How is tills plnase to be accepted ?
passions or sentmients.
C.
()/'
To understand
;
ACCEPT'ING,
;
o.
;
5.
;
;
;
;
;
word.
To consent or agree to to receive as terms of a contract as, to accept a treaty often followed by oj'.
repp. Khidly received agreed to understood received of exchange.
son who accepts the person who receives a bill of exchange so as to bind himself to
favor.
liis
;
hill
ACCEPTER,
is
])lies
;
4.
as a
esteem.
mark
or character used in writing to direct the stress of the voice in proiunicia tion. Our ancestors borrowed from the Greek language three of these characters, the acute (',) the grave (") and the circum In the Greek, the first flex (' or '.) shows when the voice is to be raised the second, when it is to be depressed and the third, when the vowel is to be uttered
ACCEPT'ED, garded
received an appointment or the offer of a commission, but he did not accept it. To regard with partiality ; to value or
;
3.
receive
He
;
;
A C C
Observe the difference between and accept.
in reailiiig or
G.
;
violence.
ACCESS'IONAL, a. ACCESSO'RIAL, a.
Additional.
Pertaining to an accessory; as accessorial agencj', acces.iorial guilt. Burr's Trial.
ACCESSORILY, adv. the
[Sec Accessory.] In by subordi-
manner of an accessory
;
A C C
A C C
Date means, or in a secondary oharai^ter not as principal, but as a subordinate agent
AC'CESSORINESS,
n.
The
state
A C C
tous taking place not according to the usual course of things opposed to that which is constant, regular, or intended as
Gr. Eol. x%invi; Sax. clif, a bank or shore; clifian, cleofian, to cliff, See Cliff.] cleave, or split. slope or inclination of the earth, as the side of a hill, considered as ascending, in opposition to declivity, or a side descending. ascent the talus of a Rising ground rampart. ACCLI'VOUS, a. Rising, as a hill with a Ir.
;
;
of being
;
A
an accidental \\sit.
accessoiy, or of being or acting in a secondary character. n. [L. Jlccessorius, from ac
Non-essential not necessarily belonging to as songs are accidental to a play. ACCESSORY, See .Accede. This word is Accidental colors, are those A\hich de|)end cessiis, accedo. the affections of the eye, in distincaccented on the first syllable on account of iipoii^ tion from those which the derivatives, which require a secondabelong to the hglit itself: but the natural ry accent on the third Encyc. accent of accessory is on the secontl sylla Iccidental point, in perspective, is that point in the horizontal thus it is often ble, and line, where the projecpronounced by ;
;
_
;
;
tions
Encyc. n. In laiv, one who is guilty felony, not by committing the ofl'ense person or as jnhicipal, but by advising or commanding another to commit the crime, or by conceahug tlie offender. There may be accessories in all felonie: but not in treason. An accessory before the fact, is one who counsels or commands another to commit a felony, and is not present when the act is executed after the fact, when one receives and conceals
of a
in
;
the offender. 9.
allv
Accessory, among pauiters, an epithet given to parts of a history-piece which are merely ornamental, as vases, armor, «Stc. n.
;
Arm.
fall;
kuctha,
to
\r.kudaim; Corn, kotha : fall. See Case and Ca
Class G d.] or falling; an event that takes place without one's foresight or expectation an event which proceeds liom an unknown cause, or is an unusual effect of a known cause, and therefore not expect dence.
1.
A coming ;
ed
2.
chance casualty contingency. That which takes place or beguis to exist without an efficient intelligent cause and without design. ;
All of
;
them,
;
opinion, owe their beini to fate, accident, or the blind action of stupfd matter. in his
Dwight
^.
In logic, a property, or quality of a being is not essential to it, as whiteness in paper. Also all qualities are called accidents, in opposition to substance, as sweetness, softness, and tilings not essential to a body, as clothes. Encyc. In graynmar, something belonging to a word, but not essential to it, as gender,
which
4.
5.
being casual.
The quaUty
n.
of
cerna, a species of Trigla. Cyi In ornithology, the name of the order ol'| rapacious fowls The accipiters have a hooked bill, the superior mandible, near the base, being extended on each side beyond the inferior. The genera are the vultiu-, the falco, or hawk, and the stri.x, or owl.
;
a.
Happenmg by
or rather unexpectedly
;
casual"
chance, :
fortui-
to agree.
apply or
;
ACCI'TE, call
;
to cite
;
[L. to summon.
[J^'ot
used.]
to cry out
V.
n.
A
shout of joy
;
tion.
A
n
;
structed for the purpose. In modern times, acclamations are expressed by huzzas; by clapping of hands and often by repeating vivat rcT, n'i'a/ respubli ca, long live the king or republic, or other
ACCLAai'ATORY,
wislies.
ACCLIV TTY,
n.
[L. acclivus, acclii'is, as-
cending, from ad and
cliviis,
an ascent
;
as, to ac-
Paley.
To
supply with or furnish followed by ; as, to accommodate a man with apartments. To supply with conveniences, as to ac;
To ance
reconcile things which are at varito adjust as to acco7ni/iodatc differ;
;
ences.
To show
fitness or
agreement
to api)Iv
;
;
—
ACCOM'MODATE,n. ed
as
;
Suitable;
means accommodate
fit;
ACCOJI'MODATED,
pp.
adapt-
to the end.
Ray. Fitted
Tillotson. ;
adjust-
ed also furnished adajjted apj)lied with conveniences. We are well accommodated with lodgings. ;
;
;
ACCO.M MODATELY', adv.
Suitably;
tle
fitly.
More.
[Little used.]
ACCOM MOD ATENESS,Ji.
Fitness. [Lit-
used.]
ACCOMMODATING, suitable
making
;
ppr. Adapting reconciling furnishing ; applying.
;
;
with conveniences
ACCOM MODATING,
a.
Adaptmg one's self to; obliging; yielding to the desires of others disposed to comply, and to oblige another as an accommodating msin. ;
;
ACCOMMODATION, n. tion
a.
;
;
commodate a friend. 4.
;
words expressive of joy and good
suitable
occasions.
;
In the later ages of Rome, acclamations were performed by a chorus of music in-
make
In an intransitive sense, to agree, to be conformable to, as used by Boyle. Obs.
See
military, nuptial, senatorial, synod theatrical, &c. they were musical, and rythmical and besto^^•ed for joy, reand even reproach, and oflen acwith words, companied repeated, five, twenty, and even sixty and eighty times.
to
icith
tical,
cal,
adapt, or
fit,
To
Acclaim.] shout ofapplau.se, uttered by a multitudeAnciently, acclamation was a form of words, uttered with veliemence, somewfiat resembhng a song, sometimes accompanied with ajjplauses which were given b\ the hands. Acclamations were ecclesias-
spect,
to
as, to acf07nniorfa^e prophecy to events. 6. leiul a commercial sense.
acclamaMilton
[L. acclamatio.
To
2.
Halt. 5.
ACCLA'IM,
[L. accommodo, from ad and co7iimodo,
commodate ourselves to circumstances; to accommodate the choice of subjects to the
t.
;
[Little used.]
suit,
Mode.] 1.
.3.
[L. acclamo, ad and clamo, Sp. c/«mnr; Port, clamar; It. clamare ; W.ltei^ain; Ir. liumhnm. See Claim, Clamor.] To applaud. [Little used.]
ACCLA'IM,
;
;
To
cilb, to cite.]
to
fill
Spenser.
of con, with, and modus, profit or helj) measure, proportion, limit, or manner. See
Ed. Encyc.
ad and
t.
to
ACCOM'MODATE,f./.
ra-
[Supra.] Seizing as the accipitrine order of fowls.
V.
to .stuff;
;
[See Cloy.]
but whether an embrace or a blow, .seems not to be settled. Cyc. a. [Fr. accommodablc. See Accommodate.] That may be fitted, made suitable, or made
ACCIP'ITER, n. [L.arf and ca;)!"o, to .seize.] 1. A name given to a fisli, the niilvus or hi
a.
fill
Coil.]
ACCOM'MODABLE,
9.
ACCIP'ITRINE,
To
t.
[See
knighthood
{Little used.' a.
Pertaining to the acMorton. [JVot used.]
cidence.
V.
[.Vol used.]
AC'COLA, n. A delicate fish eaten at Malta. ACCOLA'DE, 71. [L. ad and collum, neck.] A ceremony formerly used in conferring
casu-
Expressing joy or applause by shouts, or clapping of hands. ACCLIMATED, a. [Ac for ad and cliHabituated to a foreign climate, mate.] or a climate not native so far accustomnumber, inflection. ed to a foreign chmate as not to be pecuEncyc. In heraldry, a point or mark, not essential liarly liable to its endemical diseases. to a coat of arms. Med. Repositoi-y. Encyc.
ACCIDENT'AL,
satiety.
not essentially.
;
ACCIDRNT'AT.NESS,
A small ACeLAMA'TION,
[See Accident]
book containing the rudiments of grammar. 71. [L. accidens, falling, from ad and cado, to fall W. codum, a fa
A€ CIDENT, cwyzaw, to
fortuitously
some-
belong.? to
ACCLOY',
each other, ACCOIL'.
ACCIDEN'TIARY,
;
ACCIDENCE,
;
l)acious
That which accedes or
thing else, as its principal. Accessory nerves, in anatomy, a pair of nerves, which arising from the medulla in the vertebers of the neck, ascend and enter the skull then passing out with the par vaguni, are distributed into the muscles of the neck and shoulders.
to
meet the perspective plane.
sic.
ACCESSORY,
lines parallel
ACCIDENT' ALLY, arfy. By chance;
to the princijjal agent.
Usually, in u bad sense, as John was accessory to tiir fi'lony. 0. Aiding in certahi acts or effects in u secondary manner, as accessory sounds in mu-
of two
;
;
slope.
;
good speakers.] 1. Acceding contributing aiding in produc ing some effect, or acting in suborilination
did;
;
followed by
The
Fitness; adapta-
to.
organization of the its functions.
body with accommo-
dation to
2.
3.
4.
Hale. Adjustment of (hfferences; reconciliation; as of parties in dispute. Provision of conveniences. In the plural ; conveniences tilings furnished for use chieffy applied to lodgings. In mercantile language, accommodation is used for a loan of money which is often a great co7ivenience. An accommodation ;
;
5.
;
A C C
A C C
bank
the language of
ill
,'ole,
one drawn and the purpose of bornn\ is
iiig its
amount,
;
A€€OM'MODATOR, modates; one that
One
n.
in
A€€OM'PANABLE,
a.
[See Accompany.]
Sociable. [M'ot used.] pp. n.
[Vv.A'compagne-
menf. See Accoinpany.] Something that attends as a circumstance, or which is ad
ded by way of ornament to tlie principal Thus thing, or for the sake of symmetry. instruments of music attending the voice small objects in painting dogs, guns and ;
;
game
in
a hunting piece
;
warlike instru-
ments with the
portrait of a inilitai-y character, are accompaniments. n. The performer in sic who takes the accompanying part.
3.
V. t. [Fr. accompagner ; Sp. Port, acompanhar. See Com-
To
;
to attend
;
Bacon
Obs. To cohabit.
Milton. In music, to perform the accompanying part in a composition. Busby.
;
2.
3.
To execute
Th' according music of a well mist
;
or fury. Lev. xiii. and ,\x. To gain to obtain or effect by successful ;
state.
Pope.
Swift acconi-
ppr. Finishing com pleting; fulfilling; executing; effecting; furnishing with valuable iiualities.
Noble is the fame that is built on candor and ingenuity, according to those beautiful lines ot
n.
One who
;
Our
;
zeal should be according to knowledge.
;
Sprat
Sir
ful-
;
John Denham.
-
Spectator.
;
;
;
;
The
accordare.
Lat. has concors, concordo.
border, coast;
-side,
G.
kiiste
;
D.
cote, kttst :
Qu. coi- and cordis, the heart, or from the Dan. kyst.] same root. In some of its applications, it To ajiproach to draw near to come side is naturally deduced from chorda. It. corby side, or face to face. [JVbt in use.] ;
da, the string of a musical instrument.] 1.
Agreement
;
harmony of minds
;
2.
Acts, 3.
i.
Concert iiarniony of sounds the union of diflerent sounds, which is agreeable to the ear ; agreement in pitch and tone as but in this sense, it is tjie accord of notes more usual to employ concord or chord. ;
To
;
first to
speak
to address.
;
Milton.
consent
or concurrence of opinions or wills. They all continued with one accord in prayer
AC€OST',
V. i.
To
ACCOST' ABLE,
Dryden. adjoin.
o.
Easy
iar.
;
A€€OST'ED,
;
to.
in use.] Spenser. of access ; familHoicell. [J^Tot
pp. Addressed
;
first
spoken
In heraldry, being side by side.
;
3.
4.
Agreement just correspondence of things as the accord of hght and shade in painting. Will voluntary or spontaneous motion used of the will of persons, or the natural
A€€OST'ING, speaking
;
;
;
motion of other bodies, and preceded by
accooshdre. [Fr.] assists Avomen in childbirth.
man who ACCOUNT',
own
Being more forward of his
accord.
2
viii.
That which groweth of
shalt not reap.
'2.
To
ACCORD',
i.
;
his account.
Hall.
agree
;
to
be in corres-
3.
pondence.
My heart accnrdeth with my tongue. To agree in jiitcli and tone.
A
;
;
;
To
[Fr. conte
n.
ties to the transaction, date, and price or value of the tiling. Account signifies a single entry or charge, or a statement of a number of jiarticular debts and credits, in a book or on a separate paper and in the plural, is used for the books containing such entries. A computation of delits and credits, or a general statement of particular sums; as, the account stands thus let him exhibit
;
V.
first
;
bring to an agreement to settle, ad as to accord suits or con
just or compose troversies.
n.
lu conto ; Sp. cuenta; Arm. count ; an account, reckoning, computation. Formerly writers used tiom the Fr. accompt compte. See Count.] A stun stated on paper; a registry of a debt or credit of debts and credits, or charges ; an entry in a book or on paper of things bought o;' sold, of payments, services &c., including the names of the par-
own. Cor.
Addressing by
ppr.
to.
ACCOUCHEUR,
C
as to accomplish a vow, wrath
harmoni-
Suitable agreeable in accordance with. In these senses, the word agrees with or refers to a sentence.
;
entirely. That iJe would accomplish seventy years in the deJolation of Jerusalem. Dan. ix.
;
;
L. com-
complete
that aids, or favors
Agreeing
ppr.
zing.
its own accord thou Lev. xxv. plega. See Compter and Pledge.] An asso- 5. Adjustment of a difference reconciliation. The mediator of an accord. ciate in a crime ; a partner or partaker in It was formerly used in a good 0. In law, an agreement between parties in guilt. .sense for a co-operator, but this sense is controversy, by which satisfaction for an It is obsolete. followed injury is stiiiulated, and which, when exwholly by with bewas an accomplice fore a person ; as, Blackstone. ecuted, bars a suit. with in the murder of Dryden uses 7. Permission, leave. it with to before a thing. ACCORD', r. t. To make to agree, or corto one to another. respond ; adjust thing A€€OM'PLISII, !'. /. [Fr. accomplir, to finHer hands accorded the lute's music to th ish, from ad and L. compleo, to complete. voice. Sidney. See Complete.] To to tinish ;
B
One
n.
;
W.
A
conso-
Shak.
A€€ORD'ER,
ACCORDING,
2.
;
plicatus, folded together, of co)i, with, and plico, to fold plegy, to plait ; Arm. ;
;
adjusted.
;
;
with as a companion. [Fr. complice
Corre.sponding
;
A€€OM'PANYING,p;)r. Attending; going n.
effected.
ing a finished education. Fashionable.
;
as
;
A€COM'PLICE,
;
a.
agreeable.
filment entire pertbrmance as the accomHere the whole preceding pmls of the sentence are to accord, i. e. agree with, plishment of a prophecy. The act of carrying into effect, or obtaincorrespond with, or be suitable to, what attainment as follows. According, here, has its true ing an object designed partithe accomplishment of our desires or ends. cipial sense, agreeing, and is always fol3. Acquirement that which constitutes exlowed by to. It is never a preposition. cellence of mind, or elegance of manners, VCCORD'INGLY, adv. Agreeably; suitaacquired by education. bly in a manner conformable to. A€COMPT'. Obs. [See Account.] Those who live in faitii and good works, will A€COMPT'ANT. Obs. [See Accountant.] be rewarded accordingly. A€€ORD', n. [Fr. accord, agreement, con- \e€ORP'ORATE, V. t. To unite [mt ia sent accordei; to adjust, or reconcile Sp. Milton. use.] [See Incorporate.] acordar Arm. accord, accordi ; It. accordo, A€COST' V. t. [!• r. accoster ad and
toin\
be with as connected
pain accompanies disease. v. i. To attend; to be an associate as to accompany with others.
3.
executed
;
3.
A€€OM'PANY, 2.
;
complet-
A€€OM'PLISHMENT, n. Completion
To go
on a
fulfilled
nant
A€€ORD'£D, pp. Made to agree
pILshcs.
;
'i.
;
Gower Agreement u>itt a per
[Little used.] ;
A€€OM'PLISHING,
pany.]
with or attend as a coinpanion or associate on a journey, walk, &c. as a man accompanies his friend to church, or
Agreeable; consonanf-
n.
conformity with a thing.
;
ACCORD'ANT,
a. Well endowed with good (lualities and manners; complete in acquirements; hav-
AecOM'PLISHER,
Busby.
1.
This that is written must yet be accomplished me. Luke, xxii.
ed 2.
ACeOM'PANY, ;
a.
A€€ORD'ANCE, son
ners.
mu
AeeOM'PANIST,
acompanar
as, to accomplish
;
;
Attended; joined
in society.
ACCOM'PANIMENT,
or bring to pass
AeeOM'PLISHED, pp. Fini-shed
accom-
Warburton.
adjusts.
A€€5M'PANIED, with
that
fulfil
To fin-nish with riualities which serve to render tlie mind or body complete, as with valuable endowments and elegant man-
").
tended as notUiig more than accommodations 8.
To
a prophecy.
of those quotations were probably in-
Paley In marine language, an accommodationladder is a hght ladder hung over the side of a ship at the gangway.
AeCORD'ABLE,
xiii.
in' 4.
opposition to a note, wliieli tlie owner lias' received in payment for goods. In England, accommodation hill, is one' given instead of a loan of money. Crabb 0. It is also used of a note lent merely to accommodate the borrower. 7. In theology, accommodation is the appUcation of one thing to another by analogy, as of the words of a prophecy to a future event.
Many
A C C
exertions as to accomplish a purpose. Prov.]
directors, offerer! for discount, for
Shak
A
computation or mode of reckoning ; applied to other things, than money or as the Julian account of time. trade Narrati\ e relation statement of facts ;
4.
;
;
:
transactions antl events, verbal or written as an account of the revolution in France. Ilcnce, An assignment of reasons explanation l)y a recital of |)articular transactions, given by a person in an employment, or to a sn])erior, often implying responsiliility. Give zn account of lliy stewardship. Luke, xvi.| Without responsil)ility or obligation. He giveth not account of his matters. Job, ;
5.
;
xxxiii.
6.
7.
Reason or consideration, as a motive as on all accounts, on ci cry account. Value importance estimation that is, ;
;
;
;
A C C
A C C
A C C of particular
recital
ACCOTJNT'ABLENESS,
Liabloncss to answer or to give account tlie .state of beijig answerable, or liable to the payment of njonev or damages. n.
;
ACCOUNT ANT, n. accounts
tile
;
One
more
who
skilled in
1.
keeps accjiunts an oflicer in a ]iuboffice who has charge of tlie accounts. 2. In (ireat l?ritain, an oflicer in the courtj of cliancery, who receives money and pays it to the bank, is called accountant;
-general.
accoimts are
A
n.
book
in
which' Swifl.
kej)t.
such a state of persons or things*, as rend- ACCOUNT'ED, pp. Esteemed; deemed them worthy of more or less e.stimaconsidered regarded valued. as men of account. tion Accounted for, explained. What is the son of man that thou makest acACCOUr/TTNG, »/)r. Deeming esteeming count oihim. Ps. cxliv. reckoning rendering an account. Profit advantage that is, a result or proasfor, rendering an account To find Accountingthe duction worthy of estimation. reasons unfolding tlie causes.! signing our account in a pursuit to turn to acACCOUNTING, n. The act of reckoning!
ers
;
;
growing
Increasing by growth; as the ;
;
V. i. [Fr. accrocher, to fix on a hook from croc, crochet, a hook, from the same elements as crook, which see.] To hook, or draw to, as with a hook but ;
;
;
a.
adding to by growth motion of plants.
ACCROACH,
;
;
;
accretive
I
;
8.
bodies by the accession of parts. Plants have an accretion, but no alimentation. Bacon. In the ciiril law, the adhering of property to something else, by which the owner of one thing becomes ])osse.ssed of a right to another as, when a legacy is left to two persons, and one of them dies before the testator, the legacy devolves to the survivor by right of accretion. Encyc.
ACCRETIVE,
;
;
;
;
;
mercan-
generally, a person
lic
ACCOUNT'-BOOK,
ad and crcsco ; Eng. accrue ; Fr. accroitre. See Increase, Accrue, Groiv.] A growing to an increase by natural grow til applied to the increase of organic
1.
;
;
in this sense not used. or adjusting accounts. 2. To encroach to away from anTo couple to other. Hence in draw V. t. accvp'pk. old laws to assume the ; join or link together. [See Couple.] exercise of royal prerogatives. public affairs. n. A \CCOUPLEMENT, accup'plement. Put that to mine account. Philem. xviii. Btackstone. To make account, that is, to have a previous coupling a connecting in pairs ; junction. The noun accroachment, an encroachment, or [Tyittle used.] opinion or e.xpectation, is a sense now obattempt to exercise royal power, is rarely v. t. accur'age. CoiirACCOUR'AGE, [See solete. or never used. [See JSncroaeh.] To encourage. [Mot used.] age.] writ of account, in law, is a writ which ACCRUE, V. i. accru'. [Fr. accroitre, accru, Spenser) the plaintiffbrings demanding that the deincrease L. accresco, cresco ; Sp. crecer V. t. [See Court.] To entertain' to fendant should render his just account, or ACCOURT, and acrec(r; It. crescere, accrescere ; Port. with courtesy. [Ao( used.] Spenser.' show good cause to the contrary called crecer : Arm. cris(]i.] V. t. accoot'cr. [Fr. accoutrer ; Cowel. ACCOUTER, also an action of account. to grow to; hence to arise, procontracted from accoustrer, from Norm.j Literally, ceed or come to be added, as increase, AecOUNT', V. <; To deem, judge, considcostc, a coat, coster, a rich cloth or vester, think, or Iiold in opinion. as, a |)rofit accrues to profit or damage ment tor festivals. 1 tliink this to be the' I and son Solomon shall be accounted ofmy government from the coinage of copper; true origin of the word, rather than con-, fenders. 1. Kings, i. a loss accrues from the coinage of gold, dre, couture, coxduAer.] 2. Toaccountof, to hold in esteem to value. and silver. Let a man so account of us as of ministers In a general sense, to dress to cqui]) but Accrue, n. accru'. Something that acof Christ. 1 Cor. iv. api>ropriately, to array in a military ilress; cedes to, or follows the property of anSilver was not any thing accounted of in the to put on, or to furnish with a military other. Obs. dress and arms to equip the body for' days of Solomon. 1 Kings, x. ACCRUTNG, ppr. Growing to; arising; 3. To reckon, or compute; as, the motion of military service. coming being added. the sun whereby years are accounted ACCOUt'ERED, pp. Dressed in arms; ."VCCRU'MENT, n. increase. Addition also to assign as a debt as, a |n-oject acequipped. [Little used.] Montagu. counted to (lis service but these uses are ACCOUTERING, ppr. Equipping with; • n. [L. accubatio, a reclinantiquated. military habiliments. count.
9.
Philip.
4.
Regard; behalf; sake; a sense deduced from charges on book as on account of
ACCOUPLE,
;
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
—
I
;
;
;
j
;
V. {. To render an account or relation of jiarticidars. An oflicer must account with or to the Treasurerybr money
ACCOUNT', received. ^.
To give reasons to assign tlie causes to explain with for ; as, idleness accounts for poverty. To render reasons to answer for in a ;
;
responsible character. must account for all the talents entrusted
We
to us.
^ACCOUNTABIL'ITY, n. The state of being answer
liable to
for one's
conduct
;
liabif-
ity to give account, and to receive reward or punishment for actions.
The
awful idea oi accountability.
R. Hall.
2. Liability to the
damages
;
;
Every man
Liable to be caUed to to a siqierior. accountable to God for his cona.
answerable is
age
;
In
common
;
usage, an old or unusual dress.
;
to
[Obs-]
Spenser. V. t. [Fr. accrediter; Sp. acreaccreditare ; to give authority or
ACCRED'IT, ditar;
It.
reputation from L. ad and credo, to behove, or give faith to. See Credit.] give credit, authority, or reputation to' accredit an envoy, is to receive liini in his ;
duct.
;
and give him
])ublic character,
credit
and
ACCREDITED, with reputation character.
receiver of good.s. .Accountable for, that
ACCRE'TION,
[.Vot
Ch7-ist.
a.
[See ^ccrefi'on.]
Shuckford. ;!
}
a.
[L. accumbens, accumbo,
See Accubation.] Leaning or
rechning, as the ancients at their meals. v.t. [L. aecumido. ad and cumulo, to heap; cumulus, a heap; Sp. acumular ; It. accumutare ; Fr. accumu-
ler, 1.
In- 2.
n. [Lat. accretio, increase accres'co, to increase, litcrallv. to srrow to
cubo.
ACCU'MULATE,
Obs
Giving authority or
State of being accum-
n.
bent or reclining.
rejjutation.
creasing.
be explained.
|
.Allowed; received! authorized in a public
ACCREDITING, ;>;>r.
ACCUjM'BENCY, from
pp. ;
Encyc.
V. i. [L. accumbo ; ad and cuio.] to recline as at table. [.Yot used.]
.\CCUM'BENT,
rank accordingly.
ACCRES'CENT,
may
rupted manners.
.\CeUMB',
1
To
down. See
lie
Cube.] \ lying or reclining on a couch, as the ancients at their meals. The manner was to rechne on low beds or couches with the head resting on a pillow or on the elbow. Two or three men lay on one bed, the feet of one extended behind the back of another. This practice was not permitted among soldiers, children, and senants ; nor was it known, until luxury had cor-
;
;
caress.
from ad and cubo, to
ing,
Dress; equip
body appropri and arms equijiage
ACCOY', V. t. [old Fr. accoisir. Todd.] To render quiet or diffident to soothe
2. Subject to pay, or make good, in case of loss. A sheriff is accountable, as bailiff and
etesant.]
phi.
furniture for the
ately, miUtary dress for mihtary service.
ACCREDITA'tl'ON, n. That which gives payment of money or of title to credit. [Lnttle used.]
responsibility for a trust.
ACCOUNT' ABLE, account
AeCOUt'ERMENTS,»i.
;
;
3.
[[ACCUBA'TION,
comhler.]
To heap up to pile ; to amass as, to accumulate earth or stones. To collect or bring together; as to arcumulate causes of misery to accumulate wealth. :
;
;
ACCU'MULATE,
r.
i.
To grow
to a great
ACE
A C C
ACE
to increase 2. The size, liimiber or quantity charge of an offense or crime the declaration containing the fireatly as public evils accunmlale. ;
a.
Collected into a mass,
Bacon
orqnantitv.
They
Collected into a pp. or great qnantity. ppr. Heaping up increasing aniassinjT; reatlv. A€CUMULA'TION, n.'Tlie Kct of accuinu latins; the state of being accumulated ; an liea])
A€€U'MULATING, ;
as an amassing; a collecting together acrimndation of earth or of evils. In lau\ the concurrence of several titles to the same thing, or of several circinn-
same proof. Encyc. In Universities,an accumulation of de^ees, is the taking of sevei-al together, or at .smaller intervals than usual, or than is allowed by the rules. Encyc. AeeU'BIULATIVE, a. That accmnulates heaping up accumulating.
a. A term given to a case of nouns, in Grammars, on which the action of a verb terminates or tiills; called in English Grammar the oi/fcitfe case ACCU'SATIVELY, adv. In an accusative manner.
In relation to the
2.
an accusation
accumu-
that
71.
1.
[L. nccuratio, from accuad and curare, to take See Care.]
rare, to take care of; 1.
;
f!(ra, care.
;
nicety; correctness; precision which refrom care. The accuracy of ideas or opuiions is conformity to truth. The value of testimony depends on its accuracy copies of legal instruments shoidd be taken ^
'i.
with accuracy. Closeness tightness as a tube sealed with ;
;
[L. accuratus.] In exact conformity to truth, or to a standard or ride, or to a model free from failure, error, a.
;
or defect as an accurate account accurate measure an accurate expression. Determinate precisely fixed as, one body may not have a very accurate Influence oil ;
;
;
3.
;
;
another. Close perfectly tight ing or hitijig. ;
A€'€URATELY, rate
2.
demeanor. To charge with a
Bacon. as an accurate seal-
;
adv. Exactly; in an accu-
maimer; with precision; without
er-
ACEL'DAMA,
n. [Ch. a field, and Spn, Ch. Syr. and Sam., blood.] have lain south of Jerusalem,
Km,
A
field said to
the same as the potters field, jiurchased with the bribe which Judas took for betraying his master, and therefore called the feld of blood. It was ajipropriated to the interment of strangers. ACEPH'ALOUS, a. [Gr. a priv. and«to)i,, a head.] Without a head, headless. In liistory, the term Acejihali, or Acephahtes was given to several sects who refused to follow some noted leader, and tf> such bishops as were exempt from the jurisdiction and dis-
fault
;
to
of their patriarch.
cipline
was
also
;
Modern
ed these
blame.
It
given to certain levelers wlio acknowledged no head in the reign of Henry 1st. It was also applied to the Blemmves, a liretended nation of Africa, and toother tribes in the East, whom ancient naturalists represented as having no head their eyes and mouth being placed in other parts.
discoveries have dissipat-
In English Laws,
fictions.
who
men
held lands of no particular lord, and who were under no bishop. I. Cowel. ACEPH'ALUS, n. An obsolete naine of the t
or excusing
followed by o/betbre the subject of ac cusation the use of for after this verb is
It is
clergymen L. L. Hen.
;
;
;
accuracy.
A€'€URATE,
9.
;
;
sults
ti. <. sasi. [L. occhso, to blame, or accuse ad and causor, to blame, or accuse causa, blame, suit, or process, cause ; Fr. acciiser ; Sp. acusar ; Port. accusar; It. accusare ; Arm. accusi. The sense is, to attack, to drive against, tol charge or to fall upon. See Cause.] To charge with, or declare to have committed a crime, either by plaint, or con ])laint, information, indictnient,or impeacl ment to charge with an offense against the laws, judicially or by a jiublic process as, to accuse one of a high crime or mis ;
Exactness; exact conformity to truth; or model freedom iiom mistake
to a rule or
;
;
or amasses.
lates, gathers,
ACCURACY,
in
Accusing containing as an accusatory libel.
;
;
One
;
a.
ACCU'SE,
;
n.
accusative case
Grammar.
ACCU'SATORY,
'A.
A€€U'MULATOR,
Mat.
ACeU'SATIVE,
;
stances to the
;
over his head his accusation.
set
xxvii.
AceU'MULATED,
care
very small quantity; a particle; an atom; a tritle as a creditor will not abate an ace of his demand.
charge
ACeU'MULATE,
'2.
A
2.
;
;
;
;
;
;
temper in man. to habituate or inure as to practice ACER'IC, a. [L. acer, a maple tree.] accustom one's self to a spare diet. Pertaining to the maple obtained from the vial accttratelt/ stopped. Comstock. ACCUS'TOM, V. i. To be wont, or habituUre. maiile, as aceric acid. A€'€URATENESS, ?;. Accuracy; exact- ated to do any thing. [Little used.] a. [L. acerosus, 2. To cohabit. chaffy, from ness nicety precision. Milton. AC'EROUS, [JVotused.] In botany, chaffy ; acxts, chaft'or a jioint.] n. Custom. t. V. ACCUS'TOM, A€€URSE, [JVotused.] accurs', [Ac for ad and chaff. resembling Milton curse.] To devote to destruction to iinpre 2. An acerous or acerose leaf is one which a. Of long custom cate misery or evil upon. [This verb is r\CCUS'TOMABLE, is linear and permanent, in form of a neehabitual used. See customary. ror or defect as a writing accurately copied. Closely so as to be perfectly tight as a
;
;
;
3.
;
;
;
;
;
;
rarely
A€€URS'ED,
tion or miseiy 'I.
[Little used.]
;
Cui-se.]
pp. or a.
Doomed to destruc- ACCUS'TOMABLY, custom or
:
habit.
adv.
According
[Little iised.] n. Custom
to
dle, as ui pine.
ACES'CENCY,
Martyn. n.
[L.
ctcescens,
turning
from acesco. See Acid.] A turning .sour by spontaneous use or practice. a decomposition [JVotiised.] Boyle. ACCUS'TOiMARILY, adv. According to state of becoming sour, tart, or acid and hence a being moderately sour. I could wish custom or accursed common from Christ. myself practice. [See CusSt. Paul. tomarily.] [Little used.] ACES'CENT, a. Turning sour becoming Worthy of the curse detestable ; exe- ACCUS'tOMARY, a. Usual; customary. tart or acid by spontaneous decompo.sition.
The city shall be accursed. John vi. Separated from the faithful cast out of the church excommunicated.
ACCUS'TOMANCE,
;
habitual
sour,
;
;
;
;
;
il.
;
crable.
Keep from the accursed tiling. Josh. vi. Hence, 4. Wicked malignant in the extreme. ACeU'SABLE, a. That may be accused chargeable with a crime blamable Uable to censure followed by of. ;
[See Customary.]
ACCUS'TOMED,
;
;
n.
ACCUSA TION,
One who n. The
accuses. Hall. act of charging the act of accus-
with a crime or olfense ing of any wrong or injustice. ;
Being
familiar
by
;
as in their ac-
;
ACE, It.
A
;
the card or die so marked.
slightly sour
but the latter sense usually e.xpressed by acidulous or sub;
J\/icholson.
ACES'TE, papiho
familiar
ppr. Making inuring. n. [L. as, a unit or pound; Fr. as; asso ; D. aas ; G. Sp. as.] unit a single point on a card or die or
by practice
is
acid.
;
;
ACCUS'TOMING,
;
ACCU'SANT,
pp.
use habituated inured. a. Usual often practiced customed manner. ;
2.
;
Hence
[Little used.]
:
v\
In entomology, a species of
n.
or
butterfly, in India.
ings, found
ACES'TIS,
n.
chrysocolla, urine,
and
subdentated Oyc.
factitious
made of Cyprian
niter.
ACETAB'ULUM, egar.
A
[Gr.]
with
See Acid.]
sort
of
verdigris,
Cyc. n.
[L.
from acetum, vin-
Among
the
Romans
a
A C H
A C
A C
I
I
a. Pertaining to Achaia in In the shape of a needle having sharp point* vinegar cnisc or like vessel, anil a meas A€TIE'AN, like needles. Kirivan. Martyn. fiireece, and .a celebrated league or conlire of about one eigbtli of a ]iiiit. 1. In anatomy, the cavity of a bone for receivfederacy established there. This State lay An acicular prism is when the crystals are on sh-nder and straight. the of Corinth, within Pelopongulf Phillips. ing the protuberant end of another bone, nesus. and therefore forming the articulation calAClC'ULARLY, adv. In the manner of needles, or prickles. It is used especially for A€II1*;RN'ER, 11. A star of the first magniled enarthrosis. tude in the southern extremity of the con- ACID, a. [L. acidus ; Sax. ceced, vinethe cavity of the os innominatuni, which stellation Eridanus. from the root of acies, edge ; Gr. gar receives the head of the thigh bone. 2. In botfiHj/, the trivial name of a species of A€H'ERSET, n. An ancient measure of axr; ; VV. awr, an edge or ])oint. See Edge.] its corn, supposed to be about eight bushels. Sour, sharp or biting to the taste, having the peziza, the cup peziza so called from taste of vinegar, as orirf fruits or resemblance to a cup. Encyc. liquors. That AC'ID, n. In chimislry, acids are a class of 3. A glandular substance found in the placen- ACHIE'VABLE, a. [See Achieve.] of substances, so denominated from their Barrotv. ta of some auLinals. may be performed. taste, or the sensation of .sourness which 4. It is sometimes used in the sense of Coty- ACHIE'VANCE, n. Performance. Elyot. ACHIE'VE, v.t. [Fr.ac/ifi'er, to finish; Arm. But the ledon. they i)roduce on the tongue. name is now given to several substances, acchui ; old Fr. chcvcr, to come to the eml, 5. A species of lichen. Ci/c. AC'ETARY, n. [See ./Icid-] An acid pulpy frotu Fr. chef, the head or end old Eiig. which have not this characteristic in an eminent degree. The properties, by which chcve ; Sp. and J'ort. acaiar, from cabo, end, substance in certain fruits, as the pear, inSee Chief.] closed in a congeries of small calculous they are distinguished, are these: cnpe. 1. VViien taken into the mouth, 1. To perform, or execute to accom])lish bodies, towards the base of the fruit. they occasion the taste of sourness. They are corto finish, or carry on to a final close. It Grew. ^ unless diluted with water and some ACETATE, n. [See ,^cid.] In chimistry, a apiiropriatcly used for the effect of efforts rosive, of them arc caustic. made by the hand or bodily e.xertion, as neutral salt formed by the union of the deeds achieved by valor. 2. They change certain acetic acid, or radical vinegar, with any vegetable blue colors To gain or obtain, as the result of exertion. to red, and restore blue colors which have salifiable base, as with earths, metals, and Sliovv all the spoils by valiant Kings achieved been tinned green, or red colors which alkalies; as the acc/afe of alumine, of lii Prior. ha\ e been turned blue by an alkali. or of co|)per. Lavoisier. AC'ETATED, a. [See AciJ.] Combined ACHIE'VEP, /);). Performed; obtained 3. Most of them unite with water in all proacconqilished. with acetic acid, or radical vinegar. ])ortioiis, with a condensation of volume -VCHIE'VEMENT, n. The performance of and evolution of heat; and many of them ACE'TIe, a. [See Acid.] A term used to an action. have so strong an attraction for water, as denote a particular acid, acetic acid, the 2. A acnot to ajipear in the solid state. great or heroic deed something concentrated acid of vinegar, or radical 4. They have a complished by valor, or boldness. stronger affinity for alkaIt may be obtained by exposing vinegar. 3. An obtaining by exertion. fies, than these have for any other subcommon vinegar to fi-ost the water freez 4. An escutcheon or ensigns armorial, grantstance and in combining with them, most iiig leaves the acetic acid, in a state of pii ed for the performance of a great or honof them produce efl^ervescence. rity. orable action. Encyc 5. They unite with earths, alkahes and meACETIFICA'TION, n. The act of making ACHIE'VER, n. One who accomphshes a tallic oxyds, forming interesting comacetous or sour; or the operation of makpurpose, or obtauis an object by his exerpounds, usually called salts. ing vinegar. Cyc. tions. 6. With few exceptions, they are volatilized ACE'TIFY, V. t. To convert into acid or ACHIE'VING, ;);;). Performing; or decomposed by a moderate heat. executing .flikin. vinegar. ;
;
;
;
;
;
'
;
;
—
;
;
AC'ETITF^,
n.
[See
Jlcid.]
formed by the acetous able base
A
acid,
neutral salt
with a
salifi
as the acctitc of copjjer, alumi nous acetitc. Lavoisier. ;
ACETOM'ETER, and
n.
[L. aceimn,
vinegar,
instrument for ascertaining the strength of vinegar. Ure. ACETOUS, a. [See Acid.] Sour; hke or having the nature of vinegar. Acetous acid is the term used by chimists for distilled vinegar. This acid, in union wilji dift'erent bases, forms salts called acetites.
See Acid.]
n. [L.
Vinegar; a
sour liquor, obtained from vegetables dissolved in boiling water, and from fermented and spirituous liquors, by exposing lliem to heat and air. This is called the acid or acetous fennentation.
AellE,
r. {. ake.
ache or be primary .sense to
the oriental 1.
2.
plj?
[Sax. ace, ece ; Gr. aj;tu, pain axoi, pain. The to be pressed. Perhaps
m
;
is
to press.]
To suffer iiain ; to have or be in pain, or in continued pain ; as, the head aches. To suticr griet', or extreme grief; to be distressed
;
AGHE,
as,
the heart aches.
n. ake. Pain, or continued pain, in opposition to sudden twinges, or spasmod ic iKiin. It denotes a more moderate de of grce pain than pang, angiush, and tor
ture.
Being
in
pain
;
suffering
now deemed
distress.
inaccurate. They are also divided into oxygen acids, hydrogen acid.s, and acids destitute of these acidifiers. Another division is into acids with simple acids with double radicals, radicals, acids with triple radicals, acids with miknown
A'€HING,»i. Pain; con tinned pain or distress. A'CHIOTE, n. The anotta, a tree, and a drug used for dyeing red.
The bark of the tree the wood is used
makes good cordage, and
ftffpm; mea.siire.]
An
ACE'TUM,
The old chimists divided acids into animal, vegetable, and mineral— a division
gaining.
A'CIIING, ppr.
to excite fire
by
friction.
[See Anotta. Clavigero.
A'€HOR,
radicals,
o.x<^p,
;
;
;
j
;
I
Vol.
L
conqiound acids, dubious acids,
sordes capitis.] and acids destitute of oxygen. 1. The scald head, a disease Lavoisier. Thomson. JVicholson. Aikin. forming scaly eruptions, sujjposed to be a critical evac- ACIDIF'EROUS, a. [Acid and L, fero.] uation of acrimonious humors a species Containing acids, or an acid. of herpes. Hooper. Qiiiricy. Acidiferous minerals are such as consist of In mythology, the God of flies, said to have an earth combined with an acid as carbobeen worshipped by the Cyreneans, to nate of hme, aliimhiite, &c. Phillips. avoid beinff vexed bv those insects. Encyc. ACID'IFIABLE, a. [From Acidify.] A€HROMATl€, a. [Gi: a piiv.mid xf^'f^a. Capable of being converted into an acid, by union with an acidifying principle, withcolor.] Destitute of color. Achromatic telescopes out decomposition. are formed of a combination of lenses, ACIDIFleA'TION, n. The act or process which separate the variously colored rays of acidifying or changing uito an acid. of light to equal angles of divergence, "at ACID'IFIED, pp. Alade acid; converted different angles of refraction of the mean into an acid. In this case, the rays behig made to ACID'IFIER, n. That which ray. by combinarefract towards contrary parts, the \v hole tion forms an acid, as oxjgen and liychoiren. ray is caused to deviate from its course,! without being separated into colors, and- ACID'IFY, f, /, [Acid aiKl L.facio.] the o[)tical aberration arising fi-om the va-' To make acid but approi)riately to convert rious colors of light, is jirevented. This' into an aciil, chimically so called, by combination \\ith any substance. telescope is an uivention of Dolland. J\'icholson.i ACIDJFYIXG, ppr. Making acid; conACI€'ULAR, a. [L. aticula, Priscian, aj >erting into an acid having power to needle, from Gr. axr;, L. acies, a itoiut. See change into an acid. Oxygen is called the Acid.] acidifying jirinciplc or element. n. [Gr.
A C K -ACIDIM'ETER,
A C O
[Add and Gr.
n.
Isa. vi.
measure.]
An
iiistrument for ascertaining the strength 8.
of acids.
lire.
ACID'ITY, The quality of being sour; n.
ness
;
[Fr. aciditi,
sharpnes.s to
AC'IDNESS,
?;.
from «aW.] sourness; tart
A C O
they are the seed which the Lord hath blessed.
ixitftoy,^
I
To own, avow or assent
an act
to
Mediterranean isles is the swiftest of its kind, and coils itself upon a tree, from ACKNOWL'EDgED, pp. Owned con which it darts upon its prey. fessed noticed with regard or gratitude 2. A comet or meteor resembhng the serpent. received with approbation owned betbre adv. and ;
;
ACOP',
;
At the
A€KNOVVL'EDgING,
ppr. Owning confessing approving grateful but the latter sense is a gallicism, not to be used. n. The act of moderate degre. A)huthnol. owning ; confession ; as, the acknowledgACID'ULATED, pp. Tinged with an acid ment of a fault. made slightly sour. 2. The owiiuig, «ith approbation, or in the ACID'ULATl"NG,;)/>r. Tinging with an acid AC'IDULE, } n. In chimislry, a compound true character as the acknowledgment of ACID'ULUM, I salt, in which the alkahne a God, or of a public minister. base is s(q)ersaturated with acid as, tarta 3. Concession admission of the truth as, of a fact, position, orprincijile. reous adduhtm ; oxalic addulum. 4. The owning of a benefit received, accoma. addulus. See t.
;
in a le
gal form, to give it validity ; as, to ucknowl edge a deed before competent authority.
authority. v.
;
;
tlie taste.
The quahty of being sour
acidity.
ACIDULATE,
length of a light gray color with black spots, resembling eyes the belly perfectly white. It is a native of Aliica and the:
Cor. xvl.
acidulus, shghtly sour ; Fr. acidukr, to make sour. See Add.' To tuige Willi an acid ; to made acid in a [L.
;
;
;
1.
ACKNOWL'EDgMENT,
;
;
;
;
;
ACIDULOUS, Slightly sour cess of acid
;
;
Add.}
[L.
sub-acid, or having an ex as, addulous sulphate. a. [L. acinaces, a cime
ACINAC'IFORM,
tcr, Gr. axnaxrji, and h./orma, form.] In botany, formed hke, or resembling a cim
eter.
AC'INIFORM,
a.
Mnrtyn. [L. annus, a grape stone,
and forma, sha])e.] Having the form of grapes like
;
The uvea
grapes. the
men of
iris
in the
being ui clusters or posterior lais called the
eye,
Anatomists apply the glands of a similar tbrma
tunic.
adniform term to many tion.
ACINOSE, ACINOUS,
(^uincy. I
a.
L.
[From
Hooper.
acinus.
See
Adniform.] Consisting of minute granular concretions used in mineralogy. ICinvan ACINUS, n. [L.]' In botany, one of the small grains, which comj)ose the fruit of I
[a
cope.]
Obs.
top.
Jonson,
A'€ORN,
;
2.
71. [Sax. cecem, from ace or ac, oak, and corn, a grain.] The seed or fruit of the oak; an oval nut which grows in a rough permanent cup. The first settleis of lioston were reduced to the mcessity of f'oeiiing on clams, muscles, B. Trumbull. ground nuts, and acorns. In marine language, a small ornamental piece of wood, of a conical shape, fixed on the point of the sjiindle above the vane, on the mast head, to keep the vane from beMar. Diet. ing blown off. Ill natural history, the Lepa.s, a genus of shells of several species tbund on the Brit-
panied with gratitude and hence it com- 3. bines the ideas of an c.rpression uf thanks. ish coast. The shell is multivalvular, uiiHence, it is used also for something given or done in return for a favor. the valves are eipial, and fixed by a stem A declaration or avowal of one's own act, parallel and perpendicular, but they do not to give it legal vahdity as the acknowledgopen, so that the animal iterforms its funcment of a deed before a ])roi)er othcer. tions by an aperture on the top. These shells are always fixed to some solid Acknowledgment-money, in some parts of Engbody. land, is a sum paid by tenants, on tlie death A'€0RNED, a. Furnished or loaded with of tlieir landlord, as an acknowletlgment acorns. of their new lords. Kncyc. .\'€ORUS, n. [L. from Gr. oxopot.] 1. Aromatic ACME, n. Ac'my. [Gr. ax/^y;.] Calamus, sweet flag, or sweet The top or highest point. It is used to derush. note the maturity or iierfection of an ani- i2. In natural history, lAue coral, which grows in the form of a tree, on a mal. Among physicia7is, the crisis of a rocky bottom, in some parts of the African seas. Old nied disease, or its utmost violence. It is ical writers divided the jirogress of a dis brought from the Camarones and Benin. ease into four periods, the arche, or beginE7icyc. ning, the anabasis, or increase, the acme •3. In medicine, this name is sometimes given or utmost violence, and the paracme. to the great galangal. Encyc. or decline. But acme can hardly be con- ACOTYL EDON, n. [Gr. a priv. and xori-sidered as a legitimate English word. X);6iui' from xoTt*>;, a hollow.} In botany, a plant whose seeds have no side A€'NE, n. Ac'ny. [Gr.] A small hard pimple or tubercle on the face. lobes, or cotyledons. Martiin. ;
Quinaj. [Old Fr. accointer, to wlience accointance, ac-
ACQUIES'CENT,
^ o J
easy submitthig ;
Qu. Per. (Jva.Si kimda, qiiaintancc. knowing, intelligent; Ger. A»«rfe, knowledge kund, known, public D. korid oi' Sw. kund, known kunde, knowledge Dan. kiender, to know, to be acquainted These words seem to have lor their with. primitive root the Goth, and Sax. kimnan, to know, the root of cunning Ger. kennen; D. kunnen, kan Eng. can, and ken which see.] ;
;
;
;
an
a.
;
Resting satisfied; disposed to submit.
ppr. Quietly submitting
ACQUIRABLE,
a. That may be acquired. V. t. [L. acquiro, ad and quaro, to seek, that is to follow, to press, to urge acto jiursue to the end or ob quiro signifies
a charge or duty
a.s, the jury acquitted the acquit a man of e\ il intenfollowed by of before the obIn a reject to acquit from is obsolete. ciprocal sense, as, the soldier acquitted himself well in battle, the word has a like sense, implying the discharge of a duty or Hence its use in expressing obligation. excellence in performance ; as the orator acquitted himself well, that is, in a manner
tions.
rary possession is not exjjressed by acquire, but by gain, obtain, procure as, to obtain [not acquire] a hook on loan. Descent is the title whereby a man, on the the deatli of his ancestor, acquires his estate, by
n.
;
knowl-
Familiar
pp. Gained, obtained, or received from art, labor, or other means, in distinction from thos(4,tliings which are bestowed by nature. Thus we say, abilities, natiual and acquired. It implies title, or some |)ermanence of possession.
;
known.
slightly
or that which is
is
in opposition to natural gifts
used
m
;
demanded.
me
six.
;
;
n.
The
act of acquitting,
or state of being acquitted. South. [This word is superseded by acquittal.] ACQUITTAL, n. A judicial setting tVee, or deliverance from the charge of an ottense as, by verdict of a jury, or sentence of a :
court. TTie acquittal of a principal operates as an acquittal of tlie accessories.
ACQUITTANCE,
n.
A
discharge or re-
lease from a debt. 2.
The
writing, which is evidence of a discharge ; a receipt in full, wliich bars a fm-ther demand. pp. Set fice, or judicially
ACQUITTED,
discharged from an accusation released from a debt, duty, obligation, charge, or suspicion of guilt. ;
as.
music and jiainting. eloquence, and skill are acquirements ; genius, the gift of nature. It denotes especially personal attainments, in oi)position to material or external things gained, which are more usually called ac quisitions but this distinction is not always observed.
Ixxxviii.
acquaintance are estranged from
n. The act of acquiring acquired; attainment. It
ACQUI'REMENT,
Lover and friend hast thou put far from me and mine acquaintance into darkness. Ps.
Acquaintances, in the plm-al, is used, as apbut plied to individual persons known more generally, acquaintance is used for one or more. Jicquaintant, in a like sense, is not used.
that his situation and public expectation
Blackstone
ACQUI'RED,
;
;
we
ACQUIT'MENT,
right of representation, as his heir at law.
;
;
It is
;
low.
A
edge a state of being acquainted, or of having intimate or more than slight or suas, 1 knoiu the man, perficial knowledge bnt have no acquaintance with him. Sometimes it denotes a more slight knowledge, A person or persons well known usually persons we liave been accustomed to see and converse with; sometimes, persons
My
set free ; to release or discharge from an obligation, accusation, guilt, censure, suspicion, or whatever Ues upon a person as
grief.
acquaint one^s self, is to gain an inti mate or j)articular knowledge of. Jlcquaint now thyself with him and be at peace. Job xxii.
Job
To
prisoner
To
more
;
;
;
ACQUAFNTANCE,
3.
to leave, or forsake ; Fr. quitter, to forsake ; Sp. quitar ; Port, quitar It. quilare, to remit, forgive, remove D. kwyten ; Ger. quit-
Fr.
improper.
3.
Miltou.
ac^umr; Sp.adquirir; Ar. Sys, Heb. Ipn to seek, to make towartls, to fol-
inti-
;
mately
used.]
;
;
;
[Ml
ACQUIT', v.t. [Fr. acquitter; W. gadu, gadaw L. cedo ; Arm. kitat, or quytaat,
ACQUI'RE,
ject
See Acquest.
n.
tiren.]
The L. qximsivi, unless contracted, is See class jirobably from a different root. Gr. and Gs.] Isaiah liii. To gain, by any means, sometliing which is in a degree permanent, or vvhicli becomes 2. To inform ; to communicate notice to ; as, a vested or inherent in the possessor ; as, to friend in the country acquaints me with hi snccess. Of before the object, as to ac- acquire a title, estate, learning, habits, skill, dominion, &c. Plants acquire a green quainl a man o/'this design, has been used, mere tempo color from the solar rays. but is obsolete or t.
ACQUIST',
;
resting content.
;
To make known to make fully or known to make faniiUar. A man of sonows and acquainted with
as,
Johnson.
A€QUIES'CING,
;
;
;
acquiescence in the decisions of a court, or in the allotments of providence.
t.
;
A C R
A c a
A c a remedies for deafness, or imperfect
for
ppr. Setting free from acreleasing from a chai-ge, obliga-
ACQUIT'TING,
cusation tion, or suspicion of guilt. ;
ACRA'SE, ACRA'ZE,
)
^
v.t.
To make
fatuate.
crazy; to in[See
[.Yot in use.]
Crazy.]
n. A person who acquires. 2. Toinqjair; to destroy. [JVotinwse.] 71. [Gr. axpaaia, from a priv. and ppr. Gaining by labor or AC'RASV, other means, something that has a degree xpaoi;, constitution or temperament.] of permanence in the possessor. In medical authors, an excess or predominanledge. cy of one (luality above another, in mixAeUUA'INTING, ppr. Making known to ACQUI'RY, ?i. Acquirement. [.Vb< used.] Barrow. ture, or in the human constitution. Bailey. giving notice, or information to. AC'QUISITE, a. s as z. Gained. [AV used.] ACRE, n. a'ker. [Sax. acer, acera, ar acer ; A€QUEST', n. [L. acquisilus, acquiro.] Burton Ger. acker ; D. akker ; Sw. acker ; Dan. 1. Acquisition the tiling gained. Bacon, fi-om acLat. n. ACQUISP'TION, 2. Conquest a place acquired by force. [L. acquisitio, ager ; W. eg ; Ir. acra ; Gr. aypo; ACQUIESCE, V. i. acquiess'. [L. acquiesce, quisitus, acqutesivi, which are given as the ager. In these languages, the word retains its primitive sense, an open, plowed, of ad and quiesco, to he quiet; quies, rest part, and prct. of acquiro ; but qua'sivi is In Eng. it retained its orior sowed field. Fr. jtrobably from a difterent root \V. ceisiaw
ACQUAINTED,
Known;
pp.
known informed having ;
;
familiarly
ACQUIRER,
ACQUI'RING,
personal know-
;
;
;
;
.
To rest satisfied,
or apparently satisfied, or without opposition and discontent; usually implying previous opjiosition, tm easiness, or dislike, but ultimate conqili ance, or submission as, to acquiesce in the dispensations of providence. to rest
To
assent
to,
upon conviction
;
as, to
etc
an opinion that is, to rest satisof its correctness, or propriety. .Acquiesced in, in a passive sense, complied with submitted to, without o])position as, a measure has been acquiesced in. ACQUIES'CENCE, n. A quiet assent; a silent submission, or submission with apjiarcnt content distinguished from avowed consent on the one hand, and on the other, rjuiesce in
;
fied
;
;
Eth. chUUUJ chasas, chas Ar. ^^3 kassa, to seek. Class Gs. ] The act of acquiring as, a man takes pleasure in the acquisition of property, as well as in the possession. The thing acquired, or gained; as, learning is an acquisition. It is used for intellectual attainments, as well as for external and in a things, property, or dominion
ginal signification, that of any open field, until it was limited to a definite quantitv .31. Ed. 35. Ed. 1. 84. H. 8.
;
1.
;
3.
:
;
acquiescer.]
1
3.
by statutes
;
;
good sense, denoting something estimable. aca. That is acquired
ACQUISITIVE, quirei!
:
;
ment, with
to
adv.
Cowel.] A quantity of land, containing 160 square rods or jierclies, or 4840 square yards. This is the Enghsh statute acre. The acre of Scotland coiuams 61.50 2-5 square yards. The French arjient is nearly equal to the Scottish acre, about a fifth larger than the English. The Roman juger was
3200 square yards. Mogul's dominions, acre
JValton. 2. In the
[but improper.]
ACQUIS ITIVELY,
1.
Noting acquire-
or for following. Lilly's
Grammar.
is
the
^'ame as lack, or 100,000 rupees, equal to CI 2,500 sterUng, or S55,.500. .icre-ftght, a sort of duel in the open field.
combatants on
a.
perty.
ACRID,
a.
Possessing acres or landed proPope[Fr. acre ; L. acer.]
Sharp; pinigent
ACRON l€ALLY, manner
tlieir frontiers.
Acre-taz, a tax on lanrl in Eiifrlanrl, at a certain sum for each acre, called also acre-shot.
A'€RED,
;
ACT,
A
To
t.
[Gr. oxpo;, a spire, or spiral line.] the plume, or shoot, or sproiu of a seed from its spiral tbrm. called so plumule,
perform
to represent
;
2.
To
dTteipa,
your
part, there all the
3.
Having a sprout, or
having sprouted at both
feign or counterfeit. acted tear the villain thus pursued.
and
To put m motion movements. Most people
Mortimer.
eiuls.
prep, akruus'. [a
cross.
lies.
VV'itli I
Mortimer.
\€ROSS',
honor
Pope. Obs. or improper.
;
a.
a
character on the stage.
highest, and
n.
AC'ROSPIRED,
See
;
in the
to actuate
From
side to side, opposed to along, Avhich is in the direction of the length ; atliwart a quite over ; as, a bridge is laid across
;
Dry den. to regulate
world are acted by levity. South. Loclee.
[In this latter sense, obsolete actuate, which see.]
Cross.] 1.
V.
Jict well
A€'ROSPIRE,
the taste; acrimonious; as otn'rf salts. ACRIDNESS, n. A sharp, bitter, pungent quahty. A€RIMO'NIOUS, a. Sharp; bitter; corrowitli
In an acronical at the rising or setting of tlie adv.
sun.
sharp or biting to
bitter;
;
ACT
ACT
A C R formerly fought by English and Scotch
and superseded by
ACT,;!. The exertion of power; the effect, of which power exerted is the cause; as, In thia the act of giving or receiving. river. sense, it denotes an operation of the mind. passing o^er at any angle Intersecting Thus, to discern isan odofthe understandacross another. will. to is an act of the ACRIMONY, n. [L. acrimonia, from acer, as a line passing ing judge n. [Gr. axpa, extremity or beTliat which is done a deed, exploit, or sharp. The latter part of the word seems A€ROS'Tl€, to denote likeness, .state, condition, like ginning, and atixoi, order, or verse.] achievement, Avhether good or UI. .\ composition in verse, in which the first And his miracles and his acts wliich he did head, hood, in knighthood ; in which case it in the midst of Egypt. Deul. xi. may be from the same root as maneo, Gr. letters of the hnes, taken in order, form the name of a person, kingdom, city, &c., 3. Action performance jiroduction of efjUffW.] which is the subject of the composition, But this sense fects as, an act of cliarity. 1. Sliarpnes.s a quality of bodies, which cor-
abounding
sive;
acrimony.
Figuratively, severe; sarcastic; apphedto language or temper. A€Ri[M6'NIOUSLY, aih: With sharpness or bitterness. 2.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
or
some
title
or motto.
rodes, dissolves, or destroys others ; as, the Bacon. acrimony of the humors.
ACROS'TIC,
or severity of temper; bitterness of expression proceeding
ACROS'TIeALLY,
2. Figuratively, sliarpiiess
i'rom anger, ill-nature, or petulance. South.
AC'RISY,
n.
[Gr. a
priv.
and
xinitf,
judg-
That relates
a.
to,
or contains
adv. .In the
manner of
is closely allied to the foregoing. 4.
an acrostic.
rfJ-ffri^,
n. [Gr. a^po;,
The
extreme, .5.
end.]
Abstruse
;
./Icrid.]
m
j)ertainii!g to to exoteric.
deep learning
and
;
feet.
G.
of a prince, legislative body, council, court of justice, or magistrate ; a decree, edict, law, judgment, resolve, decision
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
:
;
;
hangs
shoulder.] tliat part of the spine of the scapula, which receives the extreme jiarl of the clavicle. Qiw'nci/. u/io?,
In anatomy,
ACRON'I€, A€RON'lCAL,
I
S
a.
[Gr. axpo;, extreme, and
"I'i,
night.]
In astronomy, a term apjilied to the rising of a star at sun set, or its setting at sun rise. This rising or setting is called ucronical.
The woyj
is
opposed to cosmical. Bailey. Encyc. Johnson.
3.
A partordivisionof aplay, to be performed without interruption after which tlie action is suspended to give respite to the performers. Acts are divided into smaller ;
Aristotle's lectiu'es opposed ACROTHYM'ION, n. [Gr. a.^pof, were of two kinds, acroatic, acroainatic, or and dvfiof, thyme.] esoteric, which were delivered to a class of Among physicians, a species of wart, with a who had been select disciples, previously narrow Ijasis and broad top, having the instructed in the elements of learning and It is called Thymus. color of thyme. exoteric, wliicli were delivered in public. Cetsus The former respected being, God, and na- ACT, r. i. [Gr. a"/u, Lat. ago, to urge, the principal subjects of the latter tiu'e drive, lead, Itring, do, pcrfunn, or in genwere logic, rhetoric, and policy. The abCantabrian, eral, to move, to exert force struse lectures were called acroatics. W. cg-nr; Ir. cig-ca)!, force Ir. eg, force Enfield. or carry on eachdam, to do or (lige, to act a. a sumACROCERAU'NIAN, [Gr. axpa, act eacht, acht, deed, actaim, to ordain mit, and xspciviof, thunder.] It. agire, to do or F. agir act, condition An epithet apphed to certain mountains, act.] between Epirus and lUyricum, in the 41st 1. To exert power as, the stomach acta upon into the of latitude. Tliey project degree food the will acts ui)on the body in pro Adriatic, and are so termed from being ducing motion. often struck ^vith lightning. Encyc. •2. To be ui action or motion to move. and n. ACRO'MION, He between in doubt to act or rest. [Gr. axpo;, highest, ;
;
denotes incomplete
portions, called scenes. The result of pidjlic deliberation, or the
Encyc. extreme,
;
it
She was taken in the very act. John In act is used also to signify incipient action, or a state of preparation to exert " power ; as, In act to strike," a poetical use.
;
A€'ROTER, n. [Gr. oxpori^p, a sunmiit.] Bailey. In architecture, a small pedestal, usually with out a base, anciently placed at the two bitterness to the tasle ; ; the middle of pediments or extremes, or heat. biting frontispieces, serving to support the statues, A€ROAMAT'I€, a. [Gr-axpoctuatcxos, from &c. It also signifies the figures placed a to hear.] axpooofiai, ornaments on the tops of churches, and the Abstruse ; jiertaining to deep learning ; an sharp pinnacles that stand in ranges about balusters. epithet applied to the secret doctrines of flat buildings with rails and Aristotle. Enfield. Anciently the word sigjiified the extremiACROAT'IC, a. [Gr. a.xpoaf.^co?.] ties of the body, as the head, hands, and [Little itsed.]
[See
in,
viii.
;
;
In general, act denotes action completed action.
;
diciousness.
seeds of plants are not at first in act, but what they afterwards grow to be. Hoolier.
but preceded by
ecclesiasticed xvrilers, an appellation of which no right .judg Among a given to any thing added to the end of ment can be formed that of wliich no or hymn as a doxology. psahn, matter in disi>ute choice is made inju-
A state or condition
AC'RITUDE, n. An acrid quahty
of reality or real existence, as
in possibility,
,\€ROTELEU'Tl€, and
state
opjiosed to a possibility.
an acrostic.
ment.]
A
award, determination as an act of parliament, or of congress. The term is also ;
transferred to the book, record, or writing, containing the laws and determinations. Also, any instrument in writing to verily facts.
In the sense of agency, or power to j)roduce effects, as in the passage cited by Johnson, from Shakespeare, the use is improper.
To tiy the vigor of them and apply AUajiiients to their act. in English Universities, is a thesis maintained in public, by a candidate for a degree, or to show the proficiency of a student. At Oxford, the time when masters
Act,
and doctors complete their degrees is also called the act, which is held with great soUnited lemnity. At Cambridge, as in the
Encyc. States," it is called commencement. Pope. To behave, demean, or conduct, as in Act offaith, auto da fe, in Catholic countries, is a solemn day held by the Incpiisition, morals, private diuies, or ]niblic offices and the of the tor heretics, minister has acted a punishment as, we know not why absolution of accused persons found innoBin in lliis sense, it in tills manner. cent or it is the sentence of the Inquisimost in as, ;
frecjuent
popular language
how the man acts or has acted. To act up to, is to equal in action
;
;
tion.
Acts of the Apostles, the title of a book in the New Testament, containing a history of or perform a correspondent action as, he the transactions of the Apostles. lias acted vp to his engagement or his Acta Diwrna, among the Romans, a sort of advantages. ;
to ;
fulfil,
ACT
ACT our newspapers. ^cta populi, or itda publica, the Roman registers of asseiiihlies, trials, executions, buildings, birth-i, iiiarri:iges, Eind deaths ot'
;
.S'e/ia<«s,
and digestion.
8.
Roman
made of a
in the
also conmientarii,
senate, called
tiji'
ip'i
Ae'TIAN,
and promontory of Epirus, games, which were instituted by Augus-
;
performing
;
%i6oi,
n. [Gr.
behav-
ActinoUte
is
.ind
crystalized, asbestifoim,
Phillips:.
a.
Like or pertaining
to
actinolite.
A€'TION, 1.
n.
See
[L. actio.
Act.]
hence, the state of L/ilernlli/, a di-iving acting or moving exertion of ])ower or force, as when one body acts on another; or action is the effect of power exerted on ;
;
real estate
demanded,
is
4.
Busy
;
in
constantly engaged
;
.5.
action
;
pursuing business withvtgor and assiduity ; oi(j)osed to dull, slow, or ijidolent; as an active officer. It is also opposed to sedentary, as an active life. Requiring action or exertion; practical; operative producing real effects oi)posed to speculative ; as, the active duties of life. ;
In grammar, active verbs are those which not only signify action, but have a noun or name following them, denoting the object of the action or impression called ;
also transitive, as they imply the passing of the action expressed by the verb to the chose in action, is a right to a thing, object ; as, a ])rofessor instructs his pupils. in o[)position to the possession. bond 6. Active capital, or wealth, is money, or pro|)or note is a chose in action [Fr. chose, a erty that may readily be converted into money, and used in commerce or other thing,] and gives the owner a right to prosecute his claim to the money, as he has an Hamilton, enij)loyment f(>r profit. absolute property i)i a right, as well as in 7. Active commerce, the commerce in which a nation carries its own productions and a lhing,m possession. In .some countries of Europe, action is a foreign commodities in its own ships, or which is prosecuted by its own citizens ; share in the capital stock of a company, as contr.idislinguished from passive comor in the public funds, equivalent to our
A
axtw, a ray, and
glassy.
Hence, 3.
Blackstone.
A
a stone.]
A€TINOLIT'I€,
when
;
mineral, called, by Werner, strahlstein, It ray-stone, nearly allied to hornblend. occurs in prismatic crystals, which are long, and incomplete, and sometimes exIts tremely minute and even fibrous. prevailing color is green of different shades, or shaded with yellow or brown. There are several varieties, as the common, the massive, the acicular, the glassy, and the fibrous. Werner. Kinvan. Cleavdand.
mijred,
;
;
A€'TlNOLltE,
disposition to move with speed ; nimble ; lively ; brisk ; agile ; as an active animal.
\
with damages for a wrong sustained. Actions are also ciwY or penal ; anV, when instituted solely in behalf of private persons, to recover debts or damages penal, when instituted to recover a penalty, imposed by way of punishment. The word is also used for a right of action as, the law gives an action for every claim.
ing; rci)re.senting the character of another. n. Action act of performing a Shnk. Churchill. partofaplav.
A
is 3.
or
;
and
naval victory over Anthony, near that town, Sep. 2, B. C. ;il. They were celebrated every five years. Hence, Actian years, reckoned from that era. Encyi\ tus, to celebrate his
Acting,
;
;
demand
a
a claim made before a
;
a town as Actian
Relating to Actiiim,
ACT'ING,/(/)r. Doing
Encyc. urging for right a
by which ;
real, personal real, or feudal, when the demandant claims a title to real estate personal, when a man demands a debt, jiersonal duty, or damages in heu of it, or satisfaction for an injin-y to person or property
mixed represent-
stage. «.
right
Actions are
tribunal.
conunentaries.
ACT'ED, pp. Done; performed; ed
cation, deglutition, In law, literally, an suit or process,
minutes of what passed
contains the principle of action, independent of any visible external force as, attraction is an active power: or it may be defined, that communicates action or motion, opposed to passive, that receives action as, the active powers of the mind. Having the power of quick motion, or ;
;
illustrious piM'sDiis, &('.
Acid
ACT
the body, vital, animal, and natural vital and involuntary, as the action of tht heart and lungs animal, as muscular, and all voluntary motions; natural, as manclu
Gazette, containing an authorized account oCtiaiisaotioiis in Rome, nearly similar to
1*.
term share
; and consequMitly, in a more The word is general sense, to stocks.
movable effects. In painting and sculpture, the attitude or
also used for 10.
position of the several parts of the body, by which they seem to be actuated by passions ; as, the arm extended, to represent the act of giving or receiving. 11. Battle ; fight ; engagement between troops in war, whether on land or water, or by a greater or smaller number of combatants. This and the f^th definition exhibit the hteral meaning of adion a driving or urging.
—
merce, in which the productions of one country are transported by the people of another country. The connnerce of Great Britain and of the United States is active ; that of China is
passive. It maybe the interest of foreign nations to de))rive us, as far as possible, of tm active commerce in our own bottoms. Federalist, Hamilton.
ACTIVELY,
adv. In an active maimer; nimbly briskly also in an active signification, as a word is used
by action
;
;
;
one boily by another motion produced. act i veil/. Hence, action is opposed to rest. Action, when produced by one body on another, is Quantity of action, in physics, the product ACT'IVENESS, n. The quality of being of the ma.ss of a body by the sjiace it active; the faculty of acting; nimblene.ss; mechanical ; when produced by the will of runs through and its velocity. a living being, spontaneous or voluntary. quickness of motion; less used than activity. Encyc. In many cases action and act are synony- ACTIVITY, n. The quahty of being ac[See Def. 3.] mous but some distinction between tive; the active faculty niinbleness; agil2. An act or thing done a deed. also the habit of dihgent and vigorous them is observable. Action seems to The Lord is a God of knowledge, and by him ity are actions weighed. have more relation to the power that 1. 8am. ii. ])ursuit of business as, a man of activity. It is applied to persons or things. i. In mechanics, agency acts, and its operation and process of! operation driving eftoil of one and moi-e another relation to the effect Sphere of activity, is the whole space in which act, im]iul.se acting hotly upon or operation com])lete. Action is also more the virtue, power, or influence of any obas, the adjon of wind upon a ship's sails. Also the effect of such action. ject, is exerted. generally used for ordinary transactions 4. In ethics, the external and act, for such as are remarkable, or To put in activity, a French j)hrase, for putsigns or expression of the sentiments of a moral agent conall our actions should be regting in action or employment. as, dignified duct ; behavior demeanor that is, moulated by i)rudence a prince is distinguish- .\CT OR, n. He that acts or performs; an tion or movement, with respect to a rule acti\e agent. ed by acts of heroism or humanity. Encyc. or propriety. Action taking, in Shakespeare, is used for Uti- 2. He that represents a character or acts a 5. In porin/, a series of events, called also part in a play a stage player. gious. the subject or table this is of two kinds A€'TIONABLE, a. That will bear a suit, 3. Among civilians, an advocate or proctor the principal action which is more strictly in civil courts or causes. or for which an action at law may be .susthe fable, and the incidental action or epitained as, to call a manathicf isac/i0Ha6/e. ACTRESS, n. A female who acts or persode. forms, and especially, on the stage, or in Encyc. A€'TION,\BLY, adv. In a manner that sub6. In oratory, gesture or gesticulation a play. the jects to legal process. external deportment of the speaker, or the A€'TIONARY or A€'TIONIST, n. In ACT U.IL, a. [Fr. actuel. See Act.] acconnnodation of his attitude, voice, gestEurope, a proprietor of stock in a traduig Real or effective, or that exists truly and one who owns acitons or ures, and countenance to the subject, or to shares as, actual heat, opposed to absolutely company the thoughts and feelings of the mind. of stock. that, which is virtual or potential ; artual ;
:
;
;
;
;
;
;
:
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
Encyc. 7.
ACTIVE, a.
[L. activus
In physiology, the motions or function.s"of That has the power
Fr. actif] or quaUty of acting ;
;
that
cautery, or the burning by a red-hot iron, opposed to a cautery or caustic apphcation,
ADA
A D
A C U
that may produce the same effect upon AC'irRU, V. The name in India of a fragrant 4d valorem, according to the value, in com« nierce and finance, terms used to denote As. Researches. aloe-wood. the body by a different ])rocess. duties or charges laid iqioii goods, at a 2. Existing iu act; real; in opposition to A'CUS, Ji. [L.] The needle-fish, or gar-fish. or sand eel. certain rate per cent, upon their value, a? Cyc. specidative, or existing in theory only; 2. The ammoclyte stated in their invoices in 0])position to a cimex. The 3. as an actual crime. oblong Cyc. a. [L. acutus, sharp-pointed Qu. 3. In theology, adiial sin is that which is specific sum upon a given quantity or nunjlier. from acuo, acus, or from the Oriental -\T\ committed by a person himself, opposed had or chad, sharp, Heb. Ch. Ar.] to original sin, or the corruption of nature AD'AgE, n. [L. adagium, or adagio; It. in end a at the ending sharp point adagio.] supposed to be communicated from Adam. Sharp 4. That includes action. opposed to blunt or obtuse. An acute angle \ proverb an old saying, which has obtained credit by long use a wise observation Besides her walking and other actual perin geometry, is one which is less than a ;
ACUTE,
;
;
;
;
;
formances.
ACTUALITY,
n. Reality. adv. In fact ; leally n. [L. actuarius.]
A€T'UALLY, A€T'UARY,
A register or clerk
Haweis. ;
in truth.
a term of the civil law, originally in courts of civil law but in Europe used for a jurisdiction ;
2.
Applied
To
pp. Put in action
;
;
;
4.
incited to
action.
;
5.
ACTUATING, /i;h-.
;
having power to feel or perceive small objects as, a man of acute eye sight, hearing, or feeling. An acute disease, is one which is attended with violent symptoms, and comes speedily to a crisis, as a pleurisy opposed to chronic. sions
legitimate.
ACT'U.Vl'ED,
senses ; having nice or quick susce|Hible of slight impres-
to the
sensibility
;
;
ADA'gIO,
antiquity.
n. [It. arfff^i'o,
and agio,
otium',;
AD'AM,
soiier.
ILdttle used.]
I. [from act.]] put into action ; to move or incite to action as, men are actuated by motives, or passions. It seems to have been used formerly in the sense of invigorate, noting but the use is not increase of action
handed down from
a compound of arf Sp. and Port, omo ; L. Eng. ease.] As an adverb, Figuratively, a]>plied to mental powers: In music, a slow movement. AVheii slo^^ ly, leisurely, and with grace. having nice discernment penetrating repeated, adagio, adagio, it directs tlie perceiving or using minute distinctions movement to be very slow. op])osed to dull or stupid; as an acute rea acute angled triangle
leisure
Fi: aise
;
;
;
;
clerk or register generally.
Put in action.
An
than
less
ninety degrees. is one whose three angles are all acute or less than ninety degrees each.
and used
ACTUATE, a. A€T UATE, V.
which subtends
right angle, or
Shnl{.
[Hardly legitimate.]
Putting in action; in
All acute accent,
that wliich elevates or
is
sharpens the voice.
n.
Ill
Ileb. Ch. Syr. Eth. Ar., Jl/a;! ; name of the human species,
primarily, the
mankind
;
approiiriately,
the progenitor of the
the
human
first
Man,
race.
The
word signifies form, shajie, or suitable form hence, species. As a verb, the word signi-
:
Etliiopic, to please or be agreeable ; in Arabic, to join, unite, or be accordant, to fies, in
agree.
It is
evidently connected with Tint
damah, Heb. Ch. Syr., to be like or equal, Whence to form an image, to assimilate.
the sense of likeness, image, form, shape ; In music, acute is applied to a tone which Gr. itfia;, a body, like. [See Man.] sharp, or high opposed to grave. In botany, ending in an acute angle, as a Adam's apple, a species of citron, [see Citleaf or jierianth. ron;] also the prominent part of the throat. Martyn of the with Ad'am's needle, the popular name adv. Sharply ; keenly cultivated in yucca, a plant of four species, nice discrimination. Of the roots, the Indians make ACTUATE, t'.<. [L. acuo, to sharpen. See "gardens. but .seldom n. Sharpness ACUTENESS, a kind of bread. [See Yucca.] Acid.] To sharpen to make pungent, or corrosive. used in this literal sense, as apphed to ma- AD'AMANT, n. [Gr. aSa/ia; L. adwnas ; terial things. a word of Celtic origin W. ehedvaen, a Harvey. [Little vsed.] Figuratively, the faculty of nice discernstar of the fourth magniload stone, from elied, to fly or move, and ACUBE'NE, ?i. ment or perception ai)plied to the senses, Chaucer uses adatude in the southern claw of Cancer. raf 71, or maen, a stone. or the understanding. By an acuteness of mant for the load stone. Romaunt of the ACUT'TION, n. [from L. acuo, to shaqien.] feehng, we perceive small objects or slight L. 1183. Ger. diamant, is adamant The sharpening of medicines to increase Rose, impressions by an acuteness of intellect, and diamond Sp. diamante ; Sw. damanl ; their effect. we discern nice distinctions. See Diamond.] Fr. aimant, loadstone. ACU'LEATE, a. [L. aculeus, from acus. 3. Sharpness, or elevation of sound, in rhet- A Gr. axr„ a point, and the diminutive ul very hard or impenetrable stone a name oric or music. Boyle. to the diamond and other substanSee Acid.] given 4. Violence of a disease, which brings it ces of extreme hardness. The name has In botany, having jirickles, or sharp points speedily to a crisis. often been given to the load stone but in pointed used chiefly to denote prickles modern mineralogy, it has no technical lixed ill the bark, in distinction from ACUTIATOR, n. In the middle ages, a perciting to action.
ACTUATION,
6.
n.
The
state
of being put
in
Gtanvitle. action; effectual operation. ACT'US, n. Among the Romans, a measure In in building equal to 150 Roman feet. agricullure, the length of one furrow.
is
;
7.
ACUTELY,
;
;
;
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
thorns,
which grow from the wood. Milne.
2.
In zoology, having a sting. In botany and zoology, re. [L.]
ACU'LEI,
prickles or spines. or AC'ULOS,
AC'ULON,
n.
tlieir
ADAMANTE'AN,
ADAMANTINE,
a.
«.
Hard
I\Iade of
;
;
;
;
acuo.]
sharp point and figuratively, quickness of perception, the faculty of nice discrim ;
illation.
;
ACU'MINATE,
a.
acumincdus,
[L.
from
acumen.]
Ending
signification.
as adamant. Milton. adamant having the quahties of adamant that cannot be broken, dissolved, or penetrated as adamantine bonds, or chains. nns, Ar. j^;;^, to come near, to approach; Adamantine Spar, a genus of earths, of three from which root we may also deduce at. The color of the first is gray, varieties. In composition, the last letter is usually with shades of brown or green the form when regular, a hexangular prism, two changed into the first letter of the word to for adclamo. Thus which it is jtrefixed. sides large and four small, without a the Romans wrote acclamo ; for adgrcdior. its surface striated, and with a ])yramid thin co\ ering of white mica, interspersed aggredior ; for adfirmo, affirmo ; for adlego, its fracture, \\ itli particles of red felspar allego ; for adpono, appono ; ti)r adripio for ascribo ; adtineo, foliaceous and sparry. The second variety arripio ; for adscribo, attineo. The reasonof this change is found is whiter, and the texture more fohaceous. in the ease of pronunciation, and agreea The third variety is of a reddish brown bleness of tlie sounds. This stone is very hard, and of cohn-.
instruments. Encyc AD. A Latin preposition, signifying to. It is proliably from Heb. Ch. Syr. Sam. Eth. [Gr. uxvxoj,
probably from ac, an oak.] The fruit or acorn of the ilex, or scarlet oak. ACU'MEN, n. [L. acumen, from news or
A
son whose office was to sharpen instru ments. Before the invention of fire-arms, such crfticers attended armies, to sliar|jen
in a
;
sharp point
;
pointed.
ACU'MINATED, a. Sharpened to a A sharpening ACUMINA'TION, ?i.
;
point. termi-
nation in a sharp point.
ACUPUNCTURE,
n. [L. acus, needle,
and
punctura, or punctus, a jiricking.] Among the Chinese, a surgical operation performed by priiking the part att'ected with a needle, as in head-aches and letharEncyc. gies.
Ad
homineni, to the man, in logic, an argu ment, adapted to touch the prejudices of
the jierson addressed. inguirendum, in law, a judicial writ manding inquiry to be made.
Ad
Ad
libitum, [L.] at pleasure.
com
Encyc. Ckaveland.
ditticult fiision.
A variety of corundum. AD'AMic, a. Pertaining
to
Adam. \Adamic
the term given to common red means of a mistaken clay, so called by earth. opinion that .\dani means red earth,
is
ADD
ADA AD'AMITES, in visionaries, who
Church history, a sect of pretended to establish a Btate of innocence, and like Adam, went naked. They abhorred marriage, holditi, it to be the effect of sin. Several attempts one have been made to revive this sect as late as the 15tli century. Encyc. ADAMIT'IC, a. LUie the Adamites.
ADA'YS, phrase,
2.
promote perspiration. The tree is named from M. Adanson, who has given
ADAPT', t>./. and
ad.
To make
it.
[^p.adaptar; It. adattare fit Gr. ortru.]
apto, to
suitable
an instrument
;
L.
;
or suit as, to adapt uses we have pro-
fit
4.
To augment.
Thou shalt add
Rehoboain
To add
to its
;
ADAPT'ABLE. a. ADAPTA'TION,
is
appUed
That may be adapted. The "act of maldng
n.
suitable, or the state of being suitable, or fit
;
fitness.
ADAPT'ED,
Suited
pp.
;
made
See
ADAPT
n.
A saltish
Parkhursl. n. [Gr. oSapxjjs.]
marshy grounds
hi Galatia.
It is
lax and
porous, like bastard spunge, and used to clear the skin hi leprosy, tetters, &c.
Quina/. Plot. In Jemsh antiquity, a gold ADAR'CON, coin worth about three dollars and a tliird, or about fifteen shillings sterling. n.
ADAR'ME,
n.
A
Spanish weight, the
teenth of an ounce
Spanish ounce is than that of Paris.
AD'ATIS,
A
n.
six-
Fr. demi-gros. The seven per cent, hghter ;
Encyc. Span. Diet. muslin or species of cotton
cloth from India. It is fine and clear ; the piece is ten French ells long, and tliree
quarters wide.
AD>AUNT,
v.t.
To
subdue.
See Daunt.]
ADAW, used.]
t'.
t.
[JVot used.
Skflton
To daunt
;
to subject.
[.Vol
Spenser.
additus and ment. See Add.] addition, or rather the thuig added, as furniture in a house any material mixed with the principal ingredient in a compound. Ancient anatomists gave the name to an epiphysis, or junction of bones without ai-ticulation. [Little used in either
An
Matt.
word is understood to "In conference they
;
ADOPTION, 1.
n. [h. additio, from addo.] The act of adding, ojiposed to subtraction, or diminution as, a sum is increased by ;
addition.
ADDED,
consideration I',
to sentence.
;
t.
united
put together. To award [See Deem.]
ing numbers.
;
Simple addition
is
the join-
ing of sums of the same denomination, as pounds to pounds, dollars to dollars. Compound addition is the joining of sums of different denominations, as dollars and
;
[Little used.] [Sax. aetter or aettor,
n. a serpent D. adder. Qu. Sax. naedre, a serpent Goth, nadr ; G. natter ; W. Corn, naddyr ; Ir. nathair ; L. ; iiatrir, a serpent.] venomous serpent or viper, of several ;
cents.
;
4.
neider
ADDER-FLY,
concretion on reeds and grass in
from
v. I. [L. ad and decimus j2. Any thing added, whether material or immaterial. tenth.] To take, or to ascertain tithes. Diet. 3. In arithmetic, the uniting of two or more numbers in one sum ; also the rule or pp. Joined in place, in smn, in branch of arithmetic which treats of addmass or aggregate, in lumiber, in idea or
JWwton month, answering to
Palestine.
ADAR'CE,
[L. additam.entum,
ADDEC IMATE,
A Hebrew
glorious, from the exuberance in that mouth, ui Egy])t and
;
;
increasing.
ADDIT'AMENT, n.
as equivalent
Gen. xxx.
Joining
Encyc. putting together
sense.]
A
become
ADDING, ppr.
when used of things, add imphes a principal thing, to which a smaller is to be amiexed, as a part of the whole sum, mass, or number.
state of' being fitted.
of vegetation,
creditors.
course. In general,
A
;
to
xii.
com-
;
legitimate.]
part of February and the beginning of March, the 19llioftlie sacred and 6th of the civil year so named from "nx,
1
intransitive, but
is
ellipsis. to, is useil in scripture,
and poison
tlie latter
your yoke. 1 Kings,
you.
AD'DER,
[A'ot used.]
A DAR,
Deut. iv. used, the \erb
devoted. His addiction was to courses vain. Shak. Among the Romans, a making over goods to another by sale or legal sentence also an assignment of debtors in service to theii;
to
added nothing to me." In narration, he or he added words, they added, is ellijitical or what follows, or he continued his dis-
adopter.
[Little used, NESS, n.
more of refuge.
word wliich
to the
In Gal. ii. the signify instruction.
;
fitting.
add
vi.
ADAPT'IiVG,;);>r. Suiting; making fit. ADAPTION, n. Adaptation tlie act of
and hardly
add
said, I will
to give, or bestoiv upon.
;
fitted.
ADAPT'ER.
three cities
may be an
ADDEE'M, suitable
state
ADDICTION,
alledged, let this argument
Deut. xix. 2.
not
shall
mand there
The quaUty or
ppr. Devoting time and attention practicing custoniarilv. «. The act of devoting or hi giving up practice ; the state of being
ADDICT'ING,
increase number.
As here
n.
of being addicted. ;
To what has been
To
Ye
Devoted" by customary
practice.
ADDICT'EDNESS,
;
he added.
;
It vision adapted to our wants. to things material or innnaterial.
ADDICTED," pp.
subjoin.
;
to
adays.
3.
food, to
a description of
for assigning debtors in service to their creditors, is found in Ben Jonson, but is not legitimate in English.
[L. addo, from ad and do, to give.] or put together, join, or unite, as, one thing or sum to another, in an aggreas, add three to four, the sum is gate seven. To unite in idea or consideration to
sixty-five to seventy-eight feet in circum-
and covered witli a greenish down, under wliicli is a hard ligneous rind. It hangs to the tree by a pedicle two feet long, and contains a white spungy substance. The leaves and bark, dried and powdered, are used by the negroes, as ])epper, on their
word
as in the
;
Taylor.
The branches shoot horizontally ference. to the length of sixty feet, the ends bending to the ground. The fruit is oblong, at both ends, ten inches in length, pointed
;
t.
Ethiopian sour gonrd,
n.
monkey's bread, or African calabasli-tree. It is a tree of one species, called haobrih, a native of Africa, and the largest of the The stem rises not vegetable kingdom. above twelve or fifteen feet, but is from
now
ADD
or in days
ADD, v. 1. To set
;
ADANSO'NIA,
On
adv.
In to
laiv,
show
title annexed to a man's name, his rank, occupation or place of
a
Richard as, John Doe, Esq. Roe, Gent Robert Dale, Mason ; Thomas Way, of .Vf if- York. fly or libellula ; sometimes called adder-bolt. 5. In music, a dot at the siile of a note, to ADDER'S-GRASS, n. A plant about which lengthen its sound one half 6. In heraldry, something added to a coat ol' serpents lurk. ADDER'S-TONGUE, n. A plant whose arms, as a mark of honor, opposed to abateseeds are produced on a spike resembling ments, as bordure, quarter, canton, gyron, See these terms. a serpent's tongue. pile, &c. Encyc. ADDER'S-WORT, n. Snakeweed, so named 7. In distilling, any thing added to the wash or liquor in a state of fermentation. from its supposed virtue in curing the bite 8. In popular language, an advantage, ornaof serpents. ment, improvement that is, an addition ADDIBIL'ITY, n. The possibility of being bv way of eminence. added. Locke AD'DI "tlONAL, a. That is added. It is a. AD'DIBLE, [See Add.] That may be used by Bacon for addition ; but unpropadded. Locke. species.
residence
;
;
;
A name
n.
of the dragon-
i
;
AD'DICE, ADDI€T', ADDICT',
erlv.
ohs.
[See Adz.] Addicted.
[Xot much used.] [L. addico, to devote, from ad and dico, to dedicate.] To apply one's self habitually; to devote a.
V.
t.
tune and attention by customary or constant practice sometimes in a good sense. ;
They have addicted themselves try of the saints.
1
to the minis-
Cor. xv.
More
usually, in a bad sense, to follow customarily, or devote, by habitually practising that which is ill as, a man is addicted ;
to
To
intemperance.
addict one''s self to a person, a sense borrowed fiom the Romans, who used the
ADDI' TIONALLY,
adv.
Byway
of addi-
tion.
ADD'ITIVE, is to
a.
That may be added, or that
be added.
ADD'ITORY, a. That adds, or may add. AD'DLE, a. [W. hadyl, corrupt hadlu, to ;
Heb. Vin,
decay, to putrify ;
to fail
;
Ar.
t° declme, and J Jsi»' J j,.^to frustrate, to fail, to cease.]
In a morbid state putiid apphed to eggs. Hence, baiTen, producing nothing. "' " His brains grow addle. Dryden. ;
'
'
;
'
ADD AD'DLED,
A D E
Morbid, coirupt, putrid, or
a.
Brotim.
Ijari'cii.
AD'DLE-PATED,
a.
A D H
ADDRESS'ING, ppr. Spealdngor applying
.\J)'EN0S,
A
11.
species of cotton, from
Aleppo, called also ma/-ine
to; directing; courting; consigning.
Having empty brains. ADDU'CE, V. t. [h. adduco, to lead or bring ADEPT', 11. to ad and duco, to lead. See Duke.] Dryden adipiscor.]
[L.
adeptus,
cotton.
fi-om
obtained,
;
ADDOOM',
V.
ADDORS'ED,
[See Doom.]
t.
To
adjudge. Spenser [L. ad and dorsum, the
a.
back.]
In heraldiy, having the backs turned to eaclj other, as heasls.
ADDREi^S', rezar
v.t.
forward, present or ofler
as, a
;
was adduced to prove the fact. To cite, name or introduce as, to adduce
witness 2.
;
an authority or an argument. pp. Brought tbnvard
ADDU'CED,
[Fr. adresser
Bp. ende-
;
dirizzare, to direct, to make Tliis is supposed to be from L
ADDU'CENT,
a.
;
have found the philosopher's stone, or the Encyc. a. Well skilled completely versed or ac(|uainted with. Boyle. )>anacea.
ADEPT',
Bringing forward, or to applied to those muscles of
a word body which
gether
One tidly skilled or well versed in any art. The term is borrowed from the Alchimists, who ajiplied it to one who pretended to
cited
;
alledaed hi argument.
It.
;
To brmg
1.
;
ADEP'TION,
n. [L. adeptio.]
one part towards An obtaining acquirement. Obs. Bacon. another. dirigo ; it also coincides with Ch. Vin, [See Mductor.] AD'EQUACY, )!. [L. adeequatus, ofarfand ADDU'CIBLE, a. That may be adduced. eequatus, made equal.] Ai-. to direct, to rectify, ADDU'CING, ppr. Bringing forward cituig The state or quality of Syr. id., lyOy'S being equal to, proin argmnent. to fit. portionate, or sufficient a sufficiency for See Dress.] " the n. The act of a particular purjMjse ?\DDir€'TION, as, bringmg To j)repare to make .suitaljlc dispositions adequacy forward. of sujjply to the expenditure." for. straight.
tlie
pull
;
)
;
;
1.
;
;
Tumus
men
addressed his
ADDUC'TIVE,
to single figlit.
ADDUCTOR,
IJrt/dcii
Tiic archano;el and the evil spirit addres:
[This sense y.
To
3.
I
is,
believe, obsolete or little used.]
words or discomsc
to ap])lyto address a discourse to an to address tliejudges. To direct in writing, as a letter or to direct and transmit as, he addressed a letter Sometimes it is used with to the speaker. the reciprocal pronoun, as, he addressed himself to the speaker, instead of, he adThe phrase is dressed his discomse. faulty ; but less so than the following. To sucli I would address with this most afectiouate petition. Young Tumus to the beauteous maid addrest. ilirect
by words assembly
;
;
as, to
;
;
;
Dryden an
.
The
latter is admissible in poetry, as
I.
To |)reseut au address, as a letter of thanks or congratidation, a petition, or a testimony of respect as, the legislature addressed the piesident. To court or make suit as a lover. In commerce, to consign or entrust to the care of another, as agent or factor as, the ship was addressed to a merchant in Bal;
5.
6.
;
part of the liody as the adductor oculi, which turns the eye towards the nose the adductor poUicis manus, which draws the tlunnb towards the fingers.
n. A speaking to verbal apa formal manner of speech as, introduced, the president made a
plication
when
;
\DDULCE, cis,
To
V.
t.
adduls'.
[L. ctd
and
dul-
a.
Equal
;
fVar in Disguise. pro|)ortionate
;
to ; fully sufficient adequate to the object ; we
;
means
have
no adequate ideas of infinite ])ower. ideas, are such as exactly represent their object. v. f. To resemble exactlv.
Mequate
AD'EQUATE,
sweet.]
[JVot used.]
Bacon. sweeten. [.\'ot tised.] n. An Egyptian weight of 210 okes, each of three rotolos, which is a weight of about two drams less than the EngUsh! But at Rosetta, the adeb is only poiuid. 150 okes. Ency'c.
AD'EB,
ADELANTA
DO,
or of a province
A governa lieutenant governor. Robertson.
M. [Spanish.] ;
n. A title of honor, given by our Saxon ancestors to the children oi'
AD'ELING,
and
to
nobles.
as,
correspondent
Shelford.
AD'EaUATELY,
adv. In an adequate exact proportion with just correspondence, representation, or proportion in a degree equal to the object. !\D'EQUATENESS,n. The state of being adequate justness of proportion orrepre-
manner
in
;
;
;
;
sentation
;
sufficiency.
ADEQUA'TION,
)!.
Adequateness. [JVbt Bp. Barlow.
used.]
ADESSENA'RIANS,
n. [L. adesse, to
be
present.]
com-
young In church histon/, a sect who hold the real posed of adel, or rather cttliel, the Teuton presence of Cinist's body in theeucharist, ic term for nohle, illustrious, and ling, but not by transubstantiation. They difyoung, posterity. Spclman. Sw. adelig ; fer however as to this presence some D. edel ; Ger. edel and adelig, noble Hp. the body of Christ to be in the We observe the term in many holding hidalgo. bread others, aiou/ the bread. Encyc. Saxon names of ])rinces, as Ethel-wolf, It is
;
;
;
V j;(
ADFE€T'ED,n.
In a/gftra, compounded consisting of difterent powers of the unknown quantitj'. Bailey. o. Adopted as a son. [See athala, to be well rooted, to be of ADFIL'IATED,
short address. a meswritten or formal api)lication 2. sage of respect, congratulation, thanks, pean tition, &c.; as, an address of thanks officer is remo\'able u])on the address of
A
;
;
3.
;
;
timore.
ADDRESS',
AD'EQUATE,
[L.]
towards another
princes,
elliptical phrase.
That brings forward.
a.
n.
Anmscle which draws one
Class Dl.
noble stock or birth.
AD'ELITE,
n.
ADFILIA'TION, n.
Adehtes or Almogaiiens,
in
A
Spain, were conjiu'ers, who predicted the fortunes of individuals by the flight and singing of birds, and other accidental cir
[L.
ad andjilius, a
son.]
Gothic custom, by which the children of a former marriage, are put upon the same footing with those of a .succeeding one ; still retained in some parts oi'Gcrmany.
Ed. Ennjc. cmnstances. yVDHE'RE, V. i. [h. udhcereo, ad and hwreo. both houses of assembly. .ADEMP'TION, n. [L. adimo, to take to stick ; Ir. adharadh.] Manner of speaking to another; as, a man 1. To stick to, as glutinous substances, or by away oiad and emo, to take.] In the civil law, the revocation of a grant natural growth of pleasing address. as, the lungs sometimes adhere to the pleura. donation, or the like. Courtship more generally in the plural, addresses ; as, he makes or pays his addresses ADENOGRAPHY, n. [Gr. aS^jv, a gland^ 2. To be joined, or held in contact to cleave ;
;
4.
;
;
5.
to a lady. Skill ;
as, the G.
dexterity
;
skillful
management
;
envoy conducted the negotiation
with address. Direction of a
and ypa(!iu, to describe.] That part of anatomy which glands.
AD'ENOID,
a.
[Gr.
aB)jv,
letter, includuig the name, form.] and place of residence of the person In the form of a gland
to.
treats of the 3. Figuratively, to hold to, be attached, or remain fixed, either by personal union or
a glaud, and
fi5o;,
glandtdous : ajjphed to the prostate glands. Hence these for whom it is intended. to the ]>articidars are denominated, a man's ADEN0L0g'T€AL, a. Pertaining doctrine of the glands. (tddress. Encijc. ADDRESS'ED, pp. Spoken or applied to ; ADENOL'OGY, «. [Gr. aSr,v, a gland, and directed; courted; consigned. ^oyoj, discourse. .\DDRESS'ER, n. One who adcbesses or In anatomy, the doctrine of the glands, their nature, and their uses. jietitioii!^. title,
;
glandiform
conformity of faith, principle, or opinion as, men adhere to a party, a leader, a church, or creed. To be consistent ; to hold together as the parts of a system.
;
;
4.
Every thing adheres together.
/\DHE'RENCE, 3.
n.
The
Shah.
quality or state of
sticking or adhering. Figurativebj.a. being fixed in attachment;
A D
A D
r
steady attachment as, an adhe rente to a ))arty or opinions, ADHE'RENCY, n. Tlie same as adherence. In t)ie sense of that ivhich adheres, not lefidelity
;
Decay of Piety.
gitimate.
ADlIE'RENT,n. The person who adheres; one who follows a leader, party or profes a believer sion ; a follower, or partisan in a particular faith or church. Obs. In the sense of an appendage. ADHE'RENTLY, adv. In an adherent ;
manner.
ADHERER,
n.
One
that adlieres
;
an ad
herent.
ADIIE'SION, n. adhe'zhun. [L. adhmsio.] 1. The act or state of .'iticking, or beuig united
God
A D
J as an everlasting
;
v.
t.
To
convert into
adipocere.
AD'IPOCERE, Fr.
n.
wax.] imctuous or
[L. adeps, fat,
and
cera,
cire,
soft
of a which tiie muscular
waxy
sidistance,
light brown color, into fibers of dead animal bodies are convert-
ed, when protected from atmospheric air, and under ceitam circumstances of tem perature and humidity. This substance was first discovered by Foiurroy, in the burying ground of the Church des Inno It i: cons, when it was removed in 17>-7. speedily produced, when the body is immersed in running water.
;
See
jungo.
L. adjungo,
Join.']
join or unite to to ]>ut to, by placing in contact to unite, by fastenuig together with a joint, mortise, or knot. But in these transitive senses, it is rarely used. ;
[See Join.] V. i. To lie or be next to, or in contact to be contiguous as, a farm adjoining to the highway. This is the common use of the word, and to is often omitted as, adjoining the highway.
ADJOIN',
;
;
;
ADJOIN'ANT,
a.
Contiguous
to.
used.]
ADJOIN'ED, pp. Joined to ADJOIN'ING, ppr. Joining
;
[Xot Carew.
united. to;
adjacent;
contiguous.
ADJOURN',
V. t. Adjum'. [Fr. ajoumer, from journee, a day, or day's work, or journey; It. giomo. Bee Jom-nal, Journey.] Lxinier. Med. Repos. Ed. Encyc, to ]iut oti; or defer to another day AD'IPOSE, } a. [L. adiposus, from adeps, Literally, but now used to denote a formal intermisAD'IPOUS, S fat. Qu. Ch. B'SD, to grow tiit sion of business, a putting off to any fuHeh. and Ch., fat, gross, stupid Ar ture meeting of the same body, and approe o, jiriately used of public bodies or private
to as the adhesion of glue, or of parts united by growth, cement, and the hke. Mhesion is generally used in a literal adherence, in a metaphorical sense. 2. Sometimes figuratively, adherence, unJ^i.js , fat, bulky.] ion or steady attachment linmiess in Fat. The adipose membrane is the cellular opinion as, an adhesion to vice but in membrane, containing tlie fat in its cells, this sense nearly obsolete. The union of and consisting of ductile membranes, con bodies by attraction is usually denominanected by a sort of net-work. The adipose ted cohesion. vein spreads itself on the coat and fat that ADHE'SIVE, a. Sticky tenacious, as glucovers the kidneys. The adipose ducts are tinous substances apt or tending to adthe bags and ducts which contain the fat. here. Thus gums are adhesive. Coxe.
and attached
aiu\
To
J
v.t. [Fr. adjoindre;
;
n. The act or process of being changed into adipocere.
ADIPOCERA'TION,
A
ADJOIN', ad
ADIPOC'ERATE,
ADHERENT, a.
Sticking, uniting, as glue or wax ; united with, as an adherent mode in Locke, that is, a mode accidentally joined with an object, as wetness in a cloth.
of
care
to the adieu.
;
;
;
;
;
commissioners, entrusted with business; as, the court adjourned the consideration of the question. ADJOURN', V. i. To suspend business for a time as, from one day to another, or for a longer period, usually pubUc business, as of legislatures and courts, for repose or refreshment as, congress adjourned at four o'clock. It is also used for the act of Q^uincy. ADHE'SIVELY, adv. In an adhesive man- AD'IT, n. [L. aditus, from •adeo, aditum,Xo closing the session of a pubhc body; as, ner. ad and to the court ap])roach, eo, go.] adjourned without day. It was moved that parliament should ADHE'SIVENESS, n. The quality of stick- An entrance or passage a term in mining, adjourn for six weeks. used to denote the opening by which a Select Speeches, Vol. v. 403. ing or adhering stickiness tenacit}'. mine is entered, or liy wliicli water and ADJOURNED, pp. Put off, delayed, or ADIIIB'IT, B. t. [L. adhibeo, ad and habeo, deferred for a hmited time. ores are carried away. It is usually made to have.] in the side of a hill. The word is some '2. As an adjective, existing or held by adTo use, or apply. [Rarely used.] times used for air-shaft, but not with strict journment, as an adjourned session of a ADHIBI'TION, n. AppUcation use. court, ojiposed to stated or regular. j)ropriety. jmiaker. Encyc. AD'HIL, n. A star of the sixth magnitude, ADJA'CENCY, n. [L. adjaceo, to lie con- ADJOURN'ING, ;)pr. Deferriiag; suspending for a time closing a session. upon the garitient of Andromeda, under tiguous, from ad and jaceo, to lie.] the last star in her foot. The act of adEna/c. The state of lying close or contiguous a ADJOURN MENT, n. ADilORTA'TION, n. [L. adhortatio.] journuig as, in legislatures, the adjournborilering uiion, or lying next to as the Advice. [Seldom used.] ment ol'one house is not an adjournment of adjacency of lands or buildings. In the .VDHORT'ATORY, a. [L. adhortor, to ad- sense of that which is adjacent, as used by the other. The putting off till another day or time vise, ad and hortor.] Brown, it is not legitimate. Advisory containing coimsel or warning. specified, or without day ; that is, the ADJA'CENT, a. Lying near, close, or con Potter^s Antiq. closing of a session of a pubhc or official tiguous bordering upon as, a field adjaADIAPII'ORISTS, n. [Gr. oiuj^opo;, mdifbody. cent to the highway. 3. The time or intenal during which a pubferent.] Moderate Lutherans a name given in the ADJA'CENT, n. That which is next to or lic body defers busuiess as, during an adLorke contiguous. [Little used.] sixteenth century, to certain men that But a suspension of business, ADJE€T', v.t. [L. adjicio, of ad ami jacia jounitnent. followed Melancthon, who was more between the tbrmuig of a house and an i)ato throw.] cific than Luther. adjournment for refreshment, is called a Encyc. The adiaphorists lield some opinioiis To add or put, as one tiling to another. recces. In Great Britain, the close of a MackniM. session of parliament is called a and ceremonies to he indifferent, which proroga71. The of act ADJE€'TION, or Luther condemnisd as sinful or heretical. adding, tum ; as the close of a parliament is a disadded. Brown. thing [Little used.] solution. But in Great Britain, as well as ADIAPH'OROUS, a. Indifferent neutral ADJE€TI "TIOUS, a. Added. in the United States, adjournment is now a name given by Boyle to a spu-it distilled Parkhurst, Gram. used for an intermission of business, for from tartar, and some other vegetable subAD'JECTIVE, n. In grammar, a word used any indefinite time as, an adjournment of stances, neither aciil, nor alkaline, or not with a noun, to express a quality of the parliament fijr six weeks. possessing the distinct character of any thing named, or something attributed to Select Speeches, Vol. v. 404. chimical body. it, or to limit or define it, or to specify or /. I'. ADJUDGE', [Fr. adjuger, from juge, ADIEU', Adu'. [Fr. it diev, to God acorn describe a thing, as distinct from somejudge. See Judge.] pound word, and an elliptical form of thing else. It is c:dled also an attributive To decide, or determine, in the case of a conspeech, for / commend you to God. It is or attribute. Thus, in the phrase, a imsc troverted question to decree by a judicial called an adverb, but it has none of the ruler, wise is the adjective or attribute, ex used appropriately of courts of o])inion projierties of a modifying \\ord.] ])ressing a particular jiroperty of ruier. law and ecjuity. Farewell an expression of kind wishes at Tlie case was adjudged in AD'JE€TIVELY, adv. In the manner o{\ the parting of friends. Hilary term. nn adjective as, a « ord is used Tlie prize was adjudged to the victor adject a n. A ;
:
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
ADIEU',
Vol.
farewell, or
I,
commendation
;
ively.
criiiiiual ivas
adjudged tosufler death.
A D
;
ADJUNCTIVELY,
opinion
The
n.
act of judging
sentence.
Ttiiifjle.
ADJU'DI€ATE,
v.
t.
2.
See Judge.] To adjudge to try and determine, as a It has the sense of adjvdge. court. ADJU'DICATE, II. 1. To try and determine
ly,
sentence.
;
judicially the case.
;
as, the
tried
and
Adjudging;
ppr. ing an
;
[L. adjuro, to
;
man
information of occmrences to the general.
thtlier
Encyc.
ADJU'TE, V. To help. [JVoJ used.] ADJU'TOR, n. A helj)er. [Little used; t.
before the Lord, that rlseth Josh, vi
biiildeth this city of Jeticho.
is in
compound coadjutor
To
common
its
use.]
charge earnestly and solenndy, on ADJU' VANT, 0. Helping assisting. Howell. pain of God's wrath. ADLEGA'TION, «. [L. ad and legatio, an I adjure thee by the Uving God. Mat. xxvi embassy, from lego, to send. See Legate.] Acts, xix. In the public laio of the German Empire, a To conjure to charge, urge or summon right claimed by the states, of joining their with solemnity. own ministers with those of the Emperor, The magistrates adjured by all the bonds of in pidjlic treaties and negotiations, relating civil duty. .MiUon to the common interest of the Empire. Ye sacred be all of ;
3.
;
you adjured.
stars,
Dry den
Encyc. it. [See Allocution.] t. admezh'ur. [ad and measure. See former adjudications. Blackstone Measure.] on oath, or with 1. To measure or ascertain dimensions, size In Scots law, an action by wliicli a cred- ADJURED, pp. Charged a denunciation of God's wrath solemnly or cai>aeity used for measure. itor attaches the heritable estate of 1 to assign to eacii claimant 2. To apjiortion urged. debtor, or his debtor's heir, in payment or his right .\DJU'RER, n. One that adjures one that a.s, to admeasure dower or comsecurity of his debt or an action by which mon of pa.«ture. exacts an oath. Blackstone. the holder of an heritable right, laboring on oath, or ou pp. Measmed apporunder a defect in point of form, may su])- .ADJURING, ppr. Charging tirmed. the penalty of a curse beseeching witli ply tliat defect. Encyc. The measursolenuiitv. n. ;
3.
ed to his care. Their bu.suiess was to correspond with that ])rovince, by their delegates, emissaries or visitors, and give
swear .solemnfrom ad and
charge, bind or command on oath, or inider the penalty of a curse. Joshua adjured them at that time, saying, cursed be the
try
The act of ad n. judging the act or process of trying an
ADJUDICATION,
t.
or compel one to swear
To
up and 3.
decided.
ADJU'DICATING,
V.
n.
juro, to swear.] 1.
court adjudicated upoi
ADJU'DICATED,;;;?. Adjudged;
adjutant.
The
act of adjuring. Adjutants General, among the Jesuits, were a select number of fathers, who resided a solenm charging on oath, or under the with the general of the order, each of penalty of a curse. whom had a province or country assignThe form of oath. Addison.
ADJURE,
to give
[L. adjudko,
connection will
In
adv.
LY,
consequently.
ADJURA'TION,
sentencing.
ADJUDGMENT,
guards, receives and distributes ammunition, assigns jilaces of rendezvous, &c. Adjutant- General, in an army, is tlie chief
adv. In an adjunctive
manner.
ADJUNCT
;
;
ADM
A D J
J
has been used in the sense of to judge ; as, he adjudged lihn unwortliy of his friendBut this sense is unusual. sliip. ADJUDGED, pp. Detenuincd by judicia opinion decreed sentenced. ADJUDG'ING, ppi: Determining by judicial It
.
The Commissioners adjured them not to lei pass so favorable an oi>poriunity of securing their liberties. .Marshall's Life of JVashinglon.
ADLOCU'TION, ADMEAS'URE, v.
'
;
;
;
;
;
;
ADMEASURED,
;
;
AD'JUMENT,
ADMEASUREMENT,
n.
[L. adjumentum.] \DJUST',"i'. /. [Sp. ajuslar; Port, id; It ing of dimensions by a rule, as of a ship, Help ; support, [.^otnsed.] Fr. ajusler, to tit or frame ; of ; cask, and the like. AD'JUN€T, n. [L. adjvnclus, jouied, from aggiuslare L. ad, a.\u\ Justus, just, exact. See Just. 2. Tlie measure of a thing, or dimensions asadjungo. See Join.] 1. To make exact; to lit; to make corres certained. 1. Something added to another, but not esor a cont'ormable to In these uses the word is equivalent to as, pondent, adjust sentially a part of it ; as, water aljsorbed measurement, mensuration and measure. garment to the bod)-, an event (o the prea cloth or is its Also by spnnge adjujxcl. i3. The diction, or things to a standard. adjustment of proportion, or ascera person joined to another. taiimient of shares, as of dower or pasture Swift. Locke. Addison In metaphysics, a qtiality of the body or 'J. held in common. This is done by writ of 3. To put in order ; to regulate or reduce to the mind, whether natural or acquired; as admeasurement, directed to the sheriff. system ; as to adjust a scheme ; to adjust color, in the body thinking, in the mind. Blackstone. aflairs. 3. In grammar, words added to illustrate or n. One that admeasures. 3. To make accurate ; to settle or bring to amphfy- the force of other words ; as, the a satisfactory state, so that parties are ADMEAS'URING,p/jr. Measuring ; apporof the American revolution. The History tioning. agreed in the result ; as to adjust accounts ; words in Italics are the adjuncts of His the differences are adju.
;
ADMEAS'URER,
ADMENeURA'TION
mode and
The
the
adjunct
modes of its two
deities,
were
among
fifths.
the
ADJUST'ER,
;
the Good Genius, the Lares; to the Evil, the Lemures. In the royal academy of sciences at Paris, the adjuncts are certaiii members at tached to the study of particular sciences. They are twelve in number, created in 1716.
A
n.
person
who
adjusts
lielji
)!. The act of adjusting regulation; a reducing to just ibrm or or der a making lit or conformable settle ment. Watts. Woodward.
ADJUST'MENT,
lias
;
The [See Adjutant.] skillfid airangement. Burke. Encyc. AD'Jl'TANT, n. [L. adjulans, aiding from been used for a colleague, but of ad and jiero, jutum, U adjuto, to assist
AD'JUTANCY,
n.
oHice of an adjutant
;
;
H'otton.
rarely.
AD'JUNCT,
17.
Added
to or
as an adjunct professor.
AD.tUN€'TION,
n.
The
affairs, an officer whose busines.is to assist the Mcjor by receiving am conmiunicatjng orders. Each battalion of foot, and r::ch regiment of hoi-se has
act of joining
;
tlie
a.
Joining;
having the
quality of joiniuff.
ADJUNCTIVE,
help.]
united with, In militanj
thing joined.
ADJUNCTIVE,
n.
is
joitied
wlo
receives orders ti-om tl Major, to comnuiincate to tl He places Colonel, and to subalterns. adjutant,
Brigade
That whicli
sup)iort.
[Ao< used.^
jyiinister.]
;
;
;
Adjunct
;
Encyc. that which regulates. ADMINICULAR, a. Supplying help; helpRomans. ADJUST'ING, ful. ]>pr. Reducing to due form fitting; making exact or correspondent: ADMIN'ISTER, r. i. [L. administro, of ad See anil ministro, to serve or manage. settling.
inferior deities which were added a~ assistants to the iivincipal gods ; as Be/loto Vulcan, the Cabin ; to 710, to JMars
1.
To act as minister or chief agent, in manpublic affairs, under laws or a constitution of government, as a king, It is president, or other sujireme officer. used also of absolute moiiarchs, who rule not in subordination ; but is more strictly applicable to limited monarchs and other aging
supreme executive
officers,
and
to
gover-
nors, viee-roys, judges and the like, who are under the authority of laws. lung or a president administers the government or laws, when he executes them, or carries them Uito effect. judge administers the laws, when he applies them to particular cases or persons. In short, to adyninister is to direct the e.xecutic>ii or application of laws.
A
A
ADM
ADM To
dispense, as to administer justice or| tlic saerainent. 3. To afford, give or furnish as, to adminisTo ter relief, that is, to act as tlie agent. admin^ater medicine is to direct and cause it to lie taken. to cause to swear 4. To give, as an oath according to law. ADMINISTER, v. i. To contribute to bring aid or supplies to add something as, a shade administers to our conifon. 2. To perform the office of adniuiistrator admiyiisters upon the estate of B. as, 2.
;
;
ADMINISTRATORSHIP,
A D M n.
The
otiice
of an administrator. n. A female who administers upon the estate of an intestatt also a female who administers government.
ADMINISTRATRIX,
AD MIRABLE, To
a.
[L. admirahilis.]
be admired; worthy of admiration
;
hav-
ing quahties to excite wonder, with approbation, esteem or reverence; used of persons or things as, the admirable structm-c of the body, or of the universe. ^D'MIRABLENESS, n. The quality of beADMINISTERED, ;)j3. Executed; mana- ing admirable the power of exciting admiration. afforded given disgoverned ged AD'MIRABLY, adv. In a manner to excite pensed. ADMINISTE'RIAL, a. Pertaining to ad- wonder, mingled with approbation, esteem or veneration. ministration, or to the executive pait ol^ AD'MIRAL, n. [In the Latin of the middle government. ;
;
;
the supreme court for the trial of maritime causes, held before the Lord High Admiral, or Lords of the admiralty. Ill general, a court of admiralty is a court for the trial of causes arising on the high seas, as prize causes and the like. In the Unitetl States, there is no admiralty court, distinct from others but the district courts, established in the several states by Congress, are mvcsted with admu-alty ;
powers.
;
;
A
ADMIRATION,
;
;
;
ADMINISTERING,
has been used, but
ister,
;
of admin-
.-
not well author-
is
si
ized.
;
ernment of pubhc affairs tlie conducting of any office or employirient.
The
executive part of government, conof the constitutional
2.
affairs,
and the enforce-
The
persons collectively, who are entrusted with the execution of laws, and the superintendence of public affairs the chief magistrate and his council or the council
;
A 1.
;
alone, as in Great Britain. Dispensation ; distribution ; exiiihition as the administration of justice, of the sacrament, or of grace. ICor. xii. 2 Cor. ix. 2. 5. The management of the estate of an intestate person, under a conunissi
the proper authority.
Tliis
management
con.sists in collecting
and (J.
legacies,
debts, paying debts and distributing the property
among the heirs. The power, office
3.
Surrogates are authorized to grant adminis Laws of JVew- York. It is
more usual
to say, letters
tion.
of administraBlackstone. 4.
This name is given by the Spaniards, to the sta|)le magazine or warehouse, at Callao, in
Peru, where foreign ships nuist un-
'"a
ADMIN ISTRATIVE,
Enei/c. a.
ADMINISTRATOR,
n.
G.
A man
virtue of a connnission
who, by
from the Ordinary, Surrogate, Court of Probate, or other proper authority, has the charge of the goods and estate of one dying without a will.
One who
administers, or
who
directs,
manages, distributes, or dispenses laws and rites, either in civil, juiUcial, poUtical, 3.
or ecclesiastical affairs. In Scots law, a tutor, curator or guardian, having the care of one who is incapable of acting for himself. Tlie term is usually applied to a father who has jiower over his children and their estate, during their jninority.
.5.
That administers,
or by vvliich one admmisters.
2.
;
Encyc:
;
;
The
Admiral, an officer next in to the Admiral, has of the second squadron. carries his flag at the fore top gallant mast head. This name is given also to certain officers who have power to hold courts of various parts of the vice-admiralty, British dominions. The Rear Admiral, next in rank to the Vice Admiral, has command of the third squadron, and carries his flag at the niizen toi) gallant mast head. The commander of any single fleet, or in
or affection. When he shall come saints and be admired in
Vice
command
U
2 Thes.
general any flag officer. The ship which carries the admiral ; also the most considerable ship of a fleet of merchantmen, or of fishing vessels. zoology, a species of
Enryi [See
to all
be
2.
glorified in his that love him.
them
i.
This word has been used
m
tration.
;
;
command or commission of an
;
;
rank and
administrator.
7.
;
;
;
4.
.
I',
legal powers, the general superinten-
ence of national ment of laws.
Dry den
When I saw her I wondered with great admiration. Luke xvii. Ch. Syr. Sam. lax, to .speak. The ADMIRATIVE, n. A note of admiration, terminating syllable of admiral may be thus \J\'ot used.] Cotgrave. from aXj, the sea. This word is said to t. [L. admiror, ad and miror, have been introduced into Europe by the ADMLRl'I, to wonder ; Sp. and Port, admirar ; Fr. Turks, Genoese or Venetians, in the I2th mlmirer ; It. ammirare Fr. mirer, to look, or VSth century.] to take aim Corn, miras, to look, see or marine commander in chief; the comface Arm. miret, to stop, hold, keep \V. mander of a fleet or navy. also fair, comely and maer, mir, visage The Lord High Admiral'm Great Britain, one that looks af^cr, keeps or guards, a is an officer who superintends all mari mayor, or bailift': Russ. zamirayu, to be astime affairs, and has the government of tonished or stninfied :a, a prefix, and mir, the navy. He has also jurisdiction over miryu, to pacify peace zamiriayu, to all maritime causes, and conuiiissions the make peace. The primaiy sense is to naval officers. Ch. and Syr. hold, to stop, or strain. The Admiral of the fleet, the highest officer L. demiror. See Moor and "im Mar.] under the admiralty. When he embarks on an expetlition, the union flag is display- 1. To regard with wonder or surprise, mingled with approbation, esteem, reverence ed at the main top gallant mast bead. !
sisting in tlie exercise
and
JJnon.
has been sometimes used in an ill sense, denoting wonder with disapprobation. Your boldness I with adiniralion see.
Ileb.
;
2.
com
to
mand, j,;^^J, a commander; Sans, amara
management; gov-
direction;
"liie.
It
Fr. aimVaijfrom Ar. j.^1 amara,
ADMINISTRATION, n. The act of administering
- ?
with
;
ages, Jlmira, Amiras, Admiralis, an Emir Sp. almiranle; Port, id.; It. ammiraglio ;
;
;
in the place
Wonder mingled ;
;
ppr. Excculing cardispensing.
rying into effect; giving
ADMIN'ISTRATE,
n.
pleasing emotions, as approbation, esteem, love or veneration a compoimd emotion excited by something novel, rare, great, or excellent applied to persons and their works. It often includes a shght degree of sur|)rise. Thus, we view the solar system with admiration. Very near to admiration is tlie wish to ad-
;
in
an
ill
sense,
hut seems now correctly restricted to the sense here given, and implying something great, rare or excellent, in the object admired. To regard with affection a familiar term ;
for to love greatly. V. i. To wonder; to be affected with slight surprise sometimes with at ; as, to admire at his own contrivance. Ray. To admire at sometimes implies (fisapproba-
ADMl'RE,
;
tion.
pp. Regarded with wonder, mingled with jdeasiirahle sensations, as
ADIMI'RED,
estei'in, love
or reverence.
n. One who admires; one esteems or loves greatly. 2. Also a butterfly, which lays her eggs on ADiAH'RING, ppr. Regarding with wonder the great stinging nettle, and delights in united with love or esteem. brambles. Encye. ADMI RlN(iLY, adv. With admiration hi AD'MIRALSIIIP, )!. The office or power the manner of an admirer. of an admiral. [Little used.] ADM1SSH5IL ITV, n. The quality of being n. In Great admissible. Chase. ADMIRALTY, Britain, the This office ADMISS IBLE, a. [See admit.] That may office of Lord High Admiral. is discharged by one person, or by Combe admitted, allowed or conceded; as, the testimonv is admissible. missioners, called Lords of the Admiralty ; ADJUSS ION, ?(. [L. admissio.] usually seven in number. The admiralty court, or court of admiralty, is I. The act or practice of admitting, as the 7.
Ill
Valuta.]
shell-fish.
ADMIRER, who
;
.
ADM of aliens
admission
ADO our
into
country 2. ;
also the state
2.
oi" being admitted. power or permission to enentrance ; access power to approach our laws as, give to foreigners easy admis sion to the rights of citizens the admission of a clerk to a benefice. Allowance grant of an argument
Admittance
ter
I
;
;
;
3.
;
position not fully proveil. V. t. [L. adinHh, from ad and 7nitto send, Fr. meitre.] To suffer to enter; to grant entrance wliether into a jdace, or an office, or into the mind, or consideration; as to admil a student into college ; to admit a serious thought into the mind.
ADMIT',
2.
To give right of entrance as, a ticket admits one into a play house. ;
3.
To
allow; to receive as true
gument or
fact
is
;
as,
the ar-
warned
ADO'NIA,
ADMON'ISHER,
One who reproves
n.
;
ppr. Reproving coun.selmg; directing.
ADMON'ISHMENT, n. Admonition. ADMONI"TION, n. Gentle reproof; ties
It
of Cyprus. He was fond of juuuing, and received a mortal woiuul from the tusk of a wild boar. Venus lamented his death, linn into the flower, aue-
Shak coun-
ADO'NIS,
;
Skakespeare uses the word for the custom or prerogative of being admitted " Sir John, you are a gentleman of excellent breeding, of great admittance" but
;
AD.MON'ITORY, tion
[Heb. Ch. and Syr. jnx adon, Lord, a scriptural title of the Su-
the license ap|)roach
iniwarrantable.
is
Permitted to enter or allowed conceded. gianted
;
;
;
ADMIT'TER, n. He tliat admits. ADMIT'TING, ppr. Permitting to else.
;
II.
allowing
or admlstio
t.
a.
one thing to another. Brown. [L. ad and nascens,
n.
which is also
admix'chun, [L. admixlio, to mix.
mingluig of bodies ; a union by mixing substances together. It differs
different
from composition or chimical combination for admixtion does not alter the nature of the substances mixed, but merely blends them together whereas in composition, the particles unite by affinity, lose their former pro))erties, and form new com poimds, witli different properties. ;
;
ADMIX'TURE,
The
n.
[From admix.]
substance mingled with another sonieof mixture. We say, an admixture of sulphm- with alum, or the admixture of different bodies. ADMON'ISH, V. t. [L. admoneo, ad andino;
tuiies the act
neo, to teach, warn, admonish iter; Norm, amonester ; Sp.
;
Fr. admon-
amonestar ;
Port. amoestar, or admoestar ; It. ammonire : G.mahnen, crmulinen; D. maaner!, to dun,
vermaanen, ;
instead of Jehovah.
ADOPT', 1.
;
to
Dan.
admonish
;
Sw. mana,
maner, formaner
mwnan, to mean.] To warn or notify of a
;
for-
Sax.
called alhuginea,
and
is
2.
some-
times confoiuided with tlie conjunctiva. It lies between the sclerotica, and con-
of ad and misceo,
;
annexed
;
[L. admoveo.]
to bring
ADNAS'CENT,
See Mix.]
mana
V. ;
maintain
name Jehovah, which the Jews were Ibrbid to utter, and the true ]M-oiuuiciation of which was lost they were therefore always to pronounce the word Monai,
To
t.
ADIMIX'TION,
].
to
[Little used.]
growing.] enter or Growing on something else. Evelyn. conceding. ADNA'TA, n. [L. ad and nalus, grown, with from nascor, to grow.] mingle sometliing 1. In [See Mix.] anatomi/, one of the coats of the eye,
approach
ADMIX',
A
ADMOVE',
who
points ordinarily
;
that admonishes.
To move
Hebrew
consonants of the word Jehovah, are not the natural jKiints belonging to that word, and that they do not express the true pronunciation of it but that they are vowel points belunging to the words, Mo7iai and Elohim, ajjplied to the ineffable
n. The reducing of lands or tenements to mortmain. [See Encnc Mortmain.]
pp.
cntics, a sect or party
that the to the
Containing admoni-
a.
n.
preme Being.]
Among
(iDMORTIZA'TION,
:
ADMIT'TED,
;
eye or pheas-
botany, bird')
ADO'NISTS,
;
[JVot
4.
in
ant's eye.
;
;
;
Cue. Bailey. n. An Adonic verse. 71. In mythology, the favorite of said to be the soii of Venus, Cinyras, king
i;l'Pe.
and changed mony.
;
^tsed.]
Encyc a. Motiic Verse, a short verse, which the death of Adonis was bewailed. consists of a dactyl and spondee or tro-
in
;
;
Faber. anciently
l)leasmes.
or
instruction in duagainst a fault caution direction. Tit. iii. 1 Cor. X. In church discipline, public or private to reclaim an offender or allowed. a step reproof preliminnrv to excommunication. ADMIT'TANCE, n. The act of admittin allowance. More tisually, ADMONI"TIONER, n. A cUspenser of admonitions. 2. Permission to enter ; the Hooker. power or right of entrance and hence, actual eiurance ADMON'ITIVE, a. Containing admonition. Barroiv as, he gained admittance into the chinch. 3. Concession admission allowance as ADMON'ITOR, n. An admonisher, a monitor. the admittance of an argument. seling
Adonis.
ADO'NIC, j
warn
;
to
n. Festivals celebrated
honor of Adonis, by females, who spent two days m lamentations and infamous
counsels.
ADMON'ISHING,
Growing; advancing
nuuihood.
ADO'NIC, ADO'NIS,
advised
;
a.
to
Pertaimng
in
.
Reproved
pp. instructed.
;
a.
Adonean Venus.
Fair
colleges.
ing
To
ADONE'AN,
uistruct or direct.
ADM(JN'ISIIED,
admitted.
permit, grant or allow, or to be capable of; as, the words do not admit of such a construction. In this sense, of may be used after the verb, or omitted. ADMIT'TABLE, a. That may be admitted 4.
To
from childhood i
iii.
;
to,
1.
ADOLES'CENT,
;
Moses was admonished of God, when he w.is about to make the tabernacle. Heb. viii. In ecclesiastical affairs, to reprove a member of the church for a fault, either pidjlicly or privately the first step ol'church disciphne. It is followed by of, or against ; as, to admonish (if a fault committed, or against It has a like use ii connnitting a fault.
;
3.
counsel against wrong practices to caution or advise. .idmonisli one another in psalms and hymns Col.
;
ADO
To
V.
t.
Encyc.
[L. adopto, of
ad and
opto, to
desire or choose. See Option.] To take a stranger into one's family, as son and heir ; to take one who is not a child, and treat him as one, giving him a title to the privileges and rights of a child.
In a spiritual sense, to receive the sinfid children of men into the invisible church, and into God's favor and protection, by which they become heirs of salvation by
Christ. Brown. Such pans of animal or vegetable bodies 3. To take or receive as one's own, that as are usual ami natural, as the hair, which is not naturally so ; as, to adopt the wool, horns ; or accidental, as fungus, misletoe, of another or to receive that ojiinions and excrescences. which is new as, to adopt a particular Offsets of plants, mode of husbandry. germinating under ground, as from the lilv, narcissus, and 4. To select and take as, which mode will
junctiva. 2.
;
;
;
"
you adopt ? pp. Taken as one's own ; received as son and heir selected tor use. growing to it. Martmi. ADOPT'EDLY, adv. In the maimer of n. and AD'NOUN, [ad something adopted. noun.] In grammar, an adjective, or attribute. n. One who adopts. [Lit- ADOPT'EH, tle 2. In used.] chimistry, a large round receiver, with two necks, diametrically opposite to each ADO', n. [Qu. a and do.] Bustle trouble one of which admits the neck of a labor to other, difficulty ; as, make a great ado about trifles; to perretort, and the other is joined to another hyacinth.
AD'NATE, In botany,
Quincy. Encyc. a. [L. ad and natus, grown.]' pressing close to the" stem, or
;
;
suade one with of ad and
Heb.
nS;f,
to
;
;
much
ADOLES'CENCE, ing,
ADOPT'ED,
n.
olesco,
receiver.
ado.
ascend
;
Ar.
;
used
in distillations, to
give
to elastic vajiors, or to increase the length oftlie nei-k of a retort. ADOPT'ING, ppr. Taking a stranger as a s
high.to reprove fault with mildness. The_ state of growing, applied to the young Count him not as an enemy, but admonish of the human race youth, or the period bim as a brother. 2 Tliess. iii. of life bet« ecn childiwvd and manhood. ;
It is
more space
[L. adolescens, growto grow, from oleo.
;
ADOP'TION, 1.
The
n. [L. adoptio.] act of adopting, or the state of being
the taking and treating of a stranger as one's own child.
adopted
;
ADO
ADO receiving as one's own, wiiat is new or not natural. 3. Gofl's taking the sinful children of men into his luvor and protection. Eph. iv. Adoption b;i arms, an ancient ceremony of presenting arms to one for his merit or valor, which laid the person under an obligation to defend the giver. Adoption by baptism Ls the spiritual affinitj' wliicli is contracted by god-fathers and god-childreTi, in the ceremony of baiitisni. It was introduced into the Greek church, and afterwards among tlie ancient Pranks. 2.
The
Tliis affinity
was supposed
tion, tliat
out scrutiny.
Encyr. used for many kinds
adopter.
In Europe, adoption is of admission to a more intimate relation,
and is nearly ei|uivalent to reception ; as, the admission of persons into ho.spitals, or monasteries, or of one society into ano ther.
Encyc.
AnOPT'IVE,
a. [L. adoptivvs.] as an adoptive father; or that is a(lii])fed, as an adoptive son. ADOPT'IVE, n. jjcrson or thing adopted. ADO'RABLE, a. Tliat ought to be adored; worthy of divine honors. In popular use, worthy of the utmost love or respect.
That adopts,
A
)i. The quality of being atlorable, or worthy of adoration. ADO'RABLY, adv. In a manner woilliy of adoration.
ADO'RABLENESS,
V.
[L. adoro.
t.
-nx^, to
honor,
adorn
Heb. nnx,
;
;
kiss one's
hand, ; as, in order to a. IL. Adria, or Hadria, the hand is carried to one's mouth. See Cal- ADRIAT'I€, gulf of Venice.] met, ad verbum, who cites, in confirmation to
the Gulf, called, from Venice, of this opinion, the ancient practice of kiss- Pertaining the Venetian Gulf See Job. xxxi. 1 Kings, ing the hand. n. The Venetian Gulf; a Ainsworth sup- ADRIATIC, Ps. ii. Gen. xli. xix. Gulf that washes the eastern side of Italy. poses the word to be a compound of ad
and if the word is comore, to pray pound, as I suspect, this opinion is most probably correct.] To worship with profound reverence; to address with exalted thoughts, by prayer to pay divine honors and thanksgiving and
I.
;
n.
a. or adv. [Sax. adrifan, gedrifan,aui\drifan, to drive. See Dnve. Adrijl is the participle of the verb.] floating at ranfloating Literally, driven dom impelled or moving without direc-
ADRIFT',
;
to
•2.
to
;
honor as a god or as divuje.
Dryden. To love in the highest degree ; to regard with the utmost esteem, affection and the adore their jirince. people respect as,
norm
A
Tatter.
ly
reverenced
ADORER,
;
high
greatly beloved.
;
One who
n.
ors as divine
;
worships, or hon in popular language, an ad
ppr.
to
(lilt
on.]
To deck add
or decorate
;
to
make
beauty by dress external ornaments. to
to
;
to
esteem
pro-
Adoration, among the Jews, was performetl by bowing, kneeling and prostration. Among the Romans, the devotee,
with his head uncovered, appHed his
rightj
to his lips, bowing and turning him-! from left to right. The Persians fell on the face, striking the forehead against: tlie earth, and kissing the ground. Tlie' adoration paid to the Grecian and Roman' emjierors, consisted in bowing and kneel-: ing at the feet of the prince, laying hold of his robe, then withdrawing the band audi
self
;
Arm.
;
See Right.]
dret.
;
;
readv
skilfiil
;
With
adv.
dexterity
manner.
ADROIT'NESS,
;
in
a
Chesterfield.
Dexterity rcadhies.s in the use of the limbs, or of the mental facn.
;
Home.
ulties.
ADRY',
[Sax. adrigan, to diy.]
a.
[This
noun.]
(dways follows
adjective
Spectator.
[L. ascititius, fiom add or join.] taken as supplemental additional
ADSCITI'TIOUS,
a.
adscisco, ascisco, to
Added
;
;
;
Warton.
not requisite.
ADSTRIC'TION,
A
n. [L. adstrictio, astrictio, fast.
of ad and slringo, to strain or bind See Strict.]
binding fast. Among physicians, the rigidity of a part of the body, occasioning a costive-retention of usual evacuations ness a closeness of the emunctories ; also the styptic effects of medicines.
ity.
4.
To display the beauty or excellence to adorn the doctrine of
ADORN', ADORN',
n. a.
Ornament. Obs. Adorned decorated. ;
ADORN'ED,
pp.
Decked
of; as,
God. Titus
;
Spenser. 04*.
Milton decorated ; em-
bellished.
ppr. Ornamenting ; decorating displaying beauty. ADORN'ING, n. Ornament ; decoration. 1 Pet. iii.
ADORN'ING, ;
ADOSCULA'TION,
)i.
[L.
ad and
plause, given to public performers mid the! election of a pope is sometimes by adora-i
ADOS'SED, to set
back
a. [Fr. adossie, part,
to
back
;
osculatio,
of adosser,
dos, the back.]
;
ii.
a kissing, from oscuhim, a kiss, or mouth.] clapping it to the lips. In modern times The impregnation of plants by the falling of adoration is paid to the pope by kissingj the farina on the pistils. Encyc. his feet, and to princes, by kneeUng and Adosctilation is also defined to be the insertkissing the hand. This word was used by hig of one part of a plant into another. Crabhc. the Romans for acclamation or great ap;
contracted from the
;
;
found reverence.
hand
Encyc.
a. [Fr. from droit, right, straight, droite, the right hand ; It.
ADROIT' LY,
;
in high
its
rogo, to ask.
whence
;
beautiful; in want of drink. deck with Thirsty, the
The
and
active in the use of the skilful hands, and figuratively, in the exercise of the mental faculties ingenious ready in invention or execution.
preme Being.
Homage paid to one
always follows
adrift.
[L. arf
diritto, right, straight,
;
2.
n.
to the parties.
Honoring or ad- Dextrous
a.
was
the boat
See Interrogate and Rogation.] species of ado|)tion in ancient Rome, by wliicli a person, capable of choosing for himself, was admitted into the relation of a son. So called from the questions put
direct
;
is,
adjective, it
L. directus, dirigo
or
dressuig as divine regaijling with great love or reverence. ADORN', II. t. [L. adorno, ad and orno, to deck, or beautify, to dress, set oft", extol, furnish; Fr. orner ; Sp. Port, ornar ; It Orno is probably ornare ; Ann. aonrna. the Saxon hrinan, gerenian, gerinan, gehrinan, to touch, to strike, to adorn, that 1.
as,
;
ADROIT',
miring lover.
ADO'RlNG,
As nn
ADROGA'TION,
;
ADO'RED, pp. Worshipped as divine
;
;
tion.
;
A bride adnrnetti herself with jewels. Isa. vi act of paying 2. To set off to advantage ; to add ornaments to to embelhsh by any tiling exhonors to a divine being ; the worship paid ternal or adventitious ; as, to adorn a speech to God ; the act of addressing as a God. by appropriate action, sentiirients with Adoration consists in external homage, ac elegance of language, or a gallery with companied with the highest reverence. It pictures. is used for the act of praying, or prefer .3. To make as, ]ileasing, or more pleasing ring requests or thanksgiving, to the Sugreat abilities adorned by virtue or affabil-
ADORA'TION,
;
to
OS, oris
;
adoption as adjitiation. Kncyc, Adoption by testament is the appointing of a person to be heir, by will, on condition of his taking the name, arms, &c. of the
Encyc. In Ch. and Ileb, reverence or glorify, to
heraldry, denoting two figures or bearings placed back to back. Encyr.
ADOWN', prep, [a and doicn.'\ From a higher to a lower situation downwards ; implying descent. be magnificent or ADOVVN', adv. Down; on the ground ; at Tin to to glorious, glorify. magnify, the bottom. word is usually referred to the Latin ad Afa. Adred'. ADREAD', [See Dread.] ad and orare, to carry to one's mouth fected bv dread. Obs. the
ADO'RE,
to entitle tlie
god-child to a share of the god-father's estate. Encyc. Adoption by hair was performed liy cutting on the hair of a ])ersMn and giving it to tlie TIlus Po|ie John VIII adoptive father. adopted Boson, king of Aries. Adoption by matrimony is the taking the children of a wife or husband, by a former marriage, into the condition of natural children. This is a |)ractice peculiar to the (iermans liut is not so properly
A D U
by sudden acclamation with In
is,
Encyc.
Quincy. [See
ADSTRIC TORY, ADSTRING'ENT. Astringent.]
ADULA'RI.\,
[From Adula,
n.
the
summit
of a Swiss mountain.]
A
mitieral
deemed
tlie
most perfect variety
of felspar; its color white, or with a tinge of green, yellow, or red. Cleaveland.
ADULA'TlbN, what
is
n.
[L. adulatio.]
praise in excess, or beyond merited high comi)liment. Shak.
Servile flattery
;
;
AD'ULATOR,
n.
A
flatterer
;
one
who
of-
fers praise servilely.
AD'ULATORY,
a.
Flattering; containing
excessive praise or compliments; servilely praising as, an adulatory address. n. A female that flatters ;
AD'ULATRESS, with
servility.
A D U
A D V
-VDULT', [L. adultus, grown to maturity, from oho, to grow Heb. nSj?, to ascend. Having arrived at mature years, or to full size and strength as an adult person or
'2.
n.
A person grown to
full size
and
as, to
;
advance an opinion or an
argument, (i.
In commerce, to supjily betbrehand to furnish on credit, or befiire goods are delivered, or work done; or to finnish as a part of a stock or fund as, to advance money on loan or contract, or towards a |)urchase or estabhshment. To finnish for others; to supply or pay for others, in expectation of reimburse;
thoro.
;
ADULT',
notice
;
;
plant.
A D V
ment grant absolute
n.
In a scriptural sense, all manner of lewdness or unchastity, as in the seventh com-
;
mandment. It strength, or to the years of manhood. also applied to full grown plants. 3. In scripture, idolatrj', or apostasy from the 7. Among civilians, a person between four- true God. Jer. iii. teen and twenty-five years of age. Enci/c. 4. In old laws, the fine and penalty imposed ment. ADl'LTERANT, n. The person or thing for the offense of adultery. 5. In ecclesiastical affairs, the intrusion of a that adulterates. They advanced the money out of their own and took the sheriff's deeds in their own ADUL'TERATE, v. t. [L. adultero, from person into a bishopric, during the life of funds, name. Kent, Johnson's Rep. the bishop. adulter, mixed, or an adulterer ; ad and Encyc 6. Among ancieitl naturalists, the grafting of 8. To raise to enhance alter, other.] as, to advance the To corrupt, debase, or make impure by an trees was called adidtery, bemg eonsitler- price of goods. ed as an imnatural imion. admixture of baser materials; as, to adul To move or Pliny. V. i. forward is
;
ADULT'NESS,
or the coin of a country.
terate liquors,
Boyle.
The
n.
ADUM'BRANT,
state of being adult. [See Adumhrate.] Giv-
a.
ing a faint shadow, or slight resemblance. ADUL'TERATE, Obs. ADUM'BRATE, v. t. [L. adumhro, to shade, ADUL'TERATE, o. Tainted with adulte- from umbra, a shade Fr. ombre ; Sj). sombra ; It. ombra.} ry debased by foreign mixtin-e. ADUL'TERATED, pp. Corrupted debased To give a faint shadow, or slight hkeness to exhibit a faint resemblance, hke a of less value. by a mixture with v. i.
;
ADVANCE,
go proceed as, the troojis advanced. improve, or make progress to grow better, greater, wiser or older as, to adto
2.
To' commit adulteiT,
;
;
To
;
;
vance in knowledge, in stature, in wisdom, or in years. To rise in rank, office, or consequence : to be preferred, or promoted as, to advance in pohtical standing. shadow. n. A moving forward, or toADUMBRA'TION, n. The act of maldnj ADV'ANCE, wards the fi-ont. Clarendon. a shadow or faint resemblajice. 2. Gradual progression improvement as, 2. A faint sketch an imperfect repiesentaan advance in religion or knowledge. tion of a thing. Bacon Atterhury. 3. In heraldry, the shadow only of a figure, 3. Advancement promotion preferment outUned, and painted of a color darker as, an advance in rank or office. than the ;
;
;
something
ADUL'TERATENESS, state
The
n.
fpiahty or
of behig debased or couiUerfeit.
ADUL'TERATING, rupting
;
ppr. counterfeiting.
ADULTER A'TJON,
n.
Debasing; cor
;
state
;
-3.
of ad and sexual commerce with any married woHookedness man, except his wife. [See Adultery.] In scripture, an idolater. Ezek. xxiii.
[.Vo?
in
hookedness
The 5.
commerce
Hall.
spurious. n. In the cmV faic, a child issuing from an adulterous connection. ;
ADUL'TERINE,
ADUL'TEROUS,
a.
Guilty of adultery;
In
«C)i}rfHrp, idolatrous,
and
xvi.
Mark,
very wicked. Mat.
Adunk'.
a.
Hooked.
13.
[J^Tot
Bacon.
used.]
ADU'RE,
II.
t.
aduro, ad and uro,
[L.
Gibbon.
In trade, additional price profit advance on the prime cost of goods. ;
A giving beforehand
;
as, aji
a furnishing of something, on contract, before an equivalent is received, as money or goods, towards a capital or stock, or on loan or the money or goods thus furnished as, A made large ;
;
to
;
burn.]
To burn up. ADUST', a.
{J^Tot
Bacon.
used.]
advances to B. 7.
[L. adustus, burnt, the participle of aduro, to burn.]
Burnt
and
pertaining to adulter}'. xii.
hook. Bacon.
ADUNQUE,
amoiiis of an empress require the plainest
advances.
Arbuthnot
;
;
;
the plural.
form of a hook.
An apostate from the true faith, or one ADUN'eOUS, [L. aduncus.] who violates his covenant engagements Hooked bent or made in the form of a
a very wicked ])erson. Jer. ix. and xxiii. 4. One devoted to earthly things. James, iv. ADULTERESS, n. A married woman guilty of incontinence. ADUL'TERINE, a. Proceeduig fiom adul-
2.
a bendhig
:
;
First hiiU by way of invitation fir.st step towards an agreement as, A made an advance towards a j-econciliation with B. In this sense, it is very frequently used in ;
Cranmer
n. [L. aduncitas, uncus, a bm :ik.] ;
4.
a.
terous
;
;
Diet.
tinio.
;
used.] ADUL'TERER, n. [L. adulter.] 1. A man guilty of aduhery a man who has ADUN'CITY,
9.
;
;
Theact of aduher-
of being adulterated, corrupted or debased by foreign mixture. field. The adulteration of liquors, of ih-ugs, and even of bread and beer, is common, but a ADUNA'TION, n. [L. ad and unus, The state of being imited union. scandalous crime. ating, or the
3.
scorched
;
;
become dry by heat
;
with great pleasure, make the necessaiy advances. Jay. The account was made up with intent to show I shall,
fiery.
ADUST'ED,
a.
Become
hot and dry burnt ;
;
what advances had been made.
scorched.
viii.
A furnisliing of money or goods for others, in expectation of reinibiusement or the property so furnished. ;
hot
Kent.
before ; also beforeact of burning, scorch In advance, in front hand ; before an equivalent is received, or ing, or heating to di-yness ; a state of being terate.] when one partner in trade has furnished 1. Violation of the thus heated or dried. bed a ; crime, marriage more than his [n'oportion is in or a civil injury, which introduces, or as, may ADV'ANCE, V. t. adv'ans. [Fr. avancer; Sj). a thousand dollars or pounds. advance to introduce, into a family, a spurious otiIt. avanzare, avanzar, to move forward to get or increase ; Ai'in. avans, to advance. spring. pp. Moved forward ; pro-
ADUL'TERY,
«.
[L.adultcrium.
SeeMul- ADUS'TION, n. The
;
A
;
B
;
By the laws of Connecticut, the sexual intercourse of any man, with a married v\oman, is the crime of adultery in both such intercourse of a married man, with an unmarried woman, is Ibrnication ui both, and adultery of the man, within the meaning of the law respecting divorce but not a felonious adultery in either, or the Clime of adultery at common law, or ;
This latter ofi'ense is, in Engby land, proceeded vi ith only in the ecclesiastical courts.
moted
This word is formed on van, the front, which seems to be the Ch. and Heb. nji3, D'J3, surface, face ; whence, Fr. avant, It.
:
statute.
ADV ANCED,
avanti, before.] 1.
To
bring forward
to
;
move
further in
2.
To
as, to
to iaiFn~to a higher rank; advance one from the bar to the
advanced
2.
3.
To improve or make better, which is considered as a progression or moving Ibr-
;
;
in years an advanced age. n. The act of niovmg forward or ]iroceeding. The state otbeing advanced preferment promotion, in rank or excellence the act of promoting. Settlement on a wife, or jointure. Provision made by a parent for a child, by gift of pro|
;
;
;
bench.
ward ; as, to advance one's true interests. In common u.tage, adultery means the 4. To forward to accelerate ; growth ; as, to unfuithfiilness of any married ])erson to advance the growth of plants. tlie marriage bed. "in England, Parlia- 5. To offer or propose to bring to \ lew or
improved; finuished beforehand
ADV ANCEMENT,
front.
Hence, promote;
;
situated in front, or before the rest; also old, having reached the decline of life ; as,
3. 4.
to which the child would be entitled as heir, after his parent's death. life,
-
R. M. Sherman.
A D V
A D V ADV'ANCER,
One who advances
n.
a
A D V
VDVE'NIENT, a. Advening
ADVENT'UROUSLY,
coming from!
adv. Boldly daroutward causes. ingly in a manner to incur hazard. sportsmen, a start or branch of a AD' VENT, n. [L. adventus, from advenio, of ADVEiXT UROUSNESS, n. The act or ad and venio, to come. See Find.] buck's attire, between the back antler and ([uality of being adventurous. the pahn. Encyc. \ coming; appropriately the coming of our AD'VERB, n. [L. adverbium, of ad and verADV'AN'CING, jipr. Moving forward pro- Savior, and in the calendar, it includes bum, to a verb.] In four to sabbaths before grammar, a word used to modify the higher Christmas, begimnng ceeding promoting raising sense of a verb, |)articiple, adjective or on St. Andrew's Day, or on the sabbath rank or excellence improving supplynext before or after it. It is intended as attribute, and usually placed near it ing beforehand, as on loan, or as stock in a.«, he writes well; paper ertremely white. a season of devotion, with reference to the trade. ADV'ANCIVE, a. Tending to advance, or coming of Christ in the flesh, and his sec- This part of speech might be more signiond to named a coming ficantly promote. judge the world. Encyc. modifier, as its use is to ADV'ANTAgE, n. [Fr. avantage, from iVDVENT'INE, a. Adventitious. [.Vo< used.] modify, that is, to vary or qualify the It. sense of another word, by enlarging or Bacon. avant, bel<)re vantaggio ; Sp. ventaja.] 1. Any state, condition, or circumstance, "TIOUS, a. [L. adventitius, from restraining it, or by exi)ressing form, (pudadvenio. See Advent.] favorable to success, prosperity, interest, ity or manner, which the word itself does not express. The term adverb, denoting Added extrinsically accidental not essenor reputation. TTie enemy had tlie advantage of elevated casual foreign. position merely, is often improper. tially inherent Diseases of continuance get an adventitious' ADVERBIAL, a. Pertainins to an adverb. ground. 2. Benefit Jiacon. /VDVERB'IALLY, adv. In the manner of an strength from custom. gain profit. \\ hat advantage will it be to thee Job xxxv. ADVENTl'TIOUSLY, arf». Accidentally. adverb. There exists, in the economy and course of a. Accidental adventitious.; ADVERSA'RIA, n. [L. from arfcersu*. See nature, an indissolul'le union between virtue and Bacon: [Little used.] Mverse.] happiness; between duty and advantage. ADVENT'IVE, n. The thing or person that Among the ancients, a book of accounts, so Washington. comes from without. [Little used.] named from the placing of debt and credit 3. Means to an end opportunity convenBacon.', in opposition to each other. A commonience for obtaining benefit as, students a. Relating to the season of ADVENT'UAL, place book. Encyc. for improvement. enjoy great advantages advent. Saunderson.l AD'VERSARY, n. TTie General took advantage of his enemy's [See Adverse.] n. from 1. An [Fr. aventure, enemy or foe one who has enmity at negligence. advenio. See Mvent.] heart. 4. Favorable state or circumstances as, L Hazard risk chance that of which one TTie Lord shall take jewels set to advantage. vengeance on his adverhas no direction as, at all adventures, that saries. \ah. i. 5. Sii])eriority, or ])revaleuce over with of at all hazards. is, [See Venture.] or over. In «cri/)(ui-e,Satan is called adver2. An of hazard a bold imder-: enterprize Lest Satan should get an advantage of us, (or sary, by way of eminence. 1 Pet. v. over us.) 2 t'or. ii. taking, in which hazards a^e to be encoim-! 2. An opponent or antagonist, as in a suit at tered, and the issue is staked upon unforeG. Superiority, or that which gives it as, the an opposing law, or in single combat seen events. Drydeni advantage ot'a good coMstitiition. ;
;
promoter.
:
;
[
Among
i
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
ADVENTI
;
;
;
;
;
;
.'
I
ADVENTTVE,
;
;
;
;
ADVENTURE,
;
;
|
;
;
;
;
;
THE
j
;
;
;
3.
increase; overplus.
7. Interest;
And with advantage means
to
pay thy love. Shak.
That which
is put to hazard a sense in use witii seamen, and usually'
popular
;
pronounced venture. Something which aj seaman is permitted to carry abroad, with' a view to sell for profit. ADV^ANTAGE, v. t. To benefit to jield A hill of adventure, is a writing signed by a profit or gain. person, who takes goods on board of his What is a man advantaged, if he gain the ship, wholly at the risk of the owner. whole woildj and lose liimself, or be cast away Encyc: Luke ix. ADVENT'URE, v. t. To risk, or hazard to] 2. To promote to advance the interest of put in the power of iniforeseen events as, Obs.
8.
litigant.
AD'VERSARY,
a. Opposed; opposite to; adverse. In law, liavmg an o))posing parin distinction ty, as an adversai-y suit
Additional circumstance to give prepou
;
from an ai)])lication, which no O])position
deration.
j
;
ADVERS'ATIVE,
law or equity, to made. Noting .some differ-
in is
a.
ence, contrariety, or opposition is an honest man, but a fanatic.
I
?
as, John Here but
;
is called an adversative conjunction. This ilenomiuation how'ever is not always correct for but does not always denote to adventure one's hie. Venture.] [See opposition, but something additional. ADVENT'URE, v. i. To dare" to try the ADVERS'ATIVE, 7i. A word denoting conchance as, to adventure on the tempestrariety or opiiositiou. tuous .sea of liberty." AD'VERSE, a. [L. adversus, opposite of arf ADVENTURED,;)/). Put to hazard ven- and versus, tinned from verto, to turn. tured risked. See Advert. Tliis word was formerly acii. One who hazards, cented, by some authors, on the last syllaor |)iits something at risk, as merchantble but "the accent is now settled on tlie ;
;
ADV>ANTAGEABLE, venient
;
gainful.
Profitable
a.
;
con-
[Little used.]
ADV'ANTAGED,/);}.
Benefitted promoted ;
ADV ANTAgE-GROUND,
n. Ground that a state gives advantage or superiority that gives superior advantages for annoy ance or resistance. Clarendon. ;
ADVANTAGEOUS, tage
;
a.
Being of advan-
;
;
;
;
;
;
adveiiturers.
tageous maimer
adv.
;
usefully
Arhuthnot
conveniently.
ADVANTA'GEOUSNESS,
The
n.
qualitj-
or state of being advantageous; profita bleness usefulness convenience. ;
;
ppr.
ADVE'NE. and
To
ADVENT' UROUS,
II.
i.
[L. advenio, to
come
jiart
[Little used.]
to
of,
;
to be
come
added
to,
ad
to,
or
though not essential
The
;
unfortunate
qual-
nicious
a.
;i
[Fr. aventureux.] ;
enterprizing applied to persons. Full of hazard attended with risk :
;
;
1
\
Inchned or wilhng to incur hazard bold encounter
to
Profiting; bene
venio.]
n.
of being bold and venturesome. ADVENTURING, ppr. Putting to risk hazarding. ity
'2.
accede, or
become a
;
ADVENT'URESOMENESS,
1.
fiting.
a. Bold daring [See Ventziresome.]
incin-ring hazard.
Boyle.
ADV'ANTAGING,
Opposite ; opposing ; acting in a contrarj' direction ; conflicting ; counteracting ; as, adverse winds ; an adverse ])arty. 2. Figuratively, opposing desire ; contraiy to the wishes, or to supposed good ; hence, 1.
terprizes.
ADVENTURESOME,
In an advan-
profitably
;
first.]
One who seeks occasions of chance, or attempts bold, novel, or extraordinary en-
;
;
ADVANTAGEOUSLY,
;
;
ADVENTURER,
fm-nishing convenience, or opportu
nity to gain benefit gainful ])rofitable ; u.seful beneficial ; as, an advantageous position of the troo])s ; trade is advantageous to a nation.
;
;
ex-
requiring coin-age posing to danger applied to things ; as, an adventurous undertaking. Ajid followed freedom on the adventurous tide ;
Trumbull
;
calamitous afflictive perunprosperous as, adverse fate or ;
;
;
;
circumstances.
ADVERSE,
I',
advers'.
t.
To
oppose.
[.Yot Goicer.
In an adverse
man-
used.]
ADVERSELY, ner
;
adv.
oppositely
])erously ; in a or success.
unfortunately
;
unpros-
manner contrary
to desire
;
.AD'VERSENESS,
n.
Opposition
;
unpros-
])eroiisness.
ADVERSITY, n. An events,
event, or
of which oppose success or desu'e : .series
A D V
A D V
A D V
grants of land, with power to lead the vascalamity sals of the church to war. state oriinhappiness. Fisced advocates, in ancient Rome, defended advisable or expedient. Ill llie (lay of oi/rcrsify, consider. Eccl. vii. causes in which the pubUc revenue was Yc have rejected God, who saved you out of ADVI'SE, V. t. s. as z. [Fr. aviser; Arm. concerned. 1 Sam. x. ;ill avisa ; Sp. avisar ; It. avvisare. See Advice.] your advcrsitief:. ADVERT', V. i. [L. adverto, otad and verto, 1. To give counsel to to offer an opinion, as Juridical advocates became judges, in conseI followed to be to tinn.] as, quence of their attending cau.ses ih the worthy or exjicfbent earl's court. To turn tlie mind or attention to to regard, advise you to be cautious of speculation. observe, or notice with to ; as, he adverted 2. To give information to connnunicate no- Matricular advocates defended the cathedral cliurclies. followed to what was said, or to a circumstance to make ac(|uaijited with tice that occurred. conmiunicated as, Military advocates were employed by the by of, before the thing cliurch to defend it liy arms, when force Attended to regarded the merchants were advised of the risk. pj). witli to. gave law to Europe. 3. To deliberate, consider, or consult. direction of tlie Mvise thyself of what word I shall bring Some advocates were called nomtwah're, from ADVERT'ENCE, ) n. 1 Ch. xxi. their being nominated by the pope or king; sent me. to him that mind to attention \DVERT'ENCY, ^ again is intransitive. some regular, fiom their being qualified by But in this sense, it notice usually regard ; consideration ; heedfulness. ADVISE, v. i. To deliberate, weigh well, a proper course of .study. Some were or consider. supreme ; others, subordinate. ADVERT'ENT, a. Attentive heedful. I shall return to Advocate, in the German and see what answer Advise to pohty, is a magisADVERTING, ppr. Attending regard him that sent me. 2 Sam. xxiv. trate, appointed in the emperor's name, to ing observing. tlie for consult is to puq)Ose administer justice. ADVERTI'SE, v. t. s as :. [Fr. avertir; Toofadvise ttrith taking the opmions of others. Arm. avertisza, to inform ; fi-om ad and Faculty of advocates, \n Scotland, is a society ADVISED, ^p. Informed; counseled also of emuient lawyers, who practice in the See Advert.} verto, to turn. cautious prudent ; acting with dehberato give notice, advice or intel\. To inform highest courts, and who are admitted tion. members only ujion the severest examinaligence to, wlietlier of a past or present Bacon Let him he advised in his answers. It consists tion, at three diflerent times. event, or of something future. With the well advised is wisdom. Prov. xiii. of about two hiuulred members, and from I will advertise thee what tills people will do Done, formed, or taken with advice or Num. xxiv. this body are vacancies on the bench to thy people in the latter day. advised act an intended dehberation it as, ; advertise to I thee, saying buy tliought usually supplied. or scheme. before the inhabitants and elders of my people Lord advocate, in Scotland, the principal Ruth iv. ADVISEDLY, adv. With deliberation or crown lawyer, or prosecutor of crimes. advice heedfully purposely by design In this sense, it has of before the subject Judge advocate, in courts martial, a person of information as, to advertise a man of as, an enterprize advisedly undertaken. who manages the prosecution. consideran. Dehberate his losses. VDVrSEDNESS, In Enghsli and American courts, advo% To publish a notice of; to publish a writ- tion; prudent procedure. cates are the same as counsel, or counselten or printed account of; as, to advertise ADVrSEMENT, n. Counsel; informaors. In England, they are of two degrees, tion circumspection. goods or a farni. barristers and Serjeants the fonner, being notified Informed 2. Consultation. ADVERTI'SED, ;);;. ajiprentices or learners, cannot, by ancient warned iised of persons : published made Tlie action standing continued nisi for advisecustom, be admitted Serjeants, till of sixMass. Rejyorts. known used of things. ment. teen years standing. Blackstone. Encyc. ad n. Information ADVI'SER, n. One who gives advice or 3. One who defends, vindicates, or espouses monition notice given. More generally, admonition also, in a bad sense, one who a cause, by argument one who is friendly a publication intended to give notice; this to as, an advocate for peace, or for the instigates or persuades. may be, by a sliort account jirinted in a ADVI'SING, ppr. Giving counsel. ojipressed. newspaper, or by a written account posted, ADVI'SING, ?(. Advice comisel. Shak In scripture, Christ is called an advocate for or otherwise made public. liis people. ADVrSORY, a. Having power to advise. ADVERTI'SER, n. One who advertises. We have an advocate with the father. The general association has a general advisO' This title is oflen given to public prints. 1 John, ii. ry superintendence over all the ministers and ADVERTI'SING, ppr. Informing giving Trnmlmirs Hist. Conn AD'VO€ATE, v. t. To plead in favor of; to chuiches. notice publishing notice. Hist. Car Madison. Hamsay, defend by argument, before a tribmial to 2. a. Furnishing advertisements ; as, adversupport or vindicate. Containing advice ; as, their opinion it Those who advocate a discrimination. tising customers. merely advisoi-y. Hamilton's Report on public debt. 3. In the sense of monitory, or active in giv AD'VO€ACY, n. The act of pleading for; Tlie Duke of York advocated the amendment. as used by Shakespeare. ing intelligence, Brown. ntercession. on the Regency in the House of Debates now nstd.} [JVot law-suit. Chaucer. 2. Judicial pleading Dec. 27, 18III. ADVrCE, n. [Fr. avis, opinion, notice AD'VO€ATE, n. [L. advocatus, Crom advoco, Lordi, The Earl of Buckingham advocated the oriArm. avis. This and the verb aviser, to of ad and voco, to call for, to plead for Ibid. ginal resolution. be iiiislortmie
;
;
affliction
;
distress
South. Open to advice. ADVI'SABLENESS,}i. The quality of bemg
2.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
ADVERTED,
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
ADVERTISEMENT,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
advise, seem to L. visa, to see, to
;
formed of ad and the
visit.]
to call.
See
Vocal.]
Advocate, in its primary sense, signifies, who pleads the cause of another in a court of civil law. Hence, 2. One who pleads the cause of another before any tribunal or judicial court, as a barrister in the Eiighsh courts. say, conduct. Franklin a man is a learned lawyer and an able deliberate consideration. '}. Prudence advocate. Shak. notice intelligence ; as, we In Europe, advocates have different titles, 3. Information have late advices from France. accordmg to then- particular duties. Consistorial advocates, in Rome, appear beTo take advice, is to consult with others. fore the Consistory, in opposition to the n. vessel to ADVI'CE
1.
an opbiion recommended, or offered, as worthy to be followed. What advice give ye 2 Ch. x. With good advice make wai-. Prov. xx. We may give advice, but we cannot give
Counsel
;
1.
one
.'
We
;
;
BOAT,
;
A
employed
carry dispatches or information. ADVI'SABLE, a. [See Mvise.] 1. Projier to be advised prudent expedient proper to be done or practiced. ;
It is CI
;
not advisable to proceed, at this time, to of officers.
(.•hoire
disposal of benefices. Elective advocates are chosen
by a
The idea of a legislature, consisting of a single branch, though advocated by some, was generally reprobated. Ramsay, Hist. Carolina. How little claim persons, who advocate this sentiment, really possess to be considered calfrom the following quotation. will vinists, appear Mackenzie's Life of Calvin.
The most eminent
orators
to
AD'VOCATED,;);). Defended by argument
;
vindicated.
AD'VOCATESS,
n.
AD'VO€ATING,
ppr.
A
female advocate. Taylor.
bislio]),
abbot, or chapter, with hcense from the prince. Feudal advocates were of a militaiy kind, and to attach them to the church, had
were engaged
advocate his cause. Mitfurd. A part only of tlie body, whose cause he advocates, coincide with him injudgnient. Scott. Chris. Obs. xi. 434.
Supporting by rea-
sons; defending; maintaining. ADVOCATION, n. A pleading for: plea; apology.
A E D
A E R
A F F
^9liU of advocation, in Scotland, is a written /E'GII.OPS, n. [Gr. aiyiXu^; ai4, a goat, and A description of the air-; that branch of phi u^-, the eye.] losoj>hy which treats of the air, its conapplication to a superior court, to call an action before them from an inferior court. A tumor in the corner of the eye, and a plant stituent j)arts, properties, and phenomena. so called. The order of the superior court for this (^uincy. Encyc. M'GlS, n. [Gr. aiyi;, a goat skin, and A'EROIWANCY, n. [Gr. arp, and tiavfua, purjjose is called a letter of advocation. ADVOU'TRESS, n. An adulteress. Bacon. shield from at|, a goat.] divination.] A or defensive armor. Divination n. means of the air and winds. ADVOU'TRY, by Adidtery. [Little used.] .--^^isild, Bacon. JEX^al, alh or eal, in Saxon, Eng. all, arc seen [Liftle used.] in many names n. He that has the ri^ht of as, in JElfred, .'Mtred, all AEROftl'ETER, n. [Gr.oirp, air,and ,ufrpoj, Gibson. Cowel. advowson. peace JElwin, all conqueror. measure] 2. The advocate of a church or religious JEhF, seems to bo one form of help, but more An instrument for weighing air, or for ascerhouse. Ci/c. taining the mean bulk of gases. generally written elph or tiljih ; as, in ;
ADVOWEE
;
,
;
ADVOWSON,
n. s as z. [Fr. avo\ierie,from avouer, to avow Norm, avoerie, or avoeson. But the woril ai us latinized, advocatio, from advoco, anil avow is from adimco.] In English law, a right of presentation to a vacant benefice or in other wends, a right of nominating a person to ofliciaie in a va-
JElfwin, victorious aid trious help.
;
;
cant church. The name is derived from ndi'ocatio, because the right was first obtained by such as were founders, lienefactors or streinious defenders, advocates, of the church. Those who have this right are styled patrons. Advo\vs()ns are of three
kinds,
prcsentaiive,
collative,
and
donative; presenlative, when the patron presents lus clerk to the bishop of the diocese to be instituted collative, when the bishop is the patron, and institutes, or collates his clerk, by a single act donative, when a church is founded by the king, and assigned to the patron, without being subject to the ordinary, so that the patron confers the benefice on his clerk, without presentation, institution, or induction. Advowsons are also appendant, that is, annexed to a manor or, in gross, that is, annexed to the person of the patron. Blackstone. ADVOY'ER, or Avoy'er, [Old Fr. advoes.] A chief magistrate of a town or canton in Switzerland. A'DY, n. The abanga, or Thernel's restorative a species of Palm tree, in the West
;
formerly
An
iron Instrument with an arching edge, across the line of the handle, and ground from a base on its inside to the outer edge used for chipping a horizontal surface of tunber. Encyc. .'E, a diphthoiig in the Latin language used also by the Saxon writers. It answers to the Gr. ai. The Sax. (e has been changed into e or ea. In derivatives from the learned languages, it is mostly superseded by e. ;
\.
combination, the reader will therefore search luuler the letter E. ed, ead, syllables found in names from the Saxon, signity ; as,
Eadric, happy happy kingdom Eadrig, hap|)y victory Edward, prosperous watch Edgar, successful weapon. Gibson. Lye. .-E'DILE, n. [Lat.] In ancient Rome, an ;
;
;
officer or magistrate, wlio
litid
the care of
the public builiUngs, [aides,] streets, high ways, public spectacles, &c.
Vol.
I.
;
partakingof
of air;
as, aerial particles. air as, aerial
A'ERONAUTISM, n. The practice of ascen-
'?.
Produced by
Inhabiting or frecpienting the air
5.
;
honey.
a:
AEROS'COPY,
aerial songster*. Placed in the air ; high ; lofty as, aerial spires ; aerial flight.
elevated
;
;
n. In church history, a branch of Arians, so called from Aerius, who main tained,that there is no diftereuce between bishops and piiests.
A'ERlE, n. [W. cryr. Corn, The nest of a fowl, as of an
er,
air
with
eagle or
Shak.
;
with
filled
[Gr.
observation of the
o.jp,
and
axirtTof,a,.
A'EROSTAT,
A
air.
[Little used.] n. [Gr. aj;p, and ataro;, susiarr;fii, to stand.]
from machine or vessel sustaining weights
taining,
the air
name given
a
;
in
to air balloons.
Encyc.
hawk AEROSTAT'IC,
Theact of combining
n.
the state of being
n.
to see.]
The
an eagle.]
a covey ofbirds.
AERIFICATION,
ding and floating in the atmosphere, in balloons. Journ. of Science.
Pope. ;
AE'RIANS,
a.
in air
Suspending pertaining to the art of aerial navigation. n. Aerial navigation the science of raising, suspending, and guiding machines in the air, or of ascendAdams. ing in air balloons. The science of weighing air. ;
AEROSTATION,
air
:
Fouro'oy 2. The act of becoming air or of changing into an aeriform state, as substances whicl 2. are converted from a liquid or solid form AERY-LIGHT, in Milton, light as air used for airy light. into gas or an elastic vapor the state of .AJF'AR, adv. [a and far. See Far.] being aeriform. Fourcroy. 1. At a distance in place to or from a disair or A'ERIFIED, pp. Having infused, tance used Avith from preceding, or off combined with. as, he was seen from afar ; I following A'ERIFORM, a. [L. aer, air, and forma, saw him afar off. form.] 2. In scripture, figuratively, estranged in afthe form or nature of or of an Having air, :
;
;
;
;
with
infuse air into or to combine air with.
air,
;
to
AEROG RAPHY, n. [Gr. or,,, air, ypoifu, to describe.] A description of the air or atmosphere is
aerology
used. chiefly '
;
AEROLOgT€AL, logy.
AEROL'OgIST,
n.
One who
is
versed in
aerology.
AEROL'OgY, description.]
[Gr.
ar,p,
air,
and
a/at' off.
assisting. Why standest thou afar off, 4. Not of the visible church.
Ps. xxxviii.
Lord
Eph.
.'
Ps. x.
ii.
AFE'ARD,
ed by
ular use,
AF'FA,
!^o/o5,
n.
is
expressIbllowed by of, but books, and even in pop-
It is
terrified.
no longer used
in
deemed
A
weight
vulgar. u.sed
coast, equal to an ounce. is called eggeba.
AFFABIL ity
n.
alienated.
;
Absent; not
a. [Sax. aferan, to make afraid. See ulfeard is the participle passive. but ; Fear.] Afraid ; aflected with fear or apprehension, in a tiiore moderate degree than is XiSoj,
and
n. [Gr. ar^f, air, and a stone.] stone falling from the air, or atmospheric a meteoric stone. regions Guidotte. Med. Rep. a. Pertaining to aero-
A'EROL'lTE,
A
fill
kinsmen stand
My 3.
To
v. t.
fection
The gases are aeri-
elastic, invisible fluid. fluids.
form
AERIFY,
initial
JED,
the air; RIAL, a. [L. aerius. See ^iiV.] pertaininff to aerial sailing. Belonging to the air, or atmosidiere as, AERONAUT'I€S,H. The doctrine, science, or art of sailing in the air, aerial regions. by means of a balloon. the nature (-'onsistingof air;
4.
;
and convenience seems to require it to be wholly rejected in anglicized words. For such words as may be found with this
Swift
AE 2.
;
n. [Sax. adese ; Sp. azuela written in Eng. addice.]
[as above.]
of tneasuring the air, including the doctrine of its pressure, rarefaction, elasticity, "
;
;
ADZ,
AEROM'ETRY,)!.
Gibson
V. t. To cond)ine and condensation. Encyc. [See .'lir.] with carbonic acid, formerly called fi.xed Rather, aeronietry is the art or science of air. ascertaining the mean bulk of the gases. [The word has been discarded from modem chimislry.] Encyc. Vre. A'ERATED, pp. Combined with carbonic A'ERONAUT, n. [Gr. a);p, and .aur.;;, a acid. sailor, from ron^, a shi]).] One who sails or floats in the air; an aerial A'ERATING, ppr. Combining with car bonic acid. navigator applied to persons who ascend in Burke. .\ERA'TION, n. The act or operation of air balloons. a. Sailing or with carlmnic acid. AERONAUTIC, floating in combining
;
tall, upright, without branches, with a thick branching head, which furnishes a juice, of which the natives make a drink by fermentation. Encyc. Coxe.
Journ. of Science. The science
.'Ethelnidph, illus-
A'ERATE,
;
Indies,
;
AE'OLIST, n. [L. .'Eolus.] A pretender to inspiration.
ITY,
of being
verse
n.
[See
atfable
on the Guuiea
The
;
half of it Enaic.
The
qualreadiness to con-
.Iffable.]
and coiu-teousness, ceiving others, and in conversation ;
civility
in re:
con-
A F F
A F F descen^ion in nianiicrs. .iffuhilili/ ot coiintenance is that inikluesa of aspect, which [L. affuhilis,
others to reserve; courof easy manners teons coniplait^ant to condescending usually applied superiors as, an affable prince. A])i)lied to external appearance, affable
Easyof ronvcisation; admitting ;
;
;
;
;
denotes
which
that combination of invites to conversation,
features,
and ren-
ders a person accessible, 0|)posed to a forbidding aspect mild benign as, an affa;
ble
;
;
countenance. n. Affability.
In an atfaWe manner;
invitingly.
;
Inchned
to
wannlv
;
attached.
'
[LittU
Bacon
used.]
AFFECTIONATELY, tion
;
fi)ndly
tenderly
;
With
adv. ;
1.
kindly.
AFFE€'TIONATENESS,
aftec
Thes.
ii.
Fondness:
n.
Touched in the feelings; having the feelgoodwill affection. ings excited as. affected with cold or heat APFE€'TIONED, a. Disposed; having an 'i. affection of heart. Having the passions moved; as, affected witli sorrow or joy. Be ye kindly affectioned one to another. 4. a. Inclined, or disposed followed by (o ; Rom. xii 2. Affected; conceited. Obs. Shak. as, well affected to government. 5. a. Given to false show assuming, or AFFECTIVE, a. That affects, or e.xcites emotion suited to affect. what is not natural pretending to possess [Little used.] or real as, an affected lady. AFFECT'IVELY, adv. In an affective or (i. a. Assimied artiiiciall}' not natiu'al as, impressive manner. AFFE€T'OR, ^ n. One that affects one affected airs. that practices affectation. In AFFECT'ER, an affected man S AFFE€T'EDLY, adv. ner hypocritically with more show than AFFE€T'UOUS, a. FuU of passion. [JVot unnaturalLeland. wscrf.] studiously reality formally 2.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
AF'FABLENESS, AF'FABLY, adv. courteously
;
the bank.
free conversation witliout
3.
interest; 4.
the like as, we by the failin-c of
force, loss,, danger, and are more or less affected
o( ad and fub-
See Fahk.^
ulor. 1.
«.
In
having suffered some change by external
invites to free social iiitercomse.
AF'FABLE,
A F F
touched, either in person or
;
;
to It
;
ly
;
;
;
;
AFFA'IR, n. [Fr. affaire, from /aire, make or do; L. face re Sp. hacer ; The jirimary sense of yacto is fare.
as, to
walk
affectedly n.
AFFE€T'EDNESS,
affectedly civil
;
The quahty
of
AFFEE'R, To confirm. AFFEE'R,
V.
t.
[Fr.
aff.er,
to set.]
[Xot used.]
[Fr. offerer, affturer, or afforer, to assess or value.] urge, drive, impel.] ppr. Iminessing having an effect on ; touching the feehngs In law, to assess or reduce an arbitrary 1. Business of any kind ; that which is done, or amercement to a precise sum ; or is to be done ; « ii'ord of very indefinite the penalty moving passions ; attempting a false to reduce a general amercement to a sum show ; greatly desiring ; aspiring to pos and wndefinabh signification. In the plural, sess. it denotes transactions in general ; as liucertain, accorduig to the circumstances man affairs ; political or ecclesiastical af- 2. a. Having power to excite, or move the of the case. Blackstone. pp. Moderated in sum ; aspassions ; tenduig to move the aflfections fairs : also tlie business or concerns of an sessed ; reduced to a certainty. individual ; as, his affairs are embarrassed. pathetic ; as, an affecting address. n. The act of The most affecting music is generally the 2. Matters ; state ; condition of business or afTeering, most simple. or assessing an amercement, concerns. Mi'tford according to adv. In an tiie circumstances of the case. I have sent that ye may know our nffairs. affecting in a vi. manner to excite emotions n. One who affeers ; a permanner; Eph. n. The state of being afson sworn to assess a penalty, or reduce •3. In the singular, it is used for a private dis- AFFE€'TION, fected. an uncertain penalty to a certainty. Coicel. [Little iised.] pute, or duel ; as, an affair of honor ; and sometimes a partial engagement of troops. 2. Passion ; but more generally, or conaffetto, [It., from L. bent of mind towards a particular obIn the phrase, at the head of affairs, the 3. affecius.'] word means, the pubUc concerns of ex- ject, holding a middle ])lace between dis In music, Si direction to render notes soft and to
being affected
;
affectation.
AFFEeTTNG,
V.
t.
;
AFFEE'RED,
AFFEE'RMENT,
AFFECT'INGLY,
AFFEE'ROR,
AFFETTUO'SO,
A
which is natural, and passion, excited by the presence of its exAffection is a permanent bent of the mind, formed by the jn-esence of an object, or by some act of another person, and existing without the presence
ecuting the laws, and administering the Junius. government.
AFFE€T'
position,
[L. afficio, affectum, o{adM\A facio, to make ; L. affecto, to desire, from the same root. 'Effect is to make to, or upon, to press upon.]
!.
V.
t.
To act upon change upon
;
;
produce an effect or cold affects the body
to as,
;
loss affects our interests. 2. To act upon, or move the passions affected 3.
;
as,
with grief
To aim
at
aspire to
;
;
is
citing
object.
of its object. Encyr. In a more particular sense, a settled good will, love or zealous attachment as, the It was affection of a ])arcnt for his child. formerly followed by to or towards, but now more generally followed by for. Desiie incliuation ; propensity, good or ;
desire or entertain
pretension to as, to affect imperial sway. [See the etymology oi' Affair.] To tend to by natural attinity or disposition as, the drops of a fluid affect aspheriial form. To tove, or regard with fondness. Think not that wars we love and strife affect. ;
4.
4.
which
5.
affecting.
AFFI'ANCE,
n,
[Norm,
affiaunce, confi-
Fr._/?«»iefr, to betroth ; S^. fianza, security in bail, afianzar, to give security or bail, fromfiar, to trust, to bail, to confide in Port, id ; Vv.fier, to trust It. fidare,
dence;
;
;
affidare, to tnist,fidanza,
zare, to betroth,
The marriage
1.
2.
conf\dence,fidanfrom h. fido, fides.] contract or promise faith ;
pledged. Trust in general
The
;
confidence
Christian looks to
reliance.
;
God with
implicit ajji-
Hammond.
ance.
;
V. t. To betroth to pledge as, virtuous or vile affections. Rom. i. AFFI'ANCE, one's faith or fidehty in marriage, or to Gal. 5. 6. In a general sense, an attribute, ([uality promise marriage. or proijcrty, whii-h is inseparable from its To me, sad maid, he was affianced. Spenser as, love, tear and ho|)e are affec 2. To give confidence. object tio7is of the mind; ./iffianeed in my faith. Pope. figure, weight, &c., are Fairfax. AFFI'ANCED, pp. Pledged in marriage affections of bodies. betrothed bound in faith. [This sense is closely allied to the third.] 7. Among physicians, a disease, or any parTo make a show of to attempt to imi- ticidar morbid state of the n. One who makes a conbody; as, a AFFI'ANCER, to study tract of marriage between parties. tate, in a manner not natural gouty affection ; liysteric affection. the appearance of what is not natiu'al, or 8. In painting, a lively representation of AFFI'ANCING, ppr. Pledging in marriage :
evil
;
;
;
r>.
;
;
;
I}.
;
;
real
;
as,
to
to
affect
be grave
affected
;
friendship. It seems to have been used formerly for convict or attaint, as in Ayhfle's I'arergon; but this sense is not now in use.
AFFECTA'TION, n. [L. affectatio.] 1. An attem)it to assume or exhibit what ;
1.
Fondness
;
affection.
AFFECT'ED,
pp.
a. [Fr. affcctionn^.] love, or affection ; fond ; as,
affectionate brother. in affection ; zealous. in his love to God, and desire to please hirii, can never be too affectionate. Sprat.
Warm Man,
3.
Hall.
Impressed; moved, or
AFFIDA'VIT, perfect tense
A
;
he
made
oath
;
from ad and
fides, faith.]
In the United States, more generally, a declaration in writing, signed by the party, and sworn to, before an authorized magistrate. \FFrED, a. or part. Joined by contract ; declaration
upon
oath.
Shak. affianced. [JVot u.^ed.] Proceeding from affection indicating benevolent; tender; as, the affec- AFFI'LE, V. t. [Fr. affiter.] care of a parent an affectionate To polish. [.Vo< used.] Chaucer. countenance. •VFFIL'IATE, JJ. t. [Fr. affdier, to adopt, ;
love;
[JVot used.]
Hooker.
Having great an
;
;
2.
;
AFFECTIONATE,
is 2.
not natural or real false pretense artificial appearance, or show as, an affectation of wit, or of virtue.
promising fidehty. n. "[An old law verb in the
passion.
Shakes])care uses the word for affectation but tliis use is not legitimate.
tionate
;
A F F
A F F to initiate into the mysteries of a religious order L. ad &\\Afilius, a son.] 1. To adopt; to receive into a family as a son. 2. To receive into a society as a member, and initiate in its mysteries, plans, or intrigues a sense in which the word was muih used hy the Jacobins in France, during the
;
;
—
revolution.
AFFILIA'TION, in the
n.
Adoption
same family or
AFFIN'ITY,
n.
;
APFIRM'ANCE, 2.
nffinis,
Solomon made
affinity
;
relation
;
Kings
;
.3.
In chimistry, attraction elective attraction, or tliat tendency whicli different species of matter have to unite, and combine
There are two kinds of
nation.
aftinity.
of aggregation, wliich is tlie power that causes two homogeneous bod ies to tend towards each otlier, unite and cohere, as two drops of water, whicli unite \. AJjinity
in one.
of composition, wliicli is the tendency of bodies of different kinds to unite and form new combinations of bodies witli different properties.
;
;
'I'lipy afflict tliy
2.
To
heritage,
O
Ps. xcv.
Lord.
trouble; to harass; to chstress. Affected with continued ;;;). ])ain, either of body or mind ; suftering grief or distress, of any kind followed by at, by or with as, affiicted at the loss of a child, by the rheumatism, or with losses.
AFFLICTED,
or often repeated ;
;
AFFLICT'EDNESS, affiicted
n.
The
state
but superseded by
;
AFFLICT'ER,
affiiclion.
One who
n.
of being
afflicts,
or
causes pain of body or of mind. AFFLICT'ING, ppr. Causing continued or durable pain of body or mind ; grieving an act o/^rm;
Confirmative; ratifying; alive (if
common
as,
:
law.
distressing.
algebra, jiositive ; a term applied to munbers wiiich liave the sign -\-plus, de noting addition, and opposed to negative, or such as have the sign nu'«M«, denoting subtraction. Obs. 4. Positive ; docmatic. Taylor. AFFIRM'ATIVE, n. That side of a ques tion which atfirms or maintains ; op])osed i.
In
—
.\FFLICT'Ii\G, as,
n. The state of being afa state of pain, distress, or grief. ; .Some virtues are seen only in affliction. pain of body or
The cause of continued mind, as sickness,
calamity, ad-
losses,
versity, persecution. Many are the afflictions of the righteoiu" Ps. xxxiv.
;
on tlie opposed
a. Giving pain ; causing continued or repeated paui or grief; pain-
aifirina
to
nega
Hall.
distressing.
fiil;
AFFLICT'IVELY,
In a manner to
adv.
give pain or grief.
lively.
AFPIRM'ED,^;). Declared ;
Grievous; distressing:
flictetl
3.
In an aflirma-
adv.
manner ; positivelj' tive side of a question ;
tive
red
a.
afflicting event.
AFFLICTIVE,
gative.
AFFIRMATIVELY,
is
an
AFFLICTION,
to negative ; as, there wtre seventy votes in tlie affirmative, and thirty-five in the ne
2. Affinity
the affinity which unites acids and alkalies, the results of which combination are neutral salts. The operations of tliis principle are vaWhen heterogeneous bodies liave rious.
Such
;
a. That afiirms, or asserts; declaratory of what exists ojiposed to negative ; as, an affirmative proposition.
;
witli certain other bodies, and the power tliat disposes tliem to contimie in conihi
is continued or of some permanence to grieve, or distress as, one is afflicted with the gout, or with melancholy, or with losses and misfortune.H.
;
;
AFFIRM'ATIVE,
;
connection blance as, sounds, of colors, or of languages. ;
;
ny given imder oath.
ili.
resemthe affinity of
conformity
n. One wlio affirms. n. The act of affirming or asserting as true ; opposed to negation or denial. Shak. is Tliat which asserted position declared as true averment. Hammond. Confirmation ratification an establishing of what had been before done or decreed. Hooker. •A .solemn declaration made under the penalties of perjury, by persons who coiian oath decline which taking sci(!ntiously aflirination is in lav/ equivalent to testimo-
iiinh.Jlekan, to strike. Hence, Ger. Jlegel : D. rtegel Eng. fail, g being suppressed ; L. fiigellum. See Flog.] 1. To give to the body or mind pain which
;
with Pharaoh. 1
Agreement
;
;
;
3.
;
2.
ratifi-
AFFIRM'ANT,
2.
from
I
v.t. ['l,.qffi;go,affiicto,i)l'ad and fiigo, to strike ; Eng._^o^ ; Gr. Eol. ^%tyu, to strike Gr. «>-'?7>j, L. plaga, a stroke ;
AFFLICT',
AFFIRMATION,
society.
[L. affmitas,
Confirmation;
n.
cation as, tlie affirmance of a judgment; a statute in affirmance of common law. Declaration affirmation. [Ldttle used.] Selden. Cowper. ;
association
adjacent, related by marriage ; ad and finis, end.] 1. Tiie relation contracted by marriage, between a husband and his wife's kindred, and between a wife and lier Ijusbanc kindred in contradistinction from consanguinity or relation by blood.
A F
or declared followed by of; as, an attribute (iffirmable of every just man.
confirmed
;
asserted
;
aver-
AF'FLUENCE, fluo, lo flow.
ratified.
;
One who
n.
See
[L. affiuentia, Floiv.]
Brown. of ad and In
flowing to, LAlerally, an equal attraction, it is called AFFIRM'ER, AFFIRM'ING, ppr. Asserting; declaring this sense it is rarely used. It is sometimes compound affinity. When one substance written affiuency. confirmmg. positively decomposes a combination of otliers, AFFIX', V. t. [L. affigo, affiruia, of ad and 2. Figuratively, abundance of riches great fgo, unites with one of them and precipitates to fix Gr. nrjyu, n^jyiiu, ytr^^u Eng. peg. plenty of worldly goods; wealth. Rogers. the other, tlie power is called the affinity See Fix.] AF'FLUENT, a. Flowing to more generalbodies will When not of decomposition. to subjoin, annex, or 1. To unite at the end abomiding in goods or riches ly, wealthy unite, but by means of a third, which ena Prior. abimdaiit. add at the close as, to affix a syllable to a bles them to combuie, this is affinity by word to affix a seal to an instrument. AFFLUENTLY, adv. In abundance abunmeans of a medium. To attach, unite, or connect with, as dantly. Dorible affinity is when by means of four names affixed to ideas, or ideas affixed to AF'FLUX, n. [L. affiuxum, frotn affiuo. bodies, two decompositions and two new See Flow.] things. combinations are effected. In this The act of flowing to a flowing to, or that 3. To fix or fasten in any manner. Fourcroy. Hooper. whicli flows to; as, an affiux of blood to senso,fix is more generally used. AFFIRM, V. t. affenn'. [L. affirmo ; ad and AF'FIX, ?i. A the head. syllable or letter added to the See Firm.] firmo, to make firm. act of flowing to ; 71. The end of a word. AFFLUX'ION, 1. To assert positively to tell witli confi that whicli flows to. United at the end annex [See Afflux.] dence ; to aver to declare the existence AFFIX'ED, pp. ed attached. AF'FORAGE, n. [Fr. afforer,\o value. See of somethmg to maintain as true oppoAFFIX' ING, ppr. Uniting at the end; sub- Affeer.] sed to deny. In France, a duty paid to the lord of a disjoining; attaching. Of one Jesus whom Paul affirmed to be alive. for to sell wme or other at the n. The act of n.
aflirms.
or concourse.
a
1.
mtitually
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
tXFFIX'ION,
Acts 25.
2.
To make ratify
;
firm to establish, confirm or as, the Supreme court affirmed the
end,
;
or state of being so
uniting united. [Liltli
AFFIX'TURE,
n.
That which
is
affixed.
Drake.
judgment.
AFFIRM'
V, i. To declare solemnly before a court or magistrate, for confirming fact, or to have an affirmation administer ed to, by way of confirmation, or as a substitme for an oath ; as, the witness affirmed to the fact, or he was nffirmed to the
AFFLA'TION,
i
fiict.
AFFIRM'ABLE.
a.
That may be asserted
A 2.
A
ijermission
liquors, within his seigiiorv.
n. [L. affio, afflatum,
of ad
n.
n.
Encyc. and/orce.J a fortification for
[arf
In old charters, a fortress defense. Obs.
;
Cyc. v.t. [ad and tlie root of forth, further; G.fordern, to further or promote D. voorderen ; Dan. hefordrer, to fiirther. The sense is to send fiirth. But I have not found this (irecise word in the exact sense of the English, in any other lan-
AFFO'RD,
and Jlo; Kiig. blow. See Btou:] blowing or breathing on.
AFFLATUS, 1.
trict,
AFFO'RCEJIENT,
used.]
;
[L.]
breath or blast of wind.
communication of divine In.spiratiou knowledge, or the power of prophesy. ;
Spence.
guage.] 1.
To
yield or produce as fruit, profit, issue.'.
A F F
A F
ur result. 'I'lius, the earth affords itra'in a well affords \vater trade affords profit ;
S.
3.
To
a good
a frightful
;
AFIRE,
with fear
pp.
Suddenly alarmed
terrified
followed by at or
;
;
more generally by at the cry of fire.
teith,
AFLO'AT,
To be able to expend without injury to that mav excite great fear ; dreadful. one's estate as, a man can afford a sum AFFRI'GIITING, ppr. Impressing sudden fear yearly in charity or be able to bear e,x terrifying. penses, or the price of the thing purchased AFFRI'GHTMENT, n. AflTright terror the state of being frightened. [Raretii used.] as, one man can afford to buy a farm, which another cannot. [In common discourse, the use of this word, in To be able without loss or with profit. all its forms, is superseded by fright, frightThe merchant can afford to trade for smaller ed, frightful.] Hamilton. AFFRONT', V. t. [Fr. affronter, to encounter profits. ;
;
AFFO'RDED, duce or
result
pp. Yielded as fruit, prosold without loss or with ;
1.
profit.
AFFORDING,
bearing expenses. [ad anCl forest.] into forest, as was done
t.
;
first Norman kings in England, for the purpose of afforihng them the pleasures of the chase. AFFORESTA'TION, n. The act of turn-
2.
1
land. Btackstone.
forest.
chise
The
[See Fran-
w.
and Disfranchise.] making free, or hberating from
act of
dependence or servitude.
AFFRAP',
V.
t.
[Little used.]
;
i.
(,
en
;
rffr'ui.
terror
;
others.
A
legal sense,
fighting in private is not, in a an aflfray. Blackstone.
In popular lan/i-uas^e, fray is vised to express any fighting of two or more persons but the word is now deemed inelegant. Tumult disturbance. Spenser. ;
as,
;
a design
;
3.
fore.]
;
;
degree of abuse than ;
insult.
[JVot usual.]
disgrace.
displeasure.
2.
;
;
The
grass which withereth afore Ps. cxxix.
up.
these .senses
all
and superseded by 4.
now
is
it
it
groweth
inelegant,
before.
In seaman's language, toward the head of the sliip further forward, or nearer the stem as, afore the windlas. Jlfore the mast, ;
;
which is applied to a common who does duty on the main deck, or has no office on board the .ship. is
a jilirase
one
sailor,
Mar. Diet
AFOREGOING, Foregoing, which
AFO'REHAND,
Gomg
a. is
before.
[See
chiefly used.]
adv. [afore
and hand.]
In time previous by previous provision as, he is ready aforehand. She is come aforehand to anoint my body. Mark xiv. ;
.
pp.
Opposed
face to face; 2. a. Prepared
abused. In popular language, offended; slightly angry at ill treatment, by words or actions ;
;
;
Arbulhnol.
popular language, shght resentment
dared
;
In
;
Shame
Prior in time before anterior prior time being considered as in front of subseqiient time.
as, to
defied
;
;
dis])leased.
AFFRONTEE',
In heraldry, front to epithet given to animals that a.
front ; an face each other.
AFFRONT'ER,
Jlsh.
One
n.
that affronts.
t.
as, previously provided to be aforehand in business. Hence in well popular language, amply pi-ovided with the means of living supphed having means beyond the requirements of necesThis word is sity moderately wealthy. ;
;
;
;
;
popularly changed into aforehanded, beforehanded, or rather forehanded ; as, a forehanded farmer. o.
[afore
and men-
;
;
;
or freight.
Commerce. pp. Hired ibr transport-
ing goods.
AFFREIOHT'ER,
and
[a
AFFREIGHT', v. affra'te. [See IVeight.] AFFR0NT'ING,;7/)r. Opposing face to face AFO'REMENTIONED, tion.] To hire a ship for the transportation of goods defying abusing otierhig abuse, or any
AFFREIGHT'ED,
or on foot. In
is afoot,
adv. or prep,
front.
to ofl'er abu.se or insult
;
AFFRONTED,
;
•3.
;
any manner, by words or actions one by giving liim the he.
abuse, or give cause of offense to, without being present with the person ; to make slightly angry a popular use of the word. AFFRONT', 71. Opposition to the face open defiance encounter. Obs. "2. lU treatment abuse any thmg reproachful or contemptuous, that excites or justifies resentment, as foul language, or personal abuse. It usually expresses a less
Arm.
In law, the fighting of two or more per.sons, in a pubhc ])lace, to the terror of
execution
AFO'RE,
To
n. [Fr. eff-rayer,to fright- 4. In
effreyza, effrey.]
word always follows the noun.] AFOOT', adv. [a or on aiid /oo<.] On foot ; borne by the feet ; opposed to riding. 2. Ill action ; in a .state of being planned for
;
SdCHSBT' )
;
;
adjective, this
affront
3.
rap,]
;2.
Hayward. Milton. Shak. [The foregoing sense is obsolete.] To ofter abuse to the face to insult, dare in
3.
[Fr./ra/jper, tostrilie;Eng.
To strike. Obs. AFFRA'Y, AFFRA' YMENT, (.
;
;
AFFRANCHISEMENT,
;
face to face, of a«! and L.frons, front, face.] 2. Between one object and another, so as to hiterally, to meet or encounter face to intercept a direct view or intercourse ; as, to stand between a person and the light of face, in a good or bad sense ; as, a candle a popular icse of the word. The seditious affronted the king's forces.
or brave openly
by the
AFFOR'ESTED, pp. Converted hito forest. AFFOR'ESTING, jipr. Converting into
;
;
—
Yielding; producing;
/);>/•.
selling without loss
AFFOR'EST, v. To convert ground
adv. or a. [a and float.]
Borne on the water swimfloating ming as, the ship is afloat. Figuratively, moving passing from place to place a rumor is afloat. as, Unfixed moving without guide or control as, our afi'airs are all afloat. [Jls au ;
2.
;
5.
Cower. Level with the Bacon.
and/af.]
[a
Sif'ii'id-
as, affrighted at 1.
;
AFFRI'GHTER, n. One who frightens. AFFRI'GHTFUL, a. Terrifying'; terrible;
;
On fire.
adv.
AFLAT', arfu.
ob|ect.
;
life
affords consolation in old age. To be able to grant or sell with profit or without loss ; as, can afford wine at a less price than B.
A F R
I
cause of terror
also, the
;
JAFFRI'GHTED,
distilled licjuors afford spirit. yield, srraiit or eoiifer ; as,
A
4.
ror
;
n.
The person
vvlio hires
or charters a ship or other vessel to convey goods. Walsh, .in. Rev.
Mentioned before
cause of displeasure.
AFFRONTING,
a.
AFFRONT'IVE,
a.
ing to oft'end
;
Contumehous; abusive. Giving
ofieiise
;
tend-
abusive.
AFFRONT'IVENESS,
n.
The quahty
that
in
discourse.
AFO'RENAMED, Named before. AFO'RESAID,
same writing or Mdison. [afore and name.]
the
a.
Peacham. a.
[n/ore
and «at/.]
Said or recited before, or in a preceding [Utile used.] .\FFREIGHT'MENT, n. The act of liirhig AFFU'SE, V. t. s as :. [L. affundo, affusum, part. AFO'RETIME, adv. [afore and time.] of ad and to See for the out. a ship Fuse.] transportation goods. fundo, pour Bible. a former time. .American Review, .1pp. To pour upon to sprinkle, as with a liquid. In time past in adv. or a. [a and foul.] AFFRET', n. [It. affrettare, to hasten.] AFFU'SED, pp. Sprinkled with a liquid; AFOUL', Columhiad Not free entangled. A furious onset, or attack. [J\l'ot used.] sprinkled on having a hfjuid poured upon. AFRA'ID, a. [The participle of o^a)/.] Spenser. AFFU'SlNG,;)^r. Pouring upon, or sprinkImpressed with fear or apprehension fearAFFRIC'TION, n. The act of rubbing ling. This word expresses a less degree of ful. Boyle AFFU'SION, n. affu'zhun. The act of pour[See Friction.] [JVot used.] It is folfear than terrified or frightened. AFFRIENDED, a. nffrend'ed. Made fiienVls ing upon, or sprinkling with a hquid sublowed by of before the object of fear; as, or a diseased Ohs. as water reconciled. stance, body, ujion Spenser to be afraid of death. AFFRI'GHT. v. t. affri'te. [Sax. frihlan upon a child in baptism. sin God. against Joseph was afraid to See Fright] AFFY', f. /. [Fr. affier.] To betroth; to bind or join. To impress with sudden fear to frighten AFRESH', adv. [a and/rc.
;
;
;
;
;
;
expresses
perhaps
less
AFFRI'GHT,
than n.
ter-
They
used.]
AFIE'LD,
terror.
Sudden or great fear:
;
;
er impression than fear or apprehend, and
To
the
adv.
field.
[a
and
Milton
cold.]
;
crucify the son of n. [Qu. L.
AF'RI€A,
field.]
God
Heh. vi. afresh. a neg. and frigus,
AFT
AFT
AFTER-BIRTH,
One of
the four quarters or largest divisions a continent separated from of the globe Europe by the Mediterranean sea.
Wiseman. fetus, called also secundines. n. unexpected, subse-
;
"'
AF'RI€AN
i
AF'RI€ANi
n.
This*nanie
P6'''3™"g
an
adv. In front. or adv. [Sax. (eft,
a.
the main sheet, that is, further towards the stern. Fore and aft is the whole length of a ship. Right aft is in a direct line with Mar. Diet. the stern. 'AFTER, a. [The comparative degree of
But
some Teutonic
in
1.
dialects
it is
D. agter ; Dan. agters. The Eng. corresponds with tlie Sax. after, Sw. efter, Goth, iftaro, Dan. ejler.] In marine language, more aft, or towarils the stern of the ship as, the after sails
g
;
;
2.
common language,
later in tujie as, an Marshall. after period of life. In this sense, the word is often combined with the following noun as in after-
In
AFTER-COMFORT,
;
word
as,
;
often
after
same
The second crop
in the Mortimer.
n.
year.
AFTER-DAYS, n. Future days. Congrere. AFTER-EATAGE, n. Part of the increase of the same year.
Burn.
[Local.]
AFTER-ENDEAVOR, n. An endeavor after the first or former effort. Locke. "AFTER-GAME, n. A subsequent scheme, or expedient.
If'otton.
\FTER-GUARD, on the poop or
n.
The seaman stationed
after part of the sliip, to Mar. Diet.
Future hope.
Hours
n.
tliat
time following.
This
"AFTER-IGNORANCE,
n.
norance.
"AFTER-KING,
n.
Math. xxvi. In pursuit of, that following in search
"AFTER-LIFE,
n.
;
*
Ye
5.
behind,
of.
A
A
.'
as,
consider a thing after Bacon. and influence
value. 6. According to the direction
.\FTER-MALICE,
"AFTER-MATH,
of.
To walk
after the flesh
To
after the sight of the eye.
inquire afler
is
to
A
to live after the flesh
;
Rom.
To judge
viii
seek by asking
;
to
To
follow afler, in scripture, is to pursue or imitate to serve, or worship. "AFTER, adv. Posterior later in time ; as it was about the space of three hoin"s after. In this sense, the word, however, is really a preposition, the object being imderstood about three hoiu's after the time or fact before specified. ;
;
;
its
genuine sig Some of the following word; nification. are of this kind, but in some of them afler seems rather to be a separate word. 'AFTER-AC€OUNT, n. A subsequent reckoning.
Killingbeck.
second crop of grass, in rowen.
life
Afler-age, in the singular, "
is not Addison.
a phrase, signifying, when all has been considered, said or done at last in the tinal result. Pope. is
:
:
'AFTER-B.\ND,
n.
A future band.
MUlon.
or the
who
lives in suc-
same season
n.
The
n.
The
pains which suclatter
part.
In
the stern.
Mar. Die. ;
A
»;. piece performed a farce or other 'entertain-
ment. n.
Cumberland. Subsequent proof or
qualities
known by subsequent
"AFTER-PROOF, evidence
;
sir,
a
aka,
title
of
in Beloch,
Encyc.
;
;
Sw. mod, imod,
emol, against,
is
our word
meet.] I.
A
second time I will
3.
It
to
;
once more.
not again curse the ground.
Gen.
viii.
notes something further, or additional one or more particulars.
For to wliieh of tlie angels said he at .iny lime, thou art my son, this day have I begotten thee ? and again, I will be to him a fathe'r, and he shall be to mc a son ? and again, let all the Heb. i. angels of God worship him.
All the uses of this word carry in them the ideas of return or repetition ; as in these phrases give it hack again ; give him as much again, that isj the same quantity South.
ff'otton.
experience.
AFTER-REPENTANCE, n.
n.
Subsequent report, South.
The sails on the mizenbetween the main and Mar. Diet.
n.
stays,
mizen-masts.
"AFTER-STATE,
n.
;
Subsequent
or information.
"AFTER-SAILS, mast and
also
D. tegens, they come them against. G. entgegen, against; jegens, towards; dagegen, against begegnen, to meet or encounter. The primary sense is to turn, or to meet in front or" the name of the So in Dan. and face, front or forepart.
ceed child birth.
marine language, the part of a ship toward
;
Qu. the och
;
n. The part of tlie day which fiiUows noon, between noon and
"AFTER-PART,
Tart. aha.
;
;
'AFTER-NOON', "AFTER-PAINS,
dominus, herus
ak and
Ijil
igien ; qu. L. eon, whence contra Ir. coinne, opposite, a meeting. Hence Sax. togeanes, togegnes, against ; "but placed after'its ob" hi comen heom togeanes," ject; as,
;
Dryden.
and
adv. agen'. [Sax. gean, agen, agean, ongean ; D. with a different prefix, tegen ; G. dagegen,gegen Sw. igen ; Dan!
Holland.
evening.
o?
AGAIN,
Sidney.
second or later
tlie
[Per.
chief oflicer. The title is given to various chief oflicers, whether civil or military. It is also given to great land holders, and to the eunuchs of the Sultan's seragho.
life
In marine lanSuperl. guage, nearest the stern, opposed to foremost ; also hindmost.
after a play
Shuekford. JI.
and ak in Balak.] In the Turkish dominions, a commander or
a.
;
improper.
ig-
Shak Succeeding mahce Dryden. [after and math. See
n.
"AFTER-A€T, n. A subsequent act. repentance. "AFTER-AgES, II. Later ages succeedmg "AFTER-REPORT, times.
lord,
n.
many words, forming "AFTER-PIECE,
compounds, but retaining
'AFTER all
ter.
AG A,
Moio.]
AFTER-MOST,
Is. xi
ask concerning.
^9fter is j>refixed to
;
A
Dryden. Butler. subsequent life.
love. ;
;
res])e.;t
succeeding khig.
Ftiture
after this.
whom is
its intrinsic
In later or subsequent time. Hooker. "AFTER- WISE, a. Wise afterwards or too late. Addison. n. "AFTER-WIT, Subsequent wit wisdom that comes too late. L'Estrange. AFTER-^\RATH, n. Later wrath anger after the provocation has ceased. Shak. ji. AFTER-WRITER, succeeding wri-
[See Hard.]
;
Subsequent
shall
a model. According to
Jonson. follow Shak.
Stafford.
2. later period of life ; the king of Israel come out 1 Sam. xxiv AFTER-LIVER, n. One not go after other Gods. Deut. vi ceeding times. 4. In imitation of ; as, to make a thing after "AFTER-LOVE, n. The jj/iici-
Mdison.
AFTERWARD, or AFTERWARDS, adv.
Sliuekford.
moving
[See Thought.]
;
sails.
n.
governing preposition. ./Ifter 1 have arisen, I will go before you into is,
n.
Brown.
"AFTER-€ROP,
Galilee.
:?.
after the first. taste which suc-
A
n.
ceeds eating and drinking.
AFTER-THOUGHT,
Reflections after an act later thought, or expedient occvirring too late. Dryden. AFTER-€OST, n. Later cost ; expense after "AFTER-TIMES, >i. Succeeding times, li the execution of the main design. niav be used in the singular. Dniden. Mortimer. "AFTER-TOSSING, n. The sweU or agitation of the sea after a storm. 'AFTER-eOURSE, n. Future couise.
men "AFTER-HOPE, as a
"AFTER-TASTE,
time between Shak. of bees
A swarm
South.
AFTER-HOURS,
supper. precedes a sentence, as,
The
n.
to bed. n.
Future con-
«.
viction.
attend the after
Behind in place one after another.
prep.
placed in a line Later in time ;
and going
'
;
'2.
Sherlock.
AFTER-eONVIC'TION,
Herbert. or fu-
which leaves the hive
Jonson.
noon.
AFTER,
suf>per
Subsequent be-
7i.
havior.
;
hatchway.
after
"AFTER-SWARM,
'AFTER-€ONDUCT,
;
;
written with
"AFTER-SUPPER,
Future comfort.
n.
sting.
A succeeding
Drtiden.
A successor.
n.
Subsequent
n.
ture storm.
something happening supposed to be at an end. Hubbard. ;
Shak. behind.]
ejl, after,
seaman's language, a word used to denote the .stern or what^ pertains to the stern of a ship as, the a/l part of the ship haul aft
aft.
aft'air is
n.
"AFTER-STORM,
after
AFTER-€0IVIER,
yafe'a Cowley.
gold.
Ill
quent event
*° Africa.
AFRONT', "AFT,
An
"AFTER-€LAP,
A native of Africa. given also to the African mary-
is
A G A
The appendages of the "AFTER-STING,
n.
The future
state.
Glanvilte.
once more or repeated.
There is not, in the world again, such merce as in London.
Who art Bring
lis
thou that answerest again word again.
a
com-
f
Igain and again, often; with frequent repetition.
A G A AGAINST, See 1.
prep, Jlgain.]
In opposition
agenst'.
in the
This
.species is distin-
shops, ami
frequent guished by the name of female agaric. From this fungus is extracted a turpentine, of which three fourths of its weight is a resinous substance the rest, a sli-
be against every man.
will
others are poisonous originally given to a fun;
gus growing on the larch.
now
bation.
His hand
of food
The name was noting enmity or disappro-
;
AGE
A G A articles
[Sax. togeanes.
Gen. x\i. I am against your pillows. Ez. xiii. In oppo.sition, noting contrariety, contramy, iTuicilaginous, earthy matter, tenadictioi], or repugnanre as, a decree cious and almost insoluble in water. It is against law, reason or public opinion. used in dyeing, but is little esteemed in 3. In opposition, noting competition, or difmedicine. Theoph. Macqner. (^uincy. ferent sides or parties as, tliere are The Agaric of the oak is calleil totich-ioood, twenty votes in the affirmative against from its readiness to take fire. Boletus ten in the negative. Igniarius, lAnne. 4. In an opposite direction ; as, to ride against the wind. Jigaric mineral, a calcarious earth, or carbonate of lime, resemWing a fungus in 5. Opjio.site in place alireast as, a ship is color and texture ; found in fissures of against the moulli of a river. In this sense it is often preceded by over. It is rocks, and on the roofs of caverns. sometimes used as an astringent in fluxe.s, Aaron lighted the lamps over against the and a styjJtic in hemorrliages. It occurs candlesticks. Num. viii. in a loose semi-indurated white form, 0. In opposition, noting adversity, injury, or or whitish red, or yellow, fight and friable. contrariety to wishes as, this change of Kinvan mentions three varieties. measures is against us. AG>AST or a. [Qu., a contrac7. Bearing upon one leans s as, against tion of wall. agazed, or Goth, agis. Sax. egesa. horror. See Aghast and Gaze.] 8. In provision for in preparation for. Struck with terror, or astonishment amaUrijah made it against king Ahaz eanje fron zed struck silent with horror. Damascus. 2 Kings, xvi. With shuddering horror pale and eyes a^ast In this sense against is a preposition, Milton with the following part of the sentence for an object. See ^Jler, prep, def 3. AGA'TE, adv. [a and gate.] Obs. Gower. In sliort, the sense of this word is oppo- On the way going. 2.
;
AG'ATY,
:
;
;
AGHAST,
;
;
;
tf^oodward.
great
2.
twenty feet, and its branches form a son of pyramid at the top. Encyc. • A genus of univalvular shells.
AGAZE,
AG'ALLOell,
tnr
?
its
AG' ATE, n.
;
" \.Oforunlal ongv M, \ Aloes-wood, the product of a tree growing and in China, some of the Indian isles AGAL'LO€Hl
J
,
There are three varieties, the calanubac, the common ligniuu aloes, and the calam boiu\ The first variety is light and porous and so filled with a tragraut resin, that it may be molded by the fingers the second is denser and less resinous and the third is the aloes-wood used by cabinet ;
;
makers and age, and
A name
Encyc.
iidayers.
AGALMAT OLITE,
n.
[Gr.
ayaJi^a,
im
XiSoj, stone.]
given by Klajn-oth to two varieties of the pierre de lard, lard stone, of China. It contams no magnesia, but otherwise has the characters of talck. It is called in Ger
man, niart,
hildstein, figm-e-stone, steatite pagodite.
AG'APE,
adv. or a.
[a
and by Brong Cyc.
and gape.
Ure.
See
Gape.] as with
Gaping, eager attention
;
wonder, expectation, or having the mouth wide
open.
Milton.
A
i>refix ipj, spotted.
The word
is used, Gen. xxx. and x.x.\i., to describe the s])eckled and spotted cattle of Laban and Jacob.]
class of siliceous, semi-])ellucid
gems of
strike with
Obs.
Spenser.
Struck with amazement.
are undoubtedly contracted words, Goth. D. eeuw ; Gr. aiu,v from the Celtic, ; ;
W.
haug, fidlness, completeness, an age, a space of time; plu. hogion ; the g being sunk in the Latin words in the Sanscrit, yuga.] 1. The whole duration of a being, whether animal, vegetable, or other kind as, the usual age of man is the seventy years of a horse be age may twenty or tliirty years ; the age of a tree may be four hundred years. 3. That part of the duration of a being, which is bet\\een its beginning and any given time as, what is the present age of a man, or of the earth ? ;
;
;
;
Jesus began to be about thirty years of age.
Luke 3.
The
iii.
latter part
duration
of
life,
or long continued
oldness.
;
The eyes
Israel
ot
were dim
for
age.
Gen.
xlviii.
4.
ipy,
a different
To
[from gaze.]
pj>.
aitv
L.
achates, gagates [Fr. agate ; Gr. ya/yari;! so called, says Pliny, .37, 10, because (tiund near a river of that name ii So also Solhius and Isidore. But Sicily. Bochart, with more probability, deduces it from the Punic and Hebrew and witi
t.
[J\/ot in Mse.] si,f,fi AgE, ?i. [Fr. age; Arm. oage ; deduced bj Limier tinm Lat. (etas, or mmim. But these
;
variously modified according to application to difl'erent objects.
V.
amazement.
AGAZED,
;
sition,
nature of agate.
A r' A irr r^ ALrA V t,, n. [Gr. aywuof, admirable.] 1. The Ainerican aloe. The aloe rises
;
;
Of the
cf.
5.
A
certain period of human life, marked by a difference of state ; as, life is divided into four stages or ages, infancy, youth, manhood, and old age ; the age of
youth
the age of manhood. The period when a person to
;
old.
many varieties, consisting of quartz-crjs- 6. JVIature years ; ripeness of strength or discretion. tal, flint, horn-stone, chalcedony, amethyst, He is of oyo-c, ask him. John ix. jasper, cornehan, hehotrope, and jade, in The time of life for conceiving children, various combinations, variegated with or perhaps the usual time of such an event. dots, zones, filaments, ramifications, arSarah was delivered of a son when she was borizations, and various figures. Agates seem to have been formed by successive \ayHeb. .xi. past age. ers of siliceous earth, on the sides of cavi- 8. A particular period of time, as distinties which they now fill entirely or in part guished from others ; as, the golden age, They are esteemed the lea.st valuable of the the age of iron, the age of heroes or of precious stones. Even in Phny's time, they chivalry. were in httle estimation. They are found The people who five at a particular periin rocks, in the form of fragments, in nod od a and a hence, succession generation of generations; as, ages yet unborn. The mysteiy hid from ages. Col. i. ;
ules, in small rounded lumps, rarely in stalactites. Their colors are various.
They are used for rings, seals, cu])i- 10. n. ag'ap!/. century the period of one himdred [Gr. aya^fj;, love.] beads, bo.xes and handles of small lUenchristians, a love feast years. sils. Kirwan. Encyc. Cleaveland. a. Old or feast of charity, held before or afterthe A'GED, having lived long having AG'ATE, n. An instrument used by gold lived almost the usual time allotted tr) that comnuuiion, when contributions were wire drawers, so called from the agate in made for the poor. This feast was held species of being applied to animals or the middle of it. at first without scandal, but afterwards plants as, an aged man, or an aged oak. a. Pertauiing to agate. 2. Having a certain age having lived ; as, being abused, it was condemned at the VG'ATINE, a man aged forty years. council of Carthage, A. 1). 397. Enryc. .-\G'ATINE, n. genus of shells, oval or A'GED, n. Old persons. oblong. AG'ARI€, ?i. [Gr. o^'optxor. Qu. from AgaAnd the aged arose and stood up. Job xxix. ria, in Sarmatia. AG'ATIZED, a. Having the colored lines Dioscorides.] In botany, mushroom, a gfinus of funguses, and figm-es of agate. Obs. Fourcroy. AGEN', for again. n. See Act] containing numerous species. Mushrooms Agatized wood, a substance apjjarently |)ro[L. agens. duced by the petrilaction of wood a spe- 1. The quality of moving or of exerting grow on trees, or spiing from the earth of the latter species some are valued as cies of hornstone. fVerner. power the state of being in action ; ac-
A
AG'APE,
;
-Vmong the primitive
;
;
;
;
;
A
AGENCY,
;
;
is enabled by do certain acts tor himself, or when he cea.ses to be controlled by parents or in our both guardians as, males country, and females are of age at twenty-one years
law
;
;
A G G
A G G as, the opci-ution ; instrumentality agtncy ot'proviflence in the natural world. U. The office of an agent, or factor ; busi-
ijon
;
;
ness of" an agent entrusted with the coneerns of another as, the prim-ipal pays the charges of a^rency. AGENDA, n. [].. things to be done.] A nicmoranduni-book the service or office of a church; a ritual or liturgy. Encyc. ;
;
AGENT,
a.
Acting
sustaining
action
to patient, or the body agent.
opposed
:
as,
;
Bacon.
[Little used.] «.
An
actor; one that exerts powas, a moral er, or has the power to act agent. 3. An active power or cause; that which has the power to produce an effect as,
AGENT,
;
;
is a pow erf ill agent. substitute, dei)uty, or factor
beat 3.
A
one entrusted with the business of another an ;
;
attorney
;
a minister.
A'GENTSHIP, used.]
[J\'ot
We
AGGELA'TION, of a
fluid.
of an agent.
office
use agency.
Concretion
n. [L. gelu!]
Brmcn.
{JVot used.]
AGGENERA'TION, The
tio.]
)i. [L. ad and genera of growing to another. Brown.
state
rjVbf used.']
AG'GER,
71.
A
[L.]
or
fortress,
v.
t.
[M)t used.]
To
[L. aggero.]
heap.
?!.
A
heaping
accumula-
;
aggerations of sand."
Ray. AGGLOM'ERATE, v. i. [L. agglomero, ad and ghmero, to wind into a ball, from glomus, a hall of yarn from the Heb. dSj, as,
;
t.
A G G
favor.
[J\/'ot
Spenser,
n.
fVGGRA'CE,
Kindness
;
;
used.^ li'iseman.
favor.
[Xot
;
;
;
;
AGGREGATELY,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
Figuratively, to make worse, moi'e severe, or less tolerable ; as, to aggravate 3. the evils of hfe ; to aggravate pain or pun sense.
;
Qu. Ar.
J
to
go round
ma
2.
form bodies. The union and coherenceof bodies of the
same
nature.
AG'GREGATIVE, a. Taken together
ishnient.
To make more enormous,
or less excusable as, to aggravate a crune. circle, to be round, to collect, or con- 3. To exaggerate. 4. To give coloring in description to give dense.] To wind, or collect mto a ball to sra'her an exaggerated representation as, to aginto a mass. Young. gravate a charge against an offender to AGGLOM'ERATE, v. i. To gather, grow aggravate circumstances. or collect into a ball or mass. Guthrie, Qtiint. Thomson Paley. Actions and motives maliciously aggravated. AGGLOM'ERATED, /)p. Wound or colto involve;
AG'XJREGATE,
;
AGGERA'TION, " tion
mounek Hearne
[JVot used.]
AG'GERATE,
v.
;
The now
n.
To
a. Formeil by a collection of particulars into a « hole mass or sum ; as, the aggregate amount of charges. Spenser. Aggregate Jlowers, in botany, are such as are used.] AGGRANDIZA'TION, n. The act of ag composed of florets united by means of Wuterhouse. the recc])tarle or calyx. Milne. grandizing. [JVot used.] AG'GRANDIZE, v. t. [Fr. agrandir, of] Aggregate corporation, in law, is one which consists of two or more persons united, L. ad and grandis. See Grand.] whose existence is preserved by a suc1. To make great or greater in power, rank cession of new members. Blackstone. or honor to exalt as, to aggrandize a AG'GREGATE, n. A sum, mass or assemfamily. 2. To enlarge, applied to things ; as, to agblage of ])articulars as, a house Ls an aggregate of ston<'s, bricks, timber, &c. grandize our conceptions. It seems to be It (hffers from a compound in this, that never apphed to the bulk or dimensions of the pai-ticulurs of an aggregate are less material bodies. intimately mixed than in a compound. AG'GRANDIZED,;);;. Made great or great AGGREGATED,;);). Collected mto a sum, er exalted enlarged. mass or svstem. AGGRANDIZEMENT, n. The act o adv. Collectively taken aggrandizing the state of being exalted in a sum or mass. honor exaltation ill rank or power, AGGREGATING, ppr. CoUectmg into a enlargement. sum or mass. The Emperor seeks only the aggrandizement AGGREGATION, n. The act of aggreof his own family. gating the state of being coUecteil into a sum or mass a collection of particulars ; AG'GR.\NDIZER, n. One that aggrandizes an aggregate. or exalts in power, rank or honor. 2. Ill ckimistry, the affinity of aggregation, is AGGRANDIZING, ppr. Making great the power which causes homogeneous exalting enlarging. bodies to tend towards each other, and to AGGRA'TE, v. t. [It.] To please. [JVot cohere, when united. The aggregate, iu this case, differs from a heap, whose u^ed.] Spenser. parts AG'GRAVATE, v. t. [L. aggravo,oCad and do not cohere and from a mixture, which consists of parts dissimilar in their nature. See Grave, Gravity.] gravis, heavy. Tho word is used of solid, fluid, or aeri1. To make heavy, but not used in this literal
fVGGRA'CE,
;
;
;
;
AGGREGATOR, a
fVashington's Life
He
n.
col-
mto
whole or mass.
AGGRESS',
v.
Burton.
i.
[L. aggredior, aggressus,
of ad and gradior, to go.
To make
a
attack
first
;
lected into a ball.
;
that collects
lective.
act
;
See Grade.]
to
commit the
of hostihty or offense
quanel or control ersy
;
first
begin a or
to
;
to assault first
invade.
Prior.
AGGRESS'ING,;);)r. Commencing hostility first making the first attack. ;
AGGLOMERATING,
ppr. Winding into a ball; gathering into a lump. n. The act of windinto a ball the state of being gathered ing into a ball or mass. AGGLU'TINANT, n. Any viscous substance which unites other substances, by
AGGLOMERA'TION, ;
causing an adhesion ; any application which tends to unite parts which have too little
adhesion.
Coxe.
AGGLU'TINANT, a.
Uniting as glue cau«e adhesion.
tend
The
propriety of the
word
in the latter
AGGRESS ION, of hostihty;
passage is questionable. Aggravate is generally used in reference to evils, or some-
The
n.
tlie first
act leading to
w ar or
first attack, or act act of injury, or fii-st
controversy.
thing improper or unnatural.
AG'GRAVATED, /i^. or enormity
;
Increased in severity exaggerated.
made worse
AGGRESSIVE, making the
;
AG'GRAVATING,
ppr. Increasnig hi severity, enormity, or degree, as evils, mis;
L'Estrange. to aggress;
Tending
Clarkson.
attack.
The person who first AGGRESS'OR, attacks he who first commences hostility n.
;
or a quarrel
fortunes, pain, punishment, crimes, guilt,
&c.
a.
fu-st
;
an assaulter
an invader. Dryden.
;
exaggerating.
The insolence of the aggressor is usually act of making proportioned to the tameness of tlie sufferer. Ames. AGGLU'TINATE, v. t. [Lat. agglutino, ad worse, used of evils, natural or moral the act of increasing severity or huinousand glutino, from gluten ; Eng. glue ; Fr AGGRIE'VANCE, n. [See Aggrieve.] ness ; addition to that which is evil or glu ; Arm. glud W. glyd. See Glue.] Oppression hardsliip injury. But grievTo unite, or cause to adhere, as with glue improper as, an aggravation of pain or ance is more geneiallv used. or other viscous substance to unite by grief AGGRIE'VE, I', t. [of'ad and grieve, from 2. Exaggerated representation, or heightcausing an adhesion of substances. Perhaps tho word is borrowed grief. ened descrijrtion of any thing wrong, pp. Glued together: directly from the Sp. agraviar, to injure ; united by a viscous substance. impro|)er, or unnatural as, an aggravaFr. grever. See Gnf/"aiid Grave.] tion of features in a caricature. To give pain or sorrow to afflict. In this AGGLU"riNATING,p/)r. Gluing together Paley. Addison. uniting by causing adhesion. sense, it is nearly superseded by grieve. ing to
;
AGGRAVATION,
The
n.
;
;
;
;
;
;
AGGLUTINATED,
;
;
n. The act of uniting by glue or other tenacious substance ; the state of being thus united.
AGGLUTI'NA'TION,
;
AG'GREGATE, in
troops
;
t.
[L. aggrego, to collect 2.
See Gregarious.]
AGGLU'TINATIVE, a. That tends to unite, To bring together or has power to cause adhesion.
v.
of ad and grex, a herd or band. ;
To
bear hard
in one's rights
ujioii :
to
;
to o])press or injure,
vex or harass by
civil
or political injustice. to collect particulars into
a sum, mass or bodv.
AGGRIEVE, [J\'ot used.
V. i.
To mourn
See Grieve.]
;
to lament.
A G AGGRIEVED, p;). illy
a
afflicted;
3.
or politirally oppres?fid.
AGGRIEVING, on
Afllicting
;)/)(•.
;
imposing
oppressing. AGGROUP', > t'. t. [Sp. agrvpar It. ag.\GGROOP', ^ gnippare, oggropparr, to knot or bring together. See Group.] To bring togetlier to group to collect many persons in a crowd, or many figures into a whole, cither in statuary, painting or description. Encyc, Iiaidsliips
4.
;
;
;
5.
C).
apt or ready to
move
;
brisk
violence
agilitv.
nimbleness briskness ness of motion. ;
;
quickly activity quick-
;
;
Watts.
n. [Ital. aggio, surplus, difl'erence.] In commerce, the difference between bank notes and current coin. In Holland, the agio is three or four per cent. in Rome,
A'GIO,
;
from fifteen to twenty-tive per cent. in Venice, twenty jier cent. but the agio is subject to variation. Encyc. smn given above the nominal 2. Premimn ;
:
;
value.
;
discussed
;
AGITATION,
«.
disputing
con-
;
state of being with irregular action ; commotion ; as, the sea after a storm is in agitation. Bacon. Disturbance of tranquility in the mind ;
perturbation; excitement of passion. Discussion examination of a sidyect ;
it
L/unier
In the
«&c.
;
a surname.
one word
to
Encyc. another by
in music, denotes a broken style of performance, adapted to awaken sur Did. ofJMusic. prise or perturbation.
an
Encyc.
DEI. [Lamb of God.] Romish Church, a cake of wax stamp-
ed with the figure of a lamb, supporting the banner of the cross. It is supjioseil to possess great virtues in ])reserving those
L'Estrange.
state of being deliberated upon, with a to contrivance, or plan to be adoj)ted as, a scheme is in agitation.
One who
Allusion of soimd.
AGNUS
view
AG'ITATOR,
i,i
ad
species of vitex, so called from the Gr. ayio;, chaste, or from a negative, and yoioj, seed, from its imagined virtue of preserving cliastity. The Athenian ladies reposed on the leaves of this plant at the feast of Ceres. The Latin Castas, chaste, now added to the name, forms a duplication of the sense.
;
A
;
AGNUS CASTUS. A
The act of shaking the moved with violence, or
controversy. 4.
agnomina
[L.
Camden.
;
considered.
;
t.
n. [L. agnomen, a surname, of ad and nomen. See JVame.] An additional name, or title; a name added to another, as expressive of some act,
achievement, 2.
shaking; moving with
disturbing
;
[JVol
Shak. v.
AGNOMINA'TION,
vsed.]
;
To acknowledge.
and nomino, nomen, name.] To name. [Utile used.^
Charles.
Agitato,
AGlL'lTY, 71. [L. agilitas.] The power of moving the limbs
1.
[JVot
t.
««f-]
triving.
3.
;
;
or actuate.
V.
AGNOMINATE,
1.
King
To move
Agitating, ;>pr.
Shak.
faculty
;
disturbed
'2.
n. Nimbleness activity the of moving llie limbs quickly
A6'ILENESS,
;
;
;
agile heels.
;
AGNI'ZE,
Dlackmore.
active. liis
;
iVG'ITATED, pp. Tossed from side to side shaken moved violently and irregularly
;
;
;
;
See Jlct.] Nimble having the faculty of quick motion
bendinf;- fonvaid, struck
distm-b, or excite into tumult as, to agitate the mind or passions. To discuss to debate to controvert as, to agitate a question. To consider on all sides to revolve in the mind, or view in all its aspects to contrive by mental deliberation as, poh;
;
And
To
ticians agitate desperate designs.
;
AGGRoUP'ED, \ pp. Collected into a group AGGROOP'ED, ^ or assemblage. AGH'AST, or more correctly agast, a or adv. [Perhaps the participle of agaze ; otherwise from the root of ghastly and ghost.] Stnick with amazement stupilied with sudden tiight or horror. AG'ILE, a. [Fr. agile; L. agilis, fvom ago. in the limbs
AGO
A G N
I
Pained;
who *
it, in faith and from accidents, Also a part of the mass in which words are repeated by the priest.
carry
&c. these
Encyc.
AGNUS SCYTHICUS.
[Scythian Lamb.] applied to the roots of a s])ecies of Aspidium Baromez, covered with brown wooly scales, and, in shape, resembling a lamb found in Russia and Tartaiy. AGO', adv. or a. [Sax. agan, orgeond,the their concerns, were called agitators. contracted from Hume. participle of gan, to go AG'LET, ? n. [Fr. aiguillette, a point, from agone. See Go.] ATGLET, \ aiguille, a needle, from aigu. Past gone as, a year ago. AGOG' adv. [Fr. agogo ; vivre a gogo, to sharp. See Acid.] live in clover.] 1. A tag of a point curved into the represenIn a state of desire highly excited by eagertation of an animal, generally of a man ness after an object. a small plate of metal. The gaudy gossip when she's set agog. 2. In botany, a pendant at the ends of the Dry den. chives of flowers, as in the rose and tuhp. of go, with the AGLET-BABY, n. A small image on the AGO'ING. [The participle prefix a.] of a lace. Shak. top In motion, as to set a mill agoing ; or AG'MINAL, a. [L. agmen, a troop or body about to go ready to go as, he is agoing from n.
agitates
;
also,
insurgeiu one who excites sedition or reIn antiquity, a chariotteer, that is, a volt. In Cromwell's time, certain offidriver. cers appointed by the army to manage
A name
;
fern,
;
;
;
;
t'. t. [If the jnimary sense is to he, or to rest, this is from Fr. gesir ; Norm. agiser, to be levant and couchant, from gtser, to lay or throw down whence gist, cast gistance, a casting. Class Gs. No. 18. If the primary signification is to feed, see Nos. 5, G, 10, "13, and 50. Ch. Class Gs.] In law, to take the cattle of others to graze, at a certain stun to feed or pastiu-e the of men arrayed, ago.] cattle of others used originally for the immediately. The latter use is vulgar. Pertaining to an army or troop. [Utile xised.] A'GON, n. [Gr.] feeding of cattle in the king's forest. Coicel. Blackstone. AG'NAIL, n. [ad and nail, or Sax. ange, The contest for the prize. [JVot used.] AGISTMENT, n. The taking and feeding pain, and nail. See JVail.] Sancroft. other men's cattle in the king's forest, or A disease of the nail a whitlow an inflam- AGONE, pp. agawn', [See Ago and Gone.] mation round the nail. on one's own land also, the price ])aid Bailey. Ago past since. [JVearly Obs.] It denotes also a bmfor such feeding. AG'NATE, a. [L. agnatus.] Related or akii rVG'ONISW, n. [Gr. ayuMri/
AGIST',
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
:
;
AG'ONIZE, pain
V.
To
t.
distress
with extreme
to torture.
;
Pope.
AGONIZING,
ppr. Suffering severe pain vvritliing witli torture. adv. With extreme an-
;
AGONIZINGLY, guish.
5.
;
ir.
r/g-/i,
"3.
In
See
Jld.}
In strictness, pain so extreme as to cause writhing or contortions of the body, sinii lar to those made in the athletic contesti in Greece. Hence, Extreme pahi of body or mind anguisli appropriately, the pangs of death, and the sufferings of our Savior in the garden of ;
;
Luke
Gethsemane. 3.
from w/u, L. ago.
a battle, conflict; Gr. oyutt^w, to
is
strive. 1.
;
xxii.
More.
Violent contest or striving. adv. In earnest. [J^/otused.] Sliak. n. [Qu. Sp. agudo, sliarp L. acii-
AGOOD'.
AGoUTY,
;
tus.]
A quadruped
of the order Rodcntia ; arranged by naturalists in the geims Caivia. It is of the size of a rabbit. The upper part of the body is brownish, with a mixture of red and black the belly yellowish. Three varieties are mentioned, all peculiar to ;
South America and the West Indies. It burrows in the ground, or in hollow trees lives on vegetables is voracious like a pig, and makes a similar grunting noise. It holds its meat in its tore paws, hke a squir-
;
;
When
rel.
erect,
hind
and
scared or angry,
it
its
hair
is
ground with it» white and well tast-
the
strikes
Its flesh is
feet.
ed. a.
[L.
agrarius, from ager.
a field.] Relating to lands.
Appropriately, denoting or pertaining to an equal division of lands as, the agranan laws of Rome, which distributed the conquered and other public lands equally among all the citizens, limiting the quantity which each might enjoy Authors sometimes use tlie word as a ;
noun
;
an agranan,
for agrarian laiv.
Burke. An agrarian distribution of land or property, would make the rich, poor, but would not make the poor, rich.
AGREE', accord.
V.
i.
[Fr. agreer,
This
is
from
mmd
sense
is
[rhath]; Syr.
j
,;
W. rhaz,
;
radah, to go.]
To be of one mind ; to harmonize in opin ion. In the expediency of the law, all the parties agree. 2, To live in concord, or without contention as, parents and children agree well to 1.
;
gether. S. To yield assent
;
;
to
;
Didst thou not agree with
day
?
me
for a
penny
Mat. xx.
To agree on Vol. I.
act.
.bihn
Spenser.
pp. Being in concord or harof opinion of one mind. Can two walk together except they be agreed Amos. iii. Assented to admitted as, a proposition is
mony
;
:
ix.
be consistent; to harmonize; not to
contradict, or be repugnant. Their witness agreed not together.
2.
Mark
;
agreed
;
to.
3. Settled by consent ; implying bargain or xiv. contract ; as, the terms were agreed to, or This story agrees with what has been related by others. agreed upon. 8. To resemble ; to be similar as, the pic- AGREE'ING, ppr. Living in concord ; contiu'e does not agree with the original. curring ; assenting ; settling by consent. 9. To suit ; to be acconunodated or adapted AGREE'INGLY, adv. In conformity to. to ; as, tlie same food does not agree with [Little used.] n. Concord ; harmony every constitution. AGREE', V. t. To admit, or come to one conformity. What agreetnent hath the temple of God with mind concerning ; as, to agree the fact. idols. ? 2 Cor. vi. Also, to reconcile or make friends ; to ])ut an end to variance ; but these senses arc 2. Union of opinions or sentiments ; as, a good agreement subsists among the memunusual and hardly legitimate. Let the bers of' the council. parties agree the fact, is really elliptical 3. Resemblance ; conformity ; similitude. let them agree on the fact. Expansion and duration have this farther AGREEABIL'ITY, n. Easiness of disposiLocke. agreement. Chaucer tion. [JVot used.] Union of minds in regard to a transfer of AGREE' ABLE, a. Suitable; conformable 4. interest ; bargain ; compact ; contract : with the consistent ; as, ; correspondent stipulation. ])ractice of virtue is agreeable to the law of IVIake an agreement wiUi me by a present. God and our own nature. 2 Kings xviiL 2. In pursuance of; in conformity with as, He made an agreement for the purchase order the to the of the house day, agreeable of a house. took up the report of the committee. It Fr. a; AGRES'TIC, ^ "' [L. agrestis In this is not correctly followed Gy ivith. ES'TICAL, $ greste ; from L. ager, a sense, some writers use agreeably, for agreefiehl, or the same root.] able, but in violation of tiie true principles Rural ; rustic ; pertainmg to fields or the of construction for the word is an adjec country, in opposition to the city ; unpoltive or attribute, in agreement with the ished. Gregory. The house last clause of the sentence. AG'RICULTOR, n. [L. ager, a field, and took up the report of a committee, (which cultor, a cultivator.] to the order of taking tqi was) agreeable One whose occupation is to till the ground ; the day. The use of agreeably in this sena farmer a husbandman ; one skilled in tence would pervert the sense. husbandrv. 3. Pleasing, either to the mind or senses ; as AGRICUL'TUR.VL, a. Pertaining to husmanners fruit to the ; agreeable agreeable or the cidture of the earth. ;
AGREEMENT,
:
;
AGR
;
bandry, tillage, AG'RICULTURE, n. [L. ager, a field, and con; cultura, cultivation. See Acre and Cxdture.] as, the agreeable- In a consistency general sense, the cultivation of the ness of virtue to the laws of God. gromid, for the i)urpose of producing veg2. The quality of pleasing that quality etables, and fruits, for the use of man and which gives satisfaction or moderate beast or the art of preparing the soil, pleasure to the mind or senses as, an sowing and planting seeds, dressing the there is an agreeableness of manners In tliis plants, and removing the crops. agreeableness in the taste of certain fruits. sense, the word includes gardeningj or This is the usual sense of the word. horticulture, and also the raising and feed3. Resemblance hkeness ; with to or be a in more But ing of cattle, or stock. tween ; as. common and appropriate sense, it is used to The agreeableness between man and' other that species of cultivation which is signifyObs. Grew. parts of creation. intended to raise grain and other crops for AGREE'ABLY, adv. Pleasingly in an man and beast. It is equivalent to A u«ta7irfry. agreeable manner; in a manner to give Agriculture is the most general occupation of man. pleasure as, to be agreeably entertained with a discourse. .VGRICUL'TURISM, n. The art or science 2. Suitably of agriculture. [Little used.] consistently conformably The effect of which is, that marriages grow- AGRICULTURIST, n. One skilled in the less frequent, agreeably to tiie inaxim above a skUful art of cidtivating the ground laid down. husbandman. Paley. This is a gross error, proceeding from AG'RllMONY, n. [L. argemonia, from the w But in Gr. Thus it is ritten Plinv. mistake. Agreeably signifies, in an agreeby lower Latin it is written agrimonia. Said able manner ; but this is not the sense, nor to be fiom Gr. oi>yt^o, the web or pearl of does the « ord modify the verb grow. The the eye, from apyoj, white, which this plant sense is, marriages grow less frequent, was supposed to cure. See Theo))h. 887.] which [fact, or ^\ hole member of the sentence, or proposition] is agreeable to the -A. genus of plants, of several species. Of taste.
AGREE'ABLENESS, n. Suitableness formity
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
to approve or admit to ; as, to agree to an ofl'er, or an opinion. To settle by stipulation, the minds of parties being agreed, as to the terms as.
ioUowed by 4.
To
;
AGREE'D,
;
advancing,
from the same root as L. gradior
do an
•i.
This use of grossly erro-
neous. Alike in the same manner. Both anned agreeably. Obs.
;
;
The primary
;
Mat. v. Jigree witli thy adversaiy quickly. to con0. To come to one opinion or ; cur ; as, to agree on a place of meeting. from the This sense differs not essentially fourth, and it often unplies a resolving to
;
gre', will
contracted from Sp. agra-
dar, Port, id, to please, to gratify, whence agradable, agreeable fi-om the root of L gratia, W. rhad, grace, favor, that comes treely.
maxim above laid down. agreeably is common, but
;
Enn/c.
AGRA' RI AN,
To come
to a compromise of dift'erenccs
to be reconciled.
n. [Gr. oywi', a contest with boda word used to denote tlie ily exertion atliletic games, in Greece ; whence aywuo, 7.
AG'ONY,
anguish, soUcitude
A G R
A G R
A G R
articles
of partnership.
a
6
A G U
A
eupntoria or common agrimonv, and the odorata or sweet scented, are tlic tlic
these,
most
useful.
Enci/c.
n. In Chinrh history, the followers of Agripjiinus, hisliop of Carthage, in the third century, wiio first taught and defended the doctrine ofrebaptization.
plied to sassafras,
)'.
1.
To terrify [JVot in use.}
V. t.
frightful.
;
n.
A
[See Guise.]
To
[JVot in use.] n. Dress. [Ao/ in a.
€hilly
;
;
More. cold or
Granville. n. CliUliness
;
chalyheate Encyc.
genus of plants "of
several species, containing the common corn cockle, wild lychnis or campion, &c. n. [Gr. aypcofrj.] a genus of many species. AGROUND', '«rfr. [Of n," nt or on, and
AGROS'TIS, ;
ground.]
;
;
;
ogit,
or hoga,
horror; Arm.hegea, to shake Goth. agyan or ogan, to fear Ir. agh, agha or aghaim, to teai'. The radical idea is a shaking or shivering similar to that occasioned by terror.] fear,
( ^ \ and n. [From a, to, gxd, misj i Uo help. and Van neuf, the new year.] In Welsh, ced is a benefit, and the word form of rejoicing among the ancient was used to denote the aids of feudal tenFranks, on the first day of the year deants.] rived from the druidical custom of cutting To help to assist to support, either bj misleto, which was held sacred by the furnishing strength or means to effect a and on the first of the druids, day year, IJurpose, or to prevent or remove evil. consecrating it by crying, aguillaneuf, the AID, J). Help; succor; support; assistance. Waits. year to the misleto. This cry is said to lie still observed in some parts of France Q. The person who aids or yields support ; and the term came to signify also a beg a helper; an auxiliary; also the thing that aids or yields succor. ging of New Year's gifts. Encyc. 3. In English law, a subsidy or tax A'GUL, n. A species of the hedysarum. granted AH, An exclamation, expressive of surprise by parliament, and making a part of the expity, complaint, contempt, dislike, joy, king's revenue.
AGUILLANEUF', leto,
;
;
;
;
1.
Further forward than another thing in front originally a sea term, denoting fur tlier forward than another ship, or on the point to wliich the stem is directed, in op;
;
;
ogis, fear,
signifies to assist
A
,
[Sax. age,
^
or strengthen, and
4.
;
In France, aids are equivalent to customs, or duties on imports and exports. Encyc. In England, a tax jjaid by a tenant to his lord originallj- a mere gift, which af\er\vards became a right demandable by the ;
The
lord.
three.
aids of this kind
were
cliiefly
To ransom the lord when a To make the lord's eldest 3. To marry the lord's eld-
1.
2. prisoner. son a knight.
A
a'gn,
In Ar. jv U or jy j
juto.
A
»(.
;
Diet. ofJVat. Hist. AID, t). t. [Fr. aider, to help It. aiutare, which seems to be contracted from L. ad' - s
;
A'GUE,
large and beautiful specie" in Brazil ; its head beauti-
the quaUty
On the ground a marine term, signifying that the bottom of a ship rests on the ultation, &c., according to the manner of ground, for want of sutKcient depth of water. When the ground is near the utterance. shore, the ship is said to be ashore or 'AIPA. An exclamation expressing trimnph, but the stranded. contempt, or simple surprise senses are distinguished by very differ Q. Figuratively, stopped; impeded by insuent modes of utterance, and different mod perable obstacles. AGUAPE€A'€A, 7i. The Jacana, a Brazil- itlcations of features. sunk fence, not visible, without near ian bird, about the size of a pigeon. In 2. Mason. the extremity of each whig, it has asliarj) ipproach. name of the gar-fish. AllAN'IGER, n. prickle \\ liich is used for (lefense. Diet. ofJVat. Hist. AUEAD, adv. Med' [a andhead, oral head.] J.
H
variegated with yellow, red and violet colors its body green the tips of its wings red, and its tail long and vellow.
of being aguish.
Spenser.
I
fiilly
Spenser. use.]
somewhat
A
n.
of parrot, fomid
to
;
make A'GTJISHNESS,
AICU'RUS,
Ency, dress
shivering also, having the quaUties of an ague. Her aguish love now glows and burns.
n. A disease frequent in Bengal, and other parts of the E. Indies, in which the tongue chaps and cleaves, becomes rough and sometimes covered with white
AGROSTEM'MA,
t.
Uncyc.
also, to
The remedy is some spots. liquor, or the juice of mint.
V.
febri-
Chaucei:
A'GROM,
Bent grass
adorn.
AGUI'SE, A'GUISH,
[Sax. agrisan.]
[JVot in use.]
A
fuge qualities.
AGUrSE,
AGRIPPIN'IANS,
AGRiSE, To shivei-. AGRISE,
A
I
on account of its
Blackslone.
est daughter. .').
Ij.
An
aiddecamp, so called by abbieviation.
To pray
in aid, in law, is to call in a jierson interested in a title, to assist in defending it. Thus a tenant for life may pray
t?! the aid of him in remainder or reversion ; that is, he may pray or petition that Mar. Diet. position to astern. he may be jfiined in the suit to aid or help Onward; fiirward; towards the point bemaintain the title. This act or jietition is fore the stem or head ; as, move ahead. 1. The cold tit which ])recedes a fever, or a Cowel. Blackstone. called aid-prayer. paroxysm of fever in intermittents. It is 3. Headlong without restraint ; in'ocijiitaiitrun ahead. Court children sufTei-ed to as, ly of aids, in France, is a court which has acconq)aiiied with shivering. cognizance of causes respecting duties or 3. Chilliness ; a chill, or state of [.Vo< used.] L'Estrange.
fear,
'2.
;
;
shaking
3.
with cold, though in health. It is used fur a periodical fever, an
AHEI'GHT, inter- Aloft;
whether
quotidian, tertian, or quartan. lu this case, the wonl, wliich signifies the preceding cold fit, is used for the disease. A'GUE, V. t. To cause a shivering in; to strike with a cold fit. Haywood. hard tumor on the A'GUE-€AKE, n. left side of the belly, lower than the false of interto be the eflect ribs; supposed mittent,
adv. [a
on high.
and
customs.
height.]
[.\'ot itsed.]
Sha1(.
A
poisonous serpent of Mexico, somewhat resembling the rattlesnake, Init destitute of rattles. Its poisoi is as fatal as that of any known species of
AHK'CYAT'LI,
n.
Encyc.
A'IDANCE, tle
71.
Aid help assistance. ;
;
A'IDANT, aid.
[Lit-
Shak.
used.] a.
Helping
;
[JVbt used.] n. phir.
A'IDDEeAMP,
helpful
;
supplying
Aiddecamps.
[Fr.,
but naturalized, and here anglicized.] In military affairs, an officer whose duty is to AHI'GH, adv. On high. [JVotused.] receive and communicate the orders of a A AIIO'LD, adv. Near the wind; as, to lay a Shak. general officer. [The pronunciation should ship ahold. [N'ot in tise.] be English, according to the orthography, trivial name synonymous AHOVAI, n. not aid de cong.] of with Cerhera, a very poisonous sj)ecies Enryr. mitting fevers. A'IDED, pp. Assisted; supported; furnish[ihim. A'GUEI), a. Chilly having a fit of agu'e ed with succor. Shah. .VHOY', Exclam. A sea term used in hail shivering with cold or tii-ar. A'IDF;R, n. One who helps; an assistant, A'GUE-FIT, n. A jiaroxysin of cold, or ing. or auxiliary. AHRIMAN. [See Ai-iman.] shivering chilliness. A'GUE-PROOF, n. Able to resist agues; AHUIT'LA, n. A worm found in the lake of A'IDING, ppr. Helping; assisting. aid: unMexico, four inches in lengtJi, as thick as A'IDLESS, a. Helpless; without ])roof against agues. Shak. AGUER'RY, v.t^[Fr.nguerrir; from guerre, a goose-quill the tail, which is hard and supjiorted undefended. n. In zoology, a Clavigero. A'IGUET, AIGRETTE, poisonous, contains a sting. war.] name of the small white heron. To inure to the hardships of war to in AHUIT'ZOTE, n. An amphibious quadruDid. o/JVai. Hist. struct in the art of war. ped of the tropical climate of America, [JVot in itse.] whose body is a foot long, its snout long 2. In botany. [See Egret.] Lyttleton and sharp, its skin of a mixed black and A'IGULET, n. [Fr. Usually contracted inA'GUE-SPELL, n. A charm or spell t. to aiglet, which see.] brown color. cm-e or ))revent ague. Clavigero. Gay. A'lA, n. A Brazilian fowl of the spoon-bill A point or tag, as at the ends of fringes. A'GUE- STRUCK, a. Struck with ague. kind, and resembling that bird in form and A'IKRAW, n. A ]iopular name of a species Hewyt Fam. of Plants. of lichen, or nio.'^s. Hist. size. Dici.nfJVat. A'GUE-TREE, n. A name sometimes
Encyi
serjjcnt.
A
:
;
;
;
;
ap-
;
AIR
AIR
[Sax. eglian, to be troubled, to be irksome egle, trouble, grief. In the Sax-
The lattwenty-tl]ird, or something less. ter is |)robahly the true proportion. Oxygen gas is called vital air. The body
AfL,
r.
I.
of air surrounding the earth
;
;
.-'
not what aits him. Wliat aileth thee, Hagar ? Gen. xxi. It is never used to express a specific disease. never say, he ails a pleurisy ;
We
but it is usual to say, he ails something he ails nothing nothing aits him.
;
;
Indisposition, or morbid affection. A'\L\NG, ppr. Diseased; indisposed; full
AIL,
of complaints.
morbid
word
3.
Disease indisposition of the body but the not appUed ordinarily to acute n.
is
fire
j
A
is
osiers play. lischarge air. Pope. .\'IRINESS, n. Exposure to a free current of air openness to the air; as, the airiutterance abroad publication ness of a country seat. publicity as, a story has taken air. '2. Vou gave it air before me. Gayety levity as, the airiness of young Dryden. persons. H'ind is used in like manner. A'IRING, ppr. Exposing to the air warmA tunc a short song or piece of music ing drying. ada])ted to words; also, the peculiar modn. An exposure to the air, or to ulation of the notes, which gives music iti^ AIRING, a fire, for warming or drying also, a walk character as, a soft air. A song or piece or ride in the open air; a short excursion. of poetry for singing also, the leading The exercise of horses in the oj)en aii". part of a tune, or that wliich is intended AIR-JACKET, n. A leather jacket, to to exhibit the greatest variety of melody. which are fastened bags or bladders filled The peculiar look, appearance, manner or with air, to render persons buoyant in mien of a person as, a heavy air ; the air swiuuning. Encyc. of youth a graceful air ; a lofty air. It a. Not open to a free current is applied to maimers or gestures, as well A'IRLESS, of air; wanting fresh air, or conimiuiicaas to features.
Vent
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
affection
R
Let vernal airs through trembling
n.
AILMENT,
I
heated or dried by exposure to a
;
ventilated. A'IRKI{, n. One who exposes to the air. called the A'IR-(jlUN, n. pneumatic engine, resembling a nuisket, to discharge buUets by atmosphere. The s|iecific gravity of air is Air meiuis of the elastic force of compressed to tluit of water, nearly as 1 to 8'28. air. is necessary to Ufe ; being inhaled into the Encyc. limgs, the oxygenous part is separated V'IR-IIOLDER, n. [Air anA hold.] from the azotic, and it is supposed to fur- .\n instrument fi)r holding air, for the purnish the body with heat and animation. pose of counteracting the pressure of a It is the medium of sounds and necessary decreasing coluiim of mercury. to combustion. Davy. Clayfield. Air in motion ; a light breeze. A'lR-IIOLE, H. An opening to admit or
;
on, it is impersonal.] To trouble to affect with uueasuiess, either of body or mind used to express some uneasiness or affection, whose cause is unI know known as, what ails the man ;
A air
;
;
diseases.
;
;
;
V. i. [Qu. Ir. oigham, to eye. Skin ner refers this word to the old Fr. esmei: If this was the orthography, I know not its
AIM,
;
;
;
aflinitie.s.]
To
point
;
with a missive weapon
at,
;
to d
rect the uitention or purpose ; to attempt to reach, or accomplish ; to tend toward to endeavor ; followed by at before the object ; as, a man aims at distinction ; or
aims
;
;
be rich.
to
To
direct or point as a weapon ; to direct to a particular object ; as, to aim 6. Airs, in the plural, is used to denote an afa musket or an arrow, the fist or a blow ; fected manner, show of pride, haughti to aim aWtire or a reflection at some perness when it is said of a he
AIM,
I'. /.
son or
vice.
The pointing or direction of a misAIM, the direction of any thing to sile weapon n.
;
a particular point or object, with a view 7. to strike or affect it ; as a spear, a blow, a
discourse or remark. Q. The point intended to be
tended to be affected
;
.'}.
8.
hit,
a
as,
his aim.
or object in-
man
missed
;
builds his
in air of
hope
your
fair
look Sliak:\
;
A
;
AIR-POISE, n. [Air and poise.] An instrmnent to measure the weight of the air.
information.
Obs.
sign .scheme as, men Bacon. pouited of their aim. 10. Different states of air are characterized 4. Conjecture; guess. by different epithets as, good air, foul air, It is impossible, by aim to tell it. [A'oi used.'] morning air, evening air ; and sometimes Spenser on Ireland. airs may have been used for ill-scent or AIMED,/)/). Pointed; directed; intended to strike or affect. vapor, but the use is not legitimate. To take the air, is to go abroad to walk or AIMER, n. One that aims. ride a little distance. A'IMING, ppr. Pointing a M-eapon at an To take air, is to be divulged to be made object directuig any thing to an object ;
n.
;
Who
;
;
air.
open
thoughtless, gay person. Jonson. The word*is used also to A'IR-PIPE, «. A pipe used to draw foul air puts from a ship's hold, by means of a commuexpress the artificial motions or carriage nication with the furnace, and the rareof a horse. faction of the air by fire. This pipe is inIn painting, that which expresses the Ufe ten
Qu. Obs. intention de 0. Advice intelligence are often disap-
Figuratively, a purpose
tion with
-V'lRLING,
person,
as, on airs.
;
AIR-PUMP,
A
n.
machine
for
exhausting
the air of a vessel. The machines for this piu'pose are of different constructions.
;
,
;
;
;
;
public. intending; purposinff. V. t. To expose to the air to give aca. AVithout aim. May. AIR, cess to the open air to ventilate as, to n. [Fr air; h.aer; Gr.ar^p; It. aria; air clothes to air a room. S|). ayre ; Port, ar ; Arm. ear, eir ; Ir. aer ;
A'IMLESS,
;
\1R,
;
;
;
2.
VV. aicyr; Ch. TIN; Syr.
Ar.
IjlJ
This word, falls
; j
j
in
;
Eth.
^^^,
the Shemitic
To expose
to heat ; to
warm
as, to
;
air\
liquors. i.
To
dry by a
fire
to expel
;
dampness;
as,
and Ch.,
The
to shine.
;
n.
Air bags in birds, which are
certahi receptacles of air, or vesicles lodged in the fleshy parts, in the hollow hones and in the abdomen, which all communicate with the lungs. These are supposed to render the body specifically lighter, and to supply the place of a nmscular dia-
phragm.
Encyc. n. A passage for air into a mine, usually ojiened in a perpendicular
AIR-SHAFT,
and meeting the ailits or hori~ zontal jiassage.s, to cause a free circiJation of fresh air through the mine. Encyc. direction,
A'lR-STIRRIXG,
to air linen.
under the root llN Heb. A'IRA,
n. Hair grass, a genus of plants. radical sense A'IR-BALLOON. [See Balloon.] to 0]>en, expand whence clear or to .VI R-15L ADDER, n. vesicle or cuticle flow, to shoot, to radiate.] filled with air also, the bladder of a fish. The fluid which we breathe. Air is ino-' Arbitthnot.
languages,
A'IR-SACS,
A
;
a.
Puttmgthe
tion.
A'IR-THREAD,
A name
air
m
mor May.
given to tlie spider's webs, which are often seen floatji.
ing in the air. These filaments are attached to the tops or ends of branches of shrubs or trees, and serve to supjiort the Congreve. spiiler when in quest of prey. Encyc. AIR-BRAVING, a. Braving the wuids. ed, and condensed. Shak. AIR-THREATENING, a. Threatenine the air; lofty. .ttmospheric air is a compound fluid, con- A'IR-BUILT, a. Erected in the air; havTodd. chimerical as, .\ IR-VESSEL, 7!. A spiral duct in plants sisting of oxygen gas, and nitrogen or azo-j ing no solid foundation te the proportion of each is stated an air-built castle oiV-iinVt hopes. containing air, and supposed to be analobyj ehimists differently some experiments! AIR-DRAWN, a. Drawn in air imasinathe to in animals. gous lungs Encyc. Shak. .V'lRV, a. Consisting of air : as, an airy making the oxygen a twenty-eighth part' ry. of a hundred others, not more than a' A'IRED, pp. Exposed to air cleansed substance. by ;
an airy flight airy region. to a free current ot" air ;
Open
3.
as,
;
an airy
situation. ;
;
;
5.
ALAMO'DE
noun.]
According
A'KING,
Light as air ; resembhng air thin un substantial without solidity ; as, ain/ ghosts. An airy dress is one which admits air, and is cool.
4.
ALB
properties; as, envy and jealousy are near akin. [This adjective is used only after the
Having continued pain
ppr.
fering distress
A'KING,
;
mind. in Arabic,
ALAND', AL'ARM,
ty
;
light
of heart;
lively
;
as,
and Icvi an ajn/girl.
A'IRY, or
Among
A'ery, n. [See Jlery.] sportsme7i, the nest of the
hawk
or
eagle.
A'IRY-FLYING,
a.
Flying hke
AILE,
Pronounced
n.
sometimes a contraction
in English, is
of the Saxon
eethel,
He.
[Fr.
Germ, alt, old. L. ala.] the composition of Latin words, is Al, quire a walk in a church written before I for ad, for the ease of pro [Sax. aizon, from L. aizoon. nunciation as, in allevo, alludo, for ad levo, It seems to be composed of Gr. au, always. aile,
a
wing
m
;
The wing of a AIZO'ON, n.
;
;
Sax. aa, Eng. aye, and |uor, living.] genus of plants, called by Miller sempervive. The name has, by some writers, been applied to the house leek and to the aloes Encyc. AJA'VA, n. The seed of a plant brought from Malabar, said to be an excellent carminative, and very useful in the colic.
A
Qi/tnci/.
AJU'GA,
Bugle, a genus of plants.
n.
Encyr
n. A species of American parrot, of a green color, with eyes of a fiery red, encircled with wliite.
\JU'RU-€ATINGA, AJU'RII-€URAU,
n.
An American
parrot,
of a hvely green color, with a blue crown the throat, and sides of the head, of a fine
ad
or granidar
fibrous
foliated,
and are of a pure white
Among
the
ancients, alabaster
was
a vessel in which odoriferous li quors were kejtt so called from the stone of which it w as made. Also, the name of a measure, containing ten ounces of wine ;
or nine of oil.
Encyc. a.
Macquer.
Made of
Pliny. alabaster, or
ajouter, to join.]
properly written
ALACK',
exclam. [Per.
dition, destruction,
^5\.^halaka, i)erand alaksadan, to per-
ish.]
ncfte.
[Sax. All exclamation expressive of sorrow. ALACK'ADAY. An exclamation uttered to 1. To be in p;iiu usually, in pain of some con express regret or sorrow. tinuance. n. Briskness. [JVot 9. To teel distress of mind to be grieved ALAC'RIOUSNESS, used.] as, the heart akes. AKE, n. Continued pain, less severe than ALA€'RITY, n. [L. alacritas, from alacer,
4.
ake.
See
Jlche.]
;
;
alacris.^ expressed by pang, agony, and torment more the tooth-aie bead-aie. It is com Cheerfulness gayety sprighthness usually, a cheerful reacUness ur j^rompti in composition with the name tude to do some act cheerful willingness of the part afl^ected, as head-ake. as, the soldiers advanced with alacrity to A'KER, n. [Gr. aypoj; L. ager; Sax. acer, is
;
;
as,
;
;
;
pronounced aker Germ, acker. correct orthography is aker.] ;
yards,
making one hundred
sixty square rods, perches or polo this is the quantity of land it contains
United States of America.
[See
o. [a or of and kin. See Kin.] Related by blood, used of persons ; as, the two families are near akin. Allied by nature partaking of the same
AKIN',
%
to
;
of danger with anxiety
fill
;
ALARM-BELL, tice
A
Ji.
bell
that gives no-
of danger.
AL'ARMED, pp.
Notified of sudden danger surprised with fear ; roused to vigilance or activity by apprehension of approaching danger soUcitous at the prospect or expectation of evil. Thus, we are alarmed at the a|)proach of danger, or alarmed for the safety of friends at sea. AL' ARMING, ppr. Giving notice of approaching danger rousing to vigilance ; exciting solicitude by a prospect of evil. AL'ARMING, a. Exciting apprehension ; territying awakening a sense of danger; as, an alarming message. AL'ARMINGLY, adv. Whh alarm in a manner to excite apprehension. AL'ARMIST, n. One that excites alarm. ;
;
;
;
Encyc. mineral; diopsemi-transparent pyroxene. A variety with twelve sided prisms, wai Ibund by Bonvoisin, near the village of Ala in Piedmont, and by liim called Alaside
;
AL> ARM-WATCH,
;
ALAMODAl.'ITY,
n. Conformity to the pre\ ailing luode, or fashion of the times. [Little used.]
Encyc.
A
n. watch that .strikes the hour by regulated movement. Herbert. for alarm, is a corruption, and is not til be used. ALAS' ex. [Dutch helaas ; Fr. helas.]
An
exclamation expressive of sorrow,
grief,
pity, concern, or apprehension of evil sometimes followed by day or while ; alas the day, like alack a day or alas the tchile, {Obs. Spenser.) expressing an unhappy
;
;
time.
ALA'TE, adv. ALA'TED, a.
Lately. [JVot used.] [L. ala, a
wing;
alatus,
wing-
ed.]
Winged
;
having dilatations
AL'ATERN,
Cleaveland.
The
lowest note but one, in Guido Aretine's scale of music. John.'ion. n.
n.
ALARUM,
a
lite.
A
place to which troops are to repair in cases of an alarm.
AL'ARM-POST,
;
Mohammedans. AL'ALITE, n. A crystalized
ALAMIRE',
Jia-e.] 1.
To call to arms for defense, To surprise with apprehension
by the prospect of evil.
meet the enemy. The most ALAD'INISTS. Free thinkers among the
Orighially an open field. But in G. Britain, the quantity of land in the aker is fixed by statute at four thousand eight hundred and
in the
Dryden. ;
to disturb with terror
monly used
forty square
arms.
fire
;
3.
;
and and
to
surprise with fear or terror as, or the enemy excited an alarm. Terror a sensation excited by an appre-
the
;
tube fitted to the mouth of a vessel. through which the water of a fountain to be played. less
Sudden
also the
name of
n. A small parrot of AmerAddison resembling it. of a beautiful green, with the beak Alabaslrum dendroide, a kind of laminated and circlets of the eyes white. alabaster, variegated with figures of shrubs Diet ofj^at. Hist. and trees, foiuid in the province of HohenAJUTAGE, or AD'JUTAgE, n. [Fr. from stein. Encyc
V. i.,
soimd an alarm.
A summon
'.i.
safety.
more
legs
pronounced
as, to 2.
structure, 9.
color, or
generally they present shades of yellow red or brown, in undidating or concentric Cleaveland. stripes, or in spots.
ica,
ace,
cation.]
hension of danger, from whatever cause ; AL'ABASTER, n. [L. from Gr. aXoSafpor] as, we felt an alarm at the cry of fire. A sidj-variety of carbonate of lune, found in 5. In /f»!ci»!g-, an ajjpeal or challenge. Encyc. large masses, formed by the deposition of AL'ARM, V. t. T
AJU'RU-PARA,
AKE,
;
Any sound, outcry or information, intended to give notice of approaching danger
\.
liido.
AL'ABASTER,
yellow.
bustle,
gives the true origin and primary signifi-
noble or illustrious.
generally al, in composition, is a con traction of aid or alt, old, and it is prefix ed to many names, as Alburg. Sax. eald
hoods, Sidney.
Fr. alarme, alarmer ; Sp. alarmo. alarmar ; It. atlarme, allartnare ; W. alarm, a great shout, compounded of al, very, most, and garm, an outciy. The Welsh
koran or the book by alchimy, alembic, almanac, &c.
AL,
land.
«.
[Dan. lami, noise, alarm ; larmer, to make a noise or bustle, to alarm; G. Idrm, liirmen, kl ; Sw. larm,
;
More
air.
Thomson. or
AISLE,
English
At or on
adv.
larma, id
as, alkoran, the eminence ; alcove,
the
A thin glossy silk for
n.
scarfs, &,c.
;
nite, like the
prevaihng mode Whitlock.
pain, or distress of
;
;
to the fashion or
ALAMO'DE,
an adjective or inseparable AL, Without reality having no solid founda prefix, answering to the Itahan il, and S|). tion vain trifling as, an airy scheinc el and la. Its use is to render nouns defi-
airy notions. 6. Gay; sprightly; full of vivacity
A
fashion.]
suf-
of mind, or grief
Contmued
n.
;
adv. [Fr. a la mode, after the
n.
A
trivial
like
name
wings. Botany. of a species
of rhamnus or buckthorn. n. [L. albus, Gr. a/nf^os, white.] surplice or vestment of white linen, reach-
ALB,
A
ing to the
worn by the Romish clerTurkish coin, called also an one hundred and twelve mills.
feet,
Also a gy. asper, value
ALB
A L C
A L C
[h. albugo, the white AL'BATROS, n. An aquatic fowl, belong ALBUgIN'EOUS, spot in the eye, from albus white.] ing to the order of an.sers. The bill is the upper mandible crooked at tlie Pertaining to or resembhng the wliite of the strait the Encyc. eye, or of an egg. point, and the lower one truncated nostrils are oval, open and Uttle promi- Albugineous humor, the aqueous humor oftlie Encyc. (^uincy. eye. nent, and placed on the sides the wings are pennated, and there are three webbed ALBU'GO, n. The white speck in the eye, called the film, haw, dragon, pearl or toes on each foot. The upper part of the Also a disease of the eye, occacicatrice. body is of a spotted brown, and the belly sioned by a white opake spot growing on white. It is of the size of a pelican or the cornea and obstructing vision. It is on fish and lai-ger, very voracious, preying called also leuconia, nebula, pannus ocuU, small water fowls. These fowls are seen, in great numbers, about the capes of the onyx, unguis, &c. Quincy. Encyc. two continents, and on the northern shores ALBU'LA, n. A species of truttaceous fish, The Atbula Indica is destitute of teeth. of Asia. They are sometimes called the called by the Dutch wit-fish, and is of the great gull. Encyc. The Albula nobilis is a size of a herring. ALBE'IT, [This is supposed to be a comfish caught in the lakes of Germany. of all, fceand il, and is equivalent to a.
:
;
;
Egyptian privet, used by the Turkish females to give a golden color to the nails and hair. Infused in water, it forms a yellow color with vinegar, it forms a red. From the beiTies is extracted an oil, used in medicine. In Cairo, it forms an article of commerce. Encyc. Theophrast. AL'€ATRAZ, n. The Spanish name of the Pelecanus Onocrotakis of Liniie ; a pelican also a fish taken on the coast of India. Span. Did. ALCAV'ALA, n. In Spain, a tax on every ;
;
transfer of property, real or personal.
Encyc.
ALCE'DO, The king
;
;
[This word
is
AL'BELEN,
now n.
A
fish
of the truttaceous or
five
German
2.
lakes,
or six pounds.
Did. ofJ^at.
A
board
Hist.
A
book, originally blank, in which foreigners or strangers insert autographs of celebrated persons, or in which friends insert pieces as memorials for each other.
ALBES'CENT, n. [L. albesco, to grow white.] ALBU'MEN, Becoming white, or rather, whitish ; modEncyc. erately white. AL'BI€ORE, n. [Port, albacor; al and
table,
or register, on which the names of public officers and pubhc transactions were entered. Lat. Diet.
antiquated.]
trout kind, found in the
weighing
Diet. ofJVaf. Hist.
AL'BUM, n. [L. albus, white.] 1. Among the Romans, a white
n.
[L.
The white of an
from
A
alhis, white.]
substance is a egg. chief constituent in all animal sohds. Ure. ALBU'MINOUS, a. Pertaining to, or havhacoro, .1 little pig.] ing tlie properties of albumen. marine fish, like a tumiy, noted for follow- AL'BURN, n. from ( [L. alburnum, albus,
ALBIciEN'SES, ALBEtiEOIS,
n.
ALBURNUM,
A
party of Reformers, who separated from the church of Rome, in the 12th century so a small called from the Albegeoie, territory in France, where they resided. They are sometimes confounded with the Waldensts; but they were prior to them in time, diflfer-
The white and
ed from them
in
some of their
tenets,
and
resided in a different part of France. Tlie catholics made war u])on them, and they gradu.illy dwindled, till the reformation, wlien tlie remains of them fell in with the followers of ZuingUus and the Genevan Protestants. Encyc.
cyon.
AL'BURN,
A
n.
[L.
albumus,
from
albus,
white.] fish called the bleak.
It belongs to the order of abdominals, and the genus CypriIt is five or six inches in length, and nus.
esteemed delicious food. are
made of
its
Artificial pearls
scales.
Encyc. [Arabic]
Relatmg to alchimy, or produced by it.
a.
\ S
adv. In the
maimer of
alchimv.
AL'€HIMIST,
n.
One who
practices al-
chimy.
AL€HIMIST'IC, AL€HIMIST'I€AL,
) a.
S
Practicing alchi-
my, or
AL'€HIMY,
n.
[It.
alchimia
and Ia^a^S) kimia,
;
secret,
the occult art, from
Ar.
al, the,
hidden,
,
or
kamai, to
See Chimistry.]
hide. 1.
relating to
Burke, Rev.
it.
between
annually acquiring hardness, and becomMilne. ing wood.
The
AL€H1M'I€ALLY,
In Amerthe inner bark and the wood. This is ica, it is popularly called the sap.
;
;
AL€HIM'le, AL€11IM'1CAL,
like
white.] , i softer part of wood,
[L.]
a genus of birds, of the species are numerous. They usually live about rivers, feeding on fish, which they take by darting into the water with surprising velocity. [See Hal-
pound
admit, or grant it all.] it so admit all that although ; notwithstanding. Whereas ye say, the Lord saith it, albeit I have not spoken. Ez. xiii.
Be
n.
fisher
order of Picse.
The more sublime and
difficult parts
of
and chiefly such as relate to the transmutation of metals into gold, the finding a universal remedy for diseases, and an alkahest or universal solvent, and other This things now treated as ridiculous. chimistry,
pretended science was much cultivated in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, is now held in contempt.
but
AL'€AHEST, or AL'KAHEST, n. 2. Formerly, a mixed metal used for utenA pretended universal dissolvent, or men- sils. struum. [See Alkahest.] ALCMA'NIAN, a. Pertaining to Alcman, a consist of an white mineral, color, opake ALCA'IC, a. Pertahiiiig to Alcfeus, a Lyric lyric poet of the twenty-seventh Olyming of aggregated crj'staline latnins, found poet of Mityleiie, in Lesbos, who ffourished piad, celebrated for his amorous verses. in Bohemia. about the forty-fourth Olympiad or to The Alcmanian verse consisted of two dacThis is regarded as a variety of apophyllite. other poets of the same name, of which Encyc. tyls and two trochees. Werner. Cleaveland. three are mentioned one an Athenian n. A quadruped of America, nearly AL'€0, ALBI'NO, »i. [L. albits, white.] tragic poet, and anotlier a Messenian. resembling a dog, but mute and melanA white descendant of black parents, or a ALCA'ICS, n. plu. Several kinds of verse, and this circum-stance seems to choly white person belonging to a race of blacks. so called from Alcfeus, their inventor. One have given rise to the fable that dogs, transA person unnaturally white. kind consists of five feet, a spondee or become mute. The ported to America, ALBI'NOS, n. A name signifying white iambic, an iambic, a long syllable and two aiiiiiinl was used for food by the native men, given by the Portuguese to the white dactyls. Encyc. Americans, and the first Spanish settlers ; negroes of Africa. The color of this race AL€A'ID, n. It is but it is said to lie now extinct. [8p. alcayde-; Port, alcaide ; Ar. appears hke that of persons affected with ~ , . s known also by the name of Tcchichi. leprosy and the negroes look upon then Ov J I i' kaidon, with the prefix al, fi-om ^ i" Ctavigero. as monsters. Encyc. AL'BION, n. An ancient name of England to lead, rule, govern. Hence the Cadi of ALCOHOL, ?i. [Ar. J.3:v^ kahala; Heb. It is supposed this still used ill jioetry. name was given to it on account of its the Turks.] Syr. and Eth. SriD, to paint with a prepawhite cliffs. Among the Moors, Spaniards and Portu- ration of powder of antimony. The oriALBO'RA, 71. A sort of itch or rather lep- guese, a governor. In Portugal, the chief ental females still practice the painting of also the civil magistrate of a town or city the eye brows with this material. The rosy, terminating without ulceration, but with fetid evacuations in the mouth and jurisdiction of certain judges of appeal. name was applied to this substance, and In Spain, the governor of a castle or fort nostrils. afterwards to other fine powders, and to Quiiifi/. Span, and Port. Diet. ALBO'RO, n. The erythrinus, a small red also a jailer. highly rectified spirits.] fisb of the Mediterranean. ALCAN'NA, n. [Arabic.] A plant and a Pure or highly rectified spirit, obtained from fermented liquors by distillation. It conDiet, of .Vat. Hist. powder, prepared from the leaves of the AL'BIN,
A
n. [L. alius, white.]
;
;
;
;
I.
;
:
;
In general, aldermen have the powers of a justice of the peace, and, with the mayor, they constitute the court of the In most of our cities, they corporation. are annually elected by the citizens.
and owgcii. ^isjs liyili'Ogcn, It is extroiiioly light and iiiflaiiiiiiable, and a powerful stiinuiaiit and antiseptic. Tliis
tion.
carhoii
but oritlic usual sense of the word Arabic, it signified a fine impalis still pable powder, in which sense it used. Enajc. ALeOHOL'IC, a. Pertaining to alcohol, or Med. its qualities. of Rep. partaking is
;
<,'inally, in
ALCOHOLIZATION,
n.
The
AL'DERMANLY,
Sw. 1.
also, to reduce a substance phlegniated to an impalpable powder. A small star adjoining n. [Ar.] to the large bright one in the middle of the tail of Ursa Major. Encyc.
AL€0'VE,
t^jj
kabba,
with an arch, and its an arch, a round Iteuse Eng.
to arch, to construct
derivatives,
;
cubhy.] recess, or part of a room, separated by an estrade, or partition of coluuuis, or by other corresponding ornaments ; in which
A
is
placed a bed of state, and sometime
The bed is sometimes seats for company. raised two or three steps, with a rail at the These are frequent in Spain. foot. il.
A recess in a library, or small apartment for books.
AL'CYON, fisher.
n.
A
Sax.
Encyc.
A
Fr. auiif, anhie
;
desired.
i)la-
A'LE-FED, A'LE-GAR, ale
;
and bishops, imjdying superior wisdom or authority. Thus, Ethelstan, duke of the East-Aiigli
was called alderman of all England and there were aldermen of cities, counwho had jurisdiction ties, and castles,
ans,
witliin tlieir respective districts, ij.
In present usage, a magistrate or officer of a town coi-porate, ne.xt in rank 'below the mayor. The ninnber of aldermen is diflt-r In London the ent in djfierent cities. iiumhcr is twenty-six, one in each ward,
and the
office is held for life. Coioel.
Encyc. Spelman. In the United Slates, the iiund)er of alderthe charters of incorpora-
men depends on
;
[jVo< used.] n. In Turkey,
to lessen
n.
Costmary, a plant, a spe-
ALEM'BIC,
Fed with
a.
n.
[ale,
ale.
n.
and Fr.
Stafford. aigre, sour.]
[D. eiloof a plant used in
;
to
who Mohammed,
an
officer
bears the green standard of when the Sultan appears in public.
n.
ul
[Ar.
and
Encyc. oi or
^xjl
5 of (JjxAj^ a chimical vessel.] A.
;
also to archbishops
To hghten
t.
ALEMB'DAR,
the acid of ale.
A'LE-HOOF,
The title was applied to princes su])erior. ilukes, earls, senators and presiding magis-
11.
assuage.
Tanacetum.
cies of
Sour
ALEGGE,
Ad of Pari.
A'LE-€OST,
;
;
Bacon.
day.
a?)-.]
;
Encyc.
;
[cde
officer in
tree, usually growing in moist land, and irewing.] belonging to the geiuis Alnus. The name Ground-ivy, the glechoma hederacea, of is a])plied also to some sjiecies of other Linne. The leaves of this plant are used to genera. clarify and give flavor to ale. Lee. Encyc. .XLD'ERMAN, n. plu. Aldermen. [Sax. aid or eald, old, comp, alder, older, and man ; A'LE-IIOUSE, Ji. A house where ale is reand hence a tijiling house. G. alt ; D. oud.] tailed n. One who }. Among our Saxon Ancestors, a senior or ALE-HOUSE-KEEPER,
trates
alewife, phi. alewives.
n. [Gr. aXfxrpvur, a cock, and licivrtta, divination.] An ancient practice of foretelling events by means of a cock. The twenty four letters were laid on the ground, and a grain of corn on each a cock was then permitted to pick up the grains, and the letters under the grains selected, being formed into words, were supposed to foretel the event Encyc.
London, whose business is to inspect the measures used in public houses, Four to ))revent frauds in selling liquors. of these are chosen annually by the livery men, in common hall, on midsummer
J.
;
is
pronunciation
ALECTRYOM'ANCY,
or see.]
An
somewhat resembling a
[L. alnus
vol. 2. 131.]
fish, belonging to the genus It Clupea, and called Clupea Serrata. The estabhshed resembles the herring.
Ben
A'LE-€ONNER,
lateral
Encyc. )i.
and Baddam's Memoirs,
An American
A
of the king
land.
cil ;
A
of Science. ALCYO'NIUM, n. The name of a submaAlso a kind rine plant, or bastard spunge. in Engfound of astroit or coral, a fossil
aL'DER,
G.
ALEE', adv. [a or at and lee. See Lee.'] Jonson. In seaman^s language, on the side opposite to the wind, that is, ojiposite to the side on Medicated Ales are those winch are ])repared which it strikes. Tlie helm of a ship is for medicinal purposes, by an infusion oil alee, when pressed close to the lee side. herbs during fermentation. Encyc. bench in or before an Hard (dec or luff (dee, is an order to put the A'LE-BENCH, n. helm to the lee .side. Homilies. ale house. that is, the helm is alee, a notice ALE-BERRY, n. beverage, made by Helm's alee, of given as an order to the seamen to cause boiling ale with i])ice, sugar and sops the head-sails to shake in the wind, with Johnson. bread. to a view bring the ship about. Mar. Did. A'LE-BREWER, n. One whose occupation A'LEuER, a. [Fr., Sp. alegre ; L. alacer.] is to brew ale. and con, to know Gay cheerful sprightly. [N'ot used.] n.
n. [Supra.]
fossil zoophite, fungus.
;
Ir. olarn, to
merry meeting in English coimtry from the liquor drank.
ces, so called
[See Halcyon.]
AL'CYON ITE,
A
name
trivio'
Qu.
Ir. ol.
;
made from an infusion of malt by A It differs from beer, in fermentation. having a smaller proportion of hops. It is of different sorts, chiefly pale and broum the first made from malt slightly dried the second, from malt more considerably Ale was the connnon dried or roasted. drink of the ancient inhabitants of Europe. but someIt is usually made with barley times with wheat, rye, millet, oats, &c.
A
1.
ol
[Sp. alcoba,
composed of a/, with the Ar.
or A'LOOF, n. [This word is properly aloof, the IntUan name of a fish. See Winthrop on the culture of maiz iix America, Phil. Trans. No. 142. p. 1065.
drink.] liquor
;
[See Koran and Alkoran.] ji.
ale house.
A'LEWIFE,
:
;
or
Dan.
;
A woman who
)i.
;
AL'€OR,
\L'€OVE
ul
Steeped or soaked in Shak. keeps an
a.
ale.
ALE-WIFE,
Simft.
AL'PERN, a. Made of Alder. ALE, 71. [Sax. eeda, eale, or alofh
act of recti-
ALE-WASHED,
Pertaining to or like
a.
an alilerman.
fying spirit, till it is w holly dephlegniatedt; or of redueuig a substance to an impalpable powder. AL'€OHOLIZE, r. t. To convert into alcohol; to rectify spirit till it is wholly de-
ALeORAN.
ALE
ALE
L D
V of
chimical vessel used in distillation usually made of glass or copper. Tlie bottom part containing the liquor to be distilled, is called the cucurbit ; the upper part wliicli receiiesand condenses the steam, is called the head, the beak of which is fitted to the The head is more neck of a receiver. This vessel is not properly the alembic. so generally used now, as the worm still
keeps an ale-house.
;
and
retort.
A
ALENGTll', adv. [a and length.] pot companion. Chaucer. At full length alono stretched at full length. Chaucer. A'LE-SHOT, n. reckoning to be jjaid for VLEP'IDOTE, [Gr. a priv. and Asrtis, ale. a scale.] Lord the to A'LE-SILVER, n. A duty paid Any fish whose skin is not covered with Mayor of London, by the sellers of ale scales. within the city. ALERT', a. [Fr. alerte ; Sp. a/erio, vigilant, be A'LE-STAKE, n. A stake set as a sisrn watchfid, estaralerta, to be on the watch.] Chaucer. tore an ale-house. active in
A'LE-KNIGHT,
n.
:
A
1.
A'LE-TASTER,
n.
An
officer api>ointed in
every court leet, and sworn, to inspect ale, beer and bread, and examine the quality and quantity within the precincts of the
mented.
;
vigilant
n.
A
vat in
which
ale
is
fer
;
vigilance. alert,
sur-
prise or danger. 2.
Brisk
;
nimble
;
moving with
Coivel.
lordship.
\'LE-VAT,
Watchtid
Hence the military phrase, upon the upon the watch, guarding against
ALERT'NESS, sprightliiiess
;
ii.
celerity.
Spectator^ Brisktiess; nimbleness;
levity.
Addison.
A L
A L G ALEUROM'ANCY,
>i.
[Gr.
a^ivjiov,
A L
I
commonly the letters are made to represent
sjnnbols, whii-h are
meal,
2.
Belonging Estranged
one
to
1
who
is
not a citizen.
3. of the al|>habet, foreign not allied adverse to numbers and (luaiitities. It takes an unof divination by meal, used by the as, j)rinciples alien from our reUgion, known quantity sought, as if granted A'LIEN, n. dlytn. A foreigner one born in, ancients. Encyc. ALEUTIAN, or ALEU'TI€, a. Designating and, by means of one or more quantities or belonging to, another country ; one certain isles intlie Pacific ocean, eastward w ho is not a denizen, or entitled to the given, proceeds till the quantity supposed is discovered, by some other known quanof Kamtscliatka, extending northeastward privileges of a citizen. towards America. The word is formed 2. In tity to which it is equal. scripture, one who is a stranger to the from «/ei(/, which, in Russian, is a bald This science was of Oiiental discovery ; but church of Christ, or to the covenant of whether among the Arabians or Indians, rock. Tooke. Pinkcrton. grace. is uncertain. At that time, ye were without Christ, beALEX^ANDERS, n. The name of a i)lant } a. of the genus Smyrniuin. Pertaining to algeing aliens from the commonweahh of Israel. MxMfnherg. ALgEBRATC, bra Eph. ii. containing an ALEXANDER'SFOOT, n. The name of a ALgEBRAT€AL, of or deduced from In France, a child born of residents who are operation Algebra, plant. not citizen.s, is an alien. In Great Britain, ALEX'ANDRIAN, n. Pertaining to Alexan- such operation. the children of aliens horn in that co\mThere are many cities of this name, Algebraic curve, a figure whose intercepted dria. diameters bear always the same projiorThe term in various parts of the earth. try, are mostly natural born subjects and the children of British subjects, owing altion to their respective ordinates. is often applied as an attribute, or used as Bailey. who is n. One versed in or a noun, for one who professed legiance to the crown of England, though taught ALgEBRA'IST, born in other countries, are natural sidithe science of algebra. the sciences in the school of Alexandria, in Egypt a [ilace highly celebrated for its AL'GENEB, n. A fixed star of the second jects, and entitled to the privileges of resident citizens. Blackslone. macnitude, in the right side of Perseus literature and magnificence, and whose Long. 27° 4G' 12" of Taurus Lat. 30° 05 Alien-duty, a tax upon goods imported by library, it is said, consisted of 700,000 28" North. ahens, beyond the duty on the like goods volumes. The Persians and Turks write Encyc. a discriminating for Alexander, Scander, or Sconder ; and ALtiERlNE', n. [from Algiers.] A native of imported by citizens for Alexandria, Scanderona ; hence Scanduty on the tonnage of .ships belonging to Algiers, a city and a government on the coast of Africa. aliens, or any extra duties unposed by laws deroon, a sea port in Syria. or edicts on ahens. ALEXANDRINE, or "ALEXANDRIAN, ALliERiNE', a. Belonging to Algiers. n. A kind of verse, consisting of twelve AL'GlD, a. [L. algidus.] Cold. [.Vot used.} A'LIEN, I , n r i ?(. A fixed star of the third mag ALIE'NE, \ "' '• fL. aheno.] syllables, or of twelve and thirteen alter AL'GOL, Medusa's in Perseus; 1. To transfer title or property to another called in a written so called from nitude, head, poem nately to sell. French on the hfe of Alexander. This Long. 21° 50' 42" of Taurus Lat. 2.3° 23' Nor could he aliene the estate, even witli 47" North. Encyc species of verse is pecnhar to modern the consent of the Lord. Blackstone. n. [Lat.] Among physicians, an poetry, but well adapted to epic poems. AL'GOR, The Alexandrine in English consists of unusual coldness in any p^t of the bod3'. 2. To estrange to make averse or indifferent to turn the affections from. twelve syllables, and is less used than this ALGORITHM, or AL'GORISM, n. An The was aliened from all prince droughts of kind of verse is among the French, ^vhose Arabic term, signifying numerical com tlie marriage. Clarendon. tragedies are generally composed of Alex)mtation, or the six operations of arith- In this sense, it is more connnon to use andrines. Johnson. Encyc. metic. Pope. Dryden.
and
fiaveiia, divination.]
A kind
;
;
;
:
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
:
;
;
:
;
tlienate.
n. [Gr. aSttSu, to expel, AL'GOUS, a. [L. alga, sea weed.] Pertaining to sea weed ; aboimding with, or poison.] like sea weed. Expelling poison ; antidotal sudorific that lias the quality of expelling poison or iidec- ALHEN'NA, n. [See Alkenna.] tion bv sweat. A'LIAS, [L.] Otherwise ; as in this exammedicine that ple, Simson alias Smith ; a ^vord used in ALEXI'PII-ARJIIC, )i. ifitended to obviate the effects of ])oison judicial proceedings to connect the different names bj' which a person is called an antidote to poison or infection. By the who attemjits to conceal his true name, Greeks, the word was used for an amulet. and pass under a fictitious one. Qkuici/. Encyc. .second writ, or execution, ALEXITER'I€, > a. [Gr. aXf|J, to expel A'LIAS, 7!. issued when the first has failed to enforce! and *)j7i);T>;pioi», poiALEXITE'RL\L, ) the judgment. son.]
ALEXIPH^ARMIC, and
ALIENABILITY, n. The capacity of bemg alienated or transferred. The alienability of the domain.
^jap/iaxoi',
;
;
A
:
A
Resisting poison;
venom.
obviating the effects of| AL'IBI, (^vincy. Enci/c place
ALEXITERTC,
)n.
ALEXITER'lCAL,
$
poison, or the bite of
nearly
Used
A
sist
medicine to the
effects
[L.]
Elsewhere
;
in
another
A'LIENATE, v. t. [L. alieno.] 1. To transfer title, property another
as, to alienate
;
or right to or sove-
lands,
reignty. 2.
a law term. When a person is charged with an oflense, and he prove tluit he could not have committed it, be cause lie was, at the time, in anotlier place, he is said to prove an alibi. The ]).ut of
re-
;
To
estrange: to withdraw, as the affei-tions to make inditferent or averse, where ;
love or friendship before subsisted ; with to alienate the heart or affec; as, tions ; to alienate a man from the friends of his youth. a plea or allegation, which avers the party 3. To ap])ly to a wrong use. to have been in another place, is also Tfiey shall not alienate the first fruits of the called an alibi. land. Ezek. xlviii.
of
venomous animals
n.
Burke.
a. That may be sold, or transferred to another ; as, land is alienable according to the laws of the State. A'LIENAgE, n. The state of being an alien. Why restore estates, forfeitable on account of Storu. alienage ?
A'LIENABLE,
;
synonymous with altxiphnniiic. by the Greeks for an amulet. or AL'GAROTH, n. The
also
AL'GAROT,
name of an
from
emetic powder, prepared from the regulus of antimony, dissolved A'LIEN, a. eilycn, [L. alienus, from alius, A'LIENATE, a. [L. alienatus.] in acids, and separated by repeated lotions W. Estranged withdraw u from another Ir. aile, eile, oile, another stranger in warm water. It is either an Arab Arm. eel, all, all, other, and ail, second with/rojii. term, or the name of the inventor, a phyHence, L. eguile : Corn, gele ; Gr. a»o;. O alienate from God, O spirit accurst. sician of Verona. whence Quincy. Encyc. to another; ;
;
;
;
to
;
;
S
AL'GEBRA,
n.
[Ar. al
and
(J
alieno,
,
duction of parts to a whole, or fractions to whole numbers, from the verb, which signifies to consolidate; Heb. Ch. Syr. and Eth. 13J, to be strong.] The science of quantity in general, or uni versal arithmetic. Algebra is a genera ijiethod of computation, in which signs and
alienate; cUter, L. alterno, to alter, to and alterco, altercor, to altercate.
Fr. alterer, to alter
^i., the re-
alternate,
Eth.
Vl^A kalea, to whence edivs, another,
1.
alter, to
change
the the .second being lost, except in the Cor See nish and Armoric, as it is in all. Cla.ss Gl. No. 36, and Ludolf, 387.] Foreign not belonging to the same coun-' try, land or government. first letter
;
Milton.
The whigs were
;
ALIENA'TION, 1.
;
2. 3.
4.
A
transfer of
alienate from truth.
n.
Swif.
[L. a/uDoho.]
or a legal conveyance of property to another. title
;
The state of being alienated. witlubawing or estrangement, the heart or affections.
A
Dehrium ties
;
;
derangement of mental
insgnitv.
as of facul-
Ifnokir,
A L
K
A L
I
ALIMENTA'TION,
Alknatlon -office, in Great-Britain, is an office to wl'iich all writs of covenant and enlevied and recovetry, on wliich fines are ries surtered, are carried, to have fines for
and paid thereon.
2.
n.
A L K
The
or
act
power
a.
perties of an alkah
of affording nutriment. The state of being nourished.
Bacon.
Johitson.
ALIMO'NIOUS,
ALKALES'CENT, AL'KALI,
Tending
to the pro-
slightly alkaline.
;
Alkahes. [Ar. tsXi'
n. phi.
ka-
with the common prefix, the plant called glass wort, from its use in the manufacture of glass; or the ashes of the plant, Warlon. AL'IMONY, n. [L. alimonia, ofalo, to feed. transfers property. which seems to be its primitive sense, for ALIENEE', 11. One to whom the title to See Aliment.] An allowance made for the support of a the verb signifies to fry.] property is transferred. If the alienee enters and keeps possession. woman, legally separated from her hus- In chimisti-y, a term applied to all bodies which possess the following properties : band. The sum is fixed by the proper Blackstone 2. volatihzable by 1. a caustic taste ALI'FE, adv. [a or on and life.'] judge, and granted out of the husband's heat 3. capability of combining with Shak. estate. Blackstone. On my life. acids, and of destroying their acidity 4. ALIF'EROU?*, a. [L. ala, wing, and fero. AL'IPED, a. [L. ala, wing, and pes, foot.] to bear.] solubility in water, even when combined Wing-footed having the toes connected by with carbonic acid 5. capability of cona membrane, which serves as a wing. Having wings. verting vegetable blues to green. AL'IFORM, a. [L. cda, wing, and forma. AL'IPED, n. [Supra.] Thomson. An animal whose toes are connected by a shape.] Having the shape of a wing ; a term ajiplied membrane, and which thus sei-ve for The term was formerly confined to three to a certain process and muscles of the substances 1. potash or vegetable fixed wings a cheiropter as, the bat. alkah, generally obtained from the ashes Dumeril. body, as the pterygoid process, and the muscles arising from that process. of wood 2. soda or mineral fixed alkaAL'IQUANT, a. [L. aliquantum, a little.] h, which is found in the earth and procuIn arithmetic, an aliquant number or part is ALlG'EROUS, a. [L. ala wing, and gero, to that which does not measure another red from marine plants and 3. ammonia or volatile alkali, an anunal product. carry.] number without a remainder. Thus 5 is Having wings. an aliquant part of 16, for 3 times 5 is 15, Modern chiiiiistry has discovered many new substances to which the term is now exALIGHT, V. i. [Sax. alihtan, gelihtan, Hh a remainder 1. leaving See LAght] tan. tended. ALIQUOT, a. [L.] or descend, as from on \. To get down An aliquot part of a number or quantity is The alkaUes were formerly considered as horseback or from a carriage. elementary substances; but it is now asone wliich will measure it without a re2. To descend and settle certained that they are all compoimds. as, a flying bird mainder. Thus 5 is the aliquot part of 15 The alkahes are used in the manufacture of altghfs on a tree. a. [From ale.] A'LISH, 3. To fall or descend and lodge ; as, snow glass and soap, in bleaching and in mediLike ale; having the quahties of ale. on a roof. cine. alienation set
A'LIENATOR,
n.
One
Encyc.
that aUenates or Nourishing
a.
[See Alimony.]
aflbrding food.
;
li,
[Little used.]
;
;
;
;
;
:
;
;
;
;
;
alights
Mortimer.
See Like.] a. [Sax. gelic. v. t. To form, or to convert ALI'VE, a. [Sax. gelifian, to Uve, from li- AL'KALIFY, into an alkali. Having resemblance or similitude similar. 9ec Life.] _^aH,tolive. v. i. To become an alkah. The darkness and the light are both alike to 1. AL'KALIFY, to in dead life, Having opposition living Ps. xiii. thee. ALKALIG'ENOUS, a. [Alkali, and yimaa, being in a state in which the organs perto generate.] form their functions, and the fluids move, [This adjective never precedes the noun which or generating alkali. it whether in animals or vegetables as, the Producing qualifes.] ALKALIM'ETER, n. [Alkali and Gr. ;«;ALI'KE, flf/(i. Ill the same manner, form or man or plant is alive. tpov, measure.] 2. Ill a state of action degree. unextinguished vm
ALI'KE,
;
:
;
;
;
We
are all alike concerned in religion. fashioneth their hearts alike. Ps. xxxiii.
He
ALI'KE-MINDED, mind
;
but like-minded
destroyed tioii
same
the
a.
Having is more generally
;
n. [L. alimentum, Ir. alaim, ailim, olaim,
from ah,
to
to feed
or
nurse.] Tliat which nourishes food ; nutriment ; any thmg wliich feeds or adds to a substance, animal or vegetable, in natural ;
;
as,
;
sprightly
;
;
;
in force or
company were
as, the
opera
alive.
lively
;
full
of alac-
all alive.
Susceptible ; easily impressed ; having lively feehngs, as when the mind is solicitous about some event ; as, one is alive to
whatever .5.
;
unexpired
;
keep the process
Cheerful rity
4.
used.
AL'IMENT, feed
3.
is
Exhibiting motion or movuig bodies in
The
city
was
all
when
the General en
Supplying food
;
ALIMENT' ARINESS,
n. The quality of sup))lying nutriment. ALIMENT'ARY, a. Pertaining to ahiiient or food having the quality of nourishing as, alimentary particles. Tlie alimentary canal, in animal bodies, is the great duct or intestine, by which ahitients are conveyed through the body, and the useless parts evacuated. .flUmentary law, among the Romans, was a law which obliged children to support ;
;
their parents. Encyc. Ohligatinn of aliment, in Scots law, is tlie natural obligation of parents to jirovide their children. for Encyc.
it
qualifes.]
AL'KAHEST,
n.
[Arab.] universal dissolvent a menstruum capa ble of dissolving every body, which Para and Van celsus Hehnont pretended they possessed. This pretense no longer imposes on the credulity of any man. The word is sometimes used for fixed salts
A
Having the properties of
a.
alkali.
ALKALIN'ITY, stitutes
n.
The quaUty which conThomson.
an alkah.
with alkah.
a.
Alkaline
06^.
;
impregnated
JVeivton. Boyle. n. The act of render-
ing alkaline by impregnating with an alkali.
that 6. In a scriptural sense, regenerated ; born has the quality of nourishing ; that furagain. nishes the materials for natural growth ; For this my son was dead and is alive. Luke is alimental alimental ; as, chyle sap. XV. ALIMENT'ALLY, adv. So as to serve for [This adjective always follows the noun which nourishment or food. a.
AL'KALINE,
ALKALIZA'TION, alive,
tered.
ALFMENT'AL,
instrument for ascertaining the strength of allvalies, or the quantity of alkali in potash and soda. Ure.
AL'KALIZATE,
interesting to a friend.
great nutnbers.
LTOWth.
An
;
volatilized.
Encyc.
ALKALES'CENCY, A tendency to become
n.
[See Alkali.] alkaUne or a tendency to the properties of an alkaU or the state of a substance in which alkaline properties begin to be developed, or to be Ure. predominant. ;
;
AL'KALIZE,
r.
t.
[and formerly Alkali-
zate.]
To make
alkaline
;
to
perties of an alkali
AL'KANET, root
is
used
n. to
communicate the proby mixture.
to,
The
plant bugloss.
The
impart a deep red color to
oily substances, ointments, plasters,
&c. Encyc.
n. The winter cherry, a species of physalis. The plant bears a near resemblance to solanum, or nightshade. The berry is medicinal.
ALKEKEN'GI,
Chambers.
ALKEN'NA,
or
ALHEN'NA,
n.
Egyptian
privet, a species of Lawsonia. The pulverized leaves of this plant are much used by the eastern nations for staining their nails
yellow.
The powder, being
wet, forms a
for a paste, which is bound on the nails will last " night, and the color thus given several weeks. Encyc.
ALKERM'ES,
[Arab.
them
See Kermes.^
Jn pharmacy, a compound eordial, in tlio form of a confection, derived from the
kermes berries. Its other ingredients are said to be pippin-cider, rose water, sugar, ambergris, musk, cinnamon, aloes-wood,
and
pearls,
ALKER'VA,
ALL
ALL
ALL n.
leaf-gold.
Chambers. Qitj'na/. n. Arabic
by
the
sum of
sixpence
In the sense of although, as "all were it as the rest," and in the sense of just, or al the moment, as "all as his straying flock he fed," it is obsolete, or restricted to poetry. is all one is a phrase equivalent to the same thing in effect ; that is, it is wholly the same
thing. Encyc. of the All the better
name
An
It
too dear
Christi.
({uincy.
ter
;
that
>
\LL-BOUN'TIFUL,
\
\LL-CHA'N(iING,
ful
ALL-€0MM"ANDING, mand
ing;
a.
all.
Raleigh. in ev-
Complying
More.
ery respect.
ALL-€OMPO'SING,
That makes
a.
tranquil or peacefiil.
;
hending
all
a.
CompreGlanvilte.
things.
ALL-CONCEALING, a. Hiding orconcealhig
applied to persons or things. written by Mohammed, hi the dialect of the Koreish, which is the piu-est Arabic All in all is a phrase vhicli signifies, alli things to a person, or every thhig desked. but the Arabian language has suffered Thou shall be alt in all, and 1 in thee. sucli changes, since it was written, that Forever. JlfiUo7i. the language of the Alkoran is not now inWhen the words, and all, close an enumeratelligible to the Arabians themselves, withtion of particulars, the word all is either out being learnt like other dead languages. intensive, or is added as a general term to[ JViebuhr. Encyc. n. One who adheres express what is not enumerated as, a tree'
all.
Spenser.
ALL-CONQUERING,
]
That
a.
subdues Milton.
all.
;
ALL-CON'SCIOUS,
Conscious of
a.
a.
devours
;
\
That consumes
a.
all.
;
together, all at once, from somne, togeth-j Sliemitic '7J, from rhs tiHe ; Gr. oXoj See Lye under Somne. er. at once. calah, to be ended or com]deted, to ])er All in the wind, in seamen's language, is ai feet. The Welsli retains the first radical phrase denoting that the sails are parallel letter. This is radically the same word as with the course of the wind, so as to! heal ; for in Sw. hel, and in Dan. hele, signishake. Mar. Dict.i fy all, and these words are from the root of All is well is a watchman's phrase, express-i heal. See Call, Heal and tVholc] ing a state of safety. 1. Every one, or the whole number of parAll, in composition, enlarges the meaning, or ticulars. adds force to a word and it is generally 2. The whole quantity, extent, duration, more einphatical than most. In some inamount, r|uality, or degree as, all the stances, all is incorporated into words, as, wheat all tlie land all the year all the in almighty, already, always but in most strength. This word signifies then, the instances, it is an adjective prefixed to whole or entire thing, or all the parts or other words, but separated by a hyphen. which it. It ;
a.
Daring
to attempt every
Jonson.
thing.
\LL-DESTROY
ING,
a.
Destroying every Fanshaw.
thing.
ALL-DEVASTATING,
a.
Wasting every
thing.
ALL-DEVOURTNG,
Eating or consum-
a.
all.
ing
Pope.
ALL-DIMMING,
a.
Obscurmg every thing. Marston.
ALL-DISCOVERING,
a.
disclosing every thuig.
ALL-DISGRA'CED,
a.
Discovering or More.
Completely disgra-
ced.
Shak.
ALL-DISPENSTNG,
a.
Dispensing
.\LL-DIVI'NE,
o.
Supremely
excellent.
HoweU.
ALL-DIVI'NING,
ALL-DREAD ED,
a.
all
Foretelling
a.
;
compose
jiarticulars
always
Abandoned bv
ALL-ABAN'DONED,
pro|)erty.
ALL-AC€OM'PLISHED,
:
a.
all.!
Sk'elton.
ALL-ABHORRED,
Detested by
a.
a.
Shak. Fully accoin highly finish-
highest degree.
Pope.
ALL-EMBRA'CING, a.
a.
Embracing
Puttinj.'
Shak.
.
ALL-ENLIGHTENING, all
all
Crashaw. an end to all
things.
;
;
ALL-ELOQUENT,
ALL-END'ING,
This word, not only in popular language, plished whose education is but in the scriptures, often signifies, indefed or complete. initely, a large portion or number, or a ALL-ADMI'RING, a. Wholly admiring. great part. Thus, all the cattle in Egypt died all Judea and all the region round ALL-ADVISED, a. Advised by all. about Jordan all men held John as a Tf'arhurfon prophet are not to be understood in a tSLL- APPROVED, a. Approved by all. literal sense, but as including a large part More.\ or very gi'eat numbers. for all a. ALL-ATO'NING, Atonhig ma-, This word is prefixed to many other Dryden.^ king complete atonement. to their as words, enlarge signification ALL-BEA'RING, o. Producing every thing ;
Shak. a. Of perfect or unlimited efficacy or efficiency. a. Eloquent in the
ALL-EFFI"CIENT,
things.
all.
things.
Fanshaw. Dreaded by aU.
;
;
aU
things; aflfording dispensation or permission. Milton. Dryden.
|
;
oi-
Pope.
ALL-DA'RING,
;
precedes the definitive adjectives, the, my, thy, his, our, your, their ; as, all the cattle' ; all my labor all thy goods ; all his wealth ; all our families ; all your citizens ; all their
j
Constraining Drayton.
all.
ALL-CONSU'MING,
fell, nest, eagles and all. L'Estrange} striclly to the letter of the Alkoran, rejecting all comments. The Persians arc At all is a phrase much used bj^ way of en-l forcement or em])hasis, usually in negativcl generally AUioranists the Turks, Arabs, or interrogative sentences. He has no] and Tartars admit a multitude of tradiambition at all ; that is, not in the least detions. ALKUS'SA, 71. A fish of the Silurus kind, gree. Has he any property at all? All and some, in Spenser, Mason interprets, with one beard only under the chin. one and all. But from Lye's Saxon Die-; Did. ofJVaf. Hist. tionary, it appears that the phrase is aj ALL, a. awl. [Sax. eal ; Dan. al G. all Sw. ail,; W. oil or holl Aim. oil ; Ir. corruption of the Sax. e»lle cet somne, all'
;
all
all-knowing.
ALL-CONSTRAINING,
;
;
all
Crashau:
ALL-COMPREHENSIVE,
;
;
infinite
Having com-
a.
or sovereigntv over
ALL-COMPLY
;
AL'KORANIST,
of
Perpetually changShak. ALL-CHEE'RING, a. That cheers all ; that gives gavetv or cheerfulness to all. Shak.
better by the
;
;
a.
ing-
equivalent to wholly the bet-
is
is,
Perfectly bouuti-
"'
bounty.
whole difference. AL'KORAN, n. [Arab, ul, the, and koran, ALL, n. The whole number; as, aW have not the same disposition that is, all men. book. The book by way of eminence, as we say the Bible. See Koran. It is pro- 2 The whole the entire thing the aggregate amount as, our all is at stake. nounced, I believe, by orientalists, alkoAnd ].,aban said, all tliat thou secst is mine.! raion.] Gen. xxxi. Tlie book which contains the Mohammedan doctrines of faith and practice. It was This adjective is much used as a noun, and
Palma
ALL-BOUN'TEOUS,
a.
Enlightening Cotton.
things.
ALL-ENRA'GED, a. Highlv enraged. Hall. ALL-FLA'MING, a. Flaming in all directions.
ALL-FOOL'S-DAY,
n.
ALL-FORGIVING,
a.
The
Beaumont. of April.
first
Forgiving or pardoning Dryden. ALL-F6URS, n. [all and/our.] A game at cards, played by two or four persons so called from the possession ot the four honors, by one person, who is then Marston.\ said to have all fours.
as all along all bedewed all over my friend is all for amusement I love my father alt. In the ancient phrases, all too dear, all so long, this word retains its ap" propriate sense as, he thought them six pence all too dear," that is^ he thought ;
;
;
;
;
Vol.
I.
omniparous.
ALL-BEAU TEOUS, ing
all
things.
ALL-BLASTING, ing or destroying
To go on all fours is to move or walk on foiu- legs, or on the two legs and two arms. Pope.\ Beholding or see- ALL-GI\"'ER, n. The giver of all things. Milton. Drayton: a. Completely good. Dryden. Blasting aU defam- ALL-GQOD', Marston. ALL-GQOD', n. The popular name of the
o.
ALL-BEHOLDING, a. all.
Perfectly beautiful.!
a.
:
ALL ALL-RULING,
Chdwpodium bonus Henrkus.
ALL-GRA'CIOUS, a. Perfeitly ALL-GUI'DING, a. Guiding or ex.
and Sax.
[all
a.
Governing
conducting Sandys.
ALL-SAGA'CIOUS,
hal, health.]
ALL-SAINTS-DAY,
a.
Having
of perfect discernment.
;
n.
ALL-SAN€'TIFYING,
person addressed.
ALL-HALLOWS,
or
All Saints day, the
of November
first
all
a
feast dedicated to all the saints in general. n. [tid, in Sax., is
ALL-HALLOW-TIDE, time.]
all
Gr.
sagacity
;
a.
Sanctifying the
a.
Saving
ALL-SEARCHING,
2.
Pervading South. seaching every thing. a. Seeing every tiling.
to set,
to fix, ;
1.
and
is,
and alloy ,'lllery were formerly used indifferently but 1 have recognized an entire distinction between them, ap])lying alloy to metals.]
Selden.
all.
a.
Fr.
dirtirently applied, that to make fast, to unite,
;
a feast
If'est.
ALL-SA'VING,
>.)jyu.
;
day of
first
The
allier, to alloy, Sp, ligar, seems to be directly from the i^.ligo, to bind but tliis may be the same word
things. Milton.
vhole.
n. ;
The
Shah
all.
N(jveniber, called also all hallows in honor of all the saints.
All health a phrase of salutation, expressing a wisli of all health or safety to the
ALL-HALLOW,
Praised by
a.
gracious.
all tilings.
ALL-HA'IL,
ALL
A L L Mercury ALL-PRA'ISED,
plant Good-Henry, or English
To make quiet; to pacify, or appease ; as, to allay the tumult of the passions, or to allay civil commotions. To
abate, mitigate, subdue or destroy ; allay grief or pain. Females, who soften and allay the bitterness
as, to
ALL-SEE'ING,
of adversity. Rawle. Dryden The time near All Saints, or November first. ALL-SEE'R, n. One that sees every thing. 3. To obtund or repress as acrimony as, to' ALL-HAP'Py, a. Completely happy. Shak. ALL-HE' AL, n. The popular name of sevallay the acrid qualities of a substance. ALL-SHA'KING, a. Shaking all things. 4. Formerly, to reduce the purity of; as, to eral plants. Shak. But, in this sense, alloy is allay metals. ALL-HE'ALING, a. Healbig all things. now exclusively used. [See Alloy.] Selden. ALL-SHUN'NED, a. Shunned by all. Shak. n. The .second day of n. Formerly, a baser metal mixed ALL-HELP'ING, a. Assisting all. Selden. ALL-SOULS-DAY, ALLA'Y, November a feast or solemnity held by with a finer but in this sense it is now ALL-HI'DING, a. Concealing all things. the church of Rome, to supplicate for the .
;
;
;
written
Shah.
ALL-HON'ORED, ALL-HURT'ING,
a.
Hurting
all
.
finite
a.
Liiitatmg
a.
Actuating
every More.
thing.
ALL-INFORM'ING, vital
all
by
a.
Interesting
ui
the hisliest degree.
ALL-INTERPRETING,
a.
Explaining ah Milton.
things.
ALL-JUDG'ING,
a. Judging all possesshig Rowe. the sovereign right of judging. Perfectly just. Perfectly kind or benevo;
ALL-JUST', a. ALL-KI'ND, a. lent.
ALL-KNO'WING, edge
;
thing
a.
Havuig
a.
Licensed
knowl-
all
omniscient.
Atlerhury.
ALL-LI'CENSED,
to
every Shak.
thing.
ALL-L6V'ING,
Of infinite
a.
ALL-MA'KING,
love.
onniific.
ALL-MATU'RING,
a.
Maturing
Of
a
ALL-MER'CIFUL,
all
;
Dri/den things
all
mercy or
KilUng or destroy
a.
Fanshaiv.
ing every thins.
ALL-OBE'DIENT, ALL-OBeY'ING, obedience from
all.
ALL-OBLIV'IOUS,
[See Obey.] Receiving Shak. a.
Causing
veying every thing.
ALL-TELL'ING,
without nuirmurs.
Mitford.
ALL-PENETRATING,
a.
Penetrating ev-
ery thing.
Stafford.
ALL-PER'FECT, having
all
a.
Completely perfect;
perfection.
ALL-PER'FE€TNESS, of the whole
;
.\LL-PIER'CING,
a.
ALL-POW'ERFUL, tent.
n.
The
perfection
More.
entire perfection.
Piercuig every thhig. Marston. a.
Almighty
;
where or over
omnipo Smfl.
a.
Triumphant eveJonson.
all.
Shak.
adored by
a.
Of
a.
infinite
;
AL'LANITE,
n.
a.
Alluring.
ALLEe'TIVE,
n.
Allurement.
mineral
or
ALLANTOID',
n.
1.
AL'LATRATE,
v.
dog.
t.
[L. allatro.] [J^'ot used.]
v.
f.
[L. allego,
Fr. allegucr
ad and
lego, to
Sp. alegar ; Port, allegar ; It. atlegare. This is only a modified application of the Eng. lay ; L. loco, to set, or throw. See Class L g.] To declare ; to affirm ; to assert to pro;
;
;
nounce with positiveness
;
as, to alledge
a
"3. To produce as an argument, plea or excuse to cite or quote as, to alledge the authority of a judge. ALLEDG'ED, pp. Affirmed asserted, ;
;
whether as a charge or a
ALLEDG'ER,
Stubbes.
t. [Sax. alecgan, alegan, to lay, to set, to depress, lecgayi, to lay, to cast or strike down ; G. legen, D. kggen, to lay :
n.
One who
plea.
affirms or de-
clares.
ALLEDoi'ING,
Asserting
ppr.
;
averring
;
declaring.
•ALLEGA'TION, 2.
thin rion
To bark, as a ALLA'Y, V.
[Xot used.]
fact.
[Gr.
a sausage, and aSo;, form.] membrane, situated between the choand anniios in quadrupeds, and forn ing one of the membranes which invest Ed. Encyc. the fetus in those animals.
aXXas,
A
and
used.]
[J^Tot
;
named from
Mr. Allan, of Edinburgh, who first recognized it as a distinct species. It is massive, of a brownish black color, and conchoidal A sdiceous oxyd of cerium. fracture. Ure. Cleaveland. Jameson.
ALLANTOIS'
the Shak.
as,
;
or black
Chaucer.
;
A
A
ease
;
little aidi,
ALLEe'TIVE,
send
nuneral, of a brown or green color, massive, with a flat conchoidal fracture, and nearly opake, foinid in the Hartz near Elbingerode. Phillips. n.
The
white diver.
the highest worth.
AL'LAGITE,
act of quieting, or a state of rest after
;
n. ally.
ALLEDgE'
Jonson. or Milton. of
worth
[reducing by mixt-
a state of tranquillity disturbance abatement allay ment of grief.
Worshiped
all.
ALL-WOR'THY,
;
The
n.
Eliot.
a.
ALL-WOR'SHIPED,
abating
;
ALLA'YMENT,
Shak. AL'LE,
Possessed of hifinite wisSouth ALL-WIT'TED, a. Having all kinds of wit
Obscuring every
Enduring every thino
a.
Sandys Upholding all Beaumont.
ALL-WaTCH'ED, a. Watched throughout.
Kin^.
ALL-P.\'TIENT,
;
tranquillity ure. Obs.]
Sur-
Telling or divulging
ALL-TRIUMPHING, ry
;
Encompassing
every thing.
Shak a.
thing.
a.
things.
total obliv-
ion.
ALL-OBSCU'RING,
a.
[See Survey.]
ALL-SUSTA'INING,
Entirely obedient. Crashaw.
a.
a.
n.
a.
:
;
;
.ALLA'YER,
God.
ALL-SURVEY'ING,
compassion.
ALL-MUR'DERING,
pp. Layed at rest quieted tranqiulized abated [reduced by mixture. Obs.] n. He, or that, which allays. H'hitlock. ALLA'YING, ppr. Quieting reducing to
all-sufficient
the whole.
Dryden. perfect
ALLA'YED,
Hooker.
The
n.
ALL-SURROUND'ING,
ALL-WI'SE, More. dom.
Mailing or creating
a.
;
;
Hall. Sufficient to every
a.
of some mixture as, joy without allay. But alloy is now more generally used.
Complete or in
infinitelv ahle.
;
ALL-SUFFI"CIENT, Being
n.
ahilitv.
ALL-SUFFI''CIENT,
Sandys.
powers.
ALL-IN'TERESTING,
see.
all.
ALL-I'DOLIZING, a. Worshipmg any thing. ALL-SUFFI"CIENCY, Crashaw.
ALL-IM'ITATING,
which
alloy, souls of the faithful deceased. 2. That which allays, or abates the predomn. The berry of the pimento, inant qualities ; as, the allay of colors. Shak. ALL'-SPICE, a tree of the West Indies ; a spice of a J\/'eivton things. taste, and ag'reeably aro mildly pungent Shak. Also, abatement ; diminution by means matic.
Honored by
a.
3.
n.
Affirmation
positive
;
assertion or declaration. That which is affirmed or asserted that which is offered asa plea, e.xcuse or justification. ;
In ecclesiastical courts, a formal complaint, or declaration of charges.
ALLEGE. [See Alledge.] ALLEG'EABLE, a. That maybe
alledged.
Brown.
[JVot used.]
ALLE'GEAS,
or
manufactured
A LLE'GlAS,
in the
n.
A
stuflf
East Indies, of twu
ALL
ALL ALLE6'EMENT, n. Allegation. [JVbh'nuse." ALLEGHA'NEAN, a. Pertaining to the mountains ghenny.
calletl
ALLEGHA'NY,
or
Alleghany,
The
n.
Alle-
chief ridge of the
great chains of niountain.s which run from N. East to S. West through the middle and southern states of North America but, more appropriately, the main or unbroken ridge, which casts all the waters on one side to the east, and on the other side to the west. This ridge runs from Pennsylvania to Georgia, and chains extend through the U. States. This name is given also to the river Ohio, above its confluence with the Monongahela but improperly, as the Indian name of the river to its source is Ohio.
Claudite
of ad and
[Old Fr. from h.alligo, See LAege and
n.
bind.
to
Itgo,
ted
eased
;
more
;
mitiga-
ppr. Making lighter, or extenuating. n.
The
act of lightening,
allaying, or extenuating;
a lessening or
mitigation. 2.
That which lessens, mitigates or makes more tolerable; as, the .synq)athy of a friend is an alleviation of grief I have not wanted s\ich allevintinns of life, a? Dr. Johnson's letter friendship could supply. lo Mr. Hector. Boswell.
Encyc.
This use of alleviation is hardly leghimate without supplying some word expressing evil, as trouble, sorrow, &c. Without such alleviations of ihe cares or
;
See Light.]
troubles of ;
;
tolerable
ALLEVIATION,
movement
In music, a word denoting a brisk movement a sprightly jiart or strain the quickest except /7)Ts/o. Piu allegro is a still quicker
;
extenuated.
ALLE'VIATING,
[from allegro,] denotes, or time quicker than andante, but not so quick as allegro. Rousseau. Busby. ALLEGRO. [It. merry, cheerful It. leggiere ; S]). ligero ; Fr. leger, light, nimble.
;
is
rare.]
ALLEGRET'TO, in music, a
[This sense of the word
offense.
ALLEVIATED, p;>. Made lighter
;
ficiently delighted.
an
viate
rivos, pueri, sat prata biberunt.
jam Stop the currents, young men, the meadows have drank sufficiently that is, let music cease, our ears have been sufyour
:
ALLE'GIANCE,
A L L
yard. The distinction in scrijiture between a parable and an allegory, is said to be that a parable is a supposed history, and an allegory, a figurative description of real facts. An allegory is called a continued metaphor. The following fine in Virgil is an example of an allegory.
kimU, one of cotton, the other of various Enci/c. plants which are spun lik«; flax.
life.
ALLEVIATIVE,
;
n.
That which
mitigates.
[N'ot in use.]
AL'LEY, n. al'ly. [Fr. o//ee, a passage, from League.] Rousseau. Encyc. alter to go ; Jr. alladh. The tie or obligation of a subject to his movement. Literally, a passuig or going.] Prince or government; the duty of fidelity ALLELU'I.'VII, n. [Heb. H'-Mn, praise to Jah.] to a king, government or state. 1. A walk in a a narrow passage. Every garden a word used to denote 2. A narrow native or citizen owes nllegiance to the Praise to Jehovah passage or way in a city, as j)ious joy and exultation, chiefly in hynuis distinct from a public street. government under wliich he is born. and anthems. The Greeks retained the :l. A ])lace in London where stocks are This is called natural or implied allegiance, word in their E>.f'A.fii Irj, praise to lo which arises from the connection of a per Ash. bought and sold. son with the society in which he is born, probably a corruption of Jah. The Ro- ALLIACEOUS, a. [L. aUium, garlic.] mans retained the latter word in their and his duty to be a faitliful subject, inde Pertaining to album, or garlic having the lo triumphe. of of Barton. pendent any ex|>ress ])romise. Express properties garUc. ;
;
;
;
allegiance,
is
that obligation
ceeds from an express promise, or oath of fideUty.
Local or temporary allegiance is due from an alien to the goverinneut or state in which
he
in
;
<,
;
adv.
;
In a figurative
n.
The quaUty
ther place, a stranger. The Welsh allis thus rendered, and this seems to be the original word. Owen, M'elsh Diet.
of
v.
t.
to turn into allegory
To form an ;
from the same root as
giance
1.
perhaps
4.
man
being allegorical.
AL'LEGORIZE,
Belonging to the M: Germans, and to Alemannia,
;
bv way of allegory.
ALLEGOR'icALNESS,
[Fr. alliance, from allier, Her, to tie or unite, from L. ligo, Gr. %vyou; Sp.alianza; Vort. alianen ; It. alleanza ;
allegory the
;
as, to allegorize
history of a people.
Campbell. 2. To understand in an allegorical sense as, when a passage in a Avriter may be imderstood literally or figuratively, lie who gives it a e sense is said to figurath allegorize it. AL'LEGORIZE, v.i. To use allegory; as, a man mav allegorize, to i)lease his fancy.
n.
liege, league, alleclass L. g.] ; The relation or union between families, their country. The word is generally supcontracted by marriage. Dryden. posed lo be composed of aH and manni, all 2. The union between nations, contracted by men. Cluver, j). G8. This is iirobably an compact, treaty or league. error. The word is more probably com- 3. The treaty, league, or compact, which is posed of the Celtic all, other, the root of the instrmnent of confederacy someLatin alius and man, place ; one of anotimes the act of
describing by resemblances.
manner
ALLI'ANCE,
Diet, of Music.
dancing.
aimi, ancient
ALLE'6IANT, a. Loyal. [JVot used.] Shak. ) a. In the manner of alALLEGOR'l€, ALLEGOR'leAL, legory figurative
ALLEGOR'l€ALLY,
n.
ALLEMAN'Nl€,a.
Blackstone.
resides.
A
slow air in common time, or grave, solemn music, with a slow movement. Also a brisk c!ance, or a figure
which pro- ALLElMAND',
The name, Memanni, seems to have been fii'st given to the Germans who invaded Gaul ui the reign
;
of Augustus. Clurer, Germ. Jlntiq.
confederating. or connection of interests between persons, famihes, states or corpora-
Any union
an
tions; as,
alliance
between church and
state. 5.
The persons or parties allied as, men or Slates may secure any alliances in their ;
"
Addison. power. an eagle with- ALLI'.^NT, n. An ally. [Xol used.] out beak or feet, with expanded wings ff'otton. denoting Imiierialists vanquished and dis- ALLI"CIENCY, n. [Lai. allicio, ad and armed. lacio G. locken ; D. lokken ; Sw. locka ; Encyc. AL'LEGORIZED, pp. Turned into allegory, ALLEVEU'R, n. A small Swedish co'in, Dan. lokker ; L. allecto, elicio. Class or understood allegorically. value about a cent. Encyc. AL'LEGORIZING, /)/ir. Turning into alle- ALLE'VIATE, v. I. [Low L. tdlevio ; ad and The power of attracting any thing; attracFr. lever ; It. tion magnetism. [Little used.] Glanville. gory, or understandhig in an allegorical leva, to raise, levis, light
ALLER'ION,
n. In heraldry,
;!
;
;
sense.
AL'LEGORY,
A
n.
levare, to raise ; Sp. llevar, to carry, levantar, to raise, and levante, a rising, and the eastern coasts of the Mediterranean, the east, so called from the rising of the sun, like orieyital, from orior, to rise ; Sa.x See Lift.] hlijian, to be eminent.
[Gr. aXKt;yofta, of aM.05, to speak, from ayopa, a
other, and ayopfuu, forum, an oration.]
figurative sentence or discourse, in which the principal subject is described by anotlier subject
resembling
it
in its
properties The principal subject is thus kept out of view, and we are left to collect the intentions of the writer or .speaker, by the resenibl.ince of the seconis dary to the primary subject.
and circumstances.
Allegory
words what hieroglyphics are iji paintWe have a fine example of an allein the eightieth psalm, in which God';* i-Joosen people are represented by a vineui
ing.
gory
1.
To make light
sense, as
it
but always in a figurative ; is not applied to material ob-
;
ALLI'CIENT,
n.
That which
ALLI'ED,
Connected by marriage,
pp.
treatv or similitude.
AL'LIGATE, bind.
See
attracts.
Robinson.
[.Yot used.]
v.
f.
[See Ally.]
ad and
[L. alligo, .illegiance, Liege,
ligo, to
League.]
To tie together to unite by some tie. ALLIGA'TION, n. The act of tying :
to-
To remove in part to lessen, miti- gether; the state of being tied. [Little , gate, or make easier to be endured ; apused.] rule of arithmetic, for finding the plied to evils ; as, to alleviate sorrow, pain, 2. price or value of coinpoimds consisting of ingrecarp, punishment, a burden, &c.; opposed to aggravate. dients of different values. Thus if a quanTo make less by representation ; to lessen tity of sugar, worth eight cents the pound, the magnitude or criminality ; to extenuand another quantity worth ten cents, are ate ; applied to moral conduct ; as, to allemixed, tlie question to be solved by alliga-
jects.
;
A
ALL Hon
is,
wliat
is tlie
ALL
value of
tlie
mixture by
the pound. Alligation is of two lands, medial and alternate ; medial, wlien the rate of a mixture is sought from the rates and quantities of the simjjles alternate, when the quantities of the simples are sought from the rates of the simples, and the rate of the mixture.
ALL
opake mineral, of a grayish, yellowish or reddish color, found in Norway con-
ALLOT'TING,
sidered as a variety of garnet. Its name is said to be given to it, as expressive of its changes of color before the blowpipe Gr. Cleaveland. aM.ni, other, and ;tpoia, color.
ALLOW,
ive,
;
n.
[L. allocutio, of
ad
n.
[Properly allagarto, from
Spanish and Portuguese
the
laf^arto,
lizard ; L. lacerta. The Latin word to be connected with lacertus, the
See Eloquence.]
loquor, to speak.
1.
;
3.
;
4.
:
;
;
;
•3.
;
;
;
Luke xi. Rom. vii. compensation :
;
3.
;
7.
afford, or grant as a
allow a dollar a day for wages. abate or deduct as, to allow a for tare or leakage.
To
;
To ])crmit to grant license to allow a son to be absent. ;
ALLOWABLE, as lawful,
not forbid
sum
as,
;
to
That may be pennittei or admitted as true and proper a.
•,.
not unlawful or unproper as. a certain degree of freedom is allowable
among
;
;
;
friends.
-VLLOWABLENESS, being allowable
;
The
n.
lawfulness
quality
of
exemptioti
;
from prohibition, or impropriety. South. ALLOWABLY, adv. In an allowable manner with proprietv. Loioth. ALLOWANCE, n. the act of allowing or ;
idinitting. 2.
Permission tion
3.
;
license
;
approbation
sanc-
;
usually slight approbation. Locke. Skak. Admission assent to a fact or state of Hooker. things a granting. ;
;
;
;
4. 5.
Freedom from
restraint indulgence. That which is allowed a portion appointa stated quantit}', as of food or drink : hence, in seamen^s language, a limited quantity of meat and drink, when provisions fall short. Abatement deduction as, to make an allowance for the inexperience of youth. Established character; reputation; as, a Obs. Shak. pilot of approved allowance. To put upon allowv. t. ance to restrain or limit to a certain or of drink. quantity provisions
6.
;
;
7.
;
;
ed
;
;
To
as, to (J.
;
A
g.]
;
1.
"l.
L
To grant, give or yield as, to allow a servant his liberty to alloiu a pension. To admit as, to allow the truth of a ])roposition to allow a claun. To admit to own or acknowledge ; as, to alloiv the right of the President to displace officers. To approve, justify or sanction. Ye allow the deeds of your fathers. ;
aiu\
a
seems
;
See Lay. Class.
alluer.
;
ALLO€U'TION,
The act or manner of speaking to, or of addressing in words. An address a formal address as, of a arm General to his troo])s a Roman term, and the animal may be named from the rarely used in English. Addison. Encyc. re.semblance of his legs to arms.] ALLO'DIAL, a. Pertaining to allodium The American crocodile. This animal is of freehold free of rent or service held the lizard genus, having a long naked independent of a lord paramount oppo sed to feudal. Blackstone. body, four feet, with five toes on the fore feet, and four on the hind, arm-l ALLODIAN is sometimes used, but is not ed with claws, and a serrated tail. The well authorized. Cowel mouth is very large, and furnished with ALLO'DIUM, n. [Fr. alleu, contr. word. the skin is brown, tough, sharp teeth According to O'Brien, in his Focaloir, or and, on the sides, covered with tubercles. Dictionary of the Irish, this word is the The largest of these animals grow to the Celtic allod, ancient. According to Pontlength of seventeen or eighteen feet. They op])idan, it is composed of all and odh, live in and about the rivers in warm cliall-property, or whole estate.] eat land which is the absolute mates, fish, and sometimes catch hogs, Freehold estate on the shore, or dogs which are swimming. property of the owner; real estate held In winter, they burrow in the earth, which, absolute independence, without being subenter work under water and to they upwards,! ject any rent, service, or acknowledgment to a superior. It is thus opposed to lying torpid till si)riiig. The female lays a| In England, there is no allodial great number of eggs, which are deposited find. in the sand, aiid left to be hatched by the land, all land being held of the kin heat of the sun. but in the United States, most lands are Encyc. n. West India allodial. ALLIGATOR-PEAR, fruit, resembling a pear in shape, from one ALLONtiE', n. allunj'. [Fr. allonger, to to two pounds in weight, (Laurus Persea lengthen, to thrust, allonge, lengthened, of «rf and long.] Linne.) It contains within its rind a which 1. A a thrust made by yellow butyraceous substance, ])ass with a sword when the fruit is perfectly ripe, constitute.' steppnig forward and extending the arm an agreeable food. a term used in fencing, often contracted Encyc. ALLIG'ATURE, n. See Ligature, which is into lunge. the word in use. 2. A long rein, when a horse is trotted ui the Johnson. ALLI'NEMENT, )!. [Fr. alignement, a row, hand. a squaring, from ligne, line L. linea.] ALLOO', V. t. or i. To incite dogs by a call A reducing to a hne or to a square a state Phillips. of being in squares, in a line, or on a level [See the correct word, Halloo.] a line a row. Asiat. Res. Columbiad. AL'LOPHANE, n. [Gr. awoj, other, and A.L'LIOTH, Ji. A star in the tail of the great $atwo, to appear.] bear, much used for fincUng the latitiule at A mineral of a blue, and sometimes of a sea. Encyc. green or brown color, which occurs niasIt gelatiniALLISION, n. allizh'un. [L. allido, to dash .sive, or in imitative shapes. or strilie against, of ad and terfo, to hurt zes in acids. Ure. D. leed, a Allophane is a variety of clay, occurring by striking ; Ir. leas, a sore hurt D. beleedigen ; Ger. beleidigen, to hurt in amorphous, botryoidal or reniform Fr. blesser, to hurt. Lado forms its parmasses. Cleaveland. Class. L d. L s.] ticiple Icesus. ALLOT', t).<. [otadanilot; Sax. Mot. See A striking against as, the allision of the sea Lot.] Woodward. 1. To divide or (Ustribute by lot. against the shore. ALUTERA'TION, n. [L. ad and litera, a 2. To distribute, or jiarcel out in parts or porlettei-. tions or to distribute a share to each inThe repetition of the same letter at the bedividual concerned. ginning of two or more words immediately 3. To grant, as a portion to give, assign or each or short at interother, succeeding appoint in general. vals as/and g in the following line : Let every man be contented with that Fields ever fresh, and groves forever green. which providence allots to him. ALLIT'ERATIVE, a. Pertaining to, or ALLOT'MENT, n. That which is allotted; consisting in, alliteration. a share, jiart, or portion granted or disALLOeA'TION, n. [L. ad and locatio, a tributed that which is assigned by lot, or
ALLIGA'TOR,
ppr. Distributing by lot ; giving as portions; assigning. V. t. [Fr. alhuer, from louer ; L. to loco, W. llogi ; Norm. lay, set, place
;
;
;
;
ALLOWANCE, ;
Distress compelled allowance his crew.
tlie
captain of the ship to
;
;
;
;
;
ALLOW'ED, ^p. sented to
admitting
lish
Exchefiuer.
AL'LOCHROITE,
[See Allow.] Chambers. n.
A
ALLOT'TED, pp. ed
Johnson. mass-!
An amorphous,
pain, portion or place appropriated. In a field, there is an allotment for olives.
;
allotment
;
but
Distributed by
;
;
;
Granting; permitting; deapproving mdulging
V.
;
;
t.
base metals with gold or silver, to league or confederate Port. id. It. legare. observe that alloy and league, alliance, ally, are from the same root. Class L g.] To reduce the piuily of a metal, by mixing with it a portion of one less valuable as, to alloy gold with silver, or silver with ;
1.
We
;
;
copper.
To mix metals. To reduce or abate by
Lavoisier. mixture ; as, to broome. 3. lot ; grantalloy pleasure with misfortunes. "2.
ALLOY',
assigned.
ALLOT'TERY
;
;
by the act of God. 2.
permitted asapjiroved indulged ;
[Fr. allier, to unite or mix ; L. alligo, ad and ligo, to bind Gr. 'Kvyoa ; Sp. ligar, to tie or bind, to alloy or mix
ALLOY',
;
;
;
abated.
ducting.
;
See Local.] placing, from locus, ])lace. act of putting one thing to another hence its usual sense is the admission of an article of account, or an allowance made upon an account ; a term used in the Eng-
;
ALLOWING, /Jjon
;
The
;
appointed
Granted
admitted
used by Shakespeare for is not authorized by usage.
n.
A
baser metal mixed with a
finer.
is
2.
The uuxture of dilTorent metals
;
any me-
ALL fallic
compound
;
common
as,
no happiness
ALLU'VIAL,
sig
1.
iiification in cliimistry. 3.
Evil mixed witli good witliout alloy.
;
2.
is
ALLOY'AGE,
n.
A L M
A L M
its
this is
[Fr. alliage,
from
oilier.]
Tlie act of alloying metals, or the mixture of a baser metal with a finer, to reduce its metals. purity the act of mixing 2. The mixture of different metals. Lavoisier. ALLOY'ED, pp. aiixed reduced in purity debased abated by foreign mixture. ALLOY'ING, ppr. Mixing a baser metal
[See Alluvion.] Pertaining to alluvion added to land by the wash of water. Washed ashore or dow^l a stream formed by a current of water; as, alluvial ores; ;
and especially on walking sticks. Many of these are preserved in the cabinets of the curious. They are called by different Kirwan. nations, rimstocks, primstaries, runstocks, n. [h. alluvia, of ad and runslaffs, clogs, &c. lava or luo, alluo, to wash. The characters used are generally the Runic ;
alluvial soil.
1.
ALLU'VION,
ALLUVIUM,
;
calendars on pieces of wood, on swords, helves of axes, and various other utensils,
a.
)
5
See Lave.]
or Gothic. Junius.
The
insensible increase of earth on a ; shore, or bank of a river, by the force of ; water, as by a current or by waves. The ; owner of the land thus augmented has a with a finer, to reduce its purity ; abating right to the alluvial earth. 2. gradual washing or can-ying of earth by foreign mixture. ALL'SPICE. [See under the compounds or other substances to a shore or bank 1.
;
ALLY', reference
;
hint-
lier,
ALLU'MINOR,
n.
allumer, to light.
[Fr.
1.
See LAmner.]
One who
upon paper or and ornament to
colors or paints
parchment, giving letters
light
and
is now ALLU'RE,
This
Coivel.
figures. written limner.
bic
Encyc. Savary. n. A weight of two pounds, used to weigh saffron in several parts of
by something that appears desira-
That which allures or apparent good held forth, or n.
;
ALHJ'RING,/J/>r. Drawing; tempting; in viting by some real or apparent good. 2. a. Inviting having the quality of attract ing or tempting.
In au alluring
The
man-
quality of allur-
ing or tempting by the prospect of some good. [Rarely used.] ji. allkzhun. [Fr. fromaWwo, Low L. See Allude.\ reference to something not exjilicitly mena suggestion, by which a hint tioned something is applied or understood to be long to that which is not mentioned, by
ALLU'SION,
cut, in India, eighty feet long, and six or 3. seven broad called also cathuri. Encyc. ;
thing not fully expressed.
South.
adv. By way of allusion by implication, remote suggestion or insin-
ALLU'SIVELY,
;
Hammond.
uation. n.
The
[Rarely used.]
See
;
A
n. [al and f fyT';, greatest.] book or collection of problems in astron
omy and geometry, dra\ni up by Ptolemy. The same title has been given to other like kind.
«.
A
fine
Encyc.
deep red ocher, with
an admixtme of purple, very heavy, dense but friable, with a rough dusty .surface It is It is the sil atticum of the ancients. austere to the taste, astringent, melting in It ii the mouth and staining the skin. used as a paint and as a medicine. Encyc.
aL'MANACK, n.
[Ar. al
and
quality of being
Johnson. (^uincy. In Portugal, a measure by which wine is of which make a pipe. Encyc. [But in Portuguese it is written almudeT]
sold, twenty-six
AL'MAtiEST,
4.
Among
lapidaries,
ahnouds
of rock crystal, used
in
candlesticks, so called
blance to this
signify pieces
adorning branch from their resem-
fruit.
Encyc.
ALMOND-FURNACE, among fin-nace in
which the
refners, is a slags of htharge, left
reduced to lead, by the help of charcoal that is, according to modern chimistry, in wliich the oxyd of lead is deoxydized, and the metal revived.
in refining sUver, are ;
n. The tree which produces the almond. The leaves and flowers resemble those of the peach, but the
ALMOND-TREE,
^i^
manacli,
manack, a calendar, or diary.] A small book or table, containing a calen dar of days, weeks and months, with the means of some .similitude which is per times of the rising of the sun and moon, Burnet. ccivcd between them. ALLU'SIVE, a. Having reference to some- changes of the moon, ecUpses, hours of
allusive.
and mighty.
;
;
ALLU'SIVENESS,
[all
;
ALMA'GRA,
enticingly.
;
a.
Might.]
works of the
;
A
ALMIGHTY,
To form
;
;
n.
only.
;
;
adv.
;
;
m
operating, as a motive to action temptation ; enticement as, the allurements of pleasure, or of honor. ALLU'RER, n. He, or that, which allures.
;
Omnipotence infipower an attribute of
;
;
ner
God
n.
or boundless
;
;
ALLU'RINGNESS,
nite
relation, as
;
;
ALLU'RINGLY,
Sp. Diet.
ALMI'GIITINESS,
L. ligo.]
between famihes by marriage, or between princes and states by treaty, league or confedeform a
;
;
real
Asia.
;
;
J,',
;
any
.\LME'NA,
match or confederate from ad and
unite, or
Egjpt, whose amuse company with
to
a relation by similitude, resem- Possessing all power omnipotent being of imlimited might being of boundless sufblance or friendship. J^Tote. This word is more generally used ui the passive form, ficiency appropriately applied to the Suas families are allied by blood or recipBeing. £reme to as Ml'GHTY, n. The Omnipotent God. powrocally, princes ally theijiselves erful states. AL'MOND, n. [Fr. amande ; It. mandola : ALLY' n. A prince or state united by treaty Sp. almendra ; Germ, mandel.] The fi-uit of the almond tree an ovate, or league a confederate. .Imes. The allies of Rome were slaves. compressed nut, perforated in the pores. It is either sweet or bitter. 2. One related by marriage or other tie but [It is popuseldom apphed to individuals, except to larly pronounced ammond.] their puldic capacity. JVicholson. Encyc. princes two near the basis of The glands ALLYING, ppr. Uniting by marriage or the tonsils,are called almonds, from their tongue, treaty. resemblance to that nut vulgularly, but AL'MA€ANTAR, n. [See Almucantar.] ALMADIE, n. A hark canoe used by the improperly, called the almotids of the ears, as they belong to the throat. Africans also a long boat used at Cali'i.
t. [Fr. leurrer, to decoy, from a lure.] To attempt to draw to to tempt by the offer of some good, real or apparent; to invite by something flattering or acceptable as, rewards allure men to l>rave danSometimes used in a bad sense, to ger. but in this sense entice is allure to evil more common. In Hosea, ii. 14, allure is used in its genuine sense in 2 Peter, ii. 18, in the sense of entice. ALLU'RED, pp. Tempted drawn, or in-
ALLU'REMENT,
To
is
occupation
singing and dancing.
[Fr. allier; reciprocal verb, s'al-
t.
translucent, sometimes transIt occurs crystahzed in the rhomdodecahedron. Phillips.
AL'ME, or AL'MA, n. Gnls in
racy.
Eiicyc,
leurre,
vited, ble.
V.
Her, to tie or unite.
at.
ing
to
[Fr.
l)arent.
;
a recent transaction.
n.
commonly
ALLUDE,
to
al-
and
In mineIt.] ralogy, precious garnet, a beautiful mineral of a red color, of various shades, sometimes tinged with yellow or blue. It is
A
mass of substances collected by V. i. [L. alltido, to smile upon or 3. The make sport with, of ad and ludo, to play ; means of the action of water. In this alluvium was found the entire skeleL d.] Sp. Port, aludir ; It. alludere. Class Buckland. To refe'r to something not directly mcntion- ton of a whale. tioned to have reference ; to liint at by ALLU'VIOUS, a. The same as alluvial, and less frequently used. remote suggestions ; as, that story alludes
ALLU'DING, ppr. Having
A maker of
n.
manack.s.
AL'MANDINE,
the earth thus added.
ofaH.]
Tooke^s Russia.
Encyc.
ALMANACK-MAKER,
longer and more compressed, the green coat is thinner and drier when ripe, and the shell is not so rugged. Miller. ALMOND-WILLOW, n. A tree with leaves of a hght green on both sides. full tide, stated festivals of churches, stated Mason from Shenstonc. terms of courts, observations on the weathThis calen- AL'SIONER, n. [See .Hms.] er, &c. for the year ensuing. dar is sometimes published on one side of An officer whose duty is to distribute charity or ahns. By the ancient canons, every a single sheet, and called a sheet-almanack The Baltic nations formerly engraved their monastery was to dispose of a tenth of its fruit is
A L O
A L O
M
A L
income in alms to the poor, and all bishto keep an almoner. ops were obliged This title is sometimes given to a chapa ship or regilain as, the almoner of ment. The Lord Almoner, or Lord High Almoner, in England, is an ecclesiastical officer, who has the forfeiture generally a bishop, of all deodands, and the goods of selfnmrderers, which he is to distribute to the
AL'OES-WOOD,
teen degrees, used to take observations of the sun, about the time of its rising or setand the variating, to find the amplitude tions of the compass. Encyc. Chambers
;
ALMU'DE,
71.
A
ALOET'IC, ALOET'IeAL,
of which twenty-six
[See Agallochum.]
Pertaming to aloe or partakmg of the
aloes
;
qualities of aloes.
ALOET'le,
wine measure
make
n.
I "• ^
in Portugal a pipe.
A medicine consisting chiefly
n.
of aloes.
ALOFT',
Port. Did.
adv. [a
and
Quincy See Lofl and
loft.
In scripture, a. tree or wood 1. Lvff.] AL'MUG, On high in the air high above the which the learned are al AL'GUM, I,S^ about ground as, the eagle soars aloft. not agreed. The most probable conjec- 2. In seamen's language, in the top at the ture is that the word denotes gummy or poor. head or on the higher yards or rigmast The Grand Almoner, in France, is the first resinous wood general. Hence on the upper part, as of a ging. and ecclesiastical dignitary, and has the super- The it translates ligna thyina, Vulgate building. Encyc intendence of hospitals. the Septuagint, ttrrought-ivood ; others, eb ALO'GIANS, 71. [a neg. and 7J>yo;, word.] 71. ren[Corrupted into amhry, aumony, bravil or pine, and the Rabbins In church history, a sect of ancient heretics, It was used for musical der it coral. bry, or aumery.] who denied Jesus Christ to be the Logos, The place where the almoner resides, or instruments, stair cases, &c. and consequently rejected the gospel of where the alms are distril>ute.oyo5.]^ Acts xxvi. Broivn. Oi softened Unreasonableness; absurdity. Ohs. 'ALMS, 11. cimz. [Sax. ahnes ; old Eng. AL'NAGE, )i. [Fr. aulnage, now an Gr. L. : arm, D. aumunes allein Fr. into u'Ktrr;, Germ, idna; ALO'NE, a. [alt and 07!e ; almesse ; Norm, almo'ignes aunage ; a cubit W. elin ; Ir. ^leleii, idle, or uilean, alleen ; Sw. allena ; Dan. a//f7ic.] D. aalmoes ; Sw. almosa ; Dan. almisse ; an elbow, a nook, or corner. See Etl.] without the presence of 1. Single ; solitary G. abnosen ; L. deemosyna : Gr. Atjjjitoswjj. another applied to a person or thing. The first appear to be from rttfu, A measuring by the ell. ^ n.
;
;
;
;
m
;
ALMONRY,
:
We
;
;
;
;
;
;
syllables
;
to pity.]
Any
the thing given gratintously to reheve money, food, or clothing, other-
AL'NAGER,
or
urer by the
ell
wise called charity. A lame man was laid
an alms
daily to ask
Acts iii. Cornelius gave much alms to the people Acts X. Tenure by free alms, or frank-almoign, in is England, is that by which the possessor bound to pray for the soul of the donor, whetlier dead or alive ; a tenure by which
AL'NAGAR, a
;
sworn
A
n.
meas whose
officer,
It is
Gen.
woolen duty was to inspect and measure This ofiice cloth, and fix upon it a seal.
jioor, as
that
applied to
man
should be alone.
follotvs its noun.]
two or more persons or
when separate fi-oni others, in a withplace or condition by themselves out company. And when they %vere aUne, he expounded all tilings to his disciples. Mark, iv. ;
Bacon
in the midst.
is
tilings,
A
wick
It
2.
Statute, 11. and 12. Will. No duty or office of this kind exists in the United States. cake of wax with the AL'NIGHT, n.
was abolished by
3.
AL'OE,
not good
ii.
[This adjective
.3.
n. al'o, plu. aloes, pronounced aloze, al'oez, in three syllables, ac-
Only.
niou whose name alone is Jehovah. Ps. Ixxxiii. most of the ancient monasteries and relicording to the Latin. [L. aloe Gr. aXorj Tills sense at first appears to be adverin England held their lands houses aloeIleb. Fr. aloe D'^HN It. Port. ; plu. gious Sp. whose name single, bial, but really is not as do the parochial clergy, and many trees.] ecclesiastical and eleemosynary establishsniitary, wilhout another, is Jehovah. agenusof monogynian hexanders To let alone is to suffer to rest to forbear ments at this day. Land thus held was Inbotany, of many species all natives of warm clifree from all rent or other service. molesting or meddling with to suffer to mates, and most of them, of the southern Bkickstone. remain in its present state. Alone, in this of Africa. which ALMS-BASKET; ALMS-BOX; ALMS- part the Mohammedans, the aloe is a phrase, is an adjective, the word to symlet let me alone it refers being omitted CHEST vessels appropriated to receive Among and in bohc plant, especially every Egypt them alone let it alone that is, suffer it alms. one who returns from a pilgrimage to to be unmolested, or to remain as it is, or 'ALMS-DEED, n. An act of charity a char Mecca, hangs it over his street door, as a let it remain by itself. itable gift. token that lie has performed the journey. ALO'NE, adv. Separately by itself. 'ALMS-FOLK, n. Persons supporting oth In Africa, the leaves of the Guinea aloe are ALO'NELY, a. or adv. Only merely ers by alms. [JVot ttserf.] Gower. 'ALMS-GIVER, n. One who gives to the made into durable ropes. Of one species singly. [JVot tised.] Bacon. are made fishing Unes, bow strings, stock- ALO'NENESS, 7i. That state which bepoor. of another The leaves of and hammocs. other. The bestowment J^Iontague. [JVot ttsed.] ings ALMS-GIVING, longs to no
and popularly
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
charity.
ALMS-HOUSE,
A
n.
house appropriated
for the use of the poor,
by the
who
species hold rain water. in mediciyie, is the inspissated juice of the aloe. The juice is collected from the leaves, which are cut and put in a tub
public.
ALMS-MEN, ALMS-PEOPLE,
I S
n. Persons supported by charity or by pubhc
provision.
AL'MU€ANTAR,
n.
A
[Arabic]
circles of the sphere passing
and when a large quantity
the vertical
is
procured,
il
series of
through the
length.]
;
exposed to the sun,
;
Fr.
boiled to a suitable consistence or it is till all the fluid part exhaled. There are several kinds sold in the shops as the socotrine aloes from So cotora, an isle in the Indian ocean the and hepatic or conunon Barbadoes aloes the fetid or caballine aloes.
is
i
;
1.
By the length lengthwise in a line with the length as, the troops marched along the bank of the river, or along the high;
;
;
wav. 1 Sam. vi. in a line, or with a progressive 2. Oiiward motion as, a meteor glides along the sky ; let us walk along. Aloes is a stimulating stomachic purgative point. when taken m small doses, it is useful for AU along signifies the w hole length through Bailey. Encyc. Johnson. the whole distance in the whole way or of a lax habit and sedentary hfe. STAFF. An instrument
center of the sun, or of a star, parallel to It is synonymous with the horizon. zenith parallel of altitude, whose common is
adv. [Sax. and-lang or ond-lang au long, le long. See Long. The Saxons always prefixed and or 07irf, and the sense seems to be, by the length, or opposite the length, or in the direction of the
ALONG',
ALOES,
are supported
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
ALMUCANTAR'S
of box or pear-tree, having
;
people
aii
arch of
fif-
I
Encyc.
length.
ALT
ALP
A L T
of an alphabet ; to form an alphabet in a Heb. n^S>' Ceh, alt, ailt, a high place hook, or designate the leaves by the letters ui)per, b;', high.] of th(! alphabet. In mnsic, a term apiilied to high notes in the ALPHABETA'RIAN, n. A learner while scale. In sculpture, (illo-relitvo, high rewWi is omitted in the A. B. C. lief, is when the figures project half or Come then, my trienci, my genius, come along. ALPHABETIC, In the order of an ) more, without being entirely detached "' Pope- ALP11ABET'I€AL, from the ground. alphabet, or in the ^ Encyc. Ch/c. Along side, in seamen's language, that is, by order of the letters as customarily ar ALTAIC, or ALTA'IAN, a. [tart, a'lathe lengtli or in a line with tlie side, signiranged. tau, perhaps a/-
;
:
;
!
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
herrings,
;
species
Bailey. worshiji. an abilominal, and some naturAL'PHUS, n. [Gr. oit^oj, white.] 3. In scripture, Christ is called the altar of alists allege it to be a different species That species of leprosy called vitiligo, m Christians, he being the atoning sacrifice from the shad. Encyc. Diet, of N'at. Hist. which the skin is rough, with white spots. for sin. ALOUD', adv. [a and loud ; Sax. gehlyd, We have an altar, whereof they have no Quincy. clamor. See Loud.] o. [L. alpinus, from Alpes.] AL'PINE, Heb. xiii. right to eat, who serve tabernacles. Loudly with a loud voice, or great noise. 1. Pertaining to the Alps, or to any lofty AL'TAR-CLOTH, n. A cloth to lay upon Ciy aloud, spare not. Isa. Iviii. elevated. mountain very high an altar in churches. Gr. L. n. white ALP, ALPS, aX(f>o;, 2. Growing on liigli mountains [Qu. as, alpine .\L'TAR-PIECE, n. A painting placed The Celts called all high mounalbus. Milton. Thomson. over the altar in a church. h'arton. plants. Cluver. tains alpes or olbe. Thucydides AL'PINE, n. A kind of strawberry grow- AL'TAR-WISE, adv. Placed in the manmentions a castle, mthe territory of Argos, hills. on an ner of altar. Howell. ing lot\v situated on a hill and called Olpas or Olp. AL PIST, or AL'PIA, n. The seed of the aL'TARAgE, n. The profits arising to Lib. 3. Ca. 105. Pelloutier, Hist, des Celfox-tail a small seed, used for feeding priests from oblations, or on account of The derivation of the tes, Liv. 1. 15. birds. the altar. Also, in law, altars erected in Encyc. word from aJ.^05, white, is therefore doubt- AL'QUIER, )i. A measure in Portugal for virtue of donations, before the reformaIn Ir. or Gaelic, ailp is a huge mass or ful. dry things, as well as liquids, containing tion, within a parochial church, for the half an ainuide or about two gallons. It lump.] purpose of singuig a mass for deceased A high mountain. The name, it is supposed, is called also Cantar. Port. Diet. friends. was originally given to mountains whose AL'QUIFOU, n. A sort of lead ore, which, .\L'TARIST, or ALTAR-THANE, Encyc. n. In and hence were covered with snow, tops when broke, looks like anthnony. It is old laws, an appellation gi^en to the priest of appropriately applied to the mountains foimtl in Cornwall, England used by also a to whom the altarage belonged Swisserland; so tliat by Alps is generally potters to give a green varnish to their Ci/c. chaplain. understood the latter mountains. But gewares, and called ])otters ore. A small AL'TER, v. t. [Fr. alterer ; Sp. alferar ; It. ographers apply the name to any high mixture of manganese gives it a blackish alterare ; from L. alter, another. See mountains. Pinkerton. hue. Alien. Alter is supposed to be a contracEncyc. .\LPAG'NA, n. An animal of Peru, used ALREAD'Y, adv. alred'dy. [all and ready. tion of a'f.xoitpfios, alienus, of 0W.0; and as a beast of burden ; the Camelus Paco See Ready.] irifioi.] of Linne, and the Pacos of Pennant. to make differ1. To make some change in Literally, a state of complete preparation Diet. ofjVat. Hist. ent in some particular to vary in some but, by an easy deflection, the sense is, at AL'PHA, Ji. [Ileb. fji'js an ox, a leader.] this time, or at a specified time. degree, without an entire change. Mat. xvii. The first letter in the Greek alphabet, anElias is come already. Aly covenant will I not break, nor aller the Ex. i. Ps. Ixxxix. Josepli was in Egypt already. thing that has gone out of my hps. swering to A, and used to denote first or or materially as, to It has reference to ])a.st time, but may be 2. To change entirely beginning. In general, to alter is to alter an opinion. 1 am Alpha and Omega. Rev. i. used for a fiiture past as, when you shal As a numeral, it stands lor one. It was forchange partiall)- to change is more genearrive, the business v\ill be aiready com been completed ai rally to substitute one thing for another, merly used also to denote chief ; as, Plato l)leted, or will have was the Alpha of the wits. or to make a material diflerence in a thing. ready. AL'PHABET, n. [Gr. 0.%^ and BijT-a, A aL'SO, adv. [all and so. Sax. eat and swa; AL'TER, v. i. To become, hi some respects, to varj' and JS.] different a*, the weather alters eat, all, the whole, and swa, so.] The letters of a language arranged in the Likewise in like manner. ahiiost daily. The law wliich altereth not. Dan. vi. the series of letters Where your treasure is, there will your heart customary order n. The quaUty of being which form the elements of speech. be also. Mat. xvi. AL'TERABILITY, AL'PIL\BET, V. t. To arrange in the order ALT or AL'TO, a. [It. from L. alius, high susceptible of alteration. It is
pea.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
ALT
A L T AL'TERABLE, ferent
;
that
Tliat
a.
may
may become
ALT
cutting line the one below the first parallel, and the other above the second.
dif-
;
vary.
AL'TERABLENESS,
n. Tlie quality of Johnson variableness. In heraldry, the first and fourth quarters, ; and the second and third, are usually of .•kL'TERABLY, adv- In a manner that may be altered, or varied. the same nature, and are called alternate AL'TERAGE, n. [From alo, to feed.] quarters. The breeding-, nourishing or fostering of a n. That which happens by child. Sir J. Davies. But this is not an turns with something else ; vicissitude. word. Prior. English
ailniitting alteration
ALTERN'ATE,
.aL'TER ANT,
a.
;
ing.
Ai'TERANT,
AL'TERNATE,
Altering gradually chang
A
?!.
See Alter. With the accent on the second syllable, the participle alternating can hardly be
medicine which, with
out a sensible operation, gradually corrects the state of tlie body and changes it from a diseased to a healthy condition. An al terative.
v.
t.
[L. alterno.
pronounced.] To perform by turns, or in succession to cause to succeed by turns to change one Quinai. thing for another reciprocally ; as, God
Encyc.
;
;
and an annual stalk rising four or five feet. It abounds with mucilage, and is used as an emollient.
Encyc.
ALTHO'UGH,
allho', obs. verb, or used only in the Imperative, [all and though ; from Sax. thah, or theah ; Ir. daighim, to Ger. doch ; D. dog ; Sw. dock, and give endoch ; Dan. dog, though. See Though.] Grant all this be it so allow all suppose that; admit all that; as, "although the fig-tree shall not blossom." Hab. iii. That is, grant, admit or sujipose what follows " the It is a fig-tree shall not blossom." transitive verb, and admits after it the definitive Ma<— although that the fig-tree shall not blossom but this use of the verb, ;
;
;
;
—
;
The word may
has been long obsolete.
be defined by notwithstanding, non obstanalternates good and evil. [L. altemtio.] The act of making ditlerent, or of varying i-. ». To happen or to act te ; as nut opposing may be equivalent to in some particular an admitting or supposing. by turns; as, the flood and ebb tides ofteraltering or partial n. [L. altus, high, and nnte with each other. change ; also the change made", or the loss or acquisition of qualities not essential to 2. To follow reciprocally in place. loquor, loquens, speaking.] each the form or nature of a thing. Thus a with oth-i Diflerent species alternating Lofty speech ; ponqious language. tTirwan.l cold substance suffers an alteration when n. [L. altus, high, and Gr. adv. In reciprocal sucit becomes hot. &ee Measure and Mode.,\ Hitfov, measure. cession by turns, so that each is succeed- An instrument for a. altitudes
ALTERA'TION,
«.
AL'TERNATE,
;
ALTIL'OQUENCE, ALTIM'ETER,
ALTERN'ATELY,
AL'TERATIVE, having the
Causmg
power
v.
i.
[L.
altercor,
alterco,
from atte}-, another.] contend in words to dispute with heat or anger to wrangle.
To
ed by that which
succeeds, as night lows day and day follows night.
to alter.
n. A medicuie winch, without sensible operation, gradually in duces a change in the habit or constitution and restores healtliy functions. This word is more generally used than alterant.
AL'TERATIVE,
AL'TERCATE,
;
alteration;
;
ALTERN'ATENESS, AL'TERNATING,
zeal,
;
controversy 2.
wrangle.
AL'TERN, 1.
of alter, another.] one succeeding another
a. [h. alternus,
Acting by turns alternate,
;
which
;
is
the
word
generally
used.
In chryxtalography, exhibiting, on two an upper and a lower part, feces which alternate among themselves, but which, when the two parts are compared Cleaveland. correspond with each other. .iltei-n-base, in trigonometry, is a term used in distinction from the true base. Thus in oblique triangles, the true base is the sum of the sides, and then the difference of the sides is the altern-base or the true base is the difference of the sides, and then the sum of the sides is the altern-base.
2.
parts,
;
Enctic.
AL'TERNACY, by turns.
«.
Performance or actions
[Little tised.]
ALTERN'AL, a. Alternative. [Little uxed.] ALTERN'ALLY, adv. By turns. [Utile May.
used.]
ALTERN'ATE, 1.
a.
[L. alternatiis.]
Beingby turns one following the other ;
succession of time or place
;
in
hence recip-
rocal.
And
bid alternate passions
fall
and
rise.
Pope.
In hotany, branches and leaves are alterwhen they rise higher on opposite come out singly, and follow in gradual order. Encyc. Lee. Alternate alligation. [See Alligation.] Alternate angles, in geometry, the internal made a line cutting two paralangles by lels, and lying on opposite sides of the
2.
nate,
sides alternately,
n. The reciprocal sue cession of things, in time or place the act of following and being followed in succession as, we observe tlie alternation of day and night, cold and heat, sunnner and winter. The different changes or alterations of orders, in numbers. Thus, if it is required ;
ALTIM'ETRY, altitudes by
The
n.
art
of ascertaining
means of a proper instrument,
and by trigonometrical principles without fol-
lowing by turns.
ALTERNA'TION,
;
;
ppr. Performing or
by geotaking metrical principles, as a geometrical quadrant.
The
n.
sion.
ALTER€A'TlON, n. [h. altercatio.] Warm contention in words dispute carried heat or anger
fol-
quality of being alternate, or of following in succes-
;
on with
it
actual mensuration. )!. A money of account in Russia, value three kopecks, or about three cents also a lake in Siberia, ninety miles yn
AL'TIN,
;
Tooice.
length.
ALTIN'€AR,
A
Encyc.
n. species of factitious salt or powder, used in the fiision and purification of metals, prepared in various ways.
[See Tincal.] Encyc. ALTIS'ONANT, ? a. [L. altus, high, and be rung ALTIS'ONOl'S, ^ sonans, sountliug; sonus, multiidy the numbers 1, 2, 3, sound.] 4, 5, 6, continually into one another, and High sounding, lofty or pompous, as lanthe last product is the number required. guage. Evelyn. This is catied permutation. AL'TITUDE, n. [L. altittido, of alius, high, 3. The answer of the and a common termination, denoting state, congregation speaking condition or manner.] alternately with the minister. 4. Alternate performance, in the choral 1. Space extended the upward higlith sense. Mason. elevation of an object above its foundaALTERN'ATIVE, a. [Fr. alternatif.] tion as, the altitude of a mountain, or column or the elevation of an object or Offering a choice of -two things. ALTERN'ATIVE, n. That wliich may be place above the surface on which we chosen or omitted a choice of two things, stand, or above the earth as, the altitude so that if one is taken, the other must be of a cloud or a meteor or the elevation of left. one object above another as, of a bird Thus, when two things offer a choice of one only, the two things are called alterabove the top of a tree. natives. In strictness, then, the word can 2. The elevation of a jioint, a star, or other not be applied to more than two things, object above the horizon. This is true or and when one thing only is offered for apparent altitude true, when taken from it is said there no is alternative. rational or real horizon choice, the apparent, Between these alternatives there is no midwhen taken from the sensible, or ajiparent dle ground. Cranch, horizon. ALTERN'ATIVELY, adv. In the manner 3. Figuratively, high degree superior e.\of alternatives in a maimer that admits cellence highest point of excellence. the choice of one out of two things. He is proud to the altitude of his virtue. Shak. ALTERN'ATIVENESS, n. The quality or state of being alternative. The altitude of the eye, in perspective, is a ALTERN'ITY, n. Succession by turns: right line let fall from the eye, pei-pendicalternation. ular to the geometrical plane. Encyc. ALTHE'A, n. [Or. axSoia, from a,7,9u, or Meridian altitude is an arch of the meridaXBaivui, to heal.] ian between the horizon and any star or In botany, a genus of monameridian. on the polyandrian ])oinf called in Eng- ALTIV'OLANT, a. [L. altus, liigh, and vodelphs, of several species lish marsh-mallow. lans, flying.] Tlie conmion species has a perennial root, Flyuig high. to
on
know how many changes can .six
bells,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
M
A
A L U
A M A
Pertaining to alum or A. M. stand also for Anno Mundi, in tin year of the world. Alto and Basso, high and low, in old law. alumina, or partaking of the same properties. AM, the first person of the verb to be, in tluteiiiis used to signify a snhinission of all differences of every kind to urhitration ALU'MINUM, n. The name given to the indicative mode, present tense. Sax. com Gr. n/xi Goth, im ; Pers. am. AL'TO-0€TA'VO. [It.] supposed metallic base of alumina. I AM that I AM. An ortave higher. Dami. Ex. iii. AI/TO-RELIE'VO. [It.] AL'UMISII, a. Having the nature of aluni; A'MA, or HA'MA, n. [D.aam, a vessel.] somewhat resembling alum. In church affairs, a vessel to contain wine fbiHigh relief, in sculpture, is the |(rojertion of a figure lialf or more, without being en ALUM-SLATE, n. A mineral of two spethe eucharist also, a wine measure, as v cies, connnon and glossy. Cyc. tirely detached. a cask, pipe, &:c. AL'TO-RIPIE'NO. [It.] ALUM-STONE, n. The" siliceous subsid- AMABILITY, n. [\.. amaUlis, fromEncyc. amo. Tlie tenor of the great chorus, which sings phate of alumina and potash. Cleaveland. to love.] A species of leather- Loveliness and plays only in particular places. Encyc. ALU'TA, n. [L.] the power of pleasing, or rather AL'TO-VIOLA. [It.] stone, soft, pliable aud not laminated. the combination of agreeable quahties A small tenor viol. Quincy. which win the affections. AL'TO-VIOLINO. [It.] ALUTA'TION, n. [L. aluta, tainted leath- AMAD'AVAI), 7!. A small curious Taylor. bird ol' small tenor violin. er.] the size of the crested wren the upper ALTOGETH'ER, adv. [all and together. The tanning of leather. part of the body is brown, the prime feathbee a Ji. See Together.] alveare, AL'VE.\RY, [L. alveanum, ers of the wings black. hive, from alvus, the belly.] Wholly entirely completely ; without exDiet. ofJVat. Hist. The hollow of the external ear, or bottom ception. AMADET'TO, n. A sort of pear, so called, of the concha. Every man at his best estate is altogether (^uincy. it is said, from a person who cultivated it. Ps. xxxix. a socket > vanity. a. alveolus, AL'VEOLAR, [L. Skinner. AL'UDEL, n. [a and lulum, without lute. AL'VEOLARY, ^ fi-om alveus, a hollow vesAMAD'OGADE, n. A .small beautiful bird Lwiier.] sel.] in Peru the upper part of its body and In chimistry, aludels are cartliern pots will Coiuaining sockets, hollow cells or pits pera wings are of lively green, its breast red, out bottoms, tluit the)' may be exactly fittaining to .sockets. Anatomy. and its belly white. Diet. Hist. ted into each other, and used in sublimaVL'VEOLATE, a. [L. alveolatus, from al- AM'ADOT, 71. A sort of pear. ofJVat. Johnson. tions. At till! bottom of the furnace is a veus, a hollow vessel.] n. AM'ADOU, variety ofthe l)oIetus igniapot containing the matter to be sublimed, Deeply pitted, so as to resemble a honey found on old ash and other trees. rius, and at the top a head to receive the volacomb. Martyn. Urr. tile matter. (juincy. Encyc. ALVEOLE, ? ri e , 1 This is written also amadou', and called fcfacA; "• ''"" °f "'""'s-l AL'L'M, n. [h. alumen.] AL'VEOLUS, \ ^^txnd pyrotechnical spunge, on account match, triple sulphate of alumina and potassa 1. A cell in a bee hive, or in a fossil. of its inflanunabihty. Cyc. Tliis substance is white, transparent and 2. The socket in tlie which a tooth is jaw, AMA'TN, adv. [Sax. a and magn, force, fixed. very astringent but seldom found pure See May, Might.] strengtli. or crystahzed. Tliis salt is usually pi'e- •3. A sea fossil of a conic figure, composed of With or violence force, ; strength violently a number of cells, like bee-hives, joined pared by roasting and lixiviating certain furiously suddenly at once. clays containing pyrites, and to the lye by a pipe of conununication. Encyc. What, when we fled amain. Milton. adding a certain quantity of potassa the AL'VEOLITE, n. [L. alveolus, and Gr. Let go amain, in seamen's language, or strike salt is then obtained by crystalization. XiOof.] is to let fall or lower at once. Alum is of great use in medicine and the In natural history, a kind of stony polypiers, amain, Mar. Did. In medicine, it is used as an astrin arts. of a globular or hemispherical shape AMAL'GAM, n. [Gr. .uaXoy^a, fi-om juaxaauw, internally, in hemoptoe, diarrhea, formed by munerous concentric beds, each gent to soften. Its usual derivation is certainly as a and dysentery externally, styptic composed of a union of httle cells. erroneous.] Diet, of Xat. Hist. 1. applied to bleeding vessels, and as an esmixture of merctn-y or quicksilver witli charotic. In the arts, it is used in dyeing AL'VINE, a. [from alvus, the belly.] another metal any metalUc alloy, of which 10 fix colors in making candles, for hard to or the intestines. belly Belonging mercury forms an essential constituent the tallow in for ening tanning, restoring jDari*t)i. part. Cyc. tlie cohesion of skins. ALWAR'GRIM, n. The spotted plover, 2. A mixture or comjioimd of diflferent Wehster^s Manual. Encyc. Fourcroy. Charadrius Apricanus. Pennant. Burke. things. ALUM-EARTH, n. A massive mineral, of AL'WAY or AL'WAYS, adv. [all and way ; A3IALGAMATE, i-. t. To mix quicksilver a blackish brown color, a dull luster, and Sax. eal, and iceg, way properly, a going with another metal. Gregory uses amalsoft consistence. Ure. at all goings hence, at all times.] gamize. AL'UMIN, ) n. An earth, or earthy sub- 1. all time Perpetually throughout as, God 2. To mix different tilings, to make a comALU'MINA, \ stance, which has been conis always the same. pound to unite. sidered to be elementary, and called pure 2. Continually without variation. ABIAL'GAMATE, v. i. To mix or unite in (lay but recently, chimical experiments i do nlway those things which please him an amalgam to blend. liave given reason to beheve it to be a John viii. Mat. xxviii. AaiAL'GAMATED, pp. Mixed with quickmetalHc oxyd, to the base of which has 3. Continually or constantly during a certain silver; blended. been given the name aluminum. This period, or regularly at stated intervals. metallic base however has not been obppr. Mixing quicksilMephibosheth shall eat bread alway at my taver with another metal compounding. tained in such a state as to make its proble. 2 Sam. ix. AMALGAMA'TION, n. The act or operaperties susceptible of examination. Alum- 4. At all convenient times regularly. tion of mixing mercury with another ina is destitute of taste aud smell. When Cornelius prayed to God alway. Acts x metal. moistened with water, it forms a cohesive Luke xviii. Eph. vi. Encyc. and ductile mass, susceptible of beuig Alway is now seldom used. The applica- 2. The mixing or blending of diflerent kneaded into regular forms. tion of this compound to time proceeds tilings. AM'ALOZK, n. Webster's Manual. from the primary sense of icay, which large aquatic fowl of Dainj. Cyc. Mexico. Diet, of .\a?. Hist. ALU'MINIFORM, a. Having the form of a going or passing hence, continuationalumina. MAN'D0L.\, n. A green marble, having Chaptal A. M. stand for Artium Magister, master of the ajipearance of honey comb, and conAL'UMINITE, n. Subsulphate of alumina: arts, the second degree given by universia mineral that occurs in small roundish or called in some counties and colleges of 100 parts, 76 are taining white spots reniform masses. Its color is snow white In America mild calcarious earth, 20 shist and 2 iron. tries, doctor of philosophy. nr yellowish white. this degree is conferred without examinaThe cellular appearance jiroceeds from Aikin. Jameson. the shist. Cleavdand. Kirwan. .Yicholson. tion, on bachelors of three years standing.
AL'TO.
[It.
fioni L. alius.]
ALLT'MINOUS,
U'liih.
a.
:
;
I
;
•
;
A
;
;
;
;
;
A
1
A
m
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
AMALGAMATING,
;
;
A
;
;
Vol.
I.
;
8
M A
A
A
AMANUF'.N'SIS, n. [L. ivommamis. band.] A person whose fniiiloynicnt is to write vvliat
M
B
M
A
they shall be amazed They shall be afraid one another. Is. xiii. They were all amazed and glorified God.
also embassador
B
and as the orthography of embassy is established, it would he better to w rite embassador. See anotlier dictates. Embassador.] Mark Luke v. AM'BE or AMARANTH, ) n. [Gr. a^apoirof, of a Tills word implies astonishment oril. perplexAM'BI, n. [Gr. a^S^, a brim; trom amb, about.] AMARANTH'US, ^ neg. and ^opaou, to trom something extraordinary, arising ity, but in surgery, an instruLiterally, a brim decay so called, it is said, because, when unexpected, imaccountable, or frightful ment for reducing dislocated shoulders, so cropped, it does not soon wither.] AMA'ZE, n. Astonishment confusion per- called from the jutting of its extremity. Flower-gentle; a genus of plants, of many from fear, surprise or won arising plexity, Also the tree. Oftliesethe tricolored has long mango species. It is chiefly used in poetry, suid is der. been cultivated in gardens, on account of Quincy. Encyc. Core. nearly synonymous with amazement. the beauty of it.s variegated leaves. AM'BER, n. [Fr. amirc 'Sji. ambar; Port. AMA'ZED, pp. Astonished confotmded id; It. ambra; an oriental word Pers. Encyc. with fear, smprise or wonder.
at
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
AM'ARANTH,
n.
A
color inclining to pur-
AM A'ZEDLY,
Cyc,
ple.
AMARANTH'INE, ranth
consisting bling amarantli. ;
a. of,
manner
Belonging to atnacontauiing, or resem-
to
adv.
With amazement
confound.
in a
;
;
;
Mass.]
inent, or per])lexity.
To
collect into a heap; to gather a great quantity ; to accumulate ; as, to amass a
Ar.
/
j^;^^
anba-
.
Kings x. 2. 10, the Arabic is rendered spices. The Arabic word is rendered by Castle, amber, a marine fish, a shield made of skins, crocus and finms. In Eth. 1 the
;
Theocritus and VirgU.] In botany, lily-daffodil, a genus of liliaceous plants of several species, which are cultivated in gardens for the beauty of their flowers. Encyc. AM'ASS, V. t. [Fr. amasser ; It. ammnssare : L. massa, a heap or lump Gr. nai^a. See girl in
or anabar;
ron. In 1
founded with fear, surprise or wonder astonishment great wonder. AMA'ZEMENT, »i. Astonishment; confusion or perplexity, from a sudden impress ion of fear, surprise or wonder. It is sometimes accompanied with fear or terror sometimes merely extreme wonder or ad miration at some great, sudden or unexjjected event, at an unusual sight, or at the narration of extraordinary events. AMA'ZING, ppr. Confounding with fear, surprise or wonder. 9. a. Very wonderful e.xciting astonish
[L. anmriludo, from amants, bitter ; from Heb. "TO bitter.] Bitterness. [J^ot much used.] n. AMARYL'LIS, [The name of a country
anbar -AAC •
/
[lAttle used.]
AMA'ZEDNESS,n. The state of being con
AMAR'ITUDE, n.
1.
;
xii.
4 anbar is rendered a whale, and word is used in Jonah, ii. 1. and Matli. This word is placed by Castle under
1 1
40.
<_.^A£
to
produce
grapes,
and
i^^^c
The signifies grapes, Ch. and Heb. 2ip. Chaldee verb signifies to join or connect, and the sense of this word, a])plied to grapes, is a cluster, like grape in Enghsh. It signifies also in Ch. a tumor, a pustle,
In an astonishing dea mountain, the sense of which is'a lump gree in a maimer to excite astonishment, and this may be the or mass collected or to perplex, confound or terrify. sense of amber. In German, Dutch, SweAM'AZON, n. [This is said to he formed of dish and Danish, it has the name of burnthings together a neg. and ^afos, breast. History informs phrases. stone.] us, tliat the Amazons cut off their right AM'ASS, n. An assemblage, heap or accu- breast, that it might not incommode them A hard semi-pellucid substance, tasteless and mulation. without smell, except when pounded or [This is superseded by Mass." This in shooting and hurling thejavehn. in or AlVrASSED, pp. Collected in a heap, heated, when it emits a fragrant odor. It is doubtless a fable.] is found in alluvial soils, or on the sea a great quantity or number accumulated. 1. The Amazons are said have to by historians, AM'ASSING, ppr. Collecting in a heap, or been a race of female warriors, who foun- shore, in many places particularly on the shores of the Baltic, in Europe, and at in a large quantity or number. ded an empire on the river Thermodon, in a collected AM'ASSMENT, n. A heap Cape Sable, in Maryland, in the U. States. Asia Minor, on the coast of the Euxine. The ancient opinion of its vegetable origin large quantity or number brought togethmen from have excluded said to are They seems now to be established, and it is beer an accumulation. their society and by their warlike enter To V. t. lieved or known to be a fossil resin. It accompany; \MA'TE, [SeeJt/a/f.] to have conquered and alarmei prises, also to terrify, to perplex. [JVot used.] Some writers treat yields by distillation an em])yreimiatic oil, nations. surroimding and the succinic acid, which subhmes in AMATEU'R, n. [Fr., from L. amator, a these accounts as fables. small wliite needles. Its color usually prelover, from amo, to love.] Herodian. Justin. sents .some tinge of yellow. It is highly person attached to a jjarticular pursuit, 2. By analogy, a warlike or masculine woelectrical, and is the basis of a varnish. study or science, as to music or painting man a virago. Burke. one who has a taste for the arts. Journal of Science. Encyc. Chambers. 3. This name lias been given to some Ameri .A.MATO'RIAL, } a. [L. amatorius, from amo, can females, on the banks of the largest ."VM'BER, a. Consisting of; or resembUiig amber. AM'ATORY, S to love.] river in the world, who joined their hus 1. Relating to love as, aniatorial verses cau bands in attacking the Sjianiards that first AM'BER, V. t. To scent with amber. drink resembling sing love as, amatory potions produced This trivial occur- AMBER-DRINK, »i. visited the country. andjer in color. by se.xual intercourse as, amatorial prorence gave the name Amazon to that river, Daricin. AMBER-DROPPING, a. Dropping amber. geny. whose real name is Maranon. to the a term 2. In anatomy, Milton. oblique applied Garcilasso, p. 60C. muscles of the eye, from their use in AM'BER-SEED, n. Musk-seed, resembling AMAZO'NIAN, a. Pertaining to or resem- millet. It is of a bitterish ta.ste, and ocling. brought Applied to females, from Egypt and the W. Indies. .^MATO'RIALLY, adv. In an amatorial bling an Amazon. manners warlike. bold of mascuhne Dann Chambers. manner; l>v way of love. 2. Belonging to the river Maranon in South .'VMAURO'SiS, n. [Gr. a^ai^po;, obscure.] n. The English name of or to Amazonia, the country AM'BER-TREE, A loss or decay of sight, without any visible America, a of with a shrub, species Anthospermum, lying on that river. defect in the eye, e.xcept an innnovable evergreen leaves, which, when bruised, Some- AMB, AM. About; around; used in compopupil ; called also gutta sere^ta. Miller. emit a fragrant odor. Ir. im, W. am Sax. sition. ; emb, ymb on times the disease is periodical, coming um ; G. Mm I>. om ; Dan. om ; Sw. om AM'BERGRIS, n. [amber and Fr. gris, suddenly, continuing for hours or days, Gr. a.ucj>i Lat. am or amb. gray gray amber.] and then disappearing. It has sometimes to drive.] A sohd, opake, ash-colored inflammable subbeen cured by electricity. Encyc. Coxe AMBA'GES, n. [L. amb and ago, a circuit of words to 1. A circumlocution; stance, variegated like marble, remarkably on its surface, and when in ideas be which light, rugged expressed may AMA'ZE, V. t. [Qu. Ar. (j-*«.j to perplex express fewer words. heated, it has a fragrant odor. It does not it melts easily into effervesce with acids 2. A winding or turning. or confuse or from maze.] To confound with fear, sudden surprise, or AMBAS'SADOR, n. [This is the more com- a kind of yellow resin, and is highly solumon orthography but good authors write ble in spirit of wine. Various opinions wonder to astonish.
AMA'ZINGLY, ;
treasure.
2.
To
adv.
;
collect in great ;
numbers to add many as, to amass words or ;
;
;
;
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
M
A liave
A M B
B
been entertained respecting
its ori-
but it is well ascertained, that it is indurated fecal matter, discharged by the spermaceti whale, a species of pkyseter. It has been found in that species of whale, but usually is found floating on the surface of the ocean, in regions frequented by whales sometimes in masses of from GO to 225 lbs. weight. In this sub.stance are found the beaks of the cuttle fish, on which gin
;
;
It is highly that whale is known to feed. valued as a material in perfumery.
Encyc.
AM'BIDEXTER, dexter, the right
A
1.
n.
[L. ambo, both,
and
hand.]
who uses both
))erson
liands with equal
facility.
8.
A
double dealer
one equally ready to
;
act on either side in party disputes. [This sense is used in ludicrous Imiguage.]
Inlaw, a juror
3.
who
takes
money of both
parties, for giving his verdict cer.
AMBIDEXTER'ITY, AMBIDEX'TROUSNESS,
an embra-
;
? n.
Cowel.
The faculty
of using both I hands with equal facility; double dealing the taking of money from both parties for
;
a verdict.
The
A M B
encompasses a thing
ingcom-j AM'BLYOPY, n. [Gr. a^uSj^j, dull, and ^4, or the sur eye.] etry, the perimeter of a figure, The periphery or circum- Incipient amaurosis; dulness or obscurity of face of a body. ference of a circular body. sight, without any apparent defect of tlie Johnson. Encyc. organs si^o-ht so depraved that objects AMBI"TION, n. [L. ambitio, from ambio, to can be seen only in a certain light, distiuice, or position! go about, or to seek by making interest, of Encyc. Coir. AM' J!. and to See BO, ami), about, eo, [Gr. a^Sui, a pulpit ; L. umbo, a go. Ambages. This word had its origin in the practice of boss.] Roman candidates for office, who went A reading desk, or pulpit. UluUr. about the city to solicit votes.] DA, n. [fiom amber.] A kind of A desire of i)referment, or of honor a desire factitious amber, which the Europeans sell to the Africans. of excellence or superiority. It is used in Encyc. a good sense as, emulation may spring AMBRO'SIA, n. ambro'zha, [Gr. a neg. and from a laudable ambition. It denotes also (Spofof, mortal, because it was supposed to confer inmiortality on them that f(;d on it.] an inordinate desire of power, or eminence, often accompanied with illegal 1. In heathen ayiiif/uity, the imaginary food of the gods. Hence, means to obtain the object. It is sometimes followed by of ; as, a man has an 2. Whatever is very pleasing to the taste or smell. The name has also been given to ambition of wit. Rlilton has used the word certain alexipliarmic compositions. in the Latin sense of going about, or attempting but this sense is hardly legiti- A3IBROSIAL, a. ambro'zhal. Partaking of the nature or qualities of ambrosia framate. AMBITION, V. t. [Fr. ambitionner.] grant delighting the taste or smell as, ambrosial dews. Ben Jonson uses ambroAmbitiously to seek after. [Little used.] siac in a like sense, and Bailey has amKing. brosian, but these seem not to be warAMBI"TIOUS,tt. Desirous of power, honor ranted bv usage. ottice, superiority or excellence aspiring eager for fame followed by of before a AMBRO'SIAN, a. Pertaining to St. Ambrose. The Ambrosian office, or ritual, is noun; as, ambitious q/" glory. a formida of worship in the church of 2. Showy ada])ted to command notice or Milan, instituted by St. Ambrose, in the praise as, ambitious ornaments. fourth 3. to swell or rise centurv. higher Encyc. Figuratively, eager ' as, the ambitious ocean. Shak. AM'BROSIN, n. In the middle ages, a coin AMBI'TIOUSLY, adv. In an ambition.' struck by the dukes of 3Iilan, on which line that
;
;
AMBREA
;
;
;
:
;
;
;
AMBIDEXTROUS,
a.
Having the
faculty
of using both hands with equal ease practicing or siding with both parties. AMBIENT, a. [L. ambietis, from ambio, to go roimd, trom amb, about, and eo, to go.] Surrounding encompassing on all sides ;
;
;
to fluids or diflTusible
apphed
investing;
substances
;
as, the
AMBI(i'ENAL,
a.
ambient
;
;
;
;
manner
Milton.
air.
[L. ambo, both,
and gemt,
a knee.]
;
ambigcnal hyperbola is one of the triple hyperbolas of the second order, having one of its infinite legs falling within an angle formed by the asymptotes, and the other without.
medlev of dishes.
AMBIGU'ITY,
ing ambitious
n.
[L. ambiguitas,
n.
The
ambition. ambition,
quality of be-
Being nearly it
is
AM'BRY,
not of\en
nerie,
used.
walk
to 1.
King. from 2.
I', ;
i. [Fr. ambler, from L. ambulo, Qu. amb, about, and the root of
1.
alter.]
To move
with a certain peculiar pace, as a horse, first lifting his two legs on one side, and then changing to the other. Edin. Encyc. To move easy, without hard shocks.
Him
Encyc. n.
[contracted from Fr. aumo-
almonry, from old Fr.
almoigne,
alms.]
AM'BLE,
umbigu.]
Doublfuhiess or uncertainty of signification, from a word's being susceptible of different meanings double meaning. Words should be used which admit of no am-
;
synonymous with
Fr.
of a
St.
ferment, or superiority.
Encuc.
AM'BIGU,n. [Fr. See Ambiguity.] An entertainment or feast, consisting
Ambrose was represented on horseback, with a whip in his right hand.
with an eager desire after pre-
AMBI'TIOUSNESS,
An
;
time ambles wilha).
Shak.
2.
An ahnonry a place where alms are deposited fi)r distribution to the poor. In ancient abbeys and priories there was an office of this name, in which the ahnoner Uved. A jjlace in wliich are deposited the utensils for house keeping also a cupboard a place for cold victuals. ;
:
;
AMBS'-ACE,
n. [L. ambo, both,
and
ace.]
A double ace, as when two dice turn up the In a ludicrous sense, to move with subace. Johnson. mission, or by direction, or to move afa. [L. ambulans, from amJohnson. AM'BULANT, fectedly. bulo.] AM'BLE, n. A peculiar pace of a horse. moving from place to place. horse which ambles a Walking BLER, ?i. being of uncertain signification suscepEncyc. tible of dirterent pacer. Ambulant brokers, in Amsterdam, are e.vinterpretations hence, obscure. It is applied to words and ex- AM'BLIGON, or AM'BLYGON, n. [Gr. change-brokers, or agents, who are not aiLSXvi, obtuse, and yuwo, an angle.] pressions; not to a dubious state of mind, and whose testimony is not reAn obtuse angled triangle a triangle with sworn, though it may be to a person using words ceived in courts of justice. Encvc one angle of more thap ninety degrees. of doubtful signification. AfllBULA'TION, n. [L. ambulatio.] A waUiTJie ancient oracles were Bailey. Encyc. ambiguous, as were ing about the act of walking. their answers. AMBLIG'ONAL, a. Containing an obtuse n. In entomology, a species Ash. angle. AMBIG'UOLISLY, adv. In an ;
3.
biguitif,
AAIIJIG UOUS, a. [h. ambiguus.] Having two or more meanings doubtftd ;
;
AM
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
AMBULATOR,
manner
ambiguous
with doubtful meaning.
AM'iSLIGONITE,
?!.
hav
of Lamia, whose thorax side with two spines
is
armed on each
[Gr. aueT-i^wwos, a Cerambyx of ing an obtuse angle.] Linne. Que. greenish colored mineral, of different pale a. That has the power shades, marked on the surface with red or faculty of walking as, an animal is dish and n. bro^vn It occurs AMBIL'OGY, yellowish spots. [ambo, both, and Xoyoj, ambulatory. massive or crystalized in oblique fourspeech.] 2. Pertainuig to a walk ; as, an ambulatory Talk or language of doubtful meaning. sided prisms, in granite, with topaz and view. AMBIL OQUOUS, a. [ambo, both, and tourmahn, in Saxony. U> 3. Moving from place to place not stationloquor, to speak.] AM'BLING, ppr. or a. Lifting the two legs ary as, an ambulatory court, which exeron the same side at first Using ambiguous expressions. cises its jurisdiction in different going oft', and places. AM'BIT, n. [L. ambitus, a circuit, from then changing. Johnson. ambio, to go about. See Ambient.] AM'BLINGLY, adv. With an ambUng gait. n. species of ichneu;
n. The quality of being ambiguous uncertainty of meaning ambiguity and hence, obscurity.
AMBIG'UOUSNESS, ;
;
A
;
AMBULATORY,
;
;
;
;
AMBULATORY,
A
A M E
A M E nion, with a yellowish scutellum anil spottPtl thorax. Cyc. AM'BURY, or AN'BURY, n. [Qu. L. umho, the navel ; Gr. a^Swj/.] \mong farriers, a tumor, wart or swelling on a horse, full of blood and soft to the
touch.
Encyc.
AM'BUS€ADE,n. emboscada care,
Eng.
Sp. Port. It. imboscata from It. imhoscinboscar, to lie in bushes, or
;
;
;
Sji.
concealed
[Fv. embuscade
and
in
;
bosco, bosque,
a wood
afier
;
;
:
cealed in any situation, for a like pui-pose. A private station in which troops he concealed with a view to attack their ene-
is obsolete.]
Liable to answer
strap.]
Having an ambush
laid against, or attacked from a private station ; as, his troojjs were ambuscaded. ppr. Lying ui wait for
AM'ENAgE, v. Tomanagg. Obs. Spenser. an amentaceous inflorescence. Martyn. AM'ENANCE, n. Conduct, behavior. Obs. AMERCE, v. amers'. [A verb formed fi-om
attacking from a secret station. n. [Fr. embuche, of in and bush Dan. busk ; D. bosch ; Germ, busch ; Fr.
AMEND',
by
sui-prise
AM'"BUS€ADE, to attack
;
2.
ble
ery
ambush.
v.
To
t.
pp.
wait
in
lie
from a concealed
AMBUSCADED,
or
for,
;
;
liable to
;
;
;
man
is
;
position.
;
AM'BUS€ADING,
;
AM'BySH,
;
See Bush.] bosquet, boscage, hocuge, hois. private or concealed station, where troops lie in wait to attack their enemy by
AMENTA'CEOUS,rt. Growing m
another.
resembling a thong
state of lying concealed, for the
pose of attacking by surprise
;
pur
Spenser.
L. emendo, of V. t. [Fr. amender neg, and menda, mendum, a fault W. mann, a spot or blemish Sp. Port, tmendar It. ammendare. See Mend.] To correct to rectify by expunging a mistake as, to amend a law. To reform, by riiiitting bad habits to make better in a moral sense; as, to amend ;
e
;
1.
;
;
1.
a lying
9.
in
wait.
The
troops posted in a concealed place
for attacking Lay thee an
AM'BySH,
V.
by surprise. ambush for the
;
To
t.
lie
3.
city. Josh. viii.
in wait for
to sur
;
oin- ways or our conduct. To correct to supply a defect to ini prove or make better, by some addition of what is wanted, as well as by expunging what is wrong, as to amend a bill before a ;
;
by assailing unexpectedly from a
concealed place.
AM'BySH,
V.
To
i.
wait, for the pursurprise.
lie in
denly
wait for
to something previously wrong improve, does not. tacking from a concealed station. AM'BUSIIMENT, n. An ambush tchich A3IEND', )!. [Fr.] A pecuniary punishment, or fiiie. The amende honorable, in France, see. is an infamous punishment inflicted on AMBUS'TION, 11. [L. ambustio, from omtraitors, parricides and sacrilegious perburo, to biu-n or scorch, otamb, about, and in
AM'BySIIING,/'p-. Lying
at-
;
plies
;
;
;
physicians, a burning
;
a
bum
or
scald.
AMEI'VA,
n.
A
Brazil.
AM'EL,
J!.
species of lizard, found in Diet, of JVa/. Hist
The matter with
[Fr. email]
which metallic bodies are overlaid but its use is superseded by enamel ; which see. ;
Boyle. v. t. [Fr. ameliorer, from L. melior, better.] To make better to improve to meliorate. Christ. Obs. Buchanan. S. S. Smith. AME'LIORATE, v. i. To grow better to meliorate. AMELIORA'TION, n. making or becoming better improvement melioration.
AME'LIORATE, ;
;
;
A
Encyc.
AMEND'ABLE, a.
;
as,
;
an amendable
a pecuniary penalty
;
to
punish
Milton uses of after amerce : " Millions of s|iirits amerced of heaven ;" but this use seems to be a poetic hcense. ."VMERCED, pp. Fined at the discretion of a court. n. amers'ment. A pecuniary penalty inflicted on an ofl'ender at the discretion of the court. It differs from a fine, in that the latter is, or was origmally, a fixed and certain sum prescribed by statute for an offense but an amercement is in general.
AMERCEMENT,
;
arbitrary.
Hence
tlie ])ractice
of afifeeiing.
[Sec ./Iffeer.] But in America, the word fine is now used for a pecuniary penalty which is uncertain and it is common in statutes, to enact that an offender shall be In fined, at the discretion of the court. England also, fines are now usually discretionary. Thus the woid fine has, in a measure, superseded the use of amercement. This word, in old books, is written amerciament. ;
AMER'CER, cretion,
n.
One who
upon an
AMER'ICA,
sets a fine at dis-
offender.
)!.
;
;
;
altering for the better.
confirm, establish, verify to trust, or give as a noun, truth, firmness, confidence trust, confidence ; as an adjective, firm
2.
;
dollars.
inflict
;
AMEND'MENT, n. An alteration or change
;
To
[from Amerigo Vespucci, writ or error. a Florentiiie, -\\\m pretended to have first AMEND' ATORY, a. That amends sup discovered the western continent.] One of the great continents, first discovered plying amendment corrective. AMEND'ED,;)^. Corrected; rectified; reby Sebastian Cabot, June 11, O. S. 1496, formed and by Columbus, or Christoval Colon, improved, or altered for the better. Aug. 1, the same year. It extends from of North, to the fiftyAMEND'ER, n. The person that amends. tlie'eiglitieth degree AMEND'ING, ;)^r. Correcting; reformuig; foiutli degree of South Latitude and
;
;
That may be amended
capable of correction
This word, with slight differences of orthography, is in all the dialects of the Assyrian stock. As a verb, it signifies to
AMEN'.
2.
The offender, being led into court with a rope about his neck, begs pardon of his God, the court, &c. These words denote also a recantation in open court, Amercement royal is a penaltj' imposed on an or in presence of the injured person. officer for a misdemeanor in his office. sons.
nro, to burn.]
Among
;
the chesnut has
a for on or at, antl Fr. merci, mercy, or from L. merces, reward.] To inflict a penalty at mercy ; to punish by a pecuniary penalty, the amount of which is not fixed by law, but left to the discretion or mercy of the court as, the court amerced the criminal in the sum of one
hundred
;
Hence it is applied to the legislature. correction of authors, by restoring passages which had been omitted, or restoring the true reading. pose of attackuig by Nor saw the snake, that ambush'd for his prey. AMEND', 11. i. To grow or become better, Trumbull by reformation, or rectifying something wrong in manners or morals. It diffen AM'BySIIED, ^/7. Lain in wait for; sudfrom improve, in this, that to amend im attacked from a concealed station. prise,
as,
t.
;
The
;
*.
A
surj)rise.
3.
;
;
;
responsible answera- In botany, a species of inflorescence, from a be called to account as, evcommon, chaf^' receptacle or consisting amenable to the laws. of many scales, ranged along a stalk or We retain this idiom in the popular slender a.xis, which is the common recepphrase, to bring in, to make answerable tacle as in birch, oak, chesnut. Martyn. man is in to the debt a of as, brought pay an ament
my
9.
;
;
a lying in a wood, concealed, for the purpose of attacking an enemy by hence, a lying in wait, and consiu'prise
1.
English,
;
;
bush.]
J. Literally,
2.
ME
A
the oriental 3. In laie, the correction of an error in a writ or |)rocess. manner, it is used at the begininng, but more generally at the end of declaiations Shakespeare uses it for the recovery of and prayers, in the sense of, be it firm, be healtli, but this sense is unusual. it established. AMENDS', n.plu. [Fr. amende.] And let all the people say amen. Ps. cvi. iCompensation for an injury recompense ; The word is used also as a noun. satisfaction equivalent as, the happiness " A]\ the of a future Wt'e will more than make amends promises of God are amen in C'li>isl;'* tliat is, firmness, stability, constancy. fijr the miseries of this. a. menare Fr. ; AME'NABLE, mtner, AME'NITY, n. [L. amosnitas ; Fr. amhiiti [It. ; amener ; Norm, amesner, to lead, to bring L. ameenus ; \V. mwyn, good, kind.] Fr. amener. It. ammainare, in marine lan- Pleasantness agreeableness of situation guage, to strike sail.] that which delights the eye iised of pla1. In old law, easy to be led governable, ces and prospects. Brmvn. as a woman by her husband. IThis sense AM'ENT, n. [L. amentum, a thong, or
In
stable.
for the better ; correction of a fault or faults ; reformation of life, by quitting vices.
A word, clause or paragraph, adiled or proposed to be added to a bill before a legislature.
from the tliirty-fiflh to the one hundred and fifty-sixth degree of Longitude West from Greenwich, being about nine thouIts breadth at sand miles ill length. Darien is narrowed to about forty-five miles, but at the northern extremity is nearly four the usand miles. From Darieu
AMI
A M
A M M
I
long and resembling threads is incombustible, and has
elastic, often
te the JVor/A, the continent is called ^orth America, and to the South, it is called South Jimcnca.
AM'ITY,
n. [Fr. amitie
;
It.
atnista, amisl-
of silk. It dde; Sp. nmistad, from amistar, to reconcile Port, amizade Norm, amis/ee, ti'iendsometimes been wrought into
;
;
;
;
;
;
•
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
•
prince.
mercury,
AMETHYST'INE,
Encyc.
justed.
low mica.
Pertaining [L. amictus from amicior, to clothe Fr. amid ; Sp. amito ; Port, arnicto.] sembling amethyst anciently applied to a garment of the color of amethyst, as dis- A scjuare hnen cloth that a Catholic priest ties about his neck, hanging down behind tinguished from the Tyriau and hyacinthino purple. under the alb, when he ofliciates at mass. to or re-
a.
AM'ICE,
;
al
;
A
n. genus offish, of the abdomin order, found in the rivers of Carolina.
AM'IA,
a.
[Fr. amiable
;
L.
Sp. and Port. Diet. [of a and Sax. midd, the middle, L. medius. the superlative degree middest, a contraction of Sax. mid-mesta, mid-most.
AMID',
Pennant.
A'MIABLE,
n.
>
AMIDST', P""^Amidst
amabilis
from amo, to love.] Lovely worthy of love
is
Plin. 37. 11.
AM'MODYTE,
n.
[Gr.
a/if.o;,
Encyc.
sand,
and
Svu, to enter.]
The sand eel, a genus of fish, of the apodal order, about a toot in length, with a compressed head, a long slender body, and There is but scales hardly perceptible. one species, the tobianus or lance. It buries itself in the sand, and is found also in the stomach of the porpess, which indi-
cates that the latter fish roots up the sand See Middle and Midst.] ; ; deserving of aflike a hog. Encyc. fection ; applied usually to persons. But in 1. In the midst or middle. This name is also given to a serpent of the Ps. Ixxxiv. 1, there is an exception, " 2. Among ; mingled with ; as, a shepherd size of a viper, and of a yellowish color, amiable are thy tabernacles, Lord." amidst his flock. also to a large serpent of in Africa found S. Pretending or showing love. .3. Surrounded, encompassed, or envelop Ceylun, of a whitish ash color, and very Lay amiable siege to the honesty of thi: ed with ; as, amidst the shade ; amid the Did. ofjYat. Hist. venomous. Ford's wife. Shak waves. Amid is used inostly in poetry. But this use is not legitimate. ) AMMO'NIA, [The real origui of this in marine the AMID'-SHIPS, language, word is not ascertained. A'MIABLENESS, /i. The quality of deserv- middle of a ship, with regard to her ^ Some authors su])posc it to be from Aming love ; loveliness. lengtli and breadth. A'MIABLY, adv. In an amiable manner AM'ILOT, ?!. mon, a title of Jupiter, near whose temple white fish in the Mexican in a manner to excite or attract love. Others in upper Egypt, it was generated. lakes, more than a foot in length, and of a AM'IANTH, [Gr. aniavto;, much esteemed at the table. sup))ose it to be fi-om Ammonia, a CyreI neg. Clavigero. naic territory ; and others deduce it from AMIANTH'l'S, (," andjiitauu, to pollute, AMISS', a. [a and miss. See .Wm.] or vitiate ; so called from its incombusti- 1. aunof, sand, as it was found in sandy Wrong faulty ; out of order ; improper Plin. 30. U».] bility. ground. Anghcized, this forms an elegant as, it may not be amiss to ask advice. [This Earth-fiax, or mountain flax ; a mineral subword, nmmony.] adjective always follows its noun.] stance somewhat resembling flax ; usually 2. adv. In a Volatile alkali ; a substance, which, in its faulty manner ; contraiy to grayish, or of a greenish white ; somepurest form, exists in a state of gas. It is propriety, truth, law or morality. times of a yeUowish or silvery wliite, olive Ye ask and receive not, because ye ask amiss composed of hydrogen and nitrogen. or mountain green, of a pale" flesh red or Combined with the muriatic acid, it forma James, iv ocher color. It is composed of delicate Applied to the the nnniatc of ammonia, called also sal body, it signifies indisposed 1.
How
O
;
AM'MONY,
"
A
;
;
;
filaments,
very
flexible
and somewhat
as, I
am somewhat
amiss to day.
ammoniac
aiyl hydro-chlorate
of
ammo-
M N
A
A M O
A M O
Native muriate of ammony is found in Egypt, where it is said to be generated in large inns and caravanseras, from the excrements of camels and other beasts. It occurs also massive and ciystalized in the vicuiity of volcanoes. Ammony, pop-
tors or conmientators
offenses of subjects against the government, or the proclamation of such pardon AM'NIOS or AM'NION, n. [Gr. a/4v«>,., a vessel or membrane.] The innermost membrane surroimding the fetus in the womb. It is thin, transparent, is called soft and smooth on the inside, but rougl hartshorn, ularly extremely punon the outside. gent and acrid, but when diluted, is an Encyc. agreeable stimulant. It extinguishes flame, AMNIOT'Ie, a. Obtained from the liquor and is fatal to animal life. It combines of the amnios, as the amniotic acid. with acids, and produces a class of salts, Ure. which, with few exceptions, are soluble in AJIOBE'AN, a. Alternately answering. water. JVicholson. Thompson, tyehsfcr's WartoH.
on the Jerusalem Tahnud. The Amoreans were followed by the Mishnic doctors, and these by the
nia.
Manual.
AMOBE'UM,
AMMO'N'IA€,
)
AMMONI'AeAL,
J
properties.
AIVIMO'NIA€,
Pertaining to ammonia, or possessing its
AMMONIAC GUM,
or
n.
a/MiSri,
A poem
n.
[Gr.
Sebureans.
AMORET',
A
from Africa and the East, resin, brought in large masses, composed of tears, internally white and externally yellow supposed to be an exudation from an umbelhferous plant. It has a fetid smell, and a nauseous sweet taste, followed by a
as speaking alternately, as the third and seventh eclogues of Virgil. Encyc
L^U^
[Gr. auu>^or; Ar.
n.
n.
[L. ainor, love.] ;
;
which persons are represented
AMO'MUM,
;
;
1. I
;
fond. In love
warm
hamnia, to
;
enamored.
Shah. Pertaining or relating to love produced by love indicatuig love as, amorous deamorous airs. Milton. Waller. light AM'OROUSLY, adv. In an amorous man;
3.
;
;
hamamna, from
;
;
from L. amor, love.] Inchned to love having a propensity to love, or to sexual enjoyment loving ;
I
12.
[See Jlmmonia.]
A gum
Fr. amour-
;
;
AM'ORIST,
alternate;
aftotSaios,
amor, love
[L.
lover an amorous woman 'also a love knot or a trifling love affair. Good''s Sacred Idyls. Chaucer.
A lover; a gallant an inamorato. Boyh. AMORO'SO, n. [It. from amor, love.] A lover a man enamored. AM'OROUS, «. [¥v. amoreux \\. amoroso
change.] in
n.
ette.]
;
;
or heat the heating plant.] ner fondly lovingly. .\ genus of plants all natives of warm cl AM'OROUSNESS, n. The qualify of being inchned to love, or to sexual pleasure'; mates, and remarkable for their pungeninflammable, soluble in fondness lovingness. water and spirit of wine, and is used ui cy and aromatic properties. It includes Sidney. the connnon ginger or zingiber, the ze- AMORPH'A, n. a neg. and y-op^yi, form.] medicine, as a deobstruent, and resolvent. [Gr. and False or bastard indigo. The plant is a narumbet, zedoary, cardamom, granum Encyc. AMMO'NIAN, a. Relating to Ammonius, paradisi or grains of paradise. The roots tive of Carohna, constituting a genus. It of the three former, and the seeds of the suriiamed Saccas, of Alexandria, who rises, with many irregular stems, to the two latter, are used in medicine as carmiflourished at the end of the second centhe highth of twelve or fourteen feet natives and stimulants, and in cookery as leaves, beautifully pinnated, are of an adtury, and was the founder of the eclectic mired green color, and its purple flowers condunents. They are important articles system of Philosophy or rather, he comof commerce. grow in s])ikes of seven or eight inches Cyc. pleted the establishment of the sect, which Of this plant has been made a long. originated with Potamo. Enfield. True amomum is a round fruit, from the East, AM'MONITE, n. [Coinu ammoms, from of the size of a grape, containing, under a coarse kintl of uidigo. Encyc. membranous cover, a number of angular AMORPH'OUS, a. [Gr. a neg. and Mopf-;, Jupiter Ammon, whose statues were rejiseeds of a dark brown color, in three resented with ram's horns.] form.] Of this fruit, ten or twelve grow in Having no determinate form of irregular cells. •Serpent-stone, or cornu amnionis, a fossil a cluster, adhering, without a pedicle, to shell, curved into a spiral, like a ram's shape not of any regular figure. Kirwan. a woody stalk. It is of a pungent taste AMORPH'Y, n. Irregularity of form dehorn of various sizes, from the smallest viation from a determinate shape. and aromatic smell, and was formerly grains to three feet in diameter. This fosStvijl. sil is found in stratums of limestone and much used in medicine, but is now a stran- AMORT', adv. [L. mors, mortuus.] Shak. It is clay, and in argillaceous iron ore. ger to the shops. Plln. 12. 13. Encyc In the state of the dead. smooth or ridged the ridges strait, crook- AMONG', or I Amung', ) [Sax. onP''^P' n. The act or right of ahenaed or undulated. Cyc. Encyc. Plin. .37. 10. AMONGST', Amungst', mang, on ting lands or tenements to a corporation, AMMO'NIUM, n. A name given to the sup- gemang, among gemangan, to mingle which was considered formerly as transD. and Ger. mengen ; Sw. mangia Dan. posed metallic basis of ammonia. If merSee Gr. fttymu. ferring tliein to dead hands, as such alienmanger, to mingle cury, at the negative pole of a galvanic batations were mostly made to rehgious housMingle.^, tery, is placed in contact with a solution es tor superstitious uses. In a general or primitive sense, mixed or Btackstone. of ammonia, and the circuit is completed, V. t. [Norm, amortizer, amorwith wheat. as tares AMORT'IZE, an amalgam is formed, which, at the temamong mingled tir It; S]). amortizar, to sell in mortmain Conjoined or associated with, or makin, perature of 70° or 80° of Fahrenheit, is of ammortire, to extinguish, from morte, L. the consistence of part of the luimber. but at the freezbitter one.
;
;
;
;
It is
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
AM ORTIZ ATI ON
;
AMORTIZE-
MENT,
(,
<,
;
;
;
;
;
;
butter,
ing point
is
a firm and crystalized mass.
This amalgam by the metallic
is
supposed
basis,
to
be formed
ammonium.
Thomson. AMMONI'URET, n. The solution of a substance in ammonia. Ed. Encyc. AMMUNP'TION, n. [L. ad and munitio, from munio, to fortify.] Davy.
Military stores, or provisions for attack or defense. In modern usage, the signitica lion is confined to the articles which are used in the discharge of fii-e-aiins and ordnance of all kinds; as powder, balls, bombs, various kinds of shot, &c. Ammunition-bread, bread or other provisions to supply troops.
AM'NESTY, Hvrinii,
n.
memory,
Of the number
;
See Mortmain.] 7nors, death. among women. Luke, as, there is not one among In English law, to alienate in mortmain, i.
o^r.;(jfia,
(ionj
ofoneg. and
the root
of mens.
that
a thousand, possessing the hke qualities. is, to sell to a corporation, sole or aggrear. [from Anion or Hamon, a gate, ecclesiastical or temporal, and their of Jupiter, or rather of the sun Ar. successors. This was considered as sellHeb. and Ch. DH, HOn, Ham or Camah, ing to dead hands. This cannot be done or as a to heat warm, without the king's hcense. which, verb, signifies [See Mortand as a noun, heat or the sun and in Coivel. Btackstone. main.] Arabic, the supreme God.] AMOTION, n. [h.amotio; amoveo.] fVarton. Pertaining to Jupiter Anion, or to his temple Removal. and worship in upper Egypt. to ascend i. V. Bryant. AMOUNT', [Fr. monter, AMORA'DO, n. [L. amor, love, amo, to love. Norm, amont, upwards Sp. Port, montar ; But the word is ill formed.] It. montare ; from L. mons, a mountain, or A lover. See Inamorato, which is chiefly its root W. mynyz.] used. Ch. Rel. Appeal. 1. To rise to or reach, by an accumulation of AMO'RE, n. A name given by Marcgrave, particulars, into an aggregate whole to to a tribe offish, of three species, the pixcompose in the whole as, the interest on the several sums amounts to fifty dollars. uma, guaeu, and tinga. They are found about the shores of South America, and 2. To rise, reach, or extend to, in effect, or are used I'oi- food. Cyc. Diet, ofj^at. Hist. substance to result in, by consequence, AMORE'ANS, n. sect of Gemaric doc- when all things arc considered as, the
AMO'NIAN, title
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
[Gr.
mind. See Mind.^ act of oblivion; a general pardon of the
An
Blessed art thou
;
A
:
AMP
AMP
AMOVE',
I',
t.
A
to
vines.
Pliny says
it is
like
35, 16.] coal, or candle coal
Cannel
[Gr.
a^cft, liaXTM
kill
worms on
bitumen. Lib.
an inflammable substance of a black color, compact texture, and resinous luster, and sufficiently hard to be cut and polished. It burn: with a bright flame, of a short duration a. [Gr. a/t4iiSo?.o{, a/.$i and gives but a moderate heat. It is used AMPHIB'OLOUS, and to hke jet for making toys. It is found in Tossed fiawa, one strike.] from to another striking each France and England, where husbandmen with mutual l)lows. way, [lAUle used.] smear vines with it to kill vermin. AMPHIBOLY, n. [Gr. a/i$iSi.?.ta, afi^i, both Encyc. Cleavctand. ways, and f3aw.u, to strike.^ AMPHIB'IAL, AMPHIBIA, n. [Gv.afipi, of meaning. [Rarely used.] Ambiguity both or about, and fitoj, life.] Spclman In loo^og'^, am|)hibials are a class of animals, ;
;
;
AMPHIBRACH,
hve on land, and for
so formed as to
[Gr. aufi,
aud
7i.
[Gr.
afi^i,
and
in castitas.
and
We
Hall. Spenser. \J^otused.'\ 71. [Gr. a^rtfXoj, a vine. The
earth used to
n.
sj)eech, o/i^iffoXayia.]
phrase or discourse, susceptible of two interpretations aud hence, a phrase of un certain meaning. Amphibology arises from the order of the phrase, rather than from the ambiguous meaning of a word, have which is called equivocation. an exanq>le in the answer of the oracle to Pyrrhus. "Aio te Romanos vincere posse." Here te and Romanos, may either of them precede or follow vincere posse, and the sense may be either, you may conquer the Romans, or the Rojiians may conquer you. The English language seldom admits of amphibology. Encyc. Johnson.
Evelyn.
and moveo,
AM'PELITE, name of an
>.oyO!,
;
[L. amoveo, a
a.
when the
faces of tlie crystal, counted in two diffTi^rent directions, give two hexahedral outhnes, or are iound to be six in number. Cleaveland.
;
AMPHIBOL'OGY,
n.
move.] To remove.
hexahedraL] Cleaveland. In cryslalography,
;
;
[L. amoveo.] Total removal. [JVot used.]
AMPHIHEX.\HE'DRAL,
a. Pertaining to amphiresembling ampliibole, or partaking of its nature and characters. Cooper. of AMPHIM'ACER, n. [Gr. a^t'^oxpos, long AMPHIBOLOGICAL, a. Doubtful on both sides.] doubtful meaning. AMPIHBOLOG'ICALLY, adv. Whh a In ancient poetry, a foot of three syllables, the middle one short and the others long, as doubtful meaning.
bole
;
AMoV'AL,
Hornblend, form is an
AMl'HIBOL'IC,
;
resulting in effect or substance. AMoUR', n. [Fr., from L. amor, love.] An unlawful coimection in love ; a love inSouth. trigue; an affair of gallantry. to
rhombic prism.
ol)li<|ue
;
;
A M P
erals, including the Tremohte, and Actinolite. Its primitive
testimony of these witnesses amounts to Bacon. very little. AMOUIST', n. The sum total of two or more particular siinis or quantities as, the anioimt of 7 and 9 is Iti. the sum 2. The effect, substance or result as, tlie amount of the testimony is this. AMOUNT'ING, ppr. Rising to, by accinnulation or adtlition coming or increasing
li^ax^i,
AMPHIS'BEN, AMPHISBE'NA,
? »i. [Gr.a^$i5e(mu,ofo^4><5 \ and Caow, to go ; indithat the animal moves with either cating end foremost.] genus of serpents, with the head small, smooth and blunt the nostrils small, the eyes minute and blackish, and the mouth furnished with small teeth. The body is cylindrical, destitute of scales, and divided into numerous annular segments the tail obtuse, and scarcely to be distinguished from the head, whence the beUef that it moved equally well with either end foremost. There are two species the fuliginosa, black with white spots, found in Africa and America and the alba, or white species, Ibuiid in both the Indies, and generally in ant-hillocks. They feed on ants and earth-worms, and were formerly deemed poisonous but this opinion is exploded. Plin. 8. %i. Encyc. Cyc. The aquatic amphisben, Oordius aquaticus, Linne, is an animal resembling a horse hair, found in water, and moving with either end foremost. The vulgar opinion that this is an animated horse-hair is found to be an error. This hair worm is generated in the common black beetle, in which the parent worm lays its eggs and is sometimes found in the earth and on the leaves of trees.
A
;
;
;
;
;
hort.] long time under water. Their heart has but one ventricle their blood is red and In poetry, a foot of three syllables, the middle one long, the first and last short ; as hacold ; and they have such command of In English verse, it is used bere, in Latin. the lungs, as for a considerable time, to as the last foot, when a syllable is added suspend Respiration. This class of animals to the usual number formmg a double is divided hito two orders, the Reptiles rhyme as, and the Serpents. To the first belong the Lifter, Phil. Trans. jYo. S^. The piece, you think, is incorrect, why take it ? AMPHIS'CII, ) testudo, or tortoise, the draco or dragon o^$t, on both "• [Gr. Pupc. Trumbull AMPHIS'CIANS, I the lacerta or lizard, and the rana or frog sides, and ffxH», shadto the second, the crotalus, boa, coluber, AM'PHICOME, n. [Gr.au^i and xofitj, hair.] ow.] Linne A Idnd of figured stone, of a round shape, In geography, the inhabitants of the tropics, anguis, amphisbena, and ceciHa. whose shadows, in one part of the year, The term has also been apphed to such but rugged and beset with eminences are cast to the north, and in the other, to the called Erotylos, on account of its supposed quadrupeds, as frequent tlie water, particularly the marine quadrujieds, such as south, according as the sim is in the southpower of e.xciting- love. Anciently, it was the seal, walrus and lamantin. ern or northern signs. used in divination but it is httle known Encyc. to the moderns. .VMPHIB'IOLITE, n. [Gr. a.utigwj, am Encyc. AM'PHITANE, n. A name given by anphibious, and XiSof, stone.] AMPIIICTYON'Ie, a. Pertaming to the cient naturahsts to a fossil, called by Dr. A fragment of a petrified amphibious ani- august council of Amphictvons. Hill pyricubium. Pliny describes it as of mal. Did. of J\rat. Hist. AMPHIC'TY'ONS, n. In 'Grecian history, a square figure and a gold color. Qu. an assembly or council of deputies from Cubic pyrites. AMPHIBIOLOg'I€AL, a. [Infra.] Pliny, 37. 10. Encyc. to the to diffi^rent states of Pertaining Greece, su])posed aniphibiology. AMPHITHE'ATER, n. [Gr. af^^iiiaTfiov, of AMPHIBIOL'OgY, n. [Gr. of
;
;
;
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
A
AMP
AMU
AMY
lowest in front. An ampliitheater may also be formed of turf only. Encyc.
extend, in o general sense ; applied to material or immaterial things. AMPHITHE'ATRAL, a. Resembling an 2. In rhetoric, to enlarge in discussion or by Tooke. amphitheater. representation ; to treat copiously, so as AMPHITHEATRICAL, a. Pertaining to to present the subject in every view and in the strongest Ughts. or exhibited in an amphitheater. H'arton AM'PHITRITE, n. [Gr. aft^trpi,^,,, a god- 3. To enlarge by addition to improve or dess of the .sea.] extend as, to amplify the sense of an an A genus of marine animals, of the Linnean thor by a paraphrase. order, MoUusca. AM'PLIFY, V. i. To speak largely or co n. [L. amphoto be (Uffuse in argument or de AM'PHOR, or piously ra ; Gr. a/t^opivi, or aju
;
AMPHORA,
AMU'SE,
s as z. [Fr. amiiser,to stop or from muser, to bay, to detain or trifle It. musare, to gaze or stand Ger. miissig, idle. Qu. Gr. fiv^u ; Lat. musso.] 1. To entertain the mind agreeably to occuor detain attention with py agreeable objects, whether by singing, conversation, or a show of curiosities. Dr. Johnson re-
marks, that amuse implies something less than
lively than divert, and less important Hence it is often said, are please.
we
2.
;
;
sufficient
ny
; fidly for the table
4.
as, ample ample justice.
;
;
])rovision Amplitude of the range, in projectiles, is tlie horizontal line subtending the path of a
flattering promises. s as i.
ed
;
the distance
;
it
Johiison.
Chambers.
spacious- Magnetical amplitude is the arch oi'the horizon between the sun or a star, at rising or ness sufficiency AMPLEX'leAUL, a. [L. ampleror, to em- setting, and the east or west point of the amb and of horizon, by the compass. The difference about, brace, plico, plexus, to between this and the true amplitude is the told, and caulis, xav\o{, a stem.] variation of the compass. In botany, surrounding or embracing the Eniyc. AM'PLY, adv. Largely; Uberally fidly; stem, as the base of a leaf. n.
;
;
Agreeably entertainhaving the mind engaged by some-
AMU'SEMENT,
Largeness; abundance.
s as z.
}i.
That which
amuses, detains or engages the mind entertainment of the mind pastime a pleasurable occupation of the senses, or that ;
;
which furnishes
;
as dancing, sports or
it,
music. n. s as z. One who amuses, or affords an agreeable entertainment to the
AMU'SER, mind.
orcf. s as :. Entertaining; giving moderate pleasure to the mind, so as to engage it; pleasing. AMU'SINGLY, adv. s as :. In an amusing
.\MU'SING, ^/?r.
manner. a. That has the entertain the mind.
AMU'SIVE, amuse or
AMYG'DALATE,
a.
power
[L. amygdalus,
to
an
almond.] Made of almonds. AMYG'DALATE, n. An emulsion made of
almonds
milk of almonds.
;
has moved.
ample narrative.
AM'PLENESS,
;
thing pleasing.
which measures
boily thrown, or the line
Liberal; magnificent; as frnip/c promises. not brief or contracted as an
5. Diffiisive
;
AMU'SED, pp.
;
;
amu-
sed with trifles. To detain to engage the attention by hope or expectation as, to amtise one by ;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
loiter,
idle
;
—
t.
at
keep
;
;
t).
AMYG'DALINE, a. bling the almond.
Core. Bailey. Pertaining to or resem-
A
AMYG'DALITE,
n. plant ; a species of spurge, with leaves resembling those of the almond. Ash.
AMYG'DALOID, mond, and
an alG. mandel-stein,
w. [Gr. a/ivySa-Kia,
n6o5,
form
;
almond-stone.] a diffusive Toad-stone a conijiound rock, consisting of copiously a basis of basalt, greenstone or some other V. t. [L. amputo, of amb, variety of trap, imbedding nodules of ;
AM'PLIATE, [L. amplio. To enlarge to make greater; V.
t.
;
See Ample.]
fication
;
sentence
n.
Enlargement
diffuseness.
Roman
In
;
1
[Little used.]
a deferring to pass a postponement of a decision,
to obtain further evidence.
2.
ampli-
;
n.
Encye.
[L. amplijicatio.]
;
In
rhetoric, iliftYisive
description or dis-
exaggerated representation copious argument, intended to present tlic subject ill every view or in the strongest light
;
;
narrative, or a dilating the particulars of a subject a
diffuse
;
upon
all
;
descrijjtion given in more words than are necessary, or an illustration by various ex-
amples and proofs.
AM'PLIFIED,
pp.
AM'PLIFIER, larges one who
One who amplifies or entreats a subject diffusive
;
the strongest light. Sidney. [Fr. amplifier ; L. ampliji-
ly, to exiiibit it in
AM'PLIFY, co 1.
;
To
<)i'
V.
t.
ampins and facio,
in
;
about, and puto, to prune.] To prune branches of trees or vines ; to cut off. To cut off a limb or other part of an ani mal body « term of surgery. ;
AM'PUTATED,;*^.
Cutoff;
AM'PUTATING, ppr.
sejiaratcil
]iart
from
to
make
large.]
enlarge; to augment; to increase or
Cutting off a limb or
various minerals, particularly spar, quartz, agate, zeolite,
calcarious
chlorite,
&c.
When ed,
it
the imbedded minerals are detachis porous, like lava. Cleaveland.
AMYG'DALOIDAL, a.
Pertaining to amyg-
daloid.
AMYLA'CEOUS, a
of the bod v.
priv.
and
a.
(iVKri,
[L.
amylum, starch, of
a mill,
being formerly
made without
grinding. Plin. 18. vii.] [L. amputatio.] to starch, or the farinaceous part of cutting off a limb or Pertaining of grain resembling starch. some part of the body. AM'ULET, n. [L. amidetum.; Fr. nmulette ; AM'YLINE, n. [\j. amylum; Gr. anv^ov ai.n'Ko;, ungrouiid, a and /uf^-ij, mill.] Sp. amuleto ; from Lat. amolior, amolitus, farinaceous substance between gum and to remove.] Webster^s Manual. starch. worn as a or
AMPUTA'TION", n. The act or operation
,
;
;
A
Something Enlarged; extended;
diffusively treated. 11.
2.
;
the bndv.
Enlargement extension. cussion
.
antiquity,
AMPLIFl€A'TION, 1.
manner.
AM'PUTATE,
[Little used.]
AMPLIA'TION, 2.
sufficiently
extend.
to
;
remedy
tive against evils or mischief,
preserva-
such as
dis-
eases and witchcraft. Amulets, in days of ignorance, were common. They con sisted of certain stones, metals or jilants sometinios of words, characters or sentences, arranged in a particvilar order. They were appended to the neck or body. Among some nations, they are still in use.
;
Encyc.
AM'YRALDISM,
n. In church history, the doctrine of universal grace, as explained by Amyraldus, or Amyrault, of France, in the seventeenth century. He taught that God desires the happiness of all men, and that none are excluded by a divine decree, but that none can obtain salvation without that God refuses to none faith in Christ the power of believing, though he does net ;
ANA
ANA grant to poucr.
his assistance to
all
improve
tliis
ANABAP'TISTRY,
Enri/c.
n. A Mexican name of the seaan amphibious quadnipeil, inhabiting the shores and rivers of America, on the
\MVZ'TLI,
used.]
Gr.
t^
uynyn
One
Ir. fin,
;
;
Arm.
ean, aon
;
W. un, yn
;
Corn.
yunan.'\
Ana-
imitation of nature. His verse consists oT three icet and a half, usually spondees and iambuses, sometimes anapests ; as in
v.
To
t.
rebaptize. [ATuf Whitlock.
n.
this line of "
A
speciesofparokeet, about tlie size of a lark; the crown of the head is a dark red, the upper part of the neck, sides,
is
length, and Its snout, short legs and crooked nails. skin is valued for tlie length and softness of its hair. Clavigero. fin Ger. een one D. a. ; ; ; AN, [Sax. an, ane, Sw. and Dan. «n ; Fr. on, un, une ; Sp. un, uno ; It. uno, una ; L. unus, una, ununi ; its tail,
ANACA,
three feet in body two feet. It has a long
Its
ANA sect of
baptists.
ANABAPTI'ZE,
lion,
Pacific ocean.
The
n.
back and wings are green. Did. of ANA€AMP'Tl€, a. [Gr. oro and
Horace. |)er omnes."
Lydia, die
ANACREON'TIC, the
AN'ADEME,
A poem
Encyc.
composed
n.
ui
Achaplctor
[Gr. woiijiwa.] of flowers.
crown
J^at. Hist.
n.
manner of Anacreon.
fV.
Browne.
xajjutta, to ANADIPLO'SIS, n. [Gr. o.a, again, and bend.] bufKoof, double.] I. Reflecting or reflected a word formerly Duplication, a figure in rhetoric and poetry, applied to that part of optics, which treats consisting in the repetition of the last word of reflection the same as what is now or words in a line or clause of a sentence, " he recalled catoptric. [See Catoptrics.] in the beginning of the next as, tained his virtues amidst all his niisforAnacamptic sounds, among the Greeks, were sounds produced by reflection, as in times, misfortunes which no inudence echoes or such as proceeded downwards coidd foresee or prevent. Encyc. from acute to grave. Rousseau. Bushy. ANAD'ROaiOUS, a. [Gr. a.a, upward, and ANACAMP'TICS, n. The doctrine of re Spo/ioi, course.] fleeted light. a word applied to such fish as [See Catoptrics.] Ascending ANA€AR'DIUM, n. The cashew-nut, or pass from the sea into fresh waters, at stated seasons. marking nut, which produces a thickish, Encyc. ;
;
;
noting an "individual, either definitely, certain, specified, or luiderstood or indefinitely, not certaui, known, or specified. Definitely, as "Noah built an ark ol " Paid was an eminent Gopher wood." ;
known,
;
"
Indefinitely, as Bring me an apostle." orange." Before a consonant the letter n but our ancestors is dropped, as a man ;
;
;
wrote an man, on king. This letter reprered, caustic, inflammable hquor, which AN'AGLYPH, n. [Gr. aim, and y?.vfu, to when used in marking, turns black, and is sents an definitely, or indefinitely. Definite engrave.] " I will take Ure, An ornament made by scidpture. very durable. you to me for a peo])le, ly, as and I will be to you a God." Ex. vi. In- ANACATHAR'TI€, a. [Gr. mu, upward, ANAGLYP'TIC, a. Relating to the art of and a is See of 'i;, of 0)o, up" such an one" is the true ANACATHAR'TIe, n. A medicine which AN'AGOgY, ^ ward, and ayuyrj, a. tautology excites the or a and such one. is from mouth, nose, discharges by Although an, leading, oyu.] phrase as expectorants, emetics, sternutatoric An elevation of mind to one, are the same word, and always have things celestial the and masticatories. the same sense, yet by custom, an and a Quincy. spiritual meaning or application of words also the apjilication of the types and alleare used exclusively as a definitive adjec- ANA€HORET. [See Anchoret.] n. and used in Where is of old to subjects of one the testament and ANA€H'RONISM, ava, xfovo^, [Gr. numbering. tive, gories the new. our ancestors wrote an, twa, tliry, we now time.] Encyc. use one, two, three. So an and a are never An error in computing time any error m ANAGOg'ICAL, a. Mysterious elevated but one like used except with a noun chronology, by which events are misspiritual as, the rest of the sabbath, in an the other adjectives, is sometimes used withplaced. anagogical sense, signifies repose of the saints in heaven. out its noun, and as a substitute for it ANA€HRONIS'Tl€, a. Erroneous in date ;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
" one is at a loss to Warton. containing an anachronism. assign a reason for such conduct." ANA€LAS'TI€, a. [Gr. ma and xTxiaii, AN, in old English authors, signifies if; as, breaking, fiom xXau, to break.] " an it the rectilinear course av honor." in Gr. So Refracting breaking please your o ofhght. or lav, Ar. • \, Sam. and L. an, if or Anaclastic glasses, sonorous glasses or phials, wliich are flexible, and emit a vehement whether Ir. an, Ch. ]x or ]'N, if, whether noise by means of the human breath called also vexing glasses, from the fright It is probably an imperative, like if, gif, which their resilience occasions. They Qu. Sax. annan, or anan, to give. give. are low phials with flat bellies, like inver A'NA, da, or a. [Gr. aio.] ted tunnels, and witii very thin convex In medical prescriptions, it signifies an equal bottoms. By drawing out a little air, the quantity of the several ingredients; as bottom springs into a concave form with wine and lioney, ana, da or a ^ ii. that is, of a smart crack ; and by breathing or blow wine and honey each two oimces. inginto them, the bottom, with a like noise, A'NA, as a termination, is annexed to the names of authors to denote a collection of springs into its former convex form. Eneyc their memorable sayings. Thus, Scaligen. That of
ANAGOG'ICALLY, sense
;
is
;
a book containing the sayings of It was used by the Romans, as
ANA€LAS'TI€S, which
Scaliger.
ANABAP'TISM, The
doctrine of
ANABAP'TIST, (iorttis'jjs,
One who
a
n.
tlie
[See Anabaptist.] Anabaptists.
n.
[Gr. cuu,
Encyc
ANA€OENO'SIS,
Ash.
and
A
again, and
ba])tist.]
to their doctrines.
Vol.
I.
""
S
Anabaptists, or Milton. BulL
xoii'Of,
n.
[Gr. oroxowuffi;
ANAeOND'A,
am
Walker.
in debate. n.
A name
given in Ceylon, Boa, which
to a large snake, a species of is said to devour travelers.
Its flesh
is
n.
considera-
Mysterious
Addison.
tions.
AN'AGRAM,
A
n.
[Gr. aio,
and
yijo/zfia,
a
letter.]
transposition of the letters of a name, by which a new word is formed. Thus Ga-
lenus
becomes angelus
William
;
N'oy,
(attorney general to Charles I., a laborious man,) may be turned into I moyl in law. ) Rlaking an anagram. l"Camden's Remains.
ANAGRAMMAT'IC, ANAGRAMMAT'ICAL,
ANAGRAMMAT'ICALLY,
adv.
In the
manner of an anagram.
ANAGRAM'MATISM, tice
The
n.
act or prac-
Camden.
of making anagrams.
ANAGRAM'MATIST,
n.
A maker of ana-
grams.
ANAGRAM'MATIZE,
I',
i.
To make
ana-
Herbert.
grams.
A
measure of graiti in Spain, containing something less than two
AN'AGROS,
n.
bushels.
A'NAL, a. as,
Encyc. anus ; Pennant. Cubic zeohte, found in aggregated or cubic crys-
[L. anus.'] Pertaining to the
the anal
ANAL'CIM,
fin. }
"
Encyc.
Encyc. ANAL'CIME, I Ure. tals. Pertaining to Anacreon, a Greek poet, whose odes and epi- This mineral is generally crj'stalized, but is also found amorphous, and in reniform, grams are celebrated for their dehcate, niaramillary, laminated or radiated masseasy and graceful air, and for their exact excellent food.
ANACREON'TIC, I
;
common.]
figure of rhetoric, by which a speaker applies to his opponents for their opinion
on the point
holds the doctrine of tlie baptism of adults, or of the invalidity of infant baptism, and the necessity of rcbaptization in an adult age. One who maintains that baptism ought always to be performed by immersion. Ena/c. ) ANABAPTIST'IC, Relatins to the
ANABAPTIST'I€AL,
optics part treats of the refraction of hght called dioptrics, which see.
commonly
in CoUectaneus, collected, gathered.
adv. In a mysterious with religious elevation.
;
ANAGOg'ICS,
;
rana,
;
;
;
a.
9
ANA
ANA Thus a
acquires a weak electricity ; hence its name, Gr. avoxxif, weak. Cleaveland. n. AN' ALECTS, [Gr. ara andxtyu, to collect.] A collection of short essays, or remarks. es.
By
friction,
it
plant
is
ANA
have
said to
because
life,
AN'ALEMMA,
growth resembles in some degree, that of an animal. In life and growth, then, there is an analogy between a plant and an animal. Learning enlightens the mind, because it is to the mind, what light is to the eye, enabling it to discover things be-
1.
fore hidden.
its
Encyc. n. [Gr. avaXt;fifia, altitude.] geometry, a projection of the sphere on the plane of the meridian, orthographical Ill
ly made ses, the
by straight lines, circles and ellip eye being supposed at an infinite distance, and in the east or west points of the horizon.
2.
An
Also,
instrument of wood or
this kind of projection is horizon and cursor fitted to
and
solstitial colure,
on which drawn, with a in which the
bi-ass
it,
all circles
parallel to
'2.
will be concentric circles all circles oWiiiue to the eye will be enii)ses and all circles whose planes pass through the eye will be right hues. Encyc. Ash. ANALEP'SIS, n. [Gr. araX);4.i5, from ara>«/i 6aiu, to receive again.] The augmentation or nutrition of an emacia ted body; recovery of .strength after a it,
;
disease.
ting
;
Qujncy. Corroborating; invigora
a.
ANALEP'TI€, strength,
and
A
XUCH5, 1.
aids in restoring a body to a restorative.
health after sickness
ANAL'OGAL,
a.
[A'oi used.]
Hah. Having analogy used by way of analogy bearing some rela-
ANALOG'ICAL,
a.
;
;
Thus
J!.
aiuXufftj,
[Gr.
;
to analyze
an action to
morality.
tion.
AN'ALYZER,
One who
71.
analyzes
which analyzes or has the power
that
;
to ana-
lyze.
mirror, appearing regular, and in right Johnson. Encyc. proportion. ANA'NAS, n. The name of a species of Bromelia, the pine-apple. Encyc. AN'APEST, 71. [Gr. am, and jtoiw, to strike.
Bailey.] Encyc. of ava and In poetry, a
a loosing, or resolving, from
/.vw,
2.
to
See Loose.]
The separation of a compound body into its constituent parts a resolving as, an analysis of water, air or oil, to discover its ;
;
Analogous.
its
pp. Resolved into its constituent parts or principles, for examina-
Johnson.
ANAL'YSIS, loosen.
medicine which gives
ascertain
AN'ALYZED,
an analogy follow a preposition, that prep- AN'ALYZING, ppr. Resolving into eleosition must be betweeti or betwixt ; as there ments, constituent parts, or first princiis an analogy between plants and animals, ples. or between customs. When one of the ANAMORPH'OSIS, n. [Gr. am, and /m;.$ufn;, formation.] things precedes a verb, and the other follows, the pre])ositioii used must be to or In perspective drawings, a deformed or disurilh ; as, a plant has some torted portrait or figure, which, in one analogy to or with an animal. point of view, is confused or unintelligible, With grammarians, analogy is a conforand in another, is an exact and regulaimity of words to the genius, structure or representation or confused to the naked general rules of a language. Thus the eye, but reflected from a plain or curved general rule in Enghsh is that the plural of a noim ends in es ; therefore all nouns which have that plural termination have an analogy, or are fcjrined in analogy with other words of a like kuul.
giving strength after disease. n.
substance
fossil
;
;
ANALEP'TI€,
When the things which have
a
;
elements. A consideration of any thing in its .separate parts an examination of the different parts of a subject, each separately as the words which compose a sentence, the notes of a tune, or the simple propositions which enter into an argument. It is op;
;
foot, consisting of three syllathe bles, the two first short, the last long reverse of the dactyl; as. Can a bosom so gentle remain Uiunoved when her Corydon sighs ? Shenstonc ;
ANAPEST'I€,
The
7!.
anapestic measure. Bentley.
Pertaining to an anapest consisting of anapestic feet.
ANAPEST'Ie,
a.
ANAPHORA,
;
n. [Gr. from ava^cpa.] analogical reasoning is reas1. A figure in rhetoric, when the same word oning from some similitude which things known bear to things unknown. An anaor words are repeated at the beguming of two or moi'e succeeding verses or clauses logical word is one which carries with it posed to sytithesis. some relation to the original idea. Thus In mathematics, analysis is the resolving of a sentence as, " Where is the wise ? the word ^rm primarily denotes solidity or Jl'here is the scrilje ? Where is the disof problems by algebraic equations. The Johnson. and by compactness in a material body puter of this world ?" analysis of finite quantities is otherwise called algebra, or specious arithmetic. 2. Amoi^g physicians, the discharge of blood analogy, when used of the mind, it conThe analysis of infinites is the method of or purulent matter by the mouth. veys the idea of (pialities having a similitude to thesolidity of bodies, that is, fixedor differential the calculus. fluxions, Encyc. Coie. ness or inmiovability. Watts. Encyc. ANAPLEROT'Ie, a. [Gr. avan.rr,f,ou, to fill.] ANALOU'ICALLY, 'adv. In an analogical In logic, analysis is the tracing of things to Filling up supplving or renovating flesh. their soiu-ce, and the resolving of knowl- ANAPLEROT'I€,7i. A medicine which remaimer; by way of similitude, relation or news flesh or wasted parts. Encyc. Coxe. agreement. Thus to reason analogically edge into its original principles. is to deduce inferences from some syllabus, or table of the principal heads AN'ARCH, n. [See Anarchy.] The authw agree- 3. ment or relation which things bear to each of confusion one who excites revolt. of a continued discourse, disposed in their other. Milton. natural order. } Without rule or gov\NALOG'ICALNESS, n. The quality of 4. A brief, mcthodi<'al illustration of the in a state ernmeiit fitness to be of a science. In this being analogical sense, it is ANAK€II'I€AL, principles applie<^l for the illustration of some analogy. Johnson. of confusion apjdied to a state or society. nearly .synonymous with syyiopsis. ANAL'OGISM, Jl. [Gr. aroXoyw'^os.] AN'ALYST, n. One who analyzes, or is Fielding uses anarchial, a word of less difficult pronunciation. An argument from the cause to the effect. versed in analysis. Kirwan. " n. An anarch one who Johnson. ANALYT'I€, to AN'AR€HIST, analvPertaining \ excites revolt, or promotes disorder in a sis that resolves uito Investigation of things by the analogy they ANALYT'ICAL, \ state. bear to each other. first principles that separates into parts Crahbe. Stephens. ANAL'OgIST, 7^. One who adheres to or original principles that resolves a com- AN'AR€HY, n. [Gr. avapz^, of o priv. and apxVi rule.] analogy. pound body or subject as, an analytical of a state of society, ANAL'OGIZE, v. t. To explain by analogy government experiment in chimistry, or an analytical Want to form some resemblance between differ when there is no law or supreme power, It is opposed to investigation. synthetic. or when the laws are not efiicient, and ent things to consider a thing with regard ANALYT'I€ALLY, adv. In the liianncr of to its analogv to soiuething else. individuals do what of a they please with imanalysis by way seiiarating Cheyne. body ANAL'OGOU'S, a. Ha\ing analogy bear- into its constituent parts, or a subject, hito ])unitv ])olitical confusion. its principles. fol ANAR'HICHAS, 7i. The sea wolf; a genus ing some resemblance or proportion lowed by to; as, there is something in tlj< ANALYT'I€S, n. The science of analysis. of ravenous fisli, of the order of Apodals, exercise of the mind analogous to that of found in the northern seas. [See Jlnalysis.] the body. genus of water fowl of AN'ALVZE, V. t. [Gr. amj^vu. See Jlnal- ANAS, ?!. [L.] the order Anseres ; including the swans, ANAL'OgY, n. [Gr. aia?.oyia, of aiw, and ysis.] To resolve a body into its elements to sep- geese, and ducks. The species are very Jioyo;, ratio, proportion.] 1. An agreement or likeness between numerous. arate a compound things subject into its parts or in some circumstances or effects, when the pro|)ositi(ins, for the purjiose of an exami- VN.ASARCA, 71. [Gr. oia, in or between, nation of each tlungs are otherwise entirely different. and au(i§, flesh.] separately as, to analyze
tion.
;
;
;
A
;
ANAR€HT€,
;
;
i,
;
;
"
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
A
;
;
ANA A species
A N C
A N C
of dropsy, from a serous
or
spread between the skin and llcsh an accumulation of lymph in the cellularj membrane, occasioning a soft, pale, ine-| lastic swelling of tlie skin, ^uincy. Coxe. ANAS' AReOlTS, a. Belonging to anasarca, or dropsy dropsical. ;
of nature or blood a predecessor, in the order of oftice. ANCES'TRAL, a. Relating or belonging to ancestors claimed or descending from
cate with a deniuiciation of curses; to pronounce an anathema against. Hammond. pp. Excommunicated with curses.
humor
;
ANATH'EMATIZED,
ANATHEMATIZING,
ppr.
;
ancestors
Pronoimcing
;
as,
an ancestral
estate.
AN'CESTRY,
and produce.] Producing ducks. Brown. a.
;
n. \ series of ancestors, or progenitors lineage, or those who compose the line cif natural descent. Hence, birth or honorable descent. Addison,
an anathema.
AN.VriF'EROUS,
[L. anas, a duck,
;
s as z. [Gr. am, and r. i. ANAT'OCISM, n. [L. anatocismus, i'roniGr. sfo^a, mouth.] to unite the mouth of one| aiu, again, and roxof, usury.] inosculate AN'€HILOPS, n. [Gr. oi7i?lu+, from o.?, a vessel with another, as the arteries with Interest upon interest the taking of comQu.] goat, and u^, an eye. Darwin. Encyc. the veins. pound interest or the contract by which The goat's eye ; an abscess in the inner ANASTOM'OSY, ) "' The inosculation of such interest is secured. ^Rarely used.] angle of the eye an incipient fi.stula lachCicero. Johnson. ANASTOMO'SIS, S vessels, or the openrymalis. Encyc. Coxe. as an artery ANATOM'l€AL, a. Belonghig to anatomy •VN'CllOR, 71. It. [L. a7ichora ; Gr. oyxi-po ing of one vessel into another, or dissection produced by or according uito a vein a relaxation or dilatation of and Port, ancora ; Sp. ancla ; D. G. Dan. to the principles of anatomy, or natural the mouths of vessels also the communianker ; Sw. anchare ; Ir. ankaire, ancair structure of the body relating to the parts or ingir; Corn, ankar ; Ar. ankar ; Pers. ancation of two vessels, as a vein with a vein. of the body when dissected or separated. Quinci/. Encyc. Coxe. ghar ; Russ. iacor ; F'r. ancre ; Arm. ancor.] adv. In an anatomical 1. An iron instrument for ANASTOMOT'IC, a. Opening the mouths holding a ship of vessels, or removing obstructions. manner; by means of dissection accord or other vessel at rest in water. It is a medicine suping to the doctrine of anatomy. ANASTOMOT'Ie, n. strong shank, with a ring at one end, to n. One who dissects bodies of the have the to be fastened and w itli a cable which opening power may posed more generally, one who is skilled in the mouths of vessels, and promoting circula two arms and flukes at the other end, the doctruie art of dissection, or versed tion, such as cathartics, deobstruents and forming a suitable angle with the shank and principles of anatomy. sudoritics. to enter the ground. Encyc. ANAS'TROPIIE, ) [Gr. avasfo^r,, a con- ANAT'OMIZE, v. t. To dissect an animal In seamen's language, the anchor comes home, ANAS'TROPHY, I version or inversion.] to divide into the constituent parts, for the when it is dislodged from its bed, so as to to each In rhetoric and grammar, an inversion of the by itself; purpose of examining drag by the violence of the wind, sea or as saxa per et natural order of words cinrent. lay open the interior structure of the parts of a body or subject as, to anatomize an Fold anchor is when the anchor hooks or is Encyc. scapulas, for per saxa et scapulas. to an or anatomize so animal )!. arguaiu-taaif, extension, plant AN'ATASE, [Gr. entangled with another anchor, or with a ment. of its crystals.] named from the length wreck or cable, or when the slack cable Octahedrite octahedral oxyd of titanium is entangled. pp. Dissected, as an ani mal body. a mineral that shows a variety of colors The anchor a cock bill, is when it is susblue to redfrom reflected ANAT'OMIZING, Dissecting. ppr. by light, indigo pended perpendicularly from the cat n. of It is usually erystahzed in dish brown. ara, through Y, [Gr. aiaroftjy, iiead, ready to be let go.
tiBrjiai, to place behind, distance, to separate.]
1.
to cut.]
and economy.
when
drawn
in
so tight as to bring the ship directly over
it.
The anchor a
The art of dissecting, or artificially separating the different parts of an animal body, to discover their situation, structure
is
peek,
it
is
The anchor is a trip, or o weigh, when it is just drawn out of the groimd, in a perpen-
dicular direction, either by the cable or the The doctrine of the structure of the body, buoy-rope. learned by dissection ; as, a physician To back an andtor is to lay down a small understands anatomy. anchor ahead of that by which the ship 3. The act of dividing any thing, corporeal rides, with the cable fastened to the crown or intellectual, for the purpose of examinwas practiced in the ancient churches, of the latter to prevent its coming home. ing its parts as, the anatomy of a plant, At anchor is when a ship rides by her anagainst notorious offenders all churches or of a discourse. were warned not to receive them all chor. Hence, to lie or ride at anchor. a The body stripped of its integuments To cast anchor, or to anchor, is to let go magistrates and private persons wen admonished not to harbor or maintain skeleton, or the cor]>oreal frame of bones an anchor, to keep a ship at rest. them, and priests were enjoined not to entire, without the skin, flesh and vessels To weigh anchor is to heave or raise the converse with them, or attend their fu an improper use of the word, and vulgar. anchor out of the ground. a neral. 5. Ironically, .\nchors are of difterent sizes. The princimeager person. There are two kinds of anathemas, Jurfi ANATREP'Tle, a. [Gr. a.-arpfjtcj, to overpal, and that on which most dependence and abjuratary. The former is Then come is jilaced, is the sheet anchor. turn.] ciary a pronounced by a council, pope or bishop Overthrowing the best bower, the small boicer, the spare prostrating defeating the latter is the act of a convert who the which to word applied dialogues of Plato, anchor, the stream anchor, aiid the kedge anathematizes the heresy which he abMar. Diet. represent a complete defeat in the gymnastic anchor, which is the smallest. exercises. jures. Enfield. 2. In a figurative sense, that which gives sta•^. In heathen that on w Inch we place mythology, an offering, or pres- AN'ATRON, n. [from Gr. vttfov, niter.] bility or security ent made to some deity and hung up in a 1. Soda or mineral fixed, alkali. dependence for safety. Wliicli hope we have as an anchor of the temple. Whenever a person quitted his 2. Spume or glass gall, a scum which rises Heb. vi. soul, both sure and stedfast. employment, he set apart, or dedicated his upon melted glass, hi the furnace, and tools to his patron-deity. Persons who when taken otf, dissolves in the air, and 3. In architecture, anchors are carved work, somewhat resembling an anchor. It is had escaped danger remarkably, or been then coagulates into common salt. of of a the otherwise very fortunate, testified their :}. The salt which collects on the walls ornaments of the commonly part boultuis of capitals in the Tuscan, Doric Johnson. Coxe vaults. gratitude by some oflering to their deity. disease in turueps, or an and Ionic orders, and on the moldings of £ncMC. AN'BURY, n. cornices. ANATHEMAT'ICAL, a. Pertaining to injiu'v occasioned by a fly. anathema. AN'C'ESTOR, n. [Fr. ancestres, ancetres ; L. In heraldry, anchors are emblems of hope. ANATHEMAT'I€ALLY, adv. In the man- antecessor, of ante, before, anil cedo, to go." Encyc. ner of anathema. One from whom a person descends, either AN'CHOR, v.t. To place at anchor; to ANATHEMATIZATION, n. The act of by the father or mother, at any distance moor as to anchor a ship. To of in the tenth or hundredth 2. fix or fasten on in a to fix stable conanathematizing. time, ; geneEncyc. ANATH'EMATIZE, v. t. To e.\coinmum- ration. An ancestor precedes in the order dition.
t.
Excommunication with curses. Hence, a curse or denunciation by ecclesiastical authority, accompanying exconnnuiiica This species of e.xconununication tion. ;
2.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
A
;
to
anchor
To
r. i.
as,
;
cast anchor
our ship anchored
come
to
;
oft' the isle
of Wight. 2.
To
stop
;
to fix or rest on.
AN'€HORABLE,
a.
Fit
for
anchorage. Herbert.
[.Voi used.]
AN'€HORAgE,
AND
A N C
A N C AN'CHOR,
Anchor-ground a place where a ship can anchor, where the ground is not too rocky, nor the water too deep nor too shallow. n.
;
or paintings, or ancient authors, books. But in seems the most
old statues or paintings;] or old authors, meaning
these examples ancient] correct, or best author-
persons apply ancient to men but this advanced in years still living use is not common in modern practice though found in scripture. With the ancient is wisdom. Job. Old that has been of long duration as,
Some
ized.
;
rude and unwrought at the ends. A piece of cast iron is melted ofl' and Iiammered at a forge, into a mass of two feet long
and square, which
is called a bloom then, carried to a finery, and worked into an ancony ; it is then sent to a chafery, where the ends are wrought into the shape of the middle, and the whole is made into a bar. ;
Encyc.
AND, conj. [Sax. and ; Ger. und ; D. ende or en ; and.] The hold of a shi|) at anchor, or rather an ancient forest; an ancient city. the anchor and all the necessary tackle 3. Known from ancient times; as the ancient And is a conjunction, connective or conjomIt signifies that a word or part for anchoring. continent, opposed to the new continent. ing woid. Robertson. of a sentence is to be added to what pre3. A duty imposed on sliips for anchoring in a harbor. AN'CIENT, n. [Supra.] Generally used in cedes. Thus, give me an apple ayid an the plural, ancients. Those who lived in A>f'€lIORED, pp. Lying or riding at anorange that is, give me an apple, add or former ages, opposed to modems. chor held by an anchor moored fixed give in adtUtion to that, an orange. John In scripture, very old men. Also, governors, and Peter and James rode to New-York, in safety. that is, John rode to New-Y'ork add or female anchoret. rulers, political and ecclesiastical. AN'€HORESS, n. The Lord will enter into judgment with the further, Peter rode to New- York add Fairfax. ancients of his people. Isa. iii. jer. xix. n. [Gr James rode to New-York. AN'€HORET, or God is called the Ancient of from liis ara, days massive mineral, of AN'DALUSITE, n. tn'a;iupi;r;75, from a!'o,vwp:io, to retire, of Dan. vU. eternal existence. a flesh or lose red color and ;tupfu, to go. Written by some ausometimes Hooker uses the word for seniors, "They found crystalized in imperfect four-sithors, anachoref.] ded prisms, nearly or quite rectangular. A hermit; a recluse; one who retires from were his ancients," but the use is not au thorized. Its hardness is nearly equal to that of society into a desart or solitary place, ti avoid the temptations of the world and I. .indent is also used for a flag or streamer, Corundum, and it is infusible by the blow and for an ensign or the in a shi]) of war It has its name from Andalusia, in devote himself to religious duties. Also a pipe. Cowel as in of a of the bearer the leave with abbot, Shakespeare. flag, Spain, where it was first discovered. monk, who, Werner. Brongniart. retires to a cave or cell, with an allowance sup])oses the word, when used for a flag to be a corruption of end-sheet, a flag at ANDAN'TE, [It. from andare, to go ; Eng. from the monastery, to live in solitude. to ivend, to wander.] the stern. It is probably the Fr. enseigne Encyc. Johnson. Cowel. Encyc. In music, a word used to direct to a moveAN'CHOR-GROUND, n. Ground suitable ment moderately slow, between largo and Indent demain, in Enghsh Law, is a tenure for anchoring. AN'CHOR-MOLD, n. The hold or fastness by which all numors belonging to tin (diegro. Encyc. Coxe. of an anchor security. crown, in the reign of William the Con AN'DARAC, n. Red orpiment. AN'€HOUING, ppr. Mooring conibig to queror, were held. The numbers, names AN'DEAN, a. Pertaming to the Andes, in were all a book of these entered the chain of mountains &c. anchor. anchor; casting great extending called Domes-day Book. Cowel. Blackstone Columliad, 3, 138. through S. America. AN'€HOR-SMITH, n. The maker or for ger of anchors, or one whose occupation AN'CIENTLY, adv. In old times; in times ANDi'RA, n. A species of bat in Brazil, is to make anchors. nearly as large as a jjigeon. Diet. J^at. Hist. long since past as Rome was anciently than at n. and anchoim > more ; AND'IRON, present. [Teutonic, andena, or andcpoj)ulous ANCHO'VY, Sp. [Port, la. In Sax. the corresponding word is Fr. anehois It. acciuga ; .\N'CIENTNESS, n. The state of bein AN'CHOVY, \ ancient antiquity; existence from old timeG. anschove.^ hrand-isen, brand or fire iron D. brandA small fish, about three inches in lengtli, of| AN'CIENTRY, n. Dignity of birth; the yzer. The Fr. landier, Ann. lander, Junius honor of ancient hneage. the genus Chipea, found and caught, in thinks, is our and-iron, with the French I vast numbers, in the Mediterranean, and prefixed.] Spenser on Ireland. Shak. An iron utensil used, in Great Britain, where [J^ot antiquity. pickled for exportation. It is used as a AN'CIENTY, n. Age coal is the common fuel, to support the Martin. sauce or seasoning. use.] of a spit but in America, used to In some old statends n. A of n. fruit AN'CIENTY, Jamaica, ANCHO'VY-PEAR, English It is large, utes and authors, eldership or senioritv support the wood in fire places. constituting the genus Grias. 14. Hen. III. contains a stone, and is esculent. ANDORIN'HA, n. The Brazihan swallow. DictofMit. Hist. AN'CIENT, a. Usually pronounced most W'CILLARY, a. [L. ancilla, a female ser;
;
2.
;
;
;
;
A
;
;
ANCHORITE,
A
;
;
;
;
;
"
;
;
;
;
;
vant.] anomalously, ancient. The pronimciation of the first vowel ought to accortl wit' Pertaining to a maid servant, or female ser-
that in antiquity, anger, atichor, &:<•. [Fr. (incien; It. anziano, an:t;fromL. ante, an-
Old
;
that
;
happened or existed
in
When
which has ceased
to exist,
a.
we commonly
use ancient, as ancient rc))ublics, ancient heroes, and not old reiJubUcs, old heroes But when the thing which began or existed in former times, is still in existence, we use either anctMi< or old; as, ancient statues
man, and
;
n. [Gr.
av^p, wSpoj,
a
avatofirj, dissection.]
AN'DREOLITE,
[L. anceps.]
former Doulitful, or double double-faced or double formed; applied to the stem of a plant, it signifies a two edged stem, compressed
times, usually at a gi-eat distance of time ; Old. as, ancient authors, ancient days. says Johnson, relates to the duration ol tlie tiling itself, as an old coat ; and ancient, to time in general, as an ancient dress. But this distinction is not always observed. AVe say, in old times, as well as ancient In general times ; old customs, &c. however, ancient is opposed to modern we and old to new, fresh or recent. speak of a thing that existed formerly
ANDRANAT'OMY,
human
subservient as a maid servant. jThe dissection of a of a male. Blackstone.
ANCIP'ITAL,
tiquus.} ^.
vice
A
n.
body, especially Co.rc. Quincy. mineral, the harmo-
tonie, or cross-stone.
ANDROG'YNAL, ANDROG'YNOUS,
Ure.
[Gr. a*ijp, a man, and yrrj?, woman.} being male and female I "' ^
tvv'o opposite angles. Having two sexes Barton's Elem. of Botany. Lee. herniaphroditical. n. small ulcerous swelling In botany, the word is applied to plants Boucher. which bear both male and female flowers, coming suddenly. from the same root, as birch, walnut, oak, AN'CON, n. [L. ancon Gr. a/yxuf, the e These plants conchesiuit, mulberry, &c. how.] The olecranon, the upper end of the ulna, or stitute tlie monecian class in Linne's sys-
and tijrming
AN' COME,
;
;
A
;
Ctue
elbow.
AN'CONE,
n. [Lat. ancon, Gr. ayxui'.]
In
corner of a wall, crossEncyc. AN'CONY, n. [Probably from oyxur, the cid)!t, from its resemblance to the arm.] In iron u^orks, a ])iece of half wrought iron iai the shape of a bar in the middle, but architecture, the beam or rafter.
tem, and frequently have an amentum, Jflilne. thong or catkin, for a calvx.
ANDROg'YNALLY,
af/i'."With the
parts
of both sexes.
ANDROG'YNUS.
ANDROID, form.l
n.
?).
[Gr.
A
hermaphrodite. Johnson.
oi>;p,
man, and
ctfio;,
A N
A N E
A
Gi
form, whii-h, by spread about in the cellular membrane, Coxe. out of its proper course, certain springs, performs some of the nat(^nincy. One of ANEURIS'MAL, a. Pertaining to an aneuural motions of a h\-ing man. rism. these machines, invented hy M. Vaiican[a and «eip.] son, appeared at Paris in 1738, represent- .'\NEVV' adv. Encyc. Over again anotlirr time in a new form; ing a flute player. iLNDROM'EDA, n. A northern constella- as, to arm anew ; to create anew. Per- ANFRACTUOUS, a. [L. an/ractus, nf amb, tion, behind Pegasus, Cassiopeia and about, and fractus, broken. See Break.] seus, representing the figure of a woman full of windings and turnings chained. The stars in this constellation, Winding written less correctly, anfractuose. in Ptolemy's catalogue, are 23 in Tyoho's, Ray. 22 in Bayer's, 27 in Flamsted's, 84. ANFRA€TUOUSNESS, n. A state of be2. The name of a celebrated tragedy of Euing full of windings and turnings. n. [L. angario ; Gr. Encyc. ANGARIA'TION, ripides, now lost. ANDROPH'AGl, n. [Gr. an;p, man, and wyyapivio, to compel a word of Persian
A
macliine, in the
;
;
;
;
;
;
^loyu, to eat.]
sharks, partaking of the characters ol' both but it differs from both in this, that mouth is placed at the extremity of the head. Enci/r. ;
"
ANgEL'I€, ANGEL'I€AL,
\\,.angeUcus.] Reseinbling angels ^ belonging to angels, or ])artaking of their nature the nature and suiting dignity of angels.
n. [Gr. a priv. and txStSuj^ui, to puhlisli, part, ixhotof, given out.] original sense, secret history, or facts
or
not generally known. But in more com mon usage, a particular or detaclied inci dent or fact of an interesting nature a biographical incident a single passage of Procopius gave the title of private life.
\ 1.3
;
;
;
anecdotes to a book he published against and Justinian and his wife Theodora similar collections of incidents in the lives of eminent men are now common. Ena/c ANEeDOT'l€AL, a. Pertaining to anecdotes.
and
n.
[Gr.
used.]
>.oyo5,
Johnson wind, and
discourse.]
doctrine of winds, or a treatise on the
subject.
ANEMOM'ETER,
n. [Gr. avifioi,
wind, and
Hirptu, to measure.]
An
instnunent or machine for measuring the force and velocity of the wind. Encyc.
ANEMONE, " [Gr. avifiufr;, from aif^tos, wind. It was the anANEM'ON }
Y,
by
^
cient Greeks written avt^uT^a. Thcoph. Lib. 6. Ca. 7. Plin. 21, 2-3. Venus is said to have changed her Adonis into an anemone. Ovid. Metam. Lib. 10, 735.] Wind-flower ; a genus of plants of numer-
Some
of tlie species are cultivated in gardens, of which their double flowers are among the most elegant ornaments. Sea Anemone. See Animal Flower. ANEM'OSCOPE, n. [Gr. awfio;, wind, and
ous species.
A
to
view.]
machine which shows city
of the wind.
tlie
course or velo-
from tvpvc, broad.] preternatural dilatation or rupture of the coats of an artery. This is encysted or late,
The encysted aneurism is when the coats of the artery being only dilated, the blood is confined to its proper coat. Of tliis kind is tlie varicose. The diffused atteurism includes all those in which, from] an apertm-c in tlie artery, the blood is' difl'used.
Ir.
ain-
AN6EL'I€ALLY, adv. Lil;e an angel. AN6EL'I€ALNESS, n. The quahiy of being
so
history,
;
God to communicate his will man. Hence angels are ministers of God, and ministring spirits. Heb. 1.
;
more than hu-
Church
sect of heretics near the close of the 5th century, who held the persons of the trinity not to be the same, nor to exist by their own nature but each to be a God. existing by participating of a deity common to them all. They are called also Severites, from Severus, their head and
to
;
in
from Angelicuin in Alexandria, where they held their first meetings, h
A
;
excellence
;
called
appropriately, spirit, or a spiritual intelhgent being
In a bad sense, an evil spirit as, the angel of the bottomless pit. Math. xxv. 1 Cor. vi. Rev. ix. 4. Christ, the mediator and head of the church. Rev. x. .5. A minister of the gospel, who is an embassador of God. Rev. ii. and iii. 6. Any being whom God employs to execute his judgments. Rev. xvi. Cruden. 7. In the style of love, a very beautiful person. Shak. n. A fish on found the coast of AN'GEL, Carohna, of the thoracic order and genus Cha;todoii. It has a small projecting mouth the lainens above the gills are armed with cerulean spines the body, a foot in length, ai)pears as if cut off, and waved, and covered with large green
angehc
man.
AN'GELITES,
;
3.
jien-
;
Theodosians, from one Theodosius, whom they made their Pope. Encyc. AN'GEL-LIKE, a. ResembUng or having the manners of angels.
ANgELOL'OgY, A
71.
[Angel and
Xoyo;.]
discourse on angels or the doctrine of Ch. Spectator. angelic beings. AN'GELOT, n. [Fr. anche, the reed of a hautboy or other instrument of music] 1.
2.
;
An instrument of music, somewhat reJohTison. sembling a lute. An ancient English coin struck at Paris while under the dominion <5f England so called from the figure of an angel supporting the escutcheon of the arms of England and France. Also, a small rich sort of cheese made in Normandy. Encyc. ;
AN'GEL-SHOT, »i. [Fr. ange, a chain-shot.] Catesby. Chain-shot, being two halves of a caimon ball fastened to the ends of a chain. gold coin formerly current in England, bearing the figure of an angel. AN' GEL- WINGED, a. Winged hke angels. Skinner says, this device was impressed Thomson. in it allusion to an observation of AN'gEL-WORSHIP, n. The worshiping upon of angels. Pope Gregory the Great, who, seeing Trapp. some beautiful English youths, in the .VN'GER, n. ang'ger. [L. ango, to choke, market at Rome, asked who they were whence angor, vexation, strangle, vex he told were being Angli, English, they anguish, the quinsy, angina. Gr. ay;tu, to replied, they ought rather to be called anstrangle, to strain or draw together, to This coin had diffeieut valgeli, angels. vex. The primary sense is to press, ues under different princes but is now Gr. ay;^i, near ; squeeze, make narrow an imaginary sum or money of account, Sax. enge G. enge ; D. Dan. eng, narimplying ten shillings sterhng. Encyc. W. jiig-. This word may row, strait AN'GEL, a. Rcsembhng angels ; angehc be connected in origin with the Ar. Shak as, angel whiteness. ANgEL-AgE, n. The existence or state of vJtA=> hanika, to be angry, and ,Jii,si, &c. Pennant from
scales.
AN'GEL,
Ji.
A
;
;
Encyc.
prep. About ; concerning ; over against : a Scottish word. Qu. Gr. fj'oiTi. AN'EURISM, n. [Gr. aio, and cvfivva, to di
ANENT',
A
Sax. angel ;
employetl by
Shak
aw^o;, wind
yixifi, description.]
A description of the \vinds. ANEMOL'OgY, n. [Gr. an^o;, The
2.
Bolingbroke.
ANEMOG'RAPHY,
tell.
geal, or aingiol; D. G. Sw.- Dan. engel; Sp. angel ; It. angelo ; Port, anjo ; Fr. ange Russ. angel.] one employed to Lnlerally, a incs.senger communicate news or intbrmation from one person to another at a distance. But ;
1.
;
ANE'LE, V. t. [Sax. wit, oil.] To give extreme unction. LYot
say, to
genus of digynian
It grows naturally in northern climates, and has large lur.bels of a globose The roots ha\ e a fragant aromatic figure. smell, and are used in the aromatic tincture. The stalks make an agreeable sweetmeat. Encyc.
;
to
a
?i.
uses.
announce Ir. agalla, agallaim, to tell Ctom the root of call, or of Ar.
speak or
Ill its
;
common
;
AN'ECDOTE,
"•
tanders, containing several species. The sort is cultivated for merlicinnl
origin.]
;
}
:
ANgEL'ICA,
but the word is little used, being Compulsion exertion. [JVot used.] superseded by anthropophagi, which see. AN6EIOT'OMY, n. See Angiotomy. Herodotus mentions people of this charac- AN'CiEL, n. Usually pronounced angel, but most anomalously. ter. angelus, Gr. [L. Mclpom, 106. ANE'AR, prep. Near. ayyfXof, a messenger, from oyytJAu, to tell Atterbury.
Blan-eaters
(J
its
;
;
iN
and sharp above, disposeil in five rows, all round the jaws. The fish takes its name from its pectoral fins, which are very large and extend horizontally, like wings wlien spread. This fish connects the genus of rays, with that ot' base, but slender
human
:
;
;
;
;
Beaumont, A species of shark, the is from six to eight feet with a teeth broad at the head, large long,
angels.
AN'gEL-FISH,
n. sijuatus squatina. It
chanaka, to strangle Heb. Ch. Syr. Eth. non, to strangle. In Sas. ange signifies ;
A
G
iV
A N G
A N G
the English, to which is added this coirN angmod. sad, anxious ang-stl, a angulo ; It. angolo. The German has an-\ i-arbuncle angsum, pressed elose anxsximou affix, ic. The Angles, were the Ingeln, for angling with a hook but in D.j mian, to vex, to luake anxious; Eng. an-\ hengel is the rofi, and hengelen, to anglc.l gsevones, of Tacitus, ing-ivoners, dweller.^ L. anxious &e. and Qu. on the plain or level land, near the Elbe sriiish, angnstus, angina, hang.] hinge In popular Umguage, the point where two See Anguish.'\ and VVeser. [See English and fVont.] A violent passion of tlic mind excited by a linos meet, or the meeting of two Unes in a| Ing is annexed to many English names, as a corner. real or supposed injury ; usually accompoint Reading, Basing, Kitlering, towns situated with a take In the to venbetween on flat land.] propensity panied geometry, space comprised two straight lines that meet in a point, or jjeaniT, or to obtain satisfaction from tliei English jiertaining to England or the EngThis jjassiou liowever between two straight converging lines lish nation as the Anglican church. (itVendiiif; party. varies in degrees of violence, and in ingen-! which, if extended, would meet or the Pinkerton. uuus minds, may be attended only with a which two quantity by straight lines, depar- ANGLICISM, ». An English Idiom; a form desire to rejirove or chide the offender. of language pecuUar to the EngUsh. ting from a point, diverge from each other. Anger is also excited by an injury otler-! The ]ioiut of meeting is the vertex of the Milton. ed to a relation, friend or party to wliich angle, and the lines, coiuaiiiing the angle, AN'GLICIZE, V. t. To make English to are its sides or legs. one is attached; and some degrees ofiti render conformable to the Enghsh idiom, may be excited by cruelty, injustice or} In optics, the angle of incidence is the angle or to English analogies. which a r;iy of light makes with a perpen- AN'GLING, ppr. Fishing with an oppression offered to those with whonii angle. dicular to the surface, or to that point of the AN'GLING, n. A one has no immediate connection, or even! a fishing with a rod and surface on which it falls. to the conuiiunity of which one is a mem-i line
vexed
;
;
;
;
;
1
;
1.
;
i
;
;
;
;
Nor is it unusual to see somethingj The angle of refraction is the angle wliieh a of this passion roused by gross absurditiesi ray of light refracted makes with the surface of the refracting medium or rather in others, especially in controversy or diswith a ])erpendicular to that point of the cussion. Anger may be inflamed till it surface on which it falls. rises to rage and a temporary deUrium. Encyc. smart of a sore or swelling the A right angle, is one formed by a right line 9. Pain literal sense of the leonl. but little used. faUing on another perpendicularly, or an To excite of 90 t. to the V. AN'GER, anger; angle angger. degrees, making quarter of a circle. provoke ; to rouse resentment. to An obtuse angle is greater than aright angle, to cause to smart :i. To make i)ainful or more than 90 degrees. Bacon.' inflame as, to anger an ulcer. An acute angle is less than a right angle or \N'GERLY, adv. [anger and like.] less than 90 degrees. in an angry manner mere generally writA rectilineal or right-lined angle, is formed ten angrily. ANgI'NA, n. [L. from ango, to choke. See' by two right hues. ber.
\NGLO-DA'NISH,
a. Pertaining to the English Danes, or the Danes who set-
tled in Eiiffland.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
\
'
• Anger.] \ quinsy ; an inflammation of the throat aj tumor impeding res])iration. It is a gei eral name of the diseases called sore-
\
A curvilineal angle,
is
;
scarlet
ANGO'LA-PEA cies
ANtilOL'OGY, ?.oyo;,
A
discourse.]
treatise or discourse
human
AN GRED gry
iScc.
(^uincy.
a vessel,
foi/oc,
alone,
and
n. [Gr.ar^ynop,
orttp^ia,
seed.]
Producing one seed only in a pod.
AN'GIOSPERM,
Bailey. Johnson. n. [Gr. ayynw, a vessel,
and ortfp|Uo, seed.] !n botany, a plant which has sed in a pericarp.
VNgIOSPERM'OUS
a.
its
seeds inclo-
Having seeds
in-
In! closed in a pod or other pericarp. Lume's system, the second order of plants; in the didynaniian class are called angio
Tins word is opposed to gymnospermous, or naked-seeded.
sperrnia.
ANGlOT'OMY, rifivui,
n. [Gr. oyyaor,
a vessel, and:
to cut.]
;
;
;
;
;
—
compounds.
;
spe-
ANGERED,
provoked. adv. In an angry manner ; with indications of resentment.
peevishly a. [See Anger.] Feeling resentment provoked; followed generally by with before a person. God is angry with the wicked eveiy day. ;
AN'GRY, 1.
;
Fa.
vii.
But
it is
usually followed by at before
Wherefore should God be angry at thy voice
a ?
Eccles. v. 2.
wearing the marks of anger caused by anger ; as, an angry countenance angry words.
Showing anger
;
;
;
Inflamed, as a sore red manifesting inflammation. furious tumultuous. 4. Raging Or chain the angry vengeance of the waves. Trumbull. ANGSA'NA or ANGSA'VA, n. A red gum of the East Indies, like that of dragon's blood. Coze. AN'GU, ?i. Bread made of the Cassada, a plant of the W. Indies. 3.
;
;
;
;
)i. [L. unguis, a serpent, and Sans, agvi.] astronomy, a cluster of stars in the form of a mail holding a serpent Serpentarius, one of the twelve signs of the zodiac. Ash.
AN'GUIFER, fero, to bear Ill
;
;
n. One that fishes with an analso a fish, a species of lophius.
AN'GLER, ;
PIGEON-PEA. A
See Anger.]
thing.
opposition to right angles. solid angle is the meeting of three or more l)lain angles at one point. A spho-ical angle is one made by the meeting of two arches of great circles, which mutually cut one another on the surface of the globe or sphere. Bailey. AN'GLE, ji. A hook an instrument to take fish, consisting of a rod, a line and a hook, or a line and hook. AN'GLE, 1'. i. To fish with an angle, or with line and hook. fish for to try to gain by '3. V. t. or i. To some bait or insinuation, as men angle for fish as, to angle for the hearts of peoShak. Sidney. ple, or to angle hearts. AN'GLED, a. Having angles used only in
gle
a vessel, whether a vein orj It includes an artery, as in bleeding. both arteriotomy and phlebotomy. AN'GLE, n. [Fr. angle ; L. angulus, a cor-i ner Gr.ayxi^os: W.ongle ; G. and D. angel,' a hook, an ano-/e ; Dnu.angel, a hook, angle,! a sting l?ax. angel, a hook Sp. Port.'
The opening of
;
AN'GRILY,
in
on the vessels of the A
^NGI03I0N0SPER3I'0US,
[L.
;
riglit-lined figure.
and Oblique angles are either acute or obtuse,
body, as the arteries, veins, lym-
phatics,
any
n.
Pain intense bodily pain. The retiring of the native bodily heat to the center, occasioning head-ache, palpitation and sadness. Encyc. Coxe. or pp. Made an-
1.
2.
i
.tsh.
or
of Cytisus.
AN'GOR,
ANGIOGRAPHY,
n. [Gr. ay/noy, a vessel,
H'otton.
a. Pertainmg to the Saxons, who settled in England, or English Saxons. ANGLO-SAX'ON, n. A kind of pear; also the language of the Enghsh Saxons.
;
body.
Wotton. Pertaining to the
ANGLO-SAX'ON,
formed by two curvedj
fever,
o.
English Normans.
line.s.
A mixed angle is formed by a right line with a ciu'ved hne. croup, Adjacent or co7itiguous angles are such as Coxe. have one leg common to both angles, and &c. mumps, both together are equal to two right an.-higina pectoris, an anomalous or spasmodic affection of the chest and organs of resgles. are ancles of any right-hned or a disease of the heart. C'o.rf.| External angles piration n. [Gr. oyyaoi-, a vessel, figure without it, when the sides are produced or lengthened. and yfta^r;, description.] A description of the vessels in the human Internal angles are those which are within as quinsy,
throat,
ANGLO-NORMAN,
or pole to which ANGUIL'LA, 71. [L. an eel.] a line and hook are fastened. In zoology, an eel; also the name of a 3Ied} Sax. ing, iterranean fish used for food, called also AN'GLIe, "' [From Jingles, a plain or meadow, and Qu. Atherina AN'GLICAN, S liospetus and atlicrina. Diet. JVat. Hist. which is the root lie, like, or nxo;, like, Hepsetus, Linne. of the L. icus, in publicus, and idl similar ANGUIL'LIFORM, a. [h. anguilla, an ecl^
ANGLE-ROD,
adje<.'tives.
n.
The rod
From ing, was formed
Angles,
and forma,
shajie.]
A N
A N H
A
I
i\
i
compact, granular, fibrous, radiated,! AN IMAL, a. That belongs or leluies xc. and conanimals as animal functions. sparry, siliciferous or vulpinite, t/re. Animal is distinguished from intellectual Jameson, voluted. animal a])petites, the appetites of the body, thr ANHY'DROUS, a. [Gr. aruipoj, dry apriv. Sp. ansia ; Port, ans^ustin, showing as hunger and thirst. and uiup, water.] direct derivation of tliis word from L. anfrom pressure D. and Destitute of water. Anliydrite is so called,' The animal functions, are touch, taste, mofrustia, narrownes.s, because it isdestilute of the water of crystion, &c. G. anf;st ; Dan. angest. Tliis and a nuAnimal life is opposed to vegetable life. Cleavcland. talization. merous chiss of words arc from the root from pressure. ANIENT'ED, a. [It. niente, nothing Norm. Animal is o))])oseil also to spiritual or rationnnfr, eng, denotuig narrow, neant ; Fr. aneantir, to annihilate.] al, which respects the soul and reasoning See Anger.^ faculties; as animal nature, spiritual naExtreme pain, either of body or mind. As Frustrated brought to naught. Obs. Chaucer. ture, rational nalure. from agony, bodily pain, it may differ Animal food may signify that food which which is such distress of the whole body ANI'GHT, adv. [a or at, and nighl.] nourishes animals but it usually denotes time anights, in the plmal, is as to cause contortion, whereas anguish In tlie night food consisting of animal flesh. used of frequent and customary acts. may be a local pain as of an ulcer, or gout. Shall. Animal economy is the system of laws by You must come in earlier anights. But anguish and agony are nearly synonywhich the bodies of animals are governed As pain of the mind, it signi- ANTL, Ji. [Sp. anil, indigo Port, anil ; D. mous. and depending on their organic .structure. fies any keen distress from sorrow, reAnimal spirit is a name given to the nervoumorse, "despair and the kindied passions. anyl ; Ar. Vj,j nilon, slender, nila, blue.] ties
In the form of an eel, or of a sci-peiu t seiiiblint; an eel or serpent. AN'GUISH, n. [Vr. angoisse h. aitf>:oscia; ;
;
;
;
m
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
And they hearkened not to Moses, guish of spirit, and for cruel bondage. Ex. for
AN'GUISH,
V.
To
t.
fluid.
an-
A
vi.
extreme Temple
distress with
pain or grief
tor-
AN'GUISHED,;>p. Extremely pained:
shrub from whose leaves and stalks indi- Animal ergy. go is made Indigo/era, or the indigo plant.
ANIL'ITV,
deeply distressed.
;
corners
;
a.
;
;
;
;
AN'GULARNESS,
n.
angular.
AN'GULATED,
The quaUty of being
Formed with
a.
a.
:
hooked.
Glanville.
ANGUST', Narrow
;
angles or
Woodward. Angular ; having corners
corners.
AN'GULOUS, a.
[L. angustus.] Burton. straight. [JVot used.] n. [L. angustus, narrow.
ANGUSTA'TION, See Anger.]
The
act ot
or being
A
n.
[L. animalculum, ani-
malcula.]
animal
but appropriately, an animal whose figure cannot be discerned without the aid of a magnifying glass such as an invisible to the naked eye. Encyr. be implied in the word, but this is not AN'IMAL-FLOWER, n. In zoology, seacommon. In an ecclesiastical sense, it anemone, sea-nettle or urtica marina, the differs from censure, says Aylifte name of several species of animals belongcensure, respecting spiritual punishment, and aniing to the genus actinia. They are called sea-nettle from their supposed property of madversion, a temporal one. Glanville in the sense of perception, vises the word stinging, and sea-anemone from the rebut this use is not authorized. semblance of their claws or tentacles, to ANIMADVER'SIVE, a. That has the pow- the petals of some flowers. These are er of ])erceiving. Obs. Glanville. disposed in regular circles, and tinged i. v. with various bright colors. Some of these ANIMADVERT', [L. animadverto, of animals are hemispherical, others cylinanimus, mind, and advcrto, to turn to.] 1. To turn the mind to; to consider. drical others are shaped hke a fig. Some 2. To consider or remark upon by way of are stiff and gelatinous; others, fleshy and criticism or censure. muscular but all can alter their figure Dryden. 3. To inflict punishment followed by upon. by extending their claws in search of food. Grew These animals can move slowly, but are ER, n. One who animadgenerally fixed by one end to rocks or verts or makes remarks by way of cen stones in the sand. On the other extremsure. ity, is the mouth in the center, which is little
;
;
a straightening
Wiseman
made narrow. n.
[L.
;
The
knights.
latidave,
whh
broader studs, was worn by,senators.
ANHELA'TION, breathe
;
;
angustus, nar-
row, and clavus, a knob or stud.] or tunic embroidered with purple studs or knobs, or by pur])le stripes, worn
A robe
Roman
;
;
making narrow
ANGUST'I€LAVE,
by
ANIMAL'€ULE,
;
adv. With angles, or corin the direction of the angles.
AN'GULARLY, ners
j
;
;
the plural, Ufe, vigor, en-
Ena/c. Animal system, or animal kingdom denote.the whole class of beings endowed with animal life. Encyc. Johnson.
n. [L. anilis, anilitas, from anus, Celtic, hen, old.]
an old woman Having an angle, angles or The state of being an old woman the old age of a woman; dotage. pointed as an angular tigure. anan of an 2. Consisting ANIMADVER'SION, n. [L. animadversio.]. angle forming as an angular point. Remarks by way of censure or criticism gle ANGULARITY, n. The quaUty of having reproof; blame. It may sometimes be used for punishment, or pimishment may an angle or corner. tiu-ed
AN'GULAR,
spirits in
;
with
ditficulty
breathe.] •Shortness of breath
;
from
halo,
to
a panting difficult respiration, without fever, or with a sense of suffocation. Ena/c. Coxe. ANHELO'SE, a. Out of breath panting breathing with difficulty. {Little used.] Diet AN'HIMA, n. A Brazihan aquatic fowl, larger than a swan, somewhat like crane. Its head is small, its bill black the toes armed with long claws. But what is remarkable, is a horn growing from its forehead and the second joint of the wing is armed with two straight triangular spurs, an inch in length. The fidelity between the male and female is so great, that when one dies, the other remains by the carcase, till it expires. ;
;
;'
:
;i
;
surrounded by rows of fleshy claws Considering; reand capable of great dilatation. marking by way of criticism or censure. They n. [L. animal, from anima, air, are very voracious, and will swallow a breath, soul Gaelic anam, breath. The muscle, or crab, as large as a hen's egg. W. has envil, en, a being, soul, spirit, and Encyc. Arm. aneval. Qu. Dan. aan- The term, Animal Flower, is also extended mil, a beast to many other marine animals, from their de, Sw. anda, breath.] An organized body, endowed with life and resemblance to flowers. They belong to the Holothurins, which with the Actinias, the power of voluntary motion a living, were ranged under tjie Molluscas, by sensitive, locomotive body as, man is an Animals are essentialLinne; and to the Tubularias and Hydras, intelligent animal. which were classed with the Zoophytes. ly distinguished from plants by the proThey are all arranged imder the Zoophytes, perty of sensation. The contractile prop by Cuvier. Cyc. erty of some plants, as the mimosa, ha: the appearance of the effect of sensation ANIMALIZA'TION, n. The act of giving animal hfe, or endowing with the properbut it may be merely the effect of irrila ties of an animal. Ure. Med. Repos. hility. The distinction here made between animals AN'IMALIZE, V. f. To give anunal hfe to to endow with the properties of animals. and vegetables, may not be philosophical
ANIMADVERT'ING, ppr.
Kennct. Quinctilian. [L. anhelo, to pant or
n.
ANIMADVERT'
AN'IMAL,
;
;
;
;
;
accurate for we cannot perhaps as AN'IMALIZED, pp. Endowed with animal hfe. certain the jirecise limit between the two kinds of beings, but this is sufficiently cor- AN'IMALIZING,;);?r. Giving annual hfe to. Diet. o/'.Vat. Hist. rect for common practical purposes. AN'IMATE, V. t. [L. animo. See Animal.] n. The of is To give natural life to to quicken to animals called 1. AN'HYDRITE, [See Anhi/drous.] history zoology. make ahve as, the soul animates the body. species of sulphate of lime, anhydrous By way of contempt, a dull person is called '5. To a stupid animal. give powers to, or to heighten the' gypsum, of which there are several varie ly
;
;
A
;
;
A
ANN
A N N
1
i\
lAOweii or cflect of a thing as, to annnuk] seetL< liave an aromatic smell, and a pleasant warm taste they are useful in warma Ij're. To give spirit or vigor to infuse cour- ing the stomach and exjielling wind. Ena/c. Theoph. Lib. 7. 3. Plin. 20. 17. age, joy, or other enlivening passion to stimulate or incite as, to animate dispmt- AN'ISESEED, n. The seed of anise.
nex a penalty to a prohibition, or pnnish»
;
ment
;
3.
;
to guilt.
ANNEX',
V. i.
To
join
;
to be united.
Tooke.
;
;
ANK'ER, n. [Dutch.] A measure of hquids used
cd troops.
W'IMATE,
Alive
«.
;
|)ossessu)g
animal
[This
word
is
used chiefly
in poetry for
imal
;
pp. Being endowed with anas the various classes of anima-
life,
each mengle, 2 wine Chambers. Encyc. fpiarts. ANK'LE, n. ank'l. [Sax. ancleow; D. enkcl.] indi- The joiut which connects the foot with the
led beings.
a. Lively ; vigorous full of s))irit cating animation as an ani'maJerf discourse. \N'IMATING, ppr. Giving life ; infusing enlivening. spirit ANIMA'TION, 71." The act of infusing life the state of being animated. i. The state of being lively, brisk or fidl of spirit and vigor; as, he recited the story ^vitll great animation. AN'IMATIVE, a. That has the power of Johnson. giving life or spirit. AN'IMATOR, n. One that gives Ufe that which infuses hfe or spirit. \N'IME, n. [Fr.] In heraldn/, a term denoting that the eyes of a rapacious animal are borne of a different tincture from the animal himself
:i.
;
;
stekan, 16 mengles
;
;
n.
A
[Sp.]
resiii
BraziUans in fumigations, for pains proceeding from cold. Encyc.
ANIMET'TA, the cloth eucharist.
ters,
ANIMOSTTY,
n.
Among
ecchsiasiicat
ivri-
which covers the cup of the Encyc. n.
[L. animositas
:
Fr. ani
trom L. animosus, animated, cour from animus, spirit, ageous, enraged mind, passion. So in Teutonic, mod. mind, signifies also pride, passion, anger. ••Jniimts, spirit, Gr. ajjftoj, wind, breath, is from flowing, swelling, rushing, which gives the sense of violent action and pasSee Animal.] sion. Violent hatred accompanied with active opmositi-
;
;
position
;
active enmity.
Jiiiimosity
dif-
from enmity which may be secret and inactive and it expresses a less criminal passion than malice. Animosity seeks to gain a cause or destroy an enemy or rival, from hatred or private interest; malice seeks revenge for the sake of giving pain. \NIN'GA, n. A root growing in the VVestIndies, like the China plant, used in refers
;
fining sugar.
AN'ISE,
n.
an'iiis.
Ar. ianison.
[L.
anisum
;
Encyc. Gr. avtJoK
;
Cast. 1(319.]
An
annual plant, placed by Linne under the genus Pim])inella. It grows natmally in Egypt, and is cultivated in Spain and Mal-
ta, Avhence the seeds .stalk rises a foot and
are imported. The a half high, dividing
into slender branches, garnished with nar row leaves, cut into tlree or four narrow
ANNEX'ING,
7i.
The bono of the
ankle.
n. [See Annals.] writer of annals. AN'NALIZE, V. i. To record to write an-
A
[.Voi mxich used.] n. plu. [L. annates,
AN'NALS,
Encyc.
the thing annexed.
ANNI'HILABLE, ANNI'HILATE, 1.
v.
t.
That may be annihiad and nihilum,
[L.
nothing, of «e, not, and hilum, a trifle.] To reduce to nothing ; to destroy the existence of
No human power
A
species of history digested in order of time, or a relation of events in chronolog-
each event being recorded un
ical order,
Shak.
a.
lated.
2.
cle.] 1.
Uniting at the end,
n. The act of annexing; anaddition. [lAttle used.] n. Tlie act of annexing:
;
ANNEX'MENT,
annalis,
from annus, a year, the root of which may be the Celtic an, ain, a great circle. Varro says the word annus signifies a great cii--
affixed.
ppr.
affixing.
;
nals.
Joined at the end; con-
pp. ;
ANNEX'ION,
AN'NALIST,
can annihilate matter.
To destroy the form or pecuhar distinctive properties, so that the no specific thing longer exists ; as, to annihilate a forest by and carrying away the trees, to though the tunber may still exist annihilate a house by demohshing the cutting
in which it liappened. An nals difier from history, in merely relatint events, without observations on the mo
der the year
exuding from
the stem of a large Anierican tree called by the natives courbaril ; by Piso, jetaiba. It is of a transparent amber color, a light agreeable smell, and of little or no taste. It dissolves entirely, but not readily, in rectified spirit of wiiie, and is used by the
nected with
nexation
ANK'LE-BONE,
;
ANTME,
ANNEX'ED,
;
leg.
;
;
crown.
Enryc.
Chambers says it contains two stekans each
ny^imnted.]
AN'IMATED,
at the end conjunction; addition; the act of connecting; union. In English law, the uniting of lands or rents to the
unitmg
in Holland, con-
taining about 32 gallons, English measure.
Milton.
life.
ANNEXA'TION, n.The act of annexing, or
;
structure.
causes and consequences, which, ANNIHILATED, pp. Reduced to nothing ; in history, are more dili'usively illustrated destrojed. 2. The books containing annals, as the «« .\NNI'HILATING,;)pr. Reducing to nothnal^ of Tacitus. ing destroving the specific form of ANNIHlLA'tlON, n. The act of reducing AN'NATS, [L. annus.] A year's income of a spiritual living the to nothmg or non-existence or the act of first fruits, originally given to the Pope destroying the form or combuiation of parts under which a thing exists, so that upon the decease of a bishop, abbot or the name can no longer be applied to it, parish clerk, and paid by his successor as the annihilation of a corporation. In England, they were, at the reforma2. The state of being reduced to nothins. in vested the and in the tion, king, reign of Queen Anne, restored to the church, ANNlVERS'ARILY,arfv. Annually. Hall. and appropriated to the augmentation of ANNIVERS'.ARY, a. [L. anniversarius, of annus, year, and verto, to tiu-n.] poor livings. Encyc. ANNE'AL, V. t. [Sax. ancelai!, on-alan, to Returning with the year, at a stated time animal yearly as an anniversary feast. kindle or inflame, to heat from (elan, to Ivindle, to heat or bake, and to anoint with ANNIVERS'ARY, n. A stated day returnoil. Sax. eel, oil. Hence it may be infering with the revolution of the year. The term is a})plied to a day on which some red that oil is named from inflaming or remarkable event is annually celebrated, burning.] or a day on which an interesting event is 1. To heat to heat, as glass and iron for the conmiemorated by solemnities of religion, purpose of rendering them less brittle, or or exhibitions of respect. In the Romish to fix colors vulgarly called nealing. This is done by heating the metal nearly to church, a day in which an office is yearly performed for the souls of the deceased. fluiflity, in an oven or furnace, and suffering it to cool gradually. Metals made 2. Tiie act of celebration performance in honor of an event. hard and brittle by hammering, by this Dryden. DOMINL [L.] In the year of oiuprocess recover their malleabihty. The word is aj)plied also to the baking of tiles. Lord, noting the time from our Savior'sincarnation as, Anno Domini, or A. D. 1800. Encyc. Bailey. Ash. and Shenstone uses 2. To temper by heat This was wriltcn Anno Domini, 1S09, and it for tempering by cold. revised A. D. I82i"> and 1827. W. lives,
;
}i..
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
ANNO
;
;
ANNE'ALED,/)/>. Heated tempered made malleable and less brittle by heat.
ANNOMINA'TION,
ANNE'ALING,
1.
;
;
Heating
pjtr.
;
tempering
ANNEX', annexcr
V. ;
t.
[L.
annecto,
annexum
of ad and nedo, to
tie,
;
Fr.
or con
2.
nect.] 1.
To
unite at the end
;
Ji. [L. ad and tiotninafrom nomino, to name, from nojncn.] pun the use of words nearly alike in but of dift'erent sound, meanings; a paronomasy. Encyc. Alliteration, or the use of two or more winds successively beginning with the
tio,
by heat.
A
;
same
as to annex a codi
cil to a will. To subjoin, to affix. The branches terminate in .segments. large loose umbels, composed of siualler 2. To unite, as a smaller thing to a greater as to annex a province to a kingdom. umbels or i-ays, on long footstalks. The flowers are small and of a yellowish white 3. To unite to something preceding, as the main object ; to coimect with ; as to an!hc seeds obloug and swelling. Anise
:
letter. Tyrwhitt. n. [L. annona, from annus, a year, and signil'ying a year's production or increase ; hence provisions.] The custard ap])lc, a genus of several spe-
ANNO'NA,
cies,
one of which, the papaw,
is
common
ANN
ANN southern and westeni parts of the United States. [See Papaw.]
in the
AN'NOTATE, To comment
l
v.
;
1.
[L. annoto.]
make remarks on a writing.
to
;
TatUr. n. [L. aimoMio, of ad and marking, from nolo, to mark, or note, a mark.] A remark, note or commentary on some passage of a book, intended to illustrate its meaning generally used in the plural, as annotations on the scriptures. The first symptoms of a fever, or attack
;
2.
ANNOTA'TION,
;
3.
of a paroxysm.
AN'NOTATOR,
A
n.
Core. a writer of notes ;
commentator a schoUast one who writes ;
;
notes to illustrate the composition of an author.
ANNOT'TA,
a hard n. Orlean, or roiicou dry paste, consisting of the pellicles of the seeds of the bixa orellana, a shrub grow ;
ing in S. America and the W. Indies. It is moderately hard, of a brown color on It is the outside, and a didl red within. used in dyeing to give an orange cast to a simple yellow. It is used also in coloring cheese. lire. [See Anotia.] ANNOUNCE, V. t. announs'. [Fr. annoncer ; It. annunziare ; L. annnncio, to deliver a message, of ad and nuncio, to tell from nuncius, a messenger.] 1.
To
or 2.
to give notice, publish to proclaim notice as, the birth of Christ was ;
;
first
;
announced by an angel. To pronounce; to declare by judicial sentence.
Prior.
ANNOUN'CED, pp.
Proclaimed
first
pub-
announs'ment.
The
;
lished.
ANNOUNCEMENT, act of giving notice
n.
proclamation pub Month. AlazANNOUN'CER, n. One that announces, or first gives notice a proclaimer. ;
first
t.
and numcro,
nmnber
;
;
;
;
;
Governments
often bori'ow tinople, whose busujess was to inform the money upon annuities, that is, for a cerpeople of the festivals which were to bo tain sum advanced on loan, the governcelebrated. Encyc. ment contracts to pay the lender a specific .ANODYNE, n. [Gr. o or ok priv. and oSvir. sum, for life, or for a term of years. The pain.] stock created by such loans is transfer- .\ny medicine which allays pain, or cause.'? able. sleep, as an opiate, paregoric, narcotic. Coxt. ANNUL', V. t. [Fr. annuller, of L. ad nullum, &c. to nothing.] AN'OD'PNE, a. Assuaging pain causing 1. To make void to abrogate to nidUfy sleep, or insensibUity. to abolish used appropriately of laws ANOINT', V. f. [Fr. oindre, p. oint ; Sy. decrees, edicts, decisions of courts, or unter, to anoint; L. ungo ; Sp.ungir; It. other established rules, permanent usages, ungere, or ugnere.] and the like, which are made void by com- 1. To pour oil upon to smear or rub ovei
lowance.
;
;
;
;
;
with
petent authority. 2.
To
in
reduce to nothmg
much
;
to obliterate.
a.
[L. annulus, a ring,
from
oil or unctuous substances also to spread over, as oil. say, the man anoints another, or the oil anoints him. To consecrate by unction, or the use of"
2.
oil.
;
base
on
;
or
when these prisms
all their
are truncated terminal edges. Cleaveland. a. Having the form of a ruig.
AN'NULAR \',
ious.]
Ray.
to injure or disturb by conAN'NULATED, a. Furnished with rings, tinued or repeated acts to tease, vex or or circles, like rings having belts. molest as, to annoy an army by impeding AN'NULET, n. [L. annulus, a ring.] their march, or by a continued cannonade. In architecture, a small square member in the ANNOY', »i. Injury or molestation from con- Doric capital, under the quarter romid; tuiued acts or inconvenience. also a narrow flat molding, which is comShak. Beattie. mon to as in the bases or ;
;
;
;
many
That which annoys, or
places, called also
or
or
capitals tlie act of annoying the state of cincture, or a fist, timea, eye brow or It includes being annoyed. something square rabbit. Encyc. more than incontienience. In heraldry, a little circle, borne as a charge ANNOY'ED, pp. Incommoded, injured or in coats of arms formerly reputed a mark molested by something that is continued it of nobihty and jurisdiction the being or repeated. custom of prelates to receive their mvesti ANNOY'ER, n. One that annovs. ture haculum et annulum, by stafl'and ANNOY'FUL, a. Giving trouble; incom- ring. perIt denotes also strength and etermoding molesting. [JVotiised.] Chaucer. nity, by its circular form. Among the Ro;
a, fillet,
hstil,
;
;
;
;
ANNOY'ING, ^^r. Incommoding;
hurtuig;
molesting.
represented liberty and distincIt denotes also difference or mark of distinction, which the fif^h brother of a family ought to bear on his coat of arms. Encyc. Johnson.
mans,
it
tion of rank.
ANNOY'OUS,
a.
AN'NUAL, a. Vol. I.
[Fr. annuel
Troublesome. ;
[JVotmed.] Chaucer.
Sp.anual;
It.
10
;
We
Milton.
«sc.]
AN'NULAR,
[Ao<
Thou shalt anoint 3.
He clay. 4.
the altar, and sanctify
it.
Ex.xax
To smear
;
injures;
from numerus.
nuiver or nuimher.
;
;
ANNOY'ANCE,
Ir.
;
;
;
n.
number,
;
;
To incommode
to
niver
;
;
and Ch. T\2i to strike. Hence probably L. neco, to kill. See JVuisance and J^ox-
W.
;
ANNOY',
;
;
See J'J'umher.] grow in the spring, and perish iri the auto unite to tumn, are called annual, in opposition to To add to a former number Johnson. evergreens. something before mentioned. 3. Performed in a year as the annual motion ANNUMERA TION, n. Addition to a for of the earth. mer number. AN'NUAL, n. A plant that lives but one ANNUN'CIATE, v. t. [See Announce.] Chaucer. year, or rather but one summer. Martyn To bring tidings to announce. AN'NUALLY, adv. Yearly returning every ANNUNCIA'TlON, n. An announcing the year vear by year. tidings brought by the angel to Mary, ol' the incarnation of Christ. Also the day ANNU'ITANT, n. [Sec Annvity.] One who receives oris entitled to receive an celebrated by the church, in memory oV the angel's salutation of the blessed virannuity. n. from a The ANNU'ITY, annus, gin, which is the Soth of March. [Fr. annuUe, Jews give the title to a part of the cereyear. See Annual.] A sum of money, payable yearly, to continue mony of the passover. Encyc, for a given number of years, for Ufe or for 2. Proclamation pronudgation. ever an annual income, charged on the ANNUNCIATOR, n. One who announor an annual alces an officer in the church of Constaii person of the grantor
Celtic ain, a circle, and ul, young, small ppr. Introducing notice annulus, a little circle.] pubUshing proclaiming. V. t. [Norm, annoyer, from nture Having the form of a ring pertaining to a Fr. nuire ; It. nuocere from nuire, to hurt ring. L. noceo, to hurt, that is, to strike Syr. Annular crystal is when a hexahedral prism has six, or an octahedral prism eight mar?,ginal faces, disposed in a ring about each {,iiJiAr- L5Cj to strike, to hurt; Heb.
ANNOUN'CING,
;
ing.
ANNUL'MENT, n. The act of annulling. ANNU'MERATE, v. [L. annumero, of aj
;
;
;
lication.
AJVNUL'LED, pp. Made void; abrogated. .ANNUL'LING, ppr. Abrogating abolish-
;
notatio, a 3.
A N O
annuale; L. annalis, from annus, a year; Gr. ttoj, (vvoi Sans, anda.] Yearly; that returns every year ; coming yearly as an annual feast. Lasting or continuing only one year or season that requires to be renewed every Leaves that year as an annual plant.
or daub. anointed the eyes of the blind John ix.
man
witli
To
prepare, in allusion to the consecrating use of oil.
Anoint
the
Holy
Isaiah xxi. the head with oil, Ps. xxiii. seem.', commuuicate the consolations of
tlie shield.
To anoint to signify to
Spirit.
The use of oil
in consecrations,
was of high
antiquity. Kings, prophets and priests were set apart or consecrated to their offi-
ces by the use of oil. Hence the pecuhar apphcation of the term anointed to Jesus Christ.
ANOINT'ED, pp. Smeared
or rubbed with consecrated with oil. n. The Messiah, or Son of consecrated to the God, great oflice of Redeemer called the Lord's anointed. CyTus is also called the Lord's anointed. oil
;
set apart
;
ANOINT'ED, ;
Isaiah xlv.
ANOINT'ER, n. One who anoints. ANOINT'ING, ppr. Smearing with pouring on stance
;
oil,
ANOINT'ING, oil
;
oil
;
or other oleaginous sub-
consecrating. n.
The
act of smearing with
a consecrating.
ANOINT'MENT,
71.
The
act of anointing,
or state of being anointed.
A N O AiVO'LE,
A
»!.
A N
species of lizard in
tlie
W.
Indies, of a yellowish color, liaviiij; spverall blue and green stripes running down its back. Did. ofMit. Hist.
fpngth
('(1
A N
S
continurilion to the clouds.
An. Dom. 1127.] Quickly; without intermission;
See
tame or
also 1.
soon
2.
wild.
S
The domestic goose
is
the'
gray-lag or wild goose, domesticated. In astronomy, a small star, in the milk)
way, between the swan and eagle. Encyc. •VN'SERINE, a. [L. anserinus, from anser.
immediately. 'I'he same is he
that heareth the word, anil a. [Gr. avufiaUa, inequal anon with joy reccivetli it. Matt. xiii. a goose.] and rtovs, L. pes, foot.] 2. Sometimes; now and then ; at other times; 1. epithet given to fowls, whose middle toe Resembling the skin of a goose; tmeven ; accompanied with ever, tucr and anon. is united to tlie exterior as, an anserine skin. Encucby three phalan a. [Vr.anonyine; L. anon 2. Pertaining to the ansers. ees, and to the interior by one onlj-. Gr. of a and ; ai'wiTfio;, ymiis ovofia, priv. AN'SERS, ?!. In Linne's system, the third ANOM'ALIPED, n. An anomalous footed name. See order of aves or fowls, whose characterfowl. [See the adjective.] Diet. J\'al. Hist. JVamc.] wanting a name; without the istics are a smooth bill, broadest at the ANOM'ALISM, n. An anomaly a deviation Nameless; real name of the author ; as, an from rule. covered with a smooth anonymous
ANOM'ALIPED, ity,
An
ANON'YMOUS,
;
point,
AN03rALIS'Tl€,
)
ANOMALIS'Tl€AL,
S
Irresular
"'
com ANON'YMOUSLY,
adv.
Witliout a name.
AN'OPLOTHER, i nion or established rules. " [Gr. av neo ANOPLOTHE'RIUai, ^ on^.oy, arms, and In astronomy, the aytomalistic year is the time Btjpiov, a lieast.] ill which the earth passes thronsh her or- This is the name which Cuvier has given to bit, which is longer than the trojiical year, a genus of animals, whose bones are found on account of the precession of the equiin the gypsmn quarries near Paris a genus noxes.
with legs and feet adapted to swimming. n. [See Slay.] Aji attack
AN'SLAIGIIT, an
a general
;
deviating from
rule, method or analogy ; applied, in grammar, to words which deviate from the connnon rules of intlcction and ;
in
astronomy, to the seemingly irregular motions of tlie planets but applied also generally to whatever is irregular; as, an miomaloiis character anomalous ])ronun-
I!, f. ansur. [Sax. andmarian, of (ra
;
;
ciatiou.
ANOjM'ALOUSLY, manner
ditlerent
adv.
Irregularly
from connnon
ride,
in a
;
meth-
od or analogy.
ANOM'ALY, lia;
[Ft. anonmlie
;
Brown.
Want
2.
3.
Encyc. Busby.
interv.Tl.
ANO'MEANS,
n. [Gr. wo^toio;, dissimilar.] tn church history, the piu'e Arians, as distin-
guished from the Semi-Arians.
ANO'jMIA,
tt.
[Gr. aiofiia
a
;
j)riv.
Encyc.
and
Mfioj,
in adtlition to a
\vill
former mim-
;
1.
as,
;
another.
Any nitely
any different |)erson, indefi" Let another praise thee and not
other; ;
as,
thy own mouth." This word is often used without a novni, becoming a substitute fnr the name of the person or thing; as in the
iu 2.
agreement and confii-mation of what
was said, or in opposition to it. To be equivalent to ; to be adequate to, or sufficient to accompfish the object. " Jloney answereth all things," noting,
last example. It is also much used in opposition to one, as in the first and second primarily, return. passages cited. It is also frequently used 3. To comply with, fidfill, pay or satisfy ; as, with one, in a reci])rocal sense ; as, " love he answered my order ; to answer a debt. " one another ;" bear o?!e another^s burdens ;" 4. To act ui return, or opposition ; as, the enethat is, love one, or let (JUe love another. answered our fire by a shower of grape my ANOTH'ER-GAINES, adv. Of another kind. shot. Obs. Sidney. 5. To bear a due projinrtion to to be equal ANOTU'ER-GATES, adv. Of another sort. or adequate to suit ; as, a weapon does Obs. not answer the size and strength of the Sanderson. ANOTH'ER-GUISE, a. [another and guise, man using it ; the success does not answer our expectation. Fr. way, manner ; Sax. wise. The Saxon manner of writing this word would be G. To j)erform what was intended ; to accomplish ; as, the measiu-e does not ansioer another->oise.] Of a diflerent kind ; different. This is a vnd- its end ; it iloes not ansicer the purjjose. 7. To be oi)posite to ; to face ; as, fire angar word, and usually contracted into other swers fiif. Shak. guess. 8. To write in reply ; to reply to another ;
;
rule.]
A genus of bivalve shells, s-o called from their unequal valves the beaked cockle. AN'OMITE, n. A fossil shell of the genus anoniia. Jameson. ;
ANOMORHOM'BOID, and
regular,
n.
pojueo£i8!j5,
[Gr. avo^o.oj,
ir-
of a rhomboidal
figure.]
A genus of
spars, pellucid, and crystaline, of no determinate form externally, but break- ,\NOT'TA, n. An elegant red color, formed from the pellicles or pulp of the seeds of ing into regular rhomboidal masses. The the bixa, a tree common in South America. species are five, mostly of a white color. This is called also Terra Orleana and Encyc. AN'OMY, n. [Gr. ato^ca.] A violation of Roco. The aimotta is made by steeping the seeds for seven or eight days, law. Bramhall. [Rarely used.] pounding
ANON',
we
grant one request, ask another favor, another aiul
indefinitely;
they
VV. hamal, or 3.
In astronomy, an irregidarity in the motion of a planet, whereby it deviates from the aphelion or apogee. In music, a false scale or
One more,
a returned word or speech. Hence observe the Saxon has andwyrd, antiword, an answer; Goth, andawaurd D. antuoord ; Ger. antwort.] To speak in return to a call or question. or to a speech, declaration or argument of another person as, " I have calfod and ye have not answered.'" " lie answered the question or the argument." This may be
site,
a. [an, or one and otter.] Not the same ; difierent ; as, we have one finin of government ; France, another.
ber,
;
:2.
ope^ij, ajjpe-
Co.ce. 1.
;
ores.
[Gr. a priv. and
of appetite, without a lothmg of food.
ANOTH'EK,
deviation from the common Irregularity rule ; thus oxen, the plural of ox, is an anomaly, in grannnar, as the regular plural
would be
)(.
tile.
Sp. anomaGr. awo^aXia, inequality, ofapriv. and )"i.
now extinct. ANOP'SY, n. [Gr. ar neg. and 1^4., sight.] Want of sight in vision. [Little used.]
AN'OREXY,
;
[.N'olin use.]
afl[iay.
'ANSWER,
;
ANOM'ALOUS, a. Irregular
and
skin,
furnished with teeth. The tongue is fle.shy, and the toes are webbed or palmated. It includes all the web-footed water fowls,
]iam|)hlet.
de
;
parting from
adv.
[Sax. on an,
S).
mathematics. This word may be applied to a great variety of objects, expres.sing the idea of a return as the notes, or sounds of birds, and other animals ; an echo, &c.
them to separate
the red skins, then straining the liquor, boiling it, taking off the scum which is the coloring matter, then boiling it to a due consistence, and making it into balls.
one; not, as Junius supposes, in one minute, but in continuation, without internii^sion applied originally to extension in measure, and " then to time by analogy. And soedon Encyc. that hi sajgon on north-east fir micel and AN'SATED, a. [L. ansatus, from ansa, a brad with thone earthe, and weax on handle.] lengthe up on an to tliam wolcne." Sax. Having a handle or handles, or something in Chron. A. D. 1022. And they said they the form of liandles. Johnson. in
;
saw in the north-east a great fire anil broad, near the earth, and It increased iu
AN'SER, \.
n.
[L. a goose.]
In zoology, the
name of the goose, whether
writing, by way of explanation, refutation or justification ; as, to answer a pamphlet. To solve, as a proposition or iiroblem in
;
'ANSWER, of retmn 1
2.
Kings
;
r. 1. a.«,
To
rej)ly
there
is
;
to
speak by
none
to
way
answer.
xviii.
To
be arcouutable, liable or responsible ; followed by to befure the person, and for before the thing liir which one is liable as, the man must answer to his employer for ;
the money eulrusted to his care we caju not answer la God for our offenses. ;
[
A N
vindicate, or give n jiistificatoi-y accoiiiu of; followed by fur; as, a man cannot answer for liis friend. 4. To correspond with ; to suit « itli ; follow
ed by of .'5.
C>.
To
act reciprocally, as the strings of an instrument to the band. Drydeii. To stand as opiiosite or correlative ; as, allegiance in the subject ayiswers to protection on the part of the prince or govern-
To
return, as
sound reverberated to echo. ;
The noise seems to fly away, and answer at a great distance. Encyc. Jlrt. Echo. 8. succeed ; to effect the object intended
To
;
have a good effect manure on a dry
to
;
as a
WNSWER, n. A reply
gyjisum answers
as,
soil.
that
;
which
is
said, in
return to a call, a (jucstion, an argument, or an allegation.
A soft
answer turneth away wrath. Prov. him, but he gave me no answer.
called
I
Cant. v.
An
account to be rendered to justice. He will call you to so hot an answer for
2.
it.
Shak.
In law, a counter-statement of facts, in a course of pleadings a confutation of what the other jiaity has alledged. 4. A writing, pamphlet or book, in reply to another. 5. A reverberated sound an echo. that wliich is sent in conse6. A return quence of some petition, as a blessing sent in answer to priiyer. 7. A sohuion, the result of a mathematical 3.
;
;
in old authoi-«i,
AN'T,
a contraction of on
is
in
the substantive verb, in the present pain.] tense of the Indicative IVIode, and not, 1 Alleviating pain anodyne. [lAttle used.] we ere-nol, he er-not, or of the Swe- ANTANACL.^'SIS, ti". [Or. oi ra. axjxwtj, a dish nr, the same verb. Infinitive vara, to driving back.] be. The.se phrases are doubtless legiti \. In rhetoric, a figure, which consists in remate remains of the Gothic dialect. jiealing the same word in a different .sense Learn some 'ANT, n. [Sax. a:met, emmet, contracted uito as, whilst we live, let us live. ant ; Germ, nmeise.] craft when young, that when old you ma> An emmet a pLsmire. Ants constitute a ge- live without crajl. luis of insects of the hymenopteral order, 2. It is al.so a repetition of words, begmniut of which the characteristics are; a small a sentence, after a long pan^nthesis as, shall that heaj-t, (which not scale between the breast and belly, with a only ieels them, but wliich has all motions of life joint so deep that the animal appears as if almost cut in two. The females, and the placed in them,) shall that heart, &:c. neuter or working ants, which liave no Smith's Rhit. sexual characteristics, are furnished with ANTANAGO'6E, n. anianago'gy. [Gr.ai-n, a hidden sting and both males and fe against, and ai-oywyij, a taking u|).] males have wings, btit the neuters have In rhetoric, a figure which consists in replying none. These insects meet together in to an adversary, by way of recrimination as, when the accusation of one party is uncompanies, and mamtain a sort of republic. answerable, the accused person charges They raise hillocks of earth, in whicl: him with till' same or other crime. Bailet/. they five. In these there are paths, leadto the their of ing repositories provisions. ANT.VPHRODIS'IAC, a. [Gr. a.ri, again^, The large black ants, in the warm climates and a^poSirsM;, venereal, from a^poSiri;. of America, to avoid the eflects of great Venus.] rains, build large nests on trees, of light Antivenereal having the quality of extineanh, rountUsh and plastered smooth. guishing or lessening venereal desire. tre,
;
er-not,
;
;
;
;
;
;
ANT-BEAR
Encyc
ANT-EATER,
or
n.
A quad-
ruped that feeds iq)on ants. This animal has no teeth, but a snout or muzzle, with a
i
long cylindrical tongue. The body is covered with long hair. There are several species, constituting the genus, myrmecoEncuc. 'ANSWERABLE, a. That may be answer- phaga, ant eaters. ed that to which a reply may be made, ANT-EGGS, J!. Little white balls found in the hillocks of ants, usually supposed to be usually implying that the answer may be their eggs, but found on examination to be satisfactory, as, an answerable argument 2. Obliged to give an accoimt, or liable to the young brood, in their first state. They be called to account; amenable ; respon are vermicules, wrapped in a film, composible as, an agent is answerable to his ])rinsed of a silky substance spun Uke a spioperation. ;
;
Obliged or
make good
indemnify or to be answerable for a debt
liable as,
;
to pay,
or for damages. 4.
5.
;
n.
A
little
;
ANTA€'RID,
it.
Equal correspondent
proportionate as, answerable to my desires. n. The quality of being answerable, liable, responsible, or correspondent. 'ANSWERABLY, adv. In due proportion, correspondence or conformity suitably as, continents have rivers answerably lar ger than isles. ;
success
tlie
;
»!.
[anti
and
aciid.]
That which
corrects acrimony written anti-acrid.
;
is
ANSWERABLENESS,
better
;
o/yuMf);;, 1.
with another in comused ]>rimarily in the Grecian games.
;
;
ANSWERER,
;
;
;
;
;
'ANSWER-JOBBER,
n.
;
One who make
a business of ^vi-ituig answers.
Sirifi.
is
ANTAPOPLE€'TIC,
a.
Good
good
Quincy. against apo-
plexy.
ANTARCTIC,
a.
[Gr. airt, agauist, and
we
say the antarctic pole, antarctic circle, or antarctic region. Encyc. 71. The nameofastai- of the first magnitude, called also the scorpion's heart. Its longhude is 60° 13' 14" of Sagand its latitude 4° 31' 2C" South. ittarius
ANTA'RES, ;
ANTAG'ONIST, sinff
;
combatiuff
a.
Counteracting
;
oppo-
as, an antagonist muscle. a. Opi)osmg in combat;
;
.-VNTAGONIS'TIC,
contending against.
ANTAGONIZE,
[Gr. mtt, against,
71. A remedy wliich (ures or alleviates the gout. IC, a. [Gr. o.rt, against, and a59(ua, asthma.] Opposing the asthma. Campbell. ANTASTHMAT'IC, 7i. remedy for the
n. [Gr. a^r., against, and a champion. See Act and j}gony.]
One who contends
;
;
medicine which
Coxe.
;
bat An adversaiy. pp. Replied to; fulfilled paid; complied with accomplished; solv- 2. An opponent in controversy. ed confuted. 3. In anatomy, a muscle which acts in oppon. One who answers; he or as a flexor, which bends sition to another that which makes a return to what anotha pan, is the antagonist of an extensor, er has spoken he who writes an answer, which extends it. ;
A
Encyc.
Opposition of action
n.
ANTAG'ONIST,
VNSVVERED,
Rejilying corresponding to fulfilhng solving succeeding reverberating confuting.
n.
abates the venereal appetite, or against the venereal disease.
ANT.\RTIIRIT IC, a. counteraction of things or principles. and apSpiTij, gout.] Good, B. ofJVature. Counteracting the gout.
ANTAG'ONISM,
;
"ANSWERING, p;;;-.
AKTAPHRODIT'l€,
tumulus or
;
for 6.
71. medicine that lessens or extinguishes the venereal appetite. Encyc. Coie. IC, a. [Gr. See the preceding words.] Antivenereal, abating the venereal appetite, or efficacious against the venereal disease.
ANTAPHRODIT
webb.
ANT-HILL,
Correspondent; agreeing with; in con aster ; written also ante. formity with ; as, the features expressed in a picture are answerable to the original. ANTACID, 71. [anti and acid.] Suitable suited as, an In pharmacy, an alkaU, or a remedy for sourjjroportionate achievement answerable to the preparation nes-s or a(-iditv better written anti-acid. ;
A
ANTAPHRODIS'LA€,
apxTo;, the bear, a northern constellation.] Encyc. hillock, Op|)osite to the northern or arctic pole ; relaformed by ants, fi)r their habitation. ting to the southern pole or to the region near it, and applied especially to a lesser AN'T.\, 71. In ancient architecture, a square colunm, at the corner of a building ; a pilcircle, distant from the pole 23° 28'. Thus
der's
cipal.
;
that
I lint,
;
3.
to art in opposition
to oppose in argument. is, if it. [See ^n.] our vulgardialect, as in the phrases, ANTAG'ONY, 71. Contest ; opposition. [.\o/ unMiUoii. vsed.] you ant, he ant, wt; ant, &Lr., is doubtedly a contraction of the Danish er, ANTAL'(il€, a. [Gr. oift, against, and oAyo;-,
it,
ANT,
to.
In water face answereth to face, so the heart to man. Prov. 27.
man
ment. 7.
A N T
A N T
S
To
3.
v.i.
To contend
against
;
ANT.\RT1IRIT'IC,
ANTASTIIMAT
A
asthma.
AN'TE. A
Latin preposition, the Gr. oin, Sax. and Goth, and; much used in the composition of Enghsh words, especially in words from the Latin and Greek lan-
It signifies before in place, in guages. irout hence opposite, contrary : and figuThe Latin ante ratively, before in time. is generally used in the sense of before, and ;
of opposite, or
in that
the Greek am, the |)laee of. AN'TE or AN'TA, n.
AN'TEDATE,
in
given.
pressed, as by dove tails,
A
n.
[ante
and
ANTECEDA'NEOUS,
and datum,
trtA'/jretixoi,
See Dale.]
epileptic,
from
to
eftiixtuSaiu,
seize.]
ANTEPOSP'TION, n. s as :. [L. ante, before,
tion.
before the true
To anticipate to take time. And antedate the bliss above. ;
act.]
a.
[L. ante,
t.
;
rounds, swallow Enajc. A preceduig
tails,
&c.
v.
To date before the true time thus, to Resisting or curing epilepsy. a ANTEPILEP'Tl€, n. A remedy for the antedate a deed or a bond is to express Encyc. Coxe. epilepsy. date anterior to the true time of its execu-
In herpilaster. that the pieces are let nhlry, ante denotes there exinto' one another, in the manner
AN'TEA€T,
ANT
A N T
A N T
ANTEDILU'VIAL, ANTEDILU'VIAN,
Ante-
[L. ante,
i
and
I'ope. dilu-
and position, from pono, to place.] In grammar, the placing of a word before another, which, by ordinary rules, ought to follow it.
n. [ante and prei'"'™- a flood. See ANTEPREDI€'AMENT, S dicament.] Lave.] in logic to illustrate Before the flood, or deluge, in Noah s time A preliminary question See CVrfe.] the doctrine of predicaments and categoror relating to what existing, happening, ""'^j To go before in tune to precede. a question which is to be first known. ies happened before the deluge. ANTECE'DENCE, n. The act or state of ANTEDILU'VIAN, Encyc. lived bewho One n. In asgoing before in time precedence. ANTE'RIOR, a. [h.] Before in time or fore the deluge. a planet of motion an apparent tronomy, preceding in prior ; antecedent n. [Qu. Gr. mti and f?.a^o;, place AN'TELOPE, order the to towards the west, or contrary time. resembling a deer.] Encyc. of the signs. the gazelle a genus of ruminant _. Before or in front in place. ANTECE'DENT, a. Going before ui tnne n zoology, between the ANTERIORITY, n. The state of being event quadrupeds, intermediate an a state of as, anterior ; preceding prior anterior, preceding or in front deer and goat. Tlieir horns are solid and antecedent to the deluge. in some being before in tune, or situation. straight or curved; and room.] A room ANTECE'DENT, n. That which goes be- permanent, in others, surrounded AN'TEROOM, n. [ante annulated species Danvin. fore in time hence in writings, that which liefore or in front of another. smooth. They by a spiral and in others, In grammar, the noun n. plu. [L.] Pillars of large dimenprecedes in place. resemble the deer in the lightness and ele- AN'TES, to which a relative or other substitute resions that support the front of a building. in their agility and of their forms, was the prince, icho, gance tijrs ; as, Solomon ANTF^STAT'URE, n. [ante and staiure.] They inhabit open plains or mountains, In In /o,gtc, the first of built the Temple. a smaU retrenchment or work fortification, and some species in herds of two or three two propositions in an enthymeme, or arformed of palisades, or sacks of earth. thousand. Their eyes are large, black, sun if the Encyc. and gument of two propositions; as, and vivacity; of and beaiity exquisite the Here n. [ante and stomach.] is fixed, the earth must move. are therefore a favorite image with the ANTESTOM'A€H, is the anfirst and conditional proposition which leads into the stomach, as Encyc. Cyc. A cavity eastern jioets. in tecedent ; the second, the consequent. fVatts. birds. in Ray. use.] [N'ot ANTELU'C'AN, a. [h. antelucanus, ot ante, the crop in mathematics, the first of two terms of a ANTEVERT', v. t. [L anteveHo.] To prebefore, and lux, light.] with the Hall. in use/] vent. ratio, or that which is compared to asword [JVot a before applied light Encyc. Being a. [avei and Virgil.] other. in ancient tmies of ANTEVIRGIL IAN, of or VNTECE'DENTLY, adv. Previously at semblies christians, in the morn- A term given to TuU's new husbandry, persecution, held before hght a time preceding. Encyc. method of horse hoeing. Encyc
cedent
;
[Infra.]
Oiven.
preceding in time.
ANTECE'DE,
v.
t.
and
[ante
cedo, to
go.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
ANTECES'SOR, See
^
.
n.
whence
[L.
ancestor.
.
[ante, before,
a.
and
;
;
in their theses.
One that possessed land before the prcs Brady. ent possessor.
VN'TECHAMBER,
n.
[Ante, before,
and
chamber.]
A chamber
or apartment before the chief whiclto which it leads, and
apartment persons wait
m
lor audience.
ANTECHAP'EL, through which
The
part of the chapel the passage to the choir
n.
is
Dryden
;
forepertaining to the
and emetic, [aire, against, vomit.] Quincy. Restraining or allaying vomiting.
ANTEMET'I€, from
ANTHELMINTIC, (>.f«ir;,
;
;
and'ui the Universities of of civil law title France, the teachers of law talfe the
i.
ing.
ANTEMERID'IAN,
Jlntecede.]
meridian.] One who goes before a leader a princi before noon a title given to those Being pal. It was formerly who excelled in any science to professors noon. a. f^ic", to
ANTEMET'le,?!. A medicine which checks Core. and [ante, before, Being before the
qnincy.
vomiting.
ANTEMUND'ANE.
a.
mundus, the world.] creation of the world.
ANTENI'CENE,
a.
a worm.]
a.
Good
tenicene fahh.
ANTEN'N^,
before,
and
against,
and
against worms.
Coxe.
in the intestines. Encyc. n. [Gr. avti, against, and v/tvos, a hymn, from vfivtu, to sing. See Hymn.] but in modalternate ;
AN'THEM,
A hymn sung in
parts
ern usage, a sacred tune or piece of music set to words, taken from the psalms or other parts of the scriptures, fu-st introduced into church service in Elizabeth's reign.
[ante,
JVicene, from jVi'cc] Anterior to the first council
[avtt,
ANTHELMIN'Tle, n. A remedy for worms
AN'THEM-WISE, an anthem
;
adv.
Encyc. In the manner of
alternately.
Bmou.
Tate. Camomile. AN'THEMIS, of Nice AN'THER, n. [L. anthera, a flowery plant, ,^"Ti from the Greek aver,fO!, flowery, from av9o5, a sail ;
as an
re.
yard.] n.plu. [L. atiienna, irarton. a flower.] In zoology, the horns or feelers of insects, opposite, and In botany, the summit or top of the stamen, the head. projectiiig from connected with the flower, and elevated number that pre«. or thread, within Bacon. by means of the filament cedes another. the corol. It contains the pollen, or ferANTENUP'TIAL, a. [ante and nuptial] when mature, is emitwhich, ian, an dust, tilizing antenuptial one party Being before marriage ; as, Ketit. ted for the impregnation of the stigma. equator, but, on opposite sides, agreement ; antenuptial children. MalThey have the north, the other south. to the It is called by Ray, the apex, and by a. Pertaining ANTEPASeH'AL, same hours of day and night, but differthe capsula stamims. Mlson nishi, " ' time before Easter. Milne. Martyn. ent seasons; it being winter with one, and n. [ante, before, pastum, when it is summer with the other. Encyc. AN'TEPAST, AN'THERAL, a. Pertaining to anthers. Jlsiat. Res. 4, 404. ANTE€URS'OR, n. [L. ante, before, and the foretaste ; something taken before See to run. cursor, a runner, from curro, ANTHERIF'EROUS, a. [anther and fero, time. proper anthers. Barton, 1()2. to Course.] Producing n. before, bear.] pene, [L. ante, One who runs before ; a forerunner. In the ANTEPENULT', 'VNTIIESTE'RION, «. The sixth month of and ultimus, last.] 29 days, Roman armies, the antecursors were a ahnost, the Athenian year, consisting of of a word, except two ; as intelli- The last syllable body of horse detached to obtain and answering to a part of November and in syllable. syl for the main to be gence, get provisions, &c., a part of December. It is supposed a. Pertaining to feasts Encyc bodv. so called from the Anthesteria, but two. that AN'TEDATE, n. [Infra.] Prior date ; a the last syllable a. honor of Bacchus, celebrated in and agamst, [arth ANTEP1LEP'TI€, Good date antecedent to another.
or body of
it.
VNTE'CIAN,
n.
[Gr.
oi-ft,
L. antwci.] In geography, the antecians are those inhabmeriditants of the earth, under the same and at the same distance from the oixEu, to dwell
;
ANTENUM'BER,
A
A
ANTEPENULT'IMATE,
m
a flower garlands of flowers being offered to Bac elms at those feasts. ANTHOLOG'IeALjO. Pertaining to antholai'9o;,
Xoyos, 1.
3.
A
;
anthropology according to Iniman man ner of speaking. Kinran.
ANTIARTHRIT'I€,
de-
ANTIARTHRIT'lC,
;
ANTHROPOL'OcilST, scribes, or
n. [Gr. arSoj,
a discourse, or
%oyi.a,
One who
n.
versed in the physical history body. a flower, and ANTHROPOL'OOY, n. [Gr. ov9purto{, man,
of the
ogy.
ANTHOL'OgY,
ANT
ANT
ANT month, and so called from
and
a collection.]
on flowers. A collection of beautiful passages from authors a collection of poems or epidiscoiu-se
1.
3.
is
human
>-oyoi,
discourse.]
discourse upon human nature. Encyc. The doctrine of the structure of the iiuman body the natural history or physiology of the human species.
•3.
The word denotes that manner of expression by
human
[See Aniarlhritic]
A
n.
for the
remedy
gout.
Good
[See Antasthmatic]
against asthma.
ANTIASTHMATIC,
A
n.
asthma.
xe">i,
remedy
for the
[Gr. arrt, and >3axa foot of one short and two long syln.
ANTIB.\C'CIIIUS, lables.]
In
which the inspired writers attribute parts and passions to God. Encyc.
named from the saint in Italy, to whom ANTIIROPOM'ANCY, n. [Gr. man, and fnarcua, divination.] those, who were affected, applied for a
a.
against the gout.
ANTIASTHMAT'IC, a.
;
;
grams. In the Greek church, a collection! of devotional pieces. Encyc AN'THONY'S FIRE. A popular name of the erysipelas, supposed to have been so
A
Good
a foot of three syllables, the two podry, long and the last short, as ambire
first
;
to the bacchitis, in wliich the first is short and tlie two last long.
opposed
avSpunos,
syllable
This foot
supposed to be so nami^d from its use in Encyc. Divination by inspecting the entrails of a hymns to Bacchus. Inuiian being. Trumbull. Enajc. Gr. Ltx. Encyc. n. The a. s as z. ANTHROPOMORPH'ISM, ANTIBASIL'ICAN, ^xaj.oi', heresy [Gr. am, and Banaixjy, a palace L. basilicus, royal, A mineral in masses composed of interlaced of the anthropomorphites. Encyc. basilica, a hall of justice.] plates, or crystalized in reed-shaped crys- ANTHROPOMORPH'ITE, n. [Gr. ai/fipuno;, man, and «opi}>i;, form.] Opjjosed to rojal state and magnificence. tals, which appear to be four sided prisms Plowden, Brit. Empire. longitutUnally streaked. The color is be One who believes a human form in the tween dark yellowish gray and olive Supreme Being. A sect of ancient here- ANTIC, a. [from Fr. antique ; L. antiquus ; It. antico ; a sense derived from the tics are called anthropomorphites. brown the luster shining and pearly. Encyc. groa. Diet. JVat. Hist. Cleaveland. fancitesque figures of antiques.] Odd Belonging AN'THORISM, n. [Gr. avti, opposite, and to tliat which has the form of man hav- ful as, antic tricks. the to a man. n. A of resemblance buflbon or Andrew ANTIC, opm/tof, definition.] ing figure ; merry Ash. Encyc. one that practices odd gesticidations. In rhetoric, a description or definition conShak. trary to that wlijch is given by the adverse ANTIIROPOP'ATHY, n. [avepuno;, min, and rtaSo;, ])assion.] 2. Odd appearance Ash. fanciful figures. party. ANTHRACITE, n. [Gr.
cure.
ANTHOPH' YLLITE, n. and
[Gr. ovSoj, a flower,
a leaf.]
;
;
ANTHROPOMORPHOUS,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
and (jxortiu, to view.] n. [Gr. avOpurtos, man The art of discovering or judging of a man's and y\wrra, the tongue.] character, passions and incUnations from animal which has a tongue resembluig the lineaments of his body. that of man, of which kind are parrots. Encyc.
ANTHROP'OGLOT, An
Enq/c.
ANTHROPOG RAPHY, n. man, and
[Gr. a.9pio«o;, description.] of man or the human race,
ypo^iij,
A description
or of the parts of the
ANTIIROP'OLITE, and
A
'Ki.So;,
a stone.] of the
jietrifaction
Some
human
n.
[Gr.
human
body. Encyc.
orSpu^rtos,
man,
body, or skel-
have asserted that skeletons of the animal frame have been found petrified in old mines ; but the fact is not credited, and the existence of such eton.
naturalists
ANTHROPOS'OPHY, man, and
ao^ia,
^^.
3o;,
ANTICAUSOT'IC,
comprehenthng anatomy and physiology.
ANTI-CHAMBER,
ng
a.
corrupt oHhography.
[See Aiitihypnotic]
ANTHYPO€HOND'RIAC.
ANTHYPOPH'ORA.
ANTHYSTER'I€. [See Antihysteric] ANTI, [Gr. See Ante.] A preposition
sigpetrifactions is denied. Encyc. nifying against, opposite, contrary, or Capt. Wilford informs us, that in digging a well near the Ganga, some persons found, place of; used in many EngUsh words. at the depth of 90 feet, on an old bed of ANTI,\C'ID, a. Opposing or removing Often written antacid. that river, the bones of men and quadruacidity. a medicine ANTIAC'ID, n. An alkali peds, supposed to be petrifactions. .idat. Res. 8. 994. proper to correct sourness, or acidity an The skeleton of a man has been fomid absorbent, as chalk, magnesia, coral, seaor an obtunin a limestone rock, of recent formation, in shells, hematite, steelfilings or an iimnutant, as Ed. Encyc. dent, as oil or fat Guadaloupe. Human bones have also been found, by Prof. hxivious salts, and soaps. Cyc. Buckland, in the open cave of Paviland, ANTIAMER'I€AN, a. Opposed to AmerGlamorganshire. He considers them post ica, or to the true interests or government diluvian. v. 29. 148. Rev. of the United States p. to the revquaH.
m
;
A
n.
;
;
ANTIIROPOLOg'I€AL,
a.
Pertaining to
olution in America.
opposed
Marshall.
[Gr. avri, against,
and
Christ.]
great adversary of Christ the man of sin; described 1 John, ii. 18. 2 Tliess. ii. Rev. Protestants generally suppose this adix. \ersary to be the Papal power and some divines believe that, in a more general sense, the word extends to any jiersons who tleny Christ or oppose the fundamental doctrines of clmstianity. ;
;
;
;
against a for a burnCoxe.
[See Ante.]
ANTI-CHRIST, [See Antihypophora.]
Good
A remedy
fever.
cation.
[See Antihy-
pochondriac]
for
and xo*-
n. Dr. Johnson prefers But ante and ante-chamber, whicli see. anti are the same word in different dialects ; and have the same radical signifi-
Encyc.
ANTHYPNOT'l€,
n.
against,
[oAitt,,
a burning fever.]
burning fever.
wisdom.] ;
remedy
Coxe.
ANTIC AUSOT'IC, a.
the natui-e of man acquaintance with man's structure and functions,
Knowledge of
against catarrh.
A
n.
catarrh.
wSpunoj,
[Gr.
Good
xarappoo;, a catarrh.]
ANTICATARRHAL,
ANTICHRIS TIAN, christ
;
Brown. Buck. Pertainmg to anti-
Encyc. a.
opposite to or opposing the
cliris-
tian religion.
ANTICHRIS TIAN, christ
;
n.
one opposed
A
foUower of anti-
to the christian reli-
.\NTICHRISTIANISM,
n.
Opposition or
contrariety to the cliristian rehgion.
?!.
\NTI€OSMET'IC,
Opposjtion or
To
ANTIHEC
in the cure
Reresby.
ANTIeOURTIER,
and
>!.
A
medicine that
and
n. anticortyur. [anii
is
good
liectic disorders.
ANTIHYPNOT'IC,
opjioses the court, or tlie measures Ash. of administration. TOR, n. One that opposes the creator.
ANTICREA
a.
[Gr. avtt,
Coie.
and
vnpo;.
leep.]
Counteracting sleep
courtier.]
;
of
Encyc.
One who
take before the proper time as, tlie lias anticipated tliat part of his
Tie,
to the court.
[Xot used.]
V. t. [h. anildpo, of ante, capio, to take.] To take or act, before another, so as to prevent him ; to take first possession.
9.
preparation,
AN'Tl€OL'RT,a. In opposition
ANTICIPATE, .1.
Any
n.
which injures beauty.
contiarifty to cliristianity. [Gr. mti, and ;tpoi'05,^ order of time.] Deviation from the true Sel(le7i. time.
ANTlClI'llONISM, )7.
before,
ANT
ANT
A N T ANTICIiRISTIAN'ITY,
tending to
;
prevent
sleep or letliargy.
ANTIHYPNOT'ie, n. A medicine that prevents or tends to prevent sleep.
ANTlHYPOClIONDRIA€,
a.
Coxe.
[Gr. wti,
and vTtoxovfifiiaxoi, hypochondriac] Opposing democra- That counteracts or tends to cure hypochon\ argument. driac afl'eetions, and depression of spirits. To foretaste or foresee to liave a prcvi cy contrary to government by the jieople. ous view or impression of sometliiuf Mitford. ANTIHYPOeHOND'RIAC, n. A remedy for hypochondi'iac affections and low future as, to anticipate the pleasures of VN'TIDOTAL, a. That has the quality of advocate
3.
ANTIDE3IO€RAT'I€, ANTIDEIMOCRAT'ICAL,
>
"
;
;
;
spirits. preventing the ill effects of poison, or of ANTIHYPOPirORA, n. [Gr. avti, and of life. any thing no,\ious or mischievous. to AN''lTDOTE, n. [ai'riSoroj, of avti, against, Drto<)iop(», an inference.] 4. To prevent by crowding in before In rhetoric, a figure which consists in refuand iii6u/»t, to give VV. dodi, to give.] Johnson preclude. 1. A medicuie to counteract the effects of in the included tuig an objection by the opposition of a sense is first.] [This essentially or of any thing noxious taken into contrary sentence. ANTICIPATED, pp. Taken before fore- poison, Smith. Johnson. Ash. the stomach. tasted foreseen precluded prevented. 2. Whatever tends to prevent mischievous ANTIHYSTERTC, a. [Gr. am, and vjfEpe., ANTICIPATING, ppr. Taking before effects, or to counteract the evil which uterus.] .ni
entcrtaimnent
to anticipate the evils
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
preventing. ANTICIPA'TION, n. The act of taking up placing, or considering something before the proper time, in natural order pre vention. 2. Foretaste previous view or impression of what is to liappen afterward as, the untiforetasting
;
])recluthng
;
;
;
;
tlie joys of heaven. The happy anticipation of a renewed exiscompany with the spirits of the just.
cipation of tence in
Thodei/ 3.
Previous notion
preconceived opinion mind, l)efore tlie truth produced known slight previous impression. The attack of a fever before the usual i.-
;
time. 5.
Co.re.
In music, the obtrusion of a chord upon a syncopated note, to which it forms a dis cord.
Busbij.
else
might produce. a. Serving as an
Counteracting hysterics. anti
adv.
By way of
n.
against Good against
A
dysentery.
a. [Gr. ain, against, and emetic, from f.uiu, to vomit." the quality of allaying vomiting.
A
n.
remedy
to
check or
and
a.
More.
time.
[Gr. avti, opposite, and See Climate.] xTliuoi?, climax. sentence in which the ideas fall or become less important and striking at the close ; op))osed to climax. For example,
A
n.
Next conies Dalhousie,
[Gr. airi, op
tSfa, side.]
en-
Opposing
ANTIL'OgY,
A
speech.] contradiction betAveen any sages in an author.
ANTIMA6IS'TRICAL, ANTIMA'NIAC, ANTIMANI'ACAL,
a.
and
Opposed
[JVot used.[ r j
?
,• "" t""'*
I
xoyof,
words or pasto the South. ^
andmamac]
madness or
frenzj".
Beatiie.
n. A lesser mask. Bacon. ANTIMETAB'OLE, n. antimetab'oly. [Gr.
AN'TIMASK,
oi'rt, against, and fitraSoXi], mutation.] Shaft sbury. AN'TIENTRY, n. [More correctly, an- In rhetoric, a setting of two things in opposition to each other Cast of antiquity that which is as, an honorable accientry.] tion may be attended with labor, but the ancient. Graij. ANTIEPISC'OPAL, a. Adverse to episco- labor is soon past, and the honor is imiuor;
;
K. Charles.
jiacy.
the great God of war, Eavl of Mar.
and loga-
the logarithm of any 90 degrees. Bailey.
In crystalography, having nine faces on two Counteracting or curing Cleavcland. opposite parts of the crvstal. thusiastic]
[anti
n. [Gr. oirt, against,
ofhce of magistrates.
allav voniitiuir. posite, fvvia, nine,
The complement of
for
ANTIEMET'Ie,
ANTiENNEAHE DRAL,
n.
rithm.] sine, tangent or secant, to
remedy
Core
ANTIE3IETTC,
Coxc.
VNTILOG'ARITHIM,
a. rt,
[Gr.
and Sviivriftixo;, dysenteric] the dvseiiterv, or bloody fiu.x.
ANTIDYSENTER'IC,
Having
medicine that
anti-
Brown.
dote.
ANTIDYSENTER'IC, a.
i/jitixo;,
A
i?.
cures or counteracts liysterical affections.
ANTID0'TI€ALLY,
ANTIC IP ATOK, n. One who anticipate a. [anti and ANTICIPATORY, a. Taking before the ANTIENTHUSIAS'Tle", enthusiasm. ANTICLI'MAX,
ANTIHYSTER'Ie,
dote.
;
in the
4.
something
ANTIDO tlCAL,
tiU.
Encyc.
ANTIMETATII'ESIS,
Ji. [Gr. avt^, against, and liitaSioii, a transposition.] of the parts or memMihier. In rhetoric, an inversion gospel. " odd postures and gesticulations with fanbers of an antithesis as, Compare the Jonson Shak AN'TIFACE, n. Opposite face. ciful appearance. arrival of this governor, with the victory AN'Tl€MASK,orAN'TIMASK,n. Amasl ANTIFANATTe, n. An opposer of fanati- of that general." "Compare this peace Bacon. B. Jonson. of antics. cism. Milton. with that war."
liieutonant Cornel lo
4.N
TICLY,
ANTIEVAN6ELT€AL,
tlie
adv. In an antic
manner; with
a. Contrary to orthodoxy, or the genuine sense of the
;
;
ANTI€ONSTITU'TIONAL,a. Opposed tc ANTIFEBRILE, the constitution. Bolimrbroke or against
ANTICONSTITU'TIONALIST, oii|)osed to the constitution. n.
ANTleONTA'UlONIST,
»."
One who
op-
poses the doctrine of contagion.
ANTleONTA'GlOUS, gious.]
a. [cwn, and contaOpposing or destroying contagion. o. [ai.n, and convul-
ANTI€ONVUL'SIVE, sive.]
Good
AN'TICOR, cor,
a.
[o.vti,
against,
and
fe-
brile.] Oni That has the quality of abating fever ; oppos-
against convulsions. Floyer. [anti, and Fr. ca:ur, or L.
?!.
the heart.]
Ainong/arrtfrs, an inflammation in a horse's throat, answering to tlie quinsy in man. Encyc.
ANTIM'ETER,
Cicero in Verrem. n. [Gr. avti and
Encyc. pfrpoi-,
measure.] An ojitical instrument for measuring angles, ing or tending to cure fever. ANTIFE'BRILE, n. A medicine that cures, with greater accuracy than can be done bv the usual quadrants or sextants. Ree-i. ibates, or tends to allay fever. a. Contrary to the ANTIFLAT'TERING, a. Opposite to flat- ANTIMET'RICAL, rules of meter or verse. Bniley. tery. Delany. and minisa.
ANTIGUG'LER, n. [anti and guggle.] A crooked tube of metal, so bent as to
ANTIMINISTE'RIAL,
be
introduced into the neck of u bottle, lor drawing out t)ie li
ANTIHEC'TI€,
a.
[Gr. avu, against, and
[anti
terial.]
Opposed
to the ministry, or administration
of government.
ANTIMINISTE'RIALIST,
?!.
One
thai
opposes the ministry.
ANTIMONARCIITCAL,
a. and monarchical.] fxrixo;, hectic] [anti and cosmetic. Destructive or injurious That has the quality of opposing or curinj Opposed to monarchy
a. [anti,
against,
ANTl€OSMET'l€, See Cosmeticl to beauty.
hectical disorders.
ly
go%ernmeut.
;
that opposes a king-
Addison,
ANT The
„.
quality of boiiig oppoisetl to iiiouarchy.
ANTIMO'NIAL,
[Worn antimony.] Pertaining to antimony ; relating to antimony, or partaking of its finalities. ANTIMO'NIAL, n. A jireparation of anti niony a incdiciiic in which antimony is a ;
principal ingrodicMit.
Encyc.
A compound
n.
or salt a base.
composed of aiitimonic acid and
Henry. Partaking of antimony nii.xed or prepared with antimoJVicholson. ny as nntimoniated tartar. ANTIMO'NIC, a. Pertaining to antimony the antimonic acid is a pero.xyd of anti-
ANTIMO'NIATED,
a.
;
;
;
mony.
Henry. Pertaining to antimoantimonious acid is a deiito.xyd
ANTIMO'NIOUS, ny.
The
a.
of antimony.
AN'TIMONITE, monious
aci
AN'TIMONY,
n.
Henry.
A
compound of
and a base.
anti-
Henry. ;
;
This
com-
posed of anti and Fr. moine, monk, from
Encyc. Invi'terato antipathies against
ous
life. This sect originated with .lohi Agricola about the year 1538. Encyc.
iVNTINO'MIANISM,
n.
The
tenets of An-
tinomians.
tions, iinil passionate to be avoided.
3.
Hull
AN'TINOJMIST,
71.
One who pays no
re-
gard to the law, or to good works. Sanderson. contradiction between two laws, or between two parts of the same law. Baker.
AN'TINOMY,
n.
ANTIO'CHIAN,
A
a.
school.
Enfield.
.flntiochian epoch
was
a
Encyc.
Washington.
In physics, a. contrariety in tlie jjroperties or atrirtiniis of matter, as of oil and water, which will not mix.
One who is opposed to the baptism of infants. Buck.
ANTIPERISTAL'TIC,
method of com- Opposed
puting time, from the proclamation of liberty granted to the city of Antioch, about the time of the battle of Pharsalia.
particular naattachments to others, are
Antipathy is ref^ularly followed by to, sometimes by against ; and is ojiposed to sym-
Pertaining to
Antiochus, the founder of a sect of philosophers, co temporary with Cicero. This sect was a branch of the academics, though Antio chus was a stoic. He attempted to recon cile the doctrhies of the difi'erent schools, and was the last preceptor of the Platonic
Low h The
[Fr. antimoine. antrmonnim ; It. antimo7i>o ; .S]i. »'(/. by some writers is sui)posed to be n.
dipend more on the constitution repugnancy may depend on reason or education.
maintain, that, under the gospel dispensa tion, the law is (if no use or obhgation or who hold doctrines which supersei the necessity of good works and a virtu-
:
a.
ANTIMO'NIATE,
A A T
A N T
ANTIMONARCH'l€ALNESf!,
to peristaltic
\omiting
;
as,
the intestuies.
;
a.
[See Peristaltic] retroverted, as in
the antiperistaltic motion of Cyc. >i. [Gr. aiu, against,
ANTIPERIS'TASIS,
and rtfptfaitf, a standing aroiuid.] monks were poison Encyc. The opposition of a contrary quahty, by This story, reported by Fare ANTIPA'PAL, a. Opposing popery. which the quahty opposed acquires to popeby Morin, as fabulous, and ANTIPAPIS'TIC, ^ "" Opposed strength or the action by which a body Ity him it is said to be composed of Gr. \NTIPAPIS'TI€AL, S ry or papacy. attacked collects force by opposition or Jorfin Ofti, against, and fiovof, alone, and so the intension of the activity of one qualinamed because it is not found alone. The VNTIPAR'ALLEL, a. Running in a conThus ty by the opposition of another. real truth is not ascertained.] Hammond. trary fUrection. quick-lime is set on fire, or sensible heat is Primarily, a metallic ore consisting of sul- ANTIPARALYT'IC, a. [mfi,,an(\ paraiytic, excited in it, by mixture with water and which see.] phur combined with a metal the sulphu cold a])]ilied to the human body may inret of Antimony, the stibium of the Ro- Good against the palsy. Dryden. Qiiincy. mans and the fw, of the Greeks. It ANTIPARALYT IC," ?!. A remedy for the crease its heat. Johnson. a. Pertauiing to an.1 blackish mineral, which stains the Core. ANTIPERISTAT'IC, hands, palsv. the fact that certain
ed by
it.
tiere, is treated
;
;
;
;
Jlsh. tiperistasis. full of long, shining, needle- ANTIPATHETIC, ? a. [anti and pesIt is foiaid in the mines of Bo ANTIPATHETICAL, ] a. [See Antipathy.] .\NTIPESTILEN'TIAL, tilential, which see.] hemia, and Himgary in France ami Eng Having a natural contrariety, or constituor infection havCounteracting contagion This word is also tional aversion to a thing. land, and in America. ing the quality of opposing or destroying used for the pure metal nrregulus of anti- ANTIPATIIET'ICALNESS, n. The qualpestilential diseases. mony, a metal of a grayish or silvery white, ity or state of having an aversion or conand of a or texJohnson. AN'TIPHLOGIS'TIAN, n. [anti and phlovery brittle, plated scaly trariety to a thing. giston, which see.] ture, and of moderate specific gravity. By ANTIP'ATHY, Ji. [Gr. avu, against, and An opposer of the theory of phlogiston. exposure to air, its surface becomes tar jtaSo;, feeling.] It is used a: Natural aversion instinctive contrariety or .\NTlPHLO(iISTIC,«. Counteracting heat nished, but does not rust. an ingredient in concave mirrors, giving or inflammation tending to reduce arteriopposition in feeling an aversion felt at] them a finer texture. In bells, it renders the presence, real or ideal, of a particular al action ; opposed to the doctrine of phlothe sound more clear it renders tin more This word literally denotes a natJVicholson. giston. object. ural avereion, which may be of different ANTIPHLOGIS'TIC, n. Any medicme or hard, white and sonorous, and gives to more firmness and smoothin some cases excite terdiet and which tends to reduce inflammation printing types may degrees, ness. It is also usefid in promoting the ror or horror at the presence of an object. or the activity of the vital power. fusion of metals, and especially in casting Such is the aversion of animals for their Coze. Hooper. fannon balls. In its crude state, it is harmnatural enemies, as the antipathy of a AN'TIPIION, n. [See Antiphony.] less to the human constitution but many mouse to a cat, or a weasel. Sometimes The chant or alternate suiging in choirs of of its preparations act violently as emetics cathedrals. persons have an insu])erable constitutional and cathartics. It has also a peculiar ef\NTlPHONAL, } antipathy to certain kinds of food. ficacy in proma. [See Antiphony.^ as a sudorific. tracted or habit as when ularly ANTIPHON'ICAL,^ by experience Chambers. Encyc. J^icholson. a person has suffered an injury from some Pertaining to antiphony or alternate singing. ANTIMOR'ALIST, ?i. An opposer of nio- food, or from an animal, which before was Encyc. ralitv. Warhurton. not an object of hatred or wlien a par- ANTIPH'ONARY, n. [«r., contrary, and ANTI"MU'SI€AL, o. Opposed to music; ticular kind of food or medicine is taken ijjui'ij, sound, voice.] no ear for music. Jlmer. which nauseates A service Review. into a sickly stomach, and having book, in the catholic church, con-
hard, brittle, like strife.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
ANTINEPHRITIC, which
a.
[anti,
and
nephritic,
see.]
Counteracting diseases of the kidneys. Coxe. medicine that ANTINEPHRIT'le, n. tends to remove diseases of the kidneys.
A
ANTINO'MIAN, fo/iof,
a.
[Gr.
am,
against, "and
law.]
Against law
;
it
;
the effect
is
antipathy,
which
is
often
taining all the invitatories, responsories, and whatever is said or sung in called also choir, except the lessons a responsary ; compiled by Gregory the Great. Encyc. ANTIPH'ONER, n. A book of anthems or aversion Chaucer. antiphons. oil
long continuance. Antipathy however is often affected, as when| persons pretend a great aversion to things from false dehcacy. In ethics, antipathy is hatred, aversion or repugnancj' haired to persons to persons or things repugnancy to ac;
;
;
pertaining to the Antinomians.
ANTINO'MIAN,
ii.
One of a
sect
who
tions.
Of these
Art^rfrf is
collect.s,
tlie
ANTIPHONY,
most voluntary.
Aversion, and antipathy, in
its
true sense,
;
n. [avu,
contrary,
and ^u^,
voice.] I.
The answer of one choir to another, when
ANT ail
anthem or psalm
ANT
sung by two choirs
is
;
ANTIQUE,
ahernate singuig. 9.
3.
4.
A
wlien a congrega-
s])ecies ol'psabiiotly,
tion is divided into two parts, and eacli sings the verses ahernately. Encyc. The words given out at the beginning ol a psahn, to wJiich botii the choirs are to arconiinodate tlieir singing. Encyc. musical composition of several verses, extracted from different psalms. Encyc
A
ANTIPH'RASIS, n. [Gr. am, against, and ^paiif, a form of speech.] Tlie use of words in a sense opposite to their proper meaning as when a court of justice is called a court of vengeance. Johnson. Jlsh. ;
> to anANTIPHRAS'TI€, °" Pertaining ANTIPHRAS'TI€AL, \ tiphrasis. Ash ANTIP'ODAL, a. Pertaining to the ami
podes
;
having the feet dueetly opposite.
AN'TIPODE, nmi, no&oi,
n.
[Gr. avti,
opposite,
and
1.
An
z.
AN'TIPORT,
n.
An outward
ANTIPRELAT'I€AL,
a.
n.
An
Waterland.
ofi)riests.
ANTIPRIE'ST€RAFT,
n.
priestcraft.
ANTIPRIN'CIPLE,
n.
ple.
ANTIPROPH'ET,
n.
Opposition to Burke.
An
An
opposite princiSpenser. enemy or oppo-
MeJe.
ser of prophets.
ANTIP'TOSIS,
n.
[Gr.
avtc
and
nt^ati,
case]
;
;
ANTIQ'UITY, 1.
n.
[L. antiquitas.]
Ancient times ; former ages times long a very indefinite term ; as ;
since past
Cicero
;
was
the most eloquent orator of
The
A
ANTISPASMOD'Ie, crrtaff|Uos,
a.
to diaw.]
resisting
;
ANTISPASMODIC,
Meaning that mankind are inclined to verify the predictions of antiquity. T. Dawes
[Gr. ai>u, against,
from bkom,
ancients the people of ancient Opposing spasm as, the fact is admitted by all aii anodynes. ;
;
tiquity.
3.
Pascalis, Med. Rep. n. [Gr. avn, against, and anau, to draw.] re\ ulsion of fluids, from one part of the body to another. ^uincy.
ANTIS'PASIS,
and
antiquity.
times
convulsions
as Coxe. ;
A
remedy for spasm or convulsions, as opium, balsam of n.
Peru, and the essential oils of vegetables. Coxe. Ancientness great age the quality of a. [See Antispasis.] being ancient as, a statue of remarkable ANTISPAS'TI€, Causing a revulsion of fliuds or humors. antiquity ; a family of great antiquity. Johnson. Old age a ludicrous sense used by Shak. The remains of ancient tunes. In thit ANTISPLENET'I€, a. [See Spleen.] sense it is usually or always plural. An- Good as a remedy in diseases of the spleen. Johnson. tiquities comprehend all the remains of an all the monuments, coins ANTIS'TASIS, n. [Gr. avti., opposite, and cient times ;
;
;
to pre- 4.
Motion. opposer or enemy
lacv.
AN'tlPRIEST,
;
of being ancient; an appearance of ancient oriirin and workmanship. Addison
gate or door. Smith.
Adverse
j
ity
in opposi
Mdison
for the
Opposition to
n.
A
Brown.
tion to the pope.
A remedy
n.
scurvy.
!aNTIS€RIP'TURISM,
;
antidote for
AN'TIPOPE, n. [anti and pope.] One who usurps the papal power,
I
;
I
2.
poison.
;
;
ANTISCORBU'Tl€,
;
the opposite side of tlie globe, and of course, whose feet are direct-
ANTIPOrSON,
anti-
qmis, probably from Old ancient of genuine antiquity in this sense it usually refers to the flourish ishing ages of Greece and Rome ; as an
;
foot.]
n. s as
[Fr. ante.]
the Holy Scriptures. Boyle. ANTISCRIPTURIST, n. One that denies revelation. antique statue. Boyle. 2. Old, as it respects the present age, or a IaNTISEP'TIC, a. [Gr. arnand ffjjrtroj, pumodern period of time of old fashion, as trid, from ffjjTtu, to putrLty.] an antique robe. lOpposing or counteracting putrefaction. 3. Odd wild fanciful more generally writ Ash. ten antic. medicine which re'ANTISEP'TI€, n. ANTIQUE, n. antee'k. In general, any sists or corrects putrefaction, as acids, but hi a more limiteil stimulants, saline substances, astringents, tiling very old &c. sense, the remains of ancient artists, as Encyc. busts, statues, paintings and vases, the ANTISO'CIAL, a. [See Social.] works of Grecian and Roman antiqiuty. Averse to society that tends to interrupt oi ANTlQUENESS, n. anlee'kness. The qual- destroy social intercourse.
One who hves on ly o|iposite.
ANT from L.
a. antee'k.
5.
;
;
oraffij, station.] edifices, history and fragments of literature, offices, habihnients In oratory, the defense of an action from the consideration that if it had been omitted, weapons, manners, ceremonies in short whatever respects any of the ancient nasomething worse woidd have happened.
inscriptions,
;
tions of the earth.
Encyc.
ANTIREVOLU'TIONARY,
a.
[See Revo-
lution.^
ANTIS'TES, n. [L.] The chief priest or prelate.
Milton.
In grammar, the ])Utting of one case for an- Opposed to a revolution opposed to an en- ANTIS'TROPHE, ) [Gr. avr^, opposite. and ;f>o^r,, a turnother. Johnson. ANTIS'TROPIIY, S tire change in the form of government. n. An opposer of jniriij'g-] Burke. the In tans. Warton. ANTIREVOLU'TIONIST, n. One who is grammar, changing of things mutually depending on each other ; reciprocal conANTIQUARIAN, a. Pertaining to antiqua- ojiposed to a revolution in government. version as, the master of the servant, the As a noim, this is ries, or to anti([uity. ANTISABBATA'RIAN, n. [anti and sab- servant of the master. used for antiquary. bath.] (e ancients, that part of a song or ANTIQUA'RIANISM, n. Love of antiqui- One of a sect who oppose the observance of 2. Amongbefore the altar, which was perdance, ties. Warhurton. the Christian sabbath maintaining that formed by turning from west to east, in n. AN'TIQUARY, the Jewish sabbath was only of ceremo[L. anliqiiarius.] opposition to the strophy. The ancient One who studies into the history of ancient nial, not of moral oliligation, and was conodes consisted of stanzas called strophies things, as statues, coins, medals, paintings, sequently abohshed by Christ. Encyc. and antistrophies, to which was often adinscriptions, books and manuscripts, or ANTISA'BIAN, a. [See Sabian.] ded the epode. These were sung by u searches for them, and explains their oriOpposed or contrary to Sabianism, or tlie chou', which turned or changed places gin and purport one versed in antiquity. of the celestial orbs. Paber. when they rejieated tlie different parts of AN'TIQUATE, v. t. [L. antiquo. See Aii- worship the ode. The fjoorfe was sung, as the choa. Adverse to tiquary.] rus stood still. [See Ode.] Waterland. To uiake old, or obsolete to make old in priests. H'est's pre/, to his Pindar. such a degree as to put out of use. Hence ANTIS"CIAN, ANTIS"CIANS, n. [L. anof Gr. and avn, ojiposite, tiscii, axia, ANTIS'TROPIION, n. A figure which rewhen applied to laws or customs, it Milton. shadow.] peats a word often. amounts to make void or abrogate. In geography, the inhabitants of the earth, ANTISTRUMAT'le, a. [anti and stnma, a Christianity might reasonably introduce new laws and anliquate or abrogate old ones. scrophulous swelling.] Uving on (hll'erent sides of the equator, whose shadows at noon are cast in con- Good against scrophulous disorders. Hale. Johnson. Wiseman. AN'TIQUATED, jip. Grown old obso- trary directions. Those who hve north of the equator are antiscians to those on the ANTITH'ESIS, n. [Gr. avtiStei.!, of o.vti. lete out of use having lost its bintling and diaii, from TWt;ni, to place.] force by non-observance as an antiquated south, and vice versa; the shadows on one law. side being cast towards the nortli those In rhetoric, an opposition of words or sentiAN'TIQUATEDNESS, n. The state of be- on the other, towards the south. Enn/c. ments contrast as, " When our vices
"
;
ANTIPU'RITAJSf,
;
;
;
ANTISACERDO'TAL,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
ing old or obsolete.
ANTIUUA'TION, antiquated.
n.
ANTIS€ORBU'Tl€, Tlie state of being
which
o. [anti
see.]
Beaumont. Counteracting the scurfy.
and
scorbu'fic.
leave
them."
us,
we
"
The
Hatter
omsehes we
lean-
)»rodigal robs his heir, the " £,rcess of ceremony
miser robs himself."
ANY
A N V "
sliows want of
breeiliiifr."
Liberty
laws, aiul goveruineiit iinlhoul oppression^ 2.
Opposition of opinions
;
controversy. Encyc.
incus, incudis, is formed by a like analog) from in and cudo, to liannner, or slia])e
Pcrtainin;; to aiitiih.-si.s.or opiinsition scntinionts ; containing or
ANTITHET'IC, ANTITHET'I€AL, of words and abounding with
?
"'
and the same ideas are connected
\
Celtic
Encyc. Enfidil. n. [anti and trini-
eingion
ANTITRINITA KIAN,
a.
existence
and
any
tiling
on which blows are Shak.
laid.
tlie anvil, is to be in a state of discussion, form.ition or preparation ; as when a scheme or measure is forming, but not
Ena/c. To be on
Opposing die
trinity.
Jr. ijineon, anvil,
strike.]
iron block with a smooth face, on whic)] smiths hammer and shape their work.
Figuratively,
trinity or the in the Godhead.
tli(^
;
A denial of
matured. This tigure bears an analogy to that of discussion, a sliaking or beating AN'TITyPE, n. [Or. avftrvttov, of (uti, ANXI'ETY, 71. angzi'ety. [L. anrietas, from i>ee Anger.] anriita, sohcitous; L. ong-o. apainst, and Tvjto;, a t) pe, or pattern.] anotlier figure ; 1. Concern or solicitude respecting some tigure eorrespondinji to that of wliieh the type is the pattern or event, future or uncertain, which disturl the mind, and keeps it in a state of i)ainful in re])resentation. Thus the paschal lamb, It expresses more tlian unea uneasiness. scripture, is the type, of which Christ is the An antitype then, is something siness or disturbance, and even more than antitype. It usually springs trouble or solicitude. whi(di is formed accordinar to a model or from fear or serious apprehension of evil, of repattern, and bearing strong features and involves a suspense respecting an semblance to it.
ANTltRFMTA'RIANlSM,
re.
the trinity.
A
bread event, and often, a perplexity of mind, to litvrs:ii, the sacramental know how to shape our conduct. called antitypes, that is, figures, similitudes ; and the Greek fathers 3. In medical langtiage, mieasiness ; unceasused the word in a like sense. ing restlessness in sickness. Encyc. an antito a. ANX'IOUS, o. ank'shus. Greatly concerned ANTITYP'R'AL, Pertaining In the Greek
and wine are
type
;
Johnson.
explaining the type.
ANTIVARIO'LOUS, a.
and
[anti
which sec.] Opposing the small pox.
ANTIVENE'REAL, which
a.
[anti
variolous
2.
see.] 3.
Furnished with
antlers.
[Gr. avu,
S
name.]
;
ANXTOUSLY, adv. solicitously
carefullv
;
In an anxious
with
;
painful
manner
time indeterminate, that presenter future.
;
;
;
;
AORTAL, AOU'TA,
Ger. einig-
This word
is
a
;
compound
1.
One
of
Encyc. adv. [a anApace.] a quick pace fast ; speedily quick with haste hastily applied to things iii motion or progression ; as, birds fly apace ; ;
rigid
sect
deny that man
is
This
made
unputatively just, that
is,
just, but is only pronounced so.
Enajc.
I
AP'AGOgY,
^
apace. [Gr. from ortayo, to ' aside,
1.
I.
arto,
draw
from, and
In logic, abduction a kind of argument, wherein the greater extreme is evidently contained in the medium, but the medium not so evidently in the lesser extreme, a.s not to require further proof. Thus, "AU whom God absolves are free from sui but God absolves all who are in Christ therefore all who are in Christ are free from The first proposition is evident but sin." the second may require further proof, as that God received full satisfaction for sin, by the suffering of Christ. In mathematics, a progress or passage from one proposition to another, when the first, ;
;
;
;
having been demonstrated,
is
employed in
Encyc.
i.
preposition The last syllable is from tlie dialect aan. verb build : in Germ, bilden, to tbrm or shape, and bUd, an image or form, which in
of
oyu, to drive.]
or thuig being understood. proving others. And when ye stand praying, forgive, if ye 3. In the Athenian law, the carrying a crimihave aught against any. Mark xi. nal, taken in the fact, to a magistrate. It" any lack msdoui, let liim ask it of God
James n. [Sax. anfilt, o'nfitt ; D. aanbec'ld; Old Eng. anvelf. The first syllable seems It is used in opposition to ?!OJie. to be the any wheat to sell ? I have none. on, from the Belgic
AN'VIL,
Vol.
;
AP'AGOtjE,
indefinitely.
;
:
;
;
weeds grow
Nor knowcth any man the Father, save the use of the name of some office, dignity Son. Math xi. profession, science or trade, instead of the If a soul shall sin against any of the com true name of the person ; as when his mamandments. Lev. iv. a noble jesty is used for a king, lordship for an indefinite lunnber, pluraUy man. Thus instead of Aiistotle, we say 2. Some ; for though the word is Ibrmed from one, it the philosopher; a grave man is called a Are there any witoften refers to many. Cato; an eminent orator, a Cicero; a wise nesses present ? "f he sense seems to be a man, a Solomon. In the latter examples, small, uncertain mnnlier. a proper name is used for an ajipellative Some ; an indefinite quantity ; a small .3. the appUcation being su]ipoited by a re portion. semblance in character. Encyc. 2. Who will show us any good ? Ps. iv. ANTOSIAN'DRIAN, n. One of a sect'of a substitute, the person Lutherans, so denominated from their 4. It is often used as
The
opposing the doctrines of Osiander.
tree in
APA'CE,
D.eenig;
OH, one, and i^, which, in the Teutonic dialects, is the ic of the Latins, miis-tc-us Any \s unic-us, one-like.]
and opofia,
The paper-mulberry
71.
Otaheite, from whose bark is manufactured a cloth worn by the inhabitants.
With
[Sax. anig, eenig
either past,
;
uncertainty;
unquietly.
a. en'ny.
is,
n. Indefinite; pertaining to an aorist, or indefinite tense. AORT'.A, 77. [Gr. oopTij, the great artery also an ark or chest.] The great artery, or trunk of the arterial system; proceeding from the left ventricle of the heart, and giving origin to all the arteries, except the pulmonary arteries. If first rises, when it is called the ascending aorta then makes a great curve, when it gives off branches to the head, and upper extremities then jiroceeds downward.'--, called the descending aorta, when it gives off" branches to the trunk and (inaljy divides into the two iliacs, which supply the pelvis and lower extremities. Cyc. Parr. a. Pertaining to the aorta, or Daricin. great artery.
ANX'IOUSNESS, n. The quality of being Johnson anxious great solicitude. AN'Y,
Milton.
AORISTTC,
object.
Encyc. )
;
residence, as to Parnassus.
.\'ORIST, 71. [Gr. aopifoj, indefinite, of a iniv. and opoj, limit.] The name of certain tenses in the grammar of the Greek language, which express
;
Encyc. ANTO'NIAN, a. Noting certain medicinal waters in Gennany, at or near Tonstcin
ANTONOMA'SIA, ANTONOM'ASY,
;
;
;
It
A
a.
or solicitous, respecting something future or unknown being in painful suspense applied to persons; as, to be anrious for the issue of a battle. of solicitude Fidl unquiet applied to things ; as anxious thoughts or labor. Very careful solicitous as, anrious to please anxious to commit no mistake is followed by for or about, before the ;
Med. Rep. and venereal.
Resisting venereal poison. ANT'LER, n. [From the root otante, before Fr. andouiller. See Ante.] start or branch of a horn, especially of the horns of the cervine animals, as of the sta; or moose. The branch next to the head is called the brow-antler, and tlie branch next above, the bes-antUr. Encyc.
ANT'LERED,
The .'Voiiian fount was Aganippe. at the fool of mount Helicon, not far from Thebes, and sacred to tlie muses. Ilencc the muses wen- called .Vonides. Dryden But in trutli. I'irg. Eclogue. 10. 12. Aonia itself is formed from tlie Celtic aon. a spring or fountain, [the fabled son oi' Neptune,] and this word gave name to Aonia. As the muses were fond of springs, the word was applied to the muses, and to mountains which were their favorite otia.
;
in the
An
tnrian, wliicli sec]
of three persons
W.
;
inneonam, to
antitliosis.
ANTITRINITA'RIAN, One who denies
A P A
Putch is heeld. To build is to shape, to AO'NIAN, a. [From Aonia, a part of Bobo is that on tia, in Greece.] form, and anvil, that is, on build, which things are shaped. The I.atin \, ord Peiiaining to the muses, or to Aonia, in Bo'-
leith
ANY-WISE
Have you APAGOti'ICAL, a. An apagogical demonstration is an indirect way of proof, by
is sometimes used adverbially, but the two words may be separated, and used with a preposition, in any viise.
11
showing the absurdity or impossibihty of the contrary-.
APALACH'IAN,
a.
Pertaining to the Apa-
APE
APE
ing and mischievous.
in the -wc-tcrn
A P
ir
mark of a long
inhabit the leaves and
They
In botany, th« syllable. anther of flowers, or tops of the stamens, like knobs. Martyn. 2. One who imitates servilely, in allusion to APH'ANITE, 71. [Gr. a priv. and ^aivu, to the manners of the ape a silly fellow. appear.] To imitate to nhniic, In mineralogy, compact ainphibole in a par1'. t. and ?!. APE, servilely APAN'TIIROI'^', [Gr. arto, fi-om, Weak ticular state. as an ape hnitates human actions. Diet, of .Yat. Hist. art^pwrtoj, man.] An aversion to tlje company of men a love pe)sons are ahvays prone to ape foreigners. APHE'LION, n. [Gr. ano, from, and tjUn;, the sun.] See of solitude. Encyc. APE'AK, adv. [a and peak, a point. That of a planet's orbit which is most n. In point Pe«*.] rhetoric, APARITIl'MESIS, [Gr.] in a posture to pierce. distant from the siui 1. On the point enumeration. opposed to perihelai-lios, a tribe
cif Iii.lians,
Hence the word is a|)-[ part of Georgia. to the nioinitains in or near their jihecl country, wliieh are in fact tlie .southern extrenhtv of the Alleghanean ridges.
and hve on
forests, insects.
fruits,
Encyc.
;
;
;
;
AP'ART,
(/rfr.
[a
am] part; Fr. aparti.
'i.
Separately
;
at a distance
separation, as to place. Jesus departed thence hito a desert place '2.
In I'fomen's /nng'tin^f, perpendicular. The is apeak, when the cable is drawn so as to bring the ship directly over it.
lion.
APHERE'SIS,
anchor
in a state of
;
;
John.$on.
See
P.irt.] 1.
Mar. Diet. Mat!i. xiv. AP'ENNIXE, a. [L. apenninvs ; ad and apart. In a statcof distinction, as to purpose, use penninus, an epithet applied to a peak or or character. ridge of the Alps. Liry. Celtic pen or The Lord hath set ajunt him that is godly for ben, the peak of a mountain, or in general,
n. [Gr. a«o, from,
and
acpiu,
to take.] 1.
The
taking of a letter or syllalile from the of a word. Thus by an aphe-
begumin^ 2.
resis, omtttere is w ritten, mitten. In the healing art, the removal of
noxious.
Encyc.
any thing
In surgery, amputation. Quincy.
Ps. iv. a mountain.] APHIDIV'OROUS, a. [of aphis, the pucethe ron or vine fretter, and loro, to eat.] Distinctly; separaiely; as, consider Pcrtauiing to or designating a chain of mounprojiositions apart. tains, which extend from the plains of Ealing, devouring, or subsisting on the apliis, 4. Aside; in exclusion of; as, apart from all the or plant-louse. of to roimd the Darwin. Genoa, Piedmont, gulf in not he is to his moral.s, center of Italy, and thence south east to APHILAN'THROPY, n. [of o neg. and $i(pialitied, regard other respects, for the olHce he hokls. the extremity. ^ai'9pwrti», of ^Acu, to love, and oi'9pu«of, or apn. The momnauis above [Fr. apartement,
himself.
3.
two
AP>ARTMENT,
VP'ENMNE,
partement, of ab or a, from, and parlir, depart. Sec Part.] room in a building a division in a house,
to
A
VP'ENNINES, APEP'SY, n.
I
"
described. S [Gr. a priv. and
man.] of love to mankind. In medicine, the first stage of melancholy, when solitude is
Want rtcn.ru,
to
Coxe. preferretl to society. digest.] a Defective In zoology, the puceron, vine separated from otliers by partitions [Little A'PIIIS, n. indigestion. digestion C'oxe. place separated by inclosure. fretter, or plant-louse ; a genus of insects, Encye. used.] a. Void of feeling free front to the of In tlie order n. One who A'PER, belonging hemipters. The apes. zoology, Harris. insensible. wild boar. passion apliis is furnished with an inflected beak, AP'ATHY, )(. [Gr. a priv. and naSos, pas- APERIENT, a. [L. aperiens, aperio ; Sp. and with feelers longer than the thorax. In tlie same species, some individuals have Fr. ouvrir.] Port, abrir ; It. aprire sion.] AVant of feeling; an utter privation of pas- Opening four erect wings, and others are entirely that has the quaUty of opening without wings. The feet are of the ambuapplied either deobstruent; laxative. sion, or insensihiUty to pain As applied to the APE'RIEJVT, /!. A medicine which proLu the body or the mind. latory kind, and the belly usually ends ia two horns, from which is ejected the submotes the circulation of the fluids, by remind, it is stoicism, a calmness of mind instance called honey-japarsley, and butcher's broom. a contempt of earthly concerns. APERTTIVE, a. Opening; deobstruent; yifo;, inflammable.] Quielism is apathy disguiseil under the apHarvey. Fotherhy. Flaraeless; as an uphlogisiic lamp, in which aperient. ICiicyc APERT', a. a coil of wire is kept in a state of continued pearance of devotion. Open evident [L. aperius.] .\P'ATITE, n. [from Gr. arfoT'ou, to deceive imilisguised. ignition by alcohol, without flame. [J\fot vsed.] it having been often mistaken for other Comsti>ck. \PER'TION, n. The act of opening; the a gap. n. [Gr. o priv. and $u-ii;, voice.J state of being opened an opening muierals.] V variety of phosphate of lime A lo.ss of voice a palsy of the tongue j generally [Little used.] ajierture, or passage. hexahedral in low, Johnson. Core. If'otton. flat, ^Viseman. prisms, lumbness; catalepsy. crystalized sometimes even tabidar. Its powder phos- APERT'LY, adv. Openly. APHORISM, n. [Gr. afoptsftos, determina[Little used.] from o^opi^u, to sepaBale. phoresces on binning coals. tion, distinction The phosporite of Werner includes the mas- APERT'NESS, n. [L. apeiius.] Openness. rate.] sive and earthy varieties of the pliosphate, Holder. A maxim a precept, or principle expressed [Rarely used.] which are distinguished from the apatite, APERT'OR, J(. A muscle that raises the a detached sentence conin few words as, the by their containing a small ])ortion of flutaining some inqiortant truth f^uiiicy. upper eve lid. Cleaveland. oric acid. AP'ERTilRE, ». The act of opening more aphorisms of Hippocrates, or of the civil law. Encyc. \PE, n. [D. aap ; Dan. nbe ; Sax. Sw. and generally, an opening; a gap, cleft or n. A dealer in a hole VV. ab, or chasm a ])assage perforated APIIORISM'ER, Ir. apa; Ice. ape : Germ, affe aphorisms. Milto?t. its through any solid substance. epa, so named from the celerity of In the form of an } Holder. .Yewton. APHORISTIC, motions.] ''^ I. A genus of quadrupeds, found in the tor- 2. An opening of meaning aphorism; in the explanation APHORIS'TICAL, ^ form of short unconnected sentences as rid zone of both continents, of a great Taylor [M'ot used.] an aphoristic stvle. In common use, the 3. In geomHry, the space between two right variety of species. word extends to all the tribe of monkeys lines, forming an angle. Encyc. APHORIS'TICALLY, adv. In the form or manner of aphorisms. and baboons but in zoology, ape is hmited APET'ALOUS, a. [Gr. a neg. and mtaioi' a flower-leaf or petal.] APH'RITE, n. [Gr. o^po?, froth the schauni to such of these animals as have no tails or flower-leaves; while those with short tails are called ta6 In botany, having no petals, erde, or earth scum, of Wern«r ; the silvery chalk of Kirwan.] having no corol. Martyn. oons, and those with long ones, monkeys. state of being A snbvariety of carbonate of lime, occurring These animals have four cutting teeth in APET'ALOUSNESS, n. in small masses, solid or tender and friable. without jietals. each jaw, and two canine teeth, with obIt is composed of lamels or scales, of a like n. tuse grinders. The feet are formed A'PEX, phi. aperes. [L. aper, ])hi. apices. I hands, with four fingers and a tlnnnb, and The tip, point or summit of any thing. pearly luster. It is connected by insensible shades with argentine. flat nails. antiquity, the ca)i of a flamen or jiriest Apes are lively, full of frol Jameson. Cleavelawi. and chatter, generally untamable, thievthe crest of a helmet. In grammar, tlie ;
;
APATHET'IC,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
APHONY,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
A
A P APII'RIZiTE,
A
n.
malin.
APIIKODIS'IAC,
APHKODISI'A€AL,
"
i;
Venus, from a^pof, frotli.] Exciting venereal denire increasing the ap;
petite for sexual connection. n. i)rovooativc to ve-
A
APHRODISIAC,
Unci/c.
nery.
APII'RODITR,
n. [Gr. A^poitri?'.]
of Venus.
APHRODITE, "
In
}
APHRODI'TA, called
with
al.so
tlie
S
are received by the Romish Church as cononiriit, but nut by Protestants. Encyc, :APOC'RVPHAL, a. IVrtauiing to the apiicnot canonical; of uncertain au ryjiha Ed. Encyc. fictitious. tion. false thority or credit APLO'ME, n. [Gr. tt«>.oo?, Him])le.] Congreve. Hooker. mineral closely allied to garnet. It is con- APOC'RYPHALLY, adv. Uncertainly not sidered by Jameson, as crystali/.ed comindisputably. mon garnet. It is a rare mineral, found ALNESS, n. Uncertainty, as to authenticity in dodecahedrons, «ith rhombic faces, doubtfulness of credit, or
zoolo^i/,
A
order of Mollu.scas,
The body
sea-moiisr.
Qiiinci).
follower Cleuvcland. a genus of is
oval,
;
;
;
APOCRYPH
;
genuineness. supposed to be derived li-om l\u- cube, by one of the most simple laws of decrement, APODAL, a. [See J]pode.] that of a single range of particles, parallel Without feet in zoology, destitute of ventral to all the edges of a cube. fins. ;
many
Haiiy.
Cteaveland.
AP'ODE,
n. [Gr. apriv..ind rtw{, rtojo;, foot.]
•VPLUS'TER, I " [h. from Gr. afXa;ov, tlie All animal that has no feet, apjilied to cersununit of the poop of a tain fabulous fowls, w liicli are said to have \PLUS'TRE, I no legs, and also to some birds that lia%e ship.] ble of being retracted. very short legs. Encyc. An ensign, or ornament carried by ancient A name of Venus, so called from 6r. ships. It was shaped hke a plume of In zoology, the apodes are an order of fishes, which have no ventral fins; the first order fealher.s, fastened on the neck of a goose o^pos, froth, from which the goddess was or swan, and to this was attached a partyill Linne's system. supposed to have been produced. [See Encyc. Veims.]
API!
A
;
A
small protuberances or tentacles on each side, which serve as feet The mouth is cylindrical, at one end of the body, with two bristly tentacles, and capa2.
A P O
A P O
li
is one whicli entirely variety of blark tour- (Vn uplanatic telescope corrects the aberration of the rays of light. I'liiUips. It is thus distinguished from the achromatic, } [Gr.a4.po6i«o!, vowhich only j)artially corrects the aberraiiereal, Al-poSifij,
THONG,
[Or. a«o, without, and
n.
^Ooyyoi, sound.]
colored ribin, to indicate the course of the wind. Jlddison. Encyc. n. apoc'abjps. [Gr. from
letter or combinallon of letters, which, ni ojtoxoXiirtru), to disclose ; orto to cover.] the customary pronunciation of a word, have no sound. Focaloir, or Did. of the Revelation disclosure. The discovery name of a Ixiok of the New Testament, Hibet-no- Celtic Langun^e. APII'THOUS, a. [Gr. a^Oai, idcers in the containing many discoveries or pre
;
£(ici/c.
A'PEXES.
A'l'ICES,
[See
Apei,
and
To
pertaining
\
to
APOCALYPTICALLY, tion
in the
;
maimer
APOCOPATE, To
cut
ofl",
arfi).
anA
[a
piece.]
[Gr.
v.t.
[See
«/)oco/)e.]
or drop the last letter or syllable
of a word.
APOCOPATED, omission of the
Shortened
pp.
last letter
by
the
or syllable.
M. Stuart. Cutting oft', or omitting the last letter or svllable. ) abscission "• [Gr. anoxojo;,
APOCOPATING, ppr.
APOCOPE, APOCOPY,
^
evi-
artohiiis,
;
tion
;
clearly proving.
[Little used.]
Brown.
Glanville.
adv. So as to be evident bevoiid contradiction.
APODICTICALLY, APOD'OSIS, latter part
AP'OuEE,
u.
[Gr.]
The
opplication
of a similitude. n. [apogeon,
from, and y>;, the earth.] That point in the orbit of a
or
Mede.
apogcum
;
planet,
Gr. o«o,
which
is
distance from the earth. ancients regarded the earth as fixed in the center of the system, and therefore assigned to the sun, with the planets, an apogee but the moderns, considering the sun as the center, use the terms perihelion and aphelion, to denote the least and greatest distance of the planets from that orb. The sun's apogee therefore is in strictness, the earth's aphelion. Apogee is properly ajiiilieable to the moon. Encyc. Johnson. AP'OGON, n. A fish of the Mediterranean, the summit of whose head is elevated.
The
adv. By revela of disclosure.
ofarto,
and xowruto
cut.]
cutting off, or omission of the hist letter or syllable of a word as rfi for dii. APOC'RISARY, n. [Gr. Ironi artoxfioi.;, an;
each; noting the share of each; as here
"
5fixiTfii, to
at tlie greatest
disclosing.
;
The
Anther.']
APIE'CE,
"'
APOCALYPTICAL, revelation
}
APODIC'TICAL,
;
;
APH'YLLOUS, a. [Gr. a neg. and ^xkov, folium, a leaf.] In hotuny, destitute of leaves, as the rush, niusbrooins, garlic, some sea-weeds, &c, Milne A'PIARY, n. [L. a/Monum, of a/Mj, a bee.] The j)lace where bees are kept a stand or shed for bees. A'PIASTER, n. [From apis, a bee.] The bird called a bee-eater, a species of me The apiaster has an iron colored rops. back, and a belly of bluish green.
APODICTIC,
S (lence, of a«o, and show.] and xoXvrtrw, Demonstrative evident beyond contradic-
APOCALYPSE,
an orange apiece. swer artoxptro^at, to answer.] A' PIS, n. In mythologi/. an ox, worshiped in Anciently a resident in an imperial city, in ancient Egypt, or a divinity or idol in the the name of a foreign church or bishop, of an ox. figure answering to the modern 7iuncio. He was A'PIS, )!. [L.] In zoolofcy, the bee, a genus a proctor, in the emperor's court, to ne of insects, of the order of hymenopters. gotiate, and transact business for his conThe mouth has two jaw s, and a jirohoscis stituent. Encyc. Spelman. infolded in a double sheath the wings' APOCRUST'IC a. [Gr. ortoxpws-ixo, from are four, the two tbremost arto and xpoDu, to drive froni.[ covering the hinder ones when at rest. The females! Astringent repelline. and working bees have a sting. Encyc.\ APOCRUST'IC, n.^A medicine wliicli conAPISH, a. [See .%.] Having the quali-f stringes, and repels tlie humors a repelties of an a|)e inclined to imitate in a serlent. Quincy. Coze. is
;
;
;
AP'OGRAPH, [Gr. o/toypa^w anoyfa^^] An exemplar a copy or transcript. Jlsh. APOLLINA'RIAN, a. [From .Apollo.] The ApoUinarian games, in Roman antiquity, )i.
;
;
were celebrated
in
honor of Apollo
:
insti-
tuted A. R. 542. after the battle of CamiiE. They were merely scenical, with exhibitions of music, dances and various moun-
tebank
tricks.
APOLLINA'RIANS, sect, deriving their
in
Church
name from
Encyc. a
history,
Apollinaris,
bishop of Laodicea, in the 4tli Century, who denied the proper humanity of Christ ; maintaining that his body w as endowed with a sensitive, and not with a rational APOCRYPIL\, n. [Gr. from anoxfwrttu, .soul and that the divine nature supplied the place of the intellectual principle in xpiTiru, to conceal.] man. Literally such things as are not published Encyc. Hooker. but in an ap|)ropriate sense, books whose Ipollo-Belvidere, an ancient statue of the authors are not known wliose authentifirst class in excellence. city, as inspired writings, is not admitted, \POL'LYON, )i. [Gr. o«oM.iui, destroying.] and which are therefore not considered a The destroyer; a name used Rev. ix. 11, tor the angel of the bottomless pit, answering part of the .sacred canon of the scri])ture. When the Jews published their sacred to the Hebrew Abaddon. books, they called them canonical and di- APOLOOETTC, I "' [Gr. o«oxoyjo^i, to vine ; such as they did not publish, were APOLOuET'ICAL, ^ speak in defense of called apocryphal. The apocryphal books a«o and ^oyo5, speech.] ;
;
;
vile
maimer; hence, foohsh,
fected, trilling, insignificant
;
foppish, afas,
an apish
apish manners. ailv. In an apish manner; with servile imitation foppishly. fellow
;
A'PISHLY,
;
A'PISHNESS, apish
;
)i.
mimicry
;
The quahty of being foppery.
APIT'PAT, With quick beating or palpita tion;aword formed from the sound, ;)!( and
pat, or
from
APLANATTe, wander.]
a.
beat.
[Gr. o neg. and
.-t^aiau, to
;
;
;
;
A P O
A P O
Dcl'ending by wonls or arguments iiig
;
;
excuS'
said or written in ilelensc, or by way as an apologetic essay. Boyle. adv. By" way of
of apology
;
APOLOGETICALLY, a|K)logy or excuse.
APOL'OGIST, n. [See Apology.] one who One wlio makes an apology ;
spe.-iks
or writes in defense of another.
APOL'OGiZE,
i>.
i.
To make
an apology
to write or speak in favor of, or to make excuse for followed by for ; as, my cor ;
respondent apologized for not answering
my
letter.
APOLOGUE, A
[Gr. orto^oyoj, a
n. ap'olog.
long speech, a fable.] moral fable a story or relation of ficti tious events, intended to convey useful An apologue differs from a para truths. ;
in this; the parable is drawn from events wliich pass among mankintl, and is an therefore supported by probability apologue may be founded on supposed actions of brutes or inanimate things, and therefore does not require to be sup]iorted by probability. Esop's fables arc good examples of apologues. Encyc. ble
;
APOL'OGY,
[Gr. anoxoyta, of arto and
n.
Xoyos, discourse.]
An
A P O An
apo- APOSIOPE'SIS [Gr. artoniurtrjisti, o? phlegmatic. Qnincy. Core. APOSIO'PESYf:\- arto, and oiurtow, to be [Gr. arto, from, and silent.] It Reticency or AP'OTHEM, tflfW*, word. S suppression as when a speakwould be eligible to reduce this harsh er for some cause, as fear, sorrow, or anword to apothem.] ger, suddenly breaks off his discourse, beA remarkable saying a short, sententious, fore it is ended or speaks of a tiling, when he makes a show as if he would instructive remark, uttered on a particular say nothoccasion, or by a distinguished character ing on the subject or aggravates what he " He is as that of Cyrus, luiworthy to be pretends to conceal, by uttering a part and a magistrate, who is not better than hi; leaving the remainder to be understood. " Homines ni Smith. Johnson. Encyc. subjects ;" or that of Cato, hil agendo, discunt male agere ;" men by APOS'TASY, n. [Gr. arto,-a«{, a defection. do soon learn to mischief. of domg nothing, afi.;y;fii, to depart, arto and TijiU'.] APOPH'YgE, ) " [Gr. arto, from, and fvy^;, 1. An abandonment of what one has professed a total desertion, or departure from APOPH'YgY, flight.] 1. In architecture, the part of a column, where one's faith or religion. it springs out of its base originally a ring 2. The desertion from a partj' to wliich one of or ferrel to bind the extremities colhas adhered. mnns, and keep them from splitting af- 3. Among physicians, the throwing off of terwards imitated in stone i)illars. It is exfohated or fractured bone, or the various sometimes called the spring of the colunm. solution of disease. Coxe. Chambers. 4. An abscess. Encyc. 2. A concave part or ruig of a column, lyin APOS'TATE, n. [Gr. arto^ar^s.] above or belo\v the flat member, called by One who has forsaken the church, sect or the French le conge d'en has, or rfVn haul ; j)rofession to which he before adliered. In its original sense, apjihed to one who by the Itahans, cavo di basso, or di sopra ; has abantloned his reh'gion but correctly also, il vivo di basso. Encyc. APOPHYLLITE, n. [Gr. arto, from, and applied also to one who abandons a poso called because of its ten litical or other party. fv'K'Kov, a leaf APOS'TATE, a. False ; traitorous. dency to exfohate.] A mineral occurring in laminated masses Spenser. or in regular prismatic crystals, having a APOSTAT'ICAL, a. After the manner of Its an apostate. strong and peculiar pearly luster. Sandys. structure is foliated, and when a fragment APOS'TATIZE, V. i. To abandon one's is forcibly rubbed against a hard body, it j)rofession or church to forsake principles or faith which one has professed; or the separates into thhi lamcns, hke selenite. It exfohates also before the flame of a l)arty to which one has been attached. n.
APOPHTHEGM,?
;
;
;
;
;
<,
;
;
;
something said or written iri defense or extenuation of what appears to others wrong, or unjustifiable or of what excuse
APOPHLEGMAT'IZANT,
;
;
be liable to disapi)robation. It may is not perfectly or a vindication of what is or may be disapproved, but which the apoloA man makes to be right. gist deems an apology for not fultiUing an engagement, or for publishing a jiamphlet. An apology then is a reason or reasons assigned for wliat is wrong or may appear to be wrong, and it may be either an extenua-
may
be an exteiuiation of what
justitiable,
;
;
lamp. From its peculiar luster, it is sometimes called by the harsh name, ichthyophthalmite, fish-eye stone.
from, and ^ai;, APOPH'YSY, S"' growth.] The projecthig.soft end or protuberance of a of a bone. a bone process APONEURO'SIS, I "' [Gr. arto, from, and W. APONEU'ROSY, nvpoi', a nerve ^uincy. Encyc. Coxe. nerth ; Arm. ncrz. See J^/erve.] APOPLE€'TI€, [See apoplexy.] I An expansion of a tendon in the manner of a APOPLE€'Tl€AL, ^ Pertaining to or in membrane ; the tendinous expansion or consisting apoplexy, as an apoplectic or predis|iosed to apoplexy, as an apo fit the tendon or tail of a fascia of muscles a justification of something that I* or may be censured, by those who are not acquainted with the reasons. tion
(u-
APOPH'YSIS,
?
[Gr.
}Vorthington.
APOSTATIZING,
orto,
APOS'TEMATE, scess
rtff<«u, to
Coxe.
Encyc. a.
[Gr.
arto,
from,
and
Denoting a song or hymn among the ancients, sung or addressed to a stranger, on Lis departure from a i)lace to his own country. It may be used as a noun for the hynm. APOPII'ASIS,
ptectic habit
n.
Encyc. from, and ^amj,
AP'OPLliXED,
a.
[Gr.
arto,
abscess
inatic.
Bacon.
a. Pertaining to an partaking of the natiu'e of an Journ. of Science.
;
;
tion to reasoning a priori, or
spiration, or the stopj;age of secretion.
from
opposi-
from causes
previously known.
APOS'TLE, ortofo^of, arto,
A
and
)i.
from
apos't.
[L. apostolus ; Gr. to senil away, of
artO)-fXXu,
send
;iXk^o, to
;
G.
stetlen, to set.]
person deputed to execute some important but appropriately, a disciple of ;
Inisiiiess
Christ commissioned to |ireach the gospel. selected by Christ and Judas, one of the for this purpose
Twelve persons were ;
any natural
number, proving an apostate, his place was supplied by JIatthias. Acts i. title of ajiostle is applied to Christ himIn the primitive ages of the self. Heb. 3. church, other ministers were called aposRom. xvi as were persons sent to tles,
Co.ce.
curry alms from one church to another.
;
apoiihleg-
;
aposteme.
;
;
An
with pus.
fill
APOPLEXY, n.'[Gr. ortort>.)jtio, of arto, from \-POSTERIORI, [L. posterior, after.] and rfKr^n^no, to strike.] a posteriori, are drawn A sudden deprivation of all sense and vol- Arguments in eflccts, consequences or facts
;
n.
a
an ab-
humation,
;
APOPHLEG'MATISM,
into
AP'OSTEME, n. [Gr. anoj-ij^io, from A person affected by oifiif^jfii, to go otf, to recede orto and ; Knalchbull if'jj'", to stand.] Affected with apoplexy. \n abscess a swelling filled with purulent Sha'k. matter written also corruptlj imposthume.
untary motion, occasioned by repletion or whateverinterrupts the action of the nerves form of speech.] Cullen. upon the muscles. In rhcloric, a waving or omission of what one, Drydcn, for the sake of measure, uses upospeaking ironically, would plainly insinuplex, fur apoplexi/. ate as, " I will not mention another arguAP'ORON, ? " "[See Apory.] A problem ment, which, however, if I should, you dilficult to be resolved. AP'ORIME, I could not refute." Smith. Johnson. Encyc. APOPIILEGMAT'IC a. [Gr. arto, from, and AP'ORY, } [Gr. artopia, from artopo;, " ^^.lyi^a, phlegm.] APO'RIA, \ inops concilii, of a and Masticatory having the quality of exciting rtopo;, way or passage.] discharges of phlegm from the mouth or I. In rhetoric, a doubting or being at a loss nostrils. where to begin, or what to say, on accuunt n. A Smith. APOPHLEGMAT'I€, masticatory; of the variety of matter. a medicine which excites discharges of '2. In the medical aH, febrile anxiety uneaphlegm from the mouth or nostrils. Coxe. siness restlessness, from obstructed n.
To form
APOSTEM'ATOUS,
of body.
APOPLE€'Tl€, apoplexy.
send.]
i.
;
;
muscle.
APOPEMP'Tle,
and
to swell
;
v.
n. The formation of an aposteme the process of gathering into an abscess; written corruptly impost-
;
;
Abandonmg
APOSTEMA'TION,
;
(,
ppr.
church, profession, sect or party.
Cleaveland.
])er-
The
;
Philip,
ii.
who
sons
title was also given to perplanted the Christian faith.
This first
Thus Dionysius of Corinth ciC
France
A P P
A P O
A P O ,^.
with a comma, indicating the
omission of a
and the Jesuit Mission-
; apostle aries are called apostles.
:
pp.
Addressed by hy the
contracted
;
omission of a letter or letters
the Jews, the title was ffiven to officers who were sent into distant provinces, as visitors or commissioners, to see the laws observed. iu the Greek hturfiy, is a book con-
Among
Apostle,
in taimng the epistles of St. Paid, printed the order in which they are to he read in Encijc. churches, through th<: year. APOSTLE-SHIP, n. The office or dignity
equal parts, called the difl'cnncc, or smaller pan, apotomc the othir, limma. Chambers. Encyc.
letter.
APOS'TROi'HIZED, way of digression
called the
is
To mark
;
marked
\POTREP'SIS,
and
[Gr. ano,
rpinu,, to
turn.]
bj
The
an apostrophv-
n.
resolution of a suppurating tumor.
APOS TROPHiZING, a digression apostro|)hy
;
ppr. Addressing in contracting or marking by
AP'OSTUME, APOTAC'TITE,
Ti.
An
Coxe.
AP'OTROPY,
n.
[Gr.
arto,
and Tftnu,
to
turn.] see. In ancient poetry, a verse or hymn cnmi)osed for averting the wrath ol'incensed deities. fron
apostcmo, which
n. [Gr. ortoraxroj, The deities invoked were called apotroprenounce ; arto and raf fio, to eans. Encyc. ordain.] One of a sect of ancient christians, wlio, in AP'OZEM, JI. [Gr. arto, and ffu, toboil.J decoction, in which the medicinal subimitation of the first believers, renounced of an apostle. stances of plants are extracted by boiling. Encyc. APOS'TOLATE, »i. Amission; the dignity all their effects and posses.sioiis. IViseman. Encyc. ji. or office of an apostle. Ancient writers [L. and Gr. apotheca, APOZEM'I€AL, a. Like a decoction. use it for the office of a bishop but it is a repository, from anotiBrifu, to deposit or Whitaker. now restricted to the dignity of the pope, lay aside, or from Sijxij, a chest.] APPA'IR, V. t. To impair. [jV«< I'ji use.] whose see is called the Apostolic See. 1. One who practices pharmacy ; one who APPA'IR,!'. j. To degenerate. [.W iJi use.] Encyc. prepares drugs for medicinal uses, and I. Pertaining or reAPOSTOLIC, [Fr.palir; L. /)a//eo, to bekeeps them for sale. In England, apothe- -•VPPALL', V. I come jiale. See Pale.] to medicines accaries arc APOSTOL'leAL, S latuig to the apos-
artorattu, to
A
APOTH'ECARY,
;
as the apostolic age.
tles,
2.
According to the doctrines of the aposdehvered or taught by tlic apostles tles
;
;
prepare obliged cording to the formulas prescribed by the college of physicians, and are liable to have their shops visited by the censors of the college, who have jjower to destroy medicines which are not good. In the middle ages, an apothecary was the keeper of any shop or warehouse and an officer appointed to take charge of a maga-
as apostolic faith or practice. collection of regulaApostolic constitutions, a tions attributed to the ajjostles, but gen- 2. They erally supposed to be spurious. appeared in the 4th century ; are divided into eight hooks, and consist of rules and zine. relating to the duties of christ
;
I.
To dejiress or discourage with fear to fear, in such a manner that the mind shrinks, or loses its firmness as, the sight appalled the stoutest heart. To reduce, allay or destroy as, to appall thirst. Thomson. [Unusual.] ;
impress with
;
i2.
;
APPALL',
V.
i.
To grow
faint; to
mayed.
be disLidgate.
Encyc. .iVPPALL'ED, pp. Depressed or disheartened with fear ; reduced. "• f^*'" -fipophthcgm.] ians, and particularly, to the ceremonies AP'OTHEMf'' \ and discipline of the church. A remarkable saying a short, instructive re- APPALL'ING, ;)/)r. Depressing with fear; reducing. an a]>pellation given to the mark. Apostolic Fathers, christian writers of tlie first century. In the manner APPALL'MENT, n. Depression occasionAPOTHEGMAT'le \ APOSTOL'I€ALLY, adv. In the mamier APOTHEGMAT'I€AL, S of an apothem. ed hy fear discouragement. JVarton. AP'P.VNAgE, n. [Fr. of the apostles. apanage, an estate collector or APOSTOL'icALNESS, Ji. The (piality of APOTHEG'MATIST, n. assigned to a younger son for his maintemaker of apothems. nance ; an appendix, dependence, appurPope. being apostolical, or according to tlie doc t. To v. utter It. tenance of the trines APOTHEG'MATIZE, apo apostles. appannaggio, an appendage. If this word is from the panage, panagiAPOSTOL'ICS, n. Certain sects so called thems or short instructive sentences. um of the middle ages, it is from panis, from their pretending to imitate tlie prac- AP'OTHEME, n. [See Apothecary.] It. tice of the apostles, abstaining from mar In Russia, an food, provision panaggio, provision. apothecary's shop, or a shop This is probably the true origin of the for the ))reparation and sale of medicines. riage, from wine, flesh, pecuniary reward &(., and wandering about clothed in Tooke. word.] white, with long beards, and hare head APOTHEOSIS, n. [Gr. aTtoBiuai,, of orto, 1. Lands appropriated by a prince to tlie maintenance of his younger sons, as their and 6io(, God.] Sagarelli, the founder of one of these sects, was burnt at Parma in 1300. Encyc. Deification consecration tlie act of placing patrimony but on condition of the failAPOS'TROPHE, / "• [Gr. arfo, from, and a prince or other distinguished person ure of male offs))ring, they were to revert APOS'TROPHY, \ fpo4>,7, a turning.] among the heathen deities. This honor to the donor or his heir. From the apwas often bestowed on illustrious men in panage it was customary for the sons to In rhetoric, a diversion of speech ; a digre; take their surnames. Spelman. Rome, and followed by the erection of sive address; a changing the course of a Sustenance; means of nourishing. temples, and the institution of sacrifices speech, and addressing a person who is to the new deity. Wealth the appanage of wit. Swift. dead or absent, as if present or a short Encyc. n. and to APOTH'ESIS, a«o, n. introduced a direct[Gr. *i9)jf.t, address into discourse, APP.\RA'Tl]S, phi. apparatuses. [L. from apparo, to prepare, oi ad and paro.] j)ut back.] ed to some person, different from the par1. The reduction of a dislocated bone. 1. Things provided as means to some end ty to which the main discourse is directed Coie. as the tools of an artisan the furniture of as when an advocate, in an argument to a house instruments of war. In more the jury, turns and addresses a few re- 2. A place on the south side of the chancel in the primitive churches, furnished w ill technical language, a complete set of inmarks to the court. Encyc. Smith. shelves, for books, vestments, &.c. JFheler. struments or utensils, for performing any 2. In grammar, the contraction of a word by Cavallo. the omission of a letter or letters, which APOT'OME, I operation. . , «•! Encyc. " rn '' ''"''**'"'"' *° '^"' °"-J ^ 2. In surgery, the operation of cutting Ibr omission is marked by a comma, as call'd APOT'OMY, S The comma used for the stone, of three kinds, the small, the this pin- 1. In mathematics, the difference between for called. two incommensurable quantities. Coie. great, and the high. pose mav also be called an apostrophe. Cyc. Encyc. APOS'TROPHIC, a. Pertaining to an apos 9. In music, that portion of a tone major Apparatus is also used as the title of severed which remains after deducting from it an books, in the form of catalogues, bibUotrophe; noting the contraction of a word. less a a than semitone &c. thecas, glossaries, dictionaries, interval, by comma, Murray. APOSTROPHIZE, v. i. or t. To make an major. Busby. Encyc. The difference between a greater and APPAR'EL, )i. [Fr. a;j;)arei7, from /larer, to apostrophe, or short detached address ii> ilress or set off; Sp. aparejar ; L. paro, lesser semitone, expressed by the ratio speaking to address by apostrophy. The Greeks supposing the to 128 125. Arm. 2. V. t. To contract a word by omitting a Port, apparo, prepare ; para ; apletter or letters. arelho, Sp. aparejo, tackle, whence parrel greater tone could not be divided into two precepts
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
;
—
;
;
;
;
;
;
A P P in
seamen's language
A P P
Ch. Heb. »n3,
;
liara
;
APPEAL, ii\i.
Ar.
J
\
Class Br. No.
.
of simplicity.
Gloriou*: in apparel.
3.
The
Isa. Ixiii.
furniture of a ship, as sails, rigging,
anchors, &c.
Lev.
or press out, is the radical .sense of This word coincides in calling, naming. elements with L. bcdo, Eng. baivl, and peal. Class 151.] To refer to a superior judge or coiut, for the decision of a cause de|)ending, or the revision of a cause decided in a lower
1.
2.
or be in sight
to
;
be in view lo ;
visible.
The
ilrive
;
;
To come be
;
;
ral apparel
;
1.
and pcllo, to drive or send Gr. f3oX>xj. We do not see the sense of call in pello, but to
8. 10. 19.]
vesture; garments; dress. Clotliiiis 2. External lialiilunents or decorations appearance as, religion appears in the natu1.
apelar
A P P
[Fr. appeler ; It. appeUare ; Von. appellar ; h. appello ; ad
?.
ti.
leprosy appeoreth in the skin of the flesh
xiii.
And God said. Let the dry land appear Gen. i. To becoine visible to the eye, as a spirit, or to the np|irehension of the mind a sense frequent in scripture. The Lord appeared to Abram, and said. Gen. xii. The angel of the Lord appeared to liim in a flame of fire out of the midst of the bush. Ex. ;
1'. /. To dress or clothe. court. Tliey who arc fjorgeously appareled are in I appeal to Cesar. Acts xxi. iii. kings courts. Luke vii. To adorn with dress. 2. To refer to another for the decision of a 3. To stand in i)resence of, as parties or adShe did apparel her apparel. Shah. vocates before a court, or as persons to be question controverted, or the counterac3. To dress with external ornaments ; to tion of testimony or facts ; as, I appeal to tried. The defendant, being called, did cover with something ornamental ; to covall mankind for the truth of what is alnot
APPAR'EL, 2.
{
I
appear. must all appear before the judgment seat
I
with garments as, trees appareled with flowers; or a garden with verdure To furnish with e.xternal aj)paratus as er, as
4.
;
;
ships appareleel for sea. clothed APPAR'ELED, pp. Dressed covered as with dress furnished. ;
;
APPAR'ELING,
ppr. Dressing; elotlung; covering as with dress furni.shing. ;
)
"•
Appearance.
[.Vol in
Chaucer.
APPA'RENT, 1.
Gower.
a.
[See Jlppear.] easily seen within sight or view.
That may be seen, or
visible
;
To
t.
call or
remove a cause
4. j '
;
before
trial,
judgment.
upon a
We
I
may
ajppeal issue and
fictitious
trial.
.5.
I
In criminal law, to charge with a crime; to accuse; to institute a criminal prosecution, for some hainous offeu.se; as, to appeal a person of felony. J'.
i
say the cause was appeal-
ed before or after /.
I
This process was anciently given to a private ])erson to recover the weiegild, or private ))ecuniary satisfaction for an injury he had received by the murder of a rehis works. lation, or by some personal injury. 3. Visible, in opposition to /i/ or secret ; as, a Blackstone. man's apparent conduct is good. APPE'AL, n. The removal of a cause or 4. Visible ; appearing to tlie eye ; seeming, suit from an inferior to a superior tribuin distinction from true or real, as the apnal, as from a connnon pleas court to a parent motion or diameter of the sun. superior or supreme coim. Also the right Heirs apparent are those whose rig'ht to of appeal. an estate is indefeasible, if they survive 2. An accusation a process instituted by a the ancestor in distinction {\om presumpprivate person against a man for some tive heirs, who, if the ancestor should die hainous crime by which he has been immediately, would inherit, but whose jured, as for murder, larciny, mayhem. Blackstone. right is liable to be defeated by the birth Blackstone. 3. of other children. summons to answer to a charge. APPA'RENTLY, adv. Opeidy ; evidently Dryden. call upon a person ; a reference to an as, the goodness of God is apparently man- 4. to the
2.
eye
;
Mterbury. evident indubitable as, ))lain the wisdom of the creator is apparent in
Obvious
;
;
;
of Christ,
I
from an inferior to a superior judge or court. This may be done after trial and judgment in the lower court or bysjiecial
APPE'AL,
use.]
i
I
APPE'AL,
v.
statute or agreement, a party
;
APPA'RENGE, APPA'RENCY,
We
ledged.
2.
3.
4.
A
[.5.
2.
in heart.
1.
[See Appear.]
In a general sense, an appearance bihty.
2.
n.
The
{Little used.]
thing appearing
form. 3.
A is
4.
;
;
visi-
Milton. a a visible object Milton. Sliali. ;
ghost; a specter; a visible spirit. [This now the ttstial sense of the word.]
Mere appearance, opposed
to reality.
Denhani,
APPAR'ITOR,
n. [L.
apparo, to
prepare,
:
(3.
,7.
is
appealable for manslaughter. n. One who appeals. [.Yot
Shak.
used.]
Removed
5.
I
'9.
a
Among
to
External show
semblance assumed,
;
;
likelihood. Bacon. This Probability is rather an inference from the third or fourth as probability is inferred from external semblance en' show. Presence mien figine as presented by the person, dress or manners as, the lady made a noble appearance. A being ])resent in court a defendant's filing comuum or special bail to a process. ;
;
;
;
;
11.
t.
[Ht'c
Sidney.
Pay.]
To accuse
;
to censm'o, or
Shak [See Impeach.] APPE'ACHiMKNT, n. Accusation; charge ri
iimai-li.
t'.xhibite
Ohs.
Ohs.
ft'otton
er
t"or
Addison. person that ajipears.
;
ibie j
!).
i.
apparoitre.
aparecer Class Br.]
Broicn. be-
in sight
;
;
appearance. a.
That may be appeas-
ed, quieted, calmed, or pacified.
;
;
;
APPE'ASABLE,
of ad and pabe manifest It. aiipa-
[L. appareo,
reo, to ap]iear, or rirc ; Sp. parecer,
Coming
;
a decision.
Al'PE'AR,
ppr.
making an e.xternal coming evident show seeming having the semblance. APPE'ARING, n. The act of becoming vis-
;
Ohs.
m
;
APPE'ARING,
;
satisfy.
an
he made his first appearance at on the stage. Exhibition of the character introduction of a person to the public in a particular character, as a person makes his appearance in the world, as a historian, an artist, or an orator.
10. An a]ip.'u-ition. APPE'AIvER, n. The
;
/VPPH'At;!!,
as
were the
opposition to reality or sid)stance as, we are often deceived by appearances ; he has the appearance of virtue. For man looketh on the outward appearance. 1 Sam. xvi. Personal presence; exhibition of the per-
;
To
it
;
[
APPE'ALED, pp. higher the Romans, any officer who attendcourt, as a cause prosecuted for a crime ed magistrates and judges to execute their by a private person, as a criminal. oidcrs. In England, a messenger or offi- APPE'ALER, n. One who appeals an ajtcer who serves the process of a spiritual |)ellor. coiu't, or a beadle in the university who .VPPE'ALING, ppr. Removing a cause to a cariies the mace. higher tribunal ])rosecuting as a jirivate Encyc. APl'A'Y, 11. /. [!^]). and Port, apagar.] referring to anoth|)crson for an otlense or appnreo, to attend.]
;
;
;
;
nal
apparent likeness. There was upon the tabernacle as appearance of tire. Num. ix.
sense
j
;
APPE'.VLANT,
Semblance
as, coiu't or
I
j
;
APPARP'TION,
prised me. The thing seen ; a phenomenon appearance in the sky.
son
A
Seemiiiiiiy; ajipearance; as, a man may be apparently friendly, yet malicious
it
;
;
in
;
might a^^T^ear sin. Rom. vii. (y. To seem, in opposition to reaUty. They disfigure their faces, that they may appear to men to fa.st. Mat. vi. 7. To be discovered, or laid open. That tliy shame may appear. Jer. xiii. APPE'AR, ». Appearance. Obs. n. The act of coming into sight the act of becoming visible to the eye; as, his sudden appearance sursin that
;
;
other for proof or decision. In an oath, a jierson makes an appeal to the Deity for the truth of his declaration. recourse. 5. Resort Every milder method is to be tried, before a Jfent. nation makes an appeal to arms. APPE'ALABLE, a. That may be appealed that may be removed to a higher triliunal for decision as, the cause is appealable. 'i. That njay be accused or called to answer by appeal applied to persons ; as. a crimi-
;
APPEARANCE,
;
works of jirovidence.
obvious to be known, as a subject of observation or comprehension. Let thy work appear to thy servant. Ps. xc. It doth not yet appear what we shall be. I John iii. To be clear or made clear by evidence this fact ancient records. as, appears by But
;
ifest in his
2 Cor. v.
To be
APPE'ASABLENESS,
Er. apparoir, I
being appeasable.
n.
The
quality
oi'
A P P
A P P
A P P
To
L. invito, com])ound. The primanp sense is to .strain, to urge or ; press, or to advance. See Bid. Class Bd.] 1. ; 1. In a desire I)ut especially, ; general sense, ; carnal desire .sensual nppitite. 2. The dis])osition of org.iiiized bodies to appendage to evselect and imbibe such portions of matter 7\tylor [T/a'.s- word is ofii general appUcalion as serve to snpjiort and nourish them, or or agitated APPEXD'ANCE, ) annexed. er;/ tiling in a disturbed, rujjkd "" Something such particles as arc designed, through UVot used.] APi'END'ENCE, S stale.] their agency, to AI'PK'ASED, pp. Uuietcd ; calmed ; stillBp. Hull. carry on the animal or
add, as an accessory to the principal Johnson. and pitix, pence L. pax. 8i'<; Pence.] thing. To make quiet; to culm to reduce to a APPE\D'AGE, n. .Something a.lded to a to to pacify state of peace to still as, principal or greater thing, though not necessary to it, as a portico to a house. appease the tumult of the ocean, or of the to appease liunfjcr or thirst. of sobriety. passions Modesty is the
APPE'ASE,
V.
s as
t.
z.
[Fr. npniser, of
ad
2.
;
;
;
;
ed
APPEND'ANT,
pacified.
;
APPE'ASHMENT, ing
n.
The
the state of being
;
APPE'ASER,
One who
11.
a. Hanging to ; annexeer.
act of appeas-
appeases, or 2. In
pacifies.
APPE'ASIVE, pease
;
APPEL'LANT, 1.
Having the power
a.
niitifratiiifj;
One who
;
«.
to ap-
quieting.
[See Jlppeal]
ap|)eals, or removes to a higher tribunal. another for a crime.
a cause
3.
One who One who
prosecutes
challenges, or siuinnons anoth-
er to single combat.
4
Blarkslonc.
who
In cliurch history, one
appeals
froiri
the Constitution Unigenitus to a general council. Blackstone. Encyc. Milton. APPEL'LATE, n. person appealed, or [jVut now used. j)roseciited for a crime.
A
See Appellee.^
to
APPEL'LATE,
Pertaining to appeals;
«.
having cognizance of appeals as "appelConst of the U. States. Binke, Rev.
APPELLA'TION,
n.
in Fiaiiee
[L. appellatio.
Set
Jlppeal.]
word by which a thing is called Name and known. Spenser uses it for appeal. ;
To append
v. t.
APPENDIeA'TION, adjunct.
;
A
or Hale.
amiexed. Latin plural
Spelman. n.
irritability or sensias the appetency of the eye for .seciete milk, «.Vc. light, Attraction, or the tendency in bodies to ;
of the paps to
.5.
move toward each other and
is
appendices.
An
Desiring
See Append.]
adjunct, concomitant, or appendage.
n.
The
;
unite.
very desirous. Buck. qtiahty of being
desirable for gratification. «. [Low L. appetibilis, from appeto.] Desirable ; that may be the object
AP'PETIBLE,
of sensu.al desire.
AP'PETITE,
7(.
See Appetence.] 1.
Something ap])ended or added. Normandy became an appendix to England.
in
a.
APPETIRIL'ITY,
The
phi. appendixes, [L.
Hale 2.
name
common
add Hale
An appendage
n.
;
n.
Darwin, animal appetency
to
synonymous with
bility
to
Obs.
APPEND'IX, 1.
According is
APPEND'ICLE, n. A small appendage. APPEND'ING, n. That which is by right
APPEL'LATIVE, a. Pertaining to a common name noting the common name of APPEL'LATIVE,
4.
AP'PETENT,
attached.
Ohs.
to.
the
a species.
in llje young to suck, in aquatic fowls to enter into w ater and to swim.
Copernicus-,
APPEND l€ATE,
;
late j\iriMk-t\on." .Ippellate }m\ges.
Dartpin.
perform certain actions, as
it.
APPEND'ED, 7»). Aimcxed;
-^ylifff-
and by animal
.An inclination or propensity in animals to
.3.
Cowel.
n. That which belongs tc another thing, as incidental or subordinate
APPEND'ANT,
nioutlis,
selection or appetency, they absorb such part of the fluid as is agreeable to their palate.
common
vowson appendant, is the right of patronage or ])rcsentation, annexed to the possession of a manor. So also a common of fishing may be appendant to a freehold.
from a lower 2.
;
appendant, is a right, be longing to the owners or occupiers of land, to put commonable beasts upon the lord's waste, and upon the lands of other persons within the same manor. An adlaiv,
vegetable economy. These lactcals have
;
;
in ])eacc.
[L. appetitus,
from appeto.
The
natural desire of pleasure or good ; the desire of gratification, either of the body or of the mind. Appetites are passions directed to general objects, as the in disappetite for fame, glory or riches tinction from passions directed to some particular objects, which retain their proper name, as the passion of love, envy or gratitude. Passion does not exist without an object natural appetites e.\ist first, and are then directed to objects. Encyc. desire of food or
mills
from a proper name. A com- 3. Moi-e generally, a supplement or short or appellative stands for a whole treatise added to a book. class, genus or s|)ecies of beings, or for APPERCE'IVE, V. t. [Fr. apercevoir.] To man is the name ideas. Thus Mni\eisal Obs. Chaucer. coiniirehend. of the whole human race, and fold of all APPERCEP'TION, n. [ad and perception.] Tree is the name of 2. winged animals. Perception that reflects upon itself; conall plants of a particular class; plant and sciousness. Leibnitz. Reid. 3. regetable are names of things that grow- APPER'IL, n. Peril danger. [.Vo< in use.] out of the earth. A proper name, on the Shak. other hand, stands for a single thing, as, APPERTA'IN, v.i. [Fr. appartenir ; It. 4. The thing desired. Power being the natural appetite of princes. London, Philadelphia, Washington, Boston. appartenere ; L. ad and pertineo, to per APPEL'LATIVELY, adv. According to the tain, of per and teneo, to hold. Pertineo is Swift. Hunmanner of nouns appellative in a manAppetites are natural or artificial. to reach to, to extend to, hence to belong. ner to express whole classes or species; as, ger and thirst are natural appetites the See Tenant.] llercides is sometimes used appellative- To appetites for olives, tobacco, snuff, &c. whether nature or belong, by right, apare that as common name to a is, artifeial. signify ly. pointment. In old authors, appetite is followed a strong man. Johnson. by to, Give it to him to whom it appertaineth but regularly it should be followed APPEL'LATORY,a. Containing an appeal. Lev. vi. by for before the object, as an appetite for APPELLEE', n. The defendant in an ap[See Pertain.] distinction
mon name
;
A
;
;
;
;
;
peal. 2.
The person who ted by a private
is
appealed, or prosecua crime.
man for
Blackstone.
APPELLOR', an
a])peal,
The person who
)i.
Blackstone.
crime.
This word the
is
rarely or never used for appeal from a lower court,
is
plaintiff' in
who
institutes
or prosecutes another for a
called the
appellant. Appellee is opposed both to appellant and appellor. APPEND', !'. t. [L. appendo, of ad and pendco, to hang.] 1.
To hang or attach to, as by a string, so that the thing is suspended as, a seal appended to a record. ;
APPERTAINING, pp. Belonging. APPERTA'INMENT, n. That which
[ileasure.
be-
Shak.
longs.
To
be given to appetite, is to be voracious or gluttonous. Prov. xxiii. 2.
APPER'TENENCE, n. [See Appurtenance. APPETI'TION, [Rarely u.ied.] APPER'TINENT, a. Belonghig now writ
71.
[L. appctHio.]
Desire.
;
ten appurtenant.
APPERTINENT, to
something
n.
That which Obs.
else.
[See Appurtenance.]
AP'PETENCE, AP'PETENCY,
\ "•
[L. appetentia, appetens,
from appeto, to desire ^ of ad and peto, to ask, supplicate or seek Ch.Q'i); Eth. tf.'VQ) to desire, to intreat
that has the of desiring gratification ; as ap(juality belongs Hale. petitive power or facidty. Shak. .\I"PIAN, a. Designating something that
Shak.
;
belongs to Appius, particularly a way from Rome through Capua to Brundusium, now Brindisi, constructed by Appius Claudius, A. R. 441. It is more than 3.30 miles in length, formed of hard stone squared, and so wide as to admit two carriages abreast. Livy.
Lempriere^
A P P
A P P APPLAUD', do, to
V.
make
:i
Sp. aplaudir
It.
applaudire
baked on
This word is formed on the root of lnus,laudo ; Eng. loud ; W. clod, praise, from
dir.
2.
cry hloeziaw, to sliout Uozest, applause, blalh acclamation. Ir. Uaodh, a shout These may all be of one family. praise. Class L d. See Loud.] To inaise by clapping the hands, acclamation, or other signilicant sign. To praise by words, actions or other means; to express approbation of; to cnnnnend used in a general sense. Pope ;
apples and otlier
be applied.
A
Praising by acclama-
shout of approbation a])probation ant by clapping the hands,! acclamation or huzzas approbation ex;
;
n.
Ger. apfel Ir.
;
Dan.
able
abhal or ubhal
;
;
;
like the
;
under consideration.
ply, display,
In
the
Pers.
same word
signifies the fruit
pronounced ublad,
.3.
or berries of the savin or juniper. Castle. In Welsh, it signifies not only the apple, but the plum and other fruits. Lhuyd. Jlval meli/nhir, a lemon aval curaid, an
orange. 1.
The
fruit
Owen.1 of the apple
from which cider
is
4.
tree, [pyrus mains,]
made.
stalk is herbaceous,
with oval,
5.
j)in-
and small yellow flowers. The berry is smooth, soft, of a yellow or' reddish color, of the size of a plum. It is, used in soups and broths. Encyc.\ AP'PLE, V. t. To form like an ai)ple. iiatod leaves,
j
n.
The
3.
6.
;
;
The
act of applying as
means
;
7.
the eni-
;
7.
2.
In geometry, a division for applying one but not qiuintity to another, whose areas, transferfigures, shall be the same or the ;
as,
" Sacred
To busy
;
to
keep
at
work
vows
to ply.
:
;
Obs.
Spenser.
;
to
have ;
To make request to solicit to have recourse, with a view to gain something as, I to apply to the president for an ofiice applied to a friend lor information. ;
;
;
;
APPLY'ING,
ppr.
Laying on
;
making ap-
plication.
APPOINT',
V.
t.
[Fr. appoinier, to refer, to
Sp. apuntar, to point give an allowance or aim, to sharpen, to fasten as with points or nails; \l. appuntarc, to fix, apor Sec Point.] point sharpen. ;
tification. 8.
;
some connection, agreement or analogy as, this argmnent applies well to the case.
act of directing or referring something to a particidar case, to discover or illustrate the agreement or disagreement
In theology, the act by which the merits of Christ are transferred to man, for bis jus-
;
Sidney.
The
leave you to
address or
[Superseded by ply, which see.] APPLY', ji. i. To suit to agree
have been greater.
Jay
To
Pope. applied to Pluto." To betake to give the chief part of time and attention ; as, to apply one's self to the study of botany. This is essentially the fourth sense. To make application ; to have recourse by request ; as, to apply one's self to a counsellor for advice. This is generally used intransitively ; as, to apply to a counsellor.
8.
:
gathering of
n. A pie made of apple stewed or baked, inclosed in paste, or cov ered with paste, as in England.
signification directed to moral objects. The act of fixing the mind intenseness of thought; close study ; attention; as, to to study. injure the health by application Had his applicntian been equal (0 liis talents,
make the remark and make the application.
apples, or the time of gathering.
APPLE-PIE,
consonant To lay on as,
;
as, I
scion of the apple-!
tree engrafted.
APPLE-HARVEST,
1.
The act of laying on as the application of emollients to a diseased limb. The tiling applied as, the pain was abated by the application. The act of nuiking request or soliciting as, he made application to a court of chan-
J.
6.
j
A
is
the quahty of being applicable.
his progress luight
Marshall n.
;
and employ. The word plegy, fornred from the root of lay. Sax. plico, The sense then is to lay to ; and lecgan. it is worthy of remark, that we use lay to in the precise sense of ply and apply. It is certain from the Welsh that the first
be ap
;
apple of the eye is the pupil. tflpple of love, or love a|)ple, the tomato,] or lycopersicuni, a species of Solanum.i
AP'PLE-GRAFT,
;
n. Fitness to
jdoyment of means as, children may be governed by a suitable application of rewards and ])unishments. This is the first
The
The
;
cery.
;
3.
That may be apphed,;
;
;
2. V.4. J 1)
W.
;
n.
;
This word primarily iabloko, or yabloko. .signifies fruit in general, especially of a 1.
round form.
Marston.
AP'PLICATE-ORDINATE. A
containing Jonson. D. appel ;
Sw. aple W. aval Arm. aval : Ru
•
is a prefix.] to put one thing to another : ; to apply the hand to the breast ; to medicaments to a diseased part of apply the body. AP'PLICATE,n. Aright finedrawn across 2. To use or employ for a particular pura curve, so as to be bisected by the diampose, or in a ))articular case ; as, to apply a sum of money to the payment of a debt. an ordinate. eter Cyc. 3. To put, refer or use, as suitable or relaright hue tive to something as, to apply the testiat right angles applied to the axis of any mony to the case. conic section, and bounded by the curve. 4. To fix the mind ; to engage and employ Bctiky. with attention ; as, apply thy heart to inAPPLI€A'TI0N, n. [L. applicatio. See struction. Proverbs.
Encyc.
[Sax. appl, appil
directed
APPLY',
n.
The applicant for a cup of water declares Plumtret himself to be the Messlas. The court require the applicant to appear in Z. Swift. person.
The applauders were divided into choruses,
AP'PLE,
:
APPLI'ER, )!. One that appUes. APPLI'MENT,n. Apphcation. [Xotinust.]
superseded by
;
;
applause.
put to
to be applied, as related to a thing that may have relation to something else a; this observation is applicable to the case
plied
made by beating a sort of soimding Persons were apvessels in the theaters. and ])ointed for the purpose of applauding, masters were emjdoyed to teach the art.
;
;
act of applying, or
AP'PLI€ABLY, adv. In such a manner that it may be apphed. AP'PLicANT, n. One who applies; one who makes request a petitioner.
testa-,
each other,
Taylor pp. Put on
cnqiloyed.
Shak.
AP'PLI€ABLENESS,
In antirpiity, applause differed pressed. from acclamation ; applause was expressed by the hands, antf acclamation by the There were three species of apvoice. plause, the bombus, a confused din made by the hands or mouth the imbrices and
That which appUes.
n.
sells
;
praise, expressed
to
AP'PLICATORY,
Hist, of Redemption .
APPLI'EDLY, adv. In a jnanner whicl: That may mav be applied. [J^Tot in use.] Montagu.
fit
[L. applausus.]
choristers in a cathedral.
is
applies.
Bramhall.
Edwards'
applyiuff.
V. t. [L. applico, of ad and plica, to fold or knit together ; Fr. appliquer ; Sp. aplicar ; It. applicare ; plegy, to bend or fold ; Arm. plegu, to fold or plait pleca, a fold ; Gr. ifKixu, to knit, or twist ; Sax. plegan, plegian, pleggan, to play, to bend to or iiicimibere Dan. fliig, a fold ; apply, D. ploot, a fold ; ploojen, to plait ; Eng.
APPLICABLE,
and placed opposite
Apply.]
That
a.
AP'PLICATORY, a. That includes the act 01
applied.
commending.
APPLAU'SIVE, a. Applauding
APPLICATIVE,
[See Apply.] The quality of being applicable, or fit to be
inends.
t.
|9.
this
an inclo-
;
Obs.
thing applied. APPLAUD'ER, «. One who praises or com APPLICABILITY,
n. « as
of
APPLI'ED, orchard
The
n.
;
APPLAUSE',
fruit
A woman who
n.
This word
applicable.
;
The
fruit.
AP'PLE-YARD, n. An sme for apjiles. APPLI'ABLE, a. [See
;
tion
apples
A tree arranged by Linnc
AP'PLE-WOMAN,
APPLAlID'ED,p/<. Praised by acclamation APPLI'ANCE, or other means commended.
APPLAUDING, ppr.
made of
tree is indefinitely various. The crab a|iple is supposed to lie the original kind, Irom which all others have sprimg. New varieties are sprmging annually from the seeds.
;
1.
71.
tart
under the genus pyrus.
is
;
A
n.
paste.
APPLE-TREE,
forcibly uttered ; llodi, to rearh out ; from llawd, that shoots out. It coincides also with W. bloez, a shout, or out-
Hod, wliat
ap])les.
AP'PLE-TART,
Fr. applau-
;
a given line into a circle or other figure, so that its ends shall be in the perimeter of the figure. Encyc, In sermons, that part of the discourse, in which the principles before laid down ant! illustrated, are applied to practical uses. I'ing
j
ed
;
;
A P P
AP'PLE-SAUCE, n. A sauce made of stew
[L. npplmido ; ad and jtlaiinoise by clapping the hands
t.
I.
To fix
;
to settle
;
to establish
;
to
make
fast.
A P P When
A P P
he appointed the foundation") of
Prov. viii. constitute, ordain, or
the,
To
order or decision. Let Pharaoh appoint Gen.
f?.
that apportions. ppr. Setting out in just proportions or shares. n. The act of appor tionhig; a dividing into just proportions or shares ; a dividing and assigning to each
fix
by decree,! I
over the
officers
land.'
APPO'RTIONMENT,
xli.
He hath appointed a day in which he will judge the world. Acts xvii. To allot, assign or designate. Aaron and his sous shall appoint every one: Num.
These dren of 4.
5.
6.
To
cities
iv.
Hamilton, Rep. Feb. 13, 1793. to
for all tlie chil1.
Josh. xx.
purpose or resolve
s as
V. t.
;
to
fi.x
;
See
L. appono.
To put questions
;
to
the inten-
To
tion.
2.
For so he had appointed. Acts xx. To ordain, command or order. Thy servants are ready to do wliatever my Lord the King shall appoint. 2 Sani. xv. To settle to fix, name or determine by agreement as, tlicy appointed a time and place for the meeting.
APPO'SEll,
;
;
:
;
esliiiiating; rising in value.
n. A setting a value on ; a just valuation or estimate of merit, weight, or any moral consideration.
APPKECIA'TION,
value.
APPREHE.M)',
An examiner one whose
1.
;
;
I
•3.
;
daining; constitutuig
plains
;
ciar
;
V.
t.
[Fr. apprecier ; Sp. ajireapprezzare, to set a value ; from
It.
many and
various
laws arc given. Milton. think to beheve or be of opinion, but
To
;
true, but
;
r\PPRA'ISE,
so
;
as, all this is
not to the
is
pur|)0se. Notwithstanding this declaration, we do not ap]>rehend that we are guilty of presumption. Encyc. Art. Metapliysics. To fear; to entertain suspicion or fear of
;
or-
apprehend not why
without positive certainty we apprehend it
;
APPOINT'EK, n. Ono who ai)points. APPOINT'ING, ppr. Settmg fi.xing
;
an inference.
;
;
In this
;"
;
;
Sax. hen-
take with the understanding, that is, conceive in the mind to understand, without passing a judgment, or making
;
;
;
hold of
is
To
;
;
it
to
;
;
[h. apprehendo, of ad
to take
;
thief.
APPOINT' ABLE, a. That maybe appointed
;
take or seize
applied chiefly to taking or arresting persons by legal process, or with a view to trial as to apprehend a
i;
put to, from appono, of ad and pono, to put or ])lace.] or constituted as, officers are nppointabti Suitable fit very applicable well adapt bv the Executive. Federalist, Madison ed followed by lo as, this argument is \er\ apposite to the case. APPOINT'ED,ipp. Fi.xed; set; established decreed ordained constituted allotted. arfi;. Suitably ; fitly AP'POSITELY, prop 3. Furnished equipped witli things neceserlv. Harrey. sary ; as, a ship or an army is well ap VP'POSITENESS, (I. Fitness; proiniety; pointed. suitableness. Hale APPOINTEE', ji. A person appointed. APPOSI'TION, 71. The act of adding to "The commission authorizes them to make addition a setting to. appointment.s and pay the appointees." By the apposition of new matter. Arhuthnot. Circular ofMass. Kepreseiitatives,l7(}8 ; } 2. In Grammar, the jdacingof two nouns, in also, tf'heaton's Reports. ^ the same case, without a connecting word 0. A foot soldier in the French army, who, between them as, I admire Cicero, the for long service and bravery, receives more orator. In tliis case, the second noun expay than other privates. Encyc. Bailey. or characterizes the first.
To
hteral sense,
to ])ut questions.
is
v.t.
and prehendo, to take or seize dan or hentan.]
Harvei/.
In tlie English Court of Exchequer there is an officer called the foreign apposer. This ordinarily pronounced aostr. Encyc. APPOSITE, a. siis z. [L. appositns, net or business
Marshal, L. of Jf'ashin^ton. Hamilton's Report. Feb. 13, 1793.
^ipposite.]
examine. [See Pose Bacon.
apply. n.
tVashinirton's Inaufr. Speech, Apr. 30, 1789. rising in value; increase of worth or
A
2.
[Fr. apposer, to set
t.
[
were appointed
Israel.
.\PPO'SE,
Al^PRE'CIATED,/)/). Valued; prized; estimated advanced in value. APPRE CI ATING, ppr. Setting a value on
an undivided
|iroprietor his just portion of right or [iroperty.
|
to his service.
A P P
One
n.
APPORTIONING,
earth.
3.
APPO'RTIONER,
evil as, we apprehend calamities from a feeble or wicked administration.
fiiture
;
APPREHENDED,
pp. Taken; seized; arrested; conceivecf; understood; feared. 71. One who takes; one conceives in his mind one wlio
APPREHEND'ER, who
;
fears.
assigning. L. ad and pretium, price. See Price and act of appointppr. Seizing ; taking ; Jlppreciaie.] conceiving; understanding; fearing. ing ; designation to office ; as, he erred by This word is written and often pronounced a. That may be the appointment of imsiiitable men. apailer the French and Italian manner. But .\PPREHEN'SIBLE, or conceived. 2. Stipulation; assignation the act of f].\ing prehended generahy it is pronounced more correctly n. The act of taking or by mutual agreement ; as, they made an the from ; ; D.prys W.pris apprize, directly ; as, the felon, after his apprearresting appointment to meet at si.x o'clock. Eug. price or prize. [See Apprize.] hension, escaped. 3. Uecrce established order or constitution ; To set a value to estimate the worth, par; 2. The mere contemplation of things withas, it is our duty to submit to the divine ticularly by jiersons appointed for the out affirming, denying, or passing any appoinlmenls. purpose. 4. Direction ; order; command. judgment the operation of the mind in n. The act of APPRA'ISEMENT, setting contemplating ideas, without comparing Wheat, salt, wine and oil, let it be given the value ; a valuation. [See Apprizethem with others, or reftn'ring them to exaccording to the appointment of the priests. ment.] ternal objects ; simple intellection. Ez. vi. APPRA'ISER, n. One who vahies; approWalts. Glanville. Encyc. 5. Equipment, furniture, as for a ship, or an a sworn and to priately person appointed 3. An inadequate or imperfect idea, as when estimate and fix the value of goods and army ; wliatever is appointed ibr use and the word is appUed to our knowledge of estate. management. [See Apprizer.] God. C. An allowance to a person ; a salary or APPRE'CIABLE, a. apprishahle. [^f^e Ap- 4. Opinion ; conception ; sentiments.Encyc. In pension, as to a public officer. preciate.] this sense, the word often denotes a belief, An appointment diflbrs from wages, in 1. That may be appreciated ; valuable. founded on sufficient evidence to give jirebeing a special grant, or gratification, not Encyc. to the but insufficient mind, ponderation lixeil, whereas wages are fixed and ordi- 2. That be estimated of
APPOINT'MENT,
n.
;
APPREHENDING,
The
;
APPREHENSION,
;
;
may
naiy. Encyc. devise or grant to a charitable use. Blackstone. APPO'RTER, n. [Fr. apporter ; L. porta.] hringerin one that brings into the counHale. try. [JVot in !(«(?.] 7.
A
A
;
capable
being
precier, xo
sex.
value, price See Price.]
;
;
To
r.
V. t.
[L.
ad and portio, por-
1.
be false, and to be thought false, is all one, of men, who act not according to South. apprehension. In our apprehension, the facts prove the
appreshate. [Fr. n;> a value; L. orf anA pretixim, f.
D. prys
;
W. pris
;
in respect truth, but
Ger.preis.
issue.
To value to set a price or value on to estimate as, we seldom sufficiently appretion. See Portion and Part.'] ciate the advantages we enjoy. To divide and assign in just proportion ; to To raise the value of. distribute among two or more, a just part Lest a sudden peace should appreciate the orshare to each as, to apportion undivided money. Ramsay. To rise in value to rights; to apportion time among various APPRE'CIATE, V. i. become of more value as, the coin of the employments. APPO'RTIONED, pp. Divided ; set out or country appreciates ; public securities o^assigned in suitable parts or shares. preciated, when the debt was funded.
APPO'RTION,
induce certainty.
to
duly estimated.
APPRE'CIATE,
;
;
;
5.
The Fear
;
Vol.
I.
12
;
;
as,
a
which new ideas are con-
man
suspicion
;
of dull apprehension. the prospect of future uneasiness of
accompanied with
evil,
mind. Claudius was in no small apprehension for
;
;
faculty by
ceived
his
own
Addison.
life.
APPREHEN'SIVE, stand
:
as,
a. Quick to imderan apprehensive scholar. Hddtr. South.
estate of a deceased person. The private act of valuing is ordinarily expressed
inclined to believe
bv
4.
;
APPREHENSIVELY,
adv.
APPREHEN'SIVENESS,
In an appre-
of lieing apprehensive
;
The
n.
quality 2.
readiness to under
;
value under some authority or appointment a valuation. Blackstone Statutes of Conn. The rate at which a thing is valued tlie value fixed, or valuation as, he purchas ed the article at the apprizement.
Mr. Hutchinson approbated the choice. /. Eliot.
APPROBATED, AP'PROBATING,
[Fr. apprenti, an ap APPRI'ZER, n. A person appointed to rate, or set a value on articles. When apprizers from apprendre, to learn L. apact imder the authority of law, they must See Apprehend.^ be s^vorn. One who is bound by covenant to serve a
APPROBATION,
Expressing appro-
;
ji.
See
[L. approbatio.
a liking
;
that state
;
or disposition of the mind, in which we assent to the propriety of a thing, with some degree of pleasure or satisfaction as, the laws of God require our approba-
mechanic, or other person, for a certain APPRrZING,p;)r. Ratmg setting a value under authority. time, with a view to learn his art, mystery or occupation, in which his master is APPRI ZING, n. The act of valuing under bound to instruct him. Apprentices are authority. APPRO.-VCH, v. i. [Fr. approcher, from regularly bound by indentures. Blackstone. proche, near. The Latin jiroximus contains the root, but the word, in the positive a learner of 9. In old law books, a barrister Blackstone. law. degree, is not found in the Latin. It is from a root in class Brg, signifying to (VPPREN'TICE, I', t. To hind to, or jiut under the care of a master, for tlie ])urpose drive, move, or press toward.] to draw of instruction in the luiowledge of a tradej 1. To come or go near, in place near to advance nearer. or business. ;
;
tion.
Attestation that is, active apsupport probation, or action, in favor of what is ;
;
Shak. or
approved.
;
3.
The commendation of a book licensed
permitted to be published by authority, as was formerly the case in England. AP'PROBATiVE, a. Approving implying MUner. approbation. AP'PROBATORY, a. Containing approbation expressing approbation. Ash. Scott.
;
;
;
Wherefore approached ye so nigh the city ? 2 Sam. xi [JVol used.] draw near in time. APPRENTICESHIP, n. The term for "2. ToAnil so mucli tlie more as ye see the day ap which an apprentice is bound to serve his proach. Heb. x. master. This term in England is by statto 3. To draw near, in a figurative sense ute seven years. In Paris, the term is five advance near to a point aimed at, in sci after which, the person, before he years ence, hteratme, government, morals, &c.; is quahfied to exercise the trade as a masto the he to approximate as, approaches ter, must serve five years as a jonrneynian character of the ablest statesman. dming which tenn, he is called the com 4. To draw near in duty, as in prayer or of his master, and the term is called n.
ppr.
Proof and Prove.] Tlie act of approving
;
APPREN'TICEHOOD,
Approved
bation of
prehcndo. \.
com-
pp.
mended.
;
;
;
prentice,
;
;
tearfulness. APPREN'TICE, n.
stand
having the worth
fixed by authorized persons. n. The act of setting a
his companionship. Encyc. The service, state or condition of an ap prentice ; a state in whicli a person is gain
Jlp-
to manifest a express approbation of liking, or degree of satisfaction toe.\piess approbation officially, as of one's fitness for a public trust.
APPRI'ZEMENT,
;
;
;
See Proof,
act.
To
prize.
am APPRI'ZED, pp. Valued
as, I
Suspicious apprehensive he does not understand me. Sensible [Rarely perceptive. feeling Milton used.] ;
an expression of the prove and Prove.]
and
Fearful; in expectation of evil; as, we' were apprehensive of fatal consequeuces.] the word.l [This IS the usual sense of r!.
A P P
A P P
A P P
11.
APPROPINQUE, V. i. To approach. [Ao? near to as. Hudibras. used.] Pope approaches Virgil in smoothness of APl'RO'PRIABLE, a. [From appropriate.] This use of the word is That versification. be appropriated that may be set may elhptical, to being omitted, so that the APPREST', o. [ad and pressed.] apart, sequestered, or assigned exclusively verb can hardly be said to be transitive. Brown. In botan)/, pressed close lying nearthe stem to a particular use. The old use of the word, as " approach the APPROPRIATE, v.t. [Fr. approprier, of L. or applying its ujjper surface to the stem. hand to the handle," is not legitimate. ad and proprius, private, peculiar. See Martyn. Ed. Encyc.\ APPRI'SE, v. t. s as :. [Fr. appris, partici- 2. To have access carnally. Lev. xviii. Proper.] or inform. Sec 3. In gardening, to ingraft a sprig or shoot 1. To set ple of apprendre, to learn, apart foi-, or assign to a particular of one tree into another, without cutting as, a use, in exclusion of all other uses Jlpprehend-] it from the parent stock. To inform to give notice, verbal or written Encyc. spot of ground is appropriated for a followed by of; as, we will apprise the APPROACH, n. The act of drawing near garden. or advancing near a an attack he as, he was intended of othcoming one's self in exclusion take to To ap-' general of what he had a])prised of the enemy's approach. to claim or use as by an exclusive ers prised the connnander of 2. Access ; as, the approach to kings. done. right. Bacon. APPRI'SED, /)/>. Informed; having notice Let no man appropriate the use of a common 3. In fortification, not only the advances of or knowledge conntiunicated. benefit. an army are called approaches, but the APPRI'SING, ppr. Informing; comnnmi3. To make peculiar as, to appropriate the to thrown works up by besiegers, pro cating notice to. names to ideas. Locke. tect them In their advances towards a APPRI'ZE, V. t. [This word is usually writTo sever an ecclesiastical benefice, and fortress. ten appraise, as if deduced from the Italian annex it to a spiritual corporation, sole or That may be apThere is no other word, from APPROACHABLE, a. apprezzare. aggregate, being the patron of the living. which it can regularly be formed the proached accessible. Black-stone. French apprecier, being recognized in ap APPROACHER, n. One who approaches APPROPRIATE, a. Belonging peculiarly or draws near. word generally predate. But apprize, the set ajiart for a particular use or n. The act of coming with from APPROACHMENT, peculiar is ad, formed, used, regularly Brown near. Ger. preis; W.pris; person as, religious worship is an appro[Little used.] price, prize ; D.prys; priate duty to the Creator. or from the Fr. priser, to prize, and this is AP' PROBATE, a. [L. approbatus.] Ajipro to use ved. Elijot. 2. Most suitable, fit or proper; as, the more correct orthography.] APPROACH,
ing instruction imder a master. APPREN'TISAgE, n. Apprenticesliip. [^tot Bacon. in j(.9e.]
i'.
t.
To come
;
;
;
;]
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
To
pursuance of generally used for the act appointed for the purpose, under tlirection Of law, or by agreejnent of parties as, to apprize the goods value
;
authority.
to set a value, in It is
of vcduin^ by
men ;
AP'PROBATE,
V. t. [L. approbo, to approve, of orf and probo, to prove or approve. Jlp is a modern word, but in connnon use in America. It differs from approve denoting not only the act of the mind, but
probate
appropriate
words
in
pleading.
APPRO PRIATED, pp. ticular use: annexed to
Assigned to a parclaimed or used exclusively ; an ecclesiastical corporation.
APPRO'PRI.VPENESS,
n.
PecuUar
fit-
the quality of being appropriate, or
;
Med. U<}> a ppr. Asf^iguiug to particular person or use claiming or using use exclusively severing to the perpetual
APPRO VE'MENT,
pcfiiliarlv suitable.
APPROPRIATING,
2.
;
;
of"
an ecclesiastical corporation.
APPROPRIA'TION,
n.
The
act of seques
use or tering, or assigning to a particular person, in excUision of all others ; application to a special use or purpose ; as, of a piece of ground, for a park ; of a right, to one'.s self; or of words, to ideas. 2.
In law, the .severing or sequestering of a benefice to the perpetual use of a spiritual the corporation, sole or aggregate, being For this purpose patron of the living. must be obtained tlie king's license, the consent of the bishop and of the patron. When the appropriation is tlius made, the appropriator
Eng. Law.
APPRO'PRIATOR,
•'}.
appro-
One
Approbation
;
liking. 2. In law,
Hay ward. In laiv, when a person indicted for felony or treason, and arraigned, confesses the fact before plea pleaded, and appeals or accuses his accomplices of the same crime, to obtain his pardon, this confession and accusation are called approvement, and the Blackstone. person an approver.
wlio
is
Kncyc.
APPROVING,
o.
Yielding approbation
APPROX'IMANT,
APPROXIMATE,
A
a.
Approaching.
used.]
APPRO V'ANCE, n.
[.Vo(
Bering.
;
;
propriety of; as, we approve the measures of administration. This word may in elude, with the assent of the mind to the propriety, a commendation to others. To prove to show to be true to justify. thou approve thy constancy
thy wisdom.
first
?
Jlp-
experience
;
trial.
prove by
Je^us, 3
Shak.
Acts
character.
To
like
A
Brown's
and sustain as right
;
to
1.
commend.
landing.
;
ebrill.]
bron, the breast.] cloth or piece of leatlier worn on the forej>art of the body, to keep the clothes
A
4.
In ships, a piece of curved timber, just above the foremost end of the keel. Mar. Did. A platform, or flooring of plank, at the entrance of a dock, on which the dock
5.
gates are shut.
A'PRONED,
Wearing an apron.
a.
.\'PRON-MAN, apron
;
n.
A man who
Encyc. Pope.
wears an
a laboring man a mechanic. adv. ap'ropo. [Fr. a and pro;
AP'ROPOS,
pos, i)urpose.] 1.
Warhurton. Opportunely; seasonably. By the way to the purpose a word used to introduce an incidental observation, suited to the occiision, though not ;
;
to the narration.
strictly belonging n. phi. apsides. [Gr. a^c;, tion, fron ojtru, to connect.]
Approaching that AP'SIS, ;
Ed. Encyc.
is an appulse of the organs. Holder. In astronomy, the approach of any planet ;
W.
Johnson.
Coxe- 2.
appids'. [L. apputsus, of ad and pelto, to drive.] The act of striking against ; as, in all con-
Arrival
;
In gunnery, a flat piece of lead that covers the vent of a cannon.
;
to a conjunction with the sun, or a star. 3.
ebril
3.
Shenslone
sonants there 2.
Diet.
Yet their
I
transplanting a disease into an animal or vegetable by immediate contact. Corea.
Corn,
clean, or defend them from injury. 2. The fat skin covering llie belly of a goose.
mode of cure by
APPROX'I.MATIVE,
ii.
This word seems to include the idea of Christ's real office, as the Messiah, and of God's love and approbation of him in that _ 3.
i.
contact. 4.
show to be worthy of approapproaches. commend. APPULSE, 7t.
mm approved o( God.
v.
In arithmetic and algebra, a continual approach or coming nearer and nearer to a root or other quantity, without being able perhaps ever to arrive at it. Encyc. Johnson. In medicine, commimication of disease by
or
to
;
3.
[JVot
See Prove.]
To make bation
1.
;
2.
.Milton
[This sense, though common a century or two ago, is tiow rare.] to
Aikin.
To come
near to Burke. approach. APPROXIMA'TION, n. Approach a drawHale. ing, moving or advancing near.
APPROX'I.MATE,
;
;
WouWst
u.ied.
Burke.
Thomson.
It. t. [Fr. approuver ; L. approto prove or approve. ; of ad and probo, See Approbate, Prove and Proof.] To like to be pleased with to athnit the
bo
4.
the level of nature.
Approbation. [See .Ap-
prove.]
APPROVE',
;
The fourth month of the year. A'PRON, n. [h-.aprun; o or ag-, and Celtic
a. [I., ad anA proiimus, See Approach.] Spelman. Nearest to; next; near to. [TViis word is APPROV'ABLE, a. [See Approve.] That may be approved that merits approsuperseded by proximate.] bation. Temple APPROXIMATE, v. t. To carry or advance near to cause to approach. APPROV'AL, n. Approbation. [See ^p To approximate the inequality of riches to prove.]
prove
;
thography.] fruit belonging to the genus Prunus, of the i)lum kind, of an oval figure, and de-
.VPPRoV'ING,
the profits of a benefice.
*?.
.
[See Approvement.] Alone who had the letting of the king's
Blackstone. lay possessor of
n.
'
and Skinner alledge that the Italians formerly wrote the word bericoco, berricoccoli At present they write it albicocca, and the Spaniards albaricoque, which indicate the word to be lormed of albus and coccus, white berry Sp. albar, white. But apricot seems to be formed from the old or-
bask in the sun. [Little used.] Ray. n. Sunshine. [Little used.] .V'PRICOT, n. Old orthography, apricock.
APRIC'ITY,
so, formerly,
approvers.
is that Mvhich appurtenant and can be claimed
to land,
A'PRIC.\TE,
Improvement of common land.s, by inthem to the uses
of husbandry.
annexed
To
as an approving conscience.
APPRO'PRIETARY,
I.
is
common
only by prescription or immemorial usage, on a legal presumption of a special grant. Blackstone.
closing and converting
priates. 2.
n.
APPRoV'ER, n. One who approves. Formerly one who proves or makes trial. 2. In law, one who confesses a crime and
Blackstone.
One who
n.
APT
A P P
A P P iiess
1.
connec-
\n astronomy, the apsides are the two points
of a planet's orbit, which are at the greatest and least distance from the sun or earth the most distant point is the aphelion, or apogee ; the least distant, the ;
The
I)erihelion or perigee.
ing these
line
connect-
called the line of the apsides.
is
Bryant. act of strikmg against
-Encyc.
posterity approve their sayings. 2. Apsis or absis is the arched roof of a APPUL'SION, n. The Ps. xlix. also the ring or by a moving body. house, room or oven This word, when it signifies to be pleased, APPUL'SIVE, a. Striking against dri\iiig compa.ss of a wheel. is often followed in which it is by of, use, towards as, the a/>/>u/«i;e influence of the 3. In ecclesiastical writers, an irmer part of a intransiti\e as, I approve of the measure. Med. Rep planets. church, where the altar was placed, and But the tendency ot modern usage is to APPUR'TENANCE, n. So written for ap- where the clergy sat, answering to the omit of. " I approve the measure." choir and standing opposite to the nave. See Appeiienence. [Fr. appartenance. 6. To improve. Blackstone. pertain.] Also, the bishop's seat or throne in anAPPRbV'ED, pp. Liked commended That which belongs to sometlijng else; an cient churches called also eiedra and trishown or proved to be worthy of approan appendage. bune. This same name was given to a adjunct Appropriatebation ha\ing the approbation and supsuch and ly, buildings, rights improverehquary or case in which the rehcs of port of saints were kept. ments, as belong to land, are called the apEncyc. Study to show thyself a7?/)rorcd to God. 2 purtenances; as small buildings are Uie .APT, a. [L. aptiLs, from apto, to fit; Gr. Tim. ii. Sax. ha^p.] appurtenances of a mansion. ortru, to tie Not he that commendeth himself is approved APPURTENANT, a. 1. Fit suitable he used very apt metaBelonging to; peras, 2 Cor. X. tEunjng to of right. phors. ;
;
;
;
;
:
;
;
;
;
;
;
A R A
A a u
A a u
crated water in the eucliarist instead of wine either under a jwetense of absti be winter-killed. nence, or because it was unlawful to drink wine. 3. Inclined disposed customarily used of Encyc persons; as, men arc too apt to slander oth AQUA'RIUS, n. [L.] The water bearer ers. sign in the zodiac which the sun enters 21st of al)ont the I. Ready; quick; used of the mental powers January so called fron an apt wit. the rains which prevaU at that season, in It as, a ])ii]pil apt to learn lit. 5. Qualified aly and the East. The stars in this constelAll tlic men (if might, strong and apt (or lation, according to Ptolemy, are 4.5 ; acWAT. 2 Kings wiv. cording to TychoBrahe, 41; according to Olts. .\PT, r. /. To lit; to suit nr adapt. Ilevelius, 47 and according to Flanistead, APT'ABLE, a. Tliat may be adapted. [.Yot, 108. Sherwood: AQUATTe, a. [L. aquaticus. See Aqua.] used.] '•}.
Having a tendcnc}' liable usn! of things;] as, wheat on moist laud is apt to blast or ;
;
;
|
;
;
;
;i
;
;
;
;
\
AP'TATE,
To make
water [Xol used.] Pertaining apjdied to animals which live in water, as tishes or to such )n. [G as frequent it, as aquatic fowls; applied to [Or. a priv. and rtrtpoi', Al'TE ERA, ^ wing. plants, it denotes such as grow in water. An insect without wings. The aptera, con Aquatical is rarely used. stitnling the seventh order of insects in .\QIjAT'I€, n. A plant which grows in waLinne's system, compreliend many genefer, as the flag. ('.
f.
lit.
to
1
;
;
AFTER ER,
ra. But later zoologists liave made a very, ditFerent distribution of tliese animals.
AQUITA'NIAN,
a.
Pertaining to Aquita-
one of the great divisions of Gaul, which, according to Cesar, lay betvpeen the Garomie, the Pyrenees and the Ocean. In modern days, it has been called Gasnia,
cony.
The
inhabitants, in
Cesar's time,
spoke a diflerent dialect from that of the proper Celts, between the Garonne and Seine. This dialect bore an affinity to the; Basque, in Biscay, to which they were contiguous; and some remains of it still exist in the Gascon. Aquitania is the country of the Aqui; from the name of the people, with tan, a Celtic word, signifying region or country. The Romans, either from their general usage, or from not understanding the Celtic tan, aimexed another termination signifying coinitry, ia, the Ir. ai or aoi, Heb. 'X ai, a settlement or habitation Gr. aia, land, coiuitry ; Hindu, eya, the same. ;
water. Cesar, Com. Lib. i. 1. D'Anville. Brown. A. R. stand for adjio regni, the year of the [Rarely used.] AP'TEUAL, a. [Supra.] Destitute of wings. AQUATINT'A, n. [aqua, water, and It. king's reign as A. R. G. R. 20, in the 20th year of the reign of king George. See Tincture.] APT'ITUDE, n. [of apfiis, apt.] tlnta, dye. I. A natural or accpiired disposition for a V method of etching on copper, by which a ARABESQUE,? .a a »,• i "• t^''^ -^rahan.] beautiful efli'ct is produced, resembling a ARABESK'Y, ])articn!ar purpose, or tendency to a ])arI has an ticular action or effect oil as, line drawmgin water colors or Indian ink 1. In the manner of the Arabians apapplied men acquire an aptitude to. This is performed with a powder of astitude to bm-n to ornaments consisting of imaginary foparticular vices. phalt and fine trans])arent rosin sifted on liage, stalks, plants,
AQ'UATILE,
"«.
That
iidiabits the
;
;
;
;
I
;
;
j
;
;
;
;
;
j
I
;
;
;
;
;
;
in others. 4.
duced.
Tendency,
in things; as, the
aptness of
tus,
[Gr. a priv. and rtrustj, case.] in orainmar, a nonn wliich has no variation of termination, or distinction of cases; aU; indeclinable noun. AP'YREXY, 71. [Gr. a priv. and rtupfoau, to
AP'TOTE,
Encyc. 71. [L. aqua, water, and due a pipe or canal, from duco, to lead.
AQ'UEDUeT,
iron to rust. n.
See Duke.]
ARABT€ALLY, iarity
A
adv. In the Arabian
man-
ner.
AR'ABISM,
n.
An
Arabic idiom or peculEncyc. Stuart. One well versed in Arabic
of language.
structure made for conveying water from n. one place to another over uneven ground AR'ABIST, literature. Encyc. It either above or under the surface. AR'ABLE, a. [L. aro, Gr. opou, to plow may be either a pipe or a chaimel. It may Ir. araim.] be feverish, from rfD(j, tire.] be constructed above ground of stone or The absence or intermission of fever. wood carried through hills by piercing Fit for plowing or tillage hence often apAP'YROUS, a. [Gr. artifu^, a. priv. and Ttup, them, and over valleys, by a structure su])- plied to land which has been plowed. Milton. )i. Arabia. fire.] ported by proj)S or arches. Some liave AR'ABY, Incombustible, or that sustains a strong heat been formed with three conduits on the ARACH'NOID, a. [Gr.opojtjjj, a spider, and f i6o5, form Heb. jiN, to weave, that is, to without alteration of form or properties same line, elevated one above another. draw out to bodies differ from those restretch, Eng. reach.] simply ,1pyrous Encyc. or arachtractory. Rffractorij bodies cannot lie fu A'QUEOUS, a. Watery; partakhig of the In anatomy, the arachnoid tunic, sed by heat, but may be altered. noid, is a semitransparent thin meniljrane nature of water, or abounding with it. ilncyr.', A'QUA, 71. [Ij. aqua ; Sp. agua ; Port.! A'QUEOUSNESS, n. The quality of being which is spreail over the brain and piamater, and for the most ]mn closely conugoa ; It. acqua, water Ann. eagwi, to' watery; waterishness; wateriness. nected with the latter. The term has also water, or steep Goth, ahum, water, whiclil AQ'UILA, n. [L., whence aquilinus ; from been applied to that capsule of the crystain Saxon is reduced to ea ; G. and D. N, n. [L. aquilo.] ARA'ISE, V. t. To raise. [.Vot used.] Shah tians, ni the prunitive church, who conse The norlh wind. Shah. ;
|
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
Pertaining to
a.
Aram,
party, or by tlie parties who have a controversy, to determine their differences. The act of the parties in giving power to the arbitrators is called the submission, and The person this may be verbal or written.
a son
of Sheni, or to the Chaldeans. n. An idiom of the Aramean or Clialdee language a Chaldaism.
All'AMlSM,
;
ARA'NEOUS,
o.
aranea, a spider, or
[L.
cobweb.]
Resembling a cobweb. Pertaining to the Aran caniuns, a tribe of aboriginals, inliabiting
ARAUCA'NIAN, a.
Molina. Arauco, hi Chili. •.VR15AL1ST, )i. [F'rom arcits, a bow, and balista, L., an engine to throw stones
;
Gr. iiaM.u, to throw.] A cross-bow. This consists of a steel bow set in a shaft of wood, furnished with a string and a trigger ; and is bent with a piece of iron. It serves to throw bullets, darts, arrows, &lc. Encyc.
"ARBALISTER,
A
n.
cross-bowman. Spud.
A person
appointed, or [L.] chosen by j)arties in controversy, to decide their differences. This is its sense in the civil law. In modern usage, arbitrator is the tochnicral ^vord. 2. In rt general sense, notv most common, a person who has the power of judging and determining, without control one whose power of deciding and governing is not
'ARBITER,
»!.
;
3.
limited. One that
commands the destiny, or holds the empire of a nation or slate. Mitford.
'ARBITRABLE, on the
a.
Arbitrary; depending Spelman. Will determmation
will.
ARBIT RAMENT,
n.
The award of
potically
arbitrators.
Coivet.
absolutely.
;
n. The quality of bedespotioahiess tyranny. Temple. ARBITRA'RIOUS, a. Arbitrary; desi)otic. ;
;
ARBITRA'RIOUSLY,
adv.
Arbitrarily
GlanvUle
[JVut used.]
'ARBITRARY, 1.
More.
JVorris.
[JVol used.]
a.
[L. arbitrarius.']
Depending on will or discretion not gov erned by any fixed rules as, an arbitrary decision an arbitrary punishment.
Despotic absolute in power having no external control as, an arbitrary prince or government. ;
;
v.
i.
[L. arbitror.]
hear and decide, as arbitrators choose men to arbitrate between us.
'J"o
;
'ARBITRATE, mine
;
v.
t.
To
to judge of.
decide
;
as, to
to deter
Milton.
Shak.
n. The hearhig and determination of a cause between parties in controversy, by a ])orson or persons chosen by the parties. This may be done bv one person but it is usual to chuse two or three or lor each i)arty to chuse one, and these to name a third, who is called the umpire. Their determination is called an award. 2. A hearing before arbitrators, though they
ARBITRA'TION,
;
;
make no award. the
word
in the
'ARBITRATOR,
[This is a common use United States.] n.
A
person cliosen by
of\
:
:
;
;
;
;
;
windmill.
This
in
Encyc.
America
'ARBORATOR,
called the shaft. plants or who
Belonging stituting is
to
a. [L. arboreus,
a tree
;
from
arfcor.]
resembling a tree
growing on
a tree ; arboreous.
ARBORES'CENCE,
n.
[L.
;
con
trees,
as
arboresco,
to
to a tree.]
grow
The
the resemblance of a or crystalizations or groups of crystals in that form. ARBORES'C'ENT, a. Resembhng a tree having the figure of a tree dendi'itical. figure of a tree tree in minerals,
;
above.
AR€A'DIAN, ARCA'DI€, ARCA'DICS, sanias,
A
STAR-FISH,
cies
of
see.
[See Staifsh.]
asterias, called also
'ARBORET,
n.
[It.
[.Vot
arboreto,
A
n.
small tree or shrub
from
arbor, a
Howell. n. The appearance or figure of a tree or plant in minerals, or
2.
[See Herborization.'] V. t. To form the appearance
tree,
little tree.] 4.
Bradley.
Resembling a shrub
having the figure of small
ARBUST'IVE,
a.
and
bout.
See
In building, an arched Encyc.
Ji. [See Arc] A segment or part of a circle. A concave or hollow structure of stone or brick, supjiorled by its own curve. It may be constructed of wood, and supjiorted by the mechanism of the work. This species of structure is much used in bridges. A vault is ja-operly a broad arch. Encyc. The sjiace between two piers of a bridge, when arched or any place covered with an arch. Any curvature, in form of an arch. Shak. The vault of heaven, or sky.
are magnificent structures at the entrance of cities, erected to adorn a trium|)h and perpetuate the memory of the event. ARCH, V. t. To cover with an arch ; to fonn « ith a curve as to arch a gate.
between a shndj and Tiiumphal arches
a tree. a.
n. [Fr. arc,
;
3.
in
in size
secret; generally [L.] plural, arcana, secret thmgs,
'ARCH,
'ARBORIZE,
'ARBUSCLE,
A
n.
mysteries.
of trees.
A dwarf
in the
buttress.
;
minerals. [L. arbusculus, a
Trans. B. 8. Hidden, secret.
used.]
About, Abutment.]
ARBORIZA'TION,
ARBUS'€lILAR,
treats of Arcadia.
ARCBOUTANT,
spe-
'ARBORIST, n. One who makes trees his study, or who is versed in the knowledge
»i.
in
Trans, of Pausanias.
a place planted or Milton. overgrown with trees.
of a tree or plant
much
used
Medu
caput
district
Trails, of Pausanias. title of a book in Pau-
a. [L. arcanus.]
AR€A'NIIM,
tree.]
fossils.
The
71.
which
ARCA'NE,
becoining woody.
Martyn
ARBORESCENT
mountainous
^
the heart of the Peloponnesus.
Encyc.
From herbaceous
Johnson. Pertaining to Arcadia, a
}
;
;
2.
Johnson.
Encyc.
ARCA'DE, n. [Fr. from arcus; Sp. arcada.] A long or continued arch a walk arched
Evelyn.
ARBO'REOUS, moss
is
One who
n.
trees.
prunes
;
trees.
Da
Costa.
[From arbuMum.]
;
Containing copses of trees or shrubs covered with shrubs. Bartram. ;
al
tree.
;
;
VARBITRATE,
copst
The strawberry
;
IVashington 2.
A
See Arbor.]
[L. arbutus.]
;
;
.Arbitrary power is most easily established on the ruins ol liberty abused to hcentiousness.
n.
;
;
;
n. [L.
of shrubs or trees; an orchanl.
'ARBUTE,
;
'ARBITRARINESS, ing arbitrary
ARBUST'UM,
VRBUTEAN, a. Pertaining to the strawchosen as umpire, by two arbitrators, berry tree. Encyc. Evelyn. when tlie parties do not agree, is also cal 'ARC, n. [L. areas, a bow, vault or arch ; led an arbitrator. arcuo, to bend Gr. op;t>j, beginning, origin 2. An arbiter, governor, or president. apj;«, to begin, to he the author or chief; Milton. Fr. an; arrhe ; Sp. area, a bow and iui one 3. In a more extensive sense, an arbiter arch; I'ori. id ; It. iV; .\riu. goarec. The who has the power of deciding or prescri- (ireiik word has a diflerent application, Addison. Shak. but is probably from the same root as bing without control. ARBITRESS, n. A female arbiter. arcus, from the sense of sjiringing or 'ARBOR, n. [The French express the sense stretching, shooting up, rising, which gives the sense of a vault, or bow, as well by berceau, a cradle, an arbor, or bower as of chief or head. Hcb. JIN, to weave; Sp. emparrado, from parra, a vine raised on stakes, and nailed to a wall. Qu. L. : to desire or long for Ar. Syr. j artior, a tree, and the primary sense.] covered with 1. A frame of lattice work, '"mit to diffuse H" odor, fragrance , vines, brandies of trees or other plants, for shade a bower. and llcb. JTJ? to desire, or long for, to as2. In botany, a tree, as distinguished from The distinction wliich Linne a shrub. cend Eth. 04T to ascend, to mount; makes, that a tree springs up with a bud Ar. id. The radical sense of all these on the stem, and a shrub not, is found not roots is, to stretch, strain, reach Gr. and the in to hold universally tree, pop opfyu h.Jragro ; and the sense of arcA is ular understanding, differs from the shrub from stretching ujiwards, ascending. From Arbor forms the seventh only in size. arc or arch comes the sense of bending, liimily of vegetables in Linne's system deviating and cunning.] [See Tree.] In geometry, any part of the circumference 3. In mechanics, the principal part of a maof a circle, or curved line, lying from ont; Also the axis chine, sustaining the rest. a segment, or part of a ])oint to another or spindle of a maclime, as of a crane, or circle, not more than a semicircle.
;
Milton. In this sense aivard is more generally used. 'ARBITRARILY, adv. By will only; des-
2.
ARC
A R B
A R D AK AME'AN,
ARCH, as, to
an arch or arches; V. i. To make arch beneath the sand. Pope.
ARC
A H C
A R C
ARCIICH^ANTER,
[It. arcare, to benil, to arch, to cheat, or deceive, Iroiii arco, L. arcus, a bow ; G. arp;, cunning, arch, bad ; D. arg,
The
ARCHERESS,
chief chanter, or president of the chanters of a chiuTh. ARCH€IIIMT€, a. Of supreme chimical The powers. Milton. crat\v, roguish ; Sw. Dan. arg, id. Teutonic arg, appears to be allied to arch, ARCIieONSPIR'ATOR, n. Principal conand to be the Eng. rogue. Tliis circumMatindrell. spirator. chief count; a title stance, and the Ann. gonrec, [see arc,] in- ARCH€OUNT', n. dicate that the radical letters in arc, arch, formerly given to the earl of Flanders, on The radical sense of bend account of his great riches and power. ap;^)?, are Rg.
"ARCir,
a.
n.
arrow ers
is,
Cnnninw ous
sly
;
tiir
;
shrewd waggish ;
sport
mirthful
;
as
;
popular language, roguish
;
;
mischiev-
we say in as an arch
*ARCII,
used also in composition.
a.
opzoJi chief; Ir. arg, noble,
famous.]
of the first class principal arch deed. Shakspeare uses this word as a noun worthy arch and patrons ;" but the not authorized. ;
;
'AR€llAISM,
"
An
is
ancient, from
[Gr. a();ioio5, beginning.] ancient or obsolete phrase or expression.
The name of
several ])lants, as the deada sjjecies of melittis and the galeopsis or hedge-nettle. nettle, or
lamium
AR€HANtiELTC,
;
a.
;
Belonging
to
chitect. »i.
The
chief beacon,
place of prospect or signal. chief bishop a ARCHBISH'OP, ji church dignitary of the first class a metropolitan bishop, who superintends the conduct of the suftragan bishops, in his province, and also exercises episcopal au-
A
;
ARCHETYPAL,
;
oflice
of an
(ipxoi, a chief; W. erchi.] ARCHDIVI'NE, n. A principal theologian A term used by the ancient chimists, ARCHDRU'ID, n. [See Druid.] A chief note the internal efficient cause
Henry, Hist.
ARCHDU'€AL,
Eng.
;
A Duchess.] title given to the females of the house of ric, or rick, territory or jurisdiction.] The jurisdiction or place of an archbishop Austria. the province over which an archbishop ARCHDUCH'Y, n. The territory of an archAsh. exercises authority. duke or archduchess. Clarendon. ARCHBOTCH'ER, n. The chief botcher, ARCHDU'KE, [See Duke.] A title given to or mender, ironically. Corbet. princes of the House of Austria; all the ARCHBUILD'ER, ) "• Chief builder. sons being archdukes, and the daughters ;
A
A
Herbert.
priest
ARCHFLAT'TERER, n. ARCHFO'E,
ARCHDUKEDOM,
n.
[See Foe.]
chief enemy.
ARCHFOUND'ER,
n.
A
;
ARCHCHAMBERLAIN, berlain
whose
n.
an officer of the
;
A
Encyc chief cham-
German
empire, of the great This oflice be-
office is similar to that
chamberlain
in
England. longs to the elector of Brandenburg.
ARCHCH'ANCELLOR, cellor
an
officer in the
n.
A
Encyc. chief chan-
German
empire, who presides over the secretaries of the court. Under the first races of French ;
when Germany and Italy belonged them, three archchancellors were a))pointed and this institution gave rise to kings, to
;
the three archchancellors now subsisting Germany, who are the archbishops of Mentz, of Cologne, and of Treves. Encyc.
in
ARCIIEN'EMY, n. A
principal
ARCHGOV'ERNOR,
enemy.
on antiquity, or
to the
knowledge of
ancient things.
ARCHEOL'OgY, and
>.oyo5,
71.
[Gr. afxaio;, ancient,
discourse.]
A
discourse on antiquity learinng or knowledge which respects ancient times. Panoplist, Dec. 1808 'ARC'HER, n. [Sp. archero ; It. arciero ; Fr. archer from arcus, a bow. See Arch and ;
;
Arc]
A bowman one who
;
is
and arrow.
one
who
uses a
bow
skilled in the use
in battle
of the
n.
ernor.
Milton.
ARCHE0L06T€AL,a. Pertainingto a treatise
[See Flatter.]
chiefflatterer.
archduchesses.
Encyc. n. A n. The territory or juficer of the German empire, who presents risdiction of an archduke or archduchess. the cup to the emperor, on solemn occaMade with an arch or curve sions. This oflice belongs to the king of '^VJICHED, pp. covered with an arch.
Bohemia.
all
;
own diocese. Clarendon taining to an archduke. ARCHBISH'OPRIC, n. [Archbishop and ARCIIDUCH'ESS, n. [See
Harmar. chief butler; an of-
of
;
Rowland's
Mona Antiqua. [See Archduke.] Per
a.
to de-
things the anima mundi or plastic power of the old philosophers the power that presides over the animal economy, or the vis medicatrix the active principle of the material world. In medicine, good health, or ancient practice. Johnson. Encyc. Coxe. ARCHFEL'ON, n. [See Felon.] A chief felon. Milton. chief ARCHFIEND, n. [See Fiend.] fiend or ti)e. Milton. n. flamen chief or ARCHFLAM'EN,
druid, or pontiff of the ancient druids.
thority in his
<,
af,xv,
;
archdeacon.
;
ARCHBILD'ER ARCHBUT'LER,
constituting
;
oflice, juris
is
The
;
[Gr. ap;tfT'vrtov rvitof, form.]
beginning, and The original pattern or model of a work ; or the model from which a thing is made as, a tree is the archetype or pattern of our idea of that tree. fVatts. 2. Among minters, the standard weight, by which others are adjusted. 3. Among Platonists, the archetypal world is the world as it existed in the idea of God, before the creation. Encyc. ARCHE'US, n. [Gr. afxvt beginning, or
Blackstone. n.
Original
n.
1.
and each archdeacoiny into rural dean erjes, and each deanery into parishes.
ARCHDE'A€ONSHIP,
a.
a model or pattern.
'ARCHETYPE,
an archdeacon. In
thocese
evei-y
ar-
Si/lvester.
ARCHBE'ACON,
;
on
divided into archdeaconries, of which there are sixty,
Trapp.
The supreme
The
n.
diction or residence of
England,
ARCHAPOS'TATE, n. A chief apostate. ARCHAPOS'TLE, n. The chief apostle. n.
to table
Encyc.
ARCHDE'AC-ONRY,
archan
gels.
ARCH"ARCIIITE€T,
is a court of appeal, in the ecclesiastical polity, the judge of which is called the dean of the arches. This court had over thirteen jurisdiction peculiar parishes in London, belonging to the archbishop of Canterbury but the office of dean of the arches being united with that of the archbishop's principal office, the dean now receives and determines appeals from the sentence of all inferior courts within the province and from him lies an appeal to the king in chancery. This and all the principal spiritual courts are now held at Doctors' Commons. Blackstone.
bishop, and has an authority originally derived from the bishop, but now inde pendent of him. He has a court, the most inferior of ecclesiastical com-ts, I'or hearing ecclesiastical causes, and the punish ment of offenders by spiritual censures. Blackstone.
angel of the high-
est order ; an angel occupying the eightl rank in the celestial hierarchy. Encyc. 2.
meat
England, so called
held,
n. [See Deacon.] In England, an ecclesiastical dignitary, next in rank below a bishop, who has jurisdic tion either over a part or over the whole diocese. He is usually appointed by the
n'atts.
An
n.
Encyc.
horseback.
in
St. Mary le bow (de whose top is raised of stone pilwhere it was anciently
lars built archwise,
My ARCHDE'AeON,
use
o-fXVt
AR€HAN'uEL,
arcubus,)
chief critic.
to carry the first dish of
Shak.
;
n.
A
;
from the church of
ARCHDAP'IFER,
an
as,
;
n.
female archer.
The
ARCHES-COURT,
n. [Arch, chief, and L. dap'fer, a lood-bearer, from daps, meat or a feast, andfero, to carry.] [Gr. An officer in the German etnpire, whose office is, at the coronation of the emperor,
lad.
Chief
ARCH€RIT'l€,
n.
arrow.
A
to strain.]
;
A
n.
Markhartv. use of the bow and the practice, art or skill of archthe act of shooting with a bow and
"ARCHERY,
;
ARCHHER'ESY,
n.
A
A
Bacon. grand or
Milton. chief founder. Milton. The chief govBrewer.
The
[See Heresy.]
Butler.
greatest heresy.
ARCHHER'ETIC,
n.
A
chief heretic. Shak.
n. [Gr. op^os, chief, and chief priest in Russia. Tooke, i. 5.30. ARCHHYP'OCRITE, n. A great or chief
ARCHIH'EREY, A tfpoj, priest.]
Fuller.
hypocrite.
n. [Gr. ap^oj, chief, and mtfoi, physician.] Chief physician ; a word used in Russia. Tooke, i. 557.
AR'CII'IATER,
ARCIITCAL,
a.
Chief; primary.
bow
Hallywell.
ARCHIDIAC'ONAL,
a.
[See Deacon.]
ARC Pertaining to an arclidcacon aconnl visitation.
ARC as an archidi-
;
A R D
beam which,
represents the
in
ancient
buildings, extended from column to collann, to support the roof Canterbury In chinmey.s, the architrave is called the mantle and over doors and winiVeever. piece 'ARCHIL, n. A lichen, wliioli grows on dows, the hyperthyrion. Johnson. Encyc. Cyc. rocks, in the Canary and Cape
AR€HIEPIS'€OPAL,
a.
[See Episcopal.]
Belonging to an nrcliliisliop is an archiepiscopal see.
;
as,
;
;
Pertaining to Arcliilochus, the poet, who invented a verse of seven feet, the first four dactyls or spon-
single face in the Tuscan order ; two face:crowned in the Doric and Ionic, and the same moldings, as the architrave, in the
dees, the last three, trochees.
Corinthian and Composite.
AReHILO'€HIAN, a.
Encyc
»i. [See Magician.] The 'ARCHIVES, JI. pht. [Gr. op^fw ; Low L. archivum ; Fr. archives ; It. archivio.] high priest of the Persian Alagi, or worshipers of fij-e. Encyc. iThe apartment in which records are kept AReHIMAND'RITE, ji. [from mandrite, a also the records and papers which are Syriac word for monk.] preserved, as evidences of facts. In church history, a chief of the mandrites or 'ARCHIVIST, n. [Fr. and It.] The keeper of archives or records. monks, answering to abbot in Europe. Encyc.
•ARCHIMAGUS,
;
Encyc.
'ARCHING, ppr. Forming an
Tooke, R%tss. cover-
arch
'ARCHING,
an arch. Curving n. [Authors are not agreed as to the origin of this word. Some suppose it to be compounded of like
ARCHIPEL'AGO, and
Wf^oyo;, sea
;
others, of
and jtfTjxyoj, the Egean sea. Gibbon, Mitford and Ed. Encyc]
See
Aiyaiot,
;
rades. tixTui; a
n.
[Gr.
workman.
ap;fo5,
and
chief,
person skilled in the art of building who miderstands architecture, or makes it his occupation to form plans and designs of buildings, and superintend the
;
artificers
employed. contriver a former or maker.
A ARCHITECT'IVE, ;
Used
a.
in
Ray. building;
Derham.
proper for building.
ARCHITECTON'IC, a. That
has power or Smellie, Ch. 13.
skill to build.
AR€HITE€TON'ICS,
n.
architecture.
The
science
ofj
^/jsh
AR€HITE€T'RESS, n. A female architect. ff'olton
ARCHITECT'URAL,
a. Pertaining to the art of building ; that is according to the rules of architecture. Mason
'ARCHITECTURE, The
n.
[L. architectura.)
art of building but in a more Umand appropriate sense, the art of constructing houses, bridges and other ;
ited
2.
buildings for the purposes of civil Ufe. Frame or structure.
The
earth
is
a piece of divine architecture.
Burnet. is the art of fortification. JStaval architecture is the art of building ships. «. [Gr. a,>;i:05, chief, and It.
Military architecture
•ARCHITRAVE,
from L. trabs, a beam.] architecture, the lower division of an entablature, or that part which rests imIt probably mediately on tlie coliunn. trave,
In
,
\
adv.
Shrewdly
;
Busby,
wittily
;
jest-
ingly.
n.
[See Priest.]
Milton. chief
A
prif'st.
Encyc. ARCH PRIM ATE, n. The chief pritnate an ;
Milton.
archbishop.
ARCHPROPH'ET,
Chief prophet.
n.
ff'arlon.
ARCHPROT'ESTANT,
A
n.
princi|)al or
distinguished protestant.
ARCHPUB'LICAN,
n.
publican.
ARCHREB'EL,
The
n.
The
distinguished Halt chief rebel. Milton.
ARCHTRA'ITOR, n. A principal traitor. ARCHTREAS'URER, n. [See Treasure.] TJie great treasurer of the German empire a dignity claimed by the elector of Hanover. Guthrie. ;
ARCHTREAS'URERSIIIP, n. The
office Collins' Peerage.
of archtreasurer.
ARCHTY'RANT,
n.
A
n.
[See VUlain.]
principal or great
HaU.
tyrant.
ARCHVIL'LAIN,
A chief
or great villain.
Shak.
ARCHVIL'LANY, n. Great villany. 'ARCHWISE, adv. [arch and loise.
See
In the form of an arch.
IVise.]
large lute, a theorbo, the base-strings of
higher strings with a unison.
'ARCHLY,
'jytery.
ARCHPRIE'ST,
ARCTA'TION, ARC'TITUDE,
n
t^'- '^'cde^cio.]
which are doubled with an octave, and the
)
Pre-
[L. arc(t/s, tight.]
^ ""ternaturalstraightness: Coxe. constipation from inflammation. a. [Gr. apxroj, a bear, and a northern constellation so called. W. arth ; Ir. art, a bear.] Northern pertaining to the northern constellation, called the bear as, the arctir pole, circle, region or sea. The arctic circle is a lesser circle parallel to the equator, 23° 28' from the north pole. This, and the antarctic circle, are called the polar circles, and witliin these lie the frigid zones.
ARCTIC, ;
The
n.
chief magi-
cian.
Spenser.
ARCHMAR'SHAL,
n.
The grand marshal
German empire a dignity belonging to the elector of Saxony. of the
;
'ARCHNESS,
ARCHON,
n.
The archons
See Technical.]
A
one
1.
'ARCHILUTE,
A
;
ri.
"•
n.
Cunning
shrewdness
;
;
waggishness.
'ARCHITECT,
2.
Yotmg. >
ARCIIMAGI"CIAN,
In a general sense, a sea interspersed with many isles but particularly the sea which separates Europe from Asia, otherwise called the Egean Sea. It contains the Grecian isles, called Cyclades and Spo-
1.
Uke an arch.
Built
a.
ARCHLUTE,
a.
opjrof, chief,
'ARCHLIKE,
;
ing with an arch.
dominion of presbyten', or the thief pres"
[Gr. apx^v, a prince.]
in
Greece were chief magis-
trates chosen, after the death of Codrus, from the most illustrious families, to su-
and religious concerns. nine in number; the first was properly the archon ; the second was called kitig ; the third, polemarch, or general of the forces. The other six were called thesmothetce, or legislators. Encyc, 'ARCHONSHIP, n. The office of an ar chon or the term of his office. .Mitford. n. In church ARCHON'TICS, history, a branch of the Valentinians, who held that the world was not created by God, but by perintend
civil
They were
;
ARCTU'RUS,
n. [Gr. opxrof, a bear, and fixed star of the first magnitude, in the constellation of Bootes.
A
oupo, tail.]
Encyc.
'ARCUATE,
a.
Bent or curved
See Arc] [L. arcuatus. in the form of a bow. Bacon.
ARCUA'TION,
n.
Martyn. Ray. act of bending in-
The
;
the state of being bent curvity; crookedness; great conve.xity of the tliorax. Core. 2. A method of raising trees by layers; thai is, by bending branches to the ground, and the with small shoots three earth, covering inches deep upon the joints making a angels, archontes. bason of earth to hold the water. When ARCHP'ASTOR, n. Chief pastor, the shep- these have taken root, are removed they herd and bishop of our souls. Barrow into a nursery. Chambers. Encyc. chief phiARCHPHILOS'OPHER, n. Hooker. ARCUBALIST, n. [L. arcus, a bow, and losopher.
curvation
;
;
;
;
A
ARCHPIL'LAR,
n.
The main
an engine for throwing stones.] cross-bow. H'arton.
balista, pillar.
Harmar.
A
ARCUBALIS'TER, n. A cross-bowman; The principal poet. one who used the arbalist. Camden. tVRCHPOLITI CIAN, n. [See Policy.] An 'ARD, the termination of many English eminent or distinguished poUtician.
ARCHPO'ET,
n.
Bacon.
AUCHPON'TIFF, preme
pontiff"
n.
ARCHPRE'LATE,
n.
A
[See Pontiff.]
or priest.
su-
Burke.
[See Prelate.]
The
chief prelate.
words,
the Ger.
is
and Dan.
art,
art, species,
;
;
ji.
;
;
;
ARCHPRES'BYTER, [See Presbyter.] A chief presbyter or priest. Encyc. ARCHPRES'BYTER Y. v. The absolute
kind
Sw.
mode, nature, genius, form
;
Ger. arten, to take after, resemble Sw. Ger. aiiig, of the arta, to form or fashion nature of, also comely Dan. and Sw. D. aarden, to take afler, artig, beautiful resemble aardig, genteel, pretty, ingenious. observe it in Goddard, a divine temper ; Ciffard, a disposition to give, lib;
We
ARE
ARE ;
;
ARDENCY, burn.]
Warmth of passion gerness
;
\RDENT,
or affection
;
in
gladiators,
ardor; ea-
2. as, the ardency of love or zeal. a. Hot ; burning ; that causes a
ancient
ARETOL'OgY,
n.
Rome, exhibited Xoyoj, discourse.] amusement of That part of moral
Hence, a ])lace for public exspectators. Adam's Rom. Ant. Ray. hibition. Among physicians, sand or gravel hi the
of virtue,
[Gr.
apsrtj,
philoso])hy
and
virtue,
which treats
nature and "the means of Johnson. [Ldttle tised.] attaining to it. ARGAL, n. Unrefined or crude tartar, a substance adheiing to the sides of wine Ceisks. Johnson. Coxe. its
kidneys. sensation of burning as, ardent spirits, that ARENA'CEOUS, a. [from arena, sand.] ARciE'AN, a. Pertaining to Argo or the an ardent fever. Sandy; having the properties of sand. is, distilled sjiirits Ark. IVoodward. Faber. i. Having the ap))earancc or quality of fire; Kirwan. ARuENT, n. [L. argentum; Gr. opynpoj, sil2. Brittle as arenaceous limestone. as ardent eyes. fierce ARENA'TION,n. Amonf[ pht/sicians, a sand ver, from apyoj, white Ir. org, white ; J. Warm, apiilicd to the passions and afTec dissand a of hot Fr. a bath upon airgiod, silver, money argent, money ; tions passionate affectionate much ensprinkhng Sans, rajatam, Qu.] C'o.re eased person. gaged zealous as, ardent love or vows AREN'DALITE, n. In mineralogy, anothei 1. The white color in coats of anns, mtended ardent zeal. to re|)resent silver, or liurity, innocence, name of epidote, or pistacite ; epidote being affecadv. With warnilli the name given to it by Hatiy, and pistacite beauty, or gentleness. Encyc. tionately; passionately. a. Silvery of a pale white, like silver. »i. by Werner. [See Epidote.] Ardency. Johnson. Encyc. ARDOR, n. [L.] Heat, in a literal sense ARENDA'TOR, n. [Russ. aretula, a farm 3. a. Bright. to rent.] Q.U. arrendar, the the ardor of sun's S]). as, rays. In Livonia and other jirovinces of Russia, a Ask of yonder argent fields above. •I. Warmth, or heat, Pope. njjplied to the passion farmer of the farms or rents ; one who and affections; eagerness; a.s, he jmrsues ARgENT'AL, a. Pertainuig to silver concontracts with the crown for the rents of study with ardor; they fought whh ardor. sisting of silver containing silver comthe farms. He who rents an estate beSlilton uses the word for person or spirit, bined with silver applied to the native longing to the crown, is called Crown bright and elTidgeiit, but by an imusiial amalgam of silver, as argental mercury. arendator. Arende is a term used both for license. Cleaveland. the estate let to farm, and the sum lor n. \RDUOUS, a. [L. arduus ; Ir. ard, high combination of the ARtiENTATE, Tooke's Russ. ii. 288 which it is rented. W. hardh ; Ir airdh, high, highth.] argentic acid with another substance. and e a. sand, ardu\RENIL1T'I€, uSof, a literal sense as, [nrena, Hiiih, lofty, ARtiENTA'TION, n. An overlayuig with stone.] ous jiatlis. silver. Pope. Johnson. Difficult attended with great labor, like Pertaining to sand stone consisting of sand- 'ARGENT-HORNED, a. Silver homed. Kirwan. stone as arenilitic mountains. the ascending of accHvities as, an arduotis ARgENTT€, a. Pertaining to silver tlie full of sand. ARENO'SE, or Sandy; ^ enterprise. employment, task, argentic acid is a saturated combination of Johnson. silver ami oxygen. This is yet hypothet'ARDUOUSLY, adv. In an arduous man- AR'ENOUS, S The colored circle Ml'EOLE, i [L.] ner with labo)iousness. ical. Lavoisier. round the nipple, or round o AREO'LA, I «. ;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
ARDENTLY,
;
ARDKNTNESS,
;
;
;
;
;
;
A
;
.
m
.
;
;
;
;
;
;
"
"
;
ARDUOUSNESS,
Highth
;
difficulty
a pustule.
execution.
VRE. The
plural of the substantive verb ; but a different word from be, am or was It is from the Svv. vara, Dan. vitrer, to ore ; to exist v or w being lost. ; be, ye or you are; they are ; i)ast tense plural were. It is usually pronounced ar.
AREOM'ETER,
room, of a church or other building, or of the ground. The space or site on which a building stands; or of any inclosure. In geometry, the .superficial contents of any the surface included within any figure given lines as the area of a sipiare or a ;
triangle.
Among phi/siciajis, baldness an empty space a bald space produced by alopecy Core. Parr. also a name of the disease. In mining, a compass of ore allotted to ;
;
;
5.
Coxe
diggers.
AREA'D, } " [Sax. aredan.] To Obs. to advise. AREE'D, A'REAL, a. Pertaiiimg to an area
coimsel
.
;
'•
interstices.
;
Spenser. as areal
Barton.
adv. In a reeking condition. [See
Rcek.'i
n.
The measuring
ARgENTIF'EROUS,
a. [L. argentum, silver, and fero, to produce.] Producing silver ; as argentiferous ore. Kirwan.
ARgENTJ'NA, 'ARGENTINE,
I
"'
I
Argentina
is
also a
name of
silver-weed.
or act
hi ichthyology, -dgeuus ot the order
of fishes
of abdominals. the wild tansy, Encyc. Core.
ARGENTINE,
a. Like silver; pertaining to silver, or sounding hke it. Johnson. 'ARGENTINE, n. In mineralogy, a subo|)agus. Milford. species of carbonate of lime, nearly pure ; member of the Are- a mineral of a lamellated or slaty strucAREOP'AGITE, n. ture its lamens usually curved or unduopagus, which see. Acts xvii. 34. lated its surface is shinuig, or of a pearly n. [Gr. A|i);5, Mars, and
A
;
AREOPAGUS, A
;
luster.
Hixyoi, hill.]
sovereign tribunal at Athens, famous for the justice and impartiality of its decisions. It was originally held on a hill in but afterward removed to the the city ;
It is
found
in iirimitive rocks,
and
Cleaveland. frequently in metallic veins. 'ARGIL, ji. A species of the Ardea, or genus of cranes. 'ARgIL, n. [L. argilla, white clay, from Gr.
white.] Royal Portico, an open square, where the In apyos, a general sense, clay, or potter's earth ; judges sat in the open air, inclosed by a but in a technical sense, pure clay, or alucord. Their sessions were in the night, mine. Fourcroy. that they might not be diverted by objects of sight, or influenced by the presence and ARtilLLA'CEOUS, a. [h. argillaceus.] Partaking of the nature of clay clayey conaction of the speakers. Ry a law of SoKirwan. sisting of argil. lon, no person could be a member of this ARgILLIF'EROUS, a. [L. argilla, clay,and tribunal, until he had been archon or chief This court took cognizance fero, to produce.] Producing clay applied magistrate. as abound with to such earths argil. of high crimes, inqnety and hnmorality, Kirwan, and watched over the laws and the publiiArgillaceous shist or treasury. Lempriere. Encyc. Pansa- } ARgILLITE, n. Its usual color is bluish, nias. Acts xvii. lU. ^ slate; clay-slate. blackish Kirwan. gray. AREOT'l€, a. [Gr. apaiof, thin.] Attenu- greenish or ;
;
;
<,
AREE'K,
ireometer.
of measuring the specific gravity of fluids. AREOPAGIT'Ie, a. Pertaining to the Are-
;
I.
Fourcroy. Pertaining to an
AREOM'ETRY,
;
3.
AREOMET'RI€AL,
a.
The
reach, stretch, lay or s])read.] 1. Any ])Iain surface, as the floor of a
2.
ftsrpsCT, to measure.] instrument for measuring the specific
gravity of liquids.
in
lowest note, except one, ALAMlRE, S Guido's scale of music. Shak. A'REA, n. [L. I suspect this to be contracted from Ch. Na'IX, an area or bed Heb. nJTTJ?; from a root wliich signifies to I
[Gr. opoioj, rare, thin,
and
An
We
A-RE,
Coie.
Encyc. ?!.
Sipijl.
ating making thin, as in liquids ; rarc- ARgILLIT'I€, a. Pertaining to argiUite. n. [L. arefacio, to dry from area.] The act of drying ; the state of ARGlLLOeAL'CITE, n. [of argilla, clay, and fo/.r, calcarious earth.] Bacon. AREOT'Ie,?i. A medicine, which attenuates growing dry. the humors, dissolves viscidity, ojjens the A species of calcarious earth, with a large AR'EFY, V. t. To dry or make dry. Kirwan. an at Bacon. and increases ].roportion f)f clav. pores, perspiration ARE'NA, n. [L. sand.] An open space ofl tenuaut. Qxdncy. Coxe. ARGlLLOaiU RITE, n. [of argilla, clay.
AREFA€'TION,
;
;
ARC
A R
sncl muria, brine or salt water
;
magneeia
being obtained from soa-salt.] species of earth consisting of magnesia, a silex, aluniine and lime variety of Magnesite.
3.
To
A
I
persuade by reasons ;
argue a
as, to
A RIANISM,
11 1
The doclrhicsof the
)(.
Ariaifs.
A'RIANIZE, V. i. To admit the tenets of the a Arians. Formerly, to accuse or charge with It'orthington Latin sense, now obsolete; as, to argue one AR'ID, a. [L. aridus, dry, from area, to be of ])rofaneness. Uryden. dry.] Kirwfin. Clcaveland. ARGUED, pp. Debated; discussed; evin Dry exhausted of moisture parched with ced accused. heat ; as an arid waste. ARgIL'LOUS, a. Consisting of clay clayey Thomson. 'ARGUER, 71. One who argues a reasoner AR'IDAS, >!. A kinil of taflety, from the partaking of clay belonging to clay. a dis|)uter Brown. a controvertist. East Indies, made of thread, from certain
A
mixed with
4.
;
.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
a. Designating what belongs to Argos, the capital of Argohs in Greece,
'ARGIVE,
whose inhabitants were called Argivi. This name however is used by the poets for the Greeks i]i general. Pans. Trans. JARGO, n. The name of the ship which carried Jason and his fifty-four companions
'ARGULNG,
I.
•3.
a.
;
golic
Gulf
D'Amnlh.
ji. The title of a chajjter in Pausauias, which treats of Argolis. Trans. D. ii. 1.5. n. 'ARGONAUT, [of apyco, Jason's ship, and I'ODT'jjs, a sailoi-.] One of the persons who sailed to Colchis with Jason, in the Argo, in quest of the golden fleece.
"•
Encyc. state of being without moisture.
Dryness a
2.
A dry
;
state of the
withermg of a
body
;
Jlrbuthnol. the;
emaciation
limb.
Coxe. n. [L. from the Celtic. Ir. reithe, or receith ; Corn, urz, a ram ; W. hwrz, a a thrust, ram.] The ram, a constellation of fixed stars, drawn mind; followed \iy for or against. In logic, an inference drawn from premi on the globe, in the figure of a ram. It i;? the first of the twelve signs in the zodiac, ses, which are indisputable, or at least of which the sun enters about the 21st of I)robable truth. Encyc. The subject of a discourse or writing. March. Milton. Shak. AR'IETATE, v. i. [L. arieto, from nries.] An abstract or summary of a book, or the To butt, as a ram. [.Yot used.] Johnson. heads of the subjects. VRIETA'TION, n. The act of butting, as a A debate or discussion a.series of reason- ram. The act of battering with the aries or battering rum. ing; as, an argument was had before the Bacon. court, ui which argument, all the reasons 2. The act of striking or conflicting. [Rare-
A
reason offered for or against a proposi-
A RIES,
;
a.
AKGOL'ICS,
^
plants.
;
a reason oftered tion, opinion, or measure in proof, to induce belief, or convince the
stars, in the British catalogue, are sixtyfour. Encyc.
Pertaining to the ship Argo, Faber. Belonging to Argolis, a territory or district of Pelopoimese, between Arcadia and the Egean sea as the Jtr-
I
AR'IDNESS, n.
Reasoning argiunentation. What (lotli your arguing reprove ? Job. vi. ARGUMENT, n. [L. argumentum.]
ARGO-NAVIS,
ARG0L'I€,
ARIDITY,
;
;
to Colchis, in quest of the golden fleece. the ship Argo, is a constellation in the soutliern hemisphere, whose
•ARGO'AN,
ppr. Inventing and offering reasons; disputing; discussing evincing
accusin;
ARGUING,
.5.
;
were mged
In astronomy, an arch by which we seek another unknown arch, proportional to the first. Chambers.
Glanvitle.
ly used.']
ARIETTA, or
71.
[It.]
A
short song
;
an
ah-,
little air.
ARIGHT, adv. [a and right. Sax. giricht.] Belonging to argu- Rightly in a right form without mistake nent consisting in argument. or crime. Pope. Cicero. Sir IK Jones. ARGUMENTATION, n. Reasoning the ARIL, ) The exterior coat or CO vcrPliny. act of reasonuig the act of inventing or ARIL'LUS, ^ ARGONAUT'A, n. [See Argotuxut.] ing of a seed, fixed to it at A genus of shell-fish, of the order of vernie; forming reasons, making inductions, draw- the base only, mvesting it wholly or partestacea. The shell consists of one spiral and them to the and conclusions, ing applying tially, falling off spontaneously by involuted valve. There are several spein case discussion. Tlie operation of in some writers called, from the Greek, CaIt is either succulent, or cartilacies; one of which is the Argo, with a ferring pro])ositious, not known or admitlyptra. subdentated carina, the famous nautilus, ted as true, from facts or princi|)les kuo« n ginous; colored, elastic, rough or knotted. hinne. Milne. Martyn. Smith. ivhicli, when it sails, extends two of its admitted, or proved to be true. arms, spreading a membrane, which serves Watts. AR'ILLATED, ( Encyc. Havuig an exterior covfor a sail, and six other arms are throw en or aril, as coffee. ARGUMENTATIVE, a. Consisting of ar- AR'ILLED, enng J out, for rowing or steering. gument containing a process of reason Encyc. Eaton. Encyc. Curie r. ing as an argumentative discourse. AR'IMAN, [Per. ahriman. Sans, ari^ a. to the Arreasons for
ARGUMENT'AL,
a.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
ARGONAUT'I€,
Pertaining gonauts, or to their voyage to Colchis as the Argonautic story. Sir H'. Jones. ARGONAUT'IeS, ji. A poem on the subject of Jason's voyage, or the ex])e(lition of the Argonauts as, the Jlrgonautics oi ;
Showing
;
of things to their uses
wisdom
the adaptation argumentative of
as,
is
the Creator. adv. In an argumentative manner. Taylor. 'ARGUS, n. A fabulous being of antiquity said to have had a hundred eyes, place( Orpheus, of V. Flaccus, and of Apollonius Rhodius. by Juno to guard lo. The origin of this Encyc. 'ARGOSY, n. [Sp. argos, Jason's ship.] A being may perhaps be found in the TeuShak. tonic word arg, crafty, cunning, of which large merchantman a carrac. the hundred eyes are symbohcal. 'vVRGUE, v. i. [L. arguo, to show, argue accuse or convict Fr. arguer ; Sp. arguir ARGUS-SHELL, ?i. species of porcelainIt. arguire. The radical sense of arg'we is shell, beautifully variegated with spots, to urge, drive, press, or struggle.] resembhng, in some measiu'e, a peacock's to invent and offer reasons to J. To reason tail. Encyc. a. [L. argutus.] Sharp slu-ill support or overthrow a proposition, opin ion or measure as, A argues in favor of witty. [lAttle used.2 infinite
in
ARGUMENT'ATIVELY,
;
;
;
A
,
^
AR'IMA,
AHRIMAN
The
a foe.]
genius or demon of the Persians opposed to yezad, yezdan, ormozd, ojhormizda, the good demon. The ancient evil
magi held, that there are two deities or one the author of all good, principles eternally absorbed in light ; the other, the author of all evil, forever buried in darkness ; or the one represented by light ; ;
the other by darkness. The latter answers to the loke of the Scandinavians, whose Celtic name, lock, signifies darkness. Originally, the Persians held these demons or
jirinciples to be equal, and from all eternibut the moderns maintain that the evil ty So the principle is an inferior being. devil is called the prince of darkness. argues against ; ARGU'TENESS, To 2. to reason with ; followed by Gibbon. .Is. Researches. (Usjjute [Liltle itsed.] Drtjden. Encyc. with ; as, you may argue with your friend, A'RIAN, a. [L. ariolus or hariPertaining to Arius, a presl)yter ARIOLA'TION or ) a week, without convincing liim. of the church of Alexandria, in the fourth H.-VRIOLA'TION, S oto, a sooth sayer.j A soothsaying ; a foretelling. 'ARGUE, V. t. To debate or discuss ; to treat century or to his iloctrines. Brown. by reasoning ; as, the counsel argued the A'RIAN, n. One who adheres to the doc- ARIO'SO, a. [It. from ana, air.] Light ; cause before the supreme court ; the cause trines of Arius, who held Christ to be a //. Diet. au-y. was well argued. created being, inferior to God the father But according to Rousseau, applied to muTo prove or evince ; to manifest by infer- in nature and dignity, though the first sic, it denotes a kind of melody bordering ence or deduction ; or to show reasons for ; and noblest of all created beings ; and also on the majestic style of a capital air. that the Holy Spirit is not God, but creaas, the order visible in the universe argues Cyc. & divine cause. ted bv the power of the Son, Encyc ARI'SE, V. i. s as z. pret. arose ; pj). onsen ; ;
ARGUTE,
;
;
;
a measure
B
;
n.
it.
;
;
%
Vol.
I,
13
Acuteness
wittiness.
;
A U
D
^
"
S.
(
,
to
,
of usually applied to a corrupted form aristocracy. ARIST'OCRAT, n. One who favors an ariswho one Heb. Ch, or in practice tocracy principle is a friend to an aristocratical tbrm of
be the head or chief ;
t.
as, vajrors arise tVom lituiiid places. the horizon as, sun or a star arises or rises. To get out of bed to leave tlie place or or to leave a sitting or lying state of rest
])larc
is
;
To emerge from below
ARISTO€RAT'I€,
?
ARISTO€RATT€AL,
^
;
consisting in a principal men
;
;
[lOBture.
The king arose Dan. 4.
5.
and went
early
den
to the
Isviii.
toljecome appear, or become known visible, sensible or operative. To you shall the sun of righteousness arise Math. iv. Till the day star shall arise in your hearts
To
;
2 Pet.
To
i.
be put in motion
tated
To
0.
;
as, the
waves
;
to swell or
Ire
agi-
arose.
be excited or provoked
;
as an aristoeratic consti
cratic
measure
;
;
as,
an
aristo-
aristocratic pride or
man-
;
as, the
wrath
distress.
By whom Amos vii.
sliall
To appear
Jacob arise
?
for lie is
small
;
officers.
invade, assaidt or begin hostility
fol-
2.
celebrated pliiloso|>lier, who was at Stagyra, in Maccdon, about 384 years before Christ. The Aristotelian phjlosophv is otherwise called peripatetic. ARISTOTE'LIAN, n. A follower of Aristotle, who was a discijrle of Plato, and foiMided the sect of perijialrtics. [See
born
n.
pernicious
of the .Irisfotelic sysSchlegel, Trcms. 2.
[Gr. ^nefio;, number,
n.
[Gr. apiS^ru, to
n.
nun
munbering, from puS/io?, nmnher, rliythm, order, agreement.] The science of nmnbers, or the art of com-
number
;
from
putation. The various operations of arithmetic are performed by addition, subtraction, nndtiplication and division.
ARITllMET'ie, AR1T1IjMET'I€AL,
)
Pertaining to arith" metic
is
arm
the
of the Lord revealed.
liii.
armo ; Fr. armer ; Sp. armar: from L. arma.] To furnish or equip with weapons of offense, or defense as, to arm the militia. To cover with a plate, or with whatever will add strength, force, or security as, to arm the hilt of a sword. To furnish with means of defense; to preIt.
V.
t.
[L.
armare
;
;
;
divination.]
.\RITH'METIC, afnO/jLoc,
Isa.
ARM, 1.
efi'ects
AR'ITHMANCY, fittirtia,
;
Pertaining to Aristotle
or to his philosophy.
Rm,
Figuratively, jjower, might, strength a.s the secidar arm. In this sense the word is often used in the scriptures.
The philosophy
n.
or doctrines of Aristotle.
to the root,
coinciding with L. ramus, a branch, that is, a shoot, like the Celtic braich, L. brachium. But if the L. armus is directly from the Gr. opftoj, a joint, it would seem to lie formed from Gr. apw, to fit.] The hnib of the human body, which extcTids from the shoulder to the hand. The briinch of a tree, or the slender part of a machine, projecting from a trunk or The limbs of animals are also axis. sometimes called arms. A narrow inlet of water from the sea.
To whom
Peripatetic.]
ARISTOTE'LIANISM, .\RlSTOTELT€,
her, apieft-^Tixr;, the art of
to
;
enter upon an office. There arose a new king who knew not Jo seph. Ex. i. 12. To begin sedition, insurrection, or nni rose upon their tiny as, the men arose, or
To
Pertaining to Aris-
a.
totle, a
and
in a particular cliaracter
1.
of being aristocratical.
ARISTOTE'LIAN,
The
word Ivlongs
If so, this
Partaking of aristocracy
or Divination or the foretelling of future events poverty, depression by the use or observation of numbers.
To emerge from
11.
L. aj'mus, a)i arm, a shoulder, a ; wing. In Russ. a shoulder is ramo, which may be the same word as the L. armus.
tiition. 2.
tem.
of the king shall arise 10.
;
arm
;
;
8.
Pertaining to aristocracy
Faltr.
Bryant.
ARKTIZITE, ) " A mineral, now called Wernerite. AR€TlZiTE, I ARM, n. [Sax. arm, earni D. G. Sw. Dan.
ners.
vi.
;
Ps.
;
government of nobles, or
ARISTO€RAT'I€ALLY, adv. In an aris To begin to spring up to originate. focratical manner. A persecution arose about Stephen. Acts xi To revive from death; to leave the grave ARISTO€RATTCALNESS, n. The quality
Many bodies of saints ojose. Math, xxvii. a state of Fi^urativebi, to awake from sin and stupidhy ; to rejjent. Jlrise from the' dead, and Christ shall give thee life. Eph. v to exert power ; to 6. To begin to act move from a state of inaction. Let God arise ; let his enemies be scattered 7.
Burke.
government.
tlie ;>.
ved in the ark or who, according t» pagan fables, belonged to the ark. 'ARKITE, a. Belonging to the ark.
;
Syr. Sam. Eth. tt'N"i head, origin.] To ascend, mount up or move tn a higher
:.'.
ARM
ARK
I
arizn. [Sax. arisen ; proii. arize, aroze, It m;ij' be allied to Ar ri/zen ; Goth, reisan.
3.
pare for resistance
Arm Pet.
to fortify. yourselves with the same mind. ;
1
iv.
To
provide with arms, weapons, or means of attack or resistance to lake arms ; as, the nations arm for war. This verb is not really intransitive in this use, but reciprocal, the pronoun being omitted. The nations arm for, the na-
"ARM,
V. i.
;
—
tions
arm
themselves.
according \RMA'D.\, n. [Sp. from arma.] method of arithmetic. lowed by against. When he^arose against me, I caught him by ARITHMETICALLY, adv. According to •V fleet of armed ships a squadron. The term is usually applied to the Spanish fleet, 1 Sam. xvii. the beard. the rides, principles or method of arithcalled the Invincible Armada, consisting of In this sense, the word against really be metic. 130 ships, intended to act against England longs to the verb, and is necessary to give ARITIIMETI CIAN, n. One skilled in in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, A. D. it this meaning. [See Rise, another arithmetic, or versed in the science of lo88. form of this verb, which has the same sigmimhers. nification, and is more generally used in 'ARK, n. [Fr. arche ; L. area ; Sp. Port. It. ARM.'VDIL'LO, n. [Sp. so called from beairh a or coffer Ir. ing armed with a bony shell.] chest po])ular language.] ; area, airg, ARI'SING, ppr. Ascending; movmg upSax. ere or erk ; G. arche ; D. arke ; Ch. ((uadruped peculiar to America, called also tatoo, and in zoology, the dasypus. ward originating or proceeding; getting rJIN.] This animal has ncitlier fore-teeth, nor up springing up appearing. 1. A small close vessel, chest or coffer, such VRIST'A, n. [L.] In botany, awn, the long dog-teeth it is covered with a hard, bony as that which was the repository of the sholl,llividcd into movable belts, except tables of the covenant among the Jews pointed beard wliich issues from the husl* on the forehead, shoulders and haunches, or scaly flower cup of the grasses, called This was about three feet nine inches in Milne where it is not movable. The belts are the glume. The lid was the propitiatory, or length. ARISTAR'CHY, n. [Or. api^o;, best, and mercy seat, over which were the <'lieriibs. connected by a membrane, which enaliles the animal to roll itself up like a afxn, rule.] The vessel in which Moses was set afloat A body of good men in power, or govern- upon the Nile was an ark of bulrushes. hedge hog. These animals burrow in the ment by excellent men. earth, where they lie during the day time, Harington. 2. The large floating vessel, in which Noah ARlSTOe'RACY, n. [Gr. apcfo;, best, and and his family were preserved, during the seldom going abroad excejit at night. x|jor£u, to hold or govern.] They are of difterent sizes the largest deluge. 3 feet in length, without the tail. They \ form of government, in which the whole 3. A depository. subsist chiefly on fruits and roots some.supreme power is vested in the principal Arise, O Lord, into thy rest, thou and the ark of thy strength. Ps. cxxxii. times on insects and flesh. When attackpersons of a state or in a few men distin gnished by their rank and opulence. 4. A large boat used on American rivers, to ed, they roll themselves into a ball, presentWhen the supreme power is exercised by transport produce to market. ing their armor on all sides to any assaila small number, the government is called 'ARKITE, n. A term used by Bryant to deant but they are inoftensive, and their all oligarch)/. The latter word however note one of the persons who were prcser flesh is esteemed good food. Eneyc.
13.
;
S
;
to the rules or
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
ARM "ARMAMENT, from
taikle,
A
n.
ARM
[L. armamenlu, utensils,
arm(i.'\
of forces eijuipped for war; used of land or naval force. Jt is more gene rally used of a naval force, includinj; ships, men and all the necessary furniture for war. l>()(ly
IX
ARMAMENT' ARY, n. An armory zine or arsenal.
'AJJMATURE,
;
a
maga-
[Ritrelij used.']
n.
[L. armiilura.'}
Armor that which (h'fends the body. It comprehends whatever is worn for iltfense of the body, and has been sometimes used for offensive weapons, .finnature, like arms and armor, is used also of the furniture of animals and vegetables, evidently intended for tlieir protection; as prickles, spines and horns. 2. In ancient military art, an exercise performed with missive weapons, as darts, spears and arrows. Encyc. 'ARAIED, pp. Furnished with weapons of 1.
;
offense
furnislied with the sectuity; fortilied, in a moral
or defense
means of
;
sense.
In heraldry, armed is when the beaks, talons, horns, or teeth of beasts and birds of prey are of a diti'erent color from the rest of the body Chambers. 3. Capped and cased, as the load stone that
2.
;
is,
set in iron.
An
armed ship is one which is taken into the service of government for a particidar occasion, and armed like a ship of war. ARME'NIA, a. Pertaining to Armenia, a country and formerly, a kingdom, in Asia, divided into Major and Minor. The greater Armenia is now called Turcomania. ARME'NIAN, n. A native of Armenia, or the language of the country. Jones.
iSrV 7V.
Armenian menia,
bole is a species of clay from and found in other countries.
ArBut
the term, being of uncertain signification, is rejected in modern mineralogy. [See Cronsledt. Kirwan. Bole] Armenian stone, a sofY blue stone, consisting of calcarious earth or gypsum, with the of is too It soft to oxyil copper. give fire witli steel, loses its color when heated, and does not admit of a polish.
ARME-PUIS'SANT, Powerful
in
[See Puissant.]
arms.
'ARMFUL,
fVeever.
As much
n.
;
;
ARMOR
;
A
ARMORY,
:
ARMIN'IANISM, or tenets
•ARMHOLE,
n.
[arm and
hole.]
The
Power
in
arms.
ARMIP'OTENT, mighty
The pecuhar doctriiies
».
in battle.
ARMIS'ONOUS,
2.
Sounding or
rustling in arms. )!. [L. arma
ARMISTICE,
A
Gr.
still,
ifjj/ti
;
sisio,
Sp. armisticio
;
It.
;
J!,
;
;
gero.] Literally, bearing arms.
armiger
is
a
title
But in present usage, of dignity next in degree
In times of chivah-y, it sigto a knight. nified an attendant on a knight, or other person of rank, who bore his shield and
Jiryden.
hostility.
3.
Johnson.
Bred to arms denotes that a person has been educated to the profession of a soldier. The ensigns armorial of a family consisting of figures and colors borne in ;
marks of dignity and descending from fa-
'ARMOR,
shields, banners, &c., as
1.
and
71. [from arm..] Defensive arms any habit worn to protect the body in battle formerly called harA complete armor formerly con-; ness. sisted of a casque or helmet, a gorget, ;
;
rendered him other military services. So cuirass, gauntlets, tasses, brassets, cuishes, in antiquity, Abimilech, Said, &c. had and covers for the legs to which the spurs their armor bearers. 1 Sam. were fastened. Jiidg. ix. Encyc. xvi. As had Hector and Achilles. Homer. In English statutes, armor is used for the
This title, under the French princes, in England, was exchanged, in common usage, for esquire, Fr. ecuyer, a word of /similar import, from ef«, L. scutum, a
;
fense.
destitute
Beaumont.
A hole for the arm in a garment. 'ARMLET, [dim. of arm.] A little arm ARMIG'EROUS, a. [h.armiger; arata and a piece of armor for the arm a bracelet.
War
ity,
;
Without an arm
of weapons.
2.
whole apjiaratus of war; including
offenas defensive arms. The statutes of armor lUrected what arms exery man should provide, 27. Hen. II. and sive
as
well
in
Enryc.
and the man I sing. Dryden. in arms, to be in a state of hostilor in a militan' life. To arms is a phrase which denotes a taking arms for war or hostiUty; [larticularly, a summoning to war. To take arms, is to arm for attack or de-
to
of hostilities by agreement of the parties. a.
skill
Arms To be
Johnson.
and
armistizio ; Fr. nrmislice.] cessation of arms, for a short time, by convention ; a truce a temporary suspension
'ARMLESS,
Bacon.
The knowledge of coat-armor;
heraldrv.
[anna and polenlia. ARMPIT,?!, [arm andpit.] The hollow place or cavity under the shoulder. .Moion. Johnsoti. 'ARMS, 71. plu. [L. arma ; Fr. arme ; Sj). a. Powerful in arms;' It. arma.] Dn/den.\ 1. Weapons of offense, or armor for defense a. [arma &nd sonus.' and protection of the body. n.
Sound.]
stand
4.
the Arminians.
See Potency.]
cavi-
ty under the shoulder, or the armpit.
cjf
ARMIP'OTENCE,
as the arms can
Slender, as the arm. [Ao< Shak.
a.
in use.]
still
:
hold.
'ARMGAUNT,
is
Armiger
;
j\\cn.o Lso It a.
ARM
retained with us,| of Westminster. Hence armor includes as a title of respect, being the Latin word all instruments of war. equivalent to es/iuire, which sec. Spelman. Blackstone, B. iv. Ch. 7. B. i. Ch. V.',. a. [L. armilla, a bracelet, Hen. Hist. Brit. B. iii. Ch. 1. j'ARMILLARY, from armus, the arm.] 2. Ill a spiritual sense, a good conscience, faith and Christian Resembling a bracelet, or ring consisting graces arc called onnor. of rings or circles. It is chiefly applied to Rom. xiii. Eph. vi^ 2 Cor. vi. an artificial s(>h(tre, composed of a number Coat-armor is the escutcheon of a person or of circles of the mundane sphere, put tofiimily, with its .several charges and other gether in their natural order, to assist in furniture, as mantling, crest, supporters, motto, &e. giving a just conception of the constituEncyc. tion of the heav(;ns, and the motions of the ARMOR-BEARER, n. One who carries celestial bodies. tlie armor of another. This artificial sjihere revolves upon its axis within a horizon, divi- 'ARMORER, n. Amakerof annor or arms ded into degrees, and movable every way a manufacturer of instruments of war. The armorer of a ship has the charge of upon a brass supporter. Encyc. 'ARMING, ppr. F^quipping with arms pro- the arms, to see that they are in a conilition fit fi)r service. viding with the means of defense or attack also, iireparing for resistance in a ARMO'RIAL, a. Belonging to armor, or to moral sense. the arms or escutcheon of a family; as )!. The as same armorial. eiisiuns Blackstone. 'ARMINGS, ivaist-clothes, hung about a .slii))'s upper works. ARMOR'le, [Celtic ar, ui>on, anil I Chambers. l€AN, J"- mor, the sea; that i.-. ARMIN'IAN, a. I'ertaining to Arininius, or niariliiiie.] designating his principles. Designating the northwestern part of France, n. or of One of a sect ARMIN'IAN, party formerly iralied Armorica, aften\ard BreChristians, so called from Arminius, or tagne, or Britanny. This jiart of France is peo])led by inhabitants who Harmanseu, of llnlUmd, who flourishe
I
4.
tlistinction,
ther to son. In law, arms are any tiling which a man takes in his hand in anger, to strike or assault another. Cowel. Black.itone. In botany, one of the seven species of fulcra or props of plants, enumerated by
Linne and others. The different sjiecies of arms or armor, are prickles, thorns, forks and stings, which seem intended to protect the plants from injury by animals. Milne. Martyn,
A R R
A R O /»i>f (irms,
ARO'SE. The
A
AROUND', prep,
are such as may be charged witli powiltr, as cannon, muskets, mortars, &c. stand of anus consists of a musket, bayonet,
cartridge-box and belt, with a sword. But (i)r common soldiers a sword is not neces-
;
;
[Fr. armee
71.
har; Irom the
2.
arhhnr, or armroot of arm, armo
A collection or body of men armed fji war, and organized in comjianies, battalregiments, brigades and divisions,
my
In general, an artimes consists of infaniiT
modern
in
;
disciple
of Arnold of
?i.
ARNOT'TO,
The
n.
Anotta, which
Also a tree so called.
'ARNUTS,
n. Tall oat grass.
The quality of [Gr. aptoua.] plants which constilutes their fragrance, which is perceived by an agreeable smell, or a warm spicy taste. AROMAT'I€, Fragrant spicy I "' AROMAT'ICAL, strong-scented; odo riferous having an agreeable odor. ;
sleep
A
;
;
That which commu-
nicates an aromatic quality.
ring
Evelyn.
ophorum.]
saffron is sometimes
called. 1.
A chimical (ireparation of Paracelsus, formed by sublimation from equal quantities of hematite and sal ammoniac. The is also used by the same writer as .synonymous with lilhontriptic, a solvent word
mr
the sloue.
arraisoner,
;
put
;
1.
JValker.
Norm, arpen. n. [Fr. arpcnt Domesday, it is written arpenmis, ar pendus, and arpent. Colimiella mentions
A
ARQUEBUSA'DE, 9.
Encyc.
Coxe.\
n.
A
distilled
applied to a bruise. The shot of an arqnebnse.
rVRQUEBUSE,
H'ARQUEBUSE,
Ash.
S
ounces. A larger kind, used in fortresses, carried a ball of three ounces and a half
ARQUEBUSIE'R,
?!.
A
armed with
n. n.
A
n. arra'ne.
for
want of knowlDryden.
Arraignment
;
as,
clerk of the arraigns. Blackstone. pp. Called before a tribunal to answer, and elect triers accused ; in called question. ;
VRRA'IGNING, ;;;»•. or tribunal
;
Calling before a court accusuig. n. [Norm, arresnementy
ARRA'IGNMENT,
arraynement.] act of arraigning the act of calling arid setting a prisoner liefore a court to answer to an accusation, and to choose his
The
;
triers.
Accusation.
A calling in question for faults. ARRA'IMENT, n. [Sec Array.]
3.
garments.
ARRANtiE,
We
V.
t.
now
ranger, to set in order; 7-ank, 1.
To
a
row or
put
line.
Clothes;
use raiment.
[Fr. arranger,
Arm.
of ad and
renega, rang,
See Rank.]
in ])roper order ; to dispose thein the manner intended,
parts of a whole
an arquebuse.
AR'RACH, ARRACK',
to
ARRAIGNED,
Encyc. soldier
is
tribunal.
any
arraign you
edge.
2. ;
will not
ARRA'IGN,
;
hand gun a species of fire arms, anciently used, which was cocked with a wheel. It carried a ball that weighed nearly twc
assize,
;
;
gun.]
A
the
;
They
D. bus, a pijie, a gun gun Sw. bossa, a gmi or canHence the word signifies a hook
the Teutonic bus, a tube, pipe,
non.
liquor
order ; arraign a writ of novel
writers, to set in
cause the tenant to be called to make the ])laint, and set the cause in order, that the tenant may be brought to answer. Cowel. To accuse to charge with faults. Johnson. More correctly, to call before the bar of reason, or taste to call in questions for faults, before
Chesterfield.
[Fr. fvom arquer, to iii«ke crooked, and
}
3.
as, to
;
To arraign
disseisin.
was ef(ual to half the The word is supposed to
read
Blackstone.
for trial
fit
Laiv
to
According to
that the arepennis jus:er.
called, the indictment is
and he is put to plead, guilty or not and to elect by whom he will be
tried. 2.
;
be corrupted from arvipendium, or aripennium, the ineasuring of land with a cord Spelman. Lunier.] portion of land in France, ordinarily containing one hundred square rods or perchBut the arpent is difes, each of IS feet. The ferent in different parts of France. arpent of Paris coutahis 900 square toises. It is less than the English acre, by about one seventh. Encyc. Coicel. Spelman. ,'lrthur Young.
When
to him, guilty,
In
Roman
[Norm, arraner, to answer, The usual derivation of this aresner, to put
word, from Sax. wregan, gewregan, to acIt appears to cuse, is probably incorrect. Norman origin, and ifs is radical, it coincides in origin with L. reus, contracted iiom the root of res.] To call or set a prisoner at the bar of a court, to answer to the matter charged against him in an indictment or information.
n. [From It. ai-pa, a harp. distinct sound of the notes of an instrumental chord, accompanymg the voice.
ARPEG'tilO,
'ARPENT,
Stromeyer.
aira'ne.
t.
be of
;
;
V.
and
to arraign.
facidties.
action
Cleavdand.
Haiiy.
ARRA'IGN,
The
Rendering spicy;
impregnating with aroma. \RO'MATOUS, a. Containing aroma, or the principle of fragrance. AR'OPH, n. [A contraction of aroma philos-
A name by which
dormant
pp. Excited into
AROW,
;
1.
to arouse the
;
AROUS'ING,
;
ppr.
zed, generally in hexahedral pristns or The massive varieties have jjyramids. usually a fibrous structure, exhibiting various imitative forms, being sometimes coraloidal.
in motion.
;
bituminous stone, in \R'OMATITE, smell and color resembling myrrh. Coxe. AROBIATiZA'TION, n. The" act of im pregnating or scenting with aroma, or rendering aromatic. AR'OMAT IZE, v. t. To impregnate with aroma to infuse an aromatic odor to give a spicy scent or taste to perfume. Bacon. AR'03IATIZED, pp. Impregnated with aroma rendered fragraiu.
AROMATIZING,
Ar.
It is
:
AROUS'ED,
plant which yields a spicy, fragrant smell, or a warm pungent taste; as sage, summer savory, geranium, sweet mai'joram, &c. Milne.
n.
;
to excite.
excite into action, that which is at rest to stir, or |)ut in motion or exertion, that is languid ; as, to ai'ouse one from
A
AR'OMATIZER,
Heb Sin
[In
stir,
which
<,
n.
arouz'.
To
;
n.
t.
Shak.
ARO'MA, I " AR'OMA, I
VROMAT'le,
V.
=> haratza, to
ppr. Putting in motion stirexciting into action or exertion. In a row sucadv. [a and rou\] Sidney. Shak. cessively. see. AROYNT', adv. Begone; away. "Ofc.
of the bunium, pig-
nut or earthnut.
from pure carbonate of lime, in hardness, sjjecific gravity, crystaline structure, &c. It isharderthan calcarious and exhibits several varieties of spar, structiu-e and form. It is often crystalidiffers
It may be contracted into rouse. allied to D. raazen; G. brausen, to rage, to stir, bluster; Class Rs.]
century, preachChiux-h, fir which
A name
AR'RAGONITE,
A
often
;
ARNOT,
adv. In a circle ; on every side. In a looser sense, at random ; without any n. [From Molhia in Arfixed direction ; as, to travel around from ragon, Spain.] In mineralogy, a species of carbonate of tr)wn to town. [See Round.] n. [Gr.] Grecian measure of liiTie, lint not jiiu'e, and said to contain 3 or 4 per cent, of carbonate of strontian. It fifty feet. Also, a square measure of hall
,0
12tli
ed against the Romish he was banished but lie was afterwards permitted to return. By his preaching, an insurrection was excited, tor which he was condennied and executed. Encyc.
brows. Dryden. In a looser sense, from place to place ; at
AROUSE,
;
-ARNOLDIST, n. A Brescia, who in the
this name is toddy, a liquor distilled from the juice of the cocoanut tree, iirocurcd by incision. Some persons alledge it to be a spirit distilled from rice or sugar, fermented with the juice of the cocoa-nut.
hit
the plethron, a measure not ascertained The Egyptian aroura was the square of a iiundred feet or a hundred cubits. Encyc. Arbuth.
oliicers.
and cavalry, with artillery ; although the union of all is not essential to the constitution of an army. Among savages, armies are diff'erentl}' formed. a vast multitude as an 2. A great number army of locusts or caterpillars. Joel ii.25.
;
which usually bears
;
AROURA,
lions,
under pro|)er
[a and round. See Round.] sides encircling; encom-
a lambent flame around
random. 2.
arma.']
1.
all
as,
;
AROUND',
Ir.
;
common
About; on I)assing
ers or wrestlers.
'ARMY,
spirituous liquor imported from the East Indies. Tlie name is said to sigiiily, in the East, any spirituous liquor but that
\erb, to arise. 1.
sary.
In falconry, arms are the legs of a hawk from the thigh to the foot. Encyc. ARMS-END, ». At the end of the arms at a good distance a phrase taken from box-
A R R
past or preterite tense of the
See Orrach. plant. contracted into rack.
A
or best suited for the purpose
arranged for
battle.
;
as troops
A R R To
2.
adjust
;
to si!ttlc
A R R
to put in oiflor ; to use of the word of very
A R R
In gelid caves with horrid glooms arrayed.
;
1.
Trumbull. pp. Set in order, or in lines for attack or defense ARRaNGLD, pp. Put in order disposed arranged dressed ; adoined by dress ill tlie proper order ini[)anneled adjusted. as a jury (enveloped. n. The act of putting in proper order the state of being jiut in or ARR.A'VKR, 11. One who arrays. In Enan officer who had a coniinisder disposition in suitable form. glish history, sjou of array, to put .s(d(liers of a comity 9. Tliat wliirli is disjiosed in order system in a condition for of parts disposed in due order. military service. The interest of that portion of sociiil ar- ARRA'YING, ppr. Setting in order; putting on splendi
prepare a popular gencr il application. ;
.ARRA'YED,
;
in ordi'r
;
;
;
original writ
arrangements
as,
;
rangement between themselves concerning tlieir disputes a popular use of the word. 3. Classification of facts relating to a sub ;
ject, in a regular, systematic order
lower sail Arm. rear, rem; or the fundament W. rhevyr, id., from Lniiier deduces arrear and Wifi!, thick. arriere fromL. arf and retro. But the deri \ atioii from the Celtic seems most jirobaurrinr, to
;
refr,
;
bly correct.] as the Behind ; at the hinder part.
;
purpose ill arn.-il of Blackstone. judgijicnt. A mangy humor between the ham and pastern of the liiad legs of a horse. Johnson.
motion 5.
In
The
ARRESTA'TION, an
n. arrest, or seiziu'e.
ARREST'ED, Spenser.
when
the verdict difliTS materially pleudiiifTs; or when the case laid in Ihe declaration is not sufficient in point of law, to fdund an action u])on. The motion for iliis is called a ;
iVmn Ihe
;
;
by power, physical
hindrance or restraint. an arre.it of judgment is the staying or slopping of a judgment after verdict, for causes a.^signed. Courts have to power arrest judgment for intrinsic causes appearing upon the face of the record as when the decluralion varies from the ;
;
reeeiving company. Final .settlement; adjustment by agree ment as, the parties have made an ur
;
A
stop, 4. In law,
;
4.
seizure, or takint;
or moral, •i.
;
;
ARRANGEMENT,
Any
stopped
;
act of arresting ;
Seized
pp.
hindered
;
apinehended
:
restrained.
;
But from this use, we ARRESTER,/ Oik; who arrests. In noun in the phrase, i/i ARREST'OR, Scots laiv, tlic jierson at ARRANGER, 7i. One that puts in order. ^ "io.«e suit an arrest is made. ARRANtilNG, ppr. Putting iji due order or arrear, to signity behind in payment. ARRE'AR, n. That which is behind in pay- ARREST'ING, ppr. Seizing; staying hinform adjusting. AR'RANT a. [I know not the origin of this ment, or which remains uiii)aid, thougli dering; restraining. due. It is generally used in the i)lural ARREST word. It coincides in sense with the W. MENT, n. In Scots law, an aras the arrears of rent, wages and taxes cam, notorious.] rest, or detention of a criminal, till he finds and supposes a part of the money already caution or surety, to stand trial. Notorious, in an ill .sense infainou.s; mere; paid. vile as an arrant rogue or coward. Also the order of a judge by wliicli a debtor to the anestor's debtor is prohibited to AR'R.VNTLY, adv. Notoriously, in an ill ARRE'ARAgE, n. [arrc r and the common French termination age.] sense infamously impudently shaniefidly. make payment, till th<: debt due to the arrestor is paid or secured. AR'RAS, n. [Said to be from Arras, the cap- Arrears any sum of money reinaining im])aid, after previous ))ayment of a part. A ARRET', n. [Contracted from ital of Artois, in the French Netherlands, arrests, Fr. person may be in arrear for the whole where tljis article is manufactured.] arrete, fixed.] amount of a debt but and arrears arrearThe decision of a court, tribunal or council Tapestry hangings wove with figures. age imply that a part has been paid. a decree pubUshed the edict of a soveShak. ) raised, erect ARRA' Y, n. [Norm, araie, and arracr, arair, ARREcT', reign prince. "' [L.a/rcc/its, from arrigo. SceReacli.] to array, settle, prepare ray, a robe and ARREeT'ED, ^ ARRET', V. t. To assign to allot. Obs. Erect attentive a as the array or pannel of the Jury Old Fr. person listening. Spenser. this seiise obsolete.
Linuean arrangement of plants.
retain the
word
as a
^
'
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
word contracted Ir. earradh, a ARRI'DE, V. t. [L. arridro.] To laugh at ; to please well. B. Jonson. annor, furniture, accouternients, ARRENTA'TION, n. [Sp. arreyidar, to [.Yot in use.] of ad and reddo, to rent, or take by lease wares It. arredo, litrniture, implements, ARRIE'RE, n. The last body of an army ; return. See to prepare or erpiii) Arm. Rent.] now called rear, w hicli see. ringing arredarc, In the forest laws of England, a licensing the reiza, to ])ut in order or arrange y-p. arreo. or ban and arriere ban. This owner of land in a forest, to inclo.se it witli Jlniere-ban, Port, arreio, arreyo, array, dress Port, ar phrase is defined to be a general proclamaa small ditch and low hedge, in consideraClass Rd., and allied to rear, to dress. tion of the French kings, by which not tion of a yearly rent. Cowel. The rod, radius, ray. their innnediate fi-udatories, but their primai-y sense is to ARREPTI'TIOUS, a. [L. arrepius, of ad only make straight or right. See Dress.] vassals, were summoned to take the field and rapio, to snatch. See Rapacious.' .1. Order disposition in regidar lines as an for war. In this case, arriere is the French 1. Snatched away. army in battle array. Hence a posture of word signifying those who are last or be2. [ad and repo, to creep. See defense. Creep.] Crept hind, and ban is proclamation. [See Ban.] in privily. Johnson. Bailey. 2. Dress garineuts disposed in order ujion or fief. A fee or fief dependent .irriere-fee ARREST', V. t. [Fr. arreter, for arrester the person. on a superior fee, or a fee held of a feudaDryden Sp. arrestar; It. arreslare ; L.resto, to stop; 3. In law, the act of impanneling a jury W. araws, arosi, to stay, wait, dweU Eng. tory. or a jury impanneled that is, a set {Arriere vassal. The vassal of a vassal. jury to rest. See in order by the sherifl', or called man by 1. To obstruct Rest.] to stop to check or hinder ARRI'VAL, n. The coming to, or reaching Blnckstone. Cowel. nian_. a place, from a distance, whetlier by water, molion as, to arresMlie current of a river: Commission of array, in English history, was as in its original sense, or by land. to arrest the senses. a counnission given by the prince to otfiTo take, seize or apprehentl by virtue of 2. The attaimnent or gaining of any object, cers in every county, to muster and array by effort, agreement, practice or study. a warrant from authority ; as, to an'est one the iidiabitants, or see them in a condition for debt or for a crime. ARRI'VANCE, n. Company coming. [.Yot for war. Blackstone. Shak. ARRA'Y, I'. /. To place or dispose in order, 3. To seize and fix as, to arrest the eyes or 2. "serf] Arrival a reaching in progress. Ohs. attention. as troops for battle. Brown. 2. To deck or dress The appearance of such a person in the to adorn with dress world, and at such a period, ought to arrest Uie ARRI'VE, V. i. [Fr. arriver Arm. arrivont, it is applied especially to dress of a splenorroi, a suit of
;
;
;
;
-
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
_
;
;
;
;
;
;
.Irray thyself with glory.
Job,
To
envelop.
Buckminster.
xl.
Pharaoh arrayed Joseph witli fine linen. Gen. xll. 3. To set a jury in order for the trial of a cause; that is, to call them man by man. Blackstone. Cowcl. 4.
arrivein
consideration of every tliinking mind.
did kind.
To
hinder, or restrain course of justice.
;
as,
to
airest the
authority.
An
arrest
or touching the body.
is
made by
It.
arrivare
;
Sp. Port, arribar ; ;
In Irish, airbhe
arivi.
n. The taking or apprehending of a person by virtue of a warrant froiii
ARREST',
;
of ad and Fr. rive, the shore or sloping bank of a river: Sp. ribera L. ripa ; Sans. that rib,
word
;
in
rive like
is ribs.
It
appears
and ripa arc rathcally one manner, costa, a rib, and
coast are radically the same.] seizing 1. Literally, to come to the shore, or bank.
A R
A R R Hence
We
HiuTC de Grace, July 10, 1824. N. W. To come to or reach by traveling on land
ji.
A weight in Porin Spain, of Also a Spanish meas-
[Arabic]
two pounds
tliirty
AR'ROGANCE, J'oo'o,
to claim
desire
;
Sp. Dictionary. n. [L. arrog-anlia, from arof nrf and rogo, to beg,
Fi'. arrogance Sp. Von. arrogancia ;
Ann. roguentez
;
;
It.
arroganza.
sent the xxii.
v.
purposes of
Hab. evil
Jer. ix. Ps. Ixiv. ))lants
The word
;
n.
A
?;.
2.
AR'ROGANCY,
n.
Pi-ov. viii.
a.
;
Consisting of arrows.
Arrogance.
Formed Uke an arrow. 'ARSE, 11. ars. [Sax. earse 2.
[This or-
is less ui'ua/.]
ihograplui
a. Assuming; making or having the disposition to make exorbitant claiuis of rank or estimation giving one's
; Persic, arsit, or arst.] tocks or hind part of an animal.
To hang an
:
;
s))ecies
;
portance. n.
Arrogance.
[Little
behind
;
The to
A
repository or magazine of arms and military stores, whether for land or naval ser-
Claimed
by
undue
pretensions.
AR'ROGATING,
or Challenging ppr. claiming more power or respect than is just or reasonable.
The
act of arrogating ARROGA'TION, or making exorbitant claims; the act ol takins; more than one is justly entitled to AR'ROGATIVE, a. Assulifing or making n.
More claims and pretensions. n. [from Fr. arrondir to uiuke round: (if (/ and rond, round.] circuit a district a division or portion of
unc'iip
ARROND'ISMENT,
^
;
;
is
felony.
The
defi-
varied by statutes in In Constates. necticut, the burning not only of a dwellor house contiguous building, but of a ing to be arship or other vessel, is declared son, if human Ufe is thereby destroyed or put to hazard.
ART,
ARSENle,
n.
[Ar. i_«j•^J zu'iiakon
J.ii.»j;i zarnika
;
;
Syr.
Gr. ap«Kxor; L. arse-
nicum ; Sp. arsenico ; Fr. arsenic] Arsenic, as it is usually seen in the shops, is not a metal, but an oxyd, from which the metal may be easily obtained liy mixing it with half its weight of black flux, and introducing the mixture into a Florence flask, cradually raised to a red heat, in a sand bath. A brilliant metallic sublimate of pure arsenic collects in the upper jiart of the flask. Arsenic is of a steel blue
n.
is
[L. ars, artis
from the root of radical sense
ARSENICAL
;
pp.
common law
nition of this crime different countries
vice.
;
over kings.
Russian measure of two
and
:
repository.]
ACID. Ar or AR'ROGATE, v. t. [L. on-og-o,ofo(/and rogo senic cinnbined with a greater proportion Fr. arroger ; Sp. Port, arrogar; It. arro of oxygen, than in the arsenious acid. It gare. The prunary sense of rog'o, to ask, is called arsenic acid by most authors. is to i-each or stretch.] n. A neiural sak, formed by To assume, demand or challenge more than ARSE'NIATE, arsenical acid condiined with any metalto make undue claims, from is proper lic, earthy or sahne base. vanity or false pretensions to right or Lavoisier. Fourcroy. merit as, the Pope arrogated dominion s-u
AR'ROGATED,
by the
but-
be slug-
n. The vulgar name of a of ]K)lygonum, or knot-grass.
ARSE'NIA€
used.]
A
n.
four inches and 242 decimals. This to be the Chinese arschin, of which four make three yards English. Toolie's Russia. Encyc. ARSON, n. arsn. [Norm. Fr. arsine,arseun; feet,
seems
ti. [Sp. Port. It. Fr. Arm. a magazine or repository of stores; in Ital- 'ART. The second person, indicative mode, ian and Spanish, a dock or duck-yard present tense, of the substantive verb am; L. ar.r navalis, a naval citailel or probably l)ut from were, Sw. vara, Dan. vcerer.
;
ARROGANTLY,
AR'ROGANTNESS,
'ARSHINE,
'ARSENAL,
;
arrogant pretensions or behavior adv. In an arrogant with imdue pride or self ini manner
a.
'ARSE-SMART,
;
;
to lag
ar-
Pertaining to, or con The arsenious acid, or taining arsenic. white oxyd of arsenic, is a combination of with a less arsenic proportion of oxygen than in the ar.?eniac acid. 'ARSENITE, n. A salt formed by the arsenious acid, with a base.
ARSENIOUS,
gish, or tardy.
;
an undue degree of importance haughty conceited applied to persons. Containing arrogance marked with arrogance proceeding from undue claims or self importance applied to things as
self
arse, is
with
Combined with
from L. ardeo, arsum, to burn.} Milton. of a dwelling Cowper. In law, the malicious burning house or outhouse of another man, which D. aars ; G.
arsrh.
ARROGANT,
;
;
To combine
t.
a.
senic.
There \\ hence the name. are several species. From the root of the arundinacea, or starch-plant, is obtauied the arrow-root of the shops. Encyc. The starch of the maranta, or arrow-root, a mitritive medicinal food.
AR'ROWY,
v.
arsenic.
;
cause the arrogance of the proiiJ to ii,
'aRSEN'I€ATE,
Muhlenberg.
The head of an arrow. ARSEN'ICATED,
n. The Maranta a genus The In dians are said to employ the roots of the arandinacea, in extracting the virus of poi-
;
Sam.
Fourcroy. J\/icholson. Cyc. a. Belonging to arsenic r consisting of or containing arsenic.
of plants, natives of the Indies.
soned arrows
and
brilliant,
yellow,
ARSENICAL,
plain or genus of
the Triglochin.
AR' ROW-ROOT,
;
See
;
1
2 Sam. is used
words and malicious men. Ps. xi. Prov. xxv. Cruden. Brown.
Sagittaria ; a genus of aquatic plants, so called from the resemblance of the leaves to the point of an arrow.
mation or power, or which exalts the worth or inqiortaiice of the person to an nndue degree proud contempt of others: conceitedness presumption. Is. xiii.
as thunder,
and famine.
iii.
AR'ROW-GRASS, AR' ROW-HEAD,
self; that species of pride which consists in exorljitant claims of rank, dignity, esti-
9.
Ez.
in
seemingly talcky masses of various sizes: realgar is red, of different shades, and often crystahze
also for slanderous
The act or quahty of taking much upon one
I will
ment appears
God are the ap-
judgmems of God,
lightning, tempests
.firrogate.]
cease.
offense, straight, barbed, to be shot
])ain the conscience. Job vi. Ps. xxxviii. In a like figurative manner, arrows repre-
;
ure of thirty two Spanisli pints.
radius, a
weapon of
missive
prehensions of his wrath, which pierce and
;
five poiuids.
A
slender, pointed and with a bow. In scripture, the arrows of
;
tugal of
rat/,
shoot.] 1.
;
twenty
[Sax. arewn. Q,u.
AR'ROW,)!.
;
ARRO'BA,
its
gnawin<;.
;
the post arrives at 7 o'clock. reach a point by progressive motion gain or compass by effort, practice study, enquiry, reasoning or experiment as, to arrive at an unusual degree of excel lence or wickedness to arrive at a conelusion. 4. To liajjpen or occur. He to whom this glorious death airivefi. Waller. ARRI'VE, V. t To reach. [JVot in use.] Shnk. ARRI'VING, ppr. Coming to, or reacliing, by water or land gaining by research, effort or study.
To
to
and the metal with afJ compoimds, is a viruleiu poi,son, vulgarly called rats-bane. It forms alloys with most of the metals. Combined with sulphur it forms orpiment or realgar, which are the yellow and red sulplmrets of arsenic. Orpimein is the true arsenicum of the ancients. Plin. .34, 18. Native orpicolor, quite brittle,
A
ARRO'SION,
as,
3.
ART
S
of n Icrritory, in France, for the exercise particular jm'isdiction. n. s as :. [L. arrodo.]
to or reach in jirogiesa by arrived at followed by at.
water, y.
come
to
straining,
is
W.
;
probably contracted cerz, Ir. ceard.
from
strength,
and power, and lience of analogy in can.] ].
The
stretching,
the jirimary sense of strength skill.
See an
The dis|)Osition or modification of things by human skill, to answer the purpose inIn this sense art stands opposed Bacon. Encyc. system of rules, serving to facilitate the performance of certain actions opposed
tended.
to nature.
A
;
to science, or to speculative principles ; as the 0(7 of building or engraving. Arts are divided into useful or mechanic, and liberal
or polite. The mechanic arts are those in which the hands and body are more conas in making cerned than the mind These arts are clothes, and utensils. Tlie liberal or j)ohte arts called trades. are those in which the mind or imagination is chiefly concerned as poetry, :nusic ;
;
and painting. In America, literature and the elegant a)(s must grow up side by side with the coarser plants of daily necessity. Irving-
ART 3.
A R T
ing certain actions, iic<|iiirc
A R T
com]>lex masses, and forming long single pyramids, with very short and slender columns. Encye.
of perform
Skill, dexterity, or tlio ])0\ver
found
crj'stals,
;
in
'ARTIC. This word
is
by mistake used
Ijy
ARTICt I5(
ARTICULATE,
sonjc authors for arctic.
tape.
a. [L. articularis.-] lontring to the joints; as, the gout is articular disease.
I.AR,
an
a. [L. firliculatus, jointed, .
distinct.]
.^
^
,
^
„
',
ARTEMIS'IA, n. Mug-wort, soutliern ARTICHOKE, n. [Qu. the first syllable of Formed by jointing or artinuliitiori of tho Gr. opriTixa. Fr. aiiichaut Arm. arti An organs of speech wood, and wormwood a iienus of plants applied to sound. articulate sound is. ni.i'Je 'by j'io.sinjt -iiOd of nunicroMS species. Of these, the ab chaudcn; S|). alcnchofa Vorr. alcactwfra It. The The j.iitcsinthium or couunoii wormwood is wel o|)ening the organs ofs|)ee(li. carciofo, carciofano, or cariiifalo. :
;
;
;
known.
first
ARTE'RIAL, to
a.
[See
an artery or the
.iiienj.] arti;ries
Pertaining as arterial
;
Contained
an artery; a»
in
arterial blood. n. [Gr. apr»;pia, an ara cutting.] an artery by the lancet, for
AKTERlOT'OiMY, and
tery,
ro|i!;,
The opening
of
the purpose of letting blood. •AliTER V, ?i. [Gr. aprjjpia, from ar;p, air, and so called, tr;fi[io, to preserve or contain fr(jm the opinion of the ancients, that the The arteries contained or circnlatetl air. term was also applied to tlie trachea or wind pipe, arlerin aspera. In Ger. lii/l in ader, air-vein, is the name for artery in Swed. Dutch, slag-ader, stroke-vein ;
;
;
A
thi.slle,
arlischoke
Dan.
;
arti.'ikok.]
A plant
action. 2.
chard,
.somewhat resembling a thistle, with a dilated, indtricated and prickly calyx. The head is large, rough and scaly, on an upright stalk. It is coinj)osed of numerous, oval scales, inclosing the florets, sitting on a broad receptacle, which, with the fleshy base of the scales, is the eatable part of the plant. Encyc. Miller. The Jerusalem artichoke is a species of sunflower or helianthus. 'ARTICLE, n. [L. articulus, a joint, from arlus ; Gr. apSpor.] 1. A single clause in a contract, account system of regulations, treaty, or other wri-
Dan. jnds-aare, ting ; a particular separate cliarge or item, puls-ader, pldse-^•ein ; in an account; a term, condition, or stip pulse vein, that is, the beating vein.] In short, a distinct ulation, in a contract. cylindrical vessel or tube, which conveys the blood from the heart to all parts of the part of a writing, instrunieut or discourse, body. There are two j)riiici])al arteries consisting of two or more particulars ; a: the aorta, which rises from the left ventriarticles of agreement ; an account concle and ramifies through the whole body sisting of many adicles. and the jndmonan/ artery, which conveys 2. a doctrinal point or point of fiiith tlie blood from the right ventricle to the proposition in theology ; as the thirty-iiitie An artery aiiicles. lungs, to undergo respiration. is composed of three coats ; the outer con- 3. distinct part. sists of condensed cellular mend)rane, and Upon each ar(ic/? of human duty. Paley. is supplied with numerous blood vessels 4. particular commodity, or substance as, and nerves ; the middle coat consists of an article of merchandize ; salt is a necescircular fibers, generally supposed to be sary article. In common usage, this word is a|)])lied to almost nui.scular ; the inner coat, thin, smooth, every separate suband dense, confines the blood within it? stance or material.
A
;
A
A
and
canal,
ARTFUL,
facilitates its
a.
[Sec
.Irl.]
motion. Parr.
art or skill. 2. Artificial, 3.
Cunning; crafty
;
as opposed to natural. Johnson. practicing art, or stratagem;
as an artful boy.
[This is
the
G.
Clarendon. In botany, that part of a stalk or stem,
7.
skilfully
adv.
With
art,
;
as an artful
the,
n.
Art; craft; cunning
?
"• $
Pertaining to joints,
or
to
this,
that,
;
il,
2.
English
to,
in
le,
;
la,
les,
The
tl:
;
which
ARTIIRIT'IS,
3. 4.
lars. [JVot used.] To treat, stipulate or used.]
separate par-
Brown.
Shak.
make
terms.
[.Vot
Shak.
To joint.
Smith. pp. Uttered distinctly in
syllables or words.
Jointed
;
having
joints, as
ARTIC ULATELY,
a plant.
With
adi:
distinct ut-
terance of syllables or words. 2.
Article
by
article
;
in detail.
ARTIC ULATENESS,
The
ii.
Paley. quality of
being articulate.
ARTIC'ULATING, ;>;jr.
Uttering in distinct
syllables or words.
ARTICULATION,
n. In anatomy, the joining or juncture of the bones. This is of three kinds 1st, diarthrosis, or a movable connection, including cnarthrosis, or the ball and socket joint artlirodia, which is the same, but more superficial ginglymus, or hinge-like joint and trochoid, or the wheel and axle: 2d, synarthrosis, immovable connection, as by suture, or junction by serrated margins harmony, or union by straight margins .ind gompliosis, like a nail driven in a board, as the teeth in their sockets 3d, symphysis, or union by means of another substance ; as synchondrosis, union by a cartilage ; :
:
;
;
in
pri-
;
;
:
syssarcosis, union by muscular fibres synneurosis, union by a tendon syndesmosis, union by bgaments and synostosis, union by a bony substance.
;
;
;
V.
t.
To draw up
in distinct par-
ticulars; as, to article the eiTOrs or folhes 2.
in
;
ARTIC ULATED, 2.
see.
ARTICLE,
Jointed
ARTICULATE,
;
Italian.
vocal sounds, but have, or very imperfectly, the
Expressed in articles, or ticulars. [Ao< used.]
fiirmed with joints. Botany. r. t. To utter articulate sounds ; to utter distinct syllables or words. 9 To draw up or write in separate particu3.
[ATot in use.]
in
la,
all,
power of articulation.
;
the
gout afiecting the joints. )i. [Gr. op9pirtj, from ap9poi, a joint. It seems to be of the same fam ily as artus, a limb.] In a general sense, any ])ainful disea-se of the joints; but more particularly, the gout, an
mouth and make either not at
mary
address.
ARTHRIT'I€, ARTHRIT'I€AL,
jnomini 111 diftc'rence between the human voice and tli.it of bnitrs. Ihutis ojicn the
use of these adjectives was to convert an indeterminate name into a determinate one or to limit the application of a common name, to a specific, known, or certain individual. But article being an improjier term to express the true signification, I make use of definitive,
or cunning
dextrously.
'ARTFULNESS,
rate,
which is between two joints. JMilne. In grammar, an adjective used before
French ;
of time.
;
Proceeding from art or craft
vening vocal sounds, form what is called sounds ; sounds distinct, sepaand modified by arti
urticuluie
uouns, to limit or define their application; as hie, ille, ipse, in Latin o, jj, to, in Greek
most
.scheme.
'ARTFULLY,
compose the blood. Darwin.
A point
usual sense.] 4.
articles wliich
5.
Drrjdcn.
other, the organs are, or may be opened, and a vowel is uttered, as in attune ; and the difliuent articulation.s, with the inter-
;
The Ci/c.
Performed with
tion or closing of the organs forms a joint or articulation, its in the syllables ab, ad, ap ; in passing from one articulation to an-
jirobably the L. carduus, corru|)ted. D. artichok ; G
is
.syllable
of a man. Taylor.' To accuse or charge by an exhibition ofl " He shall be articled articles. against Stat. in the High Court of admiralty."
2.
Coxe. (^uincy. In botany, the connection of the jiarts of a plant by joints; also the nodes or joints, as in cane and maize. Encyc.
hereditary, intermitting disease, usually 3. The forming of words ; a distinct utterafiecting the small joints; sometimes the stomach. ance of syllables and words by the human Core, a3. George III. (^uinaj. ARTHRO'DIA, n. [from apSpou, to frame or 3. To bind by articles of covenant or stipu- voice, by means of closing and opening the organs. lation ; as, to article an apprentice to a mearticulate.] 1. 4. consonant ; a letter noting a jointing or chanic. species of articulation, in which the head of one bone is receivecl into the shallow .\RTI€LE, V. i. [supra.] To agree by articlosing of the organs. socket of another; as the humerus and the cles to stipulate. Donne. 'ARTIFICE, Ji. [L. artifcium, from ars, art,
A
A
;
scapula. 2. In natural histori/,
Encyc. a genus of imperfect
'ARTICLED,
pp.
Drawn up in
accused or bound by
articles.
particulars
:
and facio, to make.] Stratagem an arttlil or ingenious device, ;
in
• •
ART
A R U
A
S
B
"ood or bad sense. In a bad sense, it xVRTISAN, J!, s as :. [Fr. from L. ars. Sec by consulting the entrails of beasts slaiii id Art.] ronesponds with trick, or fraud. sacrifice. Qu. Teiit. or/; i/r/"; Eth. 2". Art trade skill acquired by science or An artist one skilled in any art, mystciy or arwe, cattle, and L. specio, to view.] trade a handicratls-man ; a mechanic practice. [Rarely used.] A priest, in ancient Rome, whose business a tradesman. from and ars, \h.
;
A4T
;
;
;
;
'
'
.
,
;
;
;
;
;
I
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
AHifidal arguments, in i-hetoiic, are arguments invented by the sijeaker, in distinc tion
from laws, authorities and the
which are
like,
called inartificial argiunents or
Johnson. Artificial lines, on a sector or scale, are lines so contrived as to represent the logarithmic sines and tangents, whicli, by tlie help proofs.
of the
line
of numbers, solve, with tolerable
exactness, questions in trigonometry, navigation, &c. Artificial numbers, the same with logarithms. Cliambers. Encyc.
ARTIFICIAL'ITY, artificial;
The
n.
quality of being
appearance of art.
2.
Without guile atfectedly.
naturally
;
;
sincerely
By art, or human hence, with gooc contrivance with art or ingenuity. ARTIFI'CIALNESS, n. The quality of being artificial. ARTIL'LERY, n. This word has no plural. skill
adv.
and contrivance
;
;
[Fr. artilhrie ; It. artiglieria In Fr. aiiilleur, aiiillier,
Sp. arlillea matross to mount cannon. In Arin-
ria.
Sp.
ariillar,
oric, artillen/ is arlilhiry,
In
arlillier.
articlarie.
1.
Norm.
F)-.
;
is
and an
:
arlist
is
artillery is written unites this word
The Armoric
with art, artist, indicating that the jirimary sense is, instnnnents, things formed by art or rather prepared by art, pi-ejiarations.] In a general sense, oftenslve weapons of war. Hence it was formerly used for bows and arrows.
n. [ofGr. apro;, bread, and Tupoj, cheese.] One of a sect of heretics, in the primitive church, Avho celebrated the eucharist with bread and cheese, alledging that the first oblations of men were not only the fruit of the earth, but of their flocks. They admitted females to the priesthood and epis
4.
void of art or guile unaftectedness.
;
copacv.
'.\RTS-MAN,
?i.
A
Encyc. learned man.
Obs.
Shak
/VRUNDE'LIAN,
a. Pertaining to Arundel, as Arundetian marliles. The Arundelian marbles are ancient stones, containins' a chronological detail of the principal events of Greece, from Cecrops, who lived about
1.582 years before Christ, to the archonshij) ofDiognetns, before Christ 2
ARUNDINA'CEOUS, a.
'i.
3.
X.
in pi-eseut usage, appropriately,
Cannon great gims ordnance, including guns, mortars and grenades, with their liu'iiiture of carriages, bails, bombs and shot of all kinds. In a more extended sense, the word includes powder, cartridges, matches, utensils, machines of all kinds, and liorsesthat belong to a train of artillery. including matrosscs, gunners, bombardiers, cannoniers, or by whatever name they are called, with the officers, engineers
ARUS'PEX,
;
The men who manage cannon and mor-
tars,
and (icrsons who siqiply the implements and materials.
artillery witli
Encijc.
[L. arundo, a reeil.]
resembling the reed
[Gr. apspa.] Literally, as authors supi)Ose, a plowed field. According to Herodotus, and Suidas, the arura of Egypt, was a piece of ground fifty feet n.
Others make it a square of 100 square. cubits others of 100 feet. The Grecian aroura was a square measure of half the ;
plethron,
[See Aroura.] Encyc. n.
[L.]
was formerly used for as if. Obs. He lies, as he his bliss did know. Waller.
" He M''hile diuing at the same time. trembled as he spoke." But in most of its;
;
resolvable into like, equal, even, uses, or equally, in like manner. In some phrait is
nmst be considered a nominative
it
ses,
otiier words must be supplied. Ajipoint to oflice such men as deserve public confidence." This phrase may be " such men as tliose who deelliptical for serve public confidence." As seems, in some cases, to imply the sense " of projjortion. In general, men are more happy, as they are less involved in pubhc concerns." As, in a subsequent part of a sentence, answers to such ; give us such things «.s you and in a preceding part of a senplease as with the tence, has so to answer to it people, so with the priest. n. AS, [L.] A Roman weight of 12 ouncesj answering to the libra or pound. A Roman coin, orighially of a pound weight but reduced, after the first Punic in the second Punic war, to two ounces and by the Pajjirian war, to one oimce law, to Jialf an ounce. It was originally stam])ed with the figure of a slieep, sow, or ox and afterwards with a Janus, on one side, and on the reverse, a rostrum oj.' l)row of a ship. 3. An integer a whole or single thing. Hence the English ace. Hence the Romans used the word for the whole inheritance hieres ex asse, an heir to the whole
word, or "
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
ARUNDIN'EOUS, a. Abounding with reeds. ARU'RA,
;
;
It
;
AR'TOTYRITE,
And Jonathan gave his artillery to his lad. Pertaining to a reed or cane. 1 Sani. XX.
But
Tlie relations are so uncertain as they require a great deal of examination. Bacon.
iin3.
n.
Slienstone.
ARTIFI 'CIALLY,
;
Pope.
The
quality of being simphcity ; sincerity
"ARTLESSNESS,
A
Herod. Euterpe.
soothsayer.
;
estate.
ASA,
Encyc.
a corrujrtion of lasar, an ancient
of a gum.
name
[See Ooze.]
ASA-liULCIS,
the .same as benzoin.
ASA-FET'IDA,
n. [Asa,
gum, and L.
f(eti-
dus, fetid.]
A fetid
gum-resin, from tlie East Indies. It is the concrete juice of a large lunbelhferous plant, mucli used in jVIedicine, as au
Dryden. antisiiasmodic. Encyc. also haruspicc. ASBES'TINE, a. [See Asbcslus.] [L. aruspex, or liaruspex, a soothsayer, or Pertaining to asbestos, or partaking of it-? nature and quaUties incombustible. diviner, who attempted to foretell events
ARUS'PICE,
»!.
'
'
A\ritten
;
I
A ASBES'TINITE,
C
S
A ASCEND'ENCY,
[See Jlshestus.] Tlic uctinolitc' or stialilsH'in. Kirwan. Calciferous abestinitc u variety of steatite. n.
Kincan.
A
)
to cxtiiifiuisli.]
ami
itn iilx rs .soiiiotiiiies a|)|(ear
to
across, presents an irregular lilamentuu; Kirwan structure, like wood.
ppr. Rising; moving upproceeding from the less to the greater proceeding frotn modern to anA star cient, from grave to more acute. is said to be ascending, when rising above the horizon, in any parallel of llu! cipiator. Ascending latitude Is the latitude of a planet, when moving towards the North pole. ,1scending node is that point of a planet's or-
It
first,
intestines,
the
lumbricoides.
V. i.
chief
To move
u])War(ls
whether
;
to
mount
in air or
go up
n.
A
festival
;
our
first
To
rise
progenitors. as a star to proceed or come above the horizon. C. In music, to rise in vocal utterance; to pass from any note to one more a<-ute. ASCEND', V. t. To go or move upwards upon, as to ascend a hill or ladder; or to climb, as to ascend a tree.
ASCEN'SIVE,
ASf"END'.\NT,
a.
ASCENT', ].
connnand-
ingiuHucnce as, one man has the ascendant over another. An ancestor, or one who precedes in genealogy, or degrees oi" kindred opposed li) desmidant.
4.
Ilighth; elevation.
4.
a.
Vol.
1.
a.
of
act
[See Acescency, Aces-
I
cent.]
;
Rising
rising
;
upwards,
from Gr. o
[L. ascii,
priv.
AS'CITANS,
A
;
motion
n.
cxia, a shadow.] person, who, at certain times of the year, has no shadow at noon. Such are the inhabitants of the torrid zone, who have, at times, a vertical siui. Baitet/.
n. [Gr. oaxoj, a bag or bottle of skin.] sect or branch of Montanists, who appeared in the second century. They introduced into their assemblies, certain bacchanwho danced around a bag or skin als, distended with air, in allusion to the bottles filled with new wine. Math ix. Encyc.
n. [Gr. ajxo;, a bladder.] dropsy or tense elastic swelUng of the with fluctuation, fi-om a collection of water. Coxe. earth. Quincy. } The way by which one ascends the ASCIT'I€, Belonging to an ascites ; dropsical hvdropical. moans of ascending. Bacon. ASCIT'I€.'VL, 5 All eminence, hill or high place. ASCITI'TiqUS, a. [L.ascit^; Low L. ascititius ; from ascisco, to take to or assoAddison. ciate.] The degree of elevation of an object, or .Additional added supplemental; not inhethe it makes with a horizontal line
AS'CITES,
.\
belly,
;
rent or original. Homer has been reckoned name.
;
t).<.
[froin the
L. ad certum,
To make precision, guity.
certain;
AS€LE'PIAD,
to define or reduce to
by removing obscurity or ambi-
Tlie divine law ascerfains the trudi. 2.
To make certain, by exixriment, so as to
trial,
Hooker. be-
;
fiire unknown as, to asceiiain the weight of a connnodity, or the puritj' of a metal. To make sure by i)revious measures.
|
AS€RI'BABLE, may
;
3.
The ministry, in order to ascertai}i a majority in (he house of lords, persuaded the queen to create twelve new peers. Smollett.
14
n.
Maece nas ata
examination or
know what was
an ascititious
Pope. In ancient poetry, a versa of four feet, the first of which is a .spondee, the second, a choriandi, and the last two, dactyls; or of four ti-et and a cesura, the first, a spondee, the second, a dactyl, then the ccsm-a, followed by two dactyls a.s,
ascent.
1.
;
;
Q road has an ascent of fixe degrees. the ri.se of a hill as a steep
Acclivity;
ASCERTA'IN,
;
:
srone to heaven.
;
)
and
A
to a certainty.]
surpassing. i. In astrology, above the horizon. ASCEND'Eb, p//. or a. Risen mounted up;
;
Swift.
rise.
angle
Encyc. Superior predominant ;
The
as, 5.
[Little used.]
Temple. In aslrologij, that degree of the ecliptic
which rises above the horizon at the time of one's birth. That part of the ecliptic at any particular time above the horizon, supposed to liave intlucnce on a person's lit!- and fortune. Johnson.
ASCEND'ANT,
;
ASCESSANCY, ASCESSANT,
;
;
3.
;
;
;
3.
;
'J.
Making
/)/),•.
ASCERTA
of some AS'CIAN,
whether in air, water or other fluid, or on elevated objects ; rise ; a mounting upwards; as the owen< of vapors frotn the
That maybe ascended.
n. Superiority or
as-
certain.
certain fixing; establishing; reducing to a certainty obtaining certain knowledge. INMENT, n. The act of asceitahiing a reducing to certaintv certainty fixed rule. Burke.
tending to rise, Journ. of Science. n. [L. ascensusr
or causing to
;
ASCEND'ABLE,
The person who
n.
makes
ASCERTA'INING,
Chambers.
;
a.
;
:
;
certains or
;
;
In a corresponding sense, to proceed in a line towards ancestors as, to ascend to
ASCERTAINED, ASCERTA'INER,
;
water, or upon a
to recur to former ages as, our inquiries ascend to the remotest antiquity.
4.
.
:
;
ASCENSION-DAY, to
;
Gibbon
That may be made
a.
certain in fact, or certain to tlic mind that may be certainly known or reduced to a certaintyKerr's Lavoisier. pp. Made certain
ASCET'IC, a. [Gr. aoxr^to^, exercised, hardened from aaxtu, to exercise.] In astronomy, ascension is either right or Right ascension of the sun or of a Retired tioni the world rigid; severe austere star, is that degree of the equinoctial emjiloyed in devotions and mortifications. counted from the beginning of Aries which rises with the sun or star, in a right ASCET'IC, n. One who retires from the .sphere. customary business of life, and devotes Ohlique ascension is an arch of himself to the duties of piety and devotion ; the eipiator, intercepted betwec-n the first a Inuniit a recluse. point of Aries, and tliat point of ihc equator w liicli rises together with a star, in an 'i. The title of certain books, on devout exercises as the ascetics of St. Basil. Johnson. oblique sphere.
christian churches, held ten days or on the Thursday but one, before Whitsuntide, material object. which is called Holy Thursdaj', in com2. To rise, in a figurative sense; to proceed memoration of our Savior's ascension into from an inferior to a sujierior degree, from heaven, after his resurrection. mean to noble objects, from particulars to Asctnsiomd difference is the difference between the right and oblique ascension of generals, &c. 3. To jiroceed from modern to ancient times the same point on tlie surface of the sjihere. to rise,
certained the rule and measure of taxation.
ASCERTA'INABLE,
;
has the same elements as
It
hee;in.\ J.
render invariable, and not sid)ject to will. The mildness and precision of their laws as-
;
[L. ascendo, from scandn, to or climb ; VV. tsgyn, to rise ; cyn,
VSCEND', moimt
human
in th<;
and the
[Vnusiial.] Dryden. willi certainty; 1o
to establish
fix;
ohliijue.
two of the most com-
includes
mon worms
To
authorized.]
•i.
n. ]ihi. ascar'ides. [Gr.] In zoologi),a genus of intestinal worm.s. The body is cylindrical, and tapering at the
ends.
;
ness of our work. 5.
wards;
ASCA'RIS,
nscarides,
certain or confident, followed by a pronoim as, to ascertain i;.sof the gooil-
slantliiig.
be iirisiiiatic crystals. They are sometimes delicate, flexible, and elastic ; at other times, stiff' and brittle. Its ])owder bit, wherein it passes the ecliptic to proceed is soft to the touch; its colors are some northward. It is also c-alled the northern sliad(M)f white, pray or green, passinij into node. brown, red or black. It is incombustible, and has been wrought into a soft, ficxibit Ascending vessels, in anatomy, are those which carry the blood u]i«ard or toward cloth, which was formerly used as a shroU( the superior parts of the bodv. for dead bo
C
S
make
4. 'I'o
;
niiiieral, wliicli lias frequently the ii|)pnarstaMco. It isalways
controlling i)ifluein Cusioin has an ascendency over the under Watts.
;
ASBES'TUS, ASBES'TOS,
S
n
vis a.
edite regdius. I
|
[See Ascribe.]
Encyc.
That
be ascribed or attributed.
ASCRIBE, 1.
V. t. [L. ascribo, of ad and .iciibo, to write.] To attribute, impute, orset to, astoacause ; to assign, as effect to a cause ; as, losses
are ot\en to be ascribed to imprudence.
A
S
H
A
% To
attribute, as a quality, or an appurtenance to consider or alledf^e to belong ; or imperas, to ascribe perfection to God, Job xxxvi. Ps. •Ixviii. fi'Ction to man.
Job
;
1
Sam.
ASH'-HOLE,
xviii.
lower
A
well
;
tlie
female flower
repositoi^ for ashes
;
the
Mason.
foolish fellow.
AS'ININE,
Common
n.
rarely
come from
AS'INARY,
a. [L. asi-
;
;
;
;
ASHWEDNESDAY. ;
lanceolate The leaves are pinnate, and the capsules grow in clusters. This wood is valuable, and the for fuel, as well as for timber tree, when it grows in an open field, often form?, with its branches, a beaiuiful oval
of
ASINE'GO,
;
;
pistil
usediu chimical
;
is
;
;
;
fire
;
no hermaphrodite calyx, or it is quadripartite and no corol, or it is tetrapetalous. There are two stamens one pistil one seed, contained in a membranous, lanceolate capsule, and tlie
There
A
low
;
Russ. yassen.] tree, of which there are
known
many species.
n.
A
or free stones, as nus ; W. asyn, the ass ; which see.] the quarry, of different Belonging to tlie ass having the qualities of the ass. lengths, breadths and thicknesses. Johnson. 'ASK, V. t. [Sax. ascian, acsian, or axian : ASH'LERING, n. Quartering for lathing D. eischen ; G. heischen ; Ir. ascaim ; Gr; to, in garrets, two or three feet high, |)er o|iou. Qu. Eth. ^("ift- to pray orbeseecli pendicidar to the floor, and reacliing to In former times, the Enghsh word was the under side of the rafters. Enajc «.r, as in the royal style of asASHO'RE, adv. [a, at or on, and shore. See jirononnced " Be it as senting to bills in Parliament. Shore.' it is axed." In Calmuc, asoc signifies to in1. On shore on the land adjacent to water The sense is to urge or press.] quire. ashore. to the shore the as, bring goods to seek to obtain by words 1. To request 2. On land, opposed to abojrd ; as, the cap to petition with of before the person to tain of the ship. remained os/iore. whom the request is made. 3. On the ground as, the shij) was driven Ask counsel of God. Judges xviii. n. The first day of 2. To require, expect or claim. Lent supposed to be so called from a cusTo whom men Jjave committed much, o/him tom in the Romish Chiu-ch of sprinkhng they will ask the more. Luke xii. ashes, that day, on the heads of penitents, 3. To uiterrogate, or inquire to put a questhey
teudal system, who are annexed to the freehold and transferalile with it. Spdman. Lib. JYiger Scaccnrii. ASH, n. [Sax. wsc ; Dan. ask ; Germ, esche ;
D. essche
by a subsequent decision of a superior tribunal as. to set aside a verdict or a judgment. )i. a httle A ass.] [Sp. asnico, feat the eflcct or operation of,
of a furnace.
])art
ASH'LAR,
-VSCRIPTr'TIOUS, o. That is ascribed. This word is applied to villains under the
1.
11.
operations.
Attributed or imputed; /»/). considered or alledged, as belonging. ASCRI'BING,;>;)r. Attributing; imputing; alledging to belong. ASCRIP'TION, n. The act of ascribing, imputing or affirming to belong.
ASK
I
xlii.
ASH'-FIRE,
ASCRI'BED,
S
abhor myself and repent in dust and ashes.
I
is
;
then admitted to penance.
tion, with a view to an answer. n. A plant, the small wild He is of age, ask him. John ix. angeUca, gout-wort, goats-foot, or herb 4. To require, or make claim. Encyc. gerard. Ask me never so much dowry. Gen. xxxiv. to ashes a. ash-color ASHY, Dan. il. Belonging figure and a tliick shade. ed pale inclinuig to a whitish grav. To claim, require or demand, as the price Encyc. Linne. Miller. 'Shak. or value of a commodity to set a price ; 2. The wood of the ash tree. Shak. a. Pale as ashes. ASHY-PALE, as, what price do you ask ? ASH, a. Pertaining to or hke tlie ash made a name a. ASIAN, originally 6. To require, as physically necessarj'. [from ^^sia, of ash. given to Asia Minor or some part of it The exigence of a state asks a mucli longer ASHA'ME, V. t. To shame. [JVot tised.] time to conduct the design to maturity. ))erhaps from the Asses, Ases or Osse: ASHA'JMED, n. [from Sax. gescamian or asabout IMouut Taurus. Mallet, JVbrth. Ant. Addison camian, to be ashamed, to blush, from i. 60. Plin. I). 17.] This sense is nearly or entirely obsolete : scama, shame originally a participle. See Pertaining to Asia. Dryden. Mitford. ask being superseded by require and deShame.] A'SIAR€H, )!. [Asia and apxoi, chief] mand. 1. Affected by shame; abashed or confused A chief or pontiff of Asia one who had K To invite as, to ask guests to a wedding by guilt or a conviction of some crimina tlie superintendence of the public games. or entertainment a^k my friend to step action or indecorous conduct, or by the Acts xix. Milner. into the house. exposure of some gross errors or miscon- ASIAT'I€, a. Belonging to Asia, a quarter ASK, V. i. To request or petition, followed duct, which tlie person is conscious must of the globe which extends from the strait by for ; as, ask for bread ; or without for. be wrong, and which tends to impair lii,of Constantinople and the Arabian gulf, to Ask and it shall be given you. Mat. vii. honor or reputation. It is followed by of. It is jirobatlie Pacific ocean on the east. To inquire, or seek by request ; somebe asha2. and Thou shalt remember thy ways, ble, tlie name was originally a])jMoi)riated times followed by after. med. Ex. xvi. to what is now Asia IMinor or rather a Israel shall be ashamed of his own counsel Wherefore dost tliou ask after my name ]iart of it. Hosea x. Gen. xxxii. ASIATIC, ?i. A native of Asia. Q. Confused by a consciousness of guilt or of This verb can hardly be considered as ASIAT'ICISM, (!. Imitation of the Asiatic by the mortification of pride inieriority some person or obM'arton. manner. strictly intransitive, for by failure or tlisajipointraent. See Side.] adv. [a and side. ASI'DE, ject is always understood. ' They shall be greatly ashamed, that trust in \ On or to one side out of a perpendicular Ask is not equivalent to demand, claim, and Isa. xUi. images. or straight direction. require, at least, in modern usage much At a little distance from the main part or less, is it equivalent to beg and beseech. [This ndjeetive always follows its noun.} The first three words, demand, claim, reASHA'MEDLY, adv. B'ashfullv. [Mt used.] body. a. Of a color between ASH-€OLORED, Thou shalt set asule that which is full. 2 quire, im|)ly a right or supposed right in Woodward. brown and gray. the person asking, to the thuig requested ; Kings iv. ASHEN, a. [See^sh.] Pertaining to ash 3. From the body as, to jiiit or lay aside a and beseech iniphes more urgency, than ask. Ask and request imply no right, but supmade of ash. ganiient. John xiii. The numthe n. without singular ASH'ES, |)OSt> the thing desired to be a favor. plu. at a small distance 4. From the company 1). asch ; G French demander is correctly rendered by ber. [Sax. asca ; Goth, azga or in private as when speakers utter asche ; Sw. aska ; Dan. aske Basque, ausask, rather than by demand. something by themselves, upon the stage. [D. schxtins, sloping.] cua.] 5. Separate from the person, mind or atten- ASK'ANCE, I "''"• / ASK' ANT, 1. The obhquely ; Sideways earthy particles of combustible subtion in a state of abandonment. towards one corner of the eye. stances remaining after combustion as of Dryden. Let us lay aside every weight. Heb. xii. wood or coal. ques6. Out of the line of rectitude or propriety, 'ASKED, pp. Requested petitioned 2. The remains of the human body when in a moral view. tioned; interrogated. a who asks burnt. Hence figuratively, a dead body n. One Ps. are all aside. xiv. ASKER, petitioner; gone They or corpse. an inquirer. 7. In a state of separation to a particular Johnson. 3. In scrijdure, ashes is used to denote vilcuse as, to set aside a thing for a future 3. A water newt. adv. [G.schiif; Dan. skiav ; D. ness, meanness, frailty, or hiuniliation. day. I who am but dust and ashes. To set aside, in judicial proceedings, is to dc Gen. xviii. scheef awry, crooked, oblique.]
ASH'-WEED,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
.
;
;
;
;
.'
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
<,
;
;
;
;
;
;
ASKEW
ASP With a wry look
aside
;
ASP
askant
;
sometimes
;
The
indicating scorn, or contempt, or envy. Spenser. ppr. Requesting; petitioning; interrogating inquiring. 2. Silently expressing request or desire. Kxplain the asking eye. Pope. ASLA'KE, V. t. [Sax. tmlacian. See Slack.] To remit to slacken. [.Not in use.} Spenstr. silver coin worth from 11.5 ASLA'NI, n.
taste and the stalk is, in some degree, aperient and deobstruent, but not verj' efficacious. Encyc
;
'ASPECT,
Enn/c. .2.
obliquely
;
or with a right Tile
sliaft
;
not perpendicularly
;
I
4.
;
;
o.
iv.
To
fathers
2 Pet.
continue.
fell
asleep,
all
things
and
[«
See
slope.
;
obliquely
;
declivity or descent, as a hill ; decUning from an upright direction. Set them not upright, but aslope. Bacon. ASLUG', adv. In a sluggish manner. [JVot tised.]
Fotherby.
ASMONE'AN,
a. Pertaining to Asmoneus, the father of Simon, and chief of the Asnioneans, a family that reigned over the Jews 126 years. ASMONE'AN, n. One of the family of Asa.
[Gr. o priv.
i.3.
4.
[JVot
;
;
that quality
:
op-
which
Rouglmess to the taste sourness. Rouglmess or ruggedness of temper :
5.
sourness Sharpness. ;
AS'PEROUS,o.
;
and conjunction, when they are
Todd.
V.
To
t.
ASPECT' ABLE,
;
;
mo-
crabbedness. Rogers. Berkeley.
Rough:
[L. asper, rough.]
uneven.
Boyle.
ASPERSE,
t.
i'.
aspers'. [L. aspergo, asper-
ASPECT'ED,
a.
Ha^dng
used.]
ASPECTION,
n.
The
ASP'EN
ASP, Sax. cespe; 3w.
i
n.
asp
[D. esp; G. aspe, aspe ;
Dan. asp
;
;
Qu. from
gashafa, to be agitated.]
species of the poplar, so called from the trembling of its leaves, w hich move with
_
the sliglitest impulse of the air. Its leaves } 'ASP, [L. aspis; Gr. amxts, a round are roundish, smooth, and stand on shield and an asp supposed ASP'lC, ^ long slender foot-stalks. to be from Ileb. and Cli. SOX, to gather in, or collect from the coil of this serpent, ASP'EN, a. Pertaining to the aspen, or rewith his head elevated in the center, like sembling it made of aspen wood. the boss of a buckler.] Nor aspen leaves confess the gentlest breeze. A small poisonous scri)eut of Egypt and Gay. Libya, whose bite occasions inevitable AS'PER, a. [L. See Asperate.] Rough ;
;
;
;
Bacon. rugged. [Lttlle used.] death, hut without pain. It is said that the celebrated Cleojiatra, rather than be AS'PER, n. [L. aspiro, to breathe.] carried a captive to Rome by Augustus, In grammar, the Greek accent , importing that the letter over which it is placed suffered death by the bite of the asp but the fact has been questioned. Authors ought to be aspirated, or pronomiced as if the letter h ])receded it. are not agreed, as to what species the asp Encyc. of the ancients sliould be referred. Bruce AS'PER, n. Turkish coin, of which three make a niedine. Its value is about a cent thinks it the coluber cerastes, Linne. and 12 decimals. ASPAL'ATHUS, n. plant. "
;
A
A
..
j
and injurious charges to taniish in point of reputation, or good name to slander or calumniate as, to asperse a poet or his writings to asperse a character. ;
;
;
;
To
<-ast
Heywood.
upon.
One
ji.
that asperses, or
vili-
another. JI.
.4
sprinkhng,
asofwater
or dust, in a
Brown.
or
Ar.
;
to spht, divide, .scatter. See Class Brg.] To bespatter with foul reports or false
ASPERSER,
2.
Raleigh. an aspect. [.Vol B. Jonson. act of viewin
[J\ot used.]
of ad and spargo, to scatter
ASPERSION,
[Xot used.] Temple That may be seen
a.
stis,
fies
behold.
[.Yot used.]
'\
in
same degree.
body.] xised.]
unevenness
;
Boyle.
Roughness of sound
grates the ear; harshness ofpronimciation.
aspect, that is, a position which faces or looks to the south. In astronomy, the situation of one planet with respect to another. The a.spects are 1. five ; sextilc, when the planets are 60° distant ; quartile, or quadrate, when their distance is 90°, or the quarter of a circle trine, when the distance is 120°: opposition, when the distance is 180°, or half a 2.
and au^,
Without a material body incorporeal.
[This sense
seeing.
Position or situation with regard to seeing, or that position which enables one to look in a particular direction as, a hou.-e'
ASPECT',
moneus.
ASO'MATOUS,
posed 2.
to smoothness.
roseness
View; sight; act of now unusual.']
the
witl
;
Roughness of surface
}i'arton.
Countenance look, or particular appearance of the face as a mild or severe as-
circle
Slope.]
With leaning or inclination
ITV,
rough.] 1.
;
iii.
or adv.
a.
.ASLO'PE,
ASPER
or look.]
has a southern
;
death. For since the
aspicio, to
.see
Milne.
Encyc.
[See the preceding word.] n. [L. asperitas, from asper,
;
Concerning them who arc asleep, sorrow not. Thess.
from
;
as,
is
a. or adv. [a and sleep, or Sax ge^lapan, to sleep.] Sleeping in a state of sleep at rest. Sisera was fast asleep. Judges iv. 2. To a slate of sleep as to fall asleep. 3. Dead in a state of death. 1
;
;
,3.
ASLEE'P,
4.
view
appearance to the eye or to present an object or a subject in its true aspect, or under a double So we say, public affairs have a aspect. ;
to the touch.
pect.
through his neck aslant
Dryden
1.
I
aiiglo.
drove
in five di\ isions.
ASPERIFO LIOUS, a. Having leaves rough
favorable aspect.
Sec
or adv. [a and slant.
a.
Slant.]
Look
the mind
A
On one side
n. [L. aspectus,
look on, of orf and specie, to 1.
;
ASL'ANT,
Their leaves stand alternately on the stalks, and the flower is monopetalous
seeds.
;
ASKING,
to 120 asj)ers.
ASP
bristly leaves, and equal stipulas. roots have a bitterish mucilaginous
stalk,
literal sense. Shak. The spreading of calumnious reports or charges, which tarnish reputation, like the bespattering of a body W'ith foul water.
Bp. Hall.
ASPH.\LT',
}
ASPHALT
Bitumen
" [Gr.a5ta7.ro;.]
I'M, S Judaicum, Jew's pitch; a smooth, hard, brittle, black or brown substance, which breaks with a polish, melts easily when heated, and when |)ure, burns without leaving any ashes. It has little taste, and scarcely any smell, unless heated, when it emits a strong smell of It is found in a soft or liquid state pitch. on the siu'face of the Dead Sea, which,
from
this substance, is called .Isphaltite, or the Asphaltic Lake. It is found also in the earth, in many parts of Asia, Europe
and America. Formerly, it was used tor embalming dead bodies the solid asjihalt is still employed in Arabia, Egypt, and Persia, instead of pitch for ships and the fluid asphalt is used for varnishing, and ;
:
burning in lamps. A species found in Neufchatel is found excellent as a cement for walls and pavements very durable in .\ coman', and not penetrable by w ater. position of asphalt, lamp black and oil is used for drawing black figures on dialplates. Encyc. JVicholson. ASPHALTIC, n. Pertaining to asphalt, or for
;
t. .Milton. containing it l)ituminous. [L. aspero, from asper, crys- AS'PERATE, V. ASPHALT' ITE, a. Pertaining to or conrough.] To make rough or uneven. Boyle. tainiug asphalt. Bryant, ff'ilford. asparagu juice evaporated to the consistence of ASPERA'TION, n. A making rough. ASPHODEL, »!. [L. and Gr. See Theoph. Lib. 7. Phn. Lib. 21. 17. sirup. They are hi the form of rhoni- ASPERIFO'LIATE, a. [L. \sper, rough, Perhaps it is boidal prisms. Ure and folium, a leaf.] from the root of spud ; Sw. spyd ; Ice. ASPAR'AGUS, n. [L. and Gr. probably Having rough leaves. Plants of this kind spioot, a spear, from the shape of its from ortapoasu, to tear, from its lacerated are, by some authors, classified according leaves.] to this character. appearance, or from the root of aittipa, a They constitute the King's-spear ; a genus of lihaceous plants, spire, from its stem.] cultivated for the beauty of their flowforty-first order of Linne's fragments of a natural method. In the methods of HerSparagus sperage vulgarly, sparrow-grass ers. The ancients planted asphodels near a genus of plants. Thatwhich is cultiva man, Boerhave, and Ray, tliis class congraves, to supply the manes of the dead ted in gardens, has an upright herbaceous sists of plants which have four naked with nourishment. Encyc. Joh7ison.
ASPAR'AgIN, tals
of a
White transparent
n.
peculiar
;
vegetable principle,
which spontaneously form
in
;
;
;
;
ASP
ASS
ASS
ASPIIU'RELATES, n. [Gr. a piiv. and ASPi'RING ppr. Desiring eagerly aiming ASSART', n. [Old Fr. assarfer, to grub up.: at something noble, great, or spiritual. not lualleable.J In ancient laws, the offense of a
;
:
an ardent desire of power, unportance, or in their jim-est state not malleaerts of a forest. Spelman. Cowel. excellence. In their native state, they are mixed 2. tree plucked up by the roots also a with siili)hiir and other adventitious mat ASPI'RIiNG, n. Ambition; eager desire of piece of land r-leared. Ash. Under this denomHammond. ASSART', V. t. To grub up trees to comler, in the form of ore. something great. ination are classed bismuth, antimony, co- 2. Points stops. Herbert. mit an assart. [N'ot used.'] Ashmole. Core. balt, zink ani|i;, |iulse.] A temporary suspension of the motion of A carrying away. In law, the felonious re- One who kills or attempts to kill, by surThe circumstance moval of goods from the ])lace where they the heart and arteries swooning; faintprise or secret assault. of surprise or secresy seems essential to the were deposited, is an asportation, and ad injf. Quincy. Core. ASl* l€, n. The asj), which see. signification of this word though it is Judged to be theft, though the goods are sometimes used to denote one who takes 2. not carried from the house or aiiartnient. piece of ordnance carrying a twelve Blackslone. any advantage, in kiUing or attempting to pound shot. murder as one when una A a n. in adv. by France, attacking ASPIC, ASQUINT', plant growing [D. schuinte, slope armed. schuins, slopingly Sp. esqvina; D. kant, species of lavender, which it resembles in the blue color of its flowers, and in the a corner. See Askance, and Squint.] ASSAS'SINATE, v. t. To kill or attempt to to murIt is To the corner or angle of the kill, by surprise or secret assault figure and green color of its leaves. eye obliquely der Ijy sudden violence. Assassin as a verb called nialc-lavcnder, tu« arfls one side not in the straight line of spica nardi, and is not now used. Pseudo-nardus. The oil of this plant is vision; as, to look asquint. Fox. 2. To way lay to take by treachery. used by painters, farriers and other artili- 2. Not with regard or due notice. MUton It is very inflammable, of a white *ASS, n. [W. asyn ; Ir. asan ; L. asinus ; Fr. cers. murder ormurderer. color and aromatic and it is almost the ane, for asne ; Ann. asen : Sp. Port, asno ; ASSAS'SINATE, n. B. Jonson. Gr. It. asino. [N'ot used.] Qu. from Goth, aiiso, ov{, an only dissolvent of sandarac. JVicItolson. ASSAS'SINATED, pp. Murdered by surFourcroy. ear.] ASPI'RANT, n. [See .isjnre.] One who 1. A quadruped of the equine genus. This prise or secret assault. animal has long slouching ears, a short ASSAS'SINATING, ppr. Miu'dering by aspires, breathes after, or seeks with eager with hairs Faber. a tail covered ness. siu-i)rise or secret assault. Inane, and long He is usually of an ash color, ASSASSINA'TION, n. The act of kiUing al the end. VS'PIRATE, r. t. ]L. aspiro, to breathe or or murdering, by surprise or secret asblow Gr. a5rtat()io, to pal])itate i'romspiro, with a black bar across the shoulders. sault murder by violence. The tame or domestic ass is patient to n. An assassin, which and orfatpu Ar. stujudity, and carries a heavy burden. He ASSAS'SINATOil, safara, to hiss, or is slow, Init very sure footed, and for this a make hissing by blowing on a wind inreason verj useful on rough steep hills. ASS.\S'SINOUS, a. Murderous. [M)t used.] strument. See Spire, Spirit.^ a dolt. 2. ASSAS'SINS, n. In Syiia, a tribe or clan dull, heavy, stupid fellow To pronoimce with a breathing or full emiscalled Isinaelians, Batanists or Batenians. ASS*AI, [Ital.] A term in music ; added to a sion of breath. aspinile the words word signifying slow, it denotes a little They originated in Persia about the year Jiorse and house. 1090 whence a colony migrated and setDryden. quicker and to a word signifying quick, tled on the mountains of Lebanon, and AS'PIRATE, V. i. To be uttered with a it denotes a little slower. Bailey. were remarkable for their assassinations. the letter h t. from L. r. as, strong breathing aspirntes. ASSA'IL, assilio, [I^r. assaittir, Their to leap or rush upon, of ad and salio, to religion was a compound of magiaOne arAS'PIRATE, II. A letter marked wiili aii leap, to rise.] nisin, Judaism, and Christianity. ticle of their creed was, that the asper, or note of breathing a mark of as- To leap or fall upon by violence to assault Holy to attack suddenly, as when one person piration, as the Greek accent Spirit resided in their Chief, and that his orders liom God himself. He falls upon another to beat him. proceeded Bentley. AS'PIRATE, a. Pronounced with a fidl 2. To invade or attack, in a hostile manner, was called Scheik, and is better known by breath. the denomination of Old man of the niounHolder. as an army, or nation. Spenser. tain. This barbarous chieftain and his with 3. To attack AS'PIRATED, pp. Uttered with a strong arguments, censure, abuse,; followers spread terror among nations far or criticism, with a view to injiu'e, bring emission of breath. and near, for almost two centuries, when AS'PIRATING, j,pr. Pronouncing with a into disrejiute. ur overthrow. the tribe was subdued by Sultan Bibaris. 4. To attack, with a view to overcome, by full breath. Encyc. ASPIRA'TION, n. The pronunciation of a motives ajiplied to the passions. Nor hide the encounter of assailing eyes. ASSA'TION, n. [Fr. from L. assatus.] letter with a fidl emission of breath. Skak. roasting. [jVb< used.] Holder. fire,
ami
A
ble.
;
;
;
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
.
;
A
;
We
;
;
;
;
;
'
;
.
A
2. 3.
A
breathing after an ardent wish or deWatts. sire, chiefly of spiritual blessings. The act of aspiring or of ardently desiring what is noble or spiritual. ;
ASPI'RE,
V.
i.
[L. aspiro, to breathe.
See
Aspirate.] 1. To desire with eagerness ; to pant after an object, great, noble or spiritual ; followed l)y to or after: as to aspire to a crown, or after innnortality. 2. To aim at something elevated ; to rise or tower with desire.
Aspiring to be Gods, if angels fell Aspiring to be angels, men rebel.
aims
who
n. One to rise in power
ASPI'RER,
to accomplish
some
aspires
;
ASSA'ILABLE,
a.
That may be
assailed,
attacked or invaded.
ASSA'ILANT,
One who
ASSAULT',
n. [Fr. assnult,T,wiv assaut; It. Port, assalto; Sp. asalto; from L. assulto,
of ad and
sallo, to leap, fonned on salio, or See Assail. have the same root in insult and result.] 1. An attack or violent onset, whether invading with violence. by an a or an army. An ASSA'ILEI), pp. Assaulted invaded at individual, company, tacked with violence. assault by private persons may be made with or without weapons. An assault by ASSA'JLER, n. One who assails. ASSA'ILING, ppr. Assaulting invading an army is a violent hostile attack and when made upon a fort or tbrtified place is bv force attacking with violence. >i. Attack. used. called a storm, as opposed to sap or siege. ASSA'ILMENT, [Little Johnson. 2. All attack by hostile words or measures; ASSAPAN'I€, n. The flying squirrel an as, an assault upon the jirerogatives of a animal which flies a little distance by exprince, or upon a constitution of government. tending tlieskin between the fore and him Trevoux 3. In Late, an unlawful setting upon one's legs. [See S(/uirret.] an atteiu|>t or ofl'er to beat anAS'SARON, 11. The omer or homer, a He)ierson brew measure of five pints. Encyc other, without touching his person ; as by n.
[Fr.]
assails,
attacks or assaults.
ASSA'ILANT,
a.
its root.
Assaulting;
;
;
;
;
;
;
Pope. ;
one who
or consequence, or important object. Milton
We
attacking;
;
ASS
ASS
ASS
seems to be this: assent is the agreement or a cane, in a flireateniug ASSECURA'TION, n. As.surance; a maklifting to an abstract If the blow aimed takes effect, inaaner. Bp. Hall. assr'tt to ing secm-e. [JVot used.] proposition. a statement, but we do not consent to it. Blacksione. Finch. ASSE€U'RE, V. t. To secure. it is a hritlery. [.Vol used.] BuUokar. Consent is an agreement to some ASSAULT', i;. /. To attack or fall upon hy proposal An ob- or measure which affects the rights as, ASSECU'TION, n. [L. assequor.] or inviolence, or with a hostile intention terest of the conseiner. to assault a man, a house or town. taining or acquiring. Ayliffe. consent to a. See AssemUc] 8. To invade or fall on with force as, the ASSE.M'ULAt;!:, n. [Fr. This distinction proposal of marriage. \ collection of individuals, or of particular howe\er is not always observed. [See cry of war assnults our ears. 3. To attack by words, arguments or un things the state of being assembli^d. Consent.] Locke. Thomson. 3. Accord agreement. 2 Chron. xviii. friendly measures, with a view to shake, 2. Rarely, the act of assembling. ASSENT', !'. i. To admit as true ; to agree, impair or overthrow ; as, to assault a charASSEiNrBLANCE, n. Representation an yield or concede, or rather to e\i)ress an acter, the laws or the administration. ASSaULTABLE, a. That may be assault- assembling. [A'ot in use.] Sliuk. Spenser. agreement of the mind to what is alledged, fVitiiams. ASSEM'BLE, v. t. or proposed. ed. [Fr. assembler; Sw The .Jews also assented, saying these ASSAULT'ED, pp. Attacked with force, samla ; Dan. samter D. zamelen ; Ger things are so. Acts xxiv. sammetn, to assemble. L. simul ; Dan. arms, violence, or hostile views. It is sometiiucs used for sammen ; D. zamen, together.] consent, or an agreeASSaULT'ER, 71. One who assaults, or vio to something ment To number of individuals or the collect a attacks. atTecting parrigirts or l(!nlly ASSaULT'ING, ppr. Attacking >vith force, ticulars into one place, or body to bring interest of ilie per.son assenting. But to assent to the marriage of a or call together to convene ; to congre or with hostile measures. daughter is less correct than to coiisent. Port, enfssai; ASSA'Y, n. tlie
fist
We
;
We
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
[Fr.
saio
It. sagg-io,
;
Sp.eiuayo; an assay ; Fr. essayer,
gate.
to
old Fr. essoycr, to endeavor. Kelham's It. assaggiare, to try saggiarc. to try, essay Sp. eiisayar, to try Sw.fbrsbto kia, try Dim.forsiiger, to try, examine, endeavor. These words are all from the same root as st(k, the radical sense of try
ASSEM'BLE, gether
;
^urm. Did.
;
which Sax.
is,
to follow, to urge, press or strain seek ; L. sequor ; asseijuor, to
secaii, to
Dan.
examine; D. zoeken
;
(i.
Ir.
seguir, radically
one word but modern usage has appropriated assay to cx))eriments in metallurgy,
;
and essay
to intellectual
Class Sg. See Essay.] of the goodness, purity, weight, value, &c. of metals or metallic substan ces. Any operation or experiment for as certaining the quantity of a precious metal in an ore or mineral. Analysis is a term
The
3.
together.
1.
2.
n.
A
collection or
to,
meeting
or admits.
!\SSENT'1NG,
x.
[Sp. asamblea ; It. assem blea ; l''r. assembles.] comi)any or collection of individuals, in the same place ; usually for the same pin-
ting as true
n.
A
;
ppr. Agreeing to, or admityielding to. adv. In a manner to ex-
ASSENT'INGLY, ])ress assent
;
by agreement. a. Assent ; Brown.
ASSENT'MENT, [Rarely used.]
A
agreement.
congregation or religious society conve .4.SSERT', v.t. \h.asstro,assertum, to claim or challenge, to maintain or assert ol' ad ned. and sero. The sense of sero is to sow, In some of the United States, the Icghlatiirc, properly to throw or set. To assert is to consisting of difterent houses or branches, throw or set firmly.] whether in session or not. In some states. the popular branch or House of Represent- 1. To affirm positively to declare witli assurance to a\ er. atives is denominated an asseynbly. Milton. [See 2. To maintain or defend by words or measthe constitutions of the several states.] A collection ofjiersons for amusement; ures to vindicate a claim or title to a.s, to assert our rights and liberties. as a dancing assembly. Dryden. A convocation, convention or council of ASSERT'ED, pp. Afiirmed positively; maintained vindicated. ministers and ruling elders delegated from each presbytery as the General Assembly ASSERTING, ppr. Declaring with confidence maintaining defending. of Scotland or of the United States. Encyc. ASSER'TION, n. The act of asserting the In armies, the second beating of the drum maintaining of a claim. before a march, wlien the soldiers strike 2. Positive declaration or averment affirm-
0.
:
;
;
;
;
;
;
G. rarely used. [See Essay.] Obs. 4. Value great purity. Spenser. their tents. ASSA'Y, IK t. To try or prove, by examina Encyc tion or experiment, the quantity and pu- 7. An assemblage. [.Vo< in use.] rity of metallic substances. ASSEM'BLY-ROOM, ji. room in whicl 2. To apply to the touchstone. Milton persons assemble. ASSA'Y, r. i. To attempt, try or endeavor. ASSENT', ?i. [L. assensus, from assentior, He assayed to go. 1 Sam. "xvii. to assent, of n^. Examined; tested; prov- mind, sense; D. zin, mind zinnen, to feel or mind G. sinn, sense sinyien, to thmk ed by experiment. ASSA'YER, n. One who examines metals or consider. The Danes preserve the ;
a
;
Brown. position advanced. ASSERT'IVE, a. Positive ; affirming confideatlv GlanviiU. peremptory. ASSERT' I VELY, adv. Affirmativelv. ation
An offi-
;
BedeU. ly
consonant, sind, mind, sense, inclination W. syn, sense syniau; to perceive.] The act of the mind in admitting, or agreeing to, the truth of a proposition. ;
1.
;
claim tor.
;
OR,
71.
who
one
One who
affirms positive-
maintains or vindicates a
an affirmer, supporter, or vindicaDryden.
.ASSERTORY,
o.
Affirming
;
maintaining.
Bp. Hall.
;
asseoir ; Norm, asser, asseoir, to settle, fix, ascertain, assess ; It. assestare, assettare ; L. assideo, ad and sedeo ; Eng. to sit, or set. See Set and Sit.]
ASSESS',
final
is to try
;
ASSERT
;
;
;
cer of the mint, whose business the weight and purity of metals.
A
;
now
purity.
from
;
."?.
;
and
[L. assenfatio,
opinion of another, from
(lattery or dissinadation. Chesterfield. n. flatterer.
ASSENTA'TOR,
I)ose.
;
to find their quantity
llic
n.
Heb.
-ASSEM'BLY,
4.
Assaying is called the docimnstic art. laiv, an examination of weights and measures by the standard. Cowel. Examination trial effort first entrance In these upon any business attempt. are found in which old authors, senses, ;
n.
nssentor, to comi)ly.]
;
In
;
ASSENTATION,
pp. Collected into a body;
ASSEM'BLING,
to
2.
to
One who assembles. ASSENTATO'RILY, adr. With adulation. Bacon. ASSEMBLING, ppr. Coming together; [J'l/'of in rise.] ASSENT'ER, H. One who as.sents, agrees collecting into one place.
trial
of more comi>rehensive import, extendiii; an examination of the nature and t(uan tities of all parts of the compound.
come
congregated.
and bodily
efforts. 1.
or
Compliance with
ASSEiM'BLER,
surhcii;
seichim ; It. seguirt ; Sp. to follow, .issay and essay are
.•liiger ;
To meet
convene, as a number of indi
ASSEM'BLED,
;
follow, to
i.
viduals.
;
;
to
;
v.
;
V.
t.
[Fr.
To set, fix or charge a certain sum upon one, as a tax as, to assess each citizen in due proportion. agreement proposal, res- 2. To value to fix the value of property, for the purpose of being taxed as by the pecting some right or interest as, the bill ness of the precious metals. before the house has the assent of a great law of the United States. Also, to value or fix the profits of business, for the purASSE€U'RANCE, n. Assurance. [M>t majority of the members. Sheldon The oistinctioD assent between and consent used.] pose of taxation. ppr. Trying by some standexamining by experiment, as metals proving attempting. ASSAY-MASTER, n. Anassayer; an officer appointed to try the weight and fine
ASSA'YING, ard
;
Faith
:
is
2.
Consent
;
1.
the assent to any proposition, on the
credit of the proposer.
;
;
Locke.
to a
;
;
;
ASS To
;!.
or ascertain
set, fix
;
ASS it is
as,
ince iifajiny to awess Janiages.
ASSRSS',
Assessment.
n.
ASS
zeal, and observed the traditions, elders. From these sprung the
of great
tho prov-
the Pharisees and Essenes.
fif
Eneyc. [L. assideo, assidens, of ad
[J\'ot iised.]
ASSESS'ABLE, a. Tiiat may be assessed. VS'SIDENT, a. ASSESS'ED, pp. Cliarged with a certain and sedeo, to sit.] sum valued ASSESS'ING,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
A
Carew.
ors.
n. A valuation of property or ))rofits of business, for tlic purpose of taxation. An assessment is a valuation made by authorized persons according to their discretion, as opposed to a sum cerIt may be a tain or determined by law. direct charge of the tax to be paid or a valuation of the property of those wlio are to pay the tax, for the purpose of fixing the proportion which each man shall pay on wliich valuation the law imposes a specific sum upon a given amount. Blackstone. Laws of the U. Slates.
ASSIDUTTY,
ASSESS'MENT,
;
;
9. 3.
A tax or specific sum charged on the person or property. Tlie act of assessing the act of determining the amount of damages by a jury. ;
ASSESS'OR,
One appointed
n.
the person or pro])erty.
An
2.
who
inferior officer of justice,
assist the
judge.
One who
3.
sits
assai,
n. phi.
[Fr. assez,
enough, or
many
;
'2.
;
enough
;
to
)
,
S
_
[L. ad,
Sax. si«enan
;
fron
and the Teuto
Goth, ^loncan, to
;
n. Positive affirmation
solemn declaration.
Tli
not, generally, if ever, used for a declaration under an official oath, but for is
a declaration accompanied with solemnity.
ASS-HEAD, like the ass
and head.] One dull one slow of apjirchension or
CHASIDE'ANS.
[Ileb.
nnn .\
pious.] sect of Jews who resorted to Maltaihias to fight for the laws of their God and the liberties
of their country. They were
3.
n.
An
;
appointing
:
specially.
an ap-
allotting, or
to a particular person or use. transfer of title or interest by writing, as of a lease, bond, note, or bill of ex-
A
The
writing by which an interest
is
trans-
ferred. 4.
_ 5.
a seat, a con L. assideo.]
contract or convention between the king' of Spain and other powers, for turnishing slaves for the Spanish dominions in South America. Treaty between G. B. and Spain,\
The appointment or designation of causes or actions in court, for trial on particular days. In law, the conveyance of the whole interest which a man lias in an estate, usuIt differs from a ally for life or years. lease, which is the conveyance of a less term than the lessor has in the estate.
Z. Swift.
n. An assigner; a person who assigns or transfers an interest ; as the March 2(J, 1713. assignor of a bill of exchange. 1'. t. assine. [Fr. assigner ; Sp.; ASSIMILABLE, a. That may be assimiPort, assinar ; It. assegnare ; L.I lated.
ASSIGNOR',
|
ASSI'GN, asignar
;
assigno, of ad and signo, to allot, to out ; Ir. sighin ; L. signum, a mark.
primary sense of sign 1.
is
mark ASSIM'ILATE,
The
to sen
1.
To
v.
I.
[L. assimilo, of ad
and
See Similar.] a likeness
;
to cause to
resem-
;
Gen.
To
substances, tlesh, chyle, blood, &c.
xlvii.
designate or appoint for a particular
ASSIM'ILATE, v. i. To become similar. To be converted into a like substance.
])urpose.
2.
They assigned Bezer,
Bac07i.
a city of refuge. Josh.
XX. .3.
simitis, like. bring to
To allot to ap|)oiiit or grant by distribu-i ble. Swifl. tion or apportionment. 2. To convert into a like substance ; as, food The priests had a portion assigned them. is assimilated by conversion into animal
To
ASSIM'ILATED,
as an asspecify or designate signed quantity. To make or set over to transfer, sell or as by indorsing a note, convey, by writing, or by any writing on a separate paper. To alledge or show in particular as, to assign a reason for one's comhict. In taw, to show or set forth with ])articu-] to as, to assign error in a Avrit larity fix,
;
ness
;
pp.
cliange
a
Brought to a
like-
like substance.
ppr. Causing to resemble ; converting into a like substance. 4. ; ASSIMILA'TION, n. Tlic not of bringing to a resemblance. 2. The act or process by which bodies con5. ; vert other bodies into t!ieir own nature and substance ; as, tianie assimilates oil, 0. and the food of animals is by assimilation ; ; converted into the substances which comas.iign false judgment. their bodies. ASSI'GN, n. A person to Avliom property or, pose an interest is or may lie transferred ; as, a[ Mineral assimilation is the property which substances possess, in the earth, of a])])rodeed to a man and his heirs and assigns. iiriuting and assimilating to themselves ASSl'GNABLE, a. That may be allotted,i other substances with which they are in appointed or assigned. contact a property which seems to be the as 9. That may be transferred by writing basis of the natural history of the earth. an assignable note, or bill. of cona. ASSIM ]
ASSIM'ILATING,
1
[
;
[
;
a blockhead.
ASSIDE'ANS
showing
;
n. [«5S ;
;
ppr. Allotting
change.
|
;
agreement
assigns, or ap-
pointment 2.
;
;
It.
Fotherby
ty.
word
;
;
ASSIGNMENT,
;
tract or
swear, to aflirm positively.] affirm or aver positively, or with solemni-
or assertion
ASSI'GNING, transferring
Sax.j
geiit application. n. [Sp. asiento,
To
ASSEVERA'TION,
;
;
L. sat, satis,
assevero,
assirfeo,^
to sit
Eng.
;
;
;
A
or goods of the deceased, or debts due to him, which come into the hands of the executor or administrator, or which he is bound to collect and convert into money. Blackstone.
;
ad and sedeo
One who
}t.
points.
Constant in application as a person 05siduous in his occujiatiou. Attentive careful regular in attendance as an assiduous physician or nurse. 3. Performed with constant diligence or at tention as eissiduous labor. ASSID'UOUSLY, adv. DUigeiitly atten with earnestness and care with tively regular attendance. ASSID'UOUSNESS, n. Constant or dih-
Assets are rfoi! or personal : real assets are lands which descend to the heir, sub-
nic Sioear
close,
1.
cies.
ASSEVERATE,
sit
ASSI'GNER,
sittan, settan.]
ject to the fulfilment of the obligations of the ancestor; personal assets are the money
ASSEV'ER,
;
;
dered with zeal and constancy. ASSID'UOUS, a. [L. assiduus, from
Ir. sath, suffi-
;
sasadh, satisfaction
;
Constant or close application to any business or enterprise diligence. Addison. Attention attentivcness to persons. Assiduities, in the plural, are services ren
ASSIENT'O,
in dig.Milton.
ciency enough.] (ioods or estate of a deceased person, suflicient to pay the debts of tlie deceased. But the word siifficient, thougli expressing the original signification of assets, is not with us necessary to tlie definition. In present usage, assets are tlie money, goods or estate of a deceased person, subject by law to the payment of his debts and lega;
ttous.] 1.
sits to
Enci/c.
by another, as next
nity.
ASSETS',
to assess
n. A per.son to whom an assignment is made; a person appointed or deputed to do some act, perform some business or enjoy some right, privilege or as an assignee of a bankrupt. property An assignee may be by special appointment or deed, or be created by law as an executor. Coivel.
ASSIGNEE',
SeeAssid-
[h. assiduitas.
}(.
;
;
set fixed ascertained. Assident signs, in medicine, are such as usually attend a disease, but not always; disppr. Cliargin? with a sum vaUiing fixing ascertaining. tinguished from pathognomic signs, which ASSES SION, n. sitting down by a per- are inseparable from it. Encyc. son. ASSID'UATE, a. Daily. [.Yot in use.] [JVot used.] a. to K. Charles. assessASSES SIONARY, Pertaming ;
time and place for meeting used chiefly of love-meetings. 2. A inaking over by transfer of title. [See Assignment.] 3. In Russia, a public note or bank bill paTooke. per currency. ASSI'GNED,/)/). Appointed; allotted; made over shown or designated.
3.
That may be or
cision, error.
AS'SIGNAT, France
;
specified,
shown with
pre-,
designated; as an assignable, n.
A
ptdilic
paper currency.
men ASSIGNA'TION,
n.
An
note or
LATIVE,
Haviiig power verting to a likeness, or to a like substance. Hakewill.
ASSIM'ULATE, hill
iiv
Burke.l
appointment
of
feign.
i-.
[.Vo< used.
ASSIMULA'TION, [.Vo< used.
(.
[L.
assimulo.]
To
See Simulate.] n.
A
counterfeiting See Simulation.]
A
ASS
ASS
S 8
Regulated in weight, measure or price, by an a.ssize or o^hllanc(^ Riiss. siju, to .«it, ov In' placed Sp. nsistir ; It. assi.itere ; Fr. assisler. Lit- A.SSI'ZEH, n. An officer who has the care or of to be s-till say in or as we inspection weights and measures. erally, present,
ASSIST', V. stand up
t.
[L. assisto, ofail
and
sislo, In
;
;
English, to stand hy.] help to aid to siuu.'or to give support in some undfrtaking or effort, or in time of distress.
To
;
;
;
to
ASSIST',
V.
ASSrZED, ;)/).
{.
To
ASSIST' ANCE, n. Help
aid furtherance succor a contribution of support in bodily strengtli or other means.
der.
;
;
;
support
;
«.
Helping
;
One
I
assiiciatiijii (jf
a.ss.
Gotver.
The
quality of being the (luality of of suffering being affected by the affections of another Darwin. part of the body. )i.
association
clergymen.
Sidney. ASSO'CI,\'J']\E, a. Ibning the quality of unassociating, or of being ulli'cted by sympa-
To keep
rSee Sober.]
Darwin. Milltr. [Old Fr. from L. absoUo.]
thy.
ASSOIL',
To sohe
;
r. I. ;
to release
;
absoh e. Obs. Mede. Taylor.
to
some change by sympathy, or
Hale.
wlio aids, or who contributes liis strengtli or other means to further the designs or welfare of another; an auxiliary. Drydtn. n.
t.
\JVot used.]
capable of
lending aid or
auxiliary.
ASSIST'ANT,
V.
ASSOCIABIL'ITV,
;
ASSIST'ANT,
affairs, a society of the clergy, consisting of a ijumber of i)astors of heii'hhoring churches, united l(>r proihi; interests of rcdigicju and the moting Chambers.' liarmonv of the churches. In .ScoWanrf, a juror. Bailey. ASS0(;iA'T10NAJ,, a. Pertaining to an
ASSI'ZOR, ji. VVSS-LIKE, a. Resenjbling an
ASSO'BER,
lend aid.
In ecclesiastical
6.
ASSO'CIABLE, a. That may ciate.]
assdshable.
[See j]ssobe joined to or asso-
r.
t.
To
[Fr. souilhr.]
soU
;
to
Obs.
stain.
AS'SONANCE,
n.
sono, to sound.
[Fr.
from L. ad and
See Sound.]
Resemblance of
ciated. 2.
ASSOIL',
In a medical sense, liable to be affected to receive from other
.sounds. In rhetoric and poa resemblance in .sound or teruiina-
etry,
by sympathy, or
tion,
To join in company, as a friend, compan ion, partner or confederate ; as, to associate others with us in business, or in an enter-
ad and
without making rhyme. Encyc. parts correspondent feelings and aft'er-- AS'SO.N AiN'i', a. Ha\ing a resemblance of ASSIST'ER, n. One that lends aid. " The tions. soMiuls. In Spanish poetry, a.'tsonanl stomach, the most associaASSIST'ING, ppr. Helping; aiding; supble of all the organs of the animal body." are those in « hich a resemblance rhymes porthig with strength or means. (d' sounds .serves Med. R
ASSIST'ED,/);). Helped; aided.
;
ASSI'ZE, ASSl'ZES,
[Fr. assises,
S
so written in English
;
1.
L
ad and sedeo, to sit See ^l.isess.'i Originally, an assembly of knights and oth er substantial men, with a bailiff or justice, in a certain place and at a certain time, for public busines. The word was sometimes assideo, to sit by, of Ir. siasair, a session.
1.
and sometimes
)
;
prise. It 2.
To
conveys the idea of intimate union. unite in the same mass as, particles :
of matter associated with other substances
ASSO'CIATE, V. i. To unite in company to keep company, hiiplying uitimacy as, a)>phed to the general council, or lyitienacongenial minds are disposed to associate gemote, of England. To unite in action, or be affected by the 2. Blackstone. Glanville. action of a dilferent part of the body. !2. court in England, held in every county Darwin by special commission to one of the judg- ASSO'CIATE, a. Joined in interest or i)ures, who is called a justice of the asshe, and Milton. pose confederate. empowered to take assizes, that is, the 2. Joined in employment or office as an verdict of a jury, called the assize. associate }uilj^e. 3. A jury. In this sense the word was ap- ASSO'CIATE, n. one companion plied io the grand assize, for the trial of frequently in company with another, improperty, and to tlie petty assize, for the a mate a plying intimacy or equality trial of possession. In Scotliiml, the a.ssize fellow. consists of Hileen men, selected from a 2. A partner in interest, as in business ; or a greater number. contederate in a league. 1. writ as an assize of novel disseisin, 3. companion in a criminal transaction which is given to recover the possession an accomplice. of lands, tenements, rents, conmion, &c., fVSSO'CTA'TED, pp. United in company or of which the tenant has been lately disin interest joined. seised assize of mart rf' ancestor, w liich lies ASSO'CIATESHIP, n. The .state or office against an abator, who enters upon land of an associate. Encyc. art. Reynolds. after the death of the tenant, and before ASSO'CIATING, ppr. Uniting in company the heir enters assize of darrein presentor in interest joining. ment, which lies against a stranger who The act of associating; ASSOCIA'TION,»i. presents a clerk to a benefice. Blackstone. union connection of persons. 5. particular species of rents, estabhshed 2. Union of in a company a society persons and not subject to be varied. Eyig. Law. formed for transacting or carrying on 6. The time or place of holding the court of some business for mutiral advantage a assize. It is often applied to a union partnershi]). 7. In a nwre general sense, court of any jusof states or a confederacy. tice. 3. Union of things apposition, as of parti8. statute of regulation an ordinance cles of matter. regulating the weight, measure and price 4. Union or connection of ideas. An assoof articles sold in market and hence the ciation of ideas is « here two or more ideas word came to signify the weight, measure constantly or naturally follow each other or price itself; as the assize of bread. in the mind, so that one almost infallibly Spelman. Cowel. Encyc. Blackstone. produces the other. Encyc. This word is, in a certain sense, now 5. An exertion or change of some extreme into which see. size, corrupted part of the sensory residing in the muscles ASSI'ZE, I', t. To fix the weight, measure or organs of sense, in consequence of some or price of commodities, antecedent or attendant fibrous contracby an ordinance or regulation of authority. tions. Daruin.
;
;
A
;
;
A
;
;
A
;
A
;
To
1.
;
;
;
I
'
;
i
;
A
;
;
;
into
and
in
classes
;
dance with
2.
;
to suit.
pp.
Mitford. Distributed into sorts,
kinds or classes. Furnished with an assortment, or with a Burke. variety as a well assorted store. ;
ASSORT'ING,
ppr. Separating into sorts supplying with an assortment. ASSORT'MENT, n. The act of distributing into sorts, kinds or classes, or of selecting
and suiting
2.
3.
;
things.
A mass or quantity distributed into kinds or sorts; or a number of things assorted. A number of things of the same kind, varied in size, color, quality, price, Ibrm, or the like, to suit the market, the wants of people, or various purposes ; as an assort-
;
;
and distribute
seiiarate
ASSORT'ED,
ment of thread, of silks, of calicoes,
;
A
sorlir, sortire, to sully forth, lots. See Sort.]
draw
things of the like kind, nature or quality, or things which are suit(^d to a like purIt is sometimes aj)plied to persons pose. as well as things. 2. To fiunish with all sorts. Burke. ASSORT', I'. 1. To agree to be in accor-
An
;
,
to
It.
&,c.
W.
assor/me»!( of paintings.
Coxe.
A
variety of sorts or kinds adapted to various wants, demands or purposes ; as an assortment of goods. Mercantile Usage. ASSOT', r. t. [See Sot.] To infatuate ; to besot. [j\rot used.] Spenser. 4.
v. t. [This word a|)pears to be formed on the G. schwach ; D. zwak, weak ; or on D. zagt, soft, gentle, quiet, which coincides with the Sax. swig, silence
ASSUA'GE,
;
swigan, to be silent whence gesuigean, to he silent D. zwygen, id. In Sax. also, is to cease, I'ail, rest, be quiet. ;
;
gesivican,
But the Dutch word for assuage is verzagten, to soften.] soften, in afgurative sense ; to allay, mit-
To
igate, ease or lessen, as pain or grief; to
appease or pacify, as passion or tumult. In strictness, it signifies rather to moderate, than to quiet, tranquihze or reduce to perpeace or ease. ASSUA'GE, I', i. To abate or subside. fect
The waters assuaged. Gen.
viii.
i!at I
sjpiisc
tlie
aiiprclipml
were rlieckcd;
llel).
ASSUAIPT',
llm watersi
i.-,
;
;
eased
Sliligation
The
1.
9.
ment.
ASSUA'ciER,
One who
)!.
which mitigates or
allays
;
And hereby we
assimied.
?!.
him. 4.
[L. assumplio.]
act of taking to one's self.
that
(J.
eliis, p.
habit
ctssnesco, to
habitual use.
;
V.
t.
loss.
A
To
lake or take upon one.
It differs
Po])e.
ASSUMP TIVE,
undertake or promise himself,
as,
;
and |iromised
A
full
;
state of being
confidence.
HakewUI. assures; one who an insurer or under-
One who
»!.
insures against loss writer.
Romish ASSU'RING, dent
Encyc.
;
or
may
IMaking sure or conficonfirming. [See Jlssuage.]
ppr.
ffiving security
;
ASSVVA'GE. AS'TACITE,
be assu-
is
Taking
ppr. ;
;
I
assu-
;
is
just
;
;
haughty
1,.
assumo.]
a promise or imdertaking, founder on a consideration. This promise may be verbal or w litten. An assumpsit is express »r implied; express, wlien inatle in word;or writhig implied, when in consequence of some benefit or consideration accruin TO one person from the acts of another, the law presumes that person has jjromised to In this case, the iTiake compensation. law, upon a ])rinciple of justice, implies or raises a promise, on which an action may be brought to recover the compensation. contracts with B to build a Thus if house for him, by implication and inlendment of law, promises to pay B foi- the same, without any express words to that
Firm persuasion
full
confidence or trust
;
Let us draw near wilh a true heart, cr.s.sio7/^icc
3.
of
faith.
Hcb.
Firmness of mind
;
;
a. Radiated ; [Supra.] presenting diverging rays, like a star as Cleaveland. ;
x.
asterialed sai))iliire.
ASTE'RIATITE, n. Petrified asterias. AS'TERISK, n. [Gr. ayeptaxos, a little star,
Knolles is
as, his
tiv.m ofiyp, a star.] figure of a star, thus,*, used in printing a reference to a passage or
The
and writing as
intolerable.
note
Freedom from excessive modesty, timidity or bashfiilness
;
loss. 7.
!9. I
ASSU'RE,
V.
2.
An
The
ashu're.
[Gr.
fill
artpiff^os,
the space
a
little star,
a sign in the zodiac.
figures of the twelve asterisms.
As. Researches. asterisk, or
mark of reference.
[This
is less proper.]
AS'TERITE, or ASTERN', adv.
and of final t.
n.
af/ip, a star.] constellation ;
A
[i?ec Insurance.]
writing or legal evidence of the conBlackstone TiUotson Conviction. In f/ifo/ogi;, full confidence of one's intersalvation. [Fr. assurer.
the margin, or to is omitted.
name
from 1.
Any
est in Christ,
a
AS'TERISM,
veyance of projierty. l8.
in
when
laudable confidence.
Conversation with the world (vill give then Locke knowledge and assurance. Insurance ; a contract to make good ;
A
a star.] Stella
ajjjp,
ASTE'R1.\TED,
in full
undoubting steadi-
Excess of boldness; impudence; assurance
[Gr.
;
;
;
4.
}
marina, sea-star, or star ^ a genus of the order of Molluscas. It has a depressed body with a coriaceous is composed of five or more segcoat ments running out from a central part, and furnished with numerous tentacles, with a mouth below, in the center. There are many species. Encyc. fi.sh,
ness intiT])idity. Brave uicn meet danger with assurance.
;
effect.
;
freedom from doubt certain expectation the utmost certainty.
;
Jonson.
/««',
A
numerous.
ASTE'RIAS, AS'TER,
xvii. "2.
arrogant.
ASSU'MING, ASSUMP'SIT,
The act of assuring, or of making a decla ration terms that furnish groimil of confidence ; as. I trusted to his assurances ; or the act of furnishing any ground of full confidence. Whereof he hath given ossurnnce to all men, in tliat he hath raised him from the dead. Actf
m
Taking or disposed to tak
n. Presumjiticm. n. [Fret, tense of
with compound flowers, many of wliicli are cultivated for their beauty, particularly The species are very the Cliina Aster.
ed.] 1.
an arro-
arrogating
and gammarolites.
ites,
ashu'rance.
?;.
A
preteniling.
ASSU'ftlING, upon one's self more than a.
;
consequence of an
in
assume,
;
to pay.
One who assumes
taking for granted
See
action founded on a promise. When Mssurance.] to give confidence by this action is brought on a debt, it is called 1. To make certain indelitalus assumpsit, which is an action a promise, declaration, or other evidence on the case to recover damages for the nonas, he assured me of his sincerity. Blackstone. 2. To confirm to make certain or secme. payment of a debt. And it shall be assured to him. Lev. .\xvii ASSUJVIPT', J', t. To take up to raise. [Barbarous and not used.] Sheldon. 3. To embolden; to make coniiilent.
'J.
The
n.
certainty
;
ASSU'RER,
confirm, verify or laseur the G. zwar, from the root of L. verus ; or h.securus, contract
gant person.
\SSU'MIXG,
In
assured
Encyc. AS'TEISM, n. [Gr. afEioj, beautiful, polite.] [Fr. iiom In rhetoric, genteel irony ; a polite and ingenious manner of deriding another. assurer, of ad and siir, seur, sm-e, certain. Encyc. to make iirm, AS'TER, 7). [Gr. a.oyp.] Qu. the Rah. and Talm. IJVS, genus of plants,
arrogated; taken without proof; pretended.
1.
;
exphjit.
ASSU'MED, /)/). Taken; n.
to
aids,
;
ASSU'MER,
That
a.
ASSU'RANCE,
sume the garb of humility. to clainj ASii^UME, V. i. To be arrogant more than is due. 3. In laiv, to take upon one's self an obhgato
Certainly indubitably. Solomon shall reign
son
thy
i.
ASSU'REDNESS,
self.
Bacon.
;
nor Shak. ;
;
api)roiniate, or take to one's self; as, to assume the debts of another. 5. To take what is tictitious ; to pretend to possess ; to take in apjiearance ; as, to as-
;
Kings
indubitable
;
[Gr. a;axos, a crawmed. In heraldry, assumptive arms are AS'TACOLITE, ^ fish, and >.ieos, a stone.] such as a person has a right, with the ap- Petrified or fossil crawfish, and other crustaof the her and of his animals called also cancriles, crabceous sovereign, probation
reasoning.
tion
Certain
bold to excess.
Jlssuredly 1
fVoiion.
Adoption.
To
med upon
;
Jlade certain or confident insured.
botany.
;
;
in
upon one's
ascent of Mary, celebrated by the and Greek churches.
;
4.
doubting
;
a.
In tlie Romish Church, the taking up aj ASSUR'gENT, a. [L. assurgens, assurgo.] jierson into heaven, as the Virgin Mary. Rising upwarils in an arch ; as an assurgenl Also a festival in honor of the miracidous Eaton. stem, in
To take what is not just to take with to seize to arrogate arrogant claims unjustly; as, to a5«)t?;te haughty airs; to a.ssume unwarrantable powers. To take for granted, or without proof; to sujipose as a fact as, to assume a principle
o.
Insrire.]
ASSU'REDLY, adv.
Kent.
not implying an offer to give. The God assumed his native form again.
;
[See
ASSU'RED,
JEncyc a taking
;
of before the object be assured of your
to betroth. Obs. Shai. to covenant to indemnify for
;
made secure
consequence drawn from the projiosiis composed.
Undertaking
from
receive, in
'i.
assure our hearts before
tions of wliich an argiunent
[L. assumo,
to take.] 3.
to the
gism.
accustom.] Custom; Bacon. of orf and sumo.
shall
iii.
ASSU'RED, pp.
unwarrantatde ASSUA'GING, ppr. Allaying; mitigating; asswnption that the soul sleeps from the jieriod appeasing; abatins. of death to the resurrection uf lire hodvSoftena. ASSUA'SIVE, [from rismiage.'] Thodei/. Pope. :l The thing supposed ; a postulate or propoing; mitigating; tranqiiilizing. ASSUEFAC'TION, n. [L. assinfacio.] The sition assimied. In logic, the minor or Drownart of aooustotning. [j\"ol nsed.] second proposition In a categorical sylloAS'SUETUDE, ji. [L. assnetudo, from assuEncyc.
ASSU'JIE,
To affiance To insure;
.5.
.Voms. This gives no sanction
John
fidelity.
The act of taking for granted, or supposing a thing without proof; supposition.
abates.
1
To make secure, with secured as, let me ;
Hammond.
abate-
;
is
Cli iUingtvoHh
ASSUMP'TION,
;
aj>])eased. «.
That which
n.
[.Wot used.]
^B*.
ASSlJA'(iED,/>;). Allayed niitigatcil
ASSUA'uEJMENT,
AST
ASS
ASS
An
1.
star stone. [a or
at,
[See Astrite.]
and stem.
Stern.] In or at
See
or the hinder part of a ship towards the hinder part, or backw arils ;
;
;
go astnti. Behind a shij),
as, to
:
2.
at
any
indefinite distance. Mar. Diet.
;
;
AS'TEROID, form.]
n.
[Gr. ofrp, a star,
and
ubu^;.
AST
AST
A name
given l)y Ilerschel to the newly dis covered planets between the orbits of Mars
and Jupiter.
ASTEROID'AL,
Resembling a star
a.
or
;
pertaining to the asteroids.
ASTEROI'O'DIUM,
<
Science.
ofw, a star, "" [Gr. and nws, noio,, a
f;)c)t.]
Spenser.
ASTHENIC,
[Gr. o priv. and
asten'ic.
a.
strengtli.]
by extreme
debility.
Brown. [Gr. o priv., eSims, strength, and »^o;, discourse.] The doctrine of diseases arising frotn deCoxe. bility. 71. ast'ma. [Gr. aaSfut.]
ASTHENOL'OOY,
n.
ASTHMA,
A shortness of breath
intermitting difficulty of breathing, with cough, straitness and Coxe. wheezing.
ASTHMAT'Ie, also atfected
;
Pertaining to asthma; as an asthmatic
a.
by asthma
;
patient.
ASTIPULATE for Stipulaie. ASTH'ULATION for Stipulation.
[JVot in
f
use.]
I
ASTO'NE, ? , [See .Istonish.] To terrify ASTO'NY, S"''' or astonish. Obs. Chaucer. Astonished. Obs. ASTO'NED, } „ ASTO'NIED, S PPSpencer. MUton. ASTON'ISH, V. [Old Fr. estonner, now t.
Manner ; L. attono,
to astonish
ad and tono
;
Sax. gestun, noise, and stunian, to stun G. staunen ; Ann. eston, wonderfully. The
primary sense is, to stop, to fix. See Tone and Stun.]
strike
dumb,
to
stun or strike dumb with sudden fear, terror, surprise or won
confound with some sudden passion. I Daniel was astonished at the vision. Dan.
;
I
;
confounded
ASTON'ISHING, ppr. Amazmg
;
piness. Before
excite
great
was
afflicted, I
;
admiration,
JI.
%aStiv,
take.] that justice quitted heaven, in the golden 1. An instrument formerly used for taking age, to reside on earth ; but becoming the altitude of the sun or stars at sea. weary with the iniquities of men, she re- 2. A stereographic projection of the sphere, turned to heaven, and conunenced a concither upon the plane of the equator, the stellation of stars. Ena/c. being supposed to be in the pole of ASTRICT', V. t. [L. astringo, astrictus. See eye the world ; or upon the plane of the meAstringe.] ridian, the eye being in the point of interTo bind fast, or compress. [jNbt much used. section of the and the horizon. equinoctial ASTRICT', a. Compendious; contracted. 3. Among the ancients, the same as the modfVeever. Encyc. ASTRICT'ED, pp. Bound fast ; compressed ern armillarv sphere. } of ASTROL'OtiER, [L. astrologus, with bandages. and ofpor, a star, ASTRICT'ING, ppr. Bmding close ; com- ASTROLO'tilAN, >^o5, discourse.] pressing ; contracting. ASTRIC'TION, n. The act of bimUng close, 1. One who professes to foretell future events by the aspects and situation of the stars. or compressing with ligatures. fVofton. 2. .4s
p-
A
I
ASTRICT'IVE,
Binduig
To astonish ASTOUND', V. dumb with amazement. From t.
;
cstotiTit' r t
[a
Raleigh.
sty])tic.
AS'TRAGAL,
n.
[Gr.
on
ad and
stars.
a.
/.
astrinj'.
See
,
;
ASTRONOMIC,
'
15
and
"'
nomical manner astronomy.
coagulates animal fluids, condenses and Coxe. strengthens the sohds. practice inclines to the use of as-
tringent, for internal applications, tic, for external.
?
ASTRONOM'ICAL, S ASTRONOM'ICALLY,
n.
tlie
my. I
tiojuii,
v. i.
[Litth used.]
ASTRONOMY,
styp-
a law or
Pertaining to as-
tronomy.
adv. In an astroby the principles of
;
ASTRONOMIZE,
Modern
;
as-
;
;
Quincy.
it is
practice
A
n.
ASTRONOMER,
A medicine which binds parts of the body to which apphed, restrains profuse discharges,
or contracts
To
science [Supra.] which teaches to judge of the eflFects and influences of the stars, and to foretell fiiture events, by their situation and diflerent This science was formerly in aspects. great request, as men igiiorantly supi)osed the heavenly bodies to have a ruhng influence over the physical and moral world ; but it is now universally exploded by true science and philosophy. n. One who is versed in astronomy one who has a knowledge of the laws of the heavenly orbs, or the prinmotions are regulawhich their ciples by ted, with their various phenomena.
;
different
a tiu-ning
v. i.
trology.
ASTROL'OgY,
[L. astringo, of
Binding contracting strengthening; opposed to laxative.
form of a ring representing a ring or band of iron, to prevent t!ie It is often cut splitting of the colmnn. I.
ASTROL'OgIZE,
L. astrigcr.
stringo, to bind fast, to strain.
a.
;
of astrology.
[Little used.]
[Low
[.Vo< used.] I'.
See ASTRINti'ENT,
molding which surrounds the top or bottom of a
Vol.
;
Strain.]
To compress
"
ASTROLOG'ICAL,
ASTRING'ENT,
a5-payoj.oj,
iASTROLOG'IC,
Pertaining to asI professJ trology ing or practicing astrology. astrum, In the manner adv. ASTROLOG'ICALLY,
Astringent; binduig;
a.
;
joint, vertebra, spondylus.] 1. In architecture, a little round
in the
a.
to bind together; to contract Bacon by pressing the parts together. ASTRINg'ED, pp. Compressed; straitened contractid. ASTRIN6'ENCY, n. The power of contracting the parts of the body that quality in medicines which binds, contracts or as to strike strengthens parts which are relaxed the astringency of acids or bitters. Old Fr. Bacoit
straddle.
Straddle.] the legs across a thing, or sides ; as, to sit astraddle.
With
compressing;
;
apt to bind.
or Bearing stars.
adv. In a manner or degree to excite amazement. Bp. Fleetwood. ASTON'ISHINGNESS, n. The quahty of exciting astonishment. ASTON'ISHMENT, n. Amazement ; confusion of mind from fear, surprise or admiration, at an extraordinary or imexpected event.
ASTRAD'DLE,
polypier. n. [Gr. af,p, or ofpoi, a star, and ypa^u, to describe.] description of the stars, or the science of them. describing
ASTROG'RAPHY,
A
Ps
go astray when they leave their proper AS'TROIT, Star-.stone. [See Jlstrite.] owners or inclosures. See Deut. xxii. 2. A .species of petrified madrepore often ASTRE'A, n. [Gr. oyijp, a star.] found in calcarious stones. The goddess of justice. A nemie sometimes ASTROLABE, n. [Gr. ayijp, a star, and given to the sign virgo. The poets feign to
ASTRICi'EROUS,
of a
ASTONISHINGLY,
and
went astray.
cxix. Cattle
ASTRINCE,
adv.
I
;
1
Bearing or containing
Very wonderful
a.
amazement.
column,
1
j
religion, signifies wandering from the path of rectitude, from duty and hap-
[h. astrifer a star, undyeco, to bear.]
confound-
ing with wonder or fear.
ASTONISHING,
I
it
ASTRIF'EROUS,
fear, surprise, or admiration.
to
I
ASTRICT'ORY,
viii.
ASTONISHED, p;). Amazed;
nature
I
;
I
To
with
'
and
cliaracterized
;
A
n. falconer that keeps a to separate the sev Shak. goss hawk. of the architrave. Encyc. ASTRIN(i'ING,/);)r. Compressing; binding In 2. fast gunnery, a round molding on cannon contracting. near the mouth. Fr. Encyc AS'TRITE, ji. [Gr. a;r,e, a star 3. In anatomy, the buckle, ankle, or astroite.] sling bone the upper bone of the foot support lAn extraneous fossil, called also asteria and tije tibia. Coxe. astroit. Astrites are stones in the form of ing 4. In botany, the wood pea ; tlie milk vetch small, short, angular, or sulcated colunms, the liquorice vetch. about an inch and a half long, and the third of an inch in diameter, composed of several AS'TRAL, a. [h.astrum; Gr. ayiyp, a star.] Belonging to the stars stan-y. regular jouits, which, when separated, Dryden resemble a radiated star. ASTRA'Y, adv. [a and stray. See Stray.] Encyc. Out of the right way or proper place, both in ^strites arc said to be detached articua literal and figurative sense. In morals lations of encrinites, a kind of marine
mented entablatures
;
liind (if extraneous fossil, of the same substance with tlie astrite, to which it serves as the base. Encyc. ASTERT', V. t. To startle. [Ab< in use.]
aflffoj,
AST ASTRINc. ER,
used in orna
is
;
Joum. of )
Weak
and
eral faces
AS'TEROPODE,
A
into beads or berries,
n.
rule.]
To
study astrono-
Broum. [Gr. ofpov, a star, and
A
ATE
S Y
The
science which teaches the knowledge of the celestial bodies, their magnitudes, motions, distances, periods of revolution, asThis science pects, eclipses, order, &c.
depends on observations, made chiefly with instruments, and upon mathematical calculations.
AS'TROS€OPE,
[Gr. afpor, a star, and
n.
axordu, to view.]
astronomical instrument, composed of two cones, on whose surface the constellations, with their stars, are deUneated, by means of which the stars may be easily known. Encyc. AS'TROSeOPY, n. [See Astroscope.] Ob.\n
.servation of the stars.
ASTRO-THEOL'OciY,
n.
astnim, a
[L.
.star, and theologia, divinity.] Theology foundeil on the observation of the Derham. celestial bodies.
ASTRUT',
In a strutting
adv. [See Strut.]
manner.
ASTU'TE, .subtilty
Shrewd
;
a.
[L. nstidiis,
Ir. aisile, alste,
from
nstus, craft,
ingenuity.]
sharp eagle-eyed critically exSandys. amining or discerning. ASUND'ER, adv. [Sax. asuWrio?!, to divide. See Sunder.] in a divided into parts separately Apart ;
;
;
;
;
;
The
Loril hath cut
wicked.
asvndcr the cords of the
Ps. cxxix.
Obs. adv. In a swoon. Gower. n. [L. from Gr. aav\or, safe from a to and plunder.] ov^jj, spoil, otXaui, spoil, A sanctuary, or place ofrefuge, where criminals and debtors shelter themselves from justice, and from which they cannot be taken without sacrilege. Temples and
ASWOON',
altars
were anciently asylums
;
as were
tombs, statues and monuments. The anheathens allowed asylums for the protection of the vilest criminals; and the cient
Jews had
their cities ofrefuge. place of retreat and security.
Any VSYlil'METRAL,
?
\SYMMET'RICAL,
I
'i.
i
,
[Little vsrd.]
More.
ASYM'METRY, n. [Gr. apriv. and ov/i/iirpca symmetry, of am, with, and
fifrpsu,
to
measure.]
The want of proportion between
the parts of a thing. It is also used in mathematics for incommensurability, when between quantities there
is
no
;
;
ftn-nished with arms, bearing arms, present with arms ; at hand, within reach of the hand, and therefore near ; at my cost, rvith my cost ; at his suit, by or with his suit
;
at this declaration,
Johnson.
AS'YMPTOTE, rtfou, to
n. fall;
laralion
;
is,
he rose from
his
present, or
whence
coming this decresults the i
At under his command, that is, literally, com hig or being come his command, in the power of, or in consecpience of it. He is
good at engraving, at husbandry that is, inperformmg that business. He deserves well at our hands, that is, from us. The peculiar phrases in which this word oc ;
curs, with appropriate significations, are niunerous. At first, at last, at least, at best, at the worst, at the highest or lowest, are phrases in which some noun is imph
ed
as, at the first time or beginning ; at the last time, or point of time ; at the least
[Gr. a priv., bw, with, not meeting or coin
asymptote. Asymptotical lines or curves are such as continually approach, when extended, but never meet.
and ewSi^,
In grammar, a figure which omits the conas, vent, vidi, vici.
It is
down
be
filled
with
fuel.
consumed, that to
supply
its
in the
place. JVicholsop.
n. The disbelief of the existence of a God, or Supreme intelhgent Be-
A'THEISM, ing.
a ferocious system
Atlieisiu is
that leaves
notliinp! above us to excite to awaken tenderness.
A'THEIST,
awe, uor around us. Rob. Halt. n. [Gr. a9E0{,ofopriv. andSfo;.
God.]
One who or
disbelieves the existence of a
Supreme
A'THEIST,
God,
intelligent Being.
a.
Atheistical; disbelieving or
manner impiously. n. [Sp.] A kettle drum a kind n. The quahty of of tabor. Dryden. ATHE1ST'I€ALNESS, being atheistical. ATAC'AMITE, n. A muriate of copper. AT'AGAS, n. The red cock or moor-game. A'THEIZE, v. i. To discourse as an athe;
;
C'o.rf.
A
of
self-conceit.
of the
Encyc. a priv. and rolij, older.] disturbance irregularity in the functions of the body, or in the cri-
stands opa multipliCampbell.
ist.
Cudwoiih.
[JVot used.]
ATHEL, ADEL
illustrious birth
D.
edel
;
^THEL,
or ;
Sax.
Sw. wdel
;
eedel, ccthel
noble, of ; G. adel ;
Dan.
;
ccdel
Ar. Vi<
athala, to be well rooted, to be of noble Tliis word is tbund in many Saxon names ; as in Atheling, a noble youth ; origin.
Ethelred, noble
counsel
;
Ethelard,
noble
genius Ethelbert, noble bright, eminently noble Ethelwald, noble government, or power; Ethelward, noble defender. ses and paroxysms of disease. ATHE'NIAN, a. [from Athens.] Pertaining to Athens, the metropohs of Attica iu Coxe. Encyc. ATCHE, n. In Turkey, a small silver coin, Greece. value about six or seven mills. Encyc. ATHE'NIAN, n. A native or inhabitant of Athens. ATE, the preterite oieat, wliich see.
ATAX'Y, n. [Gr. Want of order ;
;
all
As
falls
;
n.
posed to polysyndeton, which cation of connectives.
furnace, with a lateral tower close on sides, which is to the fuel below is
tower
;
;
nective
and Heb. nun thanor,
[Ar.
digesting furnace, formerly used in chimical operations ; so constructed as to mamtain a imiform and durable heat. It is a
;
species lily which approaches nearer and nearer ATAMAS'GO, genus Amaryllis. to some curve, but though infinitely exAT'ARAXY, n. [Gr. aT'apa;fo;, of a priv. tended, would never meet it. This may and Tai>axr], timuilt.] be conceived as a tangem to a curve at an Calmness of mind a term used by the stoics infinite distance. Chambers. and sceptics to denote a freedom from the ASYMPTOTTCAL, o. Belonging to an emotions which proceed from vanity and
n. [Gr. a priv. to bind together.]
n.
an oven or furnace.]
;
line
ASYN'DETON,
A
or best degree, &c. all denoting an exdenying the being of a Supreme God. treme point or superlative degree. At all. ATHEIST'Ie, I "' Pertahung to atheism. is in any manner or degree. ATHEIST'lCAL, \ At is sometimes used for to, or towards, 2. Disbeheving the existence of a God im))ious applied to persons; as, an atheistic noting progression or direction as, he writer. aims at perfection he makes or rims at him, or points at him. I'l this phrase, he 3. Inqdying or containing atheism; applied to things ; as, atheistic doctrines or opinlungs to be at him, at has its general sense of approaching, or present, or with, in conATIIEIST'I€ALLY, adv. In an atheistic test or attack.
eiding.]
A
ATH'ANOR,
;
common meas- AT'ABAL,
ure.
and
;
;
;
;
c « ra ^^^'^ Sy^'nelry.]
Mot having symmetry.
two
;
sequence of it.
ASY'LUM, 1.
prep. [Sax.
seat, that
state.
A T H
at; Goth, at; L. ad. At, A'TE, n. a'ty. [Gr. Mr;, mischief; ofou, to ad and to, if not radically the same word, hint. Ate is a personification of evil, misoften coincide in signification. In W. at chief or mahce.J is to, and in Danish it is the sign of the lu pagan mythology, the goddess of mischief, in Amh. od, or ud, is toinfinitive mode who was cast down from heaven by Jupiwards. The word ctt is doubtless the ori ter. Pope's Horn. H. ental Nr\X,nnx, Ch. and Heb. to come, to ATEL'LAN, a. Relating to the dramas at Hence it primarily denotes Atella in Italy. approach. Shaftesbury. presence, meeting, nearness, direction to- ATEL'LAN, ?(. A dramatic representation, satirical or hcentious. wards.] Shaftesbury. In general, at denotes nearness, or presence ; A TEMP'O (ilUSTO. [It. L. intemporejusas at the ninth hoiu', at the house but to.] it is less definite than in or on at the A direction in music, which signifies to sing or play in an equal, true or just time. house, may be in or near the house. It denotes also towards, versus ; as, to aim an ATHANA'SIAN, a. Pertaining to Athanaarrow at a mark. sius, bishop of Alexandria, in the fourth From this original import are derived all century. The Athanasian creed is a forthe various uses of af. At the sight, is iirith, midary, confession or exposition of faith, at this news, pre.9ent, or coming the sight supposed formerly to have been drawn up present the news, on or with the approach by Atliiinasius, but this opinion is now reor arrival of this news. At jjeace, at war, jected, and the composition is ascribed by in a state of peace or war, peace or war some to Hilary, bishop of Aries. It is a existing, being present at ease, at play, at summary of what was called the orthodox a loss, &c. convey the like idea. At arms, faith.
AT,
;
;
;
]
A T O
A T L One who
A T O
ed by Moschus, before the Trojan « ar. opposed ATLANTIC, a. [from Atlas or Atlantis.] and cultivated by Epicurus, teaches that to a theologian. Hayward. Pertaining to that division of the ocean, ATHEOL'OgY, n. Atheism. [JVo< in use] which lies between Europe and Africa on atoms are endued with gravity and mothe west. east and on the America tion, by wliicli all things were formed, Smjl. A'THEOUS, a. Atheistic impious. [M'ol ATLANTIC, n. The ocean, or that part of without the aid of a supreme intelhgent the ocean, which is between Europe and Milton. Being. used.] Africa on the east and America on the The atomic theory, in chimistrj', or the docATII'KRINE, } A jjenus of fishes of the westtrine of definite proportions, teaches that ATIIKRI'NA, S "'abtloniinal order. Tlie An is rather isle mentioned all chimical combinations take place becliuracters are, the upper jaw ATLAN'TI€A, ( "• by are ATLAN'TIS, the ancients, anc: situated tween the ultimate particles or atoms of \ flat, tlie ray.s of the gill membrane west of Gades, or Cadiz, on the strait of bodies, and that these unite either atom six, and the side belt or hne shines like Gibraltar. The poets mention two isles with atom, or in proportions expressed by silver. There are four species the best known is the Hepsetus, very abundant in and call them Hesperides, western isles, some simple multiple of the number of and Elysianjields. Authors are not agreed atoms. Dalton. the IHediterranean, where it is caught hi whether these isles were the Canaries, or ATOMISM, n. The doctrine of atoms. Pennant. Ed. Encyc. lar;;e quantities. some other isles, or the continent of Amer AT'OMIST, n. One who holds to the atomica. Homer. Horace. ical atII'erome; !'•[«•'•"'""''''<'»'?''?•] |)liilosophy. An encysted tumor, without pain or discol- ATLANTIDES, n. A name given to the AT OM-LIKE, a. ResemhUng atoms. Pleiades or seven stars, which were feignoration of the skin, containing matter like Browne. ed to be the daughters of Atlas, a king of AT'OMY, n. A word used by Sliak.-ijiearc pap, intermixed with hard stony particles for atom ; also an abbreviation of anatoMauritania, or of his brother, Hesperus, Encyc. Coxe. easily cured by incision. who a. to or were to translated heaven. ATHEROMATOUS, Pertainuig my. Encyc. resembling an atherome having the qual- ATLANTIS, n. A fictitious philosophical ATO'NE, adv. [at and one.] At one toUiseman. commonwealth of Lord Bacon, or the ities of an atherome. gether. Spenser. ATIIIRST', a. athursV. \a and thirst. See piece describing it composed in the man- ATO'NE, V. i. [Supposed to be compoundner of More's Utopia, and Canipanella's ed of at and one. The Spanish has aduThir.it.] One part of the work is 1. Thirsty nar, to unite or join, and the Ital. adunare, wanting drink. City of the Sun. to assemble 2. Having a keen ajipetite or desire. from L. ad and wins, unio. finished, in which the author has described a college, founded for (he study of Nature, In Welsh, dyun signifies united, accordHe had a soul athirst lor knowledge. under the name of Solomon's House. Tin Cli. Observer ant, agreeing; dyunaw, to unite or agree; model of a commonwealth was never ex from un, one, and dy, a prefix denoting ATHLETE, n. [See Athletic] A contend-
ATHEOLO'6lAN,
n.
is
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
er for victory.
ATHLET'1€,
flf.
wrestler; from
Smith's Theory. L. athletn, a
.'J.
[Gr.
oB-Kr^rr^i;
af^'Ao;, strife,
contest.]
ecuted.
Encyc. n. A collection of maps in a supposed to be so called from a of mount Atlas, supporting the picture
AT' LAS, volume
;
iteration.] 1.
To
agree
;
to
be in accordance
;
to ac-
cord.
He and Aufidus can bo more atone, wrestling, boxing, running Than violentest contrariety. Shak. heavens, prefi.xed to some collection and other exercises and sports, which Johnson. [TTiis sense is obsolete.] were practiced by the ancients, usually 2. To .stand as an equivalent ; to make re2. large square foUo, resembling a volume called the athletic games. Hence, amend.s or satisfaction for an ofof paration, maps. An S. Strong ; lusty ; robust ; vigorous. fense or a crime, by which reconciliation 3. The supporters of a buiklin^ athletic body or constitution is one fitted is procured between the oftended and of4. silk sattin, or stuff, manufactured in the for vigorous exertions. with admirable ingenuity, Atlasses fending parties. east, and thwart. See ATHW-^RT', prep, [a The murderer fell and blood atoned for blood. are jilaiii, striped, or flowered ; but they Thwart.] have not the fine gloss and luster of some Pope. from side to side ; transverse ; 1. Across By what propitiation shall I atnne for my torFrench silks. Encyc. as athtvart the path. mer gravity. Rambler. No. 10. 5. The first verteber of the neck. Coxe. 2. In marine language, across the line of a The life of a slave was deemed to be of so (>. term as to atlas fine. apphed paper, little value, that a very slight compensation ship's course ; as, a fleet standing athwart Burke. atoned for taking it away. our course. n. [Gr. arfio,, vapor, and Robertson, Charles V. Athwart hause, is the situation of a ship 3. To atone for, to make compensation or when she lies across the stem of another, fitrpiu, to measure.] An instrument to measure the of amends. quantity whether near, or at some distance. exhalation from a humid surface in a givThis c\il was atoned for by the good effects Athwart the fore foot, is a phrase applied of the study of tlie practical physics of .\ristotle. en time an evaporonieter. lire. to tlie flight of a camion ball, across anSchlegel, Trans. n. [Gr. ar^oj, vapor, and other .'hip's course, ahead, as a signal for The ministry not atoning for their former a^aipa,a sphere.] her to bring to. conduct by any wise or popular measure. The whole mass of fluid, consisting of air, Junius. Athwart ships, reaching across the sliip aqueous and other vapors, surrounding the ATO'NE, II. t. To expiate; to answer or from side to side, or in that dnection. earth. make satisfaction for. Mar. Diet. ) to the Pertaining Or each atone his guilty love with life. "' adv. In a manner to cross ^ atmosphere ; as Pope. and perplex <-rossly wrong wrongfully. atmospheric air or vapors. 2. To reduce to concord ; to reconcile, as ATILT', adiK [anm\tilt. See TUt.] 2. Dependent on the atmosphere. at variance ; to ajipease. parties [JVbt 1. In the manner of a tilter; in the I am an posiPope. atmospheric creature. now used.] tion, or with the action of a man making AT'OM, n. [Gr. aro^oj; h.atomus; from a, ATO'NED, pp. Expiated ; appeased ; rea thrust ; as, to stand or run atilt. and to not, cut.] conciled. fiuvu, 2. In the manner of a cask tilted, or with one 1. A particle of matter so minute as to adn. Agreement; concord; end raised. mit of no division. Atoms are conceived reconciliation, after enmity or controversy. AT'IMY, n. [Gr. an^ta, a and Ti-ij-i;, honor.] to be the first principles or component Rom. v. In ancient Greece, disgrace exclusion from bodies. of all He seeks to make atonement Quincy. parts office or magistracy, " by some disqualifying 2. The ultimate or smallest component part Between the Duke of Glo*ster and your brothers. act or decree. of a body. Mitford. Shak. Chimistry. TIAN. } ^ Pertaining to the isle 3. Any thing extremely small. Shak. 2. Expiation ; satisfaction or reparation ATLANTE'AN, \ "-Atlantis, which the an- ATOiNI'lC, made by giving an equivalent for an inju\ Pertaining to atoms; concients alledge was sunk and overwhelmATOM'ICAL, \ "'sisting of atoms; extreme- ry, or by doing or suflering dial which is ed by the ocean. Plato. received in satisfaction for an oflense or ly minute. 2. Pertaining to Atlas The atomical philosophy, said to be broach; resembling Atlas. injiu-y ; whli for. 1.
Belonging
to
A
A
;
A
ATMOM'ETER,
:
ATMOSPHERE,
ATMOSPHERIC
ATHWART',
ATMOSPHERICAL,
;
;
;
ATONEMENT,
;
ATLAN
and oiler thy sin-oftering, andthy bimit-offering, and jiiake an atonement lor thyself and for the peoLev. ix. ple. When a man has been guilty of any vice, the best atonement he can make for it is, to warn others not to
saiil
Aaron, go to the
to
The Phocians behaved with
altar,
Sped. No.
into the like.
fall
1.
regard ; any passion or affection that binds a person as, an attachment to a friend, or to a party. ;
V. t. [Fr. attaquer ; Arm. atlacqi ; It. attaccare, to fasten, to engage in battle ; attacco, a sticking ; Sp. atacar, to assault, to fasten or make close, to cram ; Port. atacar, to attack, to seize, to fasten ; Heb. and Ch. ;?pn, to thrust, to drive, to strike.
ATTACK',
;
;
8.
;
suffi-
Potter, Jlntiq. 0.
L. tango, tager ; Sax. Iwccan ; Gr. iixofiai for tago ; Eng. tack ; &c. Class, Dg. See JUtack and Tack.] To take by legal authority to arrest the person by writ, to answer for a debt applied to a taking of the person by a civil process being never used for the arrest of a criminal. It is applied also to the taking of goods and real estate by an officer, by virtue of a writ or precept, to hold the ;
so niuch gallant-
they were thought to have made a atonement for their fonuer otfense.
ry, that
cient
ATT
ATT
ATT And Moses
same
In theology, the expiation of sin made by the obedience and personal sufferings of
to satisiy in the suit.
It
a judgment to be rendered
defect of muscular
power
;
a
pals)'.
Core. See Top.] On or Millon. atra bilis, [L. Wilson.
ATOP'
and
adv. [a at the top.
lop.
ATRABILA'RIAN,
)
""
ATRABILA'RIOL'S, witli
.-Vfiected
black
<,
black
cept
;
ATRAMENT'AL, VTRAMENT'OUS, black like
\ ""
\ \\\k.
a. Like ink suitable for making ink. The sulphate of iron, or green copperas, is called atramentariof ink. ous, as being the material ;
\TRO'CIOUS,
a.^
mous outrageous ;
ATRO'CIOUSLY,
2.
[L.
;
atrox, trui,
enor-
as atrocious guilt or
adv.
In
with enormous cruelty or guilt. n. The quaUty of be;
;
nourish.]
consumption or wasting of the flesh, with of strength, without any sensible cause or hectic fever a wasting from defect of
loss
;
noiunshment.
Coxe. Encyc. vegetable alkali exthe atropa helladonna, or deadly nightshade. It is white, brilliant Ure. and crystalizes in long needles. \TTACH', V. t. [Fr. attacker, to tie or fasten, to
A new
froin
apply, to engage, It. ;
writ or pre
;
Taken by
and
writ or pre fixed, or united by af-
phlet.
ATTACK', falhiig on,
calumny,
attaccare
;
to stick
Norm,
;
wmning
n.
An
first
invasion; a
Assaulted; invaded; pp. fallen on by force or emnity. ATTACK'ER, n. One who assauUs or in-
the aflec
A
takuig of the per son, goods or estate by a writ or ])recept ill a civil action, to secure a debt or de
ATTACK'ING,
mand.
ATTA€OT'Tl€,
n.
onset;
with force or violence, or with satire or criticism.
ATTACK' ED, vades.
ppr. Assaultmg; invading; force, calumny or criticism. a. Pertaining to the Attawrit directing the person or estate of a cotti, a tribe of ancient Britons, allies of the Scots. Pinkerton. person to be taken, to seciu-e his appearance before a court. In England, the first AT'TAGEN, n. beautiful fowl, resemnotice to appear in court is by summons bhng the pheasant, with a short black bill and if the defendant disobeys this moni and a fine crest of yellow feathers, varietioii, a writ of attachment issues, com gated with black and white spots, found in the mountains of Sicily. manding the sheriff to attach him, by tain which he or Diet. ofATat. Hist. security king gage, goods, forfeits by non-appearance, or l)y making ATTA'IN, V. i. [Fr. and Norm, atteindre ; L. bini find safe pledges or sureties for his attingo, to reach, come to or overtake ; ad and tango, to touch, reach or strike ; appearance. But in trespasses, an attachment is the first process. In this country, that is, to thrust, urge or push to. It has attachment is more generally the first pro no connection with L. attineo. See Class, cess, and in some states, the writ of at Dg.] tachment issues at first against the prop- 1. To reach to come to or arrive at, by modefendant. In or of the Conerty person tion, bodily exertion, or efforts towards a this writ issues the necticut, against person place or object. If by any means they might attain to Phengoods or land, in the first instance, comice. Acts xxvii. manding to take the goods and estate of the defendant, if to be found; or other 'i. To reach to come to or arrive at, by an
A
falling
on with
;
n. Enormous wickedness extreme huinousnes or cruelty as the atrocity of murder. AT'ROPHY, n. [Gr. a. priv. and rpf$«, to
ATROCITY,
n.
To fall upon, with unfriendly words or writing to begin a controversy with ; to attempt to overthrow or bring into disrepute, by satiie, calumny or criticism as, to attack a man or his opinions in a pam-
;
an atrocious
ing enormously criminal or cruel.
ntJ,
A
fierce,
;
Ch.
;
ATRO'CIOUSNESS,
staga ; attack
b}'
tions.
offense.
tracted
pp. to
influence
fixing by
cruel.]
Extremely hainous, criminal or cruel
ATRO'PIA,
;
drawn
ATTACHMENT,
\TRIP', adv. [oandfrip. See Trip.] In nautical language, the anchor is atnp when drawn out of the ground in a perThe topsails are pendicular direction. to the top of atrip, when they are hoisted the mast, or as hiirh as possible. Mar. Diet
A
be taken
ppi: Taking or seizing by connnandment or writ drawing to, and
Fotircroy.
;
2.
legally
fection or interest.
[L.a
VPRAMENTARIOUS,
manner
maybe
;
n. The state of being melancholy, or affected with disor dered bile.
;
That
ATTACH'ING,
XTRABILA'RIOUSNESS,
Inky
liable to
ATTACH'ED,
bile.
h^Q)^
;
;
a.
cept.
bile.]
melancholy, which the an replete with
cients attributed to the bile
whence
assault; to fall upon with force; to It is the assail, as with force and arms. appropriate word for the conunencing act of hostility between armies and navies.
string.
ATTACH'ABLE, attached
press,
L To
;
ATONY, ;
to
to press, to make close ; and the Class Dg.] to accuse, to unite.
;
sion
to be allied to attach ; but the verb agrees better with the Eth.
(n(D+
3. Cln-ist. take, seize and lay hold on, by moral to win force, as by affection or interest /VTO'NER, n. lie who makes atonement, the heart ; to fasten or bind by moral influATON'IC, a. Relaxed; debilitated. ence as, attached to a frienti attaching .\TO'NING, ppr. ReconciUng. Obs. wealth or others to us or .satisfaction. 'i. flattery. by Making amends, n. [Gr. arona, defect, of a. priv. 3. To make to adhere ; to tie, bind or fasten and roi'Ds, tone, from tsuu, to stretch.] as, to attach substances by any glutmous matter to attach one thing to another by or tena want of tone relaxation ; ; ; Debility ;
seems
latter
To
;
ertbrt of mind. In England, wit wise, to take his body. Such knowledge is too wonderful for me; it nesses not ai>peariiig upon a summons, is high [ cannot attain to it, Ps. cxxxix. may be taken by attachment ; a process Attachments also Regularly this verb should be always followcalled with us a capias. ed by to; the omission of (o, and the use issue against persons for contempt of of the verb, in a transitive sense, may have court. The court of attachments, iii Engoriginated in mistake, from the opinion land, is held before the verderors of the that the verb is from the L. attineo, and forest, to attach and try offenders against equivalent to obtain. vert and venison. v.t. To gain; to compass; to Foreign attachment is the taking of the money ATTA'IN, achieve or accom))lish, that is, to reach or of a debtor in the hands of a ;
goods
;
Arm.
attacher,
to
;
tache, tied, fixed, tacked together ; It seems to be allied to
;
Port. Sp. atacar.
and the sense is to put, throw or on, hence to seize, and stop, coinciding with the Eng. take ; Sw. !uga ; Dan.
by eftbrts; without to following. stranger as when the debtor is not with Is he wise who hopes to attain the end wifjiin the jurisdiction of the court or has ab Tillotso'n. out the means ? sconded. Any person who has goods or effects of a debtor, is considered in law as This use of the verb is now established ; but attain to the agent, attorney, factor or trustee of in strictness to is here implied the debtor and an attachment served on The real sense, as in the intranthe end. such person binds the properly in his hands sitive use of the verb, is, to reach or come to to respond the end or pnrjiose in view. This word the judgment against the debtor. always implies an effort toivards an object. Close adherence or affection Hence it is not synonymous with obtain fidelity
attack, fall
3.
;
;
ATT
ATT
A T T No
person shall be attainted of high treason This verb is not always ibllowed by an obwhere conu|)tioii of blood is hicurred, but by VVc procure or obtain a ject, and api)ears to be Intransitive ; but pl^ surli ert'ort. the oath of two wiUiesses, &c. Stat. 7 and 8. some object is understood, or a verb in thing liy purchase or tonn, and we ohtaiii W. the infinitive follows in the place of an by inheritance, but we do not attain it by 2. To as convicted the credit of jurors, taint, such means. An inattention to tiiis disobject ; as, he attempted to speak. of giving a false verdict. This is done by tinction has led good autliors into great ATTEMPT', (!. An essay, trial or endeavwrit of attaint. The conviction of special or an attack ; or an effort to word. of mistakes in the use tliis gain a point. such a crime attaints the reputation of juBacon. 2. To reach or come to a place or object by
and
procure,
which do not necessarily
im-1
.-i.
;
progression or motion. But ere such tidings shall
and renders them mfamous. to cloud with infamy
rors,
J.
his ears attain.
disgrace
;
stain.
Hoole's Tasso
Canaan he now attains. 3. To reach in excellence or
To
;
to
A
Bacon. a. That may be attained that may be reached by eftrirts of the mind or body that may be compassed or acto the obcomplislied by oilbrts directed equal.
ATTAINABLE,
3.
;
[See Taint.} Any thing injurious
that
;
which impairs.
Obs. 3.
A
Sliak.
blow or wound on the hinder
feet
of a
That may be
a.
temjited, tried or attacked attempt, or attack.
Spenser.
To
taint or corrupt. ,Shak. Milton ATT.^'INT, n. stain, spot or taint. Sttak. degree ; to 4.
ATTEMPT' ABLE,
ATTEMPT'ED,
;
an
Shak. tried
Essayed;
pp.
at-
to
liable
at-
;
tacked.
ATTEMPT'ER,
n.
One who
attempts, or
attacks.
Jiliiton.
ATTEMPT'ING, making an
;
/);)r.
etibrt to
Trying; essaying; gain a point attack;
horse. Farriery. ing. writ which lies after judgment against not attainable In this 4. ATTEND', V. t. [L. attendo ; Fr. attendre, to a jury for giving a false verdict in any inattention to the true sense wait, .stay, hold, e.xpect Sp. atender ; It. court of record. attendere ; L. ad and tendo, to stretch, of this word, as explained under attain, pp. Stained ; corrupted; to tend. See Tend.] authors have very hnpro|)crly used this rendered infamous rendered incapable 1. To word for obtainable, procurable. ; us in the go with, or accompany, as a compan'• of inheriting. The kind and qualiion, minister or servant. following passages. ATTA'INTING, /)/)r. Staining; corrupting; 2. To be present ; to accompany or be unity of food and liquor ; the species of habinfamous act ; rendering by judicial dejtrited to as a cold attended with fever. itation, furniture and clothing to which ving of inheritable blood. the common people of each country are 3. To be present for some duty, implying ji. The being attainted. habituated, must be attainable with ease charge or oversight to wait on as, the n. A staining or renderATTA'INTURE, Phil. B. (i. Ch. 11. and certainty." Paley, physician or the nurse attends the sick. " Gen. Howe would not ing infamous ; re|)roach ; imputation 4. To be present in business ; to be in compermit them to [ATot be purchased In Philadelphia, and they ATTASK', v.t. To task; to tax. l)any from curiosity, or from some connecused. See Task.] Sliak. were not and attainable tion in afluirs ; as, lawyers or spectators blankets) (clothes in the country." Marshall's Llle of Wash- ATTA'STE, V. I. To taste. [Mit used. See attend a court. Taste.] 5. To be conse<|uent to, from connection of ington, 3, 4^8. Each of these words should ATTEM'PER, v. f. [L. attempero, of orfand cause ; as, a measure attended with ill be obtainable. ATTA'INABLENESS, n. The quality ofi tempera, to temper, mix, or moderate. See effects. ject
A
as, perfection is
;
life.
From an
;
ATTAINTED,
;
;
ATTA'INTMENT,
;
being attainable.
ATTAINDER, and tingo, to See Tinge.]
[Norm. Fr.
n.
atteindre, to
also conviction ; L. ad Gr. rtyyu. Class Dg stain
corrupt, attaint
1.
Temper.] To reduce, modify or moderate by mixas, to attemper heat by a cooling mixture, or spirit by diluting it with water To soften, mollify or moderate as, to attemper rigid justice with clemency. ture
;
;
2.
;
a staining, corruption, or rendering impure a corruption of blood
3.
Hence, The judgment of death, or sentence of a competent tribunal iqion a person convicted of treason or felony, which judgment
4.
attaints, taints or corrupts his blood, so that he can no longer inherit lands. The
ATTEiMPERANCE,
X. Literally
To mix
;
2.
;
as,
in just
;
justice.
To acconmiodate
to
;
fit
make
or
suit-
able. Arts attempered to the lyre. Pope n. Temperance. [JVot
;
UjJon the thoroug:h demonstration of which by legal attainder, the feudal covenant is Blackstone. The act of attainting.
broken. 3.
An
act
persons. JVofe.
By
was made the
for the
attainder of several
constitution
States, no crime works an
ATTAINMENT,
n.
The
Encyc. of the United attainder.
act of attaining
;
the act of arriving at or reaching; hence the act of obtaining by eflbrts as the attainment of exitellence. 2. That which is attained to, or obtained by exertion acquisition as, a man of great ;
;
;
attainments.
.\TTA'INT, ,1.
moderated
;
pp.
softened
ATTEM'PERING,
ATTEMPT',
V.
t.
;
to regard.
tlie
Sidney.
passenger.
is not now a legitimate sense. express this idea, we now use the verb transitively, with to, attend to.
11.
To
[JVot in use.]
expect.
ATTEND' attention
To
attend
V. ;
i.
To
hsten
;
followed by
to.
voice of
my
to the
to
in-
Raleigh.
regard
w'ith
Ps.
suppUcation.
Ixxxvi.
Hence much used tend 2.
temperate
Chaucer. [Fr. uttenter, from L. at-
attempt, of ad and lento, to try The L. tento is from the Gr. tjh-u. root as tendo, to strain Hence, the literal sense is to strain, urge,
Arm. same
Lhyden. sohcitude
Tlie pilot doth rot attend the unskilful word*
Moderating in mixing in due propor-
tento, to
my doom.
This
ppr.
a
To accompany with
of
;
In
Shak.
to lie In wait.
Their hunger thus appeased, their care attends The doubtful fortune of their absent friends. Dry den. 10. To regard ; to fix the mind upon.
;
quality ; softening ; tion ; making suitable. adv. manner. [JVot in use.[
ATTEM'PERLY,
;
wait or stay for. Three days I promised to attend
9.
Hammond. Reduced in quality well mixed suited.
;
;
in the imperative, at-
!
To regard with observation, and correspondent practice.
My son, attend to my words. Hence,
regard with compliance.
to
;
He
attempti.
hath attended
to the voice of
my
prayer.
Ps. Ixvi.
;
To
the attention upon, as an object of pursuit to be busy or engaged in as, to stretch.] attend to the study of the scriptures. 1. To make an effort to effect some object to accompany or be present, to try to 4. To wait on to make trial or experiment in pursuance of duty with on or upon as, endeavor ; to use exertion for any purto attend upon a committee to attend upon pose as, to attempt to sing to attempt a business. bold flight. Hence, 2. To attack to inake an effort upon as, to .5. To wait on, in service or worship ; to serve. attempt the enemy's camp. 3.
fix
;
;
;
V.
t.
[See ^Hainder.] to extinguish the pure or inheritable blood of a person found guilty of treason or felony, by confession, battle, or verdict, and consequent sentence of death, or by special act of Parliament.
To
in use.]
to remain, abide or be in store happiness or miserj' attends us
as,
To
8.
;
ATTEM'PERED,
await ;
after death. 7. To wait for
Chaucer.
used.] consequences of this judgment are, forfeit a. [L. affemperaltis.] lire of lands, tenements and hereditaments, ATTEMTERATE, i)roportioned suited. loss of reputation, and disqualification to Tempered be a witness in any court of law. A statHope must be proportioned and atfemperale Hammond. to the promise. ute of Parhament attainting a criminal, is called an act of attainder. ATTEM'PERATE, v. t. To attemper. [JVot guilt
for
to regulate
proportion a mind well attempered with kindness
and
To
6.
;
taint or corrupt
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
:
ATT
ATT
That ye may attend upon the Lord without distraction. LI.
To
Cor.
1
vii.
er at the
Ohs. stay to delay. For this perfection she must yet attend. Till to her maker she espoused be.
To
wait
to
;
be within
ATTEND'ANCE,
n.
call.
The
[Fr.]
fully
Spenser. act of wait-
ing on, or serving. Of which no man gave attendance at the altar. Heb. vii. 2. Awaitingon; a being present on business of any kind as, the attendance of witnesses or persons in court attendance of members of the legislature. 3. Service ministry. f!hak Receive attendance. a retinue. 4. The persons attending a train Milton. 5. Attention regard careful application of ;
;
;
;
;
;
;
mind. 6.
Give attendance to reading. Obs. Expectation.
ATTEND'ANT,
o.
1
Tim. iv. Hooker.
Accompanying
being
;
present, or in the train. Other suns with their attendant moons.
Mlton. '2.
Accompanying, connected with, or iunne-
following, as consequential ; as, intemperance with all its attendant evils. In law, depending on or owing service to ; 'i. Cowel. as, the wife attendant to the heir. \TTEND'ANT, n. One who attends or diately
accompanies, in any character whatever, as a friend, companion, minister or servant one who belongs to the train. Dryden. One who is present ; as an attendant at or upon a meeting. One who owes service to or depends on ;
'i.
•3.
another. 4.
That which
is
Cowel. conse-
to.
quent
A
accompanies or
love of fame, the attendant of noh]e
spirits.
Pope.
Shame
the attendant of vice.
Anon. ATTEND'ED, pp. Accompanied; having attendants served waited on. ATTEND' ER, n. One wlio attends a companion an associate. [^Little ustd.^ .\TTEND'ING. ppr. Going with accomwaiting on panying sujjerintending or taking care of; being present immediately is
;
same
time. adv. IleedfuUy; with fixed attention.
ATTENT'IVELY,
;
Davies. 7.
;
;
ATTENT'IVENESS, attentive
;
;
;
;
;
;
.S'/ioTf.
;
intent
a. ;
[Fr.
;
regarding with
It is ai)plied to
;
a writing
is
an
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
to condense, incrassate or thicken. Doric. Encyc. To comminute to break or wear solid Attic order, an order of small square ])illars substances into finer or very mimite parts. at the uppermost extremity of a building. This had its origin in Athens, and was inThis uninterrupted motion must attenuate and tended to conceal the roof These pdlars wear away tiie hardest rocks. Trans, of C'huptal's Chimistry should never exceed one tliird of the length To make slender to reduce in thickness. of the order on which they are placed, nor •3. less a. Made or visbe less than one quarter of it. ATTEN'UATE, thin, Encyc. made sleiuler. Bacon Attic story, a story in the upper part of a cid ATTEN'UATED, pp. Made thin or le.ss house, where the windows usually are viscid comminuted made slender. In square. Encyc. botany, growing .slender towards the point. AT'TIC, n. A small square pillar with its ATTElV'UATING, ppr. Making thin, as cornice on the uppermost part of a buildAttics properly form the crown of fluids; making fine, as solid substances; ing. the building, or a finishing for the other making slender or lean. ATTENUA'TION, n. The act of making orders, when they are used in the strucas the atleniiation of the ture. thin, as fluids Encyc. an Athenian author. humors. 2. An Athenian Jones' Gr. Grammar. 2. The act of making fiue, by commnnition, »i. The and idiom or attrition. AT'TICISM, peculiar style The action of the air facilitates the attenuaof the Greek language, used by the AtheTrans. Chnptal. tion of these rocks. connians; refined and elegant Greek 3. The act or process of making slender, thin cise and elegant expression. or lean. Encyc. Art. Philos. i<. t. to To AT'TERATE, wear.] [L. uttero, 2. A particidar attachment to the Athenians. 2.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
wear away.
2.
To form
Mitford.
or accumulate bv wearing.
AT'TERATED, pp. Formed
AT'TICIZE,
by wearing. Ray.
». The operation of forn'iing land by the wearing of the sea, and the wearing of the earth in one place and depositifin of it in another. Ray. ATTEST', V. t. [Fr. attester ; L. attestor ; of ad and tcslor, to affirm or bear witness,
ATTERA'TION,
from 1.
To
See
testis.
Testify.]
bear witness to; to certify; to affirm genuine to make a solemn
to be true or
2.
tings by subscribing their names. To bear witness, or support the truth
3.
;
magnificence. To call to witness
woman Arm. ;
G.
invoke as con-
Dryden. tion.
[Little u^ed.]
zieren,
atourm, female ornaments retain tire, the
;
to adorn.
We
word, applied to the band of a wheel, and this word, in the D. toer, coinSee Class Dr.] cides with tour. To dress to array to adorn with elegant ;
or splendid garments. With the linen miter shall Aaron be attired. Lev. xvi. ATTI'IIE, n. Dress; clothes; habit but
The sacred streams which lieaven's imperial state 2. attests in oaths, and fears to violate. .3.
Witness
1.
;
to
;
;
?!.
make con-
sini|)le
scious.
ATTEST',
or
Trans, of Paus. B.
;
of
as, fact, by other evidence than words the ruhis of Palmyra attest its ancient
a
To conform
v. t. [Norm, attyrer, to provide ; Fr. atours, dress, attire ; atoumer, to dress a bride, to attire ; atourneresse, a tire
;
;
t.
ATTI'RE,
;
tion of persons ijitheir official ca|iacity as, to attest a to attest the truth of a writing copy of record. Persons also attest wri-
V.
formal)Ie to the language or idiom of Attica. Adjectives in 05, when atticized, beJones' Gr. Grammar. come "5. AT'TICIZE, 1!. i. To use atticisms, or the idiom of the Athenians. The title of a book in Pau?!. AT'TICS, phi. .sanias, which treats of Attica.
declaration in words or writing, to suppoi-t a fact appropriately used for the affirma-
aitentif.-]
observant
the sen.ses of hearing and seeing, as an attentive ear nr eye to the application of the mind, as in conor to the application of the templation mind, together with the senses abnvenieiitioned, as when a person is alleative to the care.
to
;
a stranger.
ATTENT'IVE,
name
attestation.
ATTEST'ED, pp.
;
as attention lo
;
;
;
toioards.]
Heedful
subscription of a
;
;
Act of civility, or courtesy
;
Proved or supjiorted by witnessed; testimony, solemn or official supported by evidence. the humors, subtilizes their parts, dissolves ATTEST'ING, ppr. Witnessing caUing to witness affirming in support of. viscidity, and disposes the fluids to motion circulation and secretion a diluent. ATTEST'OR, n. One who attests. Core. AT'TIC, «. [L. Mticus Or. Arnxos.] v. f. oCad and ATTEN'UATE, [L. attenuo, Pertaining to Attica in Greece, or to its prinL. tenuis; W. tenant lenuo, to make thin Thus, Attic wit, Attic cipal city, Athens. Ir. tana or tanaidhe ; salt, a poignant, delicate \vit, peculiar to Eng. thin, whicl the Athenians; v4Mic faith, inviolable faith. see.] 1. To make thin or less consistent to sub- Attic base, a peculiar base used by the antilize or break the humors of the body into cient architects in the Ionic order, or colfiner parts to render less viscid opposed umn and by Palladio and others, ui the ;
They say the tongues of dying men Enforce atttntion like deep harmony. 9.
Testimony witness
official declaration, verbal or written, in support of a fact ; evidence. The truth appears from the attestation of witnesses, or of the proper officer. The
attention.
[See Mtenuate..] Making thin, as fluids diluting rendering less dense and viscid. ATTEN'UANT, n. A medicine which thins
ATTEN
ing
n.
a solemn or care
a.
;
conseijuent to serving Ustening regarding with care. \TtENT', a. Attentive. 2 Chron. vi. ATTENT'.'VTES, n. Proceedings in a court of judicature, after an inhibition is decreed, .lyliffe. TION, n. The act of attending or heeding; the due a])plication of the ear to sountls, or of the mind to objects pre.sented to its contemplation. [Literally, a stretch-
ATTESTATION,
The state of bemg
n.
heedfulness
;
ATTEN'UANT,
;
;
;
ATT
words, the manner and matter of a speak-
;
testimony
;
attesta-
appropriately, ornamental dress.
Can a i>ride forget her The bonis of a deer.
attire.
Jer.
ii.
Ill botany, the generative parts of plants. Florid attire, called thrums or suits, as in flowers of marygold or tansy, consists of two or three parts, of whicli the outer
tlu^
ATT
ATT
ATT
that tendency which is manifested between small particles of matter, at insensible distances, or near the jMiint of contact, to unite them in coherence.
the floret. Semiform attire consists In Virginia, the duties otaltomey, counsellor, of the chives and apexes. This Innguiige conveyancer and advocate, are all perfyirt. formed by the same individual. is now obsolete.
part
is
ATTl'REU, pp. Dressed luinients or attire. n. One
ATTJ'RKR,
decked
;
An
attorney may liave general powers to transact business lur another or his pow ers may be special, or limifeil to a particular act or acts.
witli or-
dresses or adorns
Its poweror force planets in their orbits. is directly as the iiuantity of matter in a appointed to body, and inversely as the sipiare of the king, the state or distances of the attracting bodies. public ; and his duty, in ]iarlicular, is to SVewton. Encyc. prosecute jiersons guilty of crimes. letter or warrant of attorney is a written 2. The act of attracting ; the effect of the
with attire. \T:TI' KING, ppr. Dressing; adorning with Attorney General V.
f.
To entitle.
[M'otin use.] Goicer.
A
ATTITUDE,
)!. [Fr. attitude, posture ; Sp. The Itahan actituit, li-om L. actus, ago. aMi
nn
is
business for
manage
dress or attire.
ATTI'TLE,
officer
tlie
authority from one person another to transact business
ATTOKN'EV, to
word.] In painting and sculpture, tlie posture or action in wliich a figure or statue is phu-ed such a the gesture of a figure or statue disposition of the parts as serves to express the action and sentiments of tlie perJohnson. Encyc. son represented. 2. Posture position of things or persons as, in tunes of trouble let the prince or a nation preserve a firm attitude. Washington's Farewell Address. Hamilton. Gov. Smith. JV. H.
employ
v.
empowering liir
him.
To
perfi)rm by proxy as a proxy. [JVot in use.] t.
1.
;
ATTORN'EYSHIP, attorney
;
;
;
ATTOL'LENT, ad and Lifting
tollo,
up
;
to
;
lord, or transferring
levator or elevator.
ATTORN',
i.
him
otherwise called Core.
Qui/icy.
homage and
;
torniamento, a tournament
Sp.
;
lor-
Shak. a new
fealty to
When it ojieratcs on finity or cohesion. dissimilar jiarticles, producing union, it ia distinguished as heterogeneous, and called chiniical attraction or affinity.
service.
Encyc. V.
to
truho,
thaw.
H'ebster's
Blackstone.
[L. altraho, attraclus, of
I.
See Drag and
To draw to to cause to move towards, and unite with as, electrical bodies attract straws, and light substances, by physical
Manual-
Elective attraction, in chimistry, is otherIt is that power in wise called affinity. substances, which elects or selects from a
mixture those elements with whicli they have the strongest tendencv to combhie.
;
;
ATTRACT'IVE,
a.
[Er. altraclif]
Having the quality of attracting; drawing to ; as the attractive force of bodies. unite with, 2. Drawing to by moral influence ; alluring ; some cause the unthough may prevent inviting ; engaging ; as the attractive graces. ion ; as, the sun is supposed to attract the Roscoe. An attractive undertaking. planets. adv. With the power 3. To draw by influence of a moral kind to of attracting, or drawing to. invite or allure as, to attract admirers. n. The quafity of 4. To engage as, to attract attention. being attractive, or engaging. ATTRACT', n. Attraction. [J\'ot in use.] ATTRAcT'OR, n. The person or thing that la^^•s.
tour- 2.
[L. ad and torno ;'Vr.
;
Hence neo.
his
ad and Draw.]
Arm. tuirgna, tumein, to turn Sp. tomar ; Port, id; It. attornare, tomiare. ner
homage and
Shak. of an
principle of attraction. .ittractiiin niay Le performed by impulse or other means. J\,'^ewton's Optics. 3. The power or act of alluring, drawing to, inviting or engaging ; as the attraction of or beauty eloqiu;nce. Contiguous attraction is that which is exerted betweiui minute particles or atoms, When this prinat insensible distances. ciple unites particles of the same kind, it is called affinity of aggregation, cohesive af-
vassal or tenant, by which he consents, U|>on the alienation of an estate, to receive a new lord or superior, and transfers to
A
;
office
ATTORN'MENT, n. The act of a feudatory,
as an attollenl muscle
or the upper eye hd
The
another.
;
the purchaser of an estate.
Derham
V.
7t.
fi)r
ATTORN'ING, ppr. Acknowledging
n. muscle whicii raises 1. part, as the ear, tlie tip of the nose
ATTOL'LENT, some
agency
ATTRACT',
lift.]
raising
;
[L. attollens, alloUo, of
a.
The attraction of gravity is supjiosetl to be the great principle which lontines the
;
who
To draw
to
1.
or incline to
ATTRACTIVELY,
See Turn.l
;
In the feudal law, to turn, or transfer
homage
and service from one lord to another. This is the act of feudatories, vassals or tenants, upon tlie alienation of the estate. Blackstone.
Encyc.
;
ATTRACTIVENESS,
;
Hudibras.
ATTRA€TABIL'ITY,
The
n.
attracts.
quality ofl
ATTRA'HENT,
a.
Drawing being attractable, or of being subject to to ; or as a noun, that which draws to. the law of attraction. Asiat. Researches. Glaninlle. a. That may be attractATTRA€T'ABLE, One who takes the turn or change. place .VPTRAP', V. t. [Qu. Fr. drap, cloth.] To ed subject to attraction. of another. See .^rtoni and Turn.] Barret. clothe to dress. [.Vol in use.] Lavoisier by Kerr, One who is appointed or admitted in the ATTRECTA'TION, n. [L.attreclatio.] FreDiet. place of another, to manage his matters in ATTRACT'ED, pp. Drawn towards invi quent handling. law. The word formerly signified any ted allured engaged. ATTRIB'UTABLE, a. [See AttribiUc] ) to That per.son who did business for another but ATTRA€T'I€, may be ascribed, imputed or attribu"• Having power its sense is now draw to. ted ascribable imputable as, the fault chiefly or wholly restricted ICAL, I [JVot to persons who act as substitutes for the is not attributable to the author. used.] Rfypersons concerned, in prosecuting and de- ATTRACT'ILE, a. That has power to ATTRIB UTE, v. t. [L. attribuo ; ad and actions before of courts attract. Med. Rep. fending trijustice, or tribuo, to divide, to bestow, to assign in transactuig other business in which ATTRACT'ING, ppr. Drawing to or to bus, a tribe, division or ward ; Fr. attribuer ; The word anwards inviting alluring engaging. legal rights are involved. See Sp. atribuir, tribuir ; It. aitribuire. swers to the procurator, (proctor,) of the ATTRACT'INGLY, adv. In an attracting Tribe.]
ATTORN'EY, tournon
;
n. plu. attorneys. fn^m tour, ;
tome, id
[L. attrahetis.]
[Norm, attoum, turn,
;
;
;
:
;
;
ATTRACT
;
;
;
;
;
;
court. in
some of the U.
ATTRACTION,
1.
n.
The power
in bodies
sujjposed to draw them together or the tendency or principle which incUnes them to unite or cohere called by Coper-
which
is
;
or counsel in the higher courts this privilege being confuied to counsellors and serIn other states, there is no disgeants. tinction of rank, and attorneys practice in all the courts. And in a general sense, the ;
attorney comprehends counsellors, barristers and Serjeants.
To
allot or attach, in
ascribe
We
;
contemplation to to consider as belonging. God, that contains a Tillotson.
3.
To
give as due
;
to yield as
3.
pliers into attraction of gravity or gravita tion, which extends to a sensible distance, such as the tendency of the planets to the
AT'TRIBUTE, n. That which
;
an act of the
as, to attribute to God all the glory of redemption. To impute, as to a cause ; as, our misfortunes are generally to be attributed to our follies or imprudence.
mind
Encyc This power, principle or tendency in bodies to unite, is distinguished by philoso
sun, or of a stone, when raised in the air, to fall to the earth, and of which kind is the attraction of magnetism, and of elecand into attraction of cohesion, or tricity
;
attribute nothing to contradiction.
;
nicus, appetence. States,
attorneys are not j)ermitte(l to be advocates
word
;
manner.
civihans.
Attorneys are not admitted to practice in courts, until examined, approved, licensed and sworn, by direction of some court after which they are proper officers of the
In G. Britain, and
;
;
is attributed ; that which is considered as belonging to, or inherent in as, power and wisdom are attributes of the Supreme Being: or a ;
quality determining something to be after
as,
;
extension
is
an
of sale was made by a crier. sub ha^a, under a spear stuck in the earth.
of body. Encyc. characteristic disposition as Quality Bacon. bravery and generosity in men. A thing belonging to another an append ant as the arms of a warrior. In paint ing and sculpture, a symbol of office or
y.
;
;
character, added to the principal figure as a club is tlie attribute of Hercnles.
AUCTIONEE'R,
;
or giving as due
;
imputing.
ATTRIBU'TION, n. The or the quality ascribed
ATTRIB'UTIVE, pressing an
act of attributing,
commendation.
;
Pertaining to or ex
a.
Harris.
attribute.
jj. In grammar, a word an attribute; as an adje
ATTRIB'UTIVE, signiticant of
verb or particle, which is the attribute of a substance. Harris' Hermes. ATTRl'TE, a. [L. altrilus, worn, of ad and live,
Gr. istftu. See Trite.] Worn tero, to wear Milton. by rubbing or friction. [See Trite, which is now generally used.] ATTRI'TENESS,n. The behig niuchworn. Johnson. ATTRI"TION, n. Abrasion the act of wearing by friction, or rubbing substances ;
together. The change of aliment
by the
effected
state of being worn. 3. With divines, grief for sin
fear of
punishment
;
AU€UPA'TION,
and
airs
IVallis.
To make
See Tone
To
manner
;
In an impudent
adv.
Shak
with excess of boldness.
AUDA'CIOUSNESS, ing audacious
good sense
;
n.
The
impudence
quality of beaudacity.
;
Sandys. Boldness, sometimes in a daiing spirit, resolution or
n.
;
confidence.
Audaciousness
2.
sense
; impudence ; in a bad imjjlying a contempt of law or
;
moral
restraint.
AUD'EANISM,
n. Anthroponior|)liisin or the doctrine of Audeus, who maintained that God has a human shape from Gen. i
;
another
;
Hence ;
a.
court.
AUD'IT-HOUSE, n. An appendage
to a cathedral, in which the business belongingto it is transacted. Wheler.
AUD'ITIVE,
a. Having the power of hearCotgrave. one who at[L.] A hearer tends to hear a discourse. 2. A person appohited and authorized to examine an account or accounts, compare the charges with the vouchers, e.xamine the pai ties and witnesses, allow or reject charges, and state the balance. It is usual with courts to refer accounts, on which an action is brought, to auditors for adjustment, and their re])ort, if received, is the basis of the judgment. In Englaiul, there are officers who are auditors of courts; as the auditors of the Excliequer, of the receipts, &c.
ing-
AUDITOR,
AUD'ITORSHIP,
arf«.
Between. Obs.
adv. Betwixt. Obs. adv. In two. Obs.
making
oyez,
;
The verb
Port, ouvir
;
is
Fr.
contracted
ov'ir,
law
AUD'ITORY, 2.
courts.] ;
;
The
re.
quality of being
tending
1.
4.
structed.
public sale of property to the highest bidder, and regularly, by a person licensed for tlie purpose ; a vendue, CorUracts for services, somethnes, are sold to the lowest bidder. By the Romans
\5.
bench on which a judge n.
A
sits to hear Encyc. female hearer.
Milton.
Jifilton.
;
Admittance to a hearing ; pubhc reception to an interview ; a ceremony observed in courts, or by official characters, when
An auditory; an assembly of hearers. In the Spanish dominions, a com-t as the audience of Seville, which is a coiu't of oyer and terminer and the audience prctorial, in the Indies, which is a high court ;
of judicature. The word in Spain also signifies certain law-officers, appointed to institute a judicial inquiry. Span. Dirt.
and authorized
A
causes.
cian mythology, is represented as belonging to Augeas or Augias, one of the
;
A
audi-
AUF, n. A fool a simpleton. [See Oaf] AUgE'AN, a. The Augean stable, in Gre-
business in person. 3.
An
in
embassadors or applicants to men in office are permitted to appear and state their
;
[L. auditorium.]
at-
;
to .sounds.
His bold discourse had atuliencc. 2.
It.
n.
AUD'ITRESS,
audible.
It.
brown, by a transposition of the letters r and n, with a prefix, auburn, for aubrun, from brennan, burn, denoting the color made by scorchof a dark color. ing.] Brown His auburn locks on either shoulder flowed. Dry den. J!. AUCTION, [L. audio, a public sale; Eng. to hawk ; G. hoken ; properly, to cry out. Sec Hawk.]
of auditor.
A ]jlace or apartment where discourses are delivered. In ancient chircjies, the nave, where the hearers stood to be in-
3.
voice or whis))er.
AUD'IBLENESS,
Chaucer. ATVVO, AUBA'INE, »i. aubain. [Fr. awiiai?!, an alien.] AUD'IBLY, adv. In an audible manner The droit d'auhaiiu, in France, is the right a manner so as to be heard. of the king to the goods of an alien AUD'IENCE, The act of hearing, or
from hrun, bruno, Fr. and
office
;
oyer,
That may be heard perceivable by the ear loud enough to be heard as an audible Shak
dying within his jurisdiction, the king standing in the place of the heirs. AU'BURN, a. [This word is evidently formed
The
ence an assembly of hearers, as in a church or lecture room.
to hear.
and from the French hear ye, the barbarous O yes, of our in
Obs.
Spenser. Spenser.
ji.
Johnso7t.
;
ATWEE'N, ATWIXT',
;
[L. audibilis,
Vulg. Gr. av6ia. into S]i. oir
;
:
Encyc.
accommodated in sound. ATTU'NING,;9pr. Putting in tune
musical, or accordant in sound. adv. In twain asunder.
an examination, or account as adjusted by auditors; a final account. Hooker. V. t. To examine and adjust an acAUD'IT, count or accounts, by proper officers, or by persons legally authorized for the purj)Ose as, to audit the accounts of a treasurer, or of parties who have a suit depending in
;
as
;
ATWA'IN,
officers, or persons appointed for that piu-pose, who compare the charges with the vouchers, examine witnesses, and
from audio, to AIID'ITORY, a. That has the power of hear. This word is evidently connected hearing pertaining to the sense or organs of hearing; as, the aurfiVon/ nerve. with the name of the ear; Gr. ova;, oiiaroj;
one ;
26.
AUDIBLE,
ATTU'NED, pp. Made musical or harmonious
Jonson.
spirited.
;
AUDA'CIOUSLY,
;
to adjust ; to make accordant to attune the voice to a harp. to
;
;
Bold
3.
iise.]
[L. audit,
state the balance. Coivper. aucupalio, from 2. The result of such
;
musical.
tune, or put in tune
sound
[L.
Encyc. hearer. [JVo< in
Shelion. n.
proper
seU at auction.
;
attune the trembling leaves. Aliltvyi
3.
n.
To
;
the lowest degree of
[of«(/and
i). «.
Tune.']
Vernal
t.
aucupor, of avis and cupio.] The act or practice of taking birds fowling birdcatching. [Ldttlc used.] AUDA'ClOUS, a. [L. audai ; Fr. audacieux ; from L. audeo, to dare. The sense is, advancuig forward.] 1. Very bold or daring; impudent; conlem ning the restraints of law, rehgion or de corum used for 6oW i>i wickedness ; applied to persons as an audacious wretch. 2. Committed with, or proceeding from, dai-ing effrontery, or contempt of law as an audacious crime.
arising from
re|)eutance.
ATTU'NE,
v.
&c.
he hears.] An examination of an account or of accounts, with a hearing of the parties concerned, by
sells at auction a person licensed by government to dispose of goods or lands by public sale to the highest bid-
AUDACITY, is
trition of the stomach.
n.
The person who
;
9.
Pope.
Belonging to an aucDryden
a.
tion or public sale.
Encyc.
Shak Reputation ; honor. [JVot a proper sense of this tvoril.] ATTRIBUTED, ;)j). Ascribed; yielded as due imputed. ATTRIB'UTING, /*^r. Ascribing: yieldmg
thing sold at auction.
AU€'TIONARY,
;
4.
The
2.
;
;
bishop of Canterbury, on the subject of
this species
at-
tributi'
2.
AUG
A U D
A U C manner
u certain
In England, a court held by the arch-
Argonauts, and afterwards king of Ehs. This ])rince kept a great number of oxen, in a stable which was never cleansed, until Hercules undertook the task a task which it seemed im])racticable to execute. ;
Hence the Augean stable came to reprewhat is deemed impracticable, or a place which has not, for a long time, been sent
cleanscfl.
Lempriere. n. [D. aregaar. The Saxon word nafe-gar or naue-gar, from nafa, the nave
AUG'ER, is
of a wheel, and gar, a tool or a borer. It is probable that the real word is naugar, corrupted.]
An
instrument for boring large holes, chiefly used by carpenters, joiners, cabinet niak-
AUG
AUG
A U R
wheelw)i<»lits and sliipwiightr!. sioH of monasteries. It It was long ago dis- AUGTJST'AN, a. Pertaining to Augusius : consists of an iron blado, oniJing in a stee. solved. as the Augustan Encyc. age. bit, with a handle placed at right angles In heraldry, augmentation consists in ad- 2. The Augustan confession, drawn up al witli tlic blade. ditional charges to a coat-armor, often as Angers, niatfe with a Augusta or Augsburg, by Luther and Memarks of honor, borne on the escutcheon straight cliannel or groove, in some places, lancthoii, in 15:50, cont.iins the principle.^ are called pod-nugers ; tlie modern angers, ov a canton. Enrnc. of tlie Protestants, and their reasons for with spiral channels, are called scretvATI VE, «. Having the riuality separating from the Romish church. or power of angers. augmenting. Encyc. AI O'ER-IIOLE, n. A hole made by an n. He that augments. AUGUSTIN'IANS, „. Those divines, who anger. frtim 8t. Augustiii, niaiiilaiii that ;);jr. Increasing; enlarggrace is AUGHT, n. nut. [Sax. aioiht, aid, or moiht, ing. effectual from its nature, absolutely and oini'il, dIiI, tioni un'lit, wiglit, a creature, an- AU'GUR, n. [L. augur. The first .syllable morally, not relatively and gradually. This loihi seems is from imal, thing, any thing. avis, a fowl ; but the meaning and to be oin- icighl and whil ; and I of the last origin suspect .syllable are not obvious.] > An order of AJ'GUST'INS, the L. i/ul, i/uu; i/iioil, ipild, tchitt, to be the 1. Among the «• Romans, an officer whose duty so .-alled from St! same word varied in ortliograjihy. This waste foretell future events bv the sing- AUGUSTIN'IANS, $ Augnstui. They originally were hermits, word should not he written ought.] ing, chattering, flight and leediiig of birds. and called Austin friars. They were conI. There was a college or coiumimity of Any tiling, indefinitely. gregated into one \nnl\ by Popi- AlexanBut go, my son, and see if atight be wanting augurs, originally three in number, andj der IV., under Lan(raiic,"in 125(). They Mildison afterwards nine, four (latricians, and five! clothe in black, and make one of the fi.uV Any part, the smallest, a jot or tittle. plebeians. They bore a stafl'or wand, and! orders of mendicants. Enair There (.iiIlmI not might of any good thing were held in great respect. n. Encyc. wliich die Lorti had sjiokcn. Josh. x.\t. Dignity of mien; granOne who pretends to foretell future events deur ; NESS, magnificence. AU'tilTE, n. [Gr. avyr., brightness. Plin. by omens. n. from Alca.] The al37, 10.] Wc all know tliat augur cannot look at augur AUK,a [contracted ca, niineral called by Haiiy, pyroxene ; oflen genus of arpiatic fowls, of the order without langliiiifT. Buchminster of ansers, including the northern found ill distinct crystals. Its secondary penguin or great auk, the little auk or black and forms are all six or eight -sided prisms. AU'GUR, v.i. To guess ; to conjecture by white diver, the |iiirtiii, &c. sigiis or omens ; to prognosticate Sometimes it apjHiars in heniitrope crysV. t. To AU'GUR, or to ;i. predict tals. foretell; It lias a foliated AULA'RIAN, a as, At Ox[L.aula, hall.] structure, and is augur ill success. lord, the iiieniber of a hall, di.sthiguished harder than liornbleiid. Tiie varieties are common augile, sahlile, fassaite, and AU'GUR.'^L, a. [L. auguralis.] Pertaining Todd. vi'l'r^ ''.'"fgian. to an augur, or to prediction by the ap- Al coccolite. 'I'lie IC, a. [Gr. mXijT'txos, from otjXos, a omjjiiacitc of Werner appearance of birds. The Romans had their pipe.] pears also to be a variety and the eomstaff and augural books. to augural mon aiigite, tiniiul near the lake Baikal, Pertaining pipes or to a pipe. [Liltlr v. i. To judge by augury has been called BaiUalite. used.] Ckaveland. AU'GURATE, to predict. H'arburton. AU'LI€, a. [L. aulicus, from [TMle used.] Werner divides augite into four sub-species ; aula, a hall, n. The practice of aucourt or jialace ; Gr. granuhir, foliated, conchoidal, and com- AUGURA'TION, avx?;.] mon ; and there is a variety called slaggy gury, or the foretelling of events by the Pertaining t
AUGMENT'
AUGMENT'ER,
AUGMENTING,
moX,
%
AUGUST
A
LET
;
;
;
AUGMENT', ;
;
;
bigger a.s, nugmenl an army, by reinlbrcement rain ait^mcn/« ;
AU'GUROUS,
;
2.
a stream. To increase or swell
or magnitude
;
as,
tlie
degree, amount
impatience augments an
I.. J. To increase to grow as, a stream augjncnts by rain.
larger
;
AUG'MENT,
Increase; enlargement by state of increase.
;
tial
vowel.
a.
That may be
in-
creased; callable of augmentation. H'alsh''s
AUGMENTATION,
«.
The
Amer. Review. act of increas-
ing, or making larger, by adtlition,«xpansion, or dilatation. 2. The state of being increased or
1.
enlarged. thing added by wliieh a thing is enlarged. In music, a the value of the notes douJiling of the subject of a fugue or canon.
The
Bushy. Court, in England, a court
Augmentation erected by 27 Hen. VIII., to augment the revenues of tlie crown, by the suppres-
Vol.
I.
;
The
2.
An omen
AUGUST',
;
a.
prediction
;
;
The
first .syl-
;
;
Dryden. is related that this epithet was first' conferred by the Roman senate upon Octavius, after confirming him in the sovereign
power.
AU'GUST,
The
eighth month of the year, contauiiiig thirty-one days. The old Roman name was Scrtilis, the sixth month from Marcli, the month in which the primitive Romans, as well as Jews, began the n.
some European
universi-
ceives the caji and presides at the Aulic or
prognostication. Shak. Dryden.
[L. augusius.
lable of this word is proliably from the root of n!(g-co, or of face.] Grand magnificent majestic impressimr awe inspiring reverence. The Trojan chief appeared, august in visage. It
Emperor.
in
Aulic,
an act of a young divine, on being admitted a doctor of divinity. It begins by a harangue of the chancellor addressed to the young doctor, after which he reties, is
disputation.
AUMA'IL, variegate.
t..
/. [Fr. email.] [JVot used.]
To
AUMBRY. [See Ambry.] AUME, n. A Dutch measure
for
Encyc. figure or Spenser.
Rhenish
wine, containing 40 gallons.
;
AUGMENT'ABLE,
3.
foretelUng
n.
;
n.
addition In philology, a syllable iirefixed to a word or an increase of the quantity of the ini;
a.
Predicting;
[L. augurium.] The art or practice of foretelling events by the flight or chattering of birds.
evil.
AUGMENT',
a.
foreboding.
AUGURY,
Encyc. [A i-ontraction of aidne, ulna.] French cloth measure, but of different lengths in different parts of the country. At Rouen, it is an at Calais, Eng. ell 1. 52 ; at Lyons, 1. OGl ; at Paris, 0. 95.
AUNE,
A
n.
;
Encyc.
A TTTVTrn
AUNT,
)i.
tante.] sister
The
tive to
[L. amita, contracted.
Qu. Fr.
of one's father or mother, correla-
nephew
or niece.
AURA,
n. [L. from Heb.iK', a stream Gr. See Air.] in Literally, a breeze, or gentle current of air, tus, on account of his victories, and his but used by Enghsh writers for a stream' entering on his first consulate in that of fine particles flowing from a body, a!3 iT^omh. Gebelin.l effluvia, arotna, or odor au eslialation.
The name was changed to August honor of the Emperor Octavius Angus-'
year.
;
aiipa.
;
16
A U R n.
Vli'llATE,
A
[Supposed
A U be from aurum,
to
;
,•
.-VU'RATED,
AURE'LIA,
u.
ResemMii.g gold.
its
rVURIPlGMENTUM. AU'RISCALP,
n.
[See Orpiment.]
[L. auris, ear,
and
scalpo,
to scrape.]
An
instrument to clean the ears; used also in operations of surgery on the ear.
AU RIST,
color.
;
[L.
and
A
see.
ox.]
species of o.x, whoso bones are found in J. of Science. gravel and alluvial soil. . AURO'RA, n. [L. aurora ; Sans, arun ; Ch.
and Heb. IIX 1.
3.
Encyc.
light,
and
"ly
to raise.]
The rising light of the morning the dawn of day, or morning twilight. The goddess of the morning, or twilight The poets represented deified by fancy. ;
her as rising out of the ocean, in a chariot, with rosy fingers drop])ing gentle dew. aurelia. Johnson. 3. A species of crowfoot. AU'Rie, a. to gold. The auric acid is a saturated Aurora Borealis, or lumen horcale ; northern This species of hght iLsually aptwilight. combination of gold and oxygen. towards the in streams, ascending pears Fourcroy. zenith from a dusky line a few degrees dim. from au )i. [L. auricula,
above the horizon.
the ear.] external ear, or that part which is prominent from tlie head. The aiu-icles of the heart are two niuscu lar bags, situated at the base, serving as diverticula for the blood, during the dias tole. They resemble the auricle of the ear, and cover the ventricles of the heart, Their systole or contraction like caps. corresponds to the diastole of the heart, and vice I'crsa. They receive the blood from the veins, and communicate it to the ris,
2.
ventricles. called,
Encyc. 11.
its
;
;
AUSPI"CIOUSLY, omens l)lv
happily
;
;
adv.
jiromise
;
With
favorable favora-
prosperously
propitiously.
;
AUSPI"CIOUSNESS,
n.
A
;
of
state
fail-
prosperity.
rigid ; stern applied to persons austere master ; an austere look. ;
;
9-
Chambers.
Sour to
harsh
;
to the taste
rough
:
as
;
;
an
applied
or wine.
fruit,
Severely;
rigidly;
harshly.
AUSTE'RENESS, harshness 2.
n. Severity in
manners;
austerity.
;
Roughness
in taste.
AUSTER'ITY,
n. [L. austeritas.]
Severity
of manners or life strictness ; rigor harsh discipline. It is particularly appUed to the mortifications of a monastic hfe, ;
;
which are
tain.
;
things; as austere adv.
AUSTE'RELY,
;
leaves, bear's
[from L. auricula, the
a.
;
[See Auspice.] Having omens of success, or favorable ai)pearan' ees ; as an auspicious beginning. 9Prosperous fortimate applied to persons . as auspicious chief. Dryden. 3. Favorable; kind; propitious; applied to persons or things ; as an auspicious mistress. Shak.
assiuiies
hemisphere. Sometitues it appears in detached places at other times, it almost covers the hemisphere. As the streams of light have a tremulous motion, they are called, in the Shetland isles, merry dancers. They assume all shapes, and a variety of colors, from a pale red or yellow to a deep red or blood color and in the northern latitudes, serve to illuminate the earth and cheer the gloom of long winter nights. This hght is sometimes near the It is said to have been seen beearth. tween the spectator and a distant moun-
ear.
4URI€'ULAR,
;
a.
;
That species of primrose,
from the shape of
it
;
rally pluial, auspices.
a wavy ai)pearance, as in America, in AIJS'TER, n. [L.] the south wind. Pope. March 1782, when it overspread the whole AUSTE'RE, a. [h. austerus.] Severe harsh
The
AURI€'ULA,
Sometimes
Protection favor shown patronage influence. In this sense the word is gene-
AUSPI'CIOUS,
a.
AU'RICLE,
3.
awis, ear.] One skilled AU'SPICE, AU'SPICES, n. [L. auspicium, of the ear, or who professes of avis, a bird, and specio, to inspect.] to cure them. Ash. 1. The omens of an undertakuig, drawr; from bu-ds the same as augury, which AU'ROCIIS, n. [G. urochs, the ure-o.r, urus n.
in disorders
Like or pertaining to the Humphreys. [from aurum., gold.] Pertaining
AURE'LIAN,
2.
S
a sense taken from the Roman practice of taking the auspicium, or inspection of birds, before they undertook any important business. Burke's Refections. To foreshow. B. Jonson. To begin. Burke. ;
;
[from aurum, or avr, gold
n.
See Chnisalis.] In natural history, the nymjih or chrysalis of an in.sect or the form of an animal, like a worm or maggot, covered with a liardisli pellicle, and in a state of seeming inFrom this state, it changes to sensibility. a moth, butterrty or other winged insect.
1.
a tavorable turn to
gold.]
sort of pear. Fr. or ; froii! n. [L. mirum, ffold the Ileb. and Cli. 11N, light, fire, ami to shine, from if.s color; Ir. or; W. our Corn. our; Biisijue urrea ; Arm. aur, gold.] \ combination of the o.Kyd of gold witli a base; as aurate of potash. Lavoisier. Fourcroy.
AU'KATE,
from
A U
S^
or practice of driving horses harnessed to
called austerities.
Belonging to the aurora, or AUSTRAL, «. [L. australis, from auster, the .south wind, or south.] resembling the twit. Pertaining to the ear; within the sense of E. Goodrich. Southern lying or being in the south ; as light. hearing told in the ear as auricular con- AU'RUM, n. See Aurate.] Gold. austral land austral signs. [L. fession. Aurum fulminans, fulminating gold, is gold AUSTRALA'SIA, n. [austral and Asia.] A 1. Recognized by the ear; know-n by the dissolved in aqua-regia or nitro-muriatic name given to the countries situated to the evidence. sense of hearing as auricular south of Asia comprehending New-Holacid, and precipitated by volatile alkali. as aurict. Traditional ; known by report This precipitate is of a brown yellow, or land, New Guinea, New Zealand, &c. Bacon. ular traditions. Pinkerton. orange color, and when exposed to a mod.\URIC'ULARLY, adv. In a secret man- erate heat, deto)iizes with considerable AUS'TRL\N, a. [from Austria. This word ner by way of wlusper, or voice adtbessnoise. It is a compound of the oxyd of gold is formed with the Latin tenuination, ia, ed to the ear. and annnonia. Fourcroy. countrj', from (Estreich, the German name, AURI€'ULATE, a. Shaped like the ear. Aurum mo.mictim, or musivujn, a sparkling which is eastern rick, eastern kingdom, so Botany. callcil ill reference to the western domingold-colored substance, from an anutlgam UTRI€'ULATED, a. Having large or elon- of quick-silver and tin, mixed with sulphur ions of Charlemagne.] The and sal ammoniac, set to sublime. gated cars as the auricutated vultiu'e. Pertaining to Austria, a circle or district of Ed. Encyc. of the unite inand sulphmpart mercury Germany, and an ein])ire, lying ou the AURIF'EROUS, a. [L. aurifer, from aurum, to a cinnabar, which sublimes witii the sal- Danube north of the gulf of Venice. ammoniac, and leaves the aurum mosaigold, and/ero, to produce.] ?i. A n.ttive of Austria. cum at the bottom. It is a sulphtiret of AUSTRIAN, That yields or produces gold as auriferous AUS'TRINE, a. [L. austrinus, from auster, Thomson. and is used as a sands or streams.
AURO'RAL,
ear.]
a.
to the nortliern lights
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
pigment. soutfi.] Encyc. .A'icholson. Johnson. southerly southern. n. [L. from autiq.ausf, South Gr. 0V5, oias, the ear, and cultus, from colo, AUS'TROMANCY, n. [from auster, the south wind, and Gr. fiuirna, divination.] to use or exercise.] The act of listening, or hearkening to. Soothsaying, or prediction of future events, from observations of thewinds. In medicine, a method of distinguishing Encyc. diseases, particularly in the thorax, by ob- Auterfoits, a word conqiosed of the French tin,
n. [L. ofaurea, orea, a head-stall, ' a bridle, and rego, to govern or manage a car, or wagon. Literally, the director of
VURPGA,
In astronomy, the wagoner, a constellation in the northern hemisphere, consisting of an stars, according to Tycho 40, according to Hevelius ; and 68, in the Brit;
ish catalogue.
The
Encyc.
fourth lobe of the liver; also a bandage for the sides. Quincy. AURIGA'TION, n. [L. auriga.] Tlie act
3.
AUSCULTA'TION, 1.
3.
;
serving the sounds in the part, generally by means of a tube apphed to the surface.
Laennec.
AU'SPICATE,
V.
I.
[L. ausjricor.]
To
give
;
autre, another, and foils, fois, time, introduced into law language, under the Norof England. It signifies, at man
princes time,
another
formerly
;
as
uuterfoilf
A U T
A U T
A U T tjcquit, auterfoits allaint, auterfoils convict, tbrnierly a(()uitto(l, iiltaintcil or convicted,
AUTIIOR'ITATIVE,
Having due an Pearson
AUTOBIOG'RAPIIY, n. [Gr. ovro;, ai..l biography.] positive; per- Biograjihy or memoirs of one's life writteti H'otton H'alsh. by himself. AUTHOR'ITATIVELY.arfv. In an author- AUTOC'RASY, n. [Gr. oi.ros, self, and xpaa.
thority. 2. Having an air of authority specially ploadod, i.s a l)ar to a second jnosecution for tlie same oftense. emplorv.
which being
lilacksloiic
;
It itative manner with a show of authority ) AUTHEN'TH-, " [Fr. authentique with due authority. AUTHEN'TI€AL, ^ and Sp. auUnlko Low L. autheniicus, from the Gr. auOtif ixo;, AUTHOR ITATIVENESS, Thequahtj ;
;
To;, power, or stpartu, to govern, to take or hold.] Indei)endent jKnvcr su])reme, uncontrolled, imhmiled authority or right of governing^ in a .single i)er.son. An absolute prince ^ AU'TOCR.VTER, > n. or sovereign a ru AU'TOCRATOR, > Icr or monarch who holds and exercises the ])Owers of govcrninent by inherent right, not subject to restriction a title assumed by the Em)>crors of Russia. Tooke. 9 This title was sometimes conferred by the Atlionians on their emba.ssadors and generals, when invested with unlitnited
;
,
...
irom
who
one avSit'Tr;;, an autlior or maker; docs any Ihinfjhy his own ri,!;;ht also ;
one who kills himself. The first syllable is probably from the i.s from oufo;, which root of aulhoi; avxior ; and the sense of self-murdcnM- seems to indicate that the other constitnent of the word is from Onw, Onru,, to kill, bnt the primary sense of uliicli to
1.
;
;
Power; 2.
strike,
rule; sway.
The power derived froin opinion, respect or esteem intlucnce of character or office credit as the authority of age or e.\am|)le,j which is submitted to or respected, in some! measure, as a law, or rule of action. Thatj which is claimed in justification or suj);
hand, &c.
;
;
;
;
I.
AUTOCRAT
AUTHOR'
to drive or thrnst with the In the word before iis, the sense is to throw, or to set hence imthrntic is set, fi.xeil, made or made certain by the antlior, by one's own self] Having a genuine original or anthority, is,
;
of being authoritative ; an acting by authority; authoritative appcar.'ince. IT Y, n. [L. nuilnritns.] Legal power, or a right to conuiiand or to act as iho, authority of a prijice over subjects, and of ))arents over children.
port of opinions and measures.
jiowers.
Encyc. Pertaining to autocracy; absolute holding independent and unlimited j)owers of government. Eton. AU'TOCRATRIX, n. A female sovereign, who is independent and absolute a title as a given to the Empresses of Russia. Tooke.
AUTOCRAT IC, AUTOCRAT ICAL,
in opposition to that which is false, ficti- 3. Testimony; witness; or the person whoj testifies as, the Gospels or the evangel-| tious, or counterfeit ; being what it [mrists are our authorities for the miracles of ports to be ; genuine ; true ; applied to ;
as an authentic ])aper or register. things Of approved authority as an authentic writer. adv. In an authentic manner; with the requisite or genuine au-
Christ.
;
•9.
;
•1.
Weight of testimony
credibility
;
;
?
"•
^
;
;
historian of no authority. Weight of character ; respectability; dig- L/luto dafe. [Port, act of faith.] nit)' ; as a magistrate of great authority in JL In the Romish church, n so]cii)n day held by the city. Brown. the IiKiuisition, forthc punishment of herthority. etics, and the absolution of the innocent. AUTHEN'TI€ALXESS, h. The quality of 6. Warrant order permission. accused. Span, ^iuto defe. being authentic ; genuineness ; the quality By what authurity dost tliou these things. Encyc. of being of good authority autlieaticity. :2. sentence given by the Inquisition, and Mat. xxi. Acts ix. latter read to a criminal, or heretic, on the scafword is [The generally used.] 7. Precedents, decisions of a court, official Barroic. fold, just before he is executed. Sp. Diet. declarations, respectable opinions and AUTHEN'TICATE, v. t. To render au- sayings, also the books that lontain them 3. The session of the court of inquisition. thentic; to give authority to, by the jiroof, \ are called as influence the [Gr. a1.r0!, self, and
AUTHENTICALLY,
5.
j
;
;
'
A
;
1
I
authorities, they opinions of others and in taw, the decisions of supreme coiu'ts have a bindin force upon inferior courts, and are called
attestation, or formalities, required bjMaw, or suflicient to entitle to credit.
;
The king
sen'es only as a notary to authenticate the choice of judges. Burke.
AUTHEN'TI€.'VTED, thentic
;
;;;;.
Rendered au-
having received the forms which
authorities. S.
prove genuineness.
AUTHEN'TI€ATING, ppr.
Giving author-
by the necessary signature, seal, attestation or other forms. n. The act of authenticating; the giving of authority by the necc.ssarv formalities. AUTHENTIC'ITY, n. Genuineness; the quality of being of genuine original ; as the authenticitii of the scriptures. ity
AUTHENTICATION,
(iovermiient
the persons or the body exas the local authorities of the states. Marshall. 1 Pet. iii, In Connecticut, the justices of the peace are denomiinited the civil authority. ercising
;
power or command
AUTHORIZATION,
The
n.
mary sense is come forth.] I.
One who being
;
as,
cause to enlarge. The prione who brings or causes to
produces, creates, or brings into God is the author of the Uni
beginner, former, or first mover of any thing hence, the efficient cause of a It is appropriately applied to one thing. who composes or writes a book, or origi nal work, and in a more general sense, to ;
one whose occupation is to compose and write books opposed to compiler or ;
translator.
AU'THOR,
V.
t.
To
occasion
;
to
[JVot used.]
AUTHORESS,
n.
A
female author.
effect.
\
one's
;
;
by authority, as by usage, or as an aulhoi-ized idiom of ;
5.
To give authority, credit or reputation to; as to authorize a report, or opinion. To justify to support as right. Suppress desires which reason does not authorize. ;
AU'THORIZEI),
/)/j.
Warranted by
supported by authority gal or i)roper authority authoritv.
AUTHORIZING, p/jr.
;
;
right;
derived from
having power or
Pertaining to an autograph, or
;
tetrahedrons with truncated angles. It is harder than quartz, but not so hard as spinel.
It
from Gahn,
is
sometimes called gahnite, discoverer.
its
Thomson.
Cyc.
AU'TOMATH, learn.]
n.
AUTOMATIC,
AUTOMAT'ICAL, 2.
Cleaveland.
[Gr. avroj, and /Jo.Sam, to is .self taught. Young.
One who
I °'
S
Belonging to an automaton ;''having the
itself;
mechanical. Johnson. Stewart.
Not voluntary not depending on the will. Dr. Hartley has demonstrated that all our motions are originally automatic, and generally ])roduced by tlie action of tangible things on the mu-scular fiber. ;
AUTOMATON, self,
and
/tao,
»i. [Gr. wro/^aTo;; avfof, moveo, motu.t. The Greek-
plural, automata,
the regular
is
EngUsh
sometimes used jiUiral,
but automatons, is ;
preferable.]
Giving authority
or legal power, credit, or permission. n. [author and ship.] quality or state of being an author.
AU'THORSHIP,
le-
"'
writing.
n. A mineral called b> Haily, spinelle zincifcre. It is classed with the spinel ruby. It occurs imbedded in talcky slate the color, a dark green. It is crystalized in regular octahedrons, or in
power of moving
language. 4.
own hand
AUTOM'ALITE,
act of giving
;
public opinion
The
AUTOGRAPH'ICAL,
To
riage. 3. To establish
vei'se.
3.
?
torixar.]
oi'augeo.
to increase, or
AUTOGRAPH IC,
AUTHORIZE, ;
yi^r, writing.]
writing; an original
manuscript.
authority, or legal jiower ; establishment by authoritv. v.t. [Fr. autoriscr ; Sp.au-
1.
"•
AUTOG'RAPIIY, \ person's own hand
.\
;
give authority, warrantor legal power to to gi\ e a right to act to empower as, bj used.'] AU'THOR, n. [L. auctor; Ir. ughdar ; W. to authorize con)missioners to settle the boundary of the state. awdur ; Fr. nuteur ; Sp. autor ; It. autore. 5 To make to authorize a mar legal as, The Latin word is from the root
AUTHENTIC>JESS,n. Authenticity. [Bare
'AUTOGRAPH,
to,
A self-moving by
machine, or one which moves
invisible springs.
The AUTOM'ATOUS,
Sha/lesbury.
o.
Having
power of motion.
AUTON'OMOUS,
in itself the
Brown. a.
[Infra.-]
Independent.
A AUTON'OMY,
AVE
A
V
skill avail
;
judgment. AVzV'IL, V. i.
is rarely used. It signifies the right of self government, whethwliich elects its own magis-
poweror
own laws, or in an according to his own Johnson. Encyc. [Gr. auro^m, ai.*o;, self, Personal observation oc-
and makes
who
individual
AU'TOPSY, and 04-15,
its
J!.
siglit.]
eves.
adv.
lar view, or one's
own
[Autopsy and
its
;
AVENGE,
AVA'ILABLE, geous
I
Astronom-
Profitable
a.
having efficacy
;
advanta
;
a mea.sure
as,
;
more or less available. Having sufficient power,
Atterbm-y.
Avenge me
promoting an end in view. Comjjeteut power legal force validity as the availableness of a title. IaVA'ILABLY, adv. Powcrftilly; profita;
;
;
;
j
;
AUTUM'NAL,
plant
The autunmals form
Autumn.
of plants
division
in
Du
ment.
AVA'ILMENT,
the third
ful issue.
Pas' arrangeMilne.
n. [Gr. twtjjTij, increase.] fn rhetoric, a figure liy which any thing is magnified too much an increasing, or ex
goods
grave and proper word.
Smith. ) "
S
[L. auriliaris, from au.iilium, aid, auxilior, to ;
;
the service of
AUXIL'IARY, "i.
A
is,
Ur from avarus,
inordinate desire of gaining and possessing wealth covetousness greediness or Shak. insatiable desire of gain. Avarice sheds a blasting influence over the and sweetest eomtbits of manBuckminster.
finest afl'eclions
Ar. J,j balla. The stretch or extend,
to
kind.
greedy of iirinioderatcly desirous of accumu-
AVARU'CIOUS, gain
;
a.
Covetous
;
latinir jiropertv.
AVARU'CIOUSLA',
adv. Covetously
;
with
inordinate desire of gaining wealth. Goldsmith. n. The quality of being avaricious insatiable or inordinate
AVARU'CIOUSNESS, ;
passion for property. AV'AROUS, a. Covetous.
IMt
used.]
Gower.
AV'AST,
erclam..
whence
[Ger.basta,sto\>; bastanl,
Per. sufficient ; from It. basta, enough strength, value.] 1. To profit one's self ; to turn to advantage has, enough.] followed by the pronouns, myself, thyself, In seamen's lavguage, cease ; stop ; stay. himself, herself ourselves, yourselves, them- AVAUNT', excl. [W. ibant, begone.] selves, with of before the thing used ; as, Begone depart a word of contempt or ab" Get let him avail horrence, equivalent to the |>hrasc, himself of ]ns license. 2. To assist or profit ; to effect the object, or thee behind me." GaJi. of words first the bring to a succesfnl issue; as, what will A'VE [from ;
;'
;
MARY,
4.
;
adversary. Id. v. 3.
the party vindicated is the object of the verb. To take satisfaction for, by ])ain or punishment inflicted on the injuring party.
He will avenge the blood of his servants. Dent, xxxii. Here the thing for which satisfaction is' taken is the object of the verb. To revenge. To ai'fng-e and rcwng'e, radare synonymous. But modern usage inclines to make a valuable distinction in the use of these words, restricting avenge to the taking of just punislnnent, and revetige to the infliction of pain or evil, maliciously, in an illegal manner. In the passive form, this verb signifies to have or receive just satisfaction, by the punishment of th.e offender. Shall not iiiy soul be as this ? .ler. 5.
AVENG'EANCE, used.]
avenged on such
a nation
Punishment.
[JVoi
n.
[See Vengeance.]
AVENg'ED,
;
;
[Fr. valoir, to be worth ; L. valeo, to be strong or able, to profit, to be of force or authority; Sp. valer, to Ije valuable, to avail or jirevail, to be binding, to be wortli ; It. valere, to be worth, to be
F.ng.well;
or advanced
An
t.
primary sense
The van
my
ically,
[See Vanguard.] A variety of quartz
n. [L. avantia, aveo, to covet.]
from
Spanish.
useful;
n. n.
rock containing spangles.
;
V.
.3.
;
AVARICE,
Foreign troops in war. helper; an assistant;
have, be, may, can, do, must, shall and will, in English; etre and avoir, in French; avere and essert, in Italian ; estar and ha her, in
rents, issues or profits. [Fr. from avaler, to *»"•]
AVANT'URINE,
a confederate in some action, entei-jirise or undertaking. In grammar, a verb which helps to form the modes and tenses of other verbs as,
.AVA'IL,
success-
""
S
body of an army.
n. plu. nations at 71.
}
[See Van.]
used.]
;
;
AUXIL'IARIES,
fi>r
AVANT'GUARD,
aiding assisting subsidiary conferring aid or support by joint exertion influence or use as auxiliary troops. ;
;
a vast body of snow sliding down a motmtain. Eneyc. AVANT', n. The front of an army. [Xot
aid.]
Helping
or
sold,
for amplification, a more .A snow-slip magnificent word is put for the
AUXIL'IAR, AUXIL'IARY,
efficacy
[Little used.]
AVALANCHE, AVALANGE,
;
when,
;
2.
AVA'ILS, n. plu. Profits or proceeds. It is used in New-England, for the proceeds of
AUXE'SIS, ornation,
n. Profit
using
:
of
evil inflicted
effica-
;
Sp. ven-
In these examples, avenge implies that tlieon the injuring party is a satisfaction or justice done to the injured, and
;
bly advantageously ; vaUdly a. Belonging to autumn ciously. produced or gathered in autumn as au- i.WA'ILING, pp. Turning to profit tumnal fruits. to advantage or effect. n. A that flowers in
;
;
{
'i.
avenj'. [Fr. venger
xviii.
in
;
AUTUM'NAL,
1.
;
AVA'ILABLENESS,
but in popular language, autunm comprises September, October and November. The goUlen pom)) of autumn. Irving.
/.
II.
Port, vingar ; L. vindex. In Sax. gar winnan, to contend, to gain, to tvin.] To take satisfaction for an injury by punishing the injuring i>arty to vindicate by inflicting jiain or evil on the wrong doer. Shall not God avenge his own elect. Luke ;
is
force, or efficacy, for the object valid as an available plea. Laws are available by consent. Honker. n. Power or efficacy, ;
ically, begins at the equinox, when the Sim enters hljra, and ends at the winter it
solstice
;
strength.
third season of the year, or the season 2.
between summer and winter.
;
A
Ali'TUMN, n. aiitum. [L. autiwmus, " Etymon nmltum tor(|uetur." Ainsworth.]
The
;
;
Johnson. By means of ocuobservation. Broirn. derivatives are rarely usetl.]
AUTOP'TICALLY,
L-
;
R"y-
Seen with one's own
a.
;
form of devotion in the Romish Church'. Their chaplets and rosaries are divided into a certain number of ave-marys and
;
;
idar view.
AUTOP'TICAL,
Virgin Mai-y
ave, hail.]
;
lives
will.
A
;
to
er in a city trates
briel's salutation to the
To be of use, or advantage answer the purpose as, strength with out judgment will rarely avail. Generally, paternosters. have strength, force or effica- AVENA'CEOUS, o. [L. avenaceus, from it to signifies cy sufficient to accomplish the object as, avena, oats Fr. avoine.] the plea in bar nuist avail, that is, be suf- Belonging to, or partaking of the nature of this scheme ficient to defeat the suit oats. will not avail; medicines will not at)aj7 to AV'ENAgE, n. certain quantity of [Fr.] check the disease sujipositions, without oats paid by a tenant to a landlord in lieu of rent or other duty. proof, will not avail. Spelman. AVA'IL, n. Profit advantage towards suc- AV'ENER, ? "• r^r ip , i C'^o''"- French.] cess benefit as, labor without econo- AV'ENOR; \ my is of little avail. It seems usually to In English feuded latv, an officer of the king's stable whose duty was to provide oats. convey the idea of efficacious aid or
law, rule.]
This word
A y ET
us against numbers. Artifices will not avail the sinner in the day of
liaving the right of self Milford. n. [Gr. (u-'ro,-, self, and I'Ojuoj,
in goveniineiit goveniiiipiit.
pp.
Satisfied
by the punish-
ment of the offender; vindicated; punished.
AVENG'EMENT,
?!.
Vengeance
;
punish-
the act of taking satisfaction for an ; injury by inflicting pain or evil on the offender; satisfaction taken revenge. AVENG'ER, n. One who avenges or vindicates ; a vindicator ; a revenger.
ment
;
AVENg'ERESS,
n.
A
female avenger. Spenser.
AVENG'ING,
ppr.
Executing vengeance
;
taking satisfiiction (iir an injury by the Iiimishment
AV'ENTINE, tinus,
a.
nio, to
A
Pertaining to
one of the seven
Rome stood. AVEN'TURE,
Mons Avenon wliich
hills
Bryant. n. [Fr. aventure,
from L.
ve-
come.]
mischance causing a person's death withas by drowning, or fidling out felony ;
fi-om a house.
AVENUE, go
;
[See Adventure.]
n. [Fr.
L. venio.]
from
venir, to
Cuwel.
como ov
AVE
AVE
AVI
A
Averse ulikc to flatter or oflTcnd. Hence the expression in bills of lading, passage ; a way or opening for entrance Pope " into a plaoe any oponini; or passai;p by paying so inurh freight, with primajrc 2. Fnfavorable; indisposed; malign. And Pallas now averse ie(asei\ lier aid. whicli a tiling is or may be introcUii'ed. and average accustomed." Coivel. Kncyc. 2. An alley, or walk in a garden, planted 4. In England, the breaking up of cornfields, Dry Jen. with trees, and leading to a house, gate, eddish or roui^hings. Ash. Spelman. This word and its derivatives ought to be followed by to, and never I>y from. Thi.s wood, &c., and generally terminated by Upon, or 071 an average, is taking the mean word includes the idea of /rom ; but the of unequal iuimlj(M"s or ipiantities. some distant object. The trees may bo in literal meaning rows on the sides, or, according to thi AVERAGE, a. Medial; containing a mean being lost, the affection of the mind signified by the word, is exerted more modern practice, in chnnps at some Price, Kirwan. lieddoes. proportion. towards the object of dislike, and like its distance from «!ach other. Edwards' Jf. Indies. Encyc. kindred terms, hatred, dislike, contrary, re3. A wide street, as in Washington, Co AVERAGE, I', t. To find the mean of un pugnant, &('., should be followed by to. lumbia. equal sums or quantities to reduce to a AVER' V. t. [Fr. averer ; It. avverare, to medium to divide among a number, ac- Indeed it is absm-d to speak of an affliction of the mind exerted aver or vcriiy ; Arm. f/uinja, from the root from an object. cording to a given proportion as, to arcrAverse expresses a less degree of oj (posiof vents, true; Ir. /for, or _yfr ; VV. gifir ; age a loss. tion in the mind, than Corn, uir ; Gor. wahr ; D. ivaar. See AVERAGE, II. i. To form a inean or medetesting and abhorring. dial sum or quantity; as, the losses of the Venfy.] Milton once uses aver.ie in its literal sense, To affirm with confidence to declare in a owners will average 2.5 dollars each. with from, but it is not according to the Tliese spars average 10 feet in length. positive or peremptory manner, as in con English idiom. Prior. tidence of asserting the truth. Belknap. Ch. Obs. X. .522. xi. .302. AVERSELY, adv. avers'ly. With repugAV'FjRAuE, n. [Norm, aver, avers, cattle, nance unwillingly. Brown. money, goods, Syi.avcrio, from aver or hit- .W^'ERAgED, pp. Reduced or formed into a mean proportion, or into shares propor- .WERSENESS, n. avers'ness. Opposition In anher, Fr. avoir, to have or possess. of mind backtioned to each man's |>roperty. cient law, a duty or service which a tenant dislike; imwilUngness Jefferson. wardness. a mean Herbert. was bound to render to his lord, by his AV'ERAGING, ppr. Forming probeasts and carriages or instruments of luisportion out of unequal stuns or quantities -WER'SION, n. [Fr. aversion, from L, or reducing to just shares according to averto.] bandry. Spelman. But averagium signi1. Opposition or diseach man's property. fies also the loss of goods in transportarepugnance of mind like reluctance hatred. disinclination tion Sp. nveria, damage sustainetl by AVER'MENT, n. [See Aver.] Affirmation the act of averring, I'sually this word expresses moderate hapositive assertion goods or ships Port, avaria, an allowance Verification establishment by evidence. tred, or opposition of mind, not amounting out of freight to the master of a ship, for to abhorrence or detestation. It ought genBacon damage sustained contribution by insurIn pleading, an offer of either party to It. avaria ; Dan erally to be followed by to before the obers, to make good a loss he what In or ject. [See Averse.] Sometimes it admits prove alledgcs. justify any haverie, damage of a ship or waste of ofybr. stage of pleading.s, when either party adgoods, extraordinary charges durin A freeholder is bred with an aversion to subvances new matter, he avers it to be true, voyage. If avaria signifies damage, and Jiddison. jection. and concludes with these words, " and this is liom aver or haber, Spanish, to have, 2. Opposition or contrariety of nature This is called an to aphe is the sense of the word is probably that verify." ready 1.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
.
;
;
;
Blaekstone.l plied to iiianimate substances. averment. which happens or falls, a misfortune, for the verb have and happen are radically the .\VER'N.\T, n. A sort ofgrape. v3s/i. Johnson.' Magnesia, notwithstanding this aversion to solution, Ibnns a kind of paste with water. same word Spanish, haher, to have, and AVER'NIAN, a. Pertauiing to Avernus, a Fourcroy, TVatis. lake of Campania in Italy, famous for to happen or befall alsolortune, property. 3. The causa of dislike. its poisonous qualities, which the jjoets This would give the sense of damage, or Pain their aversion, pleasure their desire. of proportion, lot, share, that which falls represent as so malignant, as to kill fowls Pope. to each of a number. But the primary Hence, as authors tell us, its flj-ing over. AVERT', V. t. [L. averto, a, from, and verto, sense is not very obvious.] name, oopioj, without bird.s. to tiun, vorto ; hence vertex, vor-
I
;
;
1.
Inf07H?ncrff,acontribnlion to a general loss. When for the .safety of a shi)) in distress of |)roperty is incurred either by cutting away the masts, throwing goods overboard, or otlier means, all persons who have goods on board, or property in the ship, contribute to the loss according to their average, that is, the goods of each on board. This principle, introduced into the commerce of Europe from the Rhodian laws, and recognized by the regulations of Wisby, is now an established rule in the maritime laws of anj' destruction
Einope
;
for
it
is
most reasonable,
3.
and the average, 10. A small duty payable by the shippers of goods, to the master of the ship, over and above the fi-eight, for liis care of the goods.
Mela.
anciently,
SIrabo
tex, averto
n. Money paid towards, the king's carriages by land, instead of] Burn. service by the beasts in kind.
probably
;
allietl
to
L.
vario
;
Eiig. veer ; Sp. birar ; Eth. fl 4 P bari. Class Br.] .VVER'REb, pp. Affirmed; laid with an 1. To turn fioin ; to turn off or away ; as, to aveii the eyes from an object. Shak. averment. .WER'RING, ppr. Affirming ; declaring 2. To keep off, divert or prevent ; as, to avert an approaching calamity. Hooker. oflering to justify or verify. positively 3. To cause to dishke. But Hooker. this of of a sect One n. AVERRO'IST, peripasense seems to be improper, except when tetic philosophers, who were so denomi heaii or some equivalent word is used ; as, iiated from Averroes, a celebrated Arabi to avert the heart or affections, which an author. They held the soul to be mormay signify to alienate the affections. tal, though they pretended to submit to ;
Thomson.
the christian theology.
that
when one man's property is sacrificed to save a ship, all persons w hose property is saved, or in like hazard, should bear their proportion of the loss. Spelman. Park. Beatves. 2. From the practice of contributing to bear losses, in pro])ortion to each man's propthis word has obtained the present erty, popular sense, which is, that of a mean priijiortion, medial sum or qiuintity, made out of unequal sums or quantities. Thus, if A loses 5 dollars, B 9 and C IG, the sum
Virgil.
AVERPENNV,
Encyc. v. t. [L. averrunco, of ah and erunco, from runco, to weed, or rake
AVERRUN€'ATE, away.]
To
root lip
to scrape or tear
;
roots. n. The away by the
AVERRUN€A'T10N, ing up or raking
AVERSA'TION,
A
the Hudibras. act of tear-
away by
n. [L. aversor.
AVERT',
Avert.]
averturning from with disgust or disUke South. sion hatred disinclination.
is '^0,
1.
Disliking
;
unwilling
nance of mind.
;
having a repug-
7>/)r.
Turning from; turning
away.
A'VIARY,
A
fowl.] bird cage
11.
;
[L. aviarium,
AVID'IOUSLY, ly
;
from
avis,
a,
an inclosure for keeping birds
confined.
;
;
;
nearly supersedcil by aversion. a. avers' [See Avert.] The hteral sense of this word is, turned from, in manifestation of dislike. Hence the real sense is,
;
which turns away.
It is
AVERSE,
Thomson. To turn away. One that tiirns away that
71.
AVERT ING,
roots.
See
{.
11.
AVERT'ER,
ff'otton. arfy.
[See Amdity.] Eager-
with greediness.
Bale.
»i. [L. anrfifas, from avidus, and from aveo, to desire, to have appetite Ileb. and Ch. niN, to desire, or covet.j Greediness; strong appetite; applied
AVID'ITY, this 1.
;
A
the senses.
.>-'
A V O i.
A V O
Eagerness; intenseness of desire lo the mind.
;
AVIGA'TO, ) ^ The Persea, or alUgator-l AVO€A'DO, ^ pear, a species ranked under
tlie
Donne.
The
;
;
The
branches.
fruit is insipid.
.VVOID'ER, Miller.
Encyc.
Avignon-herry, the fruit ofa species of lyciuni, so called from the city, Avignon, in France. The berry is less tlian a pea, of a yellow-
green color, and bitter astringent taste used by dyers and painters for staining ish
;
yellow.
AVI'LE,
3.
See
[Fr. avilli:
t.
Mse.] fFr. (WIS.] .i^dvice
The person who the vessel
keeping ting
ppr.
a.
;
.WOW'ER,
rice
V.
n.
t.
See away.
voco, to call. call off", or
To
AVO€A'TION,
[See Ad-
Advisement.
[L. avoco, from a Foice and rocal.]
as 17 to 14. This is the weight for the larger and coarser commodities, as hay, Chambers. iron, cheese, groceries, &c.
AVOL.\ TION, a and volo. tie
Vocal.] 1.
The act of calling some employment The word fairs
mon
business which calls aside. The is generally used for the smaller afof life, or occasional calls wliich suma person to leave his ordinary or The use of this woi-d
princijial business.
for vocation
is
AVO'CATIVE, AVOID', void,
!>.
t.
empty
;
very improjicr. «. Calling off. [Mot used.] [Fr. vuider, or vider ; vuide.
Eng.
vidua. See Void. L. vito, evito ; Fr.
tvide, void,
widow
;
L.
coincides also with See Class Bd, 1. To shun to keep at a distance from that is, literally, to go or be luide from as, to avoid the company of gamesters. 2. To shiit oft", or clear off; as, to avoid It
eviter.
;
ly
away, of
I.
9.
To
AVOWTRY, pulled
escape, [hit-
"
affirm
;
to
;
A
[See Advoivtry.] [See Avulsion.']
a.
Plucked or Shenstone.
oft".
n.
from
[L. avulsio,
avello,
a
and vello, to pull, coinciding with Heb. and Ar. nbiJ, to separate Eng. pull.'] a rending or pidling or tearing asunder ;
;
violent separation.
AWAIT,
v. t. [a and wait. guetter, to watch guet, a tare, to look or watch.] ;
See Wait. Fr. watch It. gua;
Literally, to remain, hold or stay. 1. To wait for to look for, or expect. Betwixt the rocky pillars, Gabriel sat, Chief of the Angelic guards, awaiting night. ;
Mtton
To
be in store for; to attend to be ready as, a glorious reward awaits the Hooker. good. to affirm in favor AWA'IT, n. Ambush in a state of waiting
declare or
positiveness. To ])roduce or call in of,
;
AVULSION, >
;
n. In law, tlie act of the distrainer of goods, who, in an action of replevin, Oi'Oifsand justifies the taking ; the net of maintaining the right to distrain, by the distrainer, or defendant in replevin. Blackstone.
AVULS'ED, ;
and Latham, among the |)almipeds. The bill is long, slender, flexible and bent upwaid towards the tip. This bird is of the size ofa lapwing, with very long legs, and the feathers variegated with black and white. It is found both ill Europe and America. Encyc. AVOUCH', V. t. [Norm, voucher, to caU, to vouch ; L. I'oco, advoco. See Voice.]
;
;
flight
;
In ornithology, a species of fowls, arranged under S the genus, rccurvirostra, and placed by Linne in the grallic order, but by Pennant
sin or fi'om Ijusiness. 2.
\L. avolo, to fly Volatile.']
used.]
from AV'0.-
aside, or diverting ;
n.
See
The act of flying away
or
Openly declaring frankacknowledging justifying.
AVOWRY,
is
and
[Mot vsed.] Boyle. [See Vocation, Voice,
n.
AVOWING, ppr.
;
and Advise.]
AV'OCATE,
One who avows, owns,
Ji.
asserts.
;
Dryden.
;
Sometimes used for advoivee, the person who has a right to present to a benefice, the patron. [See Advowson.] Cowel.
;
That cannot be avoided
inevitable.
;
manner
AVOWEE, n.
;
AVI'SE, > intelligence. AVOIRDUPOIS', n. s as :. [Fr. avoir du See Poise.l AVI'SO, \ '^- [JsTot in use.] poids, to have weight. AVI'SE, I', i. sasi. To consider. [Mot in use.] A weiglit, of which a pound contains 16 ounces. Its jiroportion to a pound Troy Spenser.
AVI'SEMENT,
;
frankly acknowledged. adv. In an open with frank acknowledgment.
AVOWEDLY,
escaping evacuaejecting
void, or vacant.
making
;
Slumning
at a distance
fi-ank
in replevin,
the distress of the goods, and Cowel. justifies the taking. AVOW'ED, pp. Openly declared owned
;
;
;
Hume.
The defendant
who avows
Johnson.
To AVOID'LESS,
Vile.]
carries any thing away which things are carried
in
away.
AVOlb'ING,
B. Jonson.
[Mot in
|
open declaration
acknowledgment.
AVOWANT, n.
avoids, shuns ori
escapes.
Eticij'c.
V.
depreciate.
One who
n.
a.
AVOWAL, n. An
genus Laurus, a native of
Indies.
A
That may be avowed, or openly acknowledged with confidence.
It is
tlie •3. The act of annulling. tree lias a straiglit trunk, 4. The coiu'se by which any thing is carried off. Bacon. long oval pointed leaves, and flowers of six i)etals disposed like a star, produced .WOID'ED, pp. Shunned ; evaded made' in clusters, on the extremities of the void ejected.
W.
W
A AVOW' ABLE,
appropriately used for the state of a benefice becoming void, by the death, deprivation, or resignation of the incumbent. Cowel. Encyc.
vacant.
ajjph'edj
assert
with
2.
for
;
;
;
maintainor support.
for.
Spenser.
avouched for the AWA'ITING, ppr. Waiting for looking for expecting being ready or in store for. the Irish. expense. Spenser 3. To quit to evacuate to shun by leaving 3. To maintain, vindicate or justify. Skak. AWA'KE,i'.<. \)r-et. awoke, awaked; pp.aii'«or ked. iveccan as, to avoid the house. ; [Sax. gewcecan, wacian, AVOUCH', )!. Evidence testimony decla- D. 4. To escape Shak Ger. wecken ; Sw. upvacka ; wekken as, to avoid danger. ration. Shak [Little used.] a. To emit or throw out The L. vigilo seems to be vcekker. as, to avoid excreAVOUCH'ABLE, a. That maybe avouched. Dan. tions. For this, void is now generally used formed on tliis root. See Hake.] [Little used.] 0. To make void to anmd or vacate. maintained: 1. To rouse from sleep. The grant cannot be avoided without injustice AVOUCH'ED, pp. Affirmed; I go that I may awake him out of sleep. called in to support. to the grantee. Jlnon. John xi. n. One who avouches. AVOUCII'ER, 7. In pleading, to set up some new matter or 2. To excite from a state resembling sleep, as from death, stupidity or inaction calling in to distinction, which shall avoid, that is, de- AVOUCH'ING, ppr. Affirming to maintain ; vindicating. feat or evade tlie allegation of the other as, to awake put into action, or new life the dead to awake the dormant faculties. party. Thus, in a rephcation, the plaintiff lAVOUCH'MENT, n. Declaration; the act Shak. .\WA'KE, I', i. To cease to sleep to come may deny the defendant's )ilca, or confess of avouching. from a state of natural sleep. it, and avoid it by stating new matter. v. t. [Fr. at'ouer ; Arm. avoei ; Blackstone. Jacob awaked out of sleep. Gen. xxviii. Norm, avower ; L. voveo.] V. i. To to withdraw. retire AVOID', 1. To declare openly, with a view to justify, 2. To bestir, revive or rouse from a state of David avoided out of his presence. 1 Sam inaction to be in\igorated with new life ; maintain or defend or simply to own, xviii. l^Impraper.l as, the mind awakes from its stupidity. acknowledge or confess frankly as, a % To become void, vacant or empty.
Such
could be antiquities *
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
.WOW,
;
:
;
;
A benefice avoids
bv eoinnion law.
man
AifUffe
Awake,
di'ouwhis princijiles or his crimes.
Zech.
sword,
my
against
xiii.
shepherd.
In law, to acknowledge and justify as 3. To rouse from spiritual sleep. the distrainer of goods defends in an Awake thou tliat sleepcst, and arise from the action of replevin, and avows the taliin dead, and Chri.'st shall give thee light. Eph. v. but insists that such taking was legal. nulled. Awake to rigliteousness. 1 Cor. xv. Blackstone. 4. To rise from the dead. Job xiv. AVOID'ANCE, n. The act of avoiding, or of Not in a state a. n. or vow determinaiion. shunning. AVOW', [Mot AWA'KE, sleeping 9. The act of Ciijwer. vigilance or action. used.] vacating, or the state of being
a. That may be avoi.led, a distance, shunned or escaped. 2. That may be vacated liable to be an-
AVOID'ABLE, left at
;
when
;
A
;
W
A AWA'KEN,
This
awake, witli its Snxoii transitive or intransitive
infinitive.
fre-
Roused from
pp.
AWA'KENER,
He
n.
To drink away,
5.
or that which awa-
kens.
AWA'KENING,
A
revivalof religion, or general attention to religion, than
more
n.
AWK,o. Odd; 2.
;
AWK'WARD, a.
[awk ami ward.] Wanting dexterity iu the use of the hands or of in-
to
[Scot, warde, determination
t.
;
;
inelegantly; badly. n. Clumsiness; ungracefulness in manners; want of dexterin the use of the hands or instruments; ity unsuitableness. Jhtdison. or ogan, to dread. It would ajipear that AWL, n. [Sax. ml, an awl, and an eel Ger. the primary sense of the Dan. is to strike,' ahl, an awl, and aal, an eel D. els,un awl; or check.] Dan. aal, an ed Ir. ail, a aal, an eel Fear mingled with admiration or rever-' sting or prickle.] ence reverential fear. An iron instrument for piercing small holes Stand in awe and sin not. Ps. iv. ill leather, for and used !
;
to give by sentence or judicial to assign by sentence. ; is appropriately used to ex-
;
This word
aw.
n.
;
;
;
;
;
j
1.
press the act of arbitrators in pronouncing upon the rights of parties; as, tlje arbitra 2. Fear dread inspired by something great,! tors awarded damages to A. U. or terrific. V. i. To to determine
sewing stitching by shoemakers, sadlers, &c. The blade little bent and flat-
i
;
;
judge
make an
AWARD',
AWE,
The judgment,
7i.
tion of arbitrators, or
is either straight, or a tened.
I
;
atvard. tlie
or determinapaper contain-
V.
ence
;
pect
;
To
with fear and reverto influence by fear, terror or res-] them into as, his majesty aioed t.
strike
AW'LESS, erence
silence.
it.
Judgment sentence determination of points submitted to arbitrators. AVVARD'ED, pp. Adjudged, or given liy judicial sentence, or by the decision of
2.
;
;
AWARD'ER,
One
that awards, or assigns by sentence or judicial determination ; a judge. Thomson.
AWARD'ING,
«.
Adjudging
ppr.
;
assigning
by judicial sentence determining. a. [Sax. gewarian, to take care, to preserve or defend l)rovide, avoid ;
AWA'RE,
;
;
also
covered, protected ware war, aware. See ;
;
warian, to be-
If'are
and
if
an/.]
but more expecting an event from information, or the was aware of as, probability general the enemy's designs. AWA'RE, ii. i. To beware; to be cautious. vigilant
;
guarded
;
modern usage,
strictly in
;
a|)prised
;
;
Milton.
[.Yot legitiinale.]
AWARN',
V.
t.
To
warn, which see. Spenser.
n. A bird of Kamtchatka, enumerated by Pennant, among the warblers. The upper parts of the body are of a deep brown color the throat and breast
AWAT'CHA,
;
white, with black spots. adv. [Sax. atveg, absent, a and weg, way also onweg, away, and awegan,
AWA'Y,
;
to avert. ;
See Wni/.] at a distance
;
as,
the master
away from home. Have me away, for I am wounded.
is
a. [awe and less.] Wanting revvoid of respectful fear; as awless
;
insolence.
AWE'ARY, a. Weary, AWEATH'ER, adv.
which
see. awcth'er.
Shak.
2.
[a and
Dn/den.
Wanting the power of causing reverence; not exciting awe as an awless throne. ;
Shak. tlie wind AWL'WORT, 71. [awl and wort. See Jf'ort.] opposed to alee.- The popular name of the Subidaria aquatica, Mar. Diet. or rough leaved alyssum; so called from AWE-€OMMAND'ING, a. Striking or in- its awl-shaped leaves, which grow in clusters round the root. It is a native of Britfluencing by awe. Gray. AW" ED, pp. Struck with fear influenced ain antl Irelaml. Enciic. bv fear or reverence. " """' ' n«"i.] AWKIGH', adv. [a and weigh.] Atrip. The AUM ( anchor is aiveigh, when it is just drawn A Dutch liquid measure, containing, eight out of the groimd, and hangs perpendicusteckans or twenty verges or verteels, equal lar. to the EngUsh tierce, the sixth of a French [See Jltrip.] AWE-INSPIRING, a. Impressing with tun, and the seventh of an English tun, or awe. Bp. Hoharl! thirty-six gallons. Eneyc. .Irhulhnof. AWE'-STRU€K, a. Impressed or struck AWN, ii. [Sw. agne ; Gr. a;ti'o, axir;.] with awe. Milton. The beard of corn or grass, as it is usually understood. But technically, a slender AWFUL, a. [aive and/i
On
j
the weather-side, or towards
as, the
arbitrators.
;
I
;
AWARD',
Alisent
;
AWKWARDLY, or buMglinir manner [Dan. ave, fear, awe, chastise-! AWKWARDNESS,
;
determination
1.
;
ment, (bscipline aver, to chastise or cor-' rect Gr. ayou, to be astonished. Qu. Ir.^ agh ; Sax. ege, or oga, fear Gotli. agjan,\
;
Norm, garda, award, judgment ugurdetz, See Guard and Regard.]
awarded. adjudge
Watchful
struments mn-eady; not dextrous; bunguntoward. Dryden. Inelegant unjiohte ungraceful in manners; clumsy; uimatur.il; bad. Shak. arfc. a rude in Clumsily; ling
2.
;
V.
To
ing
out of order. L' Estrange. Cluuisy in performance, or manners unhandy not dextrous. [Vulgar.] ;
tri-
squander away, &c., to dissipate in drinking or extravagance. To make away, is to kill or destroy. Aimy with has a peculiar signification in the phrase, " I camiot away with it." Isa.l i. The sense is, " I cannot bear or endure it."
AWE,
usual.
AWARD',
to
WR
A tip,'
fles,
sleep, in
a natural or moral sense.
H
axvay, to cast from, to give
dissipate or fijolishly destroy. To trijle away, to lose or expend in or in idleness.
It is
more
lint
;
To throw
word
the
is
quently transitive, as awake is nioi-c frequently intransitive. Its significations are the same as those of awake.
AWA'KENED,
W
A
A
awakn.
t.
I',
helm
is
aweather
;
;
;
j
'-
\
I
;
people sense of frightful, ugly, detestable. adv. In a manner to fill with! awe in a reverential manner.
AW'FULLY, ;
AWN'Y, a. Having awns full of beard. AWO'KE. The preterit oi' awake. .4 WORK', adv. [Sax. geweorcan, to work.] ;
At work
of labor or action. 2 Chron. [^Vb< AW'FULNESS, n. The quahty of striking used.] XXXV. Shak. with awe, or with reverence solemnity " the adv. At work; into a state 9. It is much used with words signifying AWORK'ING, of this sacred as, aufulness place." of or or action. from Hubbard's Tale. send as, go away, working moving going 2. The state of being struck Avith awe. away, run away, &:c.; all signifying deA help to prayer, producing in us reverence and! AWRY', a. or adv. [Dan. vrider, to twist parture, or separation to a distance. Some Sw. vrida ; Sax. writhan, t'ricn, twisted awfiilness. Taylor.i times without the verb; as, whither aieay to ivrithe.] [JVot legitimate.] so fast. Shak. V. t. awhap'. [W. not to! 1. Turned or twisted towards one side AWHAPE, cwapiaw, Love hath wings and will away. Waller. in a straight or true direction, or strike smartly.] To strike to confound. position ; " to 3. As an exclamation, it is a command or inwith oblique vision Ohs. asquint as, Spenser. vitation to depart away, that is, be gone, [This is our vulgar ivhop.] glance a look awry ;" the lady's cap is " or let us go. Jlway with him." Take AWHILE, adv. [a and while, time, or interawry. him away. 2. In a fgurative sense, turned aside from val.] 4. With verbs, it serves to theii' A sense of time for some time for a short the line of truth, or right reason permodify space ; and form peculiar phrases as, time. verse or perversely. Sidney. Milton j
;
;
in a state
;
|
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
A X AX,
n.
eax, lEse
;
azza
;
It.
AYE
I
improperly written axe.
Sw.
i/xe
L. uscia
;
;
[Sax. ccx. Gr. a^ivr;
2.
;
or Ar.
WXH
established principle in some art or science a principle received without new " things which are equal to the proof; as, same thing, are equal to one another."
Encyc. Pertaining to an axiom having the na An instrument usually of iron, for licwing ture of self evident truths or received timber and cho])piiig wood. It consists of ])riiiciples. Pre/, to Bacon^s Jlphorisms. a head with an arching edge, and a helve AX' IS, )i. plu. axes. [L. Gr. a^ur Russ. os. or handle. The ax is of two kinds, tlie or osi; Sax. a:x; Fr. axe, or aissieu ; G. broad ax for hewing, and the narrow ax achse ; D. as ; It. a.sse ; Sp. exe ; Port. f.ro, for rough-hewing and cutting. The hatch ft.ro.] et is a small ax to be used with one hand. 1. The straight line, real or imaginary, pass•
Ch. and Sjr.
»» hazza, to cut;
an
•J
ax.]
AXIOMAT'IC,
?
AXIOMATT€AL,
^
A
Mexico, whose eggs, deposited on rushes and flags, in large quantities, are sold and used as a sort of caviare, called ahuauhtli. This was a dish among the Mexicans, as it now it
among
n.
fly in
the Spaniards. Clavigero. mineral, a subspecies I
AXESTONE, AXSTONE,
" A of
less
;
;
;
form of an
AXTL, D.
91.
oxel,
a.
[L. axis,
and/omn.] In
axis.
j.
;
;
t).
pits.] 1.
The armpit a cavity under l)art of the arm or shoulder.
the upper
;
it
about
its
Axis
AX'INITE,
n.
A
Martijn.
Mihie.
mineral which sometimes
oeciu's in lamellar masses, but in crystals, whose general form
commonly
is that of a very oblique rhomb, or rather, fiim-sided prism, so flatteneil that some of its edges become thin and sharp, like that of an ax; whence its name, Gr. a^n'>;. This is the thumerstone of Kirwan. It has been
sometimes called yancditc and Brongniarl.
Haiai.
AXINOftl'ANCV,
n.
[Gr.
a|«.-ij,
violet sliorl.
Cleaveland.
an ax, and
ftamia, divination.] the aneients, a species of divination, by means of an ax or hatchet, performet by laying an agate-stone on a red hot hatchet, or by fixing a hatchet on a round then the names stake, so as to be poised of those suspected were repeated, and he at whose name the hatchet moved, was
Among
A
;
Crataegus.
AZ'ERIT, > A species ofc plum or pruAZER1'TA,<«. ""« Fam. of Plants. .
as caducous leaves, which fall before the end of summer, A caducous calyx falls before the corol is well unfoldfalling early
;
ed.
Martyn.'
A
n. [L.] wind from the north-1 east, [and in Latin, according to AinsjyRUon. wortli, from the north-west.]
CiE'CIAS,
CAESARIAN. [See Cesnrian.] CjESURA. [See Cesura.] A substance obtained from €AF'FEIN, ?7.
an infusion of unroasted coffee, by treating with the muriate of tin. Ure.
it
Vol.
I.
chest, or waggon. a ca])tive, a slave, CA'ITIFF, [It. catti'wo, a rascal ; caltivare, to master, to enslave. This word is from the L. captivus, a capThe tive, from capio or capto, to take. n.
4.
sense of knavert/
is
nection between slave and vice.]
A mean plies a
villain
;
a despicable knave
:
it
im-
nnxture of wickedness and misery. Johiison.
n. An oil from the East Indies, resembling that of cardamoms, obtained from the Melaleuca leucodendron. Encyc.
CAJO'LE, rangeoli.
To
flatter
;
v.t. [Fr. cajoler, enjoler ; Arm. See Gull.] to soothe ; to coax ; to deceive
or delude by flattery.
CAJO'LER,
n.
A
A hard swelling on the flesh or rather a concretion without .juch swelling. V. t. To t'orin into a cake or mass. V. i. To concrete, i>r form into a hard mass, as dough in an oven, or as flesh or any other substance. Addison. ;
CAKE, CAKE, CAKE,
t.
11.
"To cackle.
[.Vo<
i/serf.]
Ray.
CAL'ARASII,
)!. [i^]). calabaxa, apum|)kin, a gourd, a calabash Port, calahaca. Qu. Or. xa'Artr;, a water-pot or pitcher.] A vessel made of a dried gourd-shell or of the shell of a calabai-h tree, used for containing liquors, or goods, as pitch, rosin ;
1.
and ihc 2.
A
like.
])opiilar
Encyc.
name of
the gourd-plant, or Earn, of Plants.
Cucurbita.
CAL'ARASH-TREE,
A
n.
tree of
two spe-
known in botany by the generic name Cresctntia. The cujete has narrow leaves, but a large roimd or oval fruit. The latifolia has broad leaves. The shell of the fruit is used lor cups, bowls, di.shes and other utensils. Encyc. CALA'DE, »i. The slope or declivity ot a cies,
manege-ground.
rising
CALA'ITE,
n.
A name
Encyc. given to the tur-
quois; which see.
CALAMANCO, mande
;
woolen ed
Qu.
;
G. kalmank
.Sp. winccr,
of a warp.
a spot.]
fine gloss,
stufl',
in the
CAL'AMAR,
callimanque, cal; Sp. cal-
[Fr.
D. kalmink
amaco.
A
n.
and checkerEncyc.
[Sp. id.; It. calamaia, an this animal.]
n.
ink-horn, and An animal, having an oblong body and ten On the belly are two bladders conlegs. taining a black fluid, which the animal from the natural conemits when pursued. It is called also the degradation of a sea-sleeve and cuttle-fish.
wisdom; and the two CAJ'EPUT,
wings, diligence and activity.
CADU'CITY,
Encyc.
An ammunition
.3.
;
Dryden. In .Yew England, a piece of floating ice
Dirl.of N'at. Hist. of Brazil, of two
one of them called the pongi, tin not more than six inches long. are called also jacchus and redipns.
A
in a river or lake.
species,
vvheiKC the or his
anticpiity
isles.
Philippine
named from CAG'UI,
Dip kadain,
precede of
.sense
;
;
ice.
Encyc.
inclosure made with palUsades for Johnson. confining wild beasts. Johnson. .3. A prison for petty criminals. 4. In carpentry, an outer work of tiiidjer, inclosing another within it as the cage of a wind mill or of a stair case. Encyc. €A0E, v.t. To confine in a cage; to shut Donne. u)), or confine. €A'(jiIT, n. A beautiful green parrot of the
ceadal, a
;
3.
sense seems to be, a mass ^aoiior lump.] A small mass of dough baked or a comjmsition of flour, butter, sugar, or other ingredients, baked in a small mass. The name is ap]>lied to various compositions, baked or cooked in ditierent shapes. Something in the form of a cake, rather flat than high, but roundish ; as a cake on a tree. Bacon. mass of matter concreted as a cake of
flatterer
;
Hudibras. a wheedler.
Sp. Diet.
CAL'AMBAC,
n.
Diet. ofJ\at. Hist.
[Sp. calambiico.]
Aloes-
wood, xyloe-aloes, a drug, which is the product of a tree growing in China and
some of
the Indian isles. It is of a light texture, ver}' porous, and the pores so filled with a soft fragrant resin, that it may be indented by the fingers and chewed like mastich. It is also called tambac. The two coarser kinds are called lignum
spungy
aloes,
and calambour.
CAL'AMBOUR,
n.
A
Encyc. species of the aloes-
wood, of a dusky or mottled color, of a CAJOLERY, n. light, friable texture, and less fragrant delude. than calanibac. This wood is used by cabinet-makers and inlayers. CAJO'LING, ppr. Flattering wheedling Encyc. deceiving. CALAMIF EROUS, a. [calamus and fero.] animal A Mexican resembling CAJO'TA^^ji. Producing plants having a long, hollow, a wolf and a dog. Clavigero. knotted stem. Chambers. CAKE, n. [D. koek ; G. kuchen Dan. kage or n. calFlattery; a wheedling to Burke. ;
Sw. haka;
Ch.
i;o
30
;
;
;
;
Pers,
^\^;Syr.
CAL'AJIINE,
CAL'AMIN,
aminaris, or cadmia zink,
much used
Lapis an ore of composition of
fossilis
in the
;
C A L
C A L
This term is applieii both to the silicf oils oxytl and the native carbonate of ziuk. Tliey can scarcely be distinguished
J.
brass.
4.
by their external cliaracters. They are generally compact, often stalactitic, and sometimes crystalized. Most of the calamines of England and Scotland are said to be carbonates. Encyc. Cleavelttnd.
5.
[L. calamintha ; Gr. xaT^l^wSfj (WiiSa, mentha, menta, mint.] plant, a species of Melissa, or baum, an
CAL'AJIINT,
weak
aromatic plant, and a IValer-calamint mint.
corroborant.
v.
To
t.
Cotgrave. act of cml-
ing the hair.
The
n.
longitudinally striated,
crystals,
sometimes resembling a reed. foliated ; its luster or less shining.
is
«.
Werner.
calamiteux.
[Fr.
and
See
involved in deep disVery miserable wretched tress; oppressed with infelicity from misfortune applied to men. Johnson. Catainy. ;
;
;
3.
it is
n.
The
CALAN'GAY,
A
n.
Encyc. species of white parrot.
Ash. 71. [Fr. caleche ; D. kales; Sp. Russ. koliaska.] chariot or with light carriage very low wheels, used for taking the air in parks and gardens. It is ojien, or covered with mantlets of cloth, tliat are let down at calesa
€ALCA'RIO-SUL'PHUROUS, and Sulphur.] Having lime and sulphur
[See Calx
combination, or Kirwan.
calcanus. See Calx.] Partaking of the nature of lime having the qualities of lime as calcarious earth or stone. Encyc. Kirwan. a. [L.
calamitas.
Qu. Ar
;
to
n.
A
kind of sweet wine
from Portugal.
Under this root, the Syr-
€AL'CEATED,
[L. calceatus, The sense of the verb ecus, a shoe.] down. But the origin Shod ; fitted with or wearing shoes. Johnson. micertain.] Any great misfortune, or cause of misery €AL'CEDON, n. [See Chalcedony.] With generally applied to events or disaster Jewelers, a foul vein, hke chalcedony, in which produce extensive evils, as loss of some precious stones. Ash. ) crops, earthquakes, conflagrations, defeat €ALCEDON'I€, re ^j. ; j of armies, and the like. Hut it is applied €ALCEDO'NIAN, \ "• ^^"^ Chalcedony. also to the misfortunes vvliicb bring great Pertaining to or resembling chalcedony. distress upon individuals. Milton. Prior. Encyc. Kinvan. iac is,
is
Tlie deliberations of calamity are rarely wise, Burlse.
€ALCEDONY.
n.
[L.
from Gr.
stalk or stem, a reed, stubble
to 1.
;
xa-ka.jj.af,
a
Eth. and Ar
be allied to culmus.] generic name of the Indian cane
The
anliijuily,
strument,
fistula,
made of a reed
or oaten stalk
Encyc.
be converted into a substance, or into a JVewton. n. [from L. calx.] The metallic friable
Davy.
a. [See CalcograPertaining to calcography.
n.
€ALC-SINTER, €ALC-TUFF,
n.
An
An
n.
carbonate of lime.
o. [See Calculate.] That be calculated, or ascertained by cal-
may
culation.
CALC'ULARY,
n.
[L.
A congeries
calculus, a pebble.]
of little stony knots dispersed through the jiarenchyma of the pear and other fruits, formed by concretions of the sap. Encyc.
CALC'ULATE, lare
;
v.
f.
calcular
S]).
a pebble.
calculus,
[Fr. caleuler ; It. calcuLat. calculo ; from ; o , o ,
Ar. Syr.
may be
calcined
reckon to add, subtract, multiply or divide any sums, for the purpose of finding the amount, difl^erence, or other result. Thus, to calculatel\ie exjienses of erecting a house, is to estimate and add together the several sums which each part of the materials and the work will
See Chalcedony, the more
a.
[See
Caldne.]
That
cajiable of being reduced to a friable state by the action of fire ;
Eiic^c.
^ < xj>.j'
gravel.]
To compute
;
to
;
cost. 2.
To
ascertain by the use of tables or numas, to calculate an echpse. tables upon mathematical principles, as logarithms, epiiemerides, &c.
bers .3.
;
To form
To compute at
a certain
poses
;
the situation of the planets time, for .astrological pur-
as, to ca/ci/Zn/f the birth
Kirwan.
CALCI'NABLE,
and
engraving in
Stalactitic carbonate Urt. alluvial formation of Ure.
CALCULABLE,
to produce.]
genus, a blue or olive green color, of the consist ence of clay. It consists of calcarious earth and magnesia tinged with iron.
[L. calx, chalk,
Gr. ypa^u, to engrave.] the likeness of chalk.
correct orthography.
CAL'CTFORM,
called also rotang. It is without branches, has a crown at the top, and is beset with spines. Encyc. 2. In a jjipe or a wind in-
Denham.
To
V. i.
€AL€OG'RAPHY,
CALCIF'EROUS,
a. [of ca/x, lime, and /ero, Producing calx or lime, a. [of cak, lime, and /orma, In the form of calx. form.] calamus scriptorius, a writing reed ^Xi" CALCIMU'RITE, n. [of co/r, lime, and mi/or ])en. The verb in Arabic signifies to ria, salt water.] cut or pare. But qu., for it would seem A of species of earth, of the muriatic
€AL'AMUS,
;
See Calx.]
basis of lime.
phy.]
has calamity.
to strike, to beat
of the word
calx.
CALCOGRAPII'ICAL,
Mason. from cal
a.
cal-
calcinare
;
€AL'CIUM,
;
€AL€AVAL'LA,
used in It.
calx, by the action of heat.
;
wound Heb. Ch. dSo
from
;
of lime. in
partaking of both.
eAL€A'RIOUS,
a.
A vessel
[Fr. calciner;
unite.
powder or
;
;
t.
zation from salts. To oxydize, as a metal ; to reduce to a metallic calx. To dissolve to destroy the principles
which
;
misery
oxydation. n.
To reduce a substance to a powder or to a friable state, by the action of heat; or to expel from a substance some volatile matter, combined with it, or forming its cementing principle, as the carbonic acid from limestone, or the water of crystali-
eAL'CINE, In
glass works, a kind of oven, or reverberating furnace, used for the calcination of sand and salt of potash, and converting them into frit. Encyc. a. [L. calcar, a spur; calx, n.
the heel; Ir. ccdg, a sting or goad.] Producing wretched applied to external circumstan- Furnislied witli a spur as a calcarate corol, in larkspur a calcarate nectary, a nectary Milton. ces ; as a calamitous event. resembling a cock's spur. distressful wretched Martyn. Full of to state or condition.
V.
Sp. calcinar 1.
;
;
ii.
is the cementing and thus reducing it to a friable Thus chalk and carbonate of lime are reduced to lime by calcination, or the expulsion of carbonic acid. The operation of reducing a metal to an oxyd, or metallic calx. This in modern
cination.
and misery; making
distress
combined, or which
€AL'CINATORY,
A
ladies.
The
calcine.]
state.
CALASH', 1.
[See CaL Bacon.
calcine.
[from
principle,
beetle kinti, very destructive in granaries.
eAL€'AR,
Calamity.] 1.
CAL'ANDER,
])leasure.
Cleaveland.
CALAM'ITOUS,
and
Its struc-
vitreous,
or
n.
operation of expelling from a substance by heat, some volatile matter with which
French name of a species of insect of the CAL'CINE,
[JVot used.]
n. [L. calaiyius, a reed.] A mineral, probably a variety of Tremolitc. It occurs in im])erfeet or roundetl jjrisma-
CAL'AMIT,
more
CALAN'DRE
To
t.
e"'fO
by Liime Acorus.
n. A species of lark, withj a thick bill, the upper part of the body of a reddish brown, spotted with black, with a body thicker than the sky-lark.
curl or frizzle
[JVot used.]
CALAMISTRA'TION,
ture
flag, called
i>.
€ALCINA'TION,
€ALAN'DRA, I
a species of Mentha, or
is
CAL'AMISTRATE,
tic
The sweet
CAL'CINATE,
Encyc.
Encyc.
the hair.
rush or reed used anciently as a pen to write on parchment or papyrus. Encyc. A sort of reed, or sweet-scented cane, used by tlie Jews as a perfume. It is a knotty root, reddish without and white within, and filled with a spungy substance. It has an aromatic smell. Brown. Calmet.
?!.
;
A
C A L
A
To
of a person. Shak.
adjust by coinjiutation to fit or ])repare by the adapt.itioii of the means to the end as, to calculate a system of laws for a free people. ;
;
Tillutson.
tiou
v. i. To mak*^ a coiiiputacalculate better tor ourselves
as, for otiiers.
;
than Ill
use, tliis
popular
word
is
often equivalent
to intend or purpose, that is, to make ara man raiigeiiKMits, ami loriii a plan ; as, Tliis use ol calculates to i;i) a journey. tlie word spring-s IVoni tlie practice o( com-
puting; or estimating
tlie
calidus, hot ; from caleo, to be hot. This is ti-om the root of Eng. sccUd.] large kettle or boihr, of copper, or other ter
€AL€'ULATE, we
C A L
C A L
C A L calculated for our benefit.
is
Religion
A
its
mination by
\arious circiuiiinfluence the
aihleil
ia,
signifies a country,
and was
tin;
Rinnans.
signifies
C'aledon
;
Encyc.
;
;
A
;
The
manner of computing by numbers. use of nunibers,
or beats.
CALEFACTION,
addition, subtraction, for tlic purpose niultiplication, or division, of arriving at a certain result. Thus comliy
n. [L. cakfactio, from to make warm. See Calefy.] act or opi^ation of warming or heating; the production of heat in a body by the
green
c(UcJ'ar,io,
The
for putations in astronomy and geom(!tiy making tables of numbers are called cal-
walk
field,
in
C*ALF,
action of file, or by the communication of heat from other bodies. Kiuip. Encyc.\ of an arithmetical operation I. The state of being heated. Johnson. Hooker. CALEFACTIVE, I computation reckoning. "' [See Calefaction.] That makes warm 3. Estimate funned in the mind by compar- CALEFACTORY, ^ >r hot that communicates beat. ing the various circumstances and facts whicii inHuence its determination. C.VL'EFY, I', i. [L. calif 0, to become warm, 1. €AL€'ULATIVE, a. Pertaining to calcula- or hot; iVoni adeo i\iii\fo oryaci'o.] Burke. To tion 2. tending to cali'ulate. grow hot or warm ; to be heated. Brown. €.\L€'UL.\TOK, 71. One who computes or reckons one who estimates or considers CAL'EFY, v. t. To make warm or hot. the force and eflect of causes, with a view Johnson. 3. to form a correct estimate of the effects. CAL'END.\R, n. [L. calendarium, an acSee Calends.] 4. •ount book. CAL€'ULATORY, a. Belonging to calcuJohnson. I. A register of the year, in which the hition.
culations. 2. The result
;
;
;
;
it,
n.
and sometimes attempting to is
lost.
n.
months, weeks, and days are set down in with the feasts observed by the church, &c. ; an almanack. It was so named from the Roman Calenda; the name given to the first day of the month, anil written, in large letters, at the head of each month. [See Calends.] Encyc. A list of ])risoiiers in the custody of the
Reckoning; computation. Howel.
Obs.
€AL€'ULOUS,
a.
hard Uke stone
;
order,
[Supra.] Stony; gritty; as a calculous concretion
Brown. 2.
Affected with the gravel or stone
;
as a
calculous ])erson. Sharp. The n. [L. See Calculate.] stone in the bladder or kidneys. The calculus in the bladiler is called lithia.sii; in
iJALO'UHJS,
2.
'i.
3. All orderly table or enumeration of perthe kidneys, nephritis. sons or things. Encijc. Encyc. In mathematics Differential calculus, is Calendar-month, a solar month as it stands the arithmetic of the infinitely small differin Almanacks. ences of variable quantities; the method CAL'ENDAR, v. t. To enter or write in a of differencing quantities, or of finding an calendar. infinitely small (piantity, which, being ta- CAL'ENDER, v. t. [Fr. calendrer ; Sp. calken infinite times, shall be equal to a giventar, to heat, to urge or press forward ; with the docen quantity. This coincides from caleo, to be hot.] trine of rtu.xions. Enci/c. To press between rollers, for the purpose of making smooth, glossy and wavy as Exponential calculus, is a method of differor of findwoolen and silk stuffs and linens. encing exponential quantities; ing and summing up the differentials or CAL'ENDER, 7i. A machine or hot press, ;
;
moments of cxponenlial quantities; oral of bringing them to geometrical con-
least
structions. 4.
.>.
Eng.
sherifi'.
Encj/c.
Intef!:ral calcubts, is a method of integrating or summing up moments or differential quantities; tho inverse of the differential calculus. Enci/c. Literal calculus, is specious arithmetic or
algebra.
CALDRON, now
dron,
Encyc. [Old Fr. chaulBasque, galda, to
n. cawl'dron.
chaudron
;
heat galdarea, a great kettle It. caldaia, or caldaro, !i caldron caldo, heat and hot Sp. calda, boat caldear, to beat, to weld iron caldera, a caldron ; Port, caldeira, a caldron L. caldarium, id calda, hot wa;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
used in manufactories to press cloths, forj the purpose of making them smooth, even and glossy, laying the nap, watering them and giving them a wavy appearance. Itj consi.sts of two thick rollers or cylinders,! lowplaced between hoards or planks, the er one being fixed, the upjier one movable, and loaded with a great weight. Encyc. CAL'ENDRER, n. The person who calenders cloth.
;
yei]> kalveyi, to calve, to vomit; kallien. The primary sense is is-
throwing out. Ileucc the word the protuberant part of the leg, a push, a swell.] The young of the cow, or of the bovine
sue, is
fidiii
applieil to
genus of quadruiieds. In contempt, a dolt an ignorant, stupid a weak or cowardly man. ;
person
;
Drayton.
Gr.
Among
the
month.
The thick fleshy part of the leg behind ; so called from its protuberance. Wiseman. The calves of the lips, in Hosea, signify the pure offerings of prayer, praise and thanks-
Romans, the
The
ently related.
first
origin of this
day of each
name
Varro supposes
originated in the practice
calo,
is differ-
it to have of notifying the
Broion.
giving.
C>ALF-LIKE, C^ALF-SKIN,
a. 71.
calf: or leather
Resembling a
calf.
Shnk.
The hide or skin of a made of the skin.
CAL'IBER, 77. [Fr. and Sp. calibre.] 1. The diameter of a body; as the caliber of a column, or of a bullet. Encyc. The bore of a gun, or the extent of its bore. Caliber-compasses, calibers, or callipers, a sort of compasses made with arched legs, to take the diameter of round bodies, as masts, shot, &c. The legs move on an arch of brass, on which are marked the inches and half inches, to show how far the points of the compasses are opened asunder. Encyc. Caliber-rule, Gunner's Callipers, an instrument in which a right line is so divided as that the first part being equal to the diameter of an iron or leaden ball of one ])ound weight, the other parts are to the first as the diameters of balls of two, three, four, &c. pounds, are to tho diame-
2.
ter of a ball of one pound. It is used by engineers, to determine, from a ball's weight, its diameter or cahber and vice versa.
Encyc. n. [L. calix; Fr. calice ; Sax. eoa cup Gr. xi?.i|. It is usually written chalice but incorrectly.] A cup appropriately, a communion cup, or vessel used to administer the wine in the sacrament of the Lord's supper. It is used by the Roman Catholics in the mass. C.VL'ICO, 7!. [said to be from Calicut, in In England, wliite India.] Cotton cloth. or unprinted cotton cloili is called cabeo.
CALTCE, lic,
;
;
;
n. plu. [L. ca/e7!rfa;, from See Call] xa7.fu, Eng. to call.
71. [.Sp. cakntura, heat, a fever with irregular pnl»e calentar, to beat from L. c
;
;
Mam's Rom.
CAL'ENTURE,
deterrninatlons. ;
who
priest
fact, to the people, and the number of the calends, or the day of the nqnes. Others alledge that the people hehig convened, the pontifex proclaimed the several feasts or liolidays in the month a custom which was discontinued in the year of Rome 450, when the fasti or calendar was set up in public places, to give notice of the festivals.
CALECIIE, [See Calash.) C,\LEUONlAN,((. Pertaining to Caledonia, an ancient name of Scotland. The ter-
to
new moon, by a
called out or ])roclainied the
metal, fiunished with a movable handle or bail, svitli whicli to hang it on a chimAddison. ney hook.
probably, the hill or town of the Gaels, or mind in furniing Citels, the primitive inhabitants.] CALCULATED,;;/;. Conipuieil reckoned eALEDO'NL\N, ;i. A native of Caledonia, now Scotland. suited adapted hy design. €AL€'ULATiNG, ppr. Cnin|Hiting reck- €ALEI'A'CIE\T, a. [See Calefaction, Culoning; adapting hy design adjusting. eft/.] Warming; beating. C.\L€llLA'TIOi\, H. The art, practice or CALEFA'CIENT, n. That which warms
which concur
stances
time of the
;
C A L
C A L la tl]c riiiteil States, calico is printed cotton cloth, having not more than two I have never heard this name colors. given to the imprinted cloth. Calico was originally imported from India, but is now jnanufactnred in Europe and the United States.
€AL'ICO-PRINTER, is
pation
One whose occu-
n.
to print raliioes.
CAL'ID, a. [L. caUilus, from raleo, Hot; burning; ardent.
CALID'ITY, CAL'IDUCT,
be hot.]
Johnson.
Brown.
[L. caleo, to be hot, color, to lead.]
n.
and duco,
heat,
to
Heat.
n.
a pipe or canal used Among to convey heat from a furnace to the apartments of a house. CA'LIF, n. written also caliph and kalif. the Ancients,
Ar.
[from
i_ii-L
succeed,
calafa,
Hence a calif is a successor, a title to the successors of Mohammed.]
iven
A successor or vicar a representative of Mohammed, bearing the same relation to him as the Pope pretends to bear to St. Peter. Among the Saracens, or Mohanmiedans, a calif is one who is vested with supreme dignity and power in all matters relating ;
This title is to religion and civil policy. borne by the Grand Siguier in Turkey, and by the Sophi of Persia. Encyc.
€A'LIF'ATE, €A'1,IPHATE,
The
) S
ji.
of
office or dignity
a calif; or
tlie
govern-
KA'LIFATE, ) mentofacalif Harris. CALIGA'TION, n. [L. catigatio, dimness, from ness
be dark.] Darkness
caligo, to
dim-
;
In medical authors, caligation or caligo, is an opakeness or cloudiness of the anterior surface of the crystaline lens, causing dimness of sight impaired sight from obstruction to the passage of light, or cataract. Co.re. Encyc. €ALlG'INOUS, a. Dim obscure dark.
"
;
€ALIGRAPH'I€,
;
[Infia.] Pertaining to fVarton. elegant penmanship. a.
eALIGRAPHY,
}
€ALLIG'R.VPHY,
\
"'
[Gr. mios, fair, and ypa^w, to write xax;
^typcMj'ta.]
Fair or elegant writing, or penmanship. Pridcanx. CA'LIN, n. A compound metal, of wliich the Cliinese
The
make
tea canisters and the like. seem to be lead and tin.
CALTVER,
n.
[from
caliber.]
A
Encrji " '
;
;
;
Shak hanilgim, musket or arqueljuse. n. [h. calix;Gv. xvXi^.] A cup. 2. The mendirane which covers the papillain tlie pelvis of the human kidney. Core. But it seems to be erroneously used for
CALK,
call over, to
;
;
;
Gr. xuXvu, h. caula ; Syr. Sam. Elh. to Ar. to keep ; L. celo. hold, or restrain The primary sense is to press, drive oifind the like elements and sigstrain. nification in Sax. giellan, or giillan, to yell Dan. galer, to crow. Class Gl. The VV. galic is connected in origin with gallu, to be able, to have power, may, can, Eng. could, the root of gallant, L. gallu.^, &c.] In a general sense, to drive to strain or force out sound. Hence, I. To name to denominate or give a name. ;
We
;
the niihtia.
To call to mind, memory.
CALL,
;
3.
II. t.
;
often witli together
To
;
as, the
invite.
Because
5.
;
king called his council together ; the president crdled together the congress. To request to meet or come. He sent his serV;ants to call tliem that were bidden. Math. xxii. have
called
and
ye
The Germans and
called to Hagar. ;
Gen.
tion
seems to be eipiivalent Let us speak at this
to
to speak,
D.
jilace.
make
a short visit to also, to payment, or make a demand of a debt. In a theological sense, to jiray to or as, to call on the name of the worshi]) call on, to
;
:
Lord.
Gen.
iv.
To
repeat solemnly.
Dry den.
refused.
to utter a loud voice
call out,
a popular
;
to
bawl;
of the phrase. Prov. i. CALL, n. A vocal address, of summons or To invite or summon to come or be pres- invitation as, he will not come at a call. ent; to invite, or collect. Demand 2. requisition public claim as, Call all your senses to yon. listen to the crt//s of justice or humanity. To give notice to come by authority to 3. Divine vocation, or sumnioiis as the call of Abraham. conunanil to come call a servant. as, To proclaim to name, or puhhsh the 4. Invitation request of a public body or name. society as, a clergyman has a call to setth in the ministry. Nor parish clerk, who calls the psalm so clear iise
:
;
;
;
;
7.
xxi. ;•
as, to call at the inn.
solicit
;
6.
seems not probable.
God
;
Ar. (_jiX9 kalafa, to stop the seams of ships
;
to revive in
without intention of staying
short st0|)
kallen.
To
To I
;
in this phrase, to use o/, as to call at the. inn ; or on, as to call on a friend. This ap])lica-
assemble by order or
public notice
to recollect
utter a loud sound, or to adto utter the name ; some;
This use Johnson supposes to have originated in the custom of denoting one's presence at the door by a call. It is common,
And God culled (lie light day, and the darkGen. i. ness he called nij^ht. to summon ; to direct or ; to
stop,
make a
To convoke
order to lueet
To
i.
Tlie angel of
To
2.
;
'2.
i>.
dress by name times with to.
;
I.
with fine moss, &c., and pay them over with pitch ; Sam. id. It may be corrupted from this word if not, it may be from the Dun. frrt/fr, calx, lime or mortar; but this
;
;
see.
cauk. [Qu. the connection of this word with the Sp. calafeiear ; It. calafatart ; Port, calafetar ; Arm. calefcli ; Fr. calfater, to smear with cement or mortar
body.
read a list, name by name ; V. t. [L. calo : Gr. xct?.fw; Svv. k/illa; to recite separate particidars in order, as Dan. kalder ; W. galw, to call D. kallen, a roll of names. Ch. kSd in Aph. to call, to thun- To call to talk out, tosunmion to fight to challenge der Heb. to hold or restrain, which is the also, to sunnnon into service as, to call out
1.
calyx,
lative
To
CALL,
€A'LIX,
which
calking
sliips.
"
kind of
appoint or designate, as for an office, duty or employment. See, I have called by name Bezaleel. Ex
A
ingredients
'
To
To drive oakimi or old ropes untwisted, xxxl. Paul called to be an apostle. Rom. i. into the seams of a ship or other vessel, 9. To invite ; to warn ; to exhort. Is. xxii. 12. to prevent their leaking, or admitting waCruden. After the seams are filled, they are ter. 10. To invite or draw into union with Christ : covered with hot melted pitch or rosin, to to bring to know, heheve and obey the keep the oakum from rotting. Rom. viii. 28. gos])el. 3. in some parts of America, to set upon a Heb. ii. xi. horse or o.\ shoes armed with sharp points 11. To own and acknowledge. 12. To invoke or appeal to. of iron, to prevent tlieir slipping on ice ; 1 call God for a record. 2 Cor. i. that is, to stop from slipping. 13. To esteem or account. Is. Iviii. 5. Mat. CALK, n. cauk. In JVeiv-Eugland, a sharp iii. 1.5. pointed piece of iron on a shoe for a horse To call down, to invite, or to bring down. or an ox, called in Great Britain calkin : To call back, to revoke, or retract to recall j used to prevent the animal from slipping. man who calks; to sunjinon or bring back. €ALK'ER, n. cauk'cr. To call for, to demand, require or claim, as sometimes perhaps a calk or pointed iron a crime calls for punishment ; or to cause on a horse-shoe. grow. Ezek. xxxvi. Also, to speak €\LK' E,T), pp. cauk'ed. Having the seams to for ; to ask to request ; as, to call for a dinstopped ; furnished with shoes with iron ner. points. To call in, to collect, as to call in debts or CALK'IN, n. A calk. or to draw from circidation, as ; CALK'ING, ppr. cauk'ing. Stopping the money to call in clijiped coin ; or to summon toseams of a ship; putting on shoes with gether ; to invite to come together ; as, to iron points. call in or friends. CALK'ING, ». cauk'ing. In painting, the To call neigld)ors forth, to bring or summon to action; covering of the hack side of a design with as, to call forth all the faculties of the mind. black lead, or red chalk, and tracing lines To call off, to smnnion away ; to divert ; as, to through on a waxed plate or wall or othcall off' the attention ; to call off workmea er matter, by passing lightly over each fripm their employment. stroke of the design with a point, which To call up, to bring into view or recollection; leaves an impression ofthc color on the to call the of a deceased as, image up Chambers. |)late or wall. friend to into action, or disCALK'ING-IRON, n. cnuk'ing-iron. An in- cussion ; also,to callbringa bill before a legisas, , up in a used like strument
;
eALlG'INOUSNESS,n.Dimness;obscurity.
8.
1.
chisel,
cloudiness.
;
C A L
Danes have borrowed the Spanish and French word to express the idea. Skinner deduces the word I'rom Fr. calage, tow
;
;
;
Gay
5.
A summons
from heaven
;
impulse.
J I
C A L
C A L
C A L
A
galvanic instrument, in which the calorilio influence or effects are attended by scarcely Hare. anv electrical power. CALOTTE, > [Fr. calotte] A cap or CALO'TIO, ^ coif, of hair, satin or other
[L. callus, from calleo, to be Locke secuted llie christians. hard ; Sans, kalla, stone.] Denkam. Any cutaneous, corneous, or bony liardness,
when he
per-
€AL'LUS,
or say a word or to hav(; a short conversation vvitli. In this sense 8. Vocation employment. calling is generally used. Bacon. 9. A iiaiiiing a nomination. 10. Among Imnttrs, a lesson blown on tlie
hardness
St.
Paul believed he
hail a call,
A
n.
"
;
moment and speak
;
Encyr.
duty.
The English name of the mineral called by the Germans tungsten or wolfram. Encyc. 13. Among/«w/er«, the noise or cry of a towl or a pipe to call birds by imitating their voice. Encyc. Bailey. In legislative bodies, the call of the hou.se, a calling over the names of the members, to discover who is absent or for other purpose u calling of names with a view to obtain answers from the persons named. 6ALL'ED, pp. Invited summoned addressed named ap))ointeil invoked ; asseni bled by order recited. is
;
;
;
Still
;
Hence 2.
calm day. Undisturbed
;
;
not agitated
as
;
CALOY'ERS, orCALGOERI,
Undisturbed by passion
;
and
megalochemi. cenoliites,
;
ges
to quiet as the wind, V. t. To still to still, appease, allay or or elements pacify, as the mind, or passions. Dryden. Mterbviy. 71. The person or thing that calms, or has the power to still, and make th.it which allays or pacifies. (piiet
CALM,
;
;
and
redt(.?es,
who shut
themselves up
in grottos and caverns, on the mountains, and live on alms furnished to them by the
South.
passions.
Monks
They are also divided into who are ein[>loyed in reciting their oflices, from midnight to sunrise; anchorets, who retire and live in hermita-
not agitated or
;
CALM,
n.
;
; (jniet tranquil ; as the inind,j temjier, or attention. JI. Stillness tranquillity ; quiet : freedom from motion, agitation, or disturbance ; applied to the elements, or to the mind\
excited
would
of the Greek chnndi, of three orders ; archari, or novices ordinary professed, or microchemi ; and the more perfect, called
a calm
sea. .3.
uhi(di
&:.c.,
otherwise be too high for other pieces of the apartment. Harris. Encyc.
as the air. qniet being at rest not stormy or tempestuous ; as a
;
popish countries, as an eccle-
ornament.
a chapel, cabijiet, alcove,
;
;
1.
in
In archiUrlure, a round cavity or depression, in form of a cup or cap, lathed and plastered, used to diminish the elevation of
2.
Encyc. Coxe. a. cam. [Fr. calme ; Sp. calma ; It. calma ; I), kalm. tin. Gr. a;a>.a" It. calare, to decrease or abate Sp. calar, to sink.]
12.
14.
&c.
feet,
worn
siastical
CALM,
;
tlie sailors to their
stufT,
a hard, dense, insen-
;
knob on the hands,
sible
;
Encyr. horn, to coml()rt tlic; houiid.s. 11. Among seamen, i\ wliistle or pipe, used to summon liy the boatswain and his mate,
in the skin
monasteries.
Encyc. n. A sidispecies of carbonate of lime, of a bluish black, gray or grayish blue, but
;
CALP,
;
its
streak
is
white, called also argillo-fer-
CALMER,
It is intermediate ruginous limestone. between conq)act limestone and marl. Kirwan. Cleaveland. Phillips. or a scold. n. [ATot CALMIN(;, ppr- Stilliiig C.'Mi'TROP, [Sax. coltrappe, a si)ecies appeasing. Skak CALMLY, adv. In a quiet manner; withof thistle, rendered by Lye, rhamnus, and to scold. out disturbance, agitation, tumult, or viocarduus stellatus. The French has chausse[ATot ii The Italian calcalreppolo is from lence without passion quietly. Kse.] trape. €ALL'ING, ppr. Inviting ; summoning na €"ALMNESS, »i. Quietness; stillness; tran- calcare, to tread, and triholo, a thistle L. niiiig addressing invoking. tribiUus.] quillity applied to the clevients. €ALL'1NG, n. A naming, or inviting; a 2. Quietness mildness unruffled state ap- 1. A kind of thistle, the Latin trihulus, with reading over or reciting in order, or a cal plied to the mind, pns.iions or temper. a roundish prickly ])ericarp on one side, of names with a view to obtain an answer €*ALMY, a. Calm quiet peaceable. gibbous, often armed with three or four as in legislative bodies. Spenser. Cou'ley.\ daggers; on the other side, angular, con2. Vocation profession trade usual occu €AL'OMEL, n. [Qu. Gr. xa>,o{, fair, aiid It grows verging with transverse cells. pation, or cmplovmcnt. fifj.05, black, or ^^thiops mineral.] in France, Italy and Spain, among corn, 1 Gor. vii. 30. A in Suift. of much used Pope. meiciiry, preparation and is very troublesome, as the prickles in Class of 3. medicine. It is called the submuriate ori any professifm persons engaged run into the feet of cattle. Hammond. or employment. Fam. of Plants. Miller. protocliloride of mercury, and is prepared 4. Divine summons, vocation, or invitation. in various ways, by sublimation or precipiIn military affairs, an instrument with four Give all diligence to make your calling and foland also in the The tation, dry way. iron jioiiits, disposed in a triangular form, 2 Pet. i. election siirc. lowing are the directions given in the last so that three of them being on the ground, €AL'LIOPE, »i. cal'liopy. In Pagan myLondon Pharmacopieia. Take of muriated the other points upward. These arc scatthology, the muse that (n-esides over eloquicksilver one pound, and of purified tered on the ground where an enemy's and heroic ounces rub ;
;
;
;
One who CALL'ER, €AL'LET, I " A tridi, CAL'LAT, S u.'ied.] €AL'LET, V. i. To rail
calls.
ji.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
.
quence
CAL'LIPERS. CALLOS'ITY,
]iortry.
quick.silver, nine
[See Calihcr.] n. [Fr. callosite
er
till
h.callositas.
;
them
the ghdjules disappear
;
togeth-
cavalry are to
then sub-
ress
lime, and repeat the sublimation twice See Callous.] niore successively. tf'ebsler. Hardness, or bony hardness ; the hardness of €ALOR'I€, n. The prin [L. calor, heat.] Coxe. the cicatrix of ulcers. cijde or matter of heat, or the simple eleCAL' LOUS, a. [L. co/to, hardness ; calico, to ment of heat. Lavoisier. be hard, to know or be skilled ; En Caloric may be defined, the agent to which ;
which sec.] the phenomena of heat and combustion Hard hardened indurated as an nlcei Ure. are ascribed. some part of the body. Jfiseman Cal'vic expands all bodies. Henry. Hardened in mind insensible unfeeling. €ALOR']€, a. Pertainiiig to the matter of ;
;
;
;
;
Dryden
CAL'LOUSLY,
In a hardened or un-
adv.
j
heat.
CALORIF'IC,
That has
the quality 01 feeling manner. causing bent; heating. |)r()dncing beat €AL'LOUSNESS, Ji. Hanlness, induration CALORIM'ETER, n. [L. calor, heat, and insensibility, applied applied to the body Gr. ^frpor, measure.] to the mind or heart. Cheyne. Bentley. An apparatus for measuring relative quanti€AL'LOW, a. [h: calhh ; L.'ca/i'us, bald ties of heat, or the s))ecitic caloric of bodo, ies ; or an instrument for measuring the G.kaU; B. kaal ; Fr. chanve : Purs. Vj heat given out by a body in cooling, from the quantity of ice it melts, invented by kal Russ. gold, bald, naked goleyu, to Lavoisier and Laplace. be stripped.] Destitute of feathers naked unfledged as €AL'ORIMOTOR, n. [caloric andL.mo«or,| a young bird. Milton. mover.] a.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
feet.
Dr. Addison. ihe aboriginals of Jlmerica, a pipe, used for smoking tobacco, whose bowl is usually of soft red marble, and the tube along reed, ornamented with The calumet is used as a symfeathers. bol or instrument of i)eace and war. To accept the calumet, isto agree to the terms
CAL'UMET,
or 2.
inq)ede their prog-
Encj/c.
could,
1.
|)ass, to
by endangering the horses' n.
Among
of |)eace, and to refiise it, is to reject them. The calumet of jjcaee is used to .seal or
and alhance.s, to receive strangers kindly, and to travel with safety. The calumet of war, differently made, is ratify contracts
used to proclaim war. v. t. [See Calumnn.] To accuse or charge one falsely, and know-
CALUM'NIATE,
some crime, offense, or something disreputable to slander.
ingly, with
;
v.i. To charge falsely and knowingly with a crime or offense;
CALIIMNIATE,
to propagate evil rejiorts with a design to
injure the reputation of another.
C A L
C A L
CALUM'NIATED,
pp. Slandered falsely and maliciously accused of what is criminal, immoral, or disgraceful. ;
CALUMNIATING, ppr.
Slandering. False accusation of or a malicious and false
€ALUMNIA'TION,
n.
a crime or ofl'ense, representation of the words or actious of another, with a view to injure his good
name.
One who
slanders €ALUiM'NIATOR, one who falsely and knowingly accusej another of a crime or offense, or maliciously propagates false accusations or reports. a. Slanderous. n.
€ALVIN1ST'IC, €ALVINIST'IeAL,
I "• J
to bend,
ions in theology.
€~ALVISH,a. properly,
€ALX,
M
C A €AM'BER,
Pertaijiing to Calvin, or to his opin-
n.
[Fr. cambrer, to arch, to vault, from L. camera, a vault, a cham-
ber.]
[i'rom calf.]
Like a calf. [More Sheldon.
catfish.]
n. ph\. calres or calces, [h. calx;
Among
builders, camber or camber-beam is a piece of timber cut archwise, or with an obtuse angle in the middle, used in platforms, where long and strong beams are As a verb, this word signifies to required. bend, but I know not that it is used.
j
Sax.
a stone, calculus, and chalk ; D. kalk ; G. kalk ; Sw. kalck ; Dan. kalk ; Fr. chaux. signifies chalk, lime, morand the heel, and from that is formed tar, calculus, a little stone. TheVord then signifies primarily, a lump, or clod, or ban If calx is mass, antl is allied to callus.
]
ceale,
The same word
I
A canibered-deck,
is
one which
is
higher in
the middle, or arched, but drooping or decUning towards the stem and stern also,
I
;
when
1
it is
irregular.
the usual orthogra])hy was not ,€AM'BERING,"y)/>r. or a. Bending arched ; observed by the Latins. See Calculate.] as, a deck lies cambering. Montagu. €ALUM'NIOUS, a. Slanderous bearing or Properly lime or chalk but more a))propri i€AM'BIST, n. [It. cambista, from cambio, implying calumny injurious to reputation ately, the substance of a metal or mineral exchange Sp. id.] banker one who deals in notes, and bills which remains after being sulijected to NIOUSLV, adv. Slanderously. Christ. Obs. €ALUM'NIOUSNESS, n. Slanderonsness. violent heat, burning, or calcination, solu- of exchange. tion by acids, or detonation by niter, and ICAMBRIC, n. A species of fine white linen, Bp. Morton made of flax, said to be named irom Camwhich is or may be reduced to a fine powCAL'UMNY, n. [L. calumniu ; Fr. catomnie der. Metallic calxes are now called oxyds. It. calunnia. If )?i is radical, this word bray in Flanders, where it was first manumay be allied to calamity, both from the They are heavier than the metal from factured. which they are produced, being combined CAME, pret. of come, which .see. sense of falling upon, rushing, or throwing with oxygen. on. If m is not radical, this word may be Coxe. slender rod of cast lead, of Encyc. CAlME, n. which glaziers make theu" turned lead. the Gothic hulon, to calumniate, Saxon Calx nativa, native calx, a kind of marly to rush word is found in The earth, of a dead whitish color, which, in holan, u))on. Encyc. Ir. guUimne, calumny, guilimnighim, to water, bubbles or hisses, and without burn- CAM'EL, n. [h. camelus ; Gr. xof£);?xi5 D. calimmiate or reproach]. ing, will make a cement, like hme or Dan. kameel ; G. kamel ; Ileb. Syr. Eth Slander false accusation of a crime or ofgypsum. lense, knowingly or maliciously made or Calx viva, quick-lime, is lime not slaked. hoi Ch. nSoj Ar. The Arabic 3,^ -. reported, to the injury of another; false €ALYC'INAL, f "• Pertaining to a calyx verb, to which this word belongs, signifies situated on a calyx. CAL'YCINE, ^ re|)resentation of facts reproachful to ai to be beautiful or elegant, to please or to other, made by design, and with knowlMartyn. behave with kindness and humanity. In edge of its falsehood ; sometimes followed CAL'YCLE, n. [L. calyculus. See Calyx.] Sax. gamele, or gamol, is a camel, and an In botany, a row of small leaflets, at the base by on. old man of the calyx, on the outside. The calycle gamnl-feax, one that has long Neglected calumny soon expires. hair; ganwl-ferhth, a man of a great mind. of the seed is the outer proper covering Murphy's Tacitu, CAL'VARY, 71. [L. calvaria, from calva, a or crown of the seed, adhering to it, to fa- In W. the word is cammarc, a crooked Ir. call), the head skull or scalp calcilitate its horse.] Sp.
CALUMNIATORY,
from
xo^'^^h
;
;
;
;
;
CALUM
A
;
I
;
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
vario, calva 1.
A
It. e«/i'o.]
;
place of skulls
particularly, the place crucified, on a small hill \vest of Jerusalem. In catholic countries, a kind of chapel raised on a hillock near a ;
where Christ was
as a place of devotion, in memory of the place where our Savior suffereil. In heraldry, a cross so called, set upon steps, resembling the cross on which our city,
i.
Saviour was crucified.
C'ALVE, V. i. cav. [from calf; Sax. To bring forth young, as a cow. J.
cayian.]
In a metaphorical sense, and sometimes hy tvay of reproach, as when applied to the human race, to bring fiu'th to produce. ;
G'ALVES-SNOUT,
n.
A
i)lant,
snai)-drag-
on, antirrhinum.
C.\L'VER,
V. t.
To
V.
To
use.]
Martyn.
disixirsion.
;
cut in slices.
[JVbt in B. Jonson. shrink by rutting, and Cotton. [J^ot in use.]
CALYCULATE or CAL'Y€LED,
a.
nkv-
ing a calycle at the base on the outside used of the calyx.
€ALYP'TER,
n.
The
[Gr.
xa'kv^rrsfi,
;
»i.
<:.\L'VINISM,
)(.
[Fr.]
A
sort of apple.
The theological tenets or who was born in Pic-
doctrines of Calvin,
France, and
in 15-3(3, chosen proand minister of a church Geneva. The distinguishing doctrines of this system are, original sin, particular election and reprobation, particular re
ardy
in
demption, effectual grace in regeneration, or a change of heart by the spirit of God justification by free grace, perseverance of the saints, and the trinity.
Calvin.
and there is a fissure in the upper lip. The dromedary or Arabian camel has one on the back, fiiur callous prolulieraiu-es on the lore legs and two on the hind legs. The Bactrian camel has two bimclies on the back. The Llama of South America is a smaller animal, with a smooth back, small head, fine black eyes, and very long neck. The Pacos or sheep of ChiU has Jio biuich. Camels constitute the riches of an Arabian, without which he could neither subsist, carry on trade nor travel o^•er sandy desarts. Their milk is his common food. By the camel's power of sustaining abstinence from drink, for many days, and of subsisting on a few bmicli
n. plu. calyxes, [h. calyx ; Gr. xaXvi, a flower not opened, a husk or shell.
The
anient, the spath, the glume, the calyptra, and the volva. But in general it signifies the perianth, and the leaves are generally
Milne. Martyn. Encyc green. opinion of Liime that the "calyx is the continuation of the epidernns is now considered erroneous. Ed. Encyc. Smith.
The
CAI/VINIST, n. A follovver of Calvin one who embraces the theological doctrines of CALZOONS', ;
;
;
CA'LYX,
hends the perianth, the involucrum, the
pieces.
lijr c:nrying bunlens, and for riders. a genus, the camel belongs to the order of Pecora. The characteristics are it has no horns it has six fore teeth in the under jaw the canine teeth are wide set, three in the upper and two in the lower jaw ;
;
ui
fall to
CAL'VILLE,
[Ml
n.
English.]
[Sp. calzones.]
large quadru[>ed used in Asia and Af-
As
calyx of mosses, according to Linne but not [(ropcrly a calyx. It is a kind of| vail, or cowl, which covers or is suspended over the tops of the stamens, like an extinMilne. guisher. The calyptra of mosses is an apjjendage of the capsule or female flower. It at first closely invests the capsule, and its summit is the stigma. As the capsule apjjroachcs maturity, the calyptra is detached below, and apiiendcd to the stigma like a hood. Smith. Cyc.
fessor of divinity,
not
i.
A
rica
a cover.]
It has been confounded with xuXtS, calix, a cup.] outer covering of a flower, being the termination of the cortical epidernns or outer bark of the pl.uit, which, in jnost plants, incloses and supports the bottom of the corol. In Linne's system, it compre-
CAL'VER,
1.
;
Drawers. Herbert.
coarse
shruljs,
he
is
peculiarly
fitted
parched and barren lands of Asia and Africa. In Holland, Camel, [or Kameel, as Coxe writes it,] is a machine fi)r lilting ships, and bearing them over the Pampus, at the for the
2.
mouth of It is
the river Y, or over other bars. also used in other ])lnces, and particu-
larly at the d
ock
in
Petersburg, to bear
vessels over a bar to Cronstadt. Coxe.
€AM'EL-BACKED, a camel.
a.
Enci/c.
Having a back
like
Fuller
CAM
CAM
CAMPA'IGN, ) €AMPA'IN, i"ford writes 1.
;
it
returns to
its
CAM'IS,
original green. Ure.
CAM'ELOPARD,
n. [camelus andpardalis.] giraff, a species constituting tlie genus This animal lias two Camdopiirdalis. withnut branches, six inchstraight horns, es long, covered with hair, truncateil at the end and tufted. On the forehead, is a tubercle, two inches high, resembling another horn. The fore legs are not much longer than the hind ones, but the shoulders are of such a va.st length, as to render the fore part of the animal much liiche. than the hind part. The head is like'tliat of a stag the neck is slender and elegant, furnished with a short mane. The color of the wliole animal is a dirty white mark-
The
»i.
[It.
camice.]
A
€AMISAT)E,
[Fr. from chemise, a
shirt
of day,
arms.
Encijc.
€AM'lSATED,a. Dressed wards.
i€AM'LET,
;
A
n^
with a
shirt out-
Johnson [from camel, sometimes writ
ten camelot stuff originally
it.]
An open field ; a large open plain an extensive tract of ground without considerable hills. [See Champaign.]
The
time that an army keeps the field, either in action, marches, or in camj), without entering into winter quarters. A campaign is usu.dly from spring to autumn or winter but in some instances, armies make a winter campaign. €AMPA'IGN, V. i. To serve in a campaign. 2.
;
camicia ; Sp. camisa.] attack by surprise, at night, or at break when the enemy is supposed to be in bed. This word is said to have taken its rise from an attack of this kind, in which the soldiers, as a badge to distin guisli each other by, bore a shirt over their It.
An
;
CAMPAIGNER, in
Musgrave.
One who has served
n.
an army several campaigns
dier
;
;
an old
sol-
a veteran.
CAMPANA, n. [L.] The pasque-flower. €AMPAN IFORM, a. [L. cam/^ana, a bell,
made of camel's hair. It is and forma, fiirm.] of wool, sometime.' In the shape of a bell applied to Jlowers. of silk, sometimes of hair, especially that Botany. of goats, with wool or silk. In some, the €AMPAN'ULA, n. [L.] The bell-flower.
now made, sometimes
ed with larg(! broad nisty spots. This animal is found in the central and eastern parts of Africa. It is timid and not fleet.
iucampaSna]
;
thin dress. [JVot
English.] n.
[Fr.campasnri '^«"'/'«"«-
Sp. compaha ; Port, campanha ; from camp. This should be written campain, as Mit-
;
potash,
M
C A
Came'leon mineral. [See Chnmeleon.] A com- CAM'ERATE, v. t. [L. camera, from camera, a chamber, properly an arched roof] pound of pure potash and black oxyd of manganese, fused together, whose sohjtion To vault to ceil. [lAttle v^sed.] in water, at (irst green, passes spontane- CAftl'ERATED, a. cameralus, from [I., the wliole series oi' colored ously through camera.] Arched ; vaulted. and by the addition of CAMERA'TION, n. An arching or vaulting. rays to the red
;
and wool twisted together,
warp CAMPAN'ULATE, a. |L. campanula, a little and the woof is hair. The pure oriental In the form of a boll. bell.] Botany. camlet is made solely from the hair of a CAMPE'ACHY-WOQD, from Campeachy sort of goat, about Angora. Camlets are in Mexico. [it.canimeo; Fr. cnmayeu ; Sp. and Port. [See lyjgwood.] now made in Europe. Encyc. CAMPES'TRAL, ) camafeo.] [L.campestris, Crom €AMPES TRIAN, I " campus, a field.] A peculiar .sort of onyx also, a stone on €AM'LETED, a. Colored or veined. Herbert. whi<'h are found various Pertaining to an open field growing in a figures and repn. field or resentations of landscapes, a kindoflusus CAM'MOC, Mortimer. [Sax. cammoc, or cnmmec] open ground. A plant, petty whin or rest-harrow, On- CAM PHOR, 71. properly cafor. [Low L. naturae, exhibiting pictures without paintonis. The word is said to be the oriental camphora ; Fr. camphre ; It. can/bra; Sp. ing. camehuia, a name given to the onyx, when €AM'OMILE, n. [Fr. camomille ; Ann. alcanfor ; Port, canfora ; D. and G. kamfer ; they find, in preparing it, another color cramamailh ; D. kamille ; G. id.; Dan. kumas who should say, another color. Ar. ecl-blomstcr ; L. chnmamelon, which seetu.« iU kafor, kafuron, from ^i* The word is applied by others to those to be the Gr. aro/"!") earth, and jir^m; an kafara, Heb. Ch. Syr. 133 kafar, to drive precious stones, onyxes, carnelians and apple.] ofl", remove, separate, wipe away hence, on which agates, lapidaries employ their A genus of plants, AntheiTiis, of many spe to cleanse, to make atonement. It seems art, to aid nature and [lerfect the figures. cies. It has a cliafly receptacle the calyx to be named from its The word is also a))plied to any gem on purifying effects, or is heinispheric and subequal, and tlie from exudation. It will be seen that the which figures may be engraved. florets of the ray are more than five. The letter m in this word is The word signifies also a painting in casual.] common sort is a trailing perennial plant, A solid concrete juice or exudation, from the which there is only one color, and where has a strong aromatic smell, and a bitter laurus camphora, or Indian laurel-tree, a the lights and shadows are of nauseous taste. It is accounted carminagold, large tree growing v^ild in Borneo, Sumawrought on a golden or azure ground. tive, aperient, and emollient. &c. it is is
silk
Encyc.
€AM'EO, CAMATEU,
or
€AMAY'EU,
n.
;
;
;
;
;
When
the ground is yellow, the French W. cam. €AM'OUS, I [Fr. camus ; This CAMOVS', I cirage ; when gray, grisaille. crooked.] chiefly used to' represent basso- Flat; depressed; applied only to the )!0«e, and relievos. These pieces answer to the little used.] HmoxfUfnata. of the Greeks. a. crooked. call
"
it
work
is
€AM'Ol'SED,
Depressed
;
Encyc. Cliamhers. Litnier. B. Jonson. Camera obscura, or dark chamber, in optics, €AM'OUSLY, adv. Skelton Awry. an apparatus representing an artificial €AiM I", n. [L. campus ; Fr. camp and champ in which the eye, Arm. camp ; It. Sp. Port, campo ; Sax. images of external object.s, received through a double convex camp. The sense is, an open level field or glass, are exhibited distinctly, and hi their plain. See Champion and Game.] native colors, on a white matter, placed 1. The ground on Avhich an army pitch their within the machine, in the focus of the tents, whether for a night or a longer ;
glass.
time.
CAM'ERADE, One who
apartment
[L. camera, a chamber.] 2. The order or arrangement of tents, or lodges or resides in the same disposition of an army, for rest ; as, to
;
n.
now
a.
[Infra.]
Pertaining
and public revenue. €.VMERALIS'TI€S, n. [G. camera&t, a to finance
financier. of state ;
pitch a camp. Also, the troops on the same field.
comrade, which see
CAMERALIS'TIC,
In Sp. cumarista, U a minister camariila, a small room. The
encamped
An ainiy. CAMV, i: or i. To rest or lodge, 3.
t.
Hume. as an army a camp; to fix
usually in tents; to pitch tents but seldom used. [See Encamp.] word seems to be from L. camera, a cham- eAMP'-FIGHT, »!. In late «n>rs,a trial by ber.] duel, or the legal combat of I'wi champiTlie science offinance orpublic revenue. ons, for the decis'on of a controversy. pom|)rehending the means of raisins and [Camp in VV. is a game, and campiaw is to Grimke. disposing of it. contend.! ;
a whitish translucent substance, of a granular or foliated fracture, and somewhat unctuous to the feel. It tra,
has a bitterish aromatic taste, and a very fragrant smell, and is a powerful diaphoEnn/c. Lunier. jiikin. CAMPHOR, V. t. To impregnate or wash with camphor. [Little used.] retic.
CAM'PHORATE,
Ill
71.
chimistry, a
pound of the acid of camphor, with
com-
difier-
ent bases.
CAM'PHORATE,
Pertaining to camphor, or imprecnated with it. a.
CAMPHORATED,
a.
Impregnated with
cam[ihi'r.
CAMPHOR'IC,
a.
Pertaining to camphor,
or partaking of its qualities. rSce Camphor-tree.]
CAMPHOR-OIL.
CAMPHOR-TREE, n. The tree from which camphor is obtained. According to Miller, there are two sorts of trees that produce camphor one, a native of Borneo, which produces the best species the other, a native of Japan, which resembles the :
;
bay-tree, bearing black or purple berries. But the tree grows also in Sumatra. The stem is thick, the bark of a brownish color, and the ramification strong, close
CAN
CAN and extended. The wood is soft, easily worked, and iisefid for domestic purposes. To obtain camphor, the tree is cut down, and divided into pieces, and the camphor tal
being found
it
;
fit
make and
foot
Camphor
camphor.
is
is,
_a
Syr.
to strain, stretch, to begin to be,
to create, to be prepared; Etli. ^l®^! kun, to be, to become, to be made; Ch.i Sam. as the Hebrew. See Class Gn. No.j
is
oil
;
29.
.38.
and
Can
&c.
58. 43. 45.
can not hold or contain the whole quou-
L. rectus,
reht,
derivatives, to plant or estabhsh,
its
in small whiti.sli
then repeatedly soaked and washed in soapy water, to separate fronj It is then passed it all extraneous matter. through tliree sieves of different texture, to divide it into three sorts, head, belly and It
straight
CAN
Sax.
right, rego, to rule, that
from
tlakes, situated perpen
we have
as
;
tity.
CAN, t. To know. [JVot in use.] Spenser. CAN'-BUOY, n. In seamanship, a buoy in 11.
form of a cone, made painted, as
is
of the
camphor,
;
before the operations of nature have re- 1. duced it to a concrete form and concrete camphor may be reduced to oil, by the niAsiat. Res. iv. 1. tric acid. eAMPIL'LA, Ji. plant of a new genus, 2. To have means, or instruments, which] Jhiut. Res. used by dyers. supply power or ability. A man can build a house, or fit out a ship, if he has the reCAMP'ING, ppr. Encamping. A nation cannot prosequisite property. CAMPTNG, n. playing at" football. cute a war, without money or credit. I Bryant. will lend you a thousand dollars, if I can.,
A
A
CAMPION,
ji.
A
plant, tlie popular
name
3.
of the lychnis.
CAM'US, CAM'IS, CAN, n.
I
"
A
camisa.]
[I.,
dress.
thin
Spen.'ier. Eng.] [D. kun ; tia\. canna ; G. kannc ; Dan. kande ; Sw. hanna ; Corn, hannnth ; Sans. kunJha ; ])robably from holding, containing, W. cannu or gunu, to contain,
[.Vo(
I
li'om use a
;
,-
Fr. savoir
know
kiendcr, to
;
Dan. kan,
Sw. kan G. kennen, Hence cun
;
;
Mar.
connected with yipofuu, to be born or produced. Can, cennan, and yivvtuo, are probably the same word and the Sax. ginnan, in the compounds, aginnan, heginnan, onginnan, to begin, is from the same root. The primary sense is, to strain, to stretch, to urge or thrust with force, which gives the sense of |)roducing, and of holdin containing, which is the primary .sense of and straining knoimng, comprehending gives tlie sense of power. The Sax. cunSee Ken. Ar. nian, to try, is to strain.
which
is
beconne, to be made, to
create,
to
generate,
verb
also, to
:
endure
to
know
pare, to
;
to
form
;
passing.] 1.
A
passage for water; a water course: a long trench or excavation in fiir conducting water, and eonfining it to narrow limits but the terni may be appUed to other water courses. It is chiefly apjilied to artificial cuts or passages for water, used fijr transporta])ro|)erly,
the earth
or:
;
cati
travel, tor this
A man
.
;
competent strength,
An
imj)ertinence. This is a hard saying
;
who can hear
it
.'
John
To have
the requisite knowledge, experi eiice or skill. Young men are not admit ted members of college, till they con trans A]i astronomer can late Latin and Greek. calculate an eclipse, though he can not tnake a coat. To have strength of inclination or motives sufficient to
n. A singing bird from isles, a species of Fringilla. conical and straight ; the body white the prime feathers of yellowish the wings and tail are greenish. These birds are now bred in other countries. CANA'RY-GRASS, n. A plant, the Phalaris, whose seeds are collected for canary-
CANA'RY-lilRD, the
vi.
8.
also,
overcome
liave married a wife, come, huke xiv. I
jtj
Heb. and Ch. to fit or preJD, form or fashion whence right, :
:
is percan or cannot hold an office. The Jews could not eat certain tion whereas channel is applicable to a kinds of animals which were declared to natural water course. be imclean. The House of Connnons in The canal from the Hudson to Lake Erie cati but the House of) England one of the noblest works of ait. inqjeach, Lords only can try inqieachments. In 2. In anaionii/, a duct or passage in the body general, we can do whatever neither the of an animal, through which any of the laws of God nor of man forbid. flow, or other substances pass; as How can I do this great wickedness and sin juices the neck of the bladder, and the ahmentaagainst God. Gen. xxxix. ry canal. 1 cannot go beyond the word of the Lord, my 3. Co.rf A surgical instrument a splint. God, to do less or more. Numb. xxii. To have natural strength, or caf)acity to CANAL-COAL. [See Connc/-coa/.] ? canaliculabe susceptible of; to be able or free to un- CANALICULATE, "' [L. tvs, from canaldergo any change, or produce any effect, CANALIC'ULATED, \ iculus, a little ]iipe, from canaiis, canna, a by the laws and constitution of nature, or pipe.] by divine appointment. Silver can he meltChannelled furrowed. In botany, having a ed, but cannot be changed into gold. Can the lUsh « row witliout mire ? Job viii. deep longitudinal groove above, and convex undernetith applied to the stem, leaf, Can the ii;i tree bear olive berries ? James iii. Can tailh save lain James ii. or petiole ofplant.t. Martyn. Wine wade in the Canary JI. To have ability, for- C.'VNA'RY,
I
his
to
;
these being the same word difTereutly written; Fr. canal; Arm. can, or canol Sp. Port, canal ; It. canale. See Cam, It denotes a jjassage, from shooting, or
obstacles,
imped
cannot
10.
rise
and give thee
importunity, he
Luke
and therefore
will
rise
—yet and
I
To have
;
binls. cellar
a vessel
;
V. t. [Fr. canceller ; Port, canL. cancelio, to deface, properly to
make cross bars or lattice-work, hence to make cro.ss lines on writing, from cancelli,
because of give him.
as,
;
C.'VN'CEL,
1.
sufficient capacity
bill is
is
cannot
xi.
Canary
The
ments, inconvenience or other objection. ;
;
;
ides. titude, patience, &c., in a ])assive sense. old dance. He cannot i)ear reproof. I cannot endure 2. Shakspcare has used the word as a verb in a kind of cam phrase. this
9.
to be, the substantive
; Sp. canalla ; Port. canatha ; coarser part of meal hence, the lowest lees peoi)le dregs ; offscouring. CAN'AKIN, n. A little can or cup. Shak. CANAL', n. [L. canaiis, a channel or kennel:
The
;
7.
;
ir
inhabitant or native of
[Fr. canaille It. canaglia.]
A man
We
An
CANA'IL, n.
be'
obligatifm,
])roliibition.
n.
Canada.
?
;
•
United States.
CANA'DIAJV,
competent power, from any restraint
politii-;il
Diet.
a. Pertaining to Canada, an extensive country on the north of the
;
;
;
or
Diet.
;
C.
;
ning, that is, knowing, skilful, experien ced G. konnen, a being able, ability, knowlkuyidc, knowledge, kund, public edge acquaintance. The Teutonic and Gothic words unite with the Greek ynTau, to bea female get, as a male, and to bear, as
civil
any positive highway for
Mar.
ii=
cunnian, to try, to attempt, to prove cind. cyn,gecynd, kind L. genus ; D. kunnen, to know, to understand, to hold, to contain, like tlie
tilings
instrument to sling a
;
;
;
;
mitted by law.
which is from another GAN, root. [See Could.] [Can is from the Sax. cennan, to know, to bear or produce Goth. kunnatt. Sax. cunnan, to know, to be able
na, to know ; kunna, to be able to know ; kijnnen, to be able.
is,
just or legal right to be free
of moral,
or vessel for liipiors, in modern times of metal; as a can of ale.
be able, be able
To have that
v.i. pret. could,
to
can these
can indulge in ]ileasm-c, or he can refrain. He can restrain his a])petite.s, if he will. ').
made
to
How
To have adequate moral power.
4.
gan, capacity, a mortise, Eng. gain, in carpentry. Hence W. eant, a circle, a hoop, a fence round a yard, a hundred, L. centum, Teut. hund, in hundred. See Cent and Hundred, ami Can, infra.]
A cup
To be possible. Nieodemus said. John iii.
large, and sometimes to designate shoals,
An
CANA'DIAN,
;
;
mark
n.
cask by the ends of its staves, formed by reeving a jnece of rope through two flat Looks, and splicing its ends together.
in EnglishI
treated as an auxihary verb, the sign infinitive being omitted, as in the ])hrases, 1 can go, instead of, / can to go ; thou canst go he can go.] To be able to have sufficient strength or physical ])Ower. One man can lift a weight which another can not. A horsej can run a certain distance in a given time.
a
&c.
CAN'-HQOK,
cross bars or h.ttice-work Or. xiyxXif :
;
Syr. Ch. bpjp kaiikcl, id.] To cross the lines vf a writing, and deface them to blot out or obliterate. ;
CAN
CAN To
as, to cancel
annul, or destroy ; ligation or a debt.
3.
CAN'CELATED,
a.
cancdlatus, cancross
Grew.
€ANCELA'TION, by cross
lines
CAN'CELED,
;
Martyn.
Crossed
obliterated
;
;
annulled.
CAN'CELING,;)pr. Crossing;
obliterating
annulling. Fr. [L. cancer; Sax.cancre; Si>. canf!rejo, cancro; This Gr. xoyxnIt. cancro, canchero ; same be the seems to word, though ap xafximi, a cancer, is a plied to the shell From the Greek, the different word. Latins have concha, Eng. conch. But n is not radical for this is undoubtedly the W. cocos, Eng. cockle, Fr. coquille, coque, These words are probably from It. coccia. the same root as Sp. cocar, to wrinkle, twist, or make wry faces; Ir. cuachaim, to fold ; Eng. cockle, to shrink or pucker verbs which give the primary sense. It is to be noted that cancer and canker are the same word ; canker being the original pro-
CAN'CER, cancre;
n.
D.kanker;
;
;
;
1.
nunciation.] The crab or crab-fish.
This genus of animals have generally eight legs, and two claws which serve as hands two distant kind of peduncles, a eyes, supported by and they are elongated and movable. They have also two clawed palpi, and the To this genus belong the tail is jointed. lobster, shrimp, cray-lisli, &c. In astronomy, one of the twelve signs of llie zodiac, represented by the form of a crab, and hmiling the sun's course north ward in summer hence, the sign of the ;
'J.
;
summer 3.
solstice.
In medicine, a roundish, hard, unequal scirrous tumor of the glands, which usu very painful, and gene-
ally ulcerates, is
rally fatal.
being obliged
To grow
into a can i'Bs/rann-t.
seeks or asjnres to an office ; offers himself, or is proposed for l)referment, by election or appointment followed usually by for; as a candidate for the office of sherin.
who
One who is in contem])lation for an office, or for preferment, by those who have power to elect or appoint, though he does not offer himself. 3. One who, by his services or actions, will or may justly obtain preferment or reward, or whose conduct tends to secure it as a candidate for jiraise. 4. A man who is qualified, according to the rules of the church, to jireach the gospel, and take the charge of a parish or religious society, and jnoposes to settle in the U. States. ministry. 5. One who is in a state of trial or probation as a canfor a reward, in another hfe didate for heaven or for eternity. CANDIDLY, adv. Opeidy frankly without trick or disguise ingenuously. €AN'DiDNESS, n. Opeimess of mind frankness fairness ingenuousness. CAN'DIED, pp. or a. [from candy.] Preserved with sugar, or incrustod with it; covered with crystals of sugar or ice, or| with matter resembling them ; as candied
The
mcessa
lighten the Gentiles." On this day, the Catholics consecrate all the candles and which are to be used in their In churches during the whole year. Rome, the pope performs the ceremony himself, anil distributes wax candles to the cardinals and others, who carry them in iiroce.ssion through the great hall of the
tapers
The ceremony was proEngland by an order of counBut candlemas is one of the four terms for paying and receiving rents and interest and it gives name to a law term, begiiming Jan. 15, and ending Feb. 3. pope's palace.
;
liibited in
with heat.
;
;
Encyc.
CAN'DLE-STICK,
Growing
white.
Diet
;
[Rut in this sense rarely used.] ;
;
or prejudice ap/jtied to persons. Fair ;just impartial appliedto things; ar a candid view, or construction. :
])artiality
3.
CAN'DIDATE, didus, white; •
;
;
Vol.
I.
n. [L. tliose
candidatus, frnm
who
and
[candle
stick:
;
;
and stuff.) A material of which candles are made, as See Cant and to throw, to radiate. Bacon. tallow, wax, &c. Chant.] n. [candle and waste.] CAN'DLEA long, but small cylindrical body of tal- One who WASTER, wastes or consumes candles a low, w a,\ or spermaceti, formed on a ^^•ick canhard student, or one who studies
CAN'DLE-STUFF,
n.
[candle
;
of linen or cotton threads, twisted loosely used for a portable light of domestic use.
by
conqiosed
dle-fight; a siiendthrift.
Shak.
B. Jonson.
;
A light. A light
CAN'DLES-ENDS,
;
CAN'DOC,
Ji.
A
n.
Scraps; fragments.
Beaum.
plant or
weed
that
grows
If^alton.
in rivers.
C.\N'DOR,
sought
n.
a shrub common in North America, from the bcr ries of which a kind of wax or oil is pro cured, of which candles are made. The oil is obtained by boiling the berries in water the oil rising to the surface is skimmed off and when cool, is of the con
f«?i
offices in
from candeo,
to
be white.] ;
frankness
:
ingenuouf
•
; disposition to treat sid)jects with fairness ; freedom from tricks Watts. or disguise sincerity. ;
CAN'DY,
to candy, to jirei'. t. [It. candire, This candito, candied ; Fr. candir. seems not to be the Latin condio, for the Italian has also condire. Possibly it may be from L. candeo, to be white. But in Ar.
serve
^^y
The Mynca
or wax-bearing myrtle
[L. candor,
Openness of heart ness of mind a
peeled except on one side, and dipped in Encyr. grease.
€AN'DLE-BERRY TREE,
n.
;
kand, kandon,
is
the saccharine mat-
of the sugar cane, or concrete sugar, and it is the same in Persian; Sans. ter
;
khund.] 1.
To in
2.
conserve or dress witli sugar
;
to boil
sugar.
To form
into congelations or crystals.
;
Fair open frank ingenuous free from undue bias; disposed to think and judg< according to truth and justice, or without ;
n.
Sax. candel-sticra.] An instrument or utenmade in different sil to hold a candle, forms and of different materials originally a stick or piece of wood.
n. [L. Sp. It. candela
cerifera,
t,'AN'DID, a. [L. candidus, white, from canW. canu, to bleach. See deo, to be white Cant] White. Dryden. ;
1548.
cil in
A
[L. candens, from candeo to be white or hot. See the verb, to cant.' Very hot ; heated to whiteness ; glowiiiu
2.
and mass. Sax.
;
a.
€AN DIeANT. n.
[candle
;
;
A
CAN'DENT,
n.
candle-feast.]
feast of the church celebrated on the second day of February, in honor of the purification of the Virgin Mary so called fiom the great number of lights used on that occasion. This feast is supiKjsed to have originated in the declaration of Simeon, that our Savior was "to be a light to
;
Fr. chan; CAN'DLE, delle ; Sax. cundel ; I'ers. kandil ; Arm. cantol ; W. canuyll ; \ir. cainneal I'vom h. candeo, to shine, to be white, or its root. The primary sense of the root is, to shoot,
;
tight.]
Alolineur.
CAN'DLEMAS,
;
raisins.
and
[candle
The
;
;
n.
of a candle; the necessary can-
light
dles for use.
2.
;
person that holds a candle. Hence, one that remotely assists another, but is otherwise not of importance. ShaJc.
CAN'DLE-LIGHT,
;
a luminary. In scripture, tlie €.'\N'CER.VTE, candle of the Lord is the divine fa\or and cer ; to become cancerous. CANCER.\'TION, n. growing cancer blessing, Job xxix. 3. or the conscience or understanding. Prov. xx. 27. oils, or into a cancer. CAN'CEROUS, a. Like a cancer; bavin; Excommunication by inch of candle, is when H'iseman. the ofiender is allowed time to repent, the qualities of a cancer. €AN'CEROUSNESS, n. The state of being while a candle burns, and is then excommunicated. cancerous. Sale by inch of candle, is an auction in which CAN'CRIFORM, a. Cancerous. 2. H.aving the form of a cancer or crab. persons are allowed to bid, only till a small CAN'CRINE, a. Having the qualities of a piece of candle burns out. crab. Medicated candle, in medicine, a bougie. fossil or Rush-candles are used in some countries CAN'CRITE, n. [from cancer.] Fourcroy. petrified crab. they are made of the pith of certain ritshes, v. i.
A
A man who
one
act of defacing
a canceling.
pp.
1.
marked with
;
The
n.
CAN wear a white
to
gown.]
[L.
Cross-barred
ceUo.] lines.
Rome
an ob-
Shak.
sistence of wax, and of a dull green color. 3. To cover or incrust with congelations, or In iio|iular language, this is called bayDryden. crystals of ice. CAN'DY, V. i. To form into crystals, or bebern/ tallow. come congealed ; to take on the form of n. small glass bubble,
CANDLE-BOMB, filled
A
with water, placed in the wick of a where it biusts with a report.
candle,
CANDLE-HOLDER, 31
n.
[candle
mvX
hold.]
candied sugar.
C.\N'DYING,
CAN'DYING,
ppr. Conserving with sugar. n. The act of preserving
by boiling then
iu substance,
aiinples
sugar.
CAN'DY-TUFTS,
A
n.
A
in 2.
Fam. of Plants.
Tate. Cretan flower. €ANE, n. [L. canna ; Gv. xatra Fr. canne ; W. cawn ; Sp. caha ; Port, cana or carina ; It. canna; Arm. canen ; Heb. Ch. Syr.
.3.
;
a shoot.] In botany, this term is applied to several species of plants belonging to different genera, such as Arundo, Calamus, Saccharum, &c. Among these is the bam boo of the East Indies, with a strong stem, which serves for pipes, poles, and walk ing sticks. The sugar cane, a native of Asia, Africa and America, furnishes the juice from which are made, sugar, melasses and spirit. [See Siigai' Cane.]
A A A
2. 3.
Sacrilege
lance, or dart
made of cane.
5.
Ji.
[cane
and brake.l
on sugar plantations. EdwarJs' W. Indies. CA'NE-TRASII, n. [cane and trash.] Refuse of canes, or macerated rinds of cane, reserved for fuel to boil the cane-juice.
Edwards' a.
[L. canescens.]
like
magiiituile, and the largest and From the brightest of all the fixed stars. rising of this heliacally, or at its emersion first
from the sun's rays, the ancients reckoned
to de-
throw a
Pertaining to
;
teeth.
eANING,
hemp; hemp-
A
n.
A
this
eating
flesh,
can o/
;
tea, coffee,
&c.
€ANK'ER,
n. [L. cancer; Sax. cancere or cancre; D. hanker; Fr. chancre; It. canchero. This is the Latin cancer, with the
Roman
pronunciation. See Cancer.] disease incident to trees, which causes the bark to rot and fall.
A
A
by mankind.
Burke. ; barbarity. 2. adv. In the manner of Shak.
canon ; Arm. canon or G. kanone ; S\>. caiion Port, canham ; It. cannone. Probably from L. canna, a tube. See Cane.] large military engine for throwing balls, and other instruments of death, by tlie Guns of this kind force of gunpowder. are made of iron or brass and of diffi-rent sizes, carrying balls from three or four In poiuids, to forty eight poimds weight.
CAN'NON,
Properly, a .small basket, as in Dryden but more generally, a small box or case, for
1.
human
cannibal. ;
71.
3.
[Fr.
D. kanon
;
The
tablished.] 1.
JIurdcrous cruelty
€AN'NIBALLY,
probably from the noun.
W. canon, a song, a rule, a canon, from canu to sing, L. ca^io. The sense of canon is that which is set or es-
;
2.
is
caiio, to sing,
a man-eater, or anthropophBacon. Bentley. agite. eAN'NIBALISM, Ji. The act or practice of
beating with a stick or
verb
word is from one of the roots in Class Gn, which signifies to set, or to strain. The Welsh unites it with the root of can, L.
Cleaveland. n. White cotton cloth from the East Indies, suitable for the Guinea trade. Encyc. €AN'NIBAL, n. A human being that eats
[L. canistrum ; Or. xava^fiov, xavjjs or xai'foi'; Fr. canastre ; Port, canas tra ; Sp. canasta.]
cannon;
't'Vi kanan, signifies to set, to establish, to form a rule, whence canon, a rule. But
€AN'NEQUIN,
cane.
€AN'ISTER, n.
for
)!. [Sax. Fr. Sp. Port, canon ; It. canone; L. canon; G\: xavuv. Dr. Owen deduces the word from the Heb. nJp a cane, reed or measuring rod. In Etli.
On fire it decrepitates and breaks into angular fragments. It is sometimes used for inkholders and toys
human flesh
ball
savages.
;
drophobia. Canine teeth are two sharp pointed teeth in each jaw of an animal, one on each side, between the incisors and grinders so named from their resemblance to a dog's
A
€AN'ON,
and polished.
;
n.
ball.
;
hard, opake, inflammable fo.ssil coal of a black color, sufliciently solid to be cut
CANINE,
;
[can anA not.] These words are usually united, but perhaps without good reason canst and not are never united. a. [L. camm, a tube.] Tubular; having the form of a tube. Encyc. €AN6E, n. canoo'. [Fr. canot ; Sp. canoa ; It. canoe or canon ; from L. canna, a tube or cane, or the same root.] 1. A boat used by rude nations, formed of the body or trunk of a tree, excavated, by cutting or burning, into a suitable shape. Similar boats are now used by civilized men, for fishing and other purposes. It is impelled by a paddle, instead of an oar. 2. A boat made of bark or skins, used by
canker
n.
origi-
manages cannon an engineer. Proof against cana.
€AN'NULAR,
€ANk'ERY, a. Rusty. €AN'NABINE, a. [L. cannabimis. froin cannabis, [iemp.] en.
were
€ANNOT,
Eating or corrupting
€AN'NEL-COAL, €AN'DLE-COAL,
balls
A man who
range or distance a cannon will
also, the
A
Corroding
;
made
noil shot.
Spenser. Crossly; adverselv. on fly that preys
like a
i
€AN'NON-SHOT,
M'alton a.
a.
usually
ball,
Camion
used.
€ANNONIE'R, CAN'NON-PRO(
TViomson. n. A worm, destrucor plants. In America, this name is given to a worm that, in some of apyears, destroys the leaves an
[h. canicidaris.] Pertain-
ing to the dog-star. a. [L. caninus, from canis, a dog.] Pertaining to dogs having the properties or qualities of a dog as a canine appetite, insatiable hiniger; cajiine madness, or hy-
n.
bullet,
CANNONEER,
tive to trees
their doir-days. a.
;
iron, to
Cannon
now
A
n.
nally of stone.
eANK'ER-W5RM,
Growing
;
arfi'.
;
be thrown from cannon of the like signification, is
of cast not
a canker.
€ANK'EROUS,
"
<;ANI€'ULAR,
corrupt
fruit.
CANK'ER-LIKE,
Indies
[L. canieula, a little dog, I from canis, a dog.] I star in the constellation of Canis Major, called also the dog-star, or Sirius a star
of the
€AN'NON-BALL,
pp. Corrupted.
CANK'ER-FLY,
white or hoary.
A
to plav
Addison.
uncivil.
;
A €ANK'EREDLY,
A hole n. [cane and hole.] or trench for planting the cuttings of cane,
CANI€'ULA, CA'NI€ULE,
Crabbed
with cannon shot. v. i. To discharge cannon with large guns.
to batter
€ANNONA'DE,
Herbert.
To grow
V. i.
€ANK'ERED, 2. a.
CA'NE-HOLE,
CANES'CENT,
an enemy's army, town, fortress or ship
Shak.
cay, or waste away by means of any noxious cause ; to grow rusty, or to be oxyBacon. dized, as a metal. eANK'ERBIT, a. Bitten with a cankered Shak. or envenomed tooth.
Ellicott.
If.
humor;
virulent
kind of rose, the dog rose.
CANK'ER,
;
thicket of canes.
;
corroding,
fects the body. 2. To infect orpollute.
;
act of discharging
attack of some continuance. v. t. To attack with heavy to throw balls, or other deadly artillery weapons, as chain-shot or langrage, against
;
Dryden.
field pieces.
The
€ANNONA'DE,
word
Shak. 6. In farriery, a running thrush of the worst kind a disease in horses' feet, discharging a fetid matter from the cleft in the middle of the frog. Encyc. €ANK'ER, V. f. To eat, corrode, corrupt, consume, in the manner that a cancer af-
;
CA'NE-BRAKE,
A
n.
cannon and throwing balls, for the purpose of destroying an army, or battering a town, ship or fort. The term usually imphes an
prove an eating canker. Atierbury. 2 will eat as doth a canker.
may
tlieir
countries, they have been made of The smaller guns of larger size.
kind are called
€ANNONA'DE,
Peacham.
in
ing stick.
this
ii.
An eating, corrosion.
stick.
walking
much
;
Tim.
several countries of long measure, Europe at Naples, the length is 7 feet Si inches in Thoulouse in France, 5 feet 8i inches in Provence, &c., (i feet 5i inches. eANE, V. t. To beat with a cane or walk-
4.
some
certain small eroding
whitish slough. Cyc. A virulent, corroding ulcer or any thing that corrodes, corrupts or destroys.
And
Ar. njp. In the Arabic, a word of this family signifies a subterraneous passage It probably signifies for water, or canal. 1.
popular name of
ulcers in the mouth, particularly of children. They are generally covered with a
Encyc. plant, the Iberis.
A
2.
CAN
CAN
CAN
In ecclesia.^tical affairs, a law, or rule of doctrine or di.sciiiline, enacted by a council and confirmed by the sovereign; a^ decision of matters in religion, or a regulation of policy or disciphne, by a general or ))rovinrial council. A law or rule in general. The genuine books of the Holy Scriptures, called the sacred canon, or general rule of
;
moral and religious duty, given by
inspiration. 4.
dignitary of the church a person who allotted possesses a prebend or revenue for the performance of divine service in a cathedral or collegiate church. canon is one attached to a ,'V cardinal church, incardinnlns, as a i)riest to a parish. Domicetiary canons, are young canons.
A
;
CAN uot
in orders,
having no right
CAN in
any par- Canonical punishments,
ticular cliapters.
Erpedative canons, having no revenue or
CAN
are such
as
the
church may inflict, as excommunication, degradation, penance, &c.
prebeiul, but liaving the title and dignities Canonical life, in the method or rule of living of canons, n voice in the chapter and a prescribed by the ancient clergy who liv-
Port,
to sing, to chant, to recite, to creak, to chirp, to whistle ; It. canlare, to sing, to praise, to crow ; Fr. chanter ; Arm. cana ; from L. cano, to sing. The I)rimary sense is to throw, thrust or drive, id.,
ed In coiinnunlty, a course of living preas In can ; a sense retained in the phrase, till a prebend should scribed for clerks, less rigid than the moto cant over any thing. In singing. It imnastic and more restrained than the secuplies a niodtdatiun or inflexion of voice. Foreign canons, such as did not officiate lar. in their canonries In Welsh, can, with a different sound of opposed to mansionary Canonical sins, in the ancient church, were the vowel, signifies a song and white, L. T)r residentiary canons. those for which capital punishment was These are from cnno, canus, and canto. La>/, secular or honorary canons, laymen adnjittcd out of honor or respect, into inflicted as idolatry, murder, adulterj', the same root and have the same radical some chapter of canons. sense, to throw or shoot as rays of light, heresy, &c. to shine, probably apphed to" the sun's Regular canons, who live in monasteries Canonical letters, anciently, were letters or in coininiuiity, and who, to the practice which passed between the orthodox cler morning rays. W. canu, to sing Sansof their rules, have added the profession of crit, gana Persic, kandam.] gy, as testimonials of their faith, to keep vows. up the catholic connuunlon, and to distin 1. In popular usage, to turn about, or to turn over, by a sudden ])ush or thru.st as, to guish them from heretics. Tertiary canons, who have only the third Canonical ejdsttes, is an appellation given to cant over a pail or a cask. Mar. Diet. part of the revenue of the canonicate. those epistles of the New Testament 2. To toss as, to cant a ball. Encyc. o. In monasteries, a book which are called general or catholic. 3. To speak with a whining voice, or an afcontaining the rules of the order. fected singing tone. Encyc. C. A catalogue of saints acknowledged and CANON'ICALLY, orfr. In a manner agree [In this sense, it is usually intransitive.] canonized In the Homish Church. idde to the canon. 4. To sell by auction, or to bid a price at 7. Tlie secret words of the mass from the CANON'ICALNESS, n. The quality of beauction. Sivi/I. ing canonical. preface to the Pater, in the middle of which CANT, n. A toss; a throw, thrust or push the priest consecrates the host. The poo CANONICALS, n. plu. The full dress of with a sudden jerk as, to give a ball a the clergy, worn when they ofticiate. cant. is the literal pic are to rehearse this part of the service, sense.] [This on their knees, and in a voice lower than CANONICATE, n. The office of a canon 2. A whining, singing manner at speech a can bi' heard. Romish Church. Encyc. quaint, aflt'cted mode of uttering words 8. In a7icient music, a rule or method forde- CAN'ONIST, n. A professor of canon law either In conversation or preaching. one skilled In the study and practice of i. The whining speech of beggars, as in terniining the Intervals of notes, invented ecclesiastical law. by Ptolemy. Encyc. asking alms and making complaints of 9. In modern 7mtsic, a kind of perpetual CANONIS'TIC, a. Having the their distresses. knowledge of a canonist. 4. The peculiar words and phrases of profugue, In which tlie different |>arts, begin fessional men phrases often repeated, or ning one after another, repeat incessantly CANONIZATION, n. [See Canonize.] The the same air. act of declaring a man a saint, or rather not well authorized. Busby 10. In geometry and algebra, a general rule the act of ranking a deceased person in 5. Any barbarous jargon In speech. for tlifi solution of cases of a like nature the catalogue of saints, called a canon. 6. Whining pretension to goodness. with the present iiiqulry. Every last step This act is preceded by beatification, and Johnson. of an equation is a canon. by an examination into the life and niira-j 7. Outcry, at a public sale of goods a call 11. In pharmacy, a rule for compounding cles of the person after which the Pope for bidders at an auction. Swijl. medicines. decrees the canonization. This use of the word Is precisely equiv12. In surgiri), an instrument used in sewing Addison. Encyc. alent to auction, auctio, a hawkiyig, a crj2. The state of being sainted. the or in a up wounds. dialect, out, ing vulgar singing Canon-law, is a collection of ecclesiastical CAN'ONIZE, v.t. [from canon.] To deout, but I beheve not in use in the If. clare a man a saint and rank him in the laws, serving as the rule of chiuxh govern States. menf. catalogue, called a canon. CANT, n. [D. kant, a corner.] A nich a An ecclesiastical bene- corner or retired jilace. B. Jonson. CANON-BIT, n. That part of a bit let into CAN'OiN'RY, ) a horse's mouth. CAN'ONSHIP, ^"' fice, in a cathedral or Cant-timliers, In a ship, are those which are Mar. Diet. CAN'ONESS, n. A woman who enjoys a collegiate church, which has a prebend or situated at the two ends. stated allowance out of the revenues of CANTA'BRIAN, a. Pertaining to Cantaprebend, affi.xed, by the loundation, to the church commonly annexed to it. The; maids, without obliging them to make bria, on the Bay of Biscav, In Spain. benltice filled by a canon. A prebendl CAN'TALIVER," 7i. [cantt'e and fare*.] In any vows or renounce the world. Encyc. CVNON'ICAL, a. [L. canonicus.] Pertainmay subsist without a canonry but a can-! architecture, a jiiece of wood, framed into onlcate is inseparable from a prebend. the front or side of a house, to suspend ing to a canon according to the canon or rule. the moldings and eaves over it. Ai/liffe. Encyc.'i Encyc Canonical hooks or canonical scriptures, are CAN'OPIED.a. [See Cano/)j/.]' Covered with' CAN'T.^VR, eastern weight at ? " An tliosc books of the scriptures which are a canopy. Mitton.i CAN'TARO, S Acra in Turkey, 603 admitted by the canons of the church, to C.VN'OPY, n. [Gr. xuvarteiov, a pavUion or pounds at Tunis and Tripoli, 114 pounds. be of divine origin. The Roman catholic net spread over a bed to keep off gnats, In Egypt, It consists of 100 or 150 rotochurch aihnits the Apocryphal books to at Genoa, from XU1UJ-4-, a gnat.] at Naples, it is 2.5 pounds los be canonical the Protestants reject them. 1. A covering over a fhroire, or over a bed; 150 at Leghorn, 150, 151, or 160. Encyc. Canonical hours, are certain stated times of head more generally, a covering over the At .-Micant in Spain, the cantaro is a lithe day, fixed by the ecclesiastical laws, In Cochin, a So the sky is called a canopy, and a canoquid measure of 3 gallons. or appropriated to the offices of prayer measure of capacity, of 4 rubies the rubi, py Is borne over the head in processions. In Great Britain, these 2. In architecture and and devotion. 32 rotolos. sculpture, a magnifihours are from eight o'clock to twelve in cent decoration serving to cover and CANTA'TA, n. [Italian, from cantare, to the forenoon, before and after which marcrown an altar, throne, tribunal, pulpit, sing L. canto.] chair or the like. riage cannot be legally performed in the Encyc A poem set to music a composition or song. church. Intermixed with recitatives and airs, chiefEncyc. CAN'OPy, V. t. To cover with a canopy. Canonical obedience, is submission to the Iv intended for a single voice. Dryden. canons of a church, especially the submis- C.\NO'ROUS, a. [L. canoriis, from cano, to CANTA'TION, a. A singing. [.\'ot used.] sion of the Inferior clergy to their bishops, Musical tuneful. Brown C.\NTEE'N, n. [It. canlina.] A tin vessel sins.] and other religious orders to their superi- CANb'ROUSNESS, ». Blusicalness. used by soldiers for carrjing liquor for place in the choir, fall.
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I
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'
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ors.
CANT,
V.
t.
[L. ra»i(o, to sing; Sp. cantar.
drink.
Chambers
CAN
CAN eAN'TELEUP,
A
n.
on.
CANT'ER,
V.
[Arm. cantreal or
i.
cantren,\
to run, to rove or ramble, fi-om tossing or 1. See Cant.] Iraping, canting. as a horse in a moderate gallop, raising the two fore feet nearly at the 2. same time, with a leap or spring. CANT'ER, V. I. To ride upon a canter.
To move
CANT'ER, One who
2.
n.
A
moderate gallop.
3.
cants or wliines.
4.
n. A species of [See Bell- Flower.] CANTERBURY TALE, n. A fabulous story so called from the tales of Chaucer. CA'NT'ERING, ppi: Moving or riding with a slow gallop.
CANTERBURY BELL, Campanula. ;
That pen. [Infra.] culiar substance existing in the Meloe vesicatorius, or caiitharides, whicli causes Thomson. vesication.
CANTHAR'IDIN,
CANTHA'RIS
or plu.
CANTHAR'IDES,
Spanish Hies a species of Meloe. This fly is nine or ten lines in length, of a shining green color, mixed with azure, and lias a nauseous smell. It feeds upon tlie leaves of trees and shrul)s,
n. [Gr. xai'Sapis.]
;
These flies, when preferring the ash. bruised, are luiiversally used as a vesicaThe largest tory, or blistering plaster. come from Italy, but the best from Spain eANTH'US, »!." [Gr. xavSo;; D. kant, a
\n angle of the eye
;
of the eyelids the nose the lesser, ;
;
;
;
obtain
or prefernient
2. 3.
districts
CAN'VASSER,
jerk
;
;
separate quarters to
allotting
To
t.
I',
CAN'TONMENT,
CAN'TRED, } "
CANTREF,
hemp
S
[L. centum.] villages, as in
A
hundred Wales.
1.
xanaScj
;
Ir.
eanbhas, canvas,
and cnnatb, hemp Russ. kancphas. It is from the root ot'canna, cane; perhaps a diminutive] A coarse cloth made of hemp, or flax, used for tents, sails of ships, painting and other pinposes.
2.
A
clear unbleached cloth,
in little squares,
With
A
(Jr.
wove
used for working tapestry
the French, the rough draught or on which an air or piece of music
Among
model composed, and given
A
canzonetta.]
[It.
little
Encyc. Biisby [Sax. cceppe, a cap, and a cape, a D. kap ; G. kappe and haube ; Dan. kappe, a robe or coat Sw. kappa, id It. W. cap ; Fr. chape, cappa, a cap, a cloke chapenu ; Arm. chap or cap. The sense is probably that \vhich is put on. Class Gb. n.
cloke
;
;
;
;
No. 1.
2. .3.
70. also
A
3L 36.]
part of dress made to cover the head^ Shak, ensign of a cardinalate. top, or the uppermost ; the highest. Thou ait the cap of fools. Shak.
The The
Ifilkins. A vessel in form of a cap. An act of respect, made by uncovering the head. UEstrange. a piece of lead laid over the rcgularly Cap of cannon, vent to keep the priming dry now called
with the needle. 3.
?i.
species of jig.
CAP,
;
;
composed
or short song, in one, two or three jiarts. It sometimes consists of two strains, each of which is .sung twice. Sometimes it isu
;
Speaking with a whine or song-like tone.
a cant. CAN'TION, n. song or verses. [jYoi Spenser. used.] chantell Fr. chanteau n. ; CAN'TLE, [Arm. whence echantiUon ; Eng. scantlinfc.] Obs. a piece a i)ortion. A. fragment Shak. CAN'TLE, V. t. To cut into pieces to cut Obs. out a piece. Dri/den. CANT'LET, 71. piece a little corner a
examined.
;
CAN'ZONET,
Encyc.
ppr. Tlu-owing with a sudden
adv.
;
solicits votes,
;
canton, or divide
Davies. n. A part or division of a town or village, assigned to a particular regiment of troops ; separate quarters. Marshall.
t.
tossing.
One who
of a cantata. When set to a piece of instrumental music, it signities much the same as cantata and when set to a sonait ta, signifies allegro, or a brisk movement. Bailey. Busby.
into small districts.
tion with nnisical modulations.
CANT'INGLY,
n.
style
;
'I.
pp. Discussed
;
each regiment.
CxVN'TONIZE,
Spenser
CANT'ING,
debate. ; seeking, solicitation, or efforts to ob-
|CAN'VASSED,
distinct
;
;
Discussion
A
tain.
;
tones.
;
votes.
may
ppr. Dividing into
;
CANTILLA'TION,
;
interest in
as, to
;
CANTONING,
Encyc.
See [L. cantillo. to recite with musical M. Stuart. n. A chanting ; recita-
to use efforts to favor of; folcanvass for an oflice. to canvass for a friend.
make
;
•eAN'TICLE, [Sp. and It. cantico; L. CAN'VAS, n. [Fr. canevas, canvas, and c/tartt!)'e, hemp; Arm. canavas; S|). caiiacanticum, from canto. See Cant.] mazo Port, cannmo It. cannuarcio, canvas In the plural, canticles, the Song 1. A song. and canapa, hemj) D. kanefas, canvas, and of Songs or Song of Solomon, one of the books of the Old Testament. hennep, hemp G. kanefass, canvas, and Obs. a division of a song. '3. A canto hanf, hemp; Dan. canefas ; L. cannabis. i'.
to
CAN'VASS, n. Examination; close inspec tion to know the state of; as a canvass of
n.
CAN'TILLATE, To chant Cant.]
;
lowed by for;
;
a cavitj' at the
ities
;
votes or interest
solicit
cdJiJ,
Burnet. or goes about to make interest. Burke. CAN'TON, V. t. [Sp. acantonar.] To divide 2. One who examines the returns of votes into small parts or districts, as territory for a public officer. to divide into distinct portions. CAN' VASSING, /!;»•. Discussing ; examinAddison Locke. ing sifting seeking. 2. To allot separate quarters to each regi- CAN'VASSING, n. The act of discussing, ment of an army or body of troops. examining, or making interest. Marshall. Encyc CA'NY, a. [from cane.] Consisting of cane, a. to a canton or abounding with canes. CAN'TONAL, Milton. Pertaining divided into cantons. CAN'ZONE, n. [It. a song. See Cant.] A CAN'TONED, pp. Divided into distinct song or air in two or three parts, with pasof and imitation or a parts, or (juarters lodged in distinct quar sages fugue poem to which music ters, as troojjs. be in the
corner.]
extremthe greater is next to near the temjile.
CAP
a hundred, L. centum. Sax. hund, for cantrevisa. circuit or division of a country, from cant, a himdred.] A small portion of land, or division of territory oiiginally, a portion of territory on a border also, the iidiabitants of a canton. A small portion or district of territory constituting a distinct state or government as in Switzerland. In heraldry, a corner of the shield. A distinct part, or division as the cantons of a painting or other representation.
with
variety of muskmel-j
4. 5.
;
an apron.
Cap of maintenance, an ornament of state,, carried before the Kings of England at
It is also carried before the coronation. to a poet to finish. the mayors of .some cities. contains certain notes of the composer, to show the poet In ship-building, a cap is a thick strong block of wood, used to confine two masts tothe measure of the verses he is to make. 4. Among seamen, cloth in sails, or sails in gether, when one is erected at the head of another. general as, to spread as much canvas as CAP, V. t. To cover the top, or end to the ship will bear. spread over as, a bone is capped at the Dri/den CANVAS-CLIMBER, n. A sailor that goes fragment. Shak. joint with a cartilaginous substance. CAN'TO, n. [It. canto, a song ; L. cantus. aloft to handle sails. Shak. The cloud-capped towers. See Cant.] CAN'VASS, v.t. [Old Fr. cannabasser, to A part or division of a poem, answering to boat about or shake, to examine. Junius. 2. To deprive of the cap, or take off" a cap. what in prose is called a book. In ItalSkinner.] To cap verses, is to name alternately verses to beat or shake out ian, canto is a song, and it signifies also 1. To discuss; literally, beginning with a particular letter to name to open by beating or shaking, like the the treble part, first treble, or highest voto name alin opposition or emulation L. discutio. This is the common use of cal part. Johnson. ternately in contest. CAN'TON, n. [It. eantone, a corner-stone, the word, as to canvass a subject, or the CAP, t'. 1. To uncover the head in reverence and a canton policy of a measure. Sp. canton ; Port, canto. Shak. or civility. [Xot used.] a corner Fr. canton, a corner, a part of a 2. To examine returns of votes to search or scrutinize as, to canvass the votes for Cap-a-pie, [Fr.] From head to foot all over country, a district Arm. canton ; D. kant ; senators. as, armed cap-a-pie. G. kante ; Dan. knndl, a eorner, ])oint, n. A coarse paper, so called from edge, border. The Welsh unites canton' CAN'VASS, V. i. To seek or go about to Cap-paper, ;
is
The canvas of a song
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
:
;
;
,
CAP
CAP
%eing used to make caps to hold cominod
ney, or of a statesman. He may have a natural or a political capacity. Ability, in a moral or legal sense qual ification as, a man legal power or right or a corporation may have a capacity to or receive hold and estate give 6. In geometn/, the solid contents of a body. 7. In chiynistry, that state, quality or constitution of bodies, by which they absorb and contain, or render latent, any fluid as the capacity of water for caloric. CAPAR'ISON, 7!. [Sp. caparazon; Port caparazam, a cover put over the saddle of a horse, a cover for a coach F'r. capara-
ities.
Boyle.
Cap-sheaf, n. The top sheaf of a stack of grain the crowner. ;
The [See Capable.] quality of being capable capacity capableness. Shak. Lavoisier, Trans.
CAPABIL'ITY,
n.
;
CAT ABLE, a. 1.
Able
to
from L.
capio, to 69. 75. 83.] able to receive
[Fr. capable,
See Class Gb. No.
take.
;
(j8.
hold or contain
;
often followed by not capable q/" receiving, or capable of holding the company 2. Endued with power competent to the obas, a man is capable of judging, or ject he is not capable. sufticiently capacious
of ;
as, the
room
;
is
;
3.
Possessing mental powers; intelligent; understand, or receive into the having a capacious mind ; as a ca-
able to
mind
;
pable judge 4.
a capable instructor. as, capable of pain or grief. Prior.
;
Suscei)tible
;
susceptible of; as, a tiling is capable of long duration ; or it is capable of being colored or altered. 6. Qualitiod for, in a moral sense; having legal power or capacity as, a bastard is not capable of inheriting an estate. 5.
Qualified for
;
;
[jYot now used.] €A'1'A1J1,ENESS, >i. The
7.
Hollow.
Shak. state or
of being capable capacity derstanding knowledge. ;
CAPAC'IFY,
V.
GAPA'CIOUS,
To
t.
a.
quidity
])Owcr of un-
;
Killingheck.
;
[Unusual.] Barrow. Good.
qrialily.
from capio,
[L. capax,
to
take or hold.] 1.
3.
Wide
large
;
that will hold
;
capacious vessel. Broad extensive harbor. ;
much
;
;
;
Encuc.
CA'PER-BUSH. [See CA'PER-CUTTING, cing
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
One who capers, leaps and skips about, or dances. ppr. Leaping ; skipping. CA'PIAS, n. [L. capio, to take.] In law, a writ of two sorts ; one before judgment, called a capias ad respondendum, where
;
fon.] cloth or covering laid over the saddle or furniture of a horse, especially a sumpter horse or horse of state. Milton. CAPAR'ISON, V. t. To cover with a cloth as a horse. Dryden 2. To dress pompously; to adorn with ricli dress. Shak. covered case. [Littli CAP'CASE, 71.
an original is issued, to take the defendant, and make him answer to the plaintiff'; the other, which issues after judgment, is of divers kinds; as a capiasad sati.'facienduni, or writ of execution a capias pro fine ; a capias utlagalum ; a capias in tmttiernam. Blackstonc. ICAP'IBAR, n. An animal partaking of the Burton. form of a hog and of a rabbit, the cabiai. used.] CAPE, n. [Sp. Port, cabo ; It. capo; Fr. CAPILLA'CEOUS,a. [L. ca;7i7/««us, hairy.] cap ; D. kaap ; Dan. kap ; L. caput ; Gr. Hairy resembling a hair. [See Capillary.] It signifies C;AP1LLA'1RE, 71. [Fr.] kind of sirnip, xt^a'Kr; ; Sans, cabala, head. extracted from maiden-hair. Mason. end, furthest point, from extending, sliootCAPIL'LAlMENT, 71. [L. capillamentum, from capillus, hair, probably a little shoot.] 1. head land; properly the head, point or ;
A
;
A
A
termination of a neck of land, extending some distance into the sea, beyond the common shore, and hence the name is applied to the neck of land itself, indefinitely, as in Cape-Cod, Cape- Horn, Cape of Good It (liftei-s from a promontory in Hope. this, that it may be high or low land but a promontory is a high bold termination of a neck of land. 2. The neck-piece of a cloke or coat. CAP'ELAN, 7!. A small fish, about six in ches in length, sholes of which appear off the coasts of Greenland, Iceland and New foundland. They constitute a large part of the food of the Grcenlandcrs. Pennant.
The
I.
to
niitnrid
i2.
;
power
;
t. [See Capacity.] To enable to furnish with ;
as, to
capacitate
one
understanding a theorem. To endue with moral qualifications to furnish with legal powers ; qualify to capacitate one for an office.
for
;
A fine fiber, or filament, of which the nerves are compo.sed. a. [L. capillaris, from capH-
[2.
CAP'ILLARV, lus, hair.]
Resembling a hair, fine, minute, small iu diameter, though long as a capillary tube or pipe a capillary vessel in animal bodies, such as the ramifications of the blood ves-
1.
;
;
sels.
CAPACITATED,
;
Boerliaave and Morison.
This class of plants corresponds to the order of Filices, in the Sexual method, which bear their flower and fruit on the back of the leaf or
pp. ;i.
Made
The
capable;
act of
making
capable.
CAPACITY, 1.
77.
[L. capacitas, froin
capax.
capio ; Fr. capacite.] Passive power; the
power of containing, or holding; extent of room or space as the capacity of a vessel, or a cask. The extent or comprehensiveness of the mind the power of receiving ideas oi;
2.
;
knowledge. Let instruction be adapted
to the capacities of
youth. 3.
Active power; ahiVity; applied to men or but less cotnmon, and correct. ; The world docs not include a cause endued with such capacities. Blackmore.
things
4.
State condition character profession occupation. A man may act in the capacity of a mechanic, of a friend, of an attor;
;
;
Encyc. kind of swelling, like a
A
stalk.
;
Milne.
I)ed leaf,
£7ICI/C
CA'PER,
V.
i.
[Fr. cabrer, to
prance
;
to
glands resembling hairs,
I)us
Martyn,
;
leap; to skip or
to prance; to
jump;
Shak.
spring.
A
leap a skip a spring ; as in dancing or mirth, or in the frolick of a goat or lamb.
CA'PER,
7!.
CA'PER,
71.
.-
[Fr. capre
Arm.
The
A
blood vessel like a
Brown. [JVot i/i use] a. [L. capillus, a hair, forma, form.] the shape or form of a hair, or of hairs. Kirwan.
hair.
I
CAPIL'LIFORM, SiUiX
I
CAP'ITAL,
a.
from caput, the
[L. capitalis,
See Cape.]
head. 1.
Literally, pertaining to the head capital bruise, in Milton, a bruise head. [This use is not common.]
2.
Figuratively, as the head is the highest part of a man, oliief principal first in importance as a capital city or town : the cap;
which
The buds
is
much
are collected
as a on the
;
;
;
3.
of religion. Punishable by loss of the head or of fife ; incurring the forfeiture of life punishable with death as, treason and murder are capital ofl'enses or crimes. ;
the caper-bush,
used for pickling.
fine vessel or canal.
ital articles
Ar. verb signifies
increase.]
The bud of
A 71.
Daru'in.
-
j^^5 kabaron. to
;
77.
CAPILLA'TION,
;
;
capresen ; Sp. Port, akaparra ; It. cappero ; L. capparis ; D. kapper ; G. kaper ; SjT. kapar ; Ar.
£J
CAP'ILLARY, 1
ilu
to skip.]
To
to
the filaments, to the style, and to the papor down aflixed to some seeds.
cabri
a goat-leap, a caper ; It. capriola, a wild goat, a caper in dancing Sp. cabrio But probably caper la ; L. caper, a goat. is from the i^oot of capio, which signifies not merely to seize, but to shoot or read seize. Hence it is or to and forward, leap probable that this word coincides in origin with Dan. kipper, to leap, whence Eng. ole,
qualified.
CAPACITA'TION,
71.
.Irbuthnot.
In botany, capillary plants are hair-shapod, as the ferns a term used by Ray,
2.
wen, growing on the heel of the hock on This term is applied also to leaves which are a horse, and on the point of the elbow. longer than the setaceous or bristle-sha-
to as,
;
CAP'ELLET,
filament, a small fine thread, like a grows in the middle of a flower, little knob at the top ; a chive.
hair, that
with a
;
v.
m.ike ca])able
77.
.\
,-
CAPACITATE,
A
CA'PERING,
Extensive comprehensive able to take a wide view as a capacious mind. CAPA'CIOUSNEHS, n. VVideness; large ness as of a vessel. 2. Extensiveness largeness as of a bay. 3. Comprehensiveness power of taking a CAPEl-'LA, 71. A bright fi.ved star in the wiile survey left shoidder of the constellation Auriga. applied to the mind. 3.
Caper.] n. leaping or dana frolicksome manner. Beaum.
in
CA'PERER,
;
;
as a capacious bay or
;
CAP before the flowers expand, and preserved in vinegar. The bush is a low shrub, generally growing from the joints of olii walls, from fissures in rocks and amongst rubbish, in the southern ])arts of Europe.
;
CAP 4.
5.
0.
Taking away
CAP
as a
capital punishment as a capital trial.
life,
or affecting life, Great, important, though perhaps not chief; as, a town possesses capital advantages for trade. Large of great size ; as capital letters, which are of different form, and larger ;
common
than
letters.
Capital stock, is the sum of money or stocl^ which a merchant, banker or manufacturer employs in his business either the original stock, or tliat stock augmented Also, the sum of money or stock whicli each partner contributes to the joint fund or stock of the partnership also, the common fund or stock of the company, whether incorporated or not. A capital city or town is the metropolis or chief city of an empire, kingdom, state or province. The application of the epithet indicates the city to be the largest, or to be the seat of govermnent, or both. In many instances, the capital, that is, the largest city, is not tlie seat of government. ;
2.
;
A
;
nobly 2.
;
With
finely.
loss
of life
;
CAP'ITALNKSS,
as, to
n.
punish
A
a.
offense.
capital
•
Shenvood.
[Little used.]
€AP'1TATE,
capitally.
[L. capitatus,
from
caput,
a head.] In botany, growing in a head, applied to a flower, or stiama. Martyn. Lee.
€APlTA'TION,
71.
[L. capitatio,
1.
;
Numeration by the head
;
a numbering
2.
A
Brown.
imposition upon each liead or a poll-tax. Sometimes written
tax, or
person
;
Capitation-tax. Encyc. CAP'ITE. [L. caput, the head, abl.] In Ens;lish law, a tenant in capite, or in chief, is one who holds lands immediately of the king, caput, the heail or Lord Paramount of all lands in the kingdom, by knight's service or by soccage. This tenure is called tenme in capite ; but it was abol-
ished in England, by 19 Charles II. 21. Blackstone.
€AP ITOL,
n.
[L. capitolium,
from caput,
the head.] 1.
The temple of
Jupiter in Rome, and a fort or castle, on the Mons Capitolinus. In this, the Senate of Rome aneiently as.sembled and on the same ])lace, is still the city hall or town-house, where the conservators of the Romans hold their ;
meetings.
The same name was
given to
€A'PON,
in
erv five years.
Encyc.
CAPIT'ULAR,
)
CAPITULARY,
^
1.
head
a "' [L. capitulum,
or chapter.] An act passed in a chapter, either of knights, canons or religious. The body of laws or statutes of a chap This ter, or of an ecclesiastical council.
To
t.
capponiera, a
seems
castrate, as a cock. Birchn.
little
[Fr., Sp. caponera, It.
cut
or trench, and
it
to be
allied to capon, Sp. caponar, to cut or curtail.] Infortification, a covered lodgment, sunk four or five feet into the grouud,
encompassed
with a parapet, about two feet high, serving to support several planks, laden with It is large eziough to contain 15 or 20 soldiers, and is placed in the glacis, at the extremity of the counterscarp, and in dry moats, with embrasures or loop holes,
Rome.
honor of Jupiter Capitolinus, and in commemoration of the preservation of the capitol from the Gauls, and other games institiUed by Domitian and celebrated ev
V.
CAPONNIE'RE,
D^Anville. €AP'ITOLINE, a. Pertaining to the capitol in Rome. The Capitoline Games were annual games instituted by Camillus in
earth.
through which the soldiers
CAPO'T,
A
n. [Fr.,
may fire.
Harris. Encyc. probably from L. capio, to
seize.]
winning of
the tricks of cards at the Johnson. all the tricks of
all
game of piquet. To win CAPO'T, 1..
t.
cards at picquet. n. [from cap.] One whose business is to make or sell caps. name is also €AP'REOLATE, a. [L. capreolu.t, a tendril, ecclesiastical, made by Charlemagne, and pro])eily a shoot, from the root ofcapra, a other princes, in general councils and as goat.] semblies of the people. Some indeed In botany, having tendrils, or filiform spiral have allcdged that these are supidements claspers, by which plants fasten themto laws. selves to other bodies, as in vines, peas, &c. They are so called, because they are divided into chapters or sections. Encyc. Harris. Martyn. 3. The member of a chapter. CAPRICE, )!. [Fr. caprice; Sp. Port, caCAPIT'ULARLY, adv. In the form of an pricho ; It. capriccio, a shaking in fever, 2.
CAP'PER,
given to the laws, civil anc
ecclesiastical chapter.
€APIT'ULARY,
a.
rigors
Swift.
Relating to the chap-
ter of a cathedral.
[But
I susa pre-
on the root of freak, break ; denoting primarily a sudden bursting, breaking, fix ca,
I'.t.
or starting. So we see in Italian, maglio, and camaglio, a mail. In early English is it written, according to the Spanish, c«/>nc/(0. If formed from the root oi capio, caper, the primary sense is the
Shak.
or articles.
whim, freak, fancy. word to be formed, with
also,
;
pect this
IVarton.
€APIT'ULATE, [from capitulum, suj)ra.] 1. To draw up a writing in chapters, head? this sense is not usual.']
writers,
To surrender, as an army or garrison, to an enemy, by treaty, in which the terms of surrender are specified and agreed to by the parties. The term is applicable to a garrison or to the inhabitants of a besieged place, or to an army or troops in any situation in which they are subdued or compelled to submit to a victorious enemy. €APITULA'TIOi\, n. The act of capitulating, or surrendering to an enemy upon stipulated terms or conditions. 2. Tlie treaty or instrument containing the 2.
3.
of persons.
their colonies. Encyc. The edifice occupied by the Congress of the United States in their deliberations.
tol
from caput,
the head.]
in
In some states, the State-house, or house in which the legislature holds its sessions a government house. CAPITO'LIAN, a. Pertaining to the capi
;
CAP'IT.'iL," n. [L. cfrpiteltum.] The upi)ermost part of a column, pillar or pilaster, serving as the head or crowning, and placed immediately over the shaft, and under the entablature. Encyc. By the customary omission of the noun, to which the adjective, capital, refers, it stands for, 1. The chief city or town in a kingdom or state a metro|)olis. 2. large letter or tj'pe, in printing. 3. A stock in trade, in manufactures, or in any business requiring the expenditure of nionev with a view to protit. CAPITALIST, n. A man who has a capital or stock in trade, usually denoting a man of large property, which is or maybe employed in business. Burke. Stephens. CAP'ITALLY, adv. In a capital manner
CAP Romans
temples of the
the principal
;
conditions of surrender. A reducing to heads. [.N'ot much used.] In German polity, a contract which the Emijeror makes with the electors, in the names of the princes and states of the empire, before he is raised to the imperial
A
same.]
sudden start of the mind change of opinion, or humor ;
;
a sudden a whim,
freak, or particular fancy.
eAPRI"CIOUS,
a.
Freakish:
whimsical;
apt to change opinions siKhlenly, or to start from one's purpose; unsteady; fickle fanciful ; subject to changeable change or irregularity as a man of a ca;
;
;
pricious temper.
CAPRU'CIGUSLY, manner
adv.
In a capricious
whimsically.
;
The quality of being led by caprice whimsicalness unsteadiness of purpose or opinion. 2. Unsteadiness liableness to sudden chandignitvges as the capriciousness of fortune. €APIT 'ULATOR, n. One who capitulates. CAP'RICORN, n. [L. capricornus, caper, a Sherwood. goat, and cornu, a horn.] €AP'ITULE, n. A summary. [JVo< in use.] One of the twelve signs of the zodiac, the winter solstice mckliffe. represented on ancient monuments, by the figure of a goat, or a eAP'iVI, re. A balsam of the Spanish WestIndies. a figin-e having the fore part like a goat [See Copaiba.] CAP'NOM /VNC Y, n. [(Jr. xar
€APRI"CtOUSNESS,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
n.
;
CAP
CAP
CAP
the colonel of a regiment being the caphorse makes in the same place without tain of the first company, that company is advancing, in such a manner that when commanded by a Captain-Lieutenant. he is at the iiighth of the leap, he jerks out with his hind legs, even and near. It Captain- liashaiv, or Capudan Bashate, in differs from the croupade in this, that, in a Turkey, is the High Admiral. Shak. croupade, a horse does not show his shoes, CAP'TAIN, a. Chief; valiant. and from a balotade, in which he does not CAP'TAINCY, 71. The rank, post or com mission of a captain. Farrier's Did. Washington. jerk out. €AP'RIPED, a. [L. caper, a goat, and pes, 2. The jurisdiction of a captain, or commander, as in South America. foot.] CAP'TAINRY, n. The power or command Having feet like those of a goat. over a certain district chieftainship. C.\P'SI€UM, n. Guinea pepper. Chambers. Johnson. Spenser. tJAPSI'ZE, V. t. To upset or overturn; a ;
Mar. Did CAP'TAINSHIP, n. The condition or post of a captain or chief commander. Shak. written capSp. cabestrante ; Port. 2. The rank, quality or post of a captain. In lieu of this captaincy is now used. cabrestanle, from cabresto, Sp. cabcslro, a halter L. capistrum ; Sax. cccpster, or cceb .3. The command of a clan, or government of a certain district. Davies. estr, a halter. The Spanish has also cabria,
cattivo,
from 1.
;
3.
4.
A
cabrio, a rafter.
L.
capio,
Capstan with
to hold,
some other word.] strong mas.«y column of timber, formed hke a truncated cone, and having its upper extremity pierced to receive bars or levers, for winding a rope round it, to raise great weights, or perform other extraordinary It work, that requires a great power. may be let down through the decks of a sliip, and so fixed that the work is jierformcd by a horizontal motion. JVIar. Did.
€AP'SUL\RY 2.
i
"
""^'""^^ is
that
hke a chest.
which
4.
Skill in
military affairs. n. [L. captatio,
t'APTA'TION,
to catch.] act or practice
The
from
CAP'TIVE, kept
[L.
captio,
V.
from
capio,
To
t.
prisoner
war
in
as
;
captive
71.
Prior. L. captivi-
Dryden.
[Vr. captivite
;
from capto to seize.] The state of being a prisoner, or of being in the power of an enemy by force or the fate of war. Dryden, ias,
to 1.
act of taking, or apprehending by a 2. Subjection to love. Addison. judicial process. [Little used.] 2. A certificate signed by commissioners in 3. Subjection ; a state of being under con1.
Chancery, declaring when and where tlie commission was executed. Ash
3.
A
trol.
Bringing into
obedknce of
preamble.
captivity every thought to the 2 Cor. x.
Christ.
sur- 4. In Scots law, a writ issued at the instance 4. Subjection ; servitude ; slaver)'. But I see another law in my meaibers and of a creditor, commanding an officer to ing me into captivity to the law of sin. take and till he the
Capsular ligament, rounds every movable articulation, contains tin; synovia like a bag. Hooper. €AP'SULATR," f "' Inclosed in a capsule, or as in a chest or CAP'SULATED, S
;
confinement ; as Dryden.
take prisoner; to bring
Obs.
into subjection.
CAPTIVITY, Charles.
The
or
confinement
chains.
capto,
seize.]
Made
a.
bondage,
CAP'TIVE, King
n.
in
captive souls. 2. Holding in
of catching favor or ap-
plause, by flattery or address.
CAP'TION,
One who is ensnared by love or flatter^', or by wiles. 2 Tim. ii, 26. A slave. Anciently captives were enslaved by their conquerors. But in modern times, they are not made slaves in christian countries and the word captive, in a hteral sense, rarely signifies a slave. ;
;
;
an axle-tree, and is probably from
One who is charmed or subdued by beauty or excellence one whose affections are seized, or who is held by strong ties of love.
sometimes
n.
sttrn. [Fr. cabestan
L. captivus,
caitiff;
capto, to seize.]
[aisoner taken by force or stratagem in war, by an enemy; followed byte; as a captive to the victor.
2.
seaman''s phrase.
€AP'ISTAN,
A
whence Eng.
—bring-
imprison
debtor,
pays
the debt.
from capto
Rom.
vii.
To
lead captivity captive, in scripture, is to subdue those who have held others in slaPs. Ixviii. very, or captivity.
CAP'TIOUS, [L. captiosus, to catch.] Botany. n. [L. capsula, a little chest, 1. Disposed to find fault, or raise objections; CAP'TOR, n. [L. capio, to take.] One who l)erhaps from capio, to take.] apt to cavil, as in popular langiuige, it is It is aptakes, as a prisoner or a prize. The seed vessel of a plant ; a dry membrasaid, apt to catch at ; as a captious man. propriately one who takes a prize at sea. naceous hollow pericarp, opening differ- 2. Fitted to catch or ensnare ; insidious ; ai 7!. [L. captura ; Fr. capture; It is composed Locke. CAP'Tl'RE, ently in different plaiiLs. captious question. from L. capio, to take.] of valves or outer covering, partitions, 3. Proceeditig from a caviling disposition 1. In a general sense, the act of taking or the colmnella or central pillar, and cells. as a captious objection or criticism. seizing; as the capture of an enemy, of a Martyn. Milne. C.\P'TIOUSLY, adv. In a captious manner ship, or of booty, by force, surprise or with an inclination or intention to object, CAP'TAIN, n. [Vr. capitaine ; Sp. capitan; stratagem. or censure. Port, capiiam ; It. capilano ; from L. caput, Locke. 2. The tiling taken ; a prize ; prey taken by In the feudal laws of Europe, the head. n. to find CAP'TIOUSNESS, Disposition force, surprise or stratagem. the term was applied to tenants in capite, fault ; inclination to object ; peevishness. 3. Seizure ; arrest ; as the capture of a crimwho were bound to attend their prince in Locke inal or debtor. his wars, at the head of soldiers, and from 11. t. from V. t. To lake or seize by force, €AP'TIVATE, CAP'Tl'RE, [L. captivo, capti this practice the name had its origin, or vus, a prisoner, from capto, to take ; Fr. surprise or stratagem, as an enemy or his from their command.] projierty ; to take by force under the aucapliver ; Sp. caulivar ; Port, cativar ; It J. l/uerally, a head or chief officer; approthority of a commission ; as to captures cattivare.] priately, the military officer who com 1. To take ship. prisoner ; to seize by force ; as mands a company, whether of infantry, an enemy in war. CAP'TURED, pp. Taken as a prize. cavalry, artillery or matrosses. Shak. Locke. B. Trumbull. CAP'TURING, ppr. Seizins as a prize. 2. The connnander of a ship of war, or of a 2. To subdue ; to bring into bondage. CAPU'CCIO, 71. [It.] A capuchin or hood. merchantman. But the latter is often King Charles. CAPU'CHED, a. Covered with a hood. called a master. Broun. 3. To overpower and gain with excellence [Little used.] 3. The commander of a military band, a or beauty ; to charm ; to engage the affec- CAPUCHiN, 11. [Fr. capudne, from capuce, sense that occurs in the scriptures ; as a Addison tions ; to bind in love. a hood or cowl.] of fifty. captain 4. To enslave ; with to ; as, captivated to error. 1. A garment for females, consisting of a 4. A man skilled in war or military affairs ; Locke. cloke and hood, made in imitation of the as. Lord Wellington is a great captain. Shak. dress of capuchin monks. Johnson. CAP'TIVATE, a. Taken prisoner. 5. A chief commander. Shak. But in a.
box.
CAP'SULE,
this
A
Made prisoner 2. pigeon whose head is covered with sense rarely used, but in composition. pp. feathers. charmed. Captain-general, is the commander in chief of an army, or of the militia. The gover- CAP'TIVATING, ppr. Taking prisoner; CAPUcHiNS, 71. Monks of the order of St. Francis, who cover their beads with nor of a state is Captain- General of the engaging the afl'cctions. a capuce, capuchon, a stuff-cap or cowl. militia. U. States. 2. a. Havins power to engage the affections. They are clothed in brown or gray, go Captain- Lieutenant, is an officer, who with CAPTIVA'TION, n. The act of taldng a the rank of cajitain and pay of lieutenant, bare-footed, and never shave their faces. prisoner; a taking onecajitive. commands a company or troop. Thus CAP'TIVE, 71. [Fr capti/; Sp. cautivq; It.l £71 eye.
CAPTIVATED,
;
CAR
CAR tAP'UCINE, sagoo or
A
n.
species of
monkey, the
[3.
The
s
sai.
€AP'1JL1N,
The Mexican
n.
CAR'AVAN,
cherry.
names of places, is CAK, CAER, CHAR, sometimes the CeUic Caer, a town or city,
CAR B. Jonson.
value of any thing. Obs.
,
n.
Arm.
qarr
Dan. karre rxirrus
1.
; ;
Fr. char,
whence
The
Sax. probably taken chariot
a cart.
A
;
sense is fi-om running on wheels. See Current.] A small vehicle moved on wheels, usually drawn by one horse. Johnson. In poetical language, any vehicle of dignity or splendor a chariot of war, or of tricroit,
2.
;
car; Iv. carr, carra, or caiii ; D. and G. karre ; Sw. klirra ; Sp. It. Port, carro ; L. carrus, or
[W.
;
Milton. Prior. umph. 3. The constellation called Charles's wain or the bear. DryJen. €AR'ABINE, ) [Fr. carahine Sp. carabi-
karau, to stretch along, to follow, to proSp. caravana ; Pers. as Ar.] Fr. caravane. company of travellers, pilgrims or merchants, marching or proceeding in a body over the deserts of Arabia, or other region infested with robbers.
CARAVAN'SARY,
n.
A
place appointed for receiving and loading caravans a kind of inn, where the caravans rest at night, being a large square building, with a spacious court in the middle. Encyc.
;
tile
}
C-ARVEL,
"
[S\).
It.
caravela;
caravello;
Fr. caravelle.] I small vessel on the coast of France, in the herring fishery. These vessels "• are tisually from 25 to 30 tons burden. CARBINE, I na ; It. id.] A short gun or fire arm, carrying a ball of 2. A light, round, old-fashioned ship. Johnson. 24 to the pound, borne by light horsemen n. [Gr. xopoj, xapw ; li. caros, and hanging by a belt over the left shoul- CAR' careum ; Fr. carri ; Sp. alcaravea or alcarder. Tlie barrel is two feet and a half 1.
or charcoal.
Gr.
not fully
coal, 1.
2.
;
CAR' AC,
?
CAR'ACK, ico,
A
'
[Port,
cnrraca
\ S]). carraca a burden, cargo.]
large ship of burden diaman.
;
;
;
'Pr.
caraque;
allied to It. car-
a Portuguese In-
ahueya; D.kenre
Ar.
;
Lj-^T
karawia.]
a,
and
[carbon
Composed of carbon
Carbonous acid is carbon saturated with oxygen.
CARBUNCLE,
AWAY,
n. A man who carries a carabine one who carries a longer carabine than others, whicli is sometimes used on foot. Encyc.
water.]
CARBONOUS,
and sometimes fmrowed.
€ARABINEE'R,
iiSup,
and hydrogen.
;
long,
Converted into carbon
CARBONOHY'DROUS,
A
used
matter.
CARBONIZED, pp.
;
CARAVEL,
act or process"
V. t. To convert into carbon by combustion or the action of fire to ex])el irom wood or otlier substance all vola-
ceed from place to place.
Caennarlhtn.
as in
The
CARBONIZE,
in
CAR,
n.
of carbonizing.
- , u -
from (1-3 -A, .«»** irom
n. [At.
CARBONIZA'TION,
from
An anthrax
a.
n.
Lavoisier. [L. carbunculus, a httle
carbo.]
an inflammatory timior, or painful gangrenous boil or ulcer. ;
Coxe. Hooper. beautiful gem, of a deej) red color, with a mixture of scarlet, called by the Greeks found in the East Indies. It is anthrax, found pure, and adhering to a heavy ferruIt is ginous stone, of the emery kind. usually a quarter of an inch hi length, and two-thirds of that in diameter, of an angular figure. When held up to the sun, it
A
its deep tinge, and becomes exactly of the color of a burning coal. Encyc. The carbuncle of the ancients is supposed to have been a garnet. Cteaveland.
loses
A plant of the genus Carinn,
a biennial ])lant
with a taper root like a parsnip, which when young, is good eating. Tlie seeds have an aromatic smell and a warm pungent taste. They are used in cakes, incrusted with sugar, and distilled with
3.
In heraldry, a charge or bearing consisting radii, four of which make a comcross, and the other four, a saltier.
of eight
mon
spirituous liquors. Encyc. Encyc. n. [L. carbo, a coal a. Set with carbuncles n. Sp. carbon; [Fr. caracole, a wheeling It. cai-Iwne ; Fr. charbon. Qu. Gr. xapijiu, about Sp. caracal, a small cone, a wind spotted. to dry, or the root of c/ia?-, Russ. It. caracollo, a charyu, to CARBUNC'ULAR, a. Belonging to a caring staircase, a snail buncle red burn.] resembling a carbuncle wheeling.] inflamed. a simple body, Mack, brittle, 1. In the manege, a semi-round, or half turn Pure charcoal It is usually the re- CARBUNCULA'TION, n. which a horseman makes, either to the light and inodorous. [L. carhunculamains of some vegetable body, from which In the army, the cavalry iio, from carbunculo, to burn to a coal, to right or left. all its volatile matter has been blast. See Carbon.] make a caracol after eacli discharge, in expelled by heat. When crystalized, it forms the The blasting of the young buds of trees or order to pass to the rear of the squadron. diamond and means of a galvanic Harris. plants, by excessive heat or cold. by Encyc. n. A combination of carbon 2. In architcclure, a staircase in a helix or apjiaratus, it is found to be capable of fusion. with a metal, earth or alkali. Lavoisier. spii'al form. Encyc. combination of carbon with a simple mCAR'ACOL, V. i. To move in a caracol CARBONA'CEOIJS, a. Pertaining to char coal. flammable or a metal. to wheel. Webster. [See Carbonic] a. Combined with carCAR'ACOLY, n. A mixture of gold, silver C'ARBONADE, ) "• [from carbo, supra.] In and copper, of wliich are made rings, pen- CARBONA'DO, bon, or holding carbon in solution as cookery, flesh, fowl or the like, cut across, seasoned and broiled carbureted hydrogen gas. dants and other toys for the sa\ ages. on coals. Obs. Shak. Carbureted hydrogen consists of one prime CAR'AT, n. [It. ca'raio ; Fr. carat ; D. ka? of To each. cut or hack. Oii. Ure. equivalent raut; G. karat; Gr. jcfpanov, a little horn, C^ARBONADE, , ''• ' a i>od, and the berry of a iiod, used CARBONA'DO, Shak Carbureted hydrogen gas is called hydro-carn. In for a weight of four grains. From tiie bonate, being resolvable into carbonic acid chimistry, aconqiound formed by the union of carbonic acid with and water, by combustion with oxygen. Greeks, it is said, the Arabians borrowed a base as the carbonate of Ume ; a carbonJiiken. a weight used in Mec their Is y's karat, ate of copper. Carbureted is applied to gaseous compomuls. Thus we say carbureted hydrogen, instead ca, equal to the twenty-fourth of a dena- C^ARBONATED, a. Combined with carSee Castell, Col. 3448, of carburet of hydrogen. bon. rius, or denier. Lavoisier. Silliman anil Ludolf, ItW.] CARBON'IC, o. Pertaining to carbon, or CABCAJO, n. The glutton, a voracious 1. The carnivorous animal. obtained from it. The carbonic acid is a weight of four grains, used by gold siriiths and jewelers in weighing precious saturated combination of carbon and oxvn. [Fr. carcan, a chain ; It. stones and i)earls. chain or collar of jewels. Encyc. gen. It has been called Jixed air, aerial carcame.] 2. The weight that expresses the fineness of Shak. Hakewell. acid, mephitic gas, and cretaceous acid, or The whole mass of gold is divided acid of chalk. It isfoun
CARBON,
CAR'ACOL,
;
CARBUNCLED,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
CARBURET, A
;
CARBURETED,
<,
;
<,
CARBONATE, ;
.
CARCANET, A
;
;
;
;
CAR
CAR
CAR
a pod, have a warm aroished or without ornament. This seems matic flavor, and are used in medicine. to be tlie primary sense of the word. [Sec Hale the next word.] Encyc. €'AReASS, n. [It. carcassa ; Sp. carcax ; CARDED, ;>;>. Combed; opened; cleansed with card.s. ¥r. carcasse ; D. karkas.] An iron case or hollow vessel, about the size C"ARDER, n. One who cards wool also, one who plays much at cards. Hotton. of a bomb, of an oval figure, filled with
which grow
in
;
and
as nieul-powder, salt-peter, sulphur, brokei gla.ss, turpentine, &c., to be thrown from a luortiir into a town, to set fire to buildIt has two or three apertures, from ings. which the fire blazes, and the light sometimes serves as a direction in throwing
combu.stible
other
.substances,
C^ARDIAC, C'ARDIACAL,
i
[h. cardiacus
^
axo{,
from
;
(€>ARDINALIZE, ppr.
To make
t.
a cardinal.
Shddon.
Combing, as
flax,
woo),
&c. I
2.
The
act of plaving at cards. [Little used.]
CARDLNG-MACHiNE, n. A machine lately invented, fcjr combing, breaking and cleansing wool and cotton. It consists of cylinders, thick set with teeth, and moved
^h•. xof&i-
xapSia,
v.
[lAttle used.]
C^ARDING,
the
by die force of water, steam, &.c. n. [Gr. xopito, heart, and nioi, form.] An algebraic curs-e, so called from its resemblance to a heart. Chambers. .shells. It is equipped with pistol-barrels, orating the spirits, and giving strength and CARDITE, 71. Fossil or petrified shells of the genus Cardium. cheerfulness. Mid. Did. Jameson. loaded with jjowder to the muzzle, which n. medicine which excites 71. and A down to as liiirns the CARDI.'\€, [card maker.] explode composition maker of cards. action in the stomach, and animates the them. This instrument is probably named heart.]
1.
2.
Pertaining to the heart. Exciting action in the heart, through the medium of the stomach having the quality of stimulating action in the system, invig;
A
ribs of iron that form it, which the ribs of a Inmian carcass.
from the resemble
e'ARCELA<5E,
Prison fees.
[L. career.]
CARDIALciV, and
A
xapxn'ou, xapxci'o;,
cancer
lurgescnce of the veins of
also, a
;
the eye.
Core.
€ARCINO'MATOUS,
a.
cancer, or tending to
it.
CARD Dan.
;
kort
like a
;
[Fr. cnrh ; Sp. Port. It. carta : Gr. jtaprr; D. kaart ; G. kaiie ; Ir. cairt ; perhaps from bark,
n.
L. charla
L. cortex,
Cancerous
;
;
Ir.
coirt
same
or eair(, or the
root.] 1.
A paper or pasteboard of an oblong figure, on which are painted figures or points
;
2.
3.
is
V.
To
i.
play
much
at cards
;
to
Johnson.
gain.
CARD,
[D. kaard Sw. karda ;
n.
karde ; cardoner
;
G. kardetsche Fr. carde
Dan.
;
Arm.
;
L. caro, id card
;
Ir. cir,
a cumb.
It
seems
and L. carduus, are the same word, and probably tlie plant, tca.sel, is the common original word, or both are from root. The F'rench carde is a card, and the stalks of the artichoke. Artichoke is so that card,
;;
written for cardichoke.] instrument for combing, opening and breaking wool or flax, freeing it from the coarser parts, and from extraneous matter. It is made by inserting bent teeth of wire in a thick piece of leather, and nailing th to a piece of oblong board, to which a handle is attached. CARD, II. t. To comb, or open wool, flax hemp, &c., with a card, for the purpose of
An
it
of extraneous matter, separa-
ting the coarser parts, and and soft for spinning.
CARDAMI\E,n. cresses, or
[Gr.]
cuckow
CARDAMOM, n.
The
making plant,
it
fine
meadow
flower.
A
[Gr. xapSa^uHoi.] plant of the genus Amomum, and its seeds, a native of India. The seeds of this plant,
Vol.
1.
€ARE, Ir.
.\
Encyc.
;
[Sax. car, cnra ; Goth, kar, kara ; L. cura. In Welch, cur is care,
7!.
car
;
also, a blow or beating, a throb ; curaii; to beat, strike or tiirob, to fight ; curiau; to trouble, vex, pine, or waste
anxiety
;
In L. euro signifies to care, and to cure. In Sp. curar is to prescribe medicine ; to salt or cure, as flesh to season, as timl)er ; to bleach, as cloth ; intransi-
away.
;
to recover from sickness; and reIn ciprocally, to take care of one's self. Italian, curare is to cure, attend, protect, tively,
defend, and to value or esteem. In French, " curer les cleanse dens," to ei(7-e is a benefice. The pick the teeth sense to or stretch, as in is, strain, primary care, attention, and curious is stretching forward but the sense of separating, or c»7-fr is to
;
;
;
driving off", is comprehended, which gives the French sense, and the sense of prying into is included in curious. The sense of healing is from that of care, or making sound and strong. The Welch sense of
Spelman.
of the geims Lo-
of many species. They are fibrousrooted perennials, rising from two to five or six feet high, with erect stalks, ornamented with oblong, oval, s))ear-shnped belia,
:
;
A
woman's
cloke. Cardinal-Jfou-ir, a j)lant
en-
; Sp. carda, teasel, and a card Port, carda, a card, and cardo, a thistle ; L. carduus ; It. cardo, a thistle and a card
cleansing
hat. 3.
n.
CARD-TABLE,
;
the gale.
A
in
Addison. [Sp. cardon
L. carduus.] species of Cynara, resembling the artiChambers. choke, but larger. 7i. The table appropriated to the use of gamesters, or used for playing on. cards
containing six bishops, fifty priests, and fourteen deacons, making seventy. These constitute the sacred college, and compose the Pojie's council. Originally they were subordinate in rank to bishops but they have now the precedence. The dress of a cardinal is a red soutaine or cassock, a rocket, a short purple mantle and a red
Pope.
CARD,
melted sulphur.
€ARDOON',
CARDINAL,
tlic like paper with some writin"- upon it, used in messages of civility, or business. The paper on which the points of the compass are marked.
carii, but passion
heart,
also the cardiac passion. a. [L. cardinalis, said to be from cardo, a hinge.] Chief, principal, preeminent, or fundamental ; as the cardinal virtues, which Pagans supposed to be justice, prudence, temperance and fortitude. €'ARDINAL, n. An ecclesiastical prince in the Romish church, who has a voice in the conclave at the election of a Pope, who is taken from their number. The cardinals are divided into three classes or orders,
used in gamts. A blank piece of paper, or
Reason the
[Gr. xop8ia, the
heart-burn, a violent sensation of heat and acrimony in the upper or left orifice of the stomach, seemingly at the heart, but rising into the oesophagus. It is called
[jVo< in use.]
n. [card and match.] match made by dipping pieces of card
€'ARJ)-MATCH, ti.
aj.yo;, jiain.]
The
€'ARCERAL, a. Belonging to a prison. GARCINO'MA, n. [Gr. xapxuwfta, from a cancer.]
CARD-MAKER,
spirits.
Mar. Did.
Encyc. n.
€*ARDI01D,
beating is from driving, thrusting, coinciding with straining. See Carl, and Cure.] Concern sohcitude anxiety noting some degree of jiain in the mind, from apprehension of evil. shall eat bread and with care. They by weight Ezek. iv. a looking to regard attention, 2. Caution Encyc. or heed, with a view to safety or protecCardinal nuinhers, are tlie numbers, one, two, " take care of yourtion, as in the phrase, three, &c., in disiiiirtion i'loiu Jirst, second, self." third. Sec, which are called ordinal numA want of care does more damage than a want bers. of know ledge Franklin Cardinal points, in cosmograjihy, arc the or oversight, implying concern for four intersections of the horizon with the 3. Charge as, he was imder safety and prosperity meridian, and the |)nnie vertical circle, or care of the a physician. In North anARDINALSHIP, dignity of a cardinal. 2. To be inclined or disposed to liave regard simple leaves, and spikes of beautiful monopetalous flowers of scarlet, blue and violet colors. The natives of this country use a decoction of one species, the siphilitica, as a remedy in the venereal disease.
1.
;
;
;
;
;
;
.
.
;
;
<,
;
I
32
CAR
A R
€A'REFyLLY,
before a noun, anil to before a " Not verb. caring to observe the wind." •' Great masters in painting never care for drawing people in the fashion." In thli? sense the word implies a less degree of ii)
\vitli_/br
;
"2.
The different degrees of an,xiety expressed by this word constitute the chief differences in
[care
and
ken or ilisordered by care, or
solicitude
as a care-crazed mother.
Sliak.
care. a.
;
ful.
Wounded
a.
2.
t.
[Fr. carener,
from carene,
tlie
side and keel of a shij), L. carina ; S carenar ; Port, querenar It. carenare.] In sea language, to heave or bring a ship to lie on one side, for the purpose of calking, repairing, cleansing, or paying over Mar. Did. with pitch, the other side. CAREE'N, V. i. To incline to one side, as a Mar. Diet. ship under a press of sail.
1.
Laid on one side
;
side
4.
?(.
The
act of heaving
side, as a shi]). 11. [Fr. carriere
;
A
course
'i.
;
;
a race, or running speed in motion. ;
;
Contrived without
CA'RELESSLY, way
;
Un
of penance by
Dryden. a race is run. Johnson. In the manege, a place inclosed with a barrier, in wliich they run the ring. Encyc. 5. \n falconry, a flight or tour of the hawk about 180 yards. Encyc. CAREE'R, V. i. To move or run rapidly. When a siiip is decked out in all her canvas.
to caress,
.3.
fair
The ground on which
i.
Carious.] n.
A
quadruped of the stag
kind.
CAR'ICA,
The papaw, a
tree bearing a fleshy fruit of the size of a small melon. n. [It. caricatura, formed from carica, a load, caricare, to load. See ?!.
CAR'ICATURE, C'arg'o.]
figure or description in
which beauties are
concealed and blemishes exaggerated, but still bearing a resemblance to the object.
heedlessly
;
CAR'ICATURE,
;
manner iiiatten
;
CAR'ENTANE, A papal indulgence, €ARESS',
honor's
adv. In a careless
negligently
money
n. [Fr. i/uuranlaine, forty.]
career.
in
of
Bp. Taylor,
;
;
Wilkins. Prior General course of action or movement procedure; course of proceeding.
Continue and proceed
art.
;
or
r.
Sec
carg.
Encyc.
;
without care or concern. a rapid CA'RELESSNESS, n. Heedlessness; inattention negligence manner without care.
;
Arm. ;
CAR'IBOO,
A
Done or said without care ; unconsidered as a careless throw a careless expression. Not regarding with care unmoved by
tivelv
runnmg.J rumiing
;
for ; as, careless careless q/'consequences. 5.
;
the good.s, lading or freight of a ship merchandize, or whatever is conveyed in a ship or other merchant vessel. The lading within the hold is called the inboard cargo, in distinction from horses, cattle and other things carried on deck. The person employed by a merchant to proceed witii, oversee and dispose of the lading, is called a supercargo. CARGOOSE, n. A fowl belonging to the genus Colymbus, called the crested diver. The cheeks and throat are surrounded with a long pendant ruff, of a bright The tawny color, edged with black. breast and belly are of a silvery white. It weighs two pounds and a half. CA'RIATED, (7. Carious. [M>tused. See
;
;
;
unconcerned
down
Sp. cnrrera
It is tVoni the Port, carreira ; It. carriera. root of car, and L. curro, from the sense of
1.
;
;
inclining.
;
on one
heedless Having no care negligent inattentive regardless ununthinking mindful followed by of or about; as a a mother careless of or careless mother about her children, is an unnatural parent. Free from care or anxiety whence, luidistnrbed; cheerful. Thus wisely careless, innocently gay.
Pope •3.
CAREE'NING,
;
See Loose.]
/fn(.s.
;
2.
burden, charge
The
;
Heaving down on one
CAREE'R,
caution vigilance, in guardproviding for safety. and less, Sax. leas,
in-
clined.
€AREE'N1NG, ppr.
;
evil, an
;
;
pp.
;
Heedfulness
Goth.
I.
€AREE'NED,
Collier.
Johnson. cautiously. n. An.xiety; solicitude. Drink thy water with trembling and with carefulness. Ezek. xii.
Providently
CA'RELESS,
May.
eAREE'N, V.
manner that shows care. how carefully does it look.
In a
ing against
with
care.
as,
;
Lord. Deut.
to the
CA'REFULNESS,
a.
€A'RE-WOUNDED,
hearken
Eni-y, 4.
;
Bidding defiance to Shenstone. Tuned by care mournSkak.
(JARE-DEFY'ING,
CA'RE-TUNED,
;
Bro
craze.]
tears.
XV. 3.
tions. a.
to load,
Charge.]
Though he sought it carefully with Heb. xii. needfully ; watchfully attentively consider tlie.se precepts carefully. If thou carefully
signification or applica-
its
care, anxiety, or
solicitude.
concern.
CA'RE-CR.\ZED,
CAR
With
adv.
<.
and
multiplying the remiss Taylor.
forties.
[Fr. caresser to cherish ;
;
Arm.
cherifza,
W. caredigatv
;
It.
carezza, flattciy, a caressing ; careggiare to coax, flatter, esteem ; Sp. caricia, caress acariciar, to caress, cherish, fondle Port. id. It may be frfjm the common root i.
caricature the life.
;
v.
To make
t.
to represent as
or draw a more ugly than Lyttelton.
CARICATURIST,
n.
One who caricatures
others.
CARIeOG'RAPHY, ypaijiuj,
n.
or sedge.
Dewei/, Journ. of Science.
CAR'ICOUS,
a.
[L. carica, a fig.]
Resem-
bling a fig; an epithet given to tumors that rescndile a fig, such as occur often in the piles. Encyc.
CA'RIES,
n.
fication of a
[L.]
The
bone
;
corruption or morti-
an ulcerated bone. Coxe.
;
o{h.carus, Vr.
some
To
cher, cherir,
W.car.
But
difliculties attend this hypothesis.]
and
[carex, sedge,
to describe.]
A description of the plants of the genus Carex
CAR'ILLON,
A
httle bell. Also, a [Fr.] simple air in nnisic, adapted to the performance of small bells or clocks. [See Carol.] Busby. )i.
with fondness, affection, or kind to embrace with tender' CAR'INATE, from ca^ " [L. carinatj'S, as a parent a child. South.\ CAR'INATED, ^ rina, a keel.] CARESS', n. An act of endearment; any In botany, shaped like the keel of a ship ; act or expression of affection an embrahaving a longitudinal prominency on the pears Irving back like a keel cing with tenderness as conjugal caresses. applied to a calyx, leaf CAREE'RING, pp. Running or movini Milton. or nectarv. Martyn. with speed. CARESSED, pp. Treated or embraced CARIN'THIN, n. A mineral from CarinFull of a. care CA'REFUL, [See Care.] with affection. thia, regarded as a variety of hornblend. anxious solicitous. Cleaveland. CARESS'ING, ppr. Treating with endeartreat
ness
to fondle
;
affection
;
;
swelled, and careering gayly over the every curling waves, how lofty, how gallant she ap sail
;
!
;
;
;
;
Martha, thou
art
careful and troubled about
tnent, or affection. CARIOS'ITY, n. [See Caries.] Mortifican. [L. caret, there is wantin fro n Wiseman. tion, or ulceration of a bone. Provident attentive to support and pro. CA'RET, carta, to want.] CA'RIOIiS, a. Mortified; corrupted; ulor with tect; for. of In writing, this mark a, which shows that cerated as a bone. JViseman. Thou hast been careful for us with all care omitted in the fine, is interlined CARK, n. [W. care, care, restraint something, carcar, 2 Kings iv. a prison, L. career ; Sax. cearc, care above, or inserted in the margin, and WTiat could a careful father more have done. should be read in that place. cearcian, to cark, to creak, to grumble. Dryden The primary sense is, to straiit.] In present usage careful is generally fol-: C~ARGASON, n. A cargo ; which see. Howell. Care; anxiety; concern; sohcitude dislowed by of; as, careful o/ health. tress. Obs. cautious giving good heed CARGO, 71. [W. farg-, aload, caj-ofu, to load, 3. Watchful Sidney. from car, a vehicle Port, cargo, Sp. car- CARK, r. i. To be careful, anxious, solicitas, be careful to maintain good works Obs. be careful of your conversation. ous, concerned. go, a load, bmden, charge ; Sp. cargo, s Sidtuy. load 4. Filling with care or solicitude cargazon, id. cargar, to loatl, to CARKING, pp. Distressing; perplexing; exposing Obs. to concern, anxiety or trouble full of charge ; It. carico, a load or charge ; caricgiving anxiety. to jj. to Fr. ciirl. a whence care.s. are, load, charge ; [Sax. cnr/, male, cargaison, a CARLE, Raised to a careful height. Shak The word signifies pricargo ; charge, a charge or load Carolus, Charles. charger
many
tJ.
things.
Luke
x.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
CAR
CAR VVlience the Englisii, carl-cat, and carl-hemp ; house-carl, a domestic servant Ger. kerl, a fellow kerl-
piece of timber in a ship, ranging fore and 1. Pertaining to flesh fleshly sen.sual ; opaft, from one
for food, as the lion, tiger, dog, wolf, &c. n. [Fr. carnosite, from L.
;
;
CARNOS'ITY,
;
;
;
CARLISH, CARLISHNESS.
[See Churl
CARNALITE,
n.
A
worldly-minded
man
Anderson. n. Fleshly lust, or desires, or the indulgence of those lusts; sensu-
ish.]
C'ARLOCK, n. A sort of isinglass from Rus- CARNAL'ITY, made of the sturgeon's bladder, and used in clarifying wine. Encyc. LOT, n. countryman. [See Carle. .Yot i(.?frf.] Shak.
sia,
A
CAR
Pertaining to Charas the Carlovingian race of
CARLOVIN'CilAN, lemagne
;
a.
kings.
A
n. [car and man.] man whose employment is to drive a cart, or to con-
€'ARMAN,
vey goods and other things in a cart. I "' Belonging to the order of Carmelites. \
€'ARMELIN, €'ARMELITE,
ffeever.
Monnt Carmel.] A The Carmelites have and they have now thirty-eight
CARMELITE, mendicant four tribes,
n.
[from
friar.
besides the congregation in which are fifty-four monastea vicar general, and the conof barefooted Carmelites in Itgregations ])roviiices,
Mantua,
in
ries, tinder
and S])ain. They wear a scapulary, or small woolen habit, of a brown color, thrown over the shoulders. Encyc. aly
•
A sort of pear. CARMIN'ATIVE,
2.
a.
[Fr. carminatif; Sp. carminativo, from carminar, to expel wind backward, from L. carmino, to card or tease.]
Expelling wind from the body warming antispasmodic. CARMIN'ATIVE, n. A medicine, which tends to expel wuid, or to remedy colic
and
flatulencies.
;
sual pleasnre.-i.
CARNALIZE,
v. t.
Tillotson
To make
carnal
;
base to carnality. Scott In a carnal manner; according to the flesh in a manner to gratify the flesh or sensual desire. Lev. .xviii.
CARNALLY, adv.
;
20.
Rom.
viii. 6.
a.
and cochineal jiow-| crimson, and chermes)
;
Ar.
>^J-'
a.
:
of Spain, Italy, and the Levant. It is an evergreen, growing in hedges, and jiroducing long, flat, brown-colored pods, filled with a mealy, succulent pulp, of a sweetish taste. Iji times of scarcity, these pods are eaten by poor people, but they are apt to cause griping and lax bowels. Miller.
CARO'CIIE,
€ARNAL-MINDEDNESS,
CARO CUED,
It is
A
Burton. Placed in a caroche.
a.
Beaum.
CAR'OL,
».
carola
[It.
dance
coroll, a
W.
;
\V.
;
cor.
carawl ; Arm. Corn, karol, a
choir.]
A song of ;
joy and exultation a song of deor a song in general. ;
Dryden. Spenser. Bacon. Milton. carolare
ti. i.
;
;
;
A
A
CARNELIAN, rina.]
.\
sihceous stone, a variety of chalcedony, of dee]) red, flesh-red, or reddish white color. It is tolerably hard, cajiable of a good pohsh, and used for seals. a
CARNEOUS,
a.
[L.
cameus, from
caro,
[Gr. xapunSn.] The carotid body, are two arteries, the which convey the blood from the aorta to the head and brain. The ancients supi)osed drowsiness to be seated Gr. xopoj. in these arteries.
CAROTID,
a.
arteries, in the
right
and
left,
CAROL'S' A L,
71.
« as z.
the
;
eat.
feast or festival. But in America
it
A
[See Carouse.] Johnson.
signifies a noisy drink-
ing bout, or reveling.
having the qualities of flesh. Ray. n. A disease of horses, in which is so furred that tliey cannot Chambers.
mouth
€ARNIFl€A'TION,
n.
[Infra.]
A
turning Chambers. €".\RMFy, v.i. [from L. caro,camis, flesh.] To form flesh ; to receive flesh in growth. though
used by painters in miniature, ou account of its great price.
Encyr.
See Car.]
n. [It. carrozza.
carriage of pleasure.
More. Crossness of
CARNEY,
])o«der or i)igment, of a beautiful red or crimson color, bordering on purple, and
[Sec Cameout.]
Fleshj-.
CAR'OB, 77. [Sp. algarroba It. carruba.] The carob-tree, Ceratonia siliqua, a native
^V. caroli ; Arm. CAR'OL, ; [It. n. carolli, to dance, to sing love songs.] mind. Ellis. To sing to warble ; to sing in joy or fesPrior. Shak. €ARN.\^TION, n. [Fr. carnation, the naked tivity. part of a picture, flesh color ; It. incarna CAR'OL, V. t. To praise or celebrate in song. lino ; carnagione, complexion Sp. car Milton. naztt ; I'tM't. curnaz ; from L. caro, flesh.] n. [from Carolus, Char]cs U.] 1. Flesh color the parts of a picture which CAROLI'NA, The name of two of the Atlantic States are naked, or without drapery, exhibiting in North America, called North CaroUna the natural color of the flesh. Encyc. and South Carolina. 2. of so named geinis plants, Dianthus, from the color of the flower. Anion, CAR'OLING, n. song of praise or devotion. these are the clove-gilliflowcr, sweet-wilSpenser. CAROLIN'L\N, a. Pertaining to Carolina. liam, Imlian piid\, &c. CARNA'TIONED, a. Made like carnation CAROLIN'IAN, )i. A native or inhabitant of Carolina. color. n. [Fr. cornaline; Sp. coraf- CAR'OMEL, n. The smefl exlialed by su[/>p. gar, at a calcining heat.
Fleshy kirmiz, kir-
mi/on, a berry, and an insect, used in dye-
rarely,
fleshy excrescence in the urethra, the
Worldly-minded.
flesh.]
A
little
neck of the bladder, &c.
C^ARNOFS,
;
carmesi, It. chcnnisi,
;
cochineal, kemies
caro, flesh.]
votion
CARNAL-MINDED,
[Fr. ;
A
to de-
It.
root as crimson
der
Crossness of mind or desire
Encyc. Cleaveland. carmin ; Sp. carmin : carminio ; from the samel Carnel-u-ork, in ship-building, is the putting together the tind)ers, beams and i)lauks, Port, carmesim, crimson as distinguished from clinch-work. Encyc. crimson
ARiMINE,_ H. I'on. cannim ; .Sp.
South. love of sen-
ality. 2.
:
;
t
:
;
or
linguc]
\
A
'
;
Tusser.
act like
Burton.
C'ARLiNE, r/ARLING,
CAR
prepared by dissolving cochineal in an al CARNIVAL, } ^ [Sp. Port, carnaval f Fr. kaline lye, and precipitating it by alum. camaval ; It. carr.ovale CARNAVAL, from L. core, flesh.] Encyc. JVichol.ion. €'ARNAuE, Ji. [Fr. carnage ; Sp. carniceria, The feast or season of rejoicing, before Lent, and It. shambles in Catholic countries, with great carnage, observc'd, carnaggio flesh-meat, and carnaccia, carrion Port solemnity, by leasts, balls, operas, concamagem; from L. caro, flesh.] certs, &c. Encyc. 1. Literally, flesh, or heaps of flesh, as in CARNI VORACITY,)!. [Infra.] Greediness shambles. of a|)petite for flesh. Pope. 2. Slaughter great destruction of men CARNIVOROUS, a. [L. caro, flesh, and havock massacre. voro, to eat.] Hayward. CARNAL, a. [Fr. charnel; L. carnaiis, from Eating or feeding on flesh an epithet apcaro, flesh.] plied to animals which naturally seek flcsli
to flesh.
Hale.
CAROUSE, drinking. this
word.
V. i.
I
carouz'. [Fr. carrouse, hard not the real original of
know
In Per*-
jj-f
karoz signifies
In Germ. hiliarity, singing, dancing. rauschen signifies to rush, to fuddle. In Ir. craosal is drunkenness, from craos, excess, revelling.] drink hard ; to guzzle.
To
In the U. States,
n. carouz'.
A
drinking match
fit
2.
field.
;
is used in a like sense. a hearty drink or full draught of hquor a Carpel-monger €'ARPET, V. t. To cover with a carpet; to noisy drinking match. Bacon. Derham. pread with carpets. OAROUS'ER, n. A drinker; a toper; a noiCARPETED, pp. Covered with a carpet. sy reveler, or bacchanalian. n. Cloth for carpets; carCAROUri'lNG, ppr. Drinking hard; rev- CARPETING, ;
pets in general.
eling.
CARP,
V. i.
It.
[L. carpo, to seize, catch, pick ; or ; Sp. Port, carpir, to tear
carpire See Carve.] scratch.
or to pick. Literally, to snap or catch at, Hence, to censure, cavil, or find fault, paror petulantly ticularly without reason, followed by at. No, not a tooth or nail to scratch
And
C ARP.
walk on smooth
Caviling
Evelyn. captious censo-
n.
turf
CARPING, jo/)r.
;
my actions
;
made
A
n.
A
said to be fi-om it
was
first
short piece of ordnance, having a large caliber, and a chamber for the powder, This species of cannon is like a mortar. carried on the upper works of ships, as the poop and forecastle, and is very useful in close
a carp-
kind of coarse cloth
North of England.
in the
[It is
ti.
made.]
engagements.
Mar. Diet. Encyc. In London, a rent received Ash. of driving a cart. Tooke, Russ. species of cherry.
Camden.
ing manner.
€'ARPMEALS,
;
a.
Cairon, in Scotland, where
a cavil;
in
woman a term of reproach. Shak. Relating to dead and putrefying carcasses feeding on carrion, as a carrion-crow. Shak. worthless
Herbert. carp and catcli. n. [Fr. Port, carpe ; Sp. carpa ; It at
A
CARPE'l"-WALK,
flesh so corrupted as to be unfor food. Dryden. Pope,
animals
or luxury, enjoys ease and security, and has not known the hardships of tlie
who
be noisy, as bacchana-
lians.
CAROUSE,
CAR
CAR
CAR to signifies also
it
CARROON',
77.
for the privilege
Phillips.
€'ARPOLITE, n. [Gr. xoprtos, fruit, and 2. ?.tSo5, stone.] €AR'ROT, 77. [It. carota; Fr.carotte; Low Petrified fruits, of which the most remarkaL. carota.] L. carpio, from carjM, to sieze.] An esculent root, of the genus Daucus, culA fish, a species of cijprijius, an excellent fish ble are nuts converted into silex. These fishes breed rapidly, €ARPOL'Ot;IST, n. [Gr. xaprtoj, fruit, and tivated for the table and for cattle. for ponds. fruits. who describes to a great One Uve and to a. Like a carrot in color ; an a to size, €AR'ROTY, speak.] xtyu, large grow Enciie. €ARP0L'0GY, n. [Supra.] description epithet given to red hair. age. Per71. In Ireland, people who wana. [L. carpus, the wrist.] of fruits. Cyc. n. [L.] The wrist, but not an der about and get their living by cards and Ena/c. taining to the wrist. word. dice ; strollinggamesters. Spenser. CARPA'THIAN, a. Pertaining to the Car-
A
Russ. karp ; D. carpione ; Arm. carpen ; S\v. karj) karper ; G. karpftii ; Dan. karpe ;
Low
A
CAR'ROWS,
CARPAL,
CARPUS,
I
English
of mountains between Popates, a range land, Hungary and Transylvania. CARPENTER, n. [Fr. charpentier ; Sp. It. caipen carpintcro; Port. carpeiUeiro ; or coach-maker; L. tiere, a cart-wright,
eAR'RAWAY, CARRIABLE,
from carpentuin, a chariot.] Vn artificer who works in timber ; a frame and builder of houses, and of ships. Those who build houses are called house-carpenwho build ships are called ters, and those
See Cany.]
[jVbt
ship-carpenters.
made
New England, a distinction is often between the man who frames, and the
Ji.
The art of cutting,
and joining timber, of buildings
;
English carry coincides also with the Latin our vulgar kerry ; for the sense of behavior can hardly proceed from the moving of a wheel-carriage, nor indeed can some other senses of this word. But the primary sense, in both cases, is to move.] To bear, convey, or transport, by sustain-
gero,
;
Knolles.
1.
either ing and movuig the tiling carried, by bodily strength, upon a beast, in a veIn Iiicle, or in any kind of water-craft. the general, it implies a moving from a speaker or the place present or near, to and so is opposed to place more distant, bring and fetch, and it is often followed by
;
4.
fram-
word.] &c 1. A covering for floors, tables, stairs, This covering is usually made of wool, wrought with a needle, or more generally of other made in a loom, but is sometimes materials. The manufacture is of Asiatic been introduced into many origin, but has and into the U. States. parts of Europe, as 2. Level ground covered, as with grass a grassy carpet ; a carpet of green grass. Shak. Ray. To be on the carpet, is to be under consideration to be the subject of deliberation. The French phrase,
That which is carried burden ; as bag&c. gage, vessels, furniture, And David left his carriage in the hands of the kecjuT of the carriage. 1 Sam. xvii.
;
the hke sense.
knight
from, away,
;
6.
[Little used.] In a moral sense, tiie
one's self
behavior
;
He
When he
Spenser.
manner of carrying conduct
;
;
7.
dieth,
77.
2.
carry a fortified
of]
Who.^e wills
;
to carry cupation ed a common carrier
To
A
putrefying
;
to carry a prize
town by
will
carry
force of
air. ;
to
meas;
to
arms
;
it. it
over the
rest.
bear out
If a
man
to face through. ; carries it off, there is so
nnnh mon-
ev saved. 5.
L'Estrange. urge, impel, letid or draw, noting morimpulse. Pride or passion will carry a man to great
To al
lengths.
for others, call-
goods a porter. ; pigeon that conveys letters from place to i>hice, the letters being tied to the neck. €AR'RION, n. [It. carogna ; Sp. carroiia Fr. charogne ; Arm. caronn ; D. karonje.] The dead ami body or flesh of
3.
bosoniv
Locke. Burke.
In a ship, the bilts JMar. Diet
[See Carry.] One who carthat which carries or conveys also ries a messenger. One who is employed to carry goods fur others for a reward ; also, one whose ocis
his
as, to carry a point,
sometimes followed by
71.
;
in
carry nothing away,
;
;
ure, or resolution
which support the windlass.
€AR'RIER,
Iambs
shall
;
knot.
CAR'RICK-BITTS,
the
he
;
gain the object
Shak.
kind
out.
carry
To convey as, sound is carried in the To effect to accomplish to prevail
3.
;
€AR'RIBOO. [See Cariboo.] €AR'RICK-BEND, 71. A particular
off,
Ps. xlix. 2.
deport-
ment personal manners. Bacon. Dryden Measures practices management. ;
shall
l3. xl.
;
;
a
signify primarily to cari7
That which carries, especially on wheels; a vehicle. This is a general term for a coach, chariot, chaise, gig, sulkey, or other vehicle on wheels, as a cannon-carriage on trucks, a block-carriage for mortars, and a truck-carriage. Appropriately the word is and carts and wagapplied to a "coach ons are rarely or never called carriages. The price or expense of carrying.
divided into house-car-
is
These verbs ; G.karren. on a cart or car, and are evidently from the noun. But the Sw.kiora
kiiirer;
;
Obs.
acquisition. 3.
in the construc-
Shakspeare,
;
from char[Fr. charriage, carreggio, or carriaggio
It.
;
Bacon. The act of taking by an enemy conquest
2.
;
in
V. t. [W. canaw, from car, a dray, chardrag, or wagon Fr. charrier ; Arm. reat or charreein ; Sp. acarrear ; Dan.
€AR'RY,
;
pentry and ship-carpentry. CARPER, n. One who carps a cavilcr. CARPET, n. [I know not the origin of this
Carjiet-knight,
of apple. Mason. That may be carried. Sherwood.
The act of carrying, bearing, transporting, or conveying as the carnage of sounds
The word performed by the same person. to is never applied, as in Italy and Spain, a coach-maker. ing, tion
«.
rier, to carrj
man who executes the interior wood-work of a house. The framcr is the carpenter, and the finisher is called a joiner. This and distinction is noticed by Johnson, seems to be a genuine English distinction. But in some other parts of America, as ni New-York, the term carpenter includesj both the fraincr and the joiner ; and in truth both branches of business are often
CARPENTRY,
a.
use.']
€AR'R1AGE,
earpentarius,
In
171
A kind
n.
Men
are carried away with imaginary prosSee Eph. iv. 14. Heb. xiii. 9. bear to have. In some vejrctables, we see something that
pects. 6.
7.
To
;
Hale. carries a kind of analosy to .sense. bear ; to show, display or exhibit to
To
view.
CAR The
CAR
aspect of every one in the family carries
trade, the trade
C A
R
which
consists in €'ARTEL, V. i. To B. Jonson. defy. Ohs. the transportation of n. The man who drives a goods by water from 8. To imply or import. cart, country to country, or place to place. or whose To quit former tenets carries an imputation occupation is to drive a cart. We are rivals with them in navigation and the a. cartezhun. of ignorance. CARTE'SIAN, Locke. Pertaining to carrying trade. Federalist, Jay the 9. To contain or comprise. philosopher Des Cartes, or to his phiwind, among horsemen, is a tossHe thought it carried something of argument Carrying losophy, which taught the doctrine of voring ol'the nose, as high as the horse's ears, texes round the sun and ijlanets. in it, to prove that doctrine. Watts. Encyc. CARTE'SIAN, „. One who 10. To extend or continue in time, as to adopts the tale-bearer. CAR'RY-TALE, n. [At philosophy of Des Canes. cany a historical account to the first ages ""frf-] Shale. of the world but usually with a parti€ARTHAGIN'IAN, a. Pertaining to an n. [W. cart ; Sax. €'ART, crat Ir. crret, ; cient Carthage, a celebrated cle, as to carr^ up or carry back, to carry' cairt ; Kuas. karet. city on the See Car.] Northern Coast of Africa, about twelve forward. 1. carriage with two wheels, fitted to he 11. To extend in space, as to miles from the modern Tunis. It was carry a line drawn by one horse, or by a yoke of oxen, or a boundary founded by the Phenicians, and or in a moral sense, as and used in husbandry or commercial citdestroyed to carry ideas very far. by the Romans. ies for carrying heavy commodities. In 12. To support or sustain. n. An inhabitant or CARTHAGINIAN, Gieat Britain, carts are usually drawn by native of Bacon. Carry camomile on sticks. Carthage. liorses. In America, horse-carts are used 13. To bear or produce, as trees. C-ARTHAMUS, ji. The generic name of mostly in cities, and ox-carts in the counSet them a rea.sonabIe depth, and they will Bastard Saffron. [See Snfflower.] try. Bacon. carry more shoots upon the stem. n. caHhiizhun. CARTHUSIAN, One of 2. 14. To manage or transact, carriage in genera). an order of monks, so called from Charusually with on ; as, to carry on business. Temple. Dryden. the treuse, place of their instituticm. Thev V. t. To 15. To carry one's or €^ART, on to a cart conduct or carry ; convey self, behave, are remarkable for their austerity. Thoy as, to cart hay. demean. cannot go out of their cells, except to He carried Awnse// insolently. Clarendon. 2. To expose in a cart, by way of puiiisi church, nor speak to any person without ment. Sometimes with it ; as, he carried it high. 'ei've. Ena/e. 16. To remove, lead or drive. €'AllTAuE, n. The act of carrying in a CARTILAGE, 7!. [h. caHilago ; Fr. carliU And he carried away all his catde. Gen. cart, or the price paid for carting. I age. suspect this and the English grisxxxi. C'AIIT-BOTE, n. In English law, wood to tle to be the same word the r 17. To remove ; to cause to being transwhich a tenant is entitled for go. making and posed, caHil fijr crulil.] And the king of Assyria did carry away Israel repairing carts and other instruments of Gristle a to Assyria. 2 smooth, solid, elastic substance, Kings xviii. fiusbaiidry. softer than bone, of a 18. To transport to affect with extraordipearly color and C'ARTKD, pp. Borne or exposed in a cart. homogeneous texture, without cells or nary iin|)ressions on the mind. Rev. xvii horse that draws a €'ART-lIORSE, n. cavities. It is invested with a 19. To fetch and bring. particular carl. satisfaction.
Addison.
Carrying
CARTER,
A
;
A
;
A
;
;
;
A
membrane cuHed perichondrium, which in the articular cartilages, is a reflexion of the synovial membrane. Cyc. JVistar. €"ARTING, n. The act of carrying in a cart. the ledger. CART-JADE, n. A sorry horse a horse CARTILAGINOUS, a. Pertaining to or War was to be diverted from Greece by a cartilage ; gristly being used in drawing, or fit resembling lor the carried into Asia. cart. consisting only Young whelps
20.
To
learn easily to carry.
Ascliam.
transfer
;
to carry
as,
an account
CARTING, a cart.
ppr. Conveying or exposing in
to
;
;
CART-LOAD,
carry on, to promote, advance, or help forward to continue ; as, to carry on a design ; to carry on the administration of
€'ART-ROPE,
;
grace.
To manage
'J.
or prosecute
;
as, to carry
on
husbandry.
To
prosecute, continue or pursue carry on trade or war.
;
carry through, to siijiport to the end to sustain or keep from failing, or being sub-
n.
2.
n. A rope for binding hay, or other articles on a cart. n. The cut or track of a cartwheel. [See Route.]
CART-RUT,
€\'\RT-TIRE,
as, to €>
To
A
load borne on a cart; as much as is usually carried at once on a cart, or as is sufficient to load it.
by
To
3.
of cartilage.
Mitford. carry coals, to bear injuries. Mason. carry off, to remove to a distance ; also, to kill, as to bo carried off sickness.
To To
The
«.
tire,
or iron bands,
used to bind the wheels of a cart.
ART- WAY,
A way
that
is or may be passed with carts, or o"ther wheel carria)i.
;
dued. Grace
man through all difficul"^^' Hammond. To carry out, to bear from within also, to sustam to the end to continue to the end. will car)-y a
;
;
To
bony
ges.
€' ART-
WHEEL,
makes
The wheel of a
n.
€'ART-WRiGHT,
n.
An
artificer
who
carts. j
carry away, in seamanship, is to break to carry sail till a spar breaks as, to cami mission to superscribe what conditions he aivay a fore-topmast. Ena/c. CAR'RY, r. i. To run on rotten ground, or €> pleases. n. ARTEL, [It. cartelloi Fr.Sp. Port, caron frost, which sticks to the as a hare. feet, tel; from h. chnrtula.] Johnson. 1. o I , writing or agreement between states at J. 10 bear the iiead in a particular manner war, for the exchange of prisoners, or for as a horse. When a horse holds his head some mutual advantage; also, a vessel emhigh, with an arching neck, he is said to to convey the messenger on this When he lowers his head too ployed carry well. occasion. much, he is said to carnj low. 2. A letter of defiance or challenge ; a chal3. To convey to propel as, a gun or morto combat. This sense the lenge single tar carncs well; but this is word has still in France and €AR'K\ ING, ppr. Bearing, elliptical. Italy; but with us it is obsolete. conveying, re&c. moving, Carhi-ship, is a ship employed in the exCAR'RYING, n. A bearing, eonvevine, " " re change of prisoners, or in carrying propoi moving, transporting. ;
T
1
;
;'
sitions to
an enemv.
Encyc. n.
Fr. carlon
[It. ;
Ed. Encyc.
cartone, paste-board; chaiia, paj)er.]
from L.
In painting, a design drawn on strong paper, to be afterward calked through and transferred on the fresh plaster of a wall, to be painted in fresco. Also, a design colored for working in Mosaic, tapestry &c.
CART6UCH',
n. [Fr. caHouche ; Sp,"^aX cho ; Port, cartiiio ; It. cartuccia, a cartridge, a bit of paper, from carta,
A
.
>
S|).
[Fr. white paper.] A blank' paper, signed at the bottom with a per-' son's name, and sometimes sealed with his seal, given to another person with per-
Carte-blanche.
rays.
C.VRTOON',
cart
Hay.
In ichthyology, cartilaginous fishes are those whose muscles are supported bv cartilages instead of bones, or whose skefeton is cartilaginous. Many of these are as the ray and'shark, whose viviparous, young are excluded from an egg hatched within them. Others are oviparous, as the sturgeon. Some of them have no cillcovers, but breathe through ajjcrtures^ on the sides of the neck or top of the head; others have gill-covers, but destitute of
paper.]
.
A case of wood, about three inches thick at the bottom, ejrt with marlin, holdintr about four himdred musket balls, and six or eight iron balls of a pound wein-ht, to be fired out of a howitz, for defending a A cartouch is sometimes made of a imss. globular form, and filled with a ball of a pound weight and .sometimes for gun* being of a ball of a half or quarter of a pound weight, tied in the fiirm of a bimch ot grapes, ona tompion of wood and coat«• °^''^'Encyc. :
CAR A
CAS
portable box for charges.
CAS
round with any material that shall inclose cutting in stone, wfood or metal appor or defend. tioning distributing. ridge-Vox.'] 2. To put in a case or box. roll or scroll on the cornice of a column €'ARVING, n. The act of cutting, as meat 3. the act or art of cutting figures in wood 3. To atrip off" a case, Coles. covering, or the skin. or stone sculpture n. [a corruption ofcartouch. Shak. figures carved. [Unusual.] ) In architecture, fig CASE, )i. [Fr. ens; it. caso ; case of pasteboard or parchment, hold €ARYA'TES, Sp. Port, ca^o ; or ures of women dress Ir. of and cas L. the from CARYAT'IDES, casus, S powder powder ca^o, to fall.] ing charge ed in long robes, after the Asiatic manner 1. Literally, that which falls, comes, or hapball, for a cannon, ninrtar, musket or pis tol. The cartridges for small arms, pre serving to support entablatures. The Athepens; an event. Hence, the particular nians had been long at war with the Carystate, condition, or circumstances that bepared for battle, contain the powder and ans the latter being at length vanquished fall a person, or in which he is ball those for camion and mortars arc placed as, and their wives led captive, the Greeks, t( made of paste-board, or tin. Cartridges, make the case your own this is the case with my friend this is his present case. without balls, are c.illed blank cartridges. perpetuate this event, erected tro]>hies, in which figures of women, dressed in the 2. The state of the body, with respect to n. case, usually of health or disease as a case of fever he Caryatic manner, were used to support wood, covered with leather, with cells for entablatures. Other female figures were is in a consumptive case ; his case is desIt is worn upon a belt thrown cartridges. afterwards used in the same manner, but over the left shoulder, and hangs a little perate. To be in good case, is to be fat, and thLs below the pocket-hole on the right side. they were called by the same name.
'J.
[See Cart-
;
;
A
;
CARTRIDGE, A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
A
CARTRIDGE-BOX,
;
€ ARTULARY, tulario
A
from
;
n. [Fr. carlidaire carta, pajjcr.]
;
Sp. car-
Encyc. from Curya, a Peloponnesus, which sided with the Persians, and on that account was sacked by the other Greeks, its males but chered, and its females reduced to slavery.
They were
papers.
CAR'U€ATE,
n.
[L.
As much
cariua.]
land as one team can plow in the year.
Cyc. CARYAT'Ie, a. Pertaining to the Carya'ns or Carvatides.
Kelham. €ARYOPHYL'LEOUS,n.[Gr.xo|nor,anut and ^i'aXoi/, a leaf] Having five petals with from caro,
Eng. Law.
CAR'UNCLE,
11.
[L. caruncula,
long claws, in a tubular caly.x flowers.
flesh.]
A small fleshy excrescence, either natural Coxe. qr morbid. 2. The fleshy condj on the head of a fowl. €ARUNe'ULAR, a. In the form of a ca1.
CARYOPH'YLLOID, clove-gilliflower.
A species
a.
Having a
fleshy
excrescence, or soft fleshy protuberance. II.
D. kerven
;
t.
&arv. [Sax. ceorfan, cearfan
;
)i.
nearly synonymous with cause, whose is nearly the same. In grammar, the inflection of nouns, or a change of termination, to express a difference of relation in that word to others, or to the thing represented. The variation of nouns and adjectives is called declension both case and declension signifying falling or leaning from the first state of the word. Thus, liber is a book libri, of a book libro, to a book. In other words, case denotes a variation in the termination of a noun, to show how the noun acts upon the verb with which it is connected, or is acted upon by it, or by an agent. The cases, except the nominative, are called ob;
JV^icholson.
Sp.
;
is
applied to Eaton.
;
;
A
primary sense
Infra.]
[Port, cascavcl
in e.x-
5.
;
A
11.
men,
;
;
Encyc.
eASCABEL,
to be
customarily abridged,
apjilied to beasts, but not to
A
4.
xapvo^v'K'Ko,,.
Cronsledt.
;
G.kerben; Dan.karver; h.car-
[Gr.
;
cept in a sense rather ludicrous. question a state of facts involving a question for discussion or decision as, the lawyer stated the case. cause or suit in court as, the eowe was tried at the last term. In this sense, case
3.
fowl of the genus ,/lnas. called also ruddy-goose, larger than a mallard, founil in Russia and Siberia.
€ASARC'A,
Encyc.
€'ARVE,
case
of mica, the scales of which are concentric and perpendicular. Obs.
runcle.
€ARUN€'ULATED,
n.
is
phrase
called Caryatides,
city in the
register-book, or record, as of a monastery. Blackstonc writes it chartulary ; and primarily it signifies the otlicer who bus the care of charters and other public
;
ciis-
a little bell, a button or knob at tlic end of a cannon.] The knob or puminelique cases. and Ch. lion of a cannon. Mar. Did. In case, is a phrase denoting condition or 1. To cut into small pieces or slices, as meat CVSCA'DE, 11. [Fr. cascade ; Sp. cascada supposition literally, in the event or conat table. It. cascata, from cascare, to fall.] tingency if it should so fall out or happen. 2. To cut wood, stone or other material into A waterfall a steep fall or {lowing of wa Put the ca3e, supi>ose the event, or a certain some particular form, with an instrument, tcr over a precipice, in a river or natural state of things. stream or an artificial fall in a garden Action on the case, in law, is an action in usually a chisel to engrave to cut figures or devices on hard materials. The word is apphed to falls that are less which the whole cause of complaint is set tlian a catai'act. out in the writ. make Blackstone. To or 3. shape by cutting as, to carve an image. CASCAL'HO, n. [Port.] In Brazil, a de- CASE, V. i. To put cases. [JVot in use.] to distribute 4. To apportion to provide posit of pebliles, gravel and sand in which UEsfrange. the diamond is usually found. to select and take, as to one's at )ileasure CA'SED, pp. Covered with a case. Port. Diet. Cleaveland. self, or to select and give to another. CASE-HARDEN, i'. t. To harden the outer South. €ASE, )i. [Fr. caisse ; Sp. Port, cuxa, a box part or superficies, as of iron, by convertor chest It. cassa ; D. kas ; Dan. kasse. "). To cut to hew. Shak. ing it into steel. This may be done by The French caisse is the Sp. eaxa. The To carve out, is to cut out, or to lay out, by putting the iron into an iron box, with a a seems to d be a to caieta, Spanish gasket, plan. design ; cement, and exposing it, for some hours, of and if tlie fact rivative indicates c«.nx, so, to a red heat. CARVE, V. i. c'arv. To cut up meat folEncyc. that caxa is from an oriental loot, signifylowed sometimes by for ; as, to carve for The €A'SEIC, a. [L. caseus, cheese.] all the guests. ing to tie or bind, and that tlje word oricaseic acid is the acid of cheese, or a sub2. To exercise the trade of a sculptor. ginally denoted a bag made of skin, like a stance so* called, extracted from cheese. a basket or made of o.siers 3. To engrave or cut figures. bottle, piterpo.
See Ar.
ma
,_,
and
cabel,
Heb. rjin Oj.~i, Class Rb. No. 26. 27. 30.] ~,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
CARVE,
71.
A
Proust.
carucate. [jVot in use.]
pp. Cut or divided formed by carving.
€"ARVED,
;
;
1.
CARVEL, 2.
€
n. [See Caravel.] Tlie urtica marina, or sea blubber. ARVER, 11. One who cuts meat at table a sculptor; one who apportions or distrib- 2. utes at will, or one who takes or gives at 3. ;
pleasure.
Dnjden.
like fsc, fseus. Qu. Syr. j^jali casha, to bind or tie.] A covering, box or sheath that which incloses or contains; as a case lor knives: a case for books a watch case ; a printer's case ; a pillow case.
woven,
engraved
Shak.
;
71.
A large
table knife, often
kept in a case.
CA'SEM.VTE, matta
;
Sji.
71. [Fr. casemate; It. casaPort, casamata ; from casa, a
;
The
A
outer
certain
])art
of a building. Addison. as a case of cro\
quantity
;
glass.
A large table knife for carving. 4. A building unfurnished. CARVING, ppr. Cutting, dividing, as meat CASE, r. To cover with
2.
;
€.\SE-KNIFE,
t.
[JVbt used.] a case ; to sur-
house.] 1.
1\\ fortification, a vault of mason's work in the flank of a bastion, next to the curtain, somewhat inclined toward the capital of the bastion, serving as a battery to defend the face of the opposite bastion, and the Cliambers moat or ditch.
A
well, with its subterraneous branches, thig in the passage of the bastion, till the miner is heard at work, and air given to
the mine.
•CASHIR'RED,
n.
dis
rejects,
as a cashierer of monBurke. ppr. Discarding ; dismiss-
archs.
CASHIE'RING,
house.]
One who
n.
cards or breaks
casamento, a large
[It.
;
A hollow molding, usually one sixth or ing from service. one fourth of a circle. Encyc. CASH'OO, n. The juice or gum of a tree n the East Indies. 2. A little movable window, usually within a larger, made to turn and open on hinges. CA'SING, ppr. Covering with a case. Encyc. CA'SING, 71. The act or operation of plasLike a. CA'SEOUS, [L. caseus, cheese.] tering a house with mortar on the outside, cheese having the qualities of cheese. and striking it while wet, by a ruler, with €AS'ERN, H. [Fr. caserne ; Sp. caserna, from the corner of a trowel, to make it resemble the joints of free-stone. casa, a shed or house.] Encyc. 1.
;
A
lodging for soldiers in garrison towns, usually near the rampart, containing each beds. Encyc. CASE-SHOT, n. Musket balls, stones, old
two
iron,&c., put in cases, to be discharged fron)
A covering a CASK, n. [Sp.
2.
A worm
n.
a case.
itself
€ASH,
[Fr. caisse
»!.
;
makes
that
Johnson. Sp. Port, caxa, a
See Case.] Money primarily, ready money, money in chest or on hand, in bank or at conunanc" but since It i.s properly silver and gold
.\
CASK,
;
of bank.*,
commodities, or labor, as
CASH,
V.
t.
change for an order. 2.
To turn money
To pay money
for
into
butt, barrel,
in
goods,
in barter.
money, or
to ex-
in furling.
as, to cash a note or
;
;
as,
the clerks of a
This
C^ASKET,
Mercanlile usage. t.
t>.
To
discard,
CAS'SIMER,
j;.
t.
To
put in a
little
twilled
[for cashier.
J^'ot
n. An account of money received, paid, or on hand. CASH'-BOOK, n. A book in which is kept a register or account of money. €ASH'-KEEPER, n. One entrusted with the keeping of money. CASII'EW-NUT, n. A tree of the West-
CASH- ACCOUNT',
Sea.
quash
t'.
;
[Fr. casser, L.
t.
to defeat
used.]
CASS'ADA,
^
A
;
quasso.]
to annul.
[JVol
To
and
full
of an acid
juice, wliich
is
often
now
Fam. of Plants.
Cyc.
A
n. constellation in the Hemisphere, situated near to Cepheus, as the fabulous Cassiopeia was
wife to C'e|)heus, king of Ethiopia.
It
tains fiftv five stars.
Encyc.
CASSITE'RIA,
71.
con-
[L. cassiteron, tin.]
A
kind of crystals which a[)])ear to have an admixture of tin. The color is brown or whitish. Encyc.
CASSOCK, [Sp. casaca casaque.] A robe or gown worn over 71.
;
casacca
It.
;
Fr.
other garments, particularly by the clergy. Encyc. close garment, now generally tliat which
clergymen wear under
the
their
gowns. 70^715071.
CAS'SOCKED, The
a.
Clothed with a cassock.
cassoclt'd huntsman.
CASSONA'DE,
7!.
[Fr.]
Cotvper.
Cask-sugar
;
not refined.
CASSOWARY,
71.
[Sp. casuel]
A
sugar Encyc. large
fowl of the genus Slnilhio, nearly as large as the ostrich, but its legs are thicker and The wings are stronger in proportion. so small as not to appear, being hid under the feathers. The head is armed with a helmet of horny substance, consisting of It runs with plates one over another.
now
genus Ja-
kind of bread which serves for food to the natives of Africa and the West Indies, and they are also roasted and eaten hkc
Encyc.
arrang-ed in the genus
Nortlicrn
CASS'AVI, y'' tropha, of different species. The roots of the manihot or bitter cassaused da, and of the janipha, are made into a
To the a|)ex of this fruit a nut, of the size of a hare's kidney, the shell of which is hard, and the kernel, which is sweet, is covered with a thin film.
is
CASSIOPE'IA,
Raleigh plant, of the
thin
Encyc.
Ilex.
Indics,.4»!n<;arrf(»m, bearing a kidney-sliapThe fruit is as large as an orange,
ed nut.
A
casimira.]
a.
D'Anville.] An epithet given to a large lake between Persia and Astracan, called the Caspian
CASS,
[Sp. cloth.
beautiful red color.
The Yapon
5. 27.
used.]
n.
woolen
genus Cassine, of wliich the most remarkable species is the Yapon of the Southern States of America. The berries are of a
A
chest.
[Caspia; a word applied to a pass in the range of Mount Taurus. Plin.
CAS'PIAN,
spe-
Todd. CASSiNO, 71. A game at cards. CAS'SIOBURY, 71. A species ofplant, of the
Shak
bank cash notes when presented.
CASH,
Encyc usually written gasket.
is
A
[Fr. cassidoine.] ;
&c.
n. [dim. of cask. See Case.] A small chest or box, for jewels or other Shak. small articles. In .seamen's language, a small rope, fastened to gromets or little rings upon th( yards, used to fasten the sail to the yard
CASKET,
To pay
bank notes equivalent to money. in cash is opposed to payment
close vessel
formed by staves, This is a genera' heading and lioojis. term comprehending the pipe, hogshead,
denotes also
it
A
[Sp. Port, casco.]
n.
for containing liquors,
;
institution
Port, casco ; Fr. casque ; casquen, casijed ; L. cassis. See Case] head-piece ; a helmet ; a piece of defensive armor, to cover and protect the liead and
»!.
of plant, Gnaphahum, cotton-weed, cudweed or goldylocks also, Lavandula stachas or French lavender. Encyc. Fam. of Plants. cies
case.
neck, in battle.
chest, box, coffer.
the
;
CAS'SIDONY,
Arm.
cannon.
CA'SE-WORM,
bark of which usually passes under the name of cinnamon, differing from real cinnamon chiefly in the strength of its From a plant of this kind was qualities. extracted an aromatic oil, used as a perfume by the Jews. Ex. xxx. Ps. xlv, 8. Encyc. rus, the
discarded;
Dismissed;
p/?.
annulled.
CASHIE RER,
Harris.
CA'SEMENT,
CAS
CAS
CAS 2.
great rapidity, outstripping the swiftest Encyc. now arranged in a separate genus, Casuarius. Cuvier. potatoes. They yield also a great quan kasV. I. pret. and pp. cast. the Brasilians CAST, of which [Dan. starch, export tity Encyc. ter ; Sw. kasta. Qu. Arm. cacz, pp. eafxet, CASHIE'R, n. [Fr. caissier ; It. cassiere ; in small lumps under the name of tapioca. to send, to throw. See Class Gs. No. 1. from caxa, CASSAMUNA'IR, n. An aromatic vegetaSp. caxero ; I'ort. caxeiro ; In Dan. et blind kast, is a guess, and 51). a box, whence cash.] Todd. ble brought from the East. In to cast is the radical sense of guess. One wlio has charge of money a cash-keep- CAS'SATE, r. t. [Fr. casser. See Cashier.] In a banking institution, the cashier er. Norman, gistes signifies cast up, and this To vacate, amiul, or make void. Obs. seems to be the participle of gesir, to lie is the officer who superintends the books, Ray. down to lie down may be to throw one's payments and receipts of the bank. He CASSA'TION, n. The act of annuHing. In self down. This verb coincides in sense also signs or countersigns the notes, and France there is a court of Cassation. with the \V'. colhi, to throw off.] superintends all the transactions, under CASSIA, n. cash'ia. casse : It. cas[Fr. 1. To throw, fling or send tliat is, to drive the order of the directors. Gr. and L. id. Qu. Heb. sia mp.] from, by force, as from the hand, or from CASHIE'R, V. t. [Fr. casser, to break It. to
make punch.
grows
racer.
It is
;
;
:
;
;
A
cassare, to annul, blot oiu, erase.] 1.
To dismiss from an oflice or place of trust, by annulling the commission to break, as for mal-conduct, and therefore with re as, to cashier an officer of the proach ;
;
army. 2.
To
dismiss or discard from service or from
society. 3. To reject
^'iddison. ;
to
Dryden.
annul or vacate. Locke.
SwiJH
genus of plants of many species, among which are the fistula, or purging cassia and the senna. The former is a native of Egypt and both Indies the latter is a native of Persia, Syria and Arabia. The latter is a shrubby plant, the leaves of] which are much used in medicine. Thej purging cassia is the pulp of the pods, and
an engine.
Haf^r cast the child under a shrub. Gen. xxi. Uzziah prepared slings to cast stones. 2 Ch. xxn.
;
is a gentle laxative. South. Cassia is also the name of a species of Lau-I
2.
To sow If a
Mark 3.
To
;
to scatter seed.
man
should cast seed into the ground.
iv.
drive or impel by violence. A mighty west wind cast the locusts into the sea. Ex. x.
CAS
CAS
CAS
send abroad
founders, a tube of wax, fitted into a mold, to give shape to metal. to exhale. To cast off, to discard or reject to drive 12. cylindrical piece of brass or copper, slit in two lengthwise, to form a canal or away to put off to put away; to disburden. Among huntsmen, to leave behind, conduit, in a mold, for conveying metal. the effect of casting the anchor, to set loose, or free. as dogs Among 13. Among plumbers, a little brazen funnel, To tlu-ow, as dice or lots as, to ca^t lots. at one end of a mold, for casting pipes To throw on the ground, as in wrestling. seamen, to loose, or untie. without sodering, by means of which the Shak. To cast out, to send forth ; to reject or turn melted metal is poured into the mold. to throw out, as words ; to speak or out as worthless. To throw
an inclosed place
4. To siicd or tlirow off; as, trees cast their fruit ; a serpent casts his skin. J. To throw or let fall ; as, to cast anchor. Hence, to cast anchor is to moor, as a ship,
fcl.
;
;
His carcase was cast
in the
1
way.
give vent
Kings
To
emit or throw out.
A
culate
JVoodward. This casts a sulphurous smell. eject To throw, to extend, as a trench or To cast on, to refer or resign to. South rampart, including the sense of digging, To cast one''s self on, to resign or yield one's self to the disposal of, without reserve raising, or forming. to suffer aborThy enemies shall cast a trench about thee To cast young, to miscarry Luke xix. Gen. xxxi. tion.
same rank or
as the cast of profession Bramins, or priests of rajahs, or princes of choutres, or artificers and of partes, or
10.
To To
thrust
as, to cast into prison.
;
To
put, or set, in a particular state. Both chariot and horse were cast into a dead
12.
poor people. Or according to some writers, of BjY/min*; of cwfferi/, or soldiers; of shuddery, or merchants and of wyse, or mechanics. Encyc. The four casts of the Hindoos are the Brahmins or sacred order the Chehteree
1.3.
To condemn
14.
To overcome
;
tried
;
To make
17.
to
preponderate
To
3.
;
;
throw together circumstances and facts, to compute to reckon to calculate as, to cast the event of war To cast and see how many things tlicre are Bacon which a man cannot do himself.
to
;
;
contrive
to plan. ; or to consider,
Temple. in order Milton. or distribute the parts of a play Mdison. among the actors. to or turn, the as To 22. direct, throw, sight as the eye ; to glance as, to cast a look, or glance, or the eye. to form into a particidai 23. To fotuid metal into a mold shape, by pouring liquid 20.
judge,
judge.
To
21.
fix,
;
;
;
;
to run
;
Thou
as, to cast
;
;
;
A throw of dice hence, a state of chance or hazard. It is an even cast, whetlier tlie army should South. march this way or that way. Hence the phrase, the last cast, is used to denote that all is ventured on one throw, or one effort. 7.
Is
The Is sicklied o'er witli
cast by, to
Shak.
down, to throw dc])ress the mind. art
down
thou cast down,
;
8.
Lorke.
to deject or
O my
soul.
Ps,
another cast.
Prior.
tinge; ashghtcoloring, or shght degree as a cast of green. Hence, a of a color slight alteration in external appearance, or deviation from natural appearance. ;
;
9.
Moors and Bohemians,
iards,
value.
CASTED, pp.
hue of resolution the pale cast of thought. native
chatclain.
n.
See
is
Raleigh. not in use. castellan; Fr.
[Sp.
Castle.]
A governor
or constable of a castle. In Poa tl'e name of a dignity or charge kind of lieutenant of a province, commanding part of a palatinate under a palatine. The castellans are senators, of the lower land,
;
class, sitting, in the diets,
on low seats be-
hind the palatines.
Encyc. The [See Castle.] or the exlordship belonging to a castle tent of its land and jurisdiction. Phillips. a'. Inclosed in a €AS'TELLATED, building, Johnson. as a fountain or cistern. 2. Adorned with turrets, and battlements,
€AS'TELLANY,
n.
like a castle. n. The act of fortifying a house and rendering it a castle. JI. [from cast.] One who throws or casts ; one who com|)Utes a calcula-
CASTELLA'TION,
Pope go at
2.
Sidney Encyc.
3.
number of hawks
once. small statue of bronze. cast forth, to tlirow out, or eject, as froip 10.
A
for cast,
CAS'TELLAN,
;
;
a
as an accom-
to their dances,
CASTAWAY,
of verse. flight;
the re-
guitars.
€V\STER,
A
be from
sarabands and Span. Diet. Encyc. n. That [cast and away.] A person which is thrown away. abandoned by God, as unworthy of his 1 Cor. ix. 27. favor a reprobate. €*ASTAWAY, (I. Rejected; Useless; of no
paniment
Shak. Manner air mien ; as, a peculiar cast of countenance. Tliis sense implies, the turn the or manner of throwing; as, neat cast ;
to
named from
chestnuts.]
;
in
A
i-
reject ; to dismiss or discard with neglect or hate, or as useless.
To
Form; shape. A heroic poem
two
instrument of music formed of small concave shells of ivory or hard wood, shaped like spoons, placed together, fastened to the thumb and beat with the middle finThis instrument is used by the Spanger.
;
use
to
An
;
xxii.
A
stroke ; a touch. This was a cast of Wood's politics. Sifift. Motion or turn of the eye 4. direction, look or glance ; a squinting. one cast of the let see eye. you by They
xi. Also, to throw away ; to waste by profusion to turn to no Addison use as, to cast way life. Also, to wreck, as a ship.
Wliy
Luke
cast. 3.
Rom.
lavish or
xlii.
;
;
G.
cast aside, to dismiss or reject as less or inconvenient. To ca.
cast
semblance
;
;
subject.
To
castana, a chestnut, so
im-
ivarp,
This word seems
tagnetta.
Moxon
Cast, hke throw and winding motion.
;
;
To
To
alters its
In seamen^s language, to fall off, or incline, so as to bring the side of a ship to the wind appUed particularly to a ship riding with lier head to the wind, when her an chor is first loosened. €'AST, Ji. The act of casting a throw the thing thrown the form or state of throwing kind or manner of throwing. 2. The distance passed by a thing thrown or the space through which a thing thrown may ordinarily pass; as, about a stone's
;
;
it
4.
;
;
Martin.
CASTA'LIAN,
Jlddison.
splendor upon actions, or light uj)on
Ed. Encyc.
Cyc. trick.
Bentley.
when
Note. plies a
Ex.
it.
A
;
to form by a to shape Halts. model. to spread over 25. To comnuinicate as, to cast to cast a luster upon posterity
V.
;
ics.
a. Pertaining to Castaha, a cool spring on Parnassus, sacred to the To receive form or shape. muses as Caslulian fount. Poetry. Woodward. Metal will cast and mold. CAST'ANET, n. [Sp. castaneta, castanuela ; To warp to twist from regidar shape. Port, castanheta ; Fr. castagnette ; It. cas-
caimon.
shalt cast four rings of gold for
XXV. 24. Figuratively,
;
to perform or obtain.
StuH'is said to cast or warp, flatness or straightness.
;
To To
;
or soldiers and rulers the Bice, Vaissya, or husbandmen and merchants and the Sooders, Sudras, or laborers and mechan-
;
into
;
19.
how
cast about
Bacon.
scale, for tlie purpose of giving it suto decide hy a vote thai perior weight gives a su])eriority in numbers as, to cast a casting vote in one's favor balance the or voice. 18. To throw together several particulars, to find the sum as, to cast accounts. Hence
;
i.
Spenser. 16.
one
to find the result
V.
;
;
throw
to
;
;
To throw
forward, as the thoughts, with a view to some determination; or to turn or revolve in the mind; sometimes followed by about. to contrive I cast in careful mind to seek her out.
to convict ; as a criminal and both were cast. Dryden in a civil suit, or in any contest of strength or skill; as, to cast the defendant or an antagonist. Shak. 15. To cashier or discard. to reject 16. To lay aside, as unfit for use Addison. as a garment.
Both
cast in the teeth, to upbraid ; to charge So in Danish, ^^ kaster en i ncss-
en," to cast in the nose.
CAST,
;
;
to twit.
Ps. Ixxvi.
sleep.
;
;
;
11.
jEt! eye.
to.
cast up, to compute ; to reckon ; to cal- 14. [Sp. Port, casta.] breed, race, lineage, kind, sort. ; as, to cast up accounts, or the cost. 15. In Hindoostan, a tribe or class of the to vomit. ; Also, to
To
xiii.
9.
A
;
away,
8.
;
Among
11.
;
;
;
;
7.
to emit, or
let
tor
;
one
who
A small phial set
A
itl'
calculates fortunes.
Addison. us a
or vessel for the table
;
casters.
small wheel on a swivel, on which furniture is cast, or rolled, on the floor.
CAS CAS'TIGATE,
v.
t.
from
castus, 2.
7 U) 8
Qii. Eth.
chaiste.
CAS
[L. castigo,
gasts, to chasTlie French use Arm. castiza ; chOtier, from caslus, chaste Sp. Von. cnsligar ; Jt. castigaie.] To cliastise ; to puiiisli by stripes; to correct
3.
The house
CAS
or mansion of a nobleman or
prince. In a ship,
for chastrer
there are two parts called by the forecastle, a short deck iii the fore part of the ship, al)ove the upper deck; and the hindcasUc, at the stern. Castle in the air, a to chasten to check. Slink. visionary project a scheme CAS'TIGATED, /;/;. Punished; corrected. that has no solid foundation. €AS'TIGATIi\G, /);)r. Punishing; correct- €AS'TLE, V. t. In tin; game of chess, to cover the king with a a certain castle, by ing • ten,
cliide.
correct,
this
name
CASTRATE, trare
;
;
:
Punishment; correcdiscipline; emendation
€.\S'1'IGA'T10N, tion; iienaiicu restraint.
move.
77.
;
CASTLE-BUILDER,
a wand or switcli.
Encyc,
Bramhall. engine formerly
tion; corrective; punitive.
An
n.
A
n.
kind of pure,
act of build-
kiught service,
A
feudal tenure, or
which obliged the tenant
castle.
Blount. Lcland.
A small castle. €AS'TLET, €AS'TLE-VVARD, n. An imposition »!.
€ASTIL'IAN,
Pertaining to Castile in
a.
Spain.
€ASTIL'IAN,
An
n.
Castile in Spain.
Throwing; sending computing calculating turning giving a pre|)onderancy deciding running, or throwing into a mold to give shape. [See ;
;
;
;
laid
upon subjects dwelling within a certain distance of a castle, ('or the purpose of maintaining watch and ward in the castle.
inhabitant or native of
CASTING, ;);)r.
to
perform .senice within the realm, without limitation of time. Lytlellon n. The government of a
CAS'TLERY,
refi
CASTLING,
n.
An
*<,
^ (D
Encyc. abortion or aboitive.
to castrate
:
Class Gs. No.
off.
;
;
CAS'TRATED,
Gelded emasculated />/>. purihed from obscene cxr>re.ssions ;
;
the obscene parts of a writiiiff
;
n.
EtI}.
Crowned with CAS'TRATING,;>/>r. Gelding
Furnished with castles as Druden
a.
,
to deprive of the testicles to emasculate. To take away or retrench, as the obscene ])arts of a writing. To take out a leaf or sheet from a book, and render it imi)erfect.
/Jnruc. who tbr^is 3.
castled elephant.
€AS'TLE-GUARD,
lilackatone.
ned soap.
The
a.
a castle.
nscd to punislj and correct arrant scohls, culled also a ducking stool, or trebiicket.
€AS'TlLE-SOAP,
7!.
CAS'TLE-CROWNED,
CAS'TIGATOK, n. One who corrects. eAS'TIGATORV, a. Tending to correc- CAS'TLED, a
€AS'TIGATORY,
One
n.
1.
2.
visionary schenjes.
Hale,
Boijie.
Ajuimg the Romans, a mihtary punish- €AS'TLE-I5UILDING, ing castles in the air. ment inflicted on offenders, by beating with
The act of gelding- the act or practice of making eunuchs ; the act of takmg away the ob.scene parts of a writing ; the act of taking out a leaf or sheet of a book. In botany, the iiittiiig off of the antliers, or toj]s of the stamens of flowers before the ripening of the pollen n.
'
CASTRA'TO,
n. [It.
See
A
mal6 the purpose of imCa.Hrale.]
person ema.sculated for proving his voice for a singer.
CAS'TREL
or
KESTREL,
«.
hawk, resembhng the lanner the hobbv in size.
in
Stmfl
A
kin!rof-
shape and
CASTREN'SIAN,
a. [L. ca.'irensis, from castra, a canq).] Belonging to a camp. a. cazh'ual. [Fr. casuel ; Port.
Brown. CAS'UAL,
Sp. ; It. rnsuale : from L. casus, a fall n. [L. castor ; Fr. Sp. Port, id.; See Case and .'Ircident.] Gr. xafup. See Ar. Class Gs. No. 42.] 1. Falling; hapjiening or coming to pass beaver, an amphibious quadruped, with without design in the iieison or a flat ovate tail, short ears, a blunt nose, iiersons ding. affected, and without being foreseen or small fore feet, and large hind feet. 2. That which is cast in a mold any vessel 2. A reddish brown expected; accidental; fortuitous; coming formed by casting melted metal" into substance, of a strong by chance as, the jiarties had a casual mold, or in sand. penetrating smell, taken from bags or cods rencounter. in the groin of the bettver 3. The taking of casts and a powerftil ; impressions ofl 2. Occasional coming at certain times antispasmodic. Mcholson. figures, busts, medals, &c. without regularity, in distinction from In astronomy, a moiety of the constellation staCASTING-NET, n. A net which is cast as casual ted, or regular and drawn, in distinction from a net that Gemini, called also .Apollo. expcn.ses. 3. Castor and Pollux, in Taking jilace, or beginning to exist withis set and left. jl/ou meteorology, a fiery out an efficient intelligent cause, and withCASTING-VOTE. > " The vote of a pre- meteor, which, at sea, appears sometimes out design. adhering to a part of a ship, in the form of €>ASTING-VOICE, I siding oflicer, in Atheists assert that the existence of an assembly or council, which decides a one, two and even three or four balls. things is <«""''• When one is seen it is when the called Dwi-'IU votes alone, of the assembly question, Helena, which portends that the severest part of CAS'UALLY, adv. Accidentally or house are equally divided between the fortuitthe storm is yet to come. affirmative and negative. Two appear- ously; without design by chance Accidentalness the ing at once are denominated Castor and CAS'UALNESS, n. U. States. Coie of being casual. or quality Pollux, and a cesWlicn there was an equal vote, the Governor Tyndarida:, portend n. sation of the storm. Accident; that which had the casting voice. Chambers. CAS'UALTY^ B. Tnimhiill. comes by chance or without design, or An animal principle dis-l without CAS'TLE, n. kns'l. [Sax. casiel ; L. castell- C'ASTORIN, ? being foreseen contingency. um ; D. kasteel ; Arm. gastell ; Norm, char- CASTORINE, ( covered in castor, and An accident that produces unnatural tel ; Fr. chateau ; Port, castello prepared by boiling castor in six times its ; It. id ; W. death and by a metonymy, death, or weight of alcohol, and filtering the liquor. cast, envelopment, from cds, a being sepa other misfortune, occasioned From this is deposited the Castorin. by an accirated or insulated, hatred, envy, a cas dent. tie It'ebster's Manual. ca.itell, a castle, whence castellu, to 3. In Scots law, an emolument due from a surround; casid,a cloke, a chasuble. The CASTOR-OIL, n. The oil of the Ricinus, or vassal to his superior, beyond the stated Welch cds gives the primary sense, which Palma Christi, a plant of the West Indies, yearly duties, upon certain casual events. is to separate, to drive which grows to thehighth of twenty feet off; hence, to de Encyc. fend. It is probably from this root the in one season. The oil is obtained" from CAS'UIST, «. Sp. Port, casuista : fr. Latins had casa. "We observe in the the nuts or seeds by expression or decoc- casuisle ; from [It. L. casus, a rase.] tion. Welch, cds signifies, separated, a castle, That obtained by decoction is pre- One who studies and resolves cases of conand as odious: ;
;
casual
CASTOR,
Cast.]
CASTING,
n.
The
act of casting or foun-
1.
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
hatred, envy; also, hateful, and casnaur, a hater, a i)ersecutor casnori. to persecute, to chase. Hence we see the radical sense of hatred is a ;
1.
A
house
enemy
;
fortified for
a fortress.
driving off.] defense against an
The term seems
to
include the house and the walls or other works around it. In olil writers, the word is used for a town or village fortified.
Vol.
I.
ferred,
less
liable
become
to
rancid,
being free from the mucilage and acrid matter, which is mixed with the oil when expressed.
It is a tnild cathartic.
CASTRAIMETA'TION,
Encyc.
science. is
Thejij(iinnentofanyra.«tii>/or learned divine not sufTicient to give him conlidence.
South.
[L. casirametor, CAS'UIST, V. i. To play the part of a casucastra, camp, and metior, to measure or simej'.] ? CASriS'TIC, ^ Relating to cases of The art or ai t of encamping the markins or CASl IS'TICAL, \ conscience, or to calayuig out of a camp. ses of doubtful .Murphy's Tacitus. South propriety. n.
to encanqi,
:
.
33
CAT
CAT ;
Fr. chat ; D. kat ; Dan kat; Sw. katt G. kater, or katze ; L. cntus ; It. gatto ; Vulgar Greek, xam, or yaroj Port, and Sp. goto ; Lap. id.; Pol. kot ; [Ir.
cat;
;
W.
cath
;
Rome, in the Appian supposed to be the cells and caves which the primitive christians concealed and in wliich were deposited themselves, the bodies of the primitive martyrs. These are visited by devout people, and relics are taken from them, baptized by the Pope and dispersed through Catholic countries. Each catacomb is three feet broad and
way
Mar.
the cat-block.
CAT'-MINT,
Diet.
n. n.
A
eight or ten high along the side walls are sepulchral niches, closed with tliick tiles or pieces of marble. Catacombs are found also at Naples and in other places. ;
kind of apple. strong hook fitted to
Mar. Did plant of the genus Ne-
peta, so called because cats eat
Corn €AT'S'-PAW,
€ATA€0US'TI€S,
it.
surface of^ the water also, a particular turn in the bight of a rope, made to hook Mar. Did. a tackle on. A duj)e ; the instrument which another
sound.s,
;
In Ar.
No. 1.
A
ijj^'
kitta, is
Class Gd.
a male cat.
9.
56.]
name
applied to certain species of carnivorous quadrupeds, of the genus Felis.
Thedotnestic cat needs no description.
It
a deceitful animal, and when enraged, It is kept in houses extremely spiteful. chiefly for the purpose of catching rats and mice. The wild cat is much larger than the domestic cat. It is a strong, ferocious aiii mal, living in the forest, and very des tractive to jioultry and lambs. The wild cat of Europe is of the same the cata species with the domestic cat mount, of N. America, is much larger and a distinct species. Ed. Encyc. 3. A ship formed on the Norwegian model, having a narrow stern, i)rojecting quarIt is strong built, ters, and a deep waist. from four to six hundred tons burthen, and is
;
uses.
CAT'-SaLT,
n.
»i.
[Gr.
Encyc. xaraxwu, to
seamen, a light air hear.] by a ripphng of the That part of acoustics or the doctrine of
Among
perceived, in a calm,
Bas(iue catua
;
in
hauled.
n. A strong beam projecting horizontally over a ship's bows, carrying two or three sheaves, about which a rope the called cat-fall passes, and communiMar. Did cates with the cat-block.
;
Russ. kots ; Turkish keti ; kath ; Arm. gaz or kaz ;
three miles from
eAT'-HEAD,
Law of J^Tatio^js. CAT'S'-HEAD, n. A CAT'-HOOK, n. A
of compact. Ji.
when the ship is close
in the yards,
.
€AT,
CAT
brace in the shrouds of the lower masts behind their respective yards, to tighten the shrouds and give more room to draw
The
science or doctrine of cases of conscience the science of resol ving cases of doubtful propriety, orof de or unlawfulness the lawfulness terniining of what a man may do, by rules and principles drawn from the scriptures, from the laws of society, or from equity and natural reason. Pope Casus fccderis. [L.] The case stipulated by treaty ; that which comes within the terms n.
•eAS'UISTRY,
A
sort
of
But the
Encyc.
€ATADIOP'TRIC, CATADIOP'TRICAL,
salt beautifully
granvdated, formed out of the bittern or leach-brine, used for making hard soap. CAT'SILVER, )!. A fossil, a species of mica. €AT'-TAIL, n. [cat and tail.] A species of reed, of the genus Typha, the downy substance of which is used tor stufling mat-
which treats of reflected .sounds. distinction is deemed of little use. }
"" I
[Gr. xara, and see
l>u>nTofuu.,to
through.] Reflecting light. n. [Gr. xara, and Sovrito, to sound.] cataract or waterfall. [JS/ot in use.]
€AT'ADUPE,
A
Brewer
€ATAGMAT'l€,
a.
[Gr. xaroy^a, a frag-
ment.]
tresses, &c. Bailey. That has the quality of consolidating broken 3. A substance growing on nut-trees, pines, ])arts promoting the union of fractured hones. Wiseman. Core. &c. Bailey. CATABAP'TIST, n. [Gr. xara and liart- €AT'AGRAPH, n. [Gr. xara, and ypo^iu, to ;
One who opposes
baptism. describe.] Featley. The first draught of a picture also, a profile Chambers. [Gr. xataxavsi.!, a burnCatacaustic curves, in geometry. €ATALEC'TI€, a. [Gr. xara, and >.£y«.] are that species of caustic curves, which Pertaining to metrical composition, or to measure. are formed by reflection. Tynvhitt. Bailey. Encyc. Cataledic verses, are such as want either feet employed in the coal trade. or syllables. 3. A strong tackle or combination of pulleys, €ATA€HRE'SIS, n. [Gr. xarazmni^, abuse, Cyc. from xara, against, and ;^paojuat, to use.] to hook and draw an anchor perpendicuCATAI>EP'SIS, } [Gr. xaraTiii+tj, a seizAn abuse of a trope or of words; a figure in €AT'ALEPSY, ^ "' ing, from xaraXa^Sa.'u, larly up to the cat-head of a ship. 4. A double tripod having six feet. rhetoric, when one word is abusively ]>ut to take, seize, or invade.] for another, or when a word is too tii A sudden Cat of nine tails, an instrument of punishsuppression of motion and sensawrested from its true signification as, a ment, consisting of nine ]iieces of line or tion, a kind of apople.xy, in which the pato the ear. voice cord fastened to a piece of thick rope, and beautiful tient is s]ieechless, senseless, and fixed in Smith. Johnson Bailey. one posture, with his eyes open, without having three knots at intervals, used to flog A catachresis is a trope which borrows the seeing ofl'enders on board of ships. or understanding. The word is CAT'AMOUNT, n. Cat of the mountain, name of one thing to exi)ress another, or a applied also to a retention of the breath or harsh trope as when Milton, speaking ol the wild cat. of the humors, and to the interception of CAT'-BLOCK, n. A two or three fold block "Raphael's descent from heaven, says, lie the blood by bandages. Encyc. Coie. with an iron strop and large hook, used to sails between worlds and worlds." Here €ATALEP'TI€, a. Pertaining to catalepsy. the novelty of the word sails enlivens the €AT'ALO(ilZE, v. t. To insert in a catadraw up an anchor to the cat-head. we read So in of the JMar. Did. scripture image. Coles. logue. [.\'ot used.] " blood of the CAT'S'-EYE, n. Sun-stone, a subspecies of grape." Deut. xxxii. CAT'ALOGUE, )!. kaialog. [Gr. xaro?.oyo5; ) to quartz, called in Latin oculus cali or onyco- €ATACHRES'TI€, xara and >-oyoi, according to words.] "' Belonging a catachresis palus, from its white zones or rings like €ATAeHRES'TI€AL, \ A list or enumeration of the names of men or forced far-fetched wrested from its natIt ony.x, and its variable colors like opal. things disposed in a certain order, often ural sense. Johnson. Brown is very hard and semitransparent, and from in alphabetical order; asacaia/og-ite of the certain points exhibits a yellowish radia- €ATA€HRES'TI€ALLY,adv. In a forced students of a college, or of books, or of the maimer. tion, or chatoyant appearance, somewhat Evelijn stars. resembhng a cat's eve. Encyc. Cleavcland. €AT'ACLYSM, n. [Gr. xafaxXvafiof, a del €AT'ALOGUE, v. t. To make [as above.] tAT'-EYEB, a. Havhig eyes like a cat. iige, from xataxiv^u, to inundate.] a list of. Herbert. Diyden. A deluge, or overflowing of water partini €ATAL'PA, n. A large tree of Carolina and CAT'-FISH, n. A species of the Squalus, or larly, the flood in Noah's days. [Lillli the South, which in blossom has a beautishark. The cat-fish of the N. American Hall. used.] to the genus rivers is a species of Cottiis, or bull-head. €AT'A€OMB, n. [probably from Gr. xara. inl appearance. It belongs Bignonia, or trumpet flower. and xn/iSo;, a hollow or recess.] €AT'S'-FQOT, n. A plant of the genus Drayton. Encyc. S. cave, Glechoma, ground ivy, or gill. grotto or subterraneous place for the CAT'-GUT, 71. The intestines of sheep or burial of the dead. It is said to have been €ATAL'YSIS, n. [Gr. xaro>.vf>ij.] Dissolution. lambs, dried and twisted together, used aiTaylor. [Little used.] originally applied to the chapel of St. Sebastian in Rome, where the ancient Ro CATAME'NIAL, a. [Gr. xaraujyiiof xara strings for violins and other instruments, and for other purposes. Great quantities man Calendars say, the body of St. Peter and fitif, a month.] ore imported from was deposited. It is now applied to a vast Pertaining to the catamenia, or menstrual Lyons and Italy. CAT'-HARPINGS, n. Ropes serving to number of subterraneous sepulchers, about (hscliarges'. rtj'jjj.]
;
€ATA€AU3'TIC, a. ing.]
;
;
;
;
;
;
CAT'AMITE,
A boy kept
[h. catamitus.] for UMimtiiral purposes.
[Gr. xatartav/ia.] A dry Coxe. powder for sprinkling the body. CAT'APELT.orCAT'APlJLT.n. [Gr. xafaL. cataputta ; xara and rtixtt;, a rtiMrji target, or more probably from TtaXKu or (3a>.Xto, to tiirovv or drive, L. pello.] military enfjine u.sed by the ancient Greeks and Roniiins for throwing stones, darts and arrows upon an enemy. Some of these would throw a stone of aliundred pounds
€AT'APArfI>I,
the final event of a dramatic piece or the unfolding and winding up of the plot, clearing up difliculties, and closing the The ancients divided a play into the play.
n.
A
Mitford. weight. €ATAPEL'TIC, a. Pertaining to the cataAs a noun, the catapelt. pelt. €ATAPllON'I€S, n. [Gr. xara, and 4)qwj
sound.] doctrine of reflected sounds, a branch of acoustics. Ena/c. €AT'APHRAeT, n. [L. calaphrada ; Gr. xaTo^ipaxT-os, from xaroijipaoau, to arm or
protasis,
2.
2.
the
;
catastasis,
and
:
aster. n.
[cat
and
call.]
A squeaking
instrument, used in play-houses to condemn plays. Johnson. Pope. CATCH, V. I. pret. and pp. catched or caught. [Sp. coger, to catch, ments with Gr. xixf^.
CATCH' ABLE,
catas-
introduction,
;
CAT'€ALL,
coinciding in
ele-
ciation 1.
To seize or lay hold on with the hand carrying the sense of pursuit, thrusting forward the hand, or rushing on. And they came upon him and caught him
and penny.] Something worthless, ])articularly a book n.
[catch
or pamphlet, adapted to the popular taste, anil intended to gain money in market. n. [rai./i" and poll, the A bailiff^s assistant, so called by head.]
CATCH'-POLL,
;
Acts 2.
is ketch.]
aiiCl
Encyc. Busby. That may be caught.
[.Vb< u-ell authorized.]
CATCH'ER,
The orthography of caught determines the radical letters to be Cg. The popular or connnon pronmi-
fortify.] In the ancient military art,
A horseman
epitasis,
continuance, heightening, and development or conclusion. Johnson. Encyc. A final event conclusion generally, an unfortunate conclusion, calamity, or dis-
trophy
The
a piece of heavy defensive armor, formed of cloth or leather, strengthened with scales or links, used to defend the breast, or wliole body, or even the horse as well as the rider. Encyc.
or more voices, one of which leads the others follow in the same notes.
;
;
1.
CAT
CAT
CAT ji.
way of re|)roach. CATCH'UP, ) ^ A CAT'SUP,
vi.
'
liquor extracted
used
inushrooms,
\
from as
a
sauce.
To
seize, in a general sense ; as, to catch a ball ; to catch hold of a bough.
To
CATCH'-WORD,
Among printers, the at the Ixittom of each page, under the last line, which is to be inserted as the first word on the followuig page. n.
word placed
seize, as in a snare or trap ; to ensnare Milton 3. in coin[>lete armor. to entangle. n. [Gr. xaranxariim, from They sent certain of the Pharisees and of the or to spread as a
;
CAT'APLASM,
CATE, n. [See Cates.] Herodians, to catch him in his words. Mark xii a. [See Catechise.] plaster.] 4. To seize in pursuit hence simjdy to Relating to oral instruction, and particupoultice ; a soft and moist sid)stance to be overtake a popular use of the word. in the first principles of the christian larly applied to some part of the body, to excite He ran, but could not catch his companion. or repel heat, or to relax the skin, &c. religion. 5. To take hold ; to communicate to. 2. Relating to or consisting in asking quesmustard is an ingredient, it is called The fire caught the adjoining building. tions and receiving answers, according to a sinapism. Encyc. 6. To .seize the affections to engage and the ancient manner of teaching pujnls. €AT'APUCE, n. The herb spurge. Obs. attaidi to ; as, to catch the fair. Dryden. Socrates introduced a catechetical method of Chaucer. 7. To take or receive by contagion or infecAddison n. arguing. cataracia Gr. xara; CAT'ARACT, [L. tion ; a.s, to catchxhe measles or small pox. adv. By question paxrrjf, from xarapassio, to break or fa 8. To snatch ; to take suddenly ; as, to catch and answer in the way of oral instrucwith violence, from paucru, paSu, to strike or a book out of the hand. xorarfxaciau, to anoint,
CATECHET'lCAL,
A
;
;
When
;
.
CATECHET'ICALLY, ;
dash.] 9. To receive something passing. gre.at fall of water over a precipice ; as The swelling sails no more that of Niagara, of the Rliine, Danube and Catch the soft airs and wanton in the sky. Nile. It is a cascade upon a great scale. Trumbull. The tremendous cataracts of Americi thun To catch at, to endeavor to seize suddenly. dering in their solitudes. Irving To catch at all opportunities of subverting the 8. In medicine and surgery, an opacity of the state. Jiddxson a disorder crystaline lens, or its capsule To catch up, to snatch ; to take up suddenly in the eye, which the pupil, wliich is 1.
A
tion.
CAT'ECHISE,
by
CATARRH,
thirst, lassitude and loss of appetite, and sometimes an entire loss of taste called also a cold, coryza. An epidemic catarrh
CATCH,
by infecting
is
called Influenza. }
CAT'.AJIRHOUS,
S
tending
it;
Hooper. Coxe. Encyc. Pertaining to catarrh, produced' by it or at
as a catarrhal fever.
CATAS'TERISM, n.
4. 5.
6.
[Gr. xaraffpto^os, from with stars, or to 7.
among
the stars
;
xata and
a;r;f>,
man to man. To seize and
;
CATAS'TROPHY, ing,
i
^
from xorajpffu,
to
end or overthrowsubvert xora and ;
fpft".]
1
i.
The change
or rcvolutioi'i which produces
8.
;
;
conduct. Appropriately, to ask questions concerning the doctrines of the christian rehgion to interrogate pupils and give instruction in the principles of religion. tunity to seize ; as, to lie upon the catch. Mdison CATECHISED, ;>;). Instructed. CAT'ECHISER, n. One who catechises A sudden advantage taken. Dryden one who instructs by question and anThe thing caught, considered as aii object swer, and particularly in the rudiments of of desire; profit; advantage. the christian religion. Sfiak. Hector shall have a great catch. CAT'ECHISING, ppr. Instructing in rudiA snatch a short interval of action. ments or principles. Locke. It has been writ by catches. 71. A form 3.
;
;
;
A
CAT'ECHISM,
little
retain a catch of a pretty story.
In music, a fugue in the unison, wherein some conceit in the words, the melody is broken, and the sense is interto himior
rupted in one part, and caught and supported by another, or a diffVrent sense is or a piece for three given to the words ;
[Gr. xaT^x>''^u,s.]
of instruction by means of questions and answers, particularly in the principles of
portion. Glantyille.
A constellation, or a placing among the stars. CATASTROPHE, / "• [Gr. xarafpo^.,;, an
1
To question to interrogate to examine or try by questions, and sometimes with view to reproof, by eliciting answers from a person, which condemn his own a
posture of seizing; a state of prepa ration to catch, or of watching an oppor-
star.]
;
l!
To instruct by asking questions, receiving answers, and offering explanations and corrections.
hold; as, a hook catches. CATCH,?!. Seizure; the act of seizing. 3. Any thing that seizes or takes hold, as a 2.
;
CAT'ARRHAL,
To communicate
I.
II.
s as
t.
xar)j;t«"t '" sound, to utter sound, to trom xara, and rxiu, teach by the voice Hence xaTi;jfj;ni;, to sound, whence tf/io.
;
usually black and transparent, becomes opake, blue, gray, brown, &.C., by whicl, vision is impaired or desti'oyed. Encyc. n. catar. [L. catarrhus ; Gr. xarappooj, from xarappfu, to flow down.] Adefluxion, or increased secretion of nmcus from the membranes of the nose, fauces and bronchire, with fever, sneezing, cough,
V.
and
religion. 2.
An elementarj' book containing a summary of principles in any science or art, but appropriately in religion, reduced to the form of questions and answers, and sometimes with notes, explanations, and references to authorities.
CAT
CAT
CAT A
[See Caterer.] GAT'ECHIST, [Gr. xv.trix^ini-] Chaucer. achator. who instructs viva voce, or by question Old En'g.n. The four of cards or dice so and answer a catechiser one appointed CA'TER,
OneHeA'TER,
n.
n.
provider.
a. Relating to the authority of the chair or ofiice of a teacher. miitlock.
eATH'EDRATED,
1
;
;
;
religion.
CATEeHIS'Tle, €ATE€H1S'TI€AL,
} '
<,
CATH'ETER, n. [Gr. xoSfTjjp, from xaS^iu, xara and i>;ftt, to send.] to thrust in a quatre-cousin, Shak. In surgery, a tubular instrument, usually made of silver, to be introduced into the In Chaucer, cater. n. CA'TERER, [from bladder, to draw off' the urine when the is evidently achator, a purchaser or caterer, natural discharge is suppressed also, a from acheter, to buy.] to search for the stone, or a bougie A provider, buyer or purveyor of provisions. sound made of silver or elastic gum. South. Chaucer, Cant. Tales. 570. Coie. a caters Encyc. who woman A C \'TERESS, n. €ATH'ETUS, n. [Gr. xoSfToj. See Cathefemale provider of food. ter.] of n. etymology [The CAT'ERPILLAR, In geometry, a line or radius, falling perpenPerhaps it may this word is uncertain. surface as dicularly on another line or be from Fr. chatte peine, hairy cat.] the two sides of a right-angled triangle. colored and often hairy larva of the written for Fr. quatre.
in the principles by the church to instruct of'
CA'TER-COUSIN, remote
Pertaining to a catechist, or cat-
echism.
»i.
A
;
relation.
;
CAT'ECHU,
?i.
brown
tract, or
Terra Japonica, a dry exobastringent substance,
tained by decoction and evaporation IVoin a species ol' Mimosa in India. It consists Thomson. Ure. chiefly of tannin.
CATECHU' MEN,
n.
[Gr. xar^x'^f^""^, P''^ces where hearers stood to be instructed, or bnildings adjoining a church where the catechist taught the doctrines of religion.] One who is in the first rudiments of Christone who is receiving instruction
'
;
;
The
This term
insects.
is
also
is
Encyc. a right
Cathetus of incidence, in catoptrics, of other insects, such applied to the larvas line drawn from a point of the object, more as the Tenthredo, or saw-fiy but is line. perjiendicular to the reflecting to the lepidopters. Catthe eye, a right fine generally confined ICathetus of reflection, or of from are immediately produced erpillars drawn from the eye, perjiendicular to the several with furnished are christian religion. the eii" they They principles of tiie reffecting ]>lane. and apiiairs of feet, and have the shape were admitted to this state by the im|iosia right line drawn contain the Cathetus of obliquation, in the tion of hands, and the sign of the cross. pearance of a worm. They perpendicular to the speculum, inclosed Encijc jf embryo of the perfect insect, point of incidence or reflection. is which to muscular a. a envelop, within Belonging CATE€HUMEN'I€AL, In architecture, a cathetus is a perpendicuthe enters insect the tlirown off, when catechumens. lar line, supposed to pass through the which it recatechumen. CATECHU'MENIST, n. nymph or chrysalis state, in middle of a cylindrical body. Encyc. mains for sometime as if inanimate. It CATH'OLIC, a. xara and Bp. Morion. [Gr. xaSot.txo;, and its last Peroff envelop, o. throws then whole L. cathoHcus ; CATEGOR'ICAL, [See Category.] oxtxos, from oxoc, the insect. Caterpillars emerges a perfect taining to a category. Fr. calholique ; Sp. catolico ; It. cattotico.] on leaves or succulent veg'>. Absolute express not relative positive generally feed Universal or general as the Catholic church. destrucas a categorical proi)Osiwas given to thi' or hypothetical etables, and are sometimes very Originally this epithet Ed. Encyc. Kirby. answer. or tive. tion, syllogism Christian church in general, but is now worm CATEGOPJiCALLY, adv. Absolutely di- CATERPILLAR-EATER, n. to the Romish church, and in appropriated to affirm expressly positively as, bred in the body of a caterpillar, which rectly strictness there is no Cathohc church, or Encyc. categoricall>i. eats it. universal Christian communion. The epiCAT'TEGORV, n. [Gr. xarjjyopia, from xar- 'cAT'ERWAUL, v. i. [probably from cat thet is sometimes set in opposition to herdemonstrate r,yopiu, to accuse, show, It. guaiolare, Eng. laail.] etic, sectary or schismatic. and icawl. xfira and ayoptu, to speak in an assembly, to cats in rutting time Liberal not narrow minded, partial or as or wawl, 'To cry to harangue or denounce, from ayopa, a foman. make a harsh offensive noise. bigoted as a catholic or tribunal market.] rum, judicial n. The cry of cats; a 3. Liberal as catholic principles. CAT'ERWAULING, all the or order of series a In logic, predicates Catholic epistles, the epistles of the apostles or cry. noise harsh disagreeable or attributes contained under a genus. which are addressed to all the laithtul, The school philosophers distributed all the CA'TERY, n. The place where provisions and not to a particular church. our thoughts and ideas into are deposited. objects of OLl€, n. A papist. dainties viands or food ten Aristotle made Delicious n. classes. or "enera CATES, Adherence to the ?i. CATH'OLICISM, One categories, viz. substance, quantity, qual- CATH'ARIST, n. [Gr. xapa9o,-, pure.] Catholic chinch. relation, action, passion, time, place, who pretends to more purity than others 2 Universality, or the orthodox faith of the ity, Pearson. situation and habit. Enajc whole church. possess. from CATENA'RIAN, ( of sentiments. [L. catcnarius, Iron CATI^ARTie, ? [Gr. xaeaprixo;, 3. More generally, liberality "' a to ianity
lepidopterous
;
and preparing himself for baptism. These were anciently the children of believing not fully initiated in the parents, or pagans
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
CAT'ENARY,
catena,
S
CATU'AKTICAL,
chain.]
xaSoptvu,
^
Xtt'>aipu,,
a chain. The enffxara. and atpu, to Relating to a chain; like purge, xa9opo5. clean, narian curve, in geometry, is formed by a remove.] between two rope or chain hanging freely Purging cleansing the bowels promoting the whether jjoints evacuations by stool purgative. points of suspension, Harris. Encyc. are horizontal or not. that ;
;
;
I
a chain; G. [L. catena, Sans, ketta, whence ketlenu, to bind.] or rather to connect in a series of
CAT'ENATE, kette
To
;
v.
I.
chain,
links or ties.
CATENA'TION,
n.
Darwin. Connection of links
union of parts, as hi a chain regular con[See Co7icatenation.] CAT'ENULATE, a. Consisting of little ;
nection.
links or chains.
€A'TER,
V. i.
[In
It.
cattare is to get
;
accat-
beg or borrow. In Fr. acheter
tare, to
is
The acat, a buying. seems to be a gutter, for questei; to beg, See Caterer.] different word.
to
buy
To
;
Norm,
Fr.
provide food; to buy or procure provisions followed by for ) as, to cater for the Shak the sparrow. ;
A medicine n. pro motes alvine discharges, and thus cleanses the stomach and bowels; a purge; a pur-
IcATHWRTle,
€ATH
This
13
the
renowned
€ATH'OLlCIZE, lic.
i.
[Little used.]
eATH'OLleLY,
seat of Catholicism.
E. D. i'.
adv.
catholic manner.
CATll'OLICNESS,
n.
To become
Griffin.
a catho-
Generally; m a Sir L. Cury. Universahty.
Breniit. n. [Gr. xo^oXixo)- tafia, universal remedv.] the bowels. A remedy for all diseases; a universal rempromoting discharges from to be efficacious Gr. xa9edy ; a remedy supposed re. [L. cathedra ; humors; a panacea; from xa-fa and £8pa, inpurging away all tSpa, a chair or seat, of soft purgative electuary so called. kind a a seat.] n. The practices of CatiThe see or seat of a bishop; the pruicipal CAT'ILINISM, consiiirator ; conspiracy. line, the Roman church in a diocese. In botan. [from cat and kin.] CATHE'DRAL, a. Pertaining to the church CAT'KIN, of calyx or rather of infloresny, a species which is the bishop's seat, or head church a common chaffy genimafrom ot a see cence, the of a diocese ; containing of many ceous receptacle, or consi.^ting cathedral bishop; as a cathedral church; slenchaffv scales ranged along a stalk, service. reder as a thread, which is the common ; cathedral a of aisles the Resembling birch, oak, willow. asin hazle, ceptacle, Pope. as, cathedral walks.
CATIIOL'ICON,
€ATH\\RTI€ALNESS,
CATHEDRAL,
n.
The
quality of
C A T poplar, &,c. to a cat's
;
tail.
eAT'-LllvE.
GAT' LING,
Martyti.
a
a. Reseinbliiij,'
n.
A
Sltak.
cat.
disuiciiibering knife, used
Harris 2. Tlie down or moss growing about walnut trees, resembling the hair of a cat.
by
suige'Jiis.
Harris. 3. Catgut.
Shak. Pertaining to or resem-
Qu.
CATO'NIAN,
a.
who was remark
bling Calo, the Roman, able lor liis .severity of
severe
;
manners
;
grave
;
intle.vible.
CATOP'TER, CATOP'TRON,
(
"
Catoptrics.]
$
An
(
opti-
Diet
cal glass or in.strument.
CATOP'TRIC, eATOP'TRlCAL,
See
xafortrpo;-.
[Gr.
„ ra„„ r'„/„,./„Vo ^ "' ^^^'^ Catoptrics.]
I
Relating to catoptrics, or vision by reflection.
[Gr. xorortrpixo;, from a mirror, iiom xora, against, and
CATOP'TRICS, xatoTXTjioi',
n.
ortTo^ai, to see.]
That part of optics
wliicli exjjlains the pro]
of rcllected
erties
which
light,
reflected polished bodies. that
is
€ATOP'TROMANCY, y.a,vriia
A
;
and particularly from mirrors or Encyc.
n.
[Gr. xatontfo-
xarortrpor, a mirror,
and
^ttai'rfia,
divination.)
species of divination
the ancients, ilown a mirror into water, for a sick person to look at his face in it. If bis countenance ap peared distorted and ghastly, it was an ill omen if fresh and bealtliy, it was favor-
among
which was performed by
letting
;
able.
€AT'-PIPE,
C A U
C A U
so called from its resemblance
Encyc. [See Catcall.] [See Catchup, Ketchup.] )i. sing-, or plu. [Norm, calal, n.
usage, signifies only beasts of the bovine 2. A kiud of net in which females inclose their hair ; the hinder pan of a cap. genus, oxen, bulls, cows and their yoiui In the laws respecting domestic beasts, Dryden. Grew. horses, sheep, asses, mules and swine are 3. Any kind of net. distinguished from cattle, or neat cattle. CAULESCENT, a. [L. caulis, a stalk Gr. Thus the law in Connecticut, recpiiring xavTMi. See Cole.] " that all the owners of any cattle, sheej) In botany, having a stem different from that or swine, shall ear-mark or brand all their which produces the flower; as a caulescent plant. Linne applies this term to the cattle, sheep and swine," does not e.vtend root al-so, as in cabbage and turne|). to horses. Yet it is probable that a law JjCC. giving damages for a trespass connnitted jMartyn. cattle into an would breaking CAULIF'EROUS, a. [L. caulis, a stem, and by inclosure, ;
be ailjndged to uulude horses. fero, to bear.] In Great Ibitain, beasts are distinguish In botany, having a stem or stalk. cd into black cattle, including bulls, oxen, CAUL'H'LOWER, n. [It. caroljjore ; L. cows and their young and small cattle, in caulis, VV. cawl, D. kool, ajid_^«icer.] A variety of Hrassica or cabbage, well known eluding sheep ol'all kinds and goals. and nuich esteemed. .3. In reproach, hunjaji beings are called cattle. SA.uA-. CAUL IFORM, a. [LT caulis, a stem, and CAUCA'SIAN, } Pertaining to Mount forma, form.] Caucasus in Asia. €AUC.\SE'AN, ^ Having the form of a stalk or of stems. .4*. Researches. Pinkerton. Kirwan. €AUC'US, n. A word used in America to CAUL'INE, a. [L. caiilis, a stalk.] In botdenote a meeting of citizens to agree upon any, growing immediately on the stem, candidates to be proposed for election to witliout the intervention of branches; as a cauline leaf, bulb, peduncle or scape. othces, or to concert measures for supporting a party. The origin of the word is .Martyn. ;
CAULK,
not ascertained. a. [L. cauda, a tail.] I'ertaining to a tail; or to the thread which ter minales the seed of a plant. liotam/. eAUU'ATE, } " [L. Cauda, a tail.] Ha €AUD'ATED, ving a tail. Fairfax. €AUD'EX, »i. plu. caudexes. [L.] In botLinne uses the any, the stem of a tree. word for the stock which proceeds from a seed, one part ascending and formini the body above ground, the other des
€.\UD'AL,
<,
cending and putting forth roots.
Darwin. CAT'SUP, CAU'DLE, n. [Fr. chaudeau, from chaud, CAT'TLE, warm or hot, by contraction from L. caliand chatters, goods, commodichattel, dus or its root It. caldo.] Arm. chetal, beasts Port. ties, movables A kind of warm broth, a niixlure of wine gado, cattle. In Syr. and C'h. nj and nu sigand other ingredients prc])ared for the nify a flock, herd, possession, goods. But sick. Wiseman. jMaiiyn.
n.
;
;
;
Spelman alledges
that the
word
chattel is
contracted from capitatia, captal, from ca- e.AU'DLE, V. t. To make or prepare caudle, or to dress with caudle. Shak. a word used in the middle ages for all goods, movable and immovable, an- €AUF, n. [probably from the root of cofswering nearly to the use oi'Gr. xsfa'Ka.wp, Acts xxii. 28. Ttoxxon xc^axcuov, " with a A chest with holes for keeping fish alive in or sum 1 obtained this freewater. Jlsh. great price
put,
dom." Qu. Sp. caudal, wealth, property, capital sum.] Beasts or quadrn]jeds in general, serving for tillage, or other labor, and for food to man. In its primary sense, the word includes camels, horses, asses, all the varieties of domesticated horned beasts or the bovine genus, sheep of all kinds and goats, and perhaps swine. In this general sense, it is constantly used in the scriptures. See Job
Hence it would appear that the 3. word properly signilies possessions, goods. But whether from a word originally sigi.
nifying a beast, for in early ages beasts constituted the chief part of a man's prop erty, or from a root signifying to get or possess, Gr. xraouai. It. cattare, or from capitalia, it is not easy to determine. Thi: word is restricted to domestic beasts but in England it includes horses, which it or dinarily does not, in the United States, at least not in New-England. ;
2.
In the United States,
cattle, in
common
[See Calk.]
C.\UP ON.\TE,
v.i. [L.
a victualling house.
CAUP'OMSE, uals.
V.
To
t.
cauponor.]
[Aoi sell
To keep
in use.]
wine or
[JVot in use.] a. [See
vict-
Jf'arburton.
Cause.] That may be caused, produced or eftected. ,'lsh. CAUS'AL, a. [See Cause.] Relating to a cause or causes ; implying or containing a cause or causes expressing a cause. Causal propositions are where two propositions are joined by causal words, as that or because. Walls. CAUS'AL, n. In grammar, a word thai expresses a cause, or introduces the reason. Han-is. CAUSAL'ITY, n. The agency of a cause the action or power of a cause, in jirodu-
CAUS'ABLE,
;
;
cing
its effect.
CAUS'.^LLY,
Encyc.
adv.
Glanrille.
According to the order Johnson. Brown,
or series of causes.
CAUS'ALTY,
)!.
Among
miners, the light-
er, earthy parts of ore, carried off by washing. Encyc. CAUSA'TION, ji. The act of causing or producing; the actor agency by which CAUGHT, pret. and pp. of catch, pronoun- an effect is produced. Brown. ced cavt. a. That expresses a cause A name given by miners to CAUS'ATIVE, CAUK, I or reason also, that effects as a cause. CAWK, ^ certain specimens of the comJohnson. These are of a l)act sulphate of baryte. CAUS'ATIVELY, adc. In a causative manwhite, gray or fawn color, often irregular ner. sometimes resembling a in figure, but n. One who causes or pronumber of small convex lenses set in a CAUSA'TOR, duces an eflect. Brown. j\icholson. Ure. ground. CAUSE, n. s as z. [Fr. cause ; Sp. Port. It. This name is sometimes' given to masses h. causa; causa, from the Celtic; Welsh conijiosed of concentric lamellar concreacaus, effecting power, allied to cais, efCleareland. tions. fort, ceisiaw, to seek or go after, to attempt €AUK'Y, a. Pertaining to cauk like cauk. Arm. cans or cos. The primary sense is to urge, press, impel, like sequor, whence JVoodward. GAUL, n. [L. caula, a fold, from the root suit hence, to accuse, to attack or follow with a charge. The root of this word of hold. See Hold.] coincides with that of castle, cast, &c., 1. In anatomy, a membrane in the abdomen, which express a driving. A cause is that covering the greatest part of the lower inwhich moves, excites or impels to actestines, called from its structure, reticution or effect in law, a pressing for a lum, a net, but more generally, the omen;
;
;
;
;
tum also, a little membrane sometimes encompassing the head of a child when ;
born.
Encyc.i
1.
claim. See Question. Cause, sake and thing have the like radical sense.] siut or action in court any legal pro-
A
;
C A U
C A U
which a party institutes to obtain demand, or by which he seeks his
cess his
This is a leright or his supposed riglit. gal, scriptural and popular use of the word, coinciding nearly with case from cado, and action from ago, to urge or drive. The cause of both parties shall come before the judges. Ex. xxii. 0.
French
the loss of I.
The
from
on, covering.
])Utting
to put
sense
is
probably taken Port, calgar, to pave, Sp.
on shoes, or stockings,
calzar, id, L. calceo, calceus.]
A way
raised above the natural level of the groimd, by stones, earth, timber, fascines, &c., serving as a dry passage over wet or marshy ground, or as a mole to confine water to a pond or restrain it from over-
That which produces an effect; that which impels into existence, or by its agency or operation produces what did nof before e.xist ; that by virtue of which any thing is done ; that from which any thing proceeds, and without which
C A V
shoes, Fr. chausse, and the word is evidently the same with
trowsers,
flowing lower ground. Most generally a way raised in a common road.
it
A burning or searing,
as of morbid flesh, by a hot iron or by caustic medicines that burn, corrode or destroy any solid part of an animal body. The burning by a hot iron is called actual cautery that by caustic medicines, potential cautery. CAU'TION, n. [L. cautio ; Fr. caution ; Sp. camion ; from L. caveo, to take care. See Class Gb. No. 3. 52. 53. 83. The sense of caveo is probably to retire, or to stop, check or hold.] ;
\.
is
would not CAUSID'ICAL, a. [L. causidicus, causa exist. and dico.'\ Cause is a substance exerting its power into Pertaining to an advocate, or to the mainteLocke. act, to make a thing begin to be. nance and defense of suits.
3.
The reason or motive that urges, moves, or impels the minet to act or decide. For this cause have I raised up Pharaoh. Ex. ix. And David said, is there not a cause ? 1 Sam. Sake I
it
Producmg
ppr.
;
effecting
X
CAUS'TICAL,
\
"
not foi his catise that Cor. vii. [See Sake.]
;
2.
;
The
Clarendon. •3.
;
C.
;
They hate me
CAUSE,
V.
t.
justify tvithout cause. Ps. xxxv. Lxix.
To produce
;
to bring into ex-
care.]
They caused
great joy
to
all
brethren.
the
Acts XV. 3.
To
Kings
a.
Shak.
Cautious
[Fr. cauteleux, ;
wary
;
from L.
provident. JVotton.
2.
cause him
to
fall
by the sword.
2
Obs.
CAUS'ED,
To
assign insufficient cause. Spenser. pp. Produced effected brought
V. i.
;
;
about.
Cunning treacherous ;
CAU'TELOUSLY,
xix.
CAUSE,
carco, to take
[JVot used.]
cause
vii.
I will
cautela.]
from
n. [L. cautela,
Caution.
CAU'TELOUS,
by agency, power or influence. it to rain on the earth forty days.
effect
I will
Gen.
JVicholson.
salts.
CAU'TEL,
istence.
2.
adv.
;
wilv.
Spenser.
Cunningly
CAU'TELOUSNESS, CAU'TERISM, n. The
n.
tery.
slily
;
Bacon. Brown.
treacherously. Cautiously ; warily.
Cautiousness. apphcation of cauFerrand.
no CAUTERIZA'TION, n. [See Cauterize.] Blackinore. In surgery, the act of bin-ning or searmg some morbid part, by the apphcation of 2. Without just ground, reason or motive ; as fire. This is done by burning tow, cotcauseless hatred ; causeless fear. TValler. Prov. xxvi. ton, moxa, Spanish wax, pyramidical pieFairfax. adv. cauz'lesshj. Without ces of linen, &c., or more generally by a
CAUSELESS,
a.
cauz'less.
Having
cause, or producing agent.
CAUSELESSLY, cause or reason.
Taylor. CAUSELESSNESS, n. cauz'lessness. The Hammond. state of being causeless. that causes the n. He ; CAUS'ER, agent by
hot iron.
CAU'TERIZE,
Encyc. [Fr. cauteriser; Sp. Port. cauterizzare ; Gr. xavrjjpiaiTu,
V.
t.
Provision or security against ; measures taken for security as the rules and cauof government. advice Precept injunction warning exhortation, intended as security or guard ;
tions 4.
;
;
caution, bail. parliament would give his majesty sufiBwar should be prosecuted.
cient caution that the
;
That which a party or nation pursues or rather pursuit, prosecution of an object. in a say, Bible Societies are engaged noble cause. [See the first definition.] Hence the word cause is used to denote that which a person or thing favors that J^icholson. It is a nitrate of silver. to which the efforts of an inteUigent being are directed as, to promote rehgion is to Caustic curve, in geometry, a ciu've formed advance the cause of God. So we say, the by a coincidence of rays of light reflected from another curve. cause of truth or of justice. In all its apEncyc. of its CAUSTICITY, n. The quality of acting phcations, cause retains something like fire on animal matter, or the quality original meaning, struggle, impelling force, of of combining with the princi])les organcontest, effort to obtain or to effect someized subistances, and destroying their texthing. This quality belongs to concentrature. Ifllhout cause, without good reason withand some metallic ted the act. to acids, alkalis, or motive out a reason pure
We
Caution is the armor to defend us against imand the attacks of evil. for, nearly the sense of the
Security
French
[Gr. xavfixo;, from xaun, xowffu, to burn.]
whicti api)lied to living animals, acts like fire, in corroding the part and dissolving an escharotic. [See Causticiits texture Coxe. ty.] Encyc. Lunar caustic, a preparation of crystals of silver, obtained by solution in nitric acid, and afterwards fused in a crucible.
2.
Provident care; prudence in regard to danger; wariness, consisting in a careful attention to the (irobable effects of a measure, and a judicious course of conduct to avoid evils and the arts of designing men. position
;
bringing into being.
CAUS'TIC,
corroding destroying the texture of animal flesh. had done the CAUS'TIC, n. In medicine, any substance
accoimt.
;
did
wrong. 5.
CAUS'ING,
Burning
xvii.
4.
it
;
against
;
CAU'TION, to
warn
:
;
evil. V.
To
t.
give notice of danger
;
to exhort to lake heed.
;
Vou cautioned me
against their charms.
Swift.
CAU'TIONARY, to
warning
Containing caution, or
a.
avoid danger
;
as cautionary
advice. 2.
Given as a pledge cautionary town.
CAUTIONED,
or in security; as a
Warned
pp.
;
previously
admonished.
CAUTIONER,
In Scots law, the person who is bound for anotlier, to the performance of an obligation. n.
CAU'TIONING,
ppr. Warning; giving previous notice of danger. 11. In Scots law, the act of giving security for another, or the obligation by which one person becomes enas security for another, that he gaged shall pay a sum of money or perform a deed. Encyc.
CAU'TIONRY,
CAU'TIOUS,
Wary
a.
;
watchful
;
careful
to avoid evils ; attentive to examine probable effects and consequences of measures, with a view to avoid danger or mis-
fortune
prudent
;
CAUTIOUSLY,
;
circumspect. With caution
adv.
;
in
a
warv, scru|)ulous manner.
CAU'tlOUSNESS, cautious
;
n.
The
watchfidness
circumspection danger.
CAVALCADE,
;
;
quality of being provitlent care ;
prudence with regard
to
Addison. n. [Fr. cavalcade
;
Sp.cabal-
It. gada ; It. cavalcata. See Cavalry.] from xavtr,f, a burning or branding iron, A procession of persons on Jiorseback a from xatw, to biun.] formal, pompous march of horsemen and Sidney. To burn or sear with fire or a hot iron, as equipage, by way of parade, or to grace a morbid flesh. triumph, the public entry of a person of CAUS'EY, n. cauz'y. [Norm, calsay ; Fr. or seared with or raised CAU'TERIZED, pp. Burnt distinction, &c. chaussee for chaulsie, a bank, CAVALIE'R,»(. [Fr. See Cavalry.] A horseway Arm. chaugzer, the bank or mole a hot iron. of a pond. The Spanish has calzada, a CAUTERIZING, ppr. Burning, as with a mai), especially an armed horseman ; a hot iron. knight. causey, or way paved and raised Port 2. A gay, sprightly, military man. calfada, a pavement, and stones used in CAU'TERIZING, n. The act ofburnmg,as 3. The appellation of the party of king with a hot iron. paving. Both these words are evidently Charles I. from the same root as S]). calzas. Port. CAU'TERY, n. [Gr. xemt'jjptot L. cauleri Stvifl. 4. In fortification, an elevation of earth, situiim. See Cauterize.^ calpado, Sp. calzado, hose, loose breeches,
which an
effect is
cauterizar;
;
produced. Jolmson.
;
;
;
C A V
C A V
ated ordinarily in the gorge of a bastion, bordered with a parapet, with embrasures.
C E A
Intimation of caution hint warning admonition. Encyc. CA'VEAT, V. t. To enter a caveat. 4. In the manege, one who understands Judge Innes, CrancVs Rep. horsemanship one skilled in the art of CA'VEATING, n. In fencing, is the shifting the sword from one side of that of your riding. warlike a. to the other. €AVALIE'R, adversary Gay sprightly Encyc. brave generous. CA'VEATOR, n. One who enters a caveat. 2. Haughty disdainful. Judge Inncs, Cranch's Rep CAVALIERLY, at/i). Haughtily; arrogant- CAV'ERN, 71. [L. caverna ; Sp. Port. It. id. fi'arhurton. ly disdainfully. This word seems to be composed of cutius, CAVALIK'RNESS, n. Haughtiness; a dis and the Sax. (rrn, a secret place.] dainfid manner. A deep hollow place in the earth. In gen2.
;
;
;
;
CAV'IL,
False or frivolous objections also, a fallacious kind of reason, bearing some resemblance to truth, advanced for the sake of victory. Johnson. Encyc. CAVILER, n. One who cavils; one who is a\n to raise captious objections ; a cap:
tious disputant.
;
;
;
».
CAV'ILING,
JIddison. ppr. Raising frivolous objec-
tions.
;
CAV'ILINGLY,
adv. In a caviling
CAVALRY,
n.
[Fr. cavalerie,
from
cavalier,
a horseman, and this from cluval, a horse
whence
cavalcade ; It. cavalto, a horse, cavaliere, cavalcata ; S|). caballo, caballero, cabalgada ; from L. cabaltus, a horse Ir. capnll and peall ; Russ. kobila, a mare Gr.
manner.
Shencood.
;
CAVILLA'TJON,
The [L. cavUlalio.] act or jiractice of caviling, or raising frivolous objections. Hooker. eral, it difters frcjin catc in greater depth a. and in being a])plied most usually to t'AV'lLOUS, Caf)tious; unfair in argument ; apt to object without natural hollows, or chasms. reason. n.
good
Earth with
its
caverns dark and deep.
^yliffe.
CAV'ILOUSLV,
Watts
;
adv. In a cavilous
manner
;
Milton. captiously. Full of caverns, or deep CAV'ILOUSNESS, n. Captionsness dispochasms having caverns. sition or aptitude to raise frivolous body of military troops on horses; a gen 2. objecInhabiting a cavern. Pope. cral term, inrhiding light-horse, dragoons, tions. a. [L. cavernosus.] Hollow and other bodies of men, serving on horseCAV'IN, ji. [Fr. from L. cams, hollow.] fidl of caverns. ff'oodward. back. In the military art, a hollow Encyc. way or natural [Faber uses cavernal, wliich is less regCA'VaTR, v. f. [L. earo, to make hollow.] hollow, adapted to cover troops and facilTo dig out and make hollow; but suj)er- larly formed.] itate their approach to a place. seded by excavate. CAVERN'ULOUS, o. [h. cavernula.] Full Johnson. Bailey. CAVAT'lWA, n. [It.] In music, a short air, of Uttle cavities ; as cavemulous njetal CAVITY, n. [L. cavitas ; Fr. cainle; from L. niark. without a return or second part, which is cavus, hollow.J It. sometimes relieved by recitative. cano.] hi architecture, A hollow place; Bicsby. CAVET'TO,?i.[from hollowness; an opening; a hollow mendier, or round concave mold as the cavity of the month or throat. This CAVA'ZION, ji. [L. cavo, to hollow.] t ing, containing the quadrant of a circle; arcliilcctun, the niidcrdigging or hollowing is a word of voy general significalion. used as an ornami iit in cornices. of the earth for the foundation of a buildEncyc. CAVOLINITE, n. [from Cavolini, a Nea} allowed to be the CA [Fr. cavefon, or cavesson ing, or for cellarage politan naturalist.] It. cavezzone, a muzzle for sixth part olthe liighth of the building. ^ A newly discovered Vesnvian mineral, of a a horse, from cavare, to draw.] Johnson. Bailey. hexahedral form, occurring in the interior A sort of of leather or n. nose-band, cave L. cavea ; Sp. cueva ; iron, CAVE, wood, ; of calcaneus balls, accompanied with [Fr. garsometimes flat, and sometimes hollow or It. cava ; Arm. W. ogov cajf, or cau ; nets, idocrase, mica, and granular pjToxtwisted, which is put on the nose of a ene, lining the cavity of the geode, ^c. horse to wring it, and thus to forward the to dig out or Hindoo, gopa ; Ar. ,1.3 Journ. ofSciencet suppling and breaking of him. CA'VY, n. A genus of quadrupeds, holding Farrier's Diet. to be hollow. Class excavate, or a middle place between the murine and (j CAVIAR, n. cavee'r [Sp. cabial ; It. cavi- leporine tribes. Gb. No. 8. 71.] Encyc. ale; Ar. hollow place in the earth a subtorrane ^lAAai gabiar. The Arabic CAW, II. i. [probably from the sound ; Sax. ous cavern a den. This may be luitura ceo, a crow or a jaj-.] To crj- like a crow, rook or raven. or artificial. The primitive inhabitants of verb from which this j.Aii gabara, the earth, in many countries, lived in CAX'OU, n. [Sp. caxa, caion.] chest of word is formed, signifies to try, to strain ores of any metal that has been caves and the present inhabitants of some burnt, or press, and to season with fat. \t may ground and washed, and is readv' to be parts of the earth, especially in the high coincide with the Gr. rtftpou, L. refined. northern latitudes, occupy caves, particuTodd. experior.] [Local.] The roes of certain large fish, prepared and CA'YMAN, n. An animal of the in winter. larly genus salted. The best is made from the roes of Lacerta, found in the West Indies, the alLot dwelt in a cave, he and his daughters. the Gen. xix. sterlet, sturgeon, sevruga, and beluga, ligator. Caves were also used for the burial of the caught in the lakes or rivers of Russia. CAZiC, or CAZiQUE, n. cazeik. The title The roes are put into a bag with a strong dead. of a king or chief among several Uibes of Abraham buried Sarah in the cave of the field Indians in America. brine, and pressed by wringing, and then of Machpelali. Gen. xxiii. dried and put in casks, or into cisterns CEASE, v.i. [Fr. cesser; Sp.cesar; Port. Bacon applies the word to the ear, " the cessar ; It. cessare ; L. cf««o.] perforated at bottom, where they are cave of the ear ;" but this application is pressed by heavy weights. The poorest 1. To stop moving, acting or speaking; to unusual. sort is trodden with the feet. leave off; to give over followed by Tooke from CAVE, V. t. To make hollow. before a noun. Spenser. CAV'IL, V. i. [Sp. cavilar: Port, cavillar C.WE, i\ i. To dwell in a cave. It. cavUlare ; L. cavillor ; U. kibbelen Shak. It is an honor for a man to cease from strirc. Ori; To cave in, to fall in and leave a hollow, as Prov. XX. ental Ch. to cry ont or complain '72p earth on the side of a well or pit. When J. To fail to be wanting. Syr. to accuse, oppose, censure.] in digging into the earth, the side is exca 1. To raise The poor shall never cease out of the land. captious and frivolous objections Deut. XV. to find fault without good reason followyated by a falling of a quantity of earth, it is said to cave in. 3. To stop to be at an end ed by at. as, the wonder ceases ; the storm has ceased. CA'VEAT, n. [L. caveat, let him beware, It is better to reason than to cavil. Jinan from coi't'o.] To advance futile objections, or to frame 4. To be forgotten. In law, a [irocess in a court, especially in a I would make the remembrance of them to sophisms, for the sake of victory in an arcease. Deut. xxxii. spiritual court, to stop proceedings," as to gument. stop the proving of a will also to prevent CAVIL, V. t. To receive or treat with objec- a. To abstain ; as, cease from anger. Ps. the institution of a clerk a benefice ;
A
xaSa^f-rj!, a i)aok-horse.]
CAV'ERNED,
a.
;
;
CAVERNOUS,
;
VEZON. CAVESSON,
;
I.
A
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
to
tions.
Blackstone.
In America,
mon
law.
it
is
used in courts of comCranch's Reports.
Then
the conditions.
[.Vot vsual.]
xxxvii. cease from labor, is to rest ; to cease from be quiet ; but in such phrases, the sense of cease is not varied.-
To
Wilt thou enjoy the good. cai^il
Jmiton.
strife, is to
C E CEASE, V. end
To
I.
C E L
I
put a stop to
;
to put
an
to.
Milton. this impious rage. [But in this use the phrase is generally el-
Cease
[Aof in
Extinction.
n.
2.
use.]
Shak.
CE'ASELESS, a. Without a incessant
continual
;
stop or pause : witiiout intermis-
;
with ceaselefs praise
liis
CEL'ANDINE, nia
enduring for ever
;
works be-
;
aJi:
Incessantly
failing. N, n.
;
per-
;
ppc. Stopping; ending; desist-
CE€€H
A coin
Gr.
;
It. celido-
;t£/it6o«'ioi',
CECITY,
from
n. [L. cwcitas,
circus, blind.]
Brown. [E. cedrus
};.
cedro
from
;
Gr.
Fr. cedre
;
xfSpoj
;
Sp.
;
Syr.
i
^a
j
Heb. "np kadar, to be dark.] A tree. This name is given to different species of the juniper, and to a species of Fi-
The latter is that which is mennns. It is an evergreen, tioned in scripture. grows to a great size, and is remarkal)le its
durability.
CE'DAR-LIKE,
a.
CEDE, cedere
V. ;
We
;fofu), j;i;a6oi'.] ;
;
;
;
its orbit.
This distinction however
is
not
general, nor can the different uses of the two words be precisely defined. ap})ly celerity rather than velocity to thought : but there seems to be no reason, except usage, why the two words should not be
We
synonymous. ble
to
catlo,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
Lev.
To honor and marks
; Eug. to This coin-
To yield to surrender to give up to resign as, to cede a fortress, a province or couutry, by treaty. This word is apjirodenote the rehuquishmcut priately used to of a conquered city, fortress, or territory, to the former sovereign or projjiietor.
Gr. xtVlM.]
;
;
sabbath. 3.
gadaw
Qidt and Conge.
cides also with the Gr.
swift, light
;
2.
t [Fr. ceder ; Si). L. cedo ; W. gadv,
See
quit.
from
[L. ccelatura,
;
Resembling a cedar.
Milton. Port, ceder ; It.
n.
;
B. Jonson.
CE'DARN,
Sp
;
from
horned or prickly
engrave or emboss.] 1. The act or art of engraving or embossing. Hakewill. 2. That which is engraved. CEL'EBRATE, v. t. [Ir. ceileabradh ; Fr. celebrcr ; Sp. Port, celebrar ; It. celebrare ; L. celebro, t'lom celeber, famous. The Russ. has slavlyu. Qu. the root of c«H.] 1. To praise to extol to commend to give
Pertaining to the cedar.
a.
Oriental
;
Rapidity in motion; swiftness; speed; applied mcst generally to bodies moving on or near the earth as the celerity of a horse or of a fowl. speak of the iielocity of sound or of light, or of a planet in
An affection of motion by which a movabody rims through a given space in a given time. Eneyc. CEL'ERY, n. [Fr. celeri ; D. seldery;'G. selleri ; Gr. arUvm.] A i>lant, a species of Apium, cultivated for the table. CELES'TIAL, a. [L. cmlestis, from calum. ccelum, heaven.] 1. Heavenly belonging or relating to heaven dwelling in heaven as celestial spirmake famous to celebrate to to as, praise its celestial joys. Hence the word conthe name of the Most High. veys the idea of superior excellence, The grave cannot celebrate thee. Is. xxxviii &c. Dryden. To distinguish by solemn rites to keep 2. delight, purity, Belonging to the upper regions, or visible holy. heaven as celestial signs the celestial From even to even shall ye celebrate your
CE'LATURE,
Blindness.
CE'DAR,
plant, swallow-wort,
The called the greater tree-celandine. true orthography would be Chelidine. 2. Core. Fam. of Plants.
of Italy and Barbary.
[See Zechin.]
1.
[D. celedonie
n.
L. chelidonia ; a swallow.]
Ji.
ccler,
swift 1.
poppy, growing on old walls, among ruband in waste places. The lesser celandine is called pile-wort, a species of Ranunculus. The name is also given to the Bocconia, a plant of the West Indies,
Donne.
petually.
CE'ASJXG,
for
;
A
variety of celery, called also the turnep-rooted celery. [See Celery.^ ?!. [L. celeritas ; Fr. celerite : celeridad It. celeritii ; from L. ; Sp.
bish,
joys of heaven.
CE'ASEEESSLY,
It.
A
Milton. as the cease-
hold.
Endless
ing
CELER'ITY,
;tsXi6ui',
All these
less
be of boards, or of lath and Hence ceiling is used for the plastering. upper part of a room. In ship building, the inside planks of a
may
ship.
sion.
2.
CELE'RIA€,
ering
liptical.]
CEASE,
C E L
the inner roof of a building, or the timbers which form the top of a room. Tliis cov-
3.
;
brate the birth day of ebrate a marriage.
Washington
;
to cel-
To mention in a solemn manner, whether Johnson. of joy or sorrow. CEL'EBRATED, pp. Praised ; extolled honored. CEL'EBRATING,ppr. Praising; honorin
4.
;
CELEBRATION,
;
globe.
xxiii.
or distinguish by ceremonies of joy and respect as, to cele-
Descending from heaven lesfial
;
as a suit of ce-
armor.
Pope.
CELES'TIAL,
An
n.
inhabitant of heaven.
CELES'TIALLY,
adv. transporting manner.
CELES'TIFY,
!'.
t.
Pope. In a heavenly or
To communicate some-
thing of a beaveidy nature to any thing.
Brown.
[JVot used.]
Solemn performance; CEL'ESTIN,
In" mineralogy, native sulphate of strontian, a mineral so named from its occasional delicate blue color. Ure. festival. 71. A 2. religious order, so namsome of their natuial rights. (distinguishing by ceremonies, or by CEL'ESTINS, Jay. CE'DED, pp. Yielded surrendered given marks of joy or res[)ect; as the celebration ed from PopeinCelestin. They have ninetysix convents of a birth clay, or other anniversary. Italy, and twenty-one in up. France. They rise two hours after midrenown honor or distinction be3. Praise CE'DING, ppr. Yielding giving up. night to say matins. They eat no flesh, stowed, whether by songs, eulogies, or CE'DRAT, n. A species of citron-tree. when Clarendon Their sick, and fast often. rites and ceremonies. except Pallas. Tooke. habit is a white gown, a capuche and a CEL'EBRATOR, n. One who celebrates. CE'DRINE, a. Belonging to cedar. black scapulary. Encyc. Boyle. CE'DRY, a. Having the color or properties a. Famous renowned. CELIAC, a. [L. cceliacus ; Gr. xoaiaxoj, of cedar. Evelyn. CELE'BRIOUS, Gretv. from xoi?.ia, the belly.] CED'UOUS, a. Fit to be felled. [Little used.] Evelyn. CEIL, J). <. [Sp. cieio, heaven, a roof or ceil- CELE'BRIOUSLY, adv. With praise or re- Pertaining to the lower belly, or intestines. nown. [Little used.] Arbuthnot. ing It. cielo ; Fr. del, heaven, a canopy, a tester L. ccelum. Qu. Gr. xoa.o(. This CELE'BRIOUSNESS, n. Fame; renown CELIB'ACY, n. Calebs, an unmarried
2.
a distinguishii:g by solemn rites; as the celebration of a marriage, or of a religious
To
relinquish and grant ; as, to cede all claims to a disputed right or territory. The people must cede to the government ;
ji.
}
CEL'ESTINE,
S
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
word
indicates
its
original application to
vaulted buildings, without divisions into stories such as many of the ijublic edifi ces in Europe, but which are rarely seen in America.] To overlay or cover the inner roof of a building ; or to cover the top or roof of a
Little used.]
CELEB'RITY, nown
room. And
n. [L. celebritas.]
Fame;
re-
the distinction or honor publicly bestowed on a nation or person, on char acteror exploits; the distinction bestowed on whatever is great or remarkable, and as th< manifested by praises or eulogies the celebrity of the duke of Wellington celebrity of Homer, or of the Iliad. from the trininph; England acquired celebrity
;
;
;
;
the greater house he ceiled with
2 Chron.
fir-tree.
iii.
CE'ILED, pp. Overlaid with
2.
or building.
CE'ILING,
of Marlborough.
timber, or with
]ilastpring.
n.
The
room
the top of a
T.Dawes.
Public and splendid transaction
of a marriage. In used hv Bacon, we now use covering which overlays CEL'ER'I. [See Celery.]
CE'ILINO, ppr. Covering
celebrity
;
as the
person
;
[L. ralibatvs, a single life.] state ; a single life.
An unmarried
It is
most
frequently if not always applied to males, or to a voluntary single life. They look on celibacy as an accursed state. Spectator.
CEL'IBATE, chiefly used life
n.
A
single
life
of the Popish clergv.
CELL,
n.
[L.
;
when speaking of celia
;
Ir."
ceall
;
celibacy the single
;
Enci/c. Sp. celda :
D. kelder, a cellar ; G. It. cella ; ^w. keltare ; Dan. kelder ; M'.cill. has the elements of the Latin celo, to conceal, and of the English hold.] Port.
this sense, as
heller;
celebration.
It
M
C E I.
A small
C E N ;
or a bath. 9.
3.
A cottage ; a cave of residence.
a small or
;
mean
place Prior.
A
;
of a honey comb, &c. In botany, a hollow ])lacc
in a pericarp particularly in a capsule, in whicli seeds .nre lod<^ed. According to the number of
these cells, pericarps are called unilocular,
&c.
bilocular, trilocular,
Dryden.
CENS'ER, rio
A
It.
;
n. [Fr. eneensoir ; Sp. incensaincensiere. See Incense.]
vase or pan in which incense is burned. Among the Jews, a kind of chafing-dish, covered by a dome, and suspended by a chain, used to ofter perfumes in sacrifices.
;
3.
MaHt/n.
In anatomy, a little bag, or bladder, containing fluid or other matter ; as the adipose cells, containing fat. Encyc. C. A religious house. Chaucer. J.
or experiment.] Any glutinous or other substance capable; in close cohesion, as mortar, glue, soder, &c. In building, cement denotes a stronger kind of mortar than that which is ortUnarily used. Encyc. Bond of union that which unites firmly, as persons in friendship, or men in society. Powders or pastes, surrounding bodies in pots and crucibles, for chimical purposes.
of uniting bodies
small cavity or hollow place, variously applied as the cells of the brain the cells ;
4.
C E N
Arm. cimant Sp. cimiento, tho ground! To perfume with odors from burning subwork of a building; It. cimento, an essayl staiices.
or close apartment, as in a prison,
V. t. To unite by the application of glutinous substances, by mortar which hardens, or other matter that produces cohesion of bodies.
Encyo.
CENS TNG, ppr. CEN'SION,
n.
Perfuming with odors. See Cense]
[L. censio.
rate, tax, or assessment.
A
[JVot used.]
CEMENT',
J. Hall.
CENS'OR, ti. [L. censor. See Cense.] An officer, in ancient Rome, whose business
was to register the effectti of the citizens, to impose taxes according to the unite firmly or closely property as, to cement which each man possessed, and to inspect to cement parts of the community the manners of the citizen.s, with power to friendship. censure vice and innnorahty, by inflicting CEMENT', f. 1. To unite or become solid a public mark of ignominy on the ofli^nder. to unite and cohere. Sharp. a cellar, or cellars. CEMENTA'TION, n. The act of cement- 2. One who is empowered to examine all case of cabinet work, CEI/LARET, »!. the of act manuscripts and books, before they are ing imiting by a euitable subfor holding bottles of liquors. committed to the press, and to see that [Local.] stance. «. An of- 2. In CEL'LARIST, they contain notliing heretical or innuoral. chimistry, the act of applying cements ficer in a monastery who ha.s the care of' to substances, or the Encyc. corroding and changthe cellar, or the charge of procuring and One who is given to censure. ing of them by cement. This is done by keeping tlie provisions also, an officer in Roscommon. Dryden. sm-rounding them with the powder of anwho has the care of the chapters, tempoother body, and exposing them, in a close CENSO'RIAL, ) a. Belonging to a censor. rals, and particularly of distributing bread, or to the correction of RIAN, I vessel, to a heat not suflicient to fuse them. 71. See Cell.] [L. cellarium. under a house or other building, used as a repository of liquors, provisions, and other stores for a family. CEL'LARAOE, n. The room for a cellar
CEL'LAR,
To
A room
;
all
;
;
;
A
;
CELLARER, ;
wine, and money to canons, an account of their attendance in the choir. Etinjc. a. [L. cella, and fero, to bear.] Bearing or producing cells.
eELLIF'EROUS,
Encyc.
CEL'LULAR,
a.
cellula,
[L.
a
little
Consisting of cells, or containing
cell.]
cells.
cellular
memhrane,
in
animal bodies,
composed of an infinite number of mi mite cells, communicating with each otli er. It invests every fiber, and seems to be the medium of comiection between all is
parts of the body. servoirs for fat.
The
CELLULIF'EROUS, cell,
and
ducing
fero, to bear.]
little cells.
CELS'ITUDE,
n.
n.
[L. celhda, a
little
Bearing or pro Dkt. .Vat. Hist.
[L. celsitudo.]
elevation.
CELT,
cells serve as re-
Encyc. a.
Highth
:
Chaucer. the primitive inhabitants
One of
of the South ofEurope. [See Celtic] CELTIBE'RI.'VN, «. Pertaining to Celtibe-
and its inhabitants, the Celtiberi, or Celts of the Iberus, a river in Spain. CELTIBE'RIAN, n. An inhabitant of Cehi-
United
pp.
changed by cement
[W.
We
Celtic origin.
Celts.
cement ;
:
;
;
;
nity, fJtou,
One
from
xoiioj,
common, and
of a religious order,
tude.
CENOBIT'Ie, CENOBIT'ICAL, to
/Jmj, life.
to live.]
who
vent, or in connnunity an anchoret, or hermit, \
a.
n.
in
lives in soli-
Encyc. Living in communias men belonging Stillingheet. live in
.
A
place
where persons
CEN'OTAPH,
n.
empty, and
[Gr. xtvoraifmv, to-Jio;, a tomb.]
from
I.
Johnson. Encyc. n. cens. [L. census, a valuation, a registering, a tax censeo, to enroll, to tax. Qu. Ch. DJp to impose a fine.] A public rate or tax. Bacon. Condition rank. Ohs. B. Jonsonl :
;
V.
t.
[Fr. encenser.
34
See
Incense.]
;
CENS'URABLENESS,
n. Blamablcness be censured. If'hitlock. adv. In a manner worthy
fitness to
;
of blame.
CENS'URE, censure 1.
;
CENSE,
;
;
CENS'URABLY,
xs
empty tomb erected in honor of some deceased person a monument erected to one who is buried elsewhere.
3.
;
;
n. cen'shur.
Sp. Port.
It.
[L.
censura
censura; Fr. ;
from L. cen-
seo, censor.]
.\n
1.
a.
;
Buck.
conmiunitv.
;
fVhitaker. Encyc. [See Censure.] Worthy of censure blamable culpable reprehensible faulty as a censurable person, or censurable conduct or writings. Locke.
CENSURABLE,
live in a conopposition to
who
ty,
J
a convent.
CE'NOBY,
JVartun.
southern, a native of Africa and the South ofEurope the oriental, growing in Armenia and Taurica and the western, growing in Virginia. Encyc. Tnoke. bEM'ENT, n. [L. cmmentnm: Fr. cimcjit ;•
Vol.
;
;
CEMENTI
CELT'IS, n. The nettle-tree, of several species; among which are the anstralis or CENSE,
;
word.
CENSO'RIOUS,
;
con-
;
voi,
CELTIC, n. The language of the Celts. CELTICISM, n. The manners and customs of the
public morals ; as, censorial powei\ Full of censure. See C'ensoWoiM. the projier
;
celt,
Pertaining to the primitive hdiabitants of the South end West ofEurope, or to the early inhabitants of Italy, Gaul, Spain and Britain. say, Celtic nations ; Celtic ;
by
firmly united
;
;
a covert or shelter celtiad, one that dwells in a covert, an in habitant of the forest, a Celt; celu, to conceal, L. celo ; Gr. Krtroi, Celts.] a.
2.
;
a. Ad
CEMENT'ED,
beria.
CELT'I€,
Encyc. lire. having Encyc.
Cementing
the quality of uniting firmly.
ria,
customs
a.
;
Kirtvan
The
CENSO
CEMENT' ATORY,
i
The
act of blaming or finding fault and condenming as wrong; api)licable to the
moral conduct, or
to the
AVhen applied to persons, it
works of men. is
nearly equiv-
alent to blame, reproof, reprehension, re-
an expression of disapproprimand. bation, which often implies reproof Judicial sentence judgment that condemns. An ecclesiastical cen.ture is a sentence of condemnation, or penalty inflicted on a member of a church for mal-conductj by which he is deprived of the comIt is
:
C E N
C E N
of the church, or prohibited from executing the sacerdotal office. Enajc. uiiiiiiou
CENS'URE,
V.
cen'shur.
t.
[Fr.
cenaurer
Sp. censurar.] To find fault with and con as wrong to blame to express dis approbation of; as, to censure a man, or his manners, or his vvTitings.
demn
;
;
CENTAURY,
C E N
n. [L. centaurea;
Gr. xfrfov-
pfOl*.]
ated into a hundred divisions or equat parts as a centigrade thermometer. Medical Repository. _ ;
The name of a
plant, and a genus of plants, of numerous species. The lesser centaury is a species of Gentiana. Centaury bears the popular names of knapweed, bluebottle, sultan,
and
star-thistle.
CEN'TIGRAM,n.
[L. centum and gram.] In French Measure, the hundredth part of a gram. [See Gram.]
CENTILITER,
n. [L. centum, and Fr. litre or litron.] The hundredth part of a liter, a httle more than 6-10 of a cubic inch as a centenary of CENTIM'ETER, n. [L. centum, a hundred, To condemn and Gr. fttrpov, measure.] years. ecclesiastical affairs. 3. To estimate. Shak CENT'ENARY, o. Relating to a hundred In French measure, the hundreth part of a [Not in use.] consisting of a hundred. meter, rather more than 39-100 of an inch. CENS'URE, t'. !. To judge. [.ATo^ in mm.] a. Christ. Obs. x. 192. [L. centum, a huncb-ed English measure. CENS'URED, pp. Blamed reproved con- CENTEN'NIAL, and annus, a year.] demned. CEN'TINODY, n. Knotgrass. [JVot used.] CENS'URING, ;?/))-. Blaming, finding fault 1. Consisting of a hundred years, or com- CEN'TIPED, n. [L. centipeda; centum, a Mason. and a with condemning. pleting that term. hundred, pes, foot.]^ An insect having a hundred feet, but the CENS'US, n. [L. froin censeo. See Cense.'] 2. Pertaining to a hundred years. term is applied to insects that have many In ancient Rome, an authentic declaration 3. Happening every hundred years. made before the censors, by the citizens, CEN'TER, n. [Gr. xfifpor, a point, goad or Insects of feet, thougli not a hundred. this kind arc called generically of their names and places of abode. This spur, from xtirtia, to prick L. centrum ; Scolope7idra. In warm climates, some of them Fr. centre ; Sp. centro ; Port. It. irf.] declaration was registered, and contained grow to the length of six inches or more, and their an enumeration of all their lands and es 1. A jjoint equally distant from the extrembite is poisonous. ities of a line, figure or tates, their quantity and quality, with the Encyc. body the middle for or is not used. and CENTIPEE, wives, children, domestics, tenants, point place. centiped, slaves of each eitizen. Hence the word 2. The middle or central object. In an ar- CENT'NER, n. [L. centum, centennriiis.] my, the body of troops occui)ying the place In metallurgy and assaying, a docimastic .signities this enumeration or register, a hundred a weight divisible first into a in the fine between the wings. man's whole substance, and the tax im In a. fleet, hundred parts, and then into smaller parts. the division between the van and rear of posed according to each man's property. The metallurgists use a weight divided the fine of battle, and between the weathIn the United States of America, an emi into a hundred equal parts, each one er division and lee, in the order of sailing meration of the inhabitants of all the Mar. Diet. pound the whole they call a centner : the States, taken by order of the Congress, to furnish the rule of apportioning the repre- 3. pound is divided into thirty-two parts or single body or house. half ounces the half ounce into two quarsentation among the States, and the numThese institutions collected all authority intens, and each of these into two drams. to one center, ber of represensatives to which each State kings, nobles and people. But the assayers use different weights. is entitled in the Congress /. Jldams. also, an enuWith them a centner is one dram, to which meration of the iidiabitaiits of a State, ta- Center of gravity, in mechanics, the point the other parts are proportioned. ken by order of its legislature. about which all the parts of a body exactEncyc. CEN'TO, n. [L. cento, patched cloth, a CENT, ?^. [Fr. cent; S\i.ciento; Port.cento; ly balance each other. It. ce)i/o ; froin L. centum, formed on the Center rhapsody.] of motion, the point which remains at A composition formed by verses or passaCeltic, W. cant. Arm. cant, Corn. kanz. rest, while all the other parts of a body The Welch cant signifies a circle, hoo|), move round it. ges from other authors, disposed in a new Encyc. order. Johnson. Encyc. wheel, or rim, a wattled fence round a CEN'TER, V. t. To place on a center to a. [L. centralis.] fix on a central point. Relating to yard or corn floor hence, a complete cirMilton. CEN'TRAL, the center ])Iaced in the center or middle It is probable that the 2. To collect to a cle, a hmidred. point. Teutonic and Gothic hund, in hundred, is containing the center, or pertainmg to Thy joys are centered all in me alone. the parts near the center. Prior. Central forces, in mechanics, the powers the same word. Ar. j^i^ handon, a CEN'TER, V. i. To be collected to a point. which cause a moving body to tend tohundred, and the same root gives India, Our hopes must center on ourselves alone. wards or recede from the center of moHindu. See Hundred.] tion. Dryden. 1. A Inmdred. In commerce, per cent, de- 2. To be collected to a point to rest on. n. The state of being cenCENTRAL'ITY, notes a certain rate by the hundred ; 3. To be placed in the middle. Milton. tral. us, fen per cent, is ten in the hundred, whether CEN'TERED, pp. Collected to a point or CEN'TRALLY, adv. With regard to the center fixed on a central pohit. This rate is caWed percentprofit or loss. center in a central manner.
We
we censure Buckmbisler.
laugh at vanity, oftener than
CENT'ENARY,
n.
[L.
centum, a hundred.] The number of a hundred by a judicial sentence, as in
piiJe.
%
Encyc.
cenlenarius,
from
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
".?.
;
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
age. 2. In the United States of America, a copper coin whose value is the liundredtli part of a dollar.
CENT'AgE,
n.
dred.
CEN'TERING, ;j;)r.
Placing on the center;
collecting to a point.
CENTES'IMAL,
a.
CEN'TRI€,
a.
Placed in the center or mid-
dle.
[L. centesimus,
centum, a hundred.]
from
Rate by the cent or hun- The hundredth. As a noun, the next step of
CEN'TRICALLY, adv. In a central position. CEN'TRI€ALNESS, n. Situation in the center.
progression after decimal in the arithme- CENTRIFUGAL, a. [L. centrum, and fuOr. xt rraupos. tic of fractions. Johnson. gio, to flee.] Qu. xivtiu, to spur, and rcwpoj, a bull.] CIENTESIMA'TION, n. [L. centesimus, su- Tending to recede from the center. The In mytholoo-ij, a fabulous being, supposed to pra.] centrifugal force of a body, is that force by be half njan and half horse. It has been \ for which all bodies moving round another miUtary puinshment, desertion, muliny supposed that tliis fancied monster originor the like, where one jjerson in a liundrcd hotly in a curve, tend to fly off from the ated among the Lapitha^, a tribe in Thesis selected for execution. axis of their motion, in a tangent to the Encyc. saly, who first invented the art of breaking CEN'TESM, n. [L. periphery of tlie curve. centesimus.] The hunEncyc. horses. But the origin of the fable and of dredth part of an integer or thing. [JVot CENTRIPETAL, a. [L. centrum, and peto, the name is doubtful to move towards.] used.] Railey. 2. Part of a southern constellation, in form CENTIFO'LIOUS, a. [L. centum, a hund- Tending towards the center. Centripetal of a centaur, usu.illy joined with the wolf, red, waA folium, a leaf] Having a hundred force is that force which draws or impels containing thirty-five stars the archer. leaves. a body towards some point as a center as Johnson. Baile'ii. Encm. CEN'TIGRADE, a. [L. centum, a Inmdred, „„„ „ in case of a planet revolving round the sun, CEN'TAURLIKE, a. Having the appear- and gradus, a degree.] the center of the system. ance ol a centaur. Sidney. Consisting of a hundred degrees gradu[Note. The common accentuation of cen-
CEN'TAUR,
)!.
[L. centaurus
;
;
;
;
CEP
C E
and centripetal is artificial and harsi first and third syllables, as in circumpolar, would be natural and easy.]
CEPII'ALALtiV,
R
accent on the
CENTUM' tumvirs.
a.
[Fr.
from L.
cenluplex,
CEPIIAL'IC,
71.
A
Encyc.
A
hundred
V.
To
t.
multiply a hundred
ShaJi.
According to the rules and forms prescribed or civil; formally respect" customary
Ceremonious ])hrases." Addison. to the rules of civility take a ceremonious leave. 5. Formal exact too observant precise of forms. CEREMO'NIOUSLY, adv. In a eeremonious manner; formally; with due forms. CEREMO'NIOUSNESS, 71. The use of customary forms the practice of too much ceiemonv great formalitv in mannei-s. CER'EMONY, 71. [L. Sp.'lt. Port, ceremonia ; Fr. ceremonie.] 71. A CER'ASITE, I. Outward rite [L. ceroiiim, cherry.] external form in religion. petrifaction resembling a cherry. Cyc. 'i. Forms of civility; rules established by CERAS'TES, 71. [Gr. xcf>a;ri(, from xifai, a custom for regulating social intercourse. horn.] 3. Outward forms of state the forms preIn zoology, the name of a serpent, of the scribed or established by order or custom, genus Coluber, which the ancients supposserving for the purpose of civility or maged to have horns. nificence, as in levees of princes, the reCERATE, 71. [L. ceratum, from cera, wax.] ception of embassadors, &c. A thick kind of ointment, composed of wax Master of ceremonies, an officer w-bo superand oil, with other ingredients intends the reception of embassadors. applied externally in various diseases. Cyc. person w ho regulates the forms to be obCE'RATED, a. [L. ceratus.] Covered with served by the company or attendants on a wax. public occasion. CERE, 71. The naked skin that covers the CER'EOLITE, 71. [L. cera, wax, and Gr. base of a hawk's bill. Enei/c %.i.9o(, a stone.] CERE, I', t. [L. cera, wax.] To wax or A substance which in and soft-
A
CEPH'EUS,
fold.
a. Consisting of out(brins and rites; as the ceremonious part of worship. [In this sense, cereTnoTiiaK is now used.] Full of ceremony or solemn forms.
ward
;
medicine for headache
or other di.sorder in the head. 71. constellation in the Northern hei7iisphere. CEN'TUPLE, Beaum. fold. CE'PIIUS, 71. A fowl of the duck kind al CENTU'PLICATE, v. t. [L. centum, and so, a species of monkey, the mona. Diet. Mit. Hist. pHcatus, folded ; Sp. centuplicar, to make a hundred fold.] CERA SEE', 71. The male balsam apple. To make a hundred fold. CER'ASIN, 71. [L. cerasus.] CENTU'RIAL, a. [from centun/.1 Relating Any guiriiny substance whicli swells ni colli water, but does not readily dissolve to a century, or a hundred years; as a in it. centurial sermon. Ure. Dr. John
centum, and plico, to fold.]
rules prescribed to be observed on solemn occasions.
CEREMONIOUS,
;
CEN'TUPLE,
R
C E
n.
[Gr. xt^a%a%//ia, xi^aJ.r,, the head, and aAyo;, pain.] The headache. CEPIIAL'IC, a. [Gr. xt^ojuxoj, from xi^aT-rj, the head.] CEN'TUIMVIR, 71. [L. centum, a hundred, and vir, a man.] Pertaining to the head as ccpWic medicines, remedies Cor disorders in the head. The One of a hundred and five judges, in ancient Home, appointed to decide common causcephalic vein, which runs along the arm, 2. was so named because the ancients used es among the people. to open it for disorders of the head. 3. VIRAL, a. Pertaining to tiie ceniriftigal
The
ful.
4.
Formal; according
;
as, to
;
;
;
;
When England ing to
Oic shall
third centurial juliilce of
New-
come, who of us will then be the general joy
liv-
.'
i)articii)ate
J.
CENTU'RIATE,
v.
t.
TVoodbridge. [L. centurio, to divide
into liundreds or companies.]
To divide into hundreds. Johnso7i. Bailey. CENTURIA'TORS, ) n. [Fr. centtiiiateur, from L. cenluria, a CEN'TURIST, (,
century,
or from centurio, to divide into
;
;
;
;
A
;
A
hundreds.] historian who distinguishes time into centuries ; as in the Universal Cliurclx His-
tory of Magdeburg.
CENTU'RION,
n.
Ayliffe.
[L. centurio,
from
cen-
tum, a hundred.]
Romans, a military officer who commanded a hundred men, a century or comjiany of infantry, answering to the in modern armies. captain CEN'TURY, n. [L. centuria, from centum, a
Among
1.
the
hundred.] In a general sense, a hundred consisting of a hundred parts.
;
any
thijig
cover with wax.
CER'EBEL,
If'iseman. I
CEREBEL'LUM, head, or the
I little
CEREBRAL, CER'FBRINE,
)
"
hinder
ness resembles wax ed with steatite.
The
"• [L. cerebellum.]
part of the
brain.
Coxe. [from L. cerebrum, the
appearance sometimes confoundCyc.
CE'REOUS, [L. rereus, Waxen like wax. CE'RES,
from
Cleaveland. cera,
wax.]
Gayton. In mythology, the inventor or
;
71.
goddess of corn, or rather the name of corn
brain.]
I
;
a.
Pertaining to the ccrcbrnm or brain.
deified.
A division of the Roman people for the CERECLOTH, 71. [L. cera, wax; and cloth.] The name of a planet discovered by M. Piozzi, at Palermo in Sicily, in 1801. pm-pose of electing magistrates and enact- A cloth sirieare
;
;
;
;
;
;
CENTZONT'LI, the Turdus thrush.
CEOL,
n.
or
mockins Clavigero.
Sax. a ship, L.
This word names.
is
celox, or Eng. keel sometimes found prefixed to
CEPHALAL'CilC, good
The Mexican name of CEREMO'NIAL,
Polyglottus, "
n.
[Infra.] for the lieadache.
A
medicine Swijl.
71.
Outward form;
exter- 2.
rite, or established forms or rites, including all the forms prescribed; a system of rules and ceremonies, enjoined by law or established by custom, whether hi religious worship, in social intercourse, or in the courts of princes. The order for rites and forms in the Romish church, or the book containing the
nal
A
fossil shell.
CE'RIUM,
11.
A
metal recently discovered
in
Sweden, in the mineral cerite, and so called from the planet Ceres. It is of great specific gravity. Its color a grayisli its texture lamellar.
white and
•
Diet. jVat. Hist.
CEROOX',
71.
or package
[from the Spanish.]
made of skins.
A
bale
R
C E
1.
2.
R
C E
C E
S
of the Mareschall of the army, in writing CER'VR'AL, a. [L. cen'ij-, the neck, under his seal. Blackstone. whence cervicalis.] CERTIFICATE, v. t. or i. To give a cer Belonging to the neck ; as the cervical nerves ; to lodge a certificate with the tificate cervical vessels. Encyc. cieHo ; It. Port, certo ; from L. certus.] proper officer, for the pin-pose of being ex CERV'IN, [L. cervinus ; Sv.cervino: I Sure true undoubted unquestionable empted from the payment of taxes to sup CERVINE, p- from L. cerrus, a deer ;W. tliat cannot be denied ; existing in fact and carw ; Corn, and Arm. karu ; Kamtchatka, port the ministry, in a parish or ecclesi astical society. truth. JVew England. karo.] The dream is certain and the interpretation To give a certificate to, acknowledging Pertaining to the deer, or to animals of the Dan. ii. sure. one to be a parishioner. genus Cervus. Assured in mind ; having no doubts folBut such certificated person can gain no set- CESA'REAN, a. The Cesareaii operation is lowed by of, before a noun. tlement. Blackstone. B. 1. Ch. 9 the taking of a child from the womb by However I with thee have fixed my lot, CERTIFICA'TION, )i. The act of certify- cutting an operation, which, it is said, Certain to undergo like doom of death. ing. gave name to Cassar, the Roman emConsort with thee. Milton. CER'TIFIED, pp. [See CeHify.] Assured peror.
Pertaining to the Cerrus, or Chaucer. bitter oak. CER'RUS, n. [L.] Tiie bitter oak. a. cer'tin. CER'TAIN, [Fr. ceHain; Sp.
CER'RIAL,
a.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
To
malce her certain of the sad event.
made certain
Dryden
.
Unfailing; always producing the intended as, wo may have a certain remedy for a disease. 4. Not doubtful or casual really existing. 3.
effect
;
CERTIFIER, CER'TIFY, It.
Stated
fixed
;
Ye shall 6.
;
determinate
;
regular.
gather a certain rate every day.
V.
certificare
t.
Ex
The judges
There came a certain poor widow. Marl; xii lu the plural number, a particular part or ;
01-
some
an
;
men
Hanani came, he " I mourned
also of
own
your
noun
;
the freehold
cer-
shall certify
came
To
;
Gough.
carpet or matting.
CESS,
Martyn
V.
i.
[L. cesso, to cease.] Obs.
To
neglect
from
cesso, to
a legal duty.
CESSA'TION,
chiefly in question. to
[L. cespes, turf] Per-
Pertaining to turf; turfy.
as a noun, a rate or tax, and as a verb, to rate or lay a tax, is probably a corruption of assess, or from the same root. It is not used. Spenser
under his hand, that
give certain information
a.
made of turf
CESS,
n.
[L. cessaiio,
Cotoet.
cease.]
£lackstone. 2.
applied
1.
A
ceasing
;
a stop
;
a rest
;
the act of dis-
continuing motion or action of any kind, whether temporary or final.
to
persons.
as, 3.
poets have
from
;
;
a.
A cespitous or turfy plant, has many stems from the same root, usually forming a close thick
Sp. certificar;
usually founded.
The judge
of Judah."
certain days." Nell. i. 2. 6. In the latter sense, it is used as a
" certain
;
certifico
indefinite part, ninn
"
quantity.
L.
shall certify their opinion to the] upon such certificate, the decree!
is
certain
taining to turf
and/acio, to make.] To testify to in writing; to make a declaration in writing, under hand, or hand and seal, to make known or establish a fact. chancellor, and
and
[Fr. certifier
Low
;
Particular.
ber,
or
certifies,
CES'PITOUS,
xvi.
number
One who
n.
tus, certain, 1.
Dryden. 5.
CESPITP'TIOUS,
assures.
;
Virtue that directs our ways Througli certain dangers to uncertain praise.
informed.
;
We have sent and certified the liing. Ezra iv. To give certain information of; applied to
2.
A ceasing or susi)ension of operation, force or effect; as a cessation of the laws of nattu'e.
things.
A
cessation of arms, an armistice or truce, agreed to by the commanders of armies, followed by of, after the person, andj to give time for a capitulation, or for other before the thing tuld as, I certified youi Certainly tliis was a righteous man. Luke purposes. xxiii. CESSA'VIT, n. [L. cesso, to cease, cessavit, of the fact. 2. Without failure. he hath ceased.] CER'TIFV-ING, ppr. Giving a written tesHe said, I will certainly return to thee. Gen. timony, or certificate giving certain no-i In late, a writ given by statute, to recover xviii. tice lands, when the tenant or occupier has making certainly known. CER'TAINNESB, n. Certainty, wliich see. CERTIORA'RI, n. [Low L. certioror, ceased for two years to perform the service, fromj CER'TAINTY, n. A fixed or real state ; certus, certior.] which constitutes the condition of his tentruth fact. .\ writ issuing out of Chancery, King's! ure, and has not sufficient goods or chatfor that the Lord God Know a certainty, your Bench or other superior court, to call up tels to be distrained, or the tenant has so will no more drive out these nations. Josh, the records of an inferior court, or remove inclosed the land that the lord cannot Luke i. xxiii. there depending, that it may lie' a cause come Blackstone. upon it to distrain. 2. Full assurance of mind exemption from tried in the superior court. This writ is' CES'SER, n. A ceasing a doubt. [See Cess.] to perform services or payment for obtained upon complaint of a party, that he neglect is the perception of the Certainty agreement two years. [See Cessatrit.] has not received justice, or that he cannot Blackstone. Locke or disagreement of our ideas. have an impartial trial, in the inferior CESSIBIL'ITY, n. [See Cede and Cession.] .3. Exemption from failure as the certainty The act of giving way or receding. [Litcourt. of an event, or of the success of a mediEncyr. CER'TITUDE, n. [Low L. ceHitudo, from tle used.] cine. Digby. assurance CES'SIBLE, a. -(See Cede.] Giving way The certainty of punishment is the truest secertus, certain.] Certainty Ames. freedom from doubt. yielding easy to give way. Dryden. curity against crimes. Digby. It. Sp. CES'SION, n. [L. cessio ; Fr. cesmon 4. from CERU'LEAN, ) [L. cwndeus Regularity settled state.
Acts
said."
xvii.
CER'TAINLY, adv. Without doubt or question
in truth
;
and
Tliis is designed to certify those things that are confirmed of God's favor. Hatnmo7idA
It is
fact.
;
{
;
'
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
"
:
CER'TES,
adv. Certainly
;
in truth
n.
[Fr. ceHificat
;
verily. It. cer
See
Certify.] In a general sense, a written testimony not sworn to ; a declaration in writing, signed intended to verify a fact. the and by ])arty, tificnto.
I.
;
Chaucer.
Obs.
CERTIFICATE,
^. In a more particular sense, the written declaration, under the hand or seal or both of some pulilic otficer, to be used as evidence in a court, or to substantiate a fact certificate of this kind may be considered as given under the oath of office. 3. Trial by certificate, is where the evidence of the person certifying is the only proper as when criterion of the point in dispute the issue is whether a person was absent in the army, this is tried by the certificate
A
;
;
;
L. cedo, cessum. See Cede.] Tlie act of giving way a yielding to force or impulse. Bacon. color. 2. A yielding, or surrender, as of property CERU'MEN, n. [L. cera, wax.] The waxj or rights, to another person particularly, or yellow matter secreted by the ear. a surrender of conquered territory to its former proprietor or sovereign, by treaty. CER'USE, n. [Fr. eenise ; L. It. cerussa 3. In the civil law, a voluntary surrender of Sp. cerusa.] a person's effects to his creditors, to avoid White-lead ; a carbonate of lead, produced imprisonment. Encyc. by exposing the metal in thin plates to Lead is .sometimes I. In ecclesiastical law, the leaving of a benethe vapor of vinegar. found native in the form of ceruse. fice without dispensation or being otherWhen an ecclesiastical wise ([ualified. Ceruse of antimony is a white oxyd of anti-j mony, which separates from the water in person is created a bishop, or when the which diaphoretic antimony has been parson of a parish takes another benefice, without dispensation, the benefices are washed. .VioAo/.son. CER'USED, a. Washed with a preparation void by cession, without resignation.
CERU'LEOUS,
S
blue.
CERULIF'IC,
a.
ceruleo.]
Sky-colored
;
Thomson. Producing a blue or sky-|
1.
;
I
;
i
;'
j
Beaum.
of white lead.
V
JSnc^'
C H A CES'SIONARY, fects
;
C H A
Having surrendered
a.
ef-
ture
Martin. assessment or tax.
as a cessionary bankrupt.
CESS'MENT,
An
n.
In lato, n. [L. cesso, to cease.] that neglects, for two years, to perform the service by which he holds lands, so that he incurs the danger of the writ of
CES'SOR, he.
cessavit.
Coioel.
[See Cessavit.]
An assessor, or taxer. CEST, n. [Infra.] A lady's
girdle.
from Gr.
xfjof.]
somewhat
is
[L.
girdle of Venus, or marriage-girdle,
CHAF'FER,
A kind of fish
n.
CHAFE,
the Greeks and Romans.
;
warm
A
bargainer
?
"
I
1.
To
melodious. It divides a verse or line into Its most pleasing equal or unequal parts. effect is produced, when it is placed at the end of the second foot, or in the middle, or at the end of the third foot. Sheridan. CE'SURAL, a. Pertaining to the cesure. CETA'UEOUS, a. [L. cete; Gr. x^toj, a
whale.] Pertaining to the whale
whale kind.
The
To
CHAFE,
or horizontal n.
cetaceous fishes include
tail.
A
compoiuid of
Enci/c. cetic acid,
species of
V. i.
to fret
To ;
to
as, chaffy
n. AVithout chaff. Shak. n. plant, cud-weed, a
A
Gnaphalimn
;
name
but this
Like chaff; full of chaff; straws chaffy opinions.
is
CHA'FING, ;
;
to
71.
[chafe
and
dish.]
A
dish or vessel to hold coals for heating any a portable grate for coals. thing set on it CHAGRIN', 7!. [Fr. This word, applied to a particular kind of skin, or leather, is said to be derived from a Turkish word, safari, Fr. croupe. The skin is dressed so as to present on its surface little eminences. See ;
tioubled Tyber chafing with his shores ;
ppr.
CHAFING-DISH,
to fret
be fretted and worn by rubbing
;
Glanville.
Heating or fretting by
friction.
Suckling
be e.xcited or heated be in violent action.
light
;
Broivn.
Shak
To
sell-
Spenser.
CH'AFFY, a.
Pope.
The 5.
buying and
Muhlenberg.
air.
act violently upon, by rid)bing agauist, as waves against a shore.
genera mnnodon, balcena, phijseter and They have no gills, but an aperture on the top of the head, and a flat
CE'TATE,
whose scent chajed the
To
thi!
;
[chaff
given also to the Centimculus.
Lilies,
delpkinus.
Trafick
71.
To
;
;
A vessel for heating water.
CH^AFFWEED,
excite violent action ; to cause to rage ; as, the wind chafes the ocean. 4. To perfume ; rather, to slinndato, or agitate ; to excite by pimgent odors.
belonging to the
One who
[Aoitii iisf.] Skelton. a chaffers
Obs.
CH'AFFLESS,
xvii. 8.
rage ;
obsolete.]
and fnch.] A species of birds of the genus Fringilla, which are said to delight in chaff', and are admired for their song.
;
3.
;
[Local.] ing.
fric-
hy
71.
n.
CHAF'FINCH,
excite heat or inflannnation
it is
CHAF'FERY,7i.
calejio, calfucio.]
[Vr.cesure; ll.cesura; L. cwsura, from casdo, caswn,
and change
Dryden. exchange.
a buyer.
;
CHAF'FERN,
t. [Fr. echauffer ; Sp. escalfar, to Port, escalfar, to poach or boil from the root of L. caleo, whence
;
to
Merchandize.
ji.
CHAF'FERER,
II.
;
slightly
;
Spenter.
s/uirf.
pronounced
To buy
V. t.
[In this sense
tion, as to chafe the skin also, to fret and wear by rubbing, as to chafe a cable. to cut off.] 3. excite heat in the mind ; to excite passion ; to inflame ; to make angry ; to cause pause in verse, so introduced as to aid the to fret; to provoke or mccnse. 2 Sam. recital, and render the versification more
CESU'RA, CE'SURE,
;
CHAF'FER,
luster.
Carew.
The among
;
It is
CHAD,
CoUins. n.
haggle
Its translucent, sometimes transparent. color is white or grayish white, sometimes with a rosy tinge. Before the blowpipe, it uituincsces a little, and easily melts into a white spongy mass. Cleaveland.
2.
CEST'US,
to negotiate to chop as, to chaffer for preterments.
its fi-ac
;
conclioidal or uneven,
with a gUstening vitreous
W^ot used.\
H A
C
Cbabasie has a foliated structure
as,
a cable chafes.
Shagreen.] n. Heat, excited by friction. Ill-humor; vexation; peevishness; fretfulViolent agitation of the mind or passions ness. Pope. heat fret passion. Camden CHAGRIN', V. t. [Fr. chagriner.] To exof Asplenium, or spleen-wort. cite ill-humor in; to ve.x to mortify. CE'TI€, a. [L. cetvs, a whale.] Pertaining CHA'FED, pp. Heated or fretted by rubto the whale. The cetic acid is a peculiar bing worn by friction. CHAGRINED, pp. Vexed; fretted; dissubstance obtained from the spermaceti. CHA'FER, n. One who chafes. pleased. Ure. CHA'FER, )!. [Sax.ceafor; D.kever; CHAIN, 71. [Fr. chaine, for chaisne ; Norm. An insect, a species of Scara- cadene, and clieyne ; Arm. chaden, cadenn, kclfer.] CE'TIN, n. [L. cetits, a whale.] A name or jadenn ; Sp. cadena ; Pari, cadea ; It. ba-iis, or lieetle. given to spermaceti by Chevreul. CET0L0GT€AL, a. [from cetology.] Per- CHA'FERY, n. [from chafe.] In Iron works, catena ; L. catena ; D. keten ; G. kette ; Sw. a forge in which an ancony or square mass kiidia ; Dan. kede ; W. cadwen. Qu. Ar. taining to cetology. into a bar in the mid CETOL'OgIST, n.'One who is versed in tjio of iron, hammered natural history of the whale and its kindie, with its ends rough, is reduced to a .il.S,? from jXSjI akada, to bind or dred animals. complete bar, by hammering down the make fast.] CETOL'OOY, n. [Gr. xjjfoj, a whale, and ends to the shape of the middle. Encyc A series of links or rings connected, or n. In England, an oflicer ^0^05, discourse.] fitted into one another, usually made of The doctrine or natural history of cetaceous belonging to the Lord Chancellor, who some kind of metal, as a chain of gold, or fits the was for the sealing of writs. animals. Ed. Enn/c. of iron but the word is not restricted to Harris. CE'TUS, 71. [Supra.] In astronomy, the any particular kind of material. It is used n. [Sax. ceaf; D. kaf; G. kaff.] whale, a large constellation of the south- CH'AFF, often for an ornament about the person. ern hemisphere, containing ninety-seven 1. The husk, or dry calyx of corn, andj That which binds a real chain that In common language, the grasses. stars. wordj Encyc. which restrains, confines, or fetters ; a is applied to the husks when separated CE'YLANITE, )!. [from Ceylon.] A min- from the corn by thrashing, riddhng or bond. If God spared not the angels that sinned, but called eral, classed with the ruby iiimily winnowing. The word is sometimes used delivered tliem into chains of darkness. also pleonasfe. Its color is a 2 muddy, dark rather improperly to denote straw cut Peter ii. blue, and grayish black, approaching to small for the food of cattle. iron black. It occurs in grains, or small Bondage affliction. Martyn. Encyc. He hath made my chain hea\'y. Lam. iii. crystals, either perfect octahedrons, or 2. Refuse worthless matter; especially that Bondage slavery. truncated on the edges, or with the angles which is light, and apt to be driven by the In despotism the people sleep soundly in their acuminated by four planes. It occurs also chains. In scripture, false doctrines, fruitwhid. Ames. in rbomboidal dodecahedrons. Ornament. Prov. i. 9. less designs, hypocrites and ungodly men Ure. Cyc. Ps. i. 4. Jer. xxiii. A series of things linked together a series are compared to chaff. ) rllAB'ASIE, [Schahasit. Werner.] A of things connected or following in suc28. Is.xxxiii.il. Math. iii. 12. CHABASITE, S mineral which has been CHAF'FER, V. i. [Sax. ceapian ; D.koopen; cession as a chain of causes, of ideas, or regarded as a variety of zeolite. It is di G. kauftn Sw. kapa ; Dan. kiobcr, to bar-| events ; a chain of being. visible into very obtuse rhomboids. A range, or fine of things connected; as a gain or buy. It seems to be radically the! Diet. Xat. Hist. same word as cheap, cheapen, and chapV chain of mountains. This mineral occurs in crystals, whose primiin chapman. See Cheap.] series of links, forming an instrument to tive form is nearly a cube. Ure To treat about a purchase to bargain ; to measure land.
with a base.
CET'ERACH, n. A
Chevreul.
trivial
name of a species
CHAFE,
2.
;
;
;
;
G
CHAFE-WAX,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
:
;
\
i'
;
A
C 9.
H
A
string of twisted wire, similar, to liang a watcli on,
pui-poses. 10. In France,
and
various
C
A and
, r f a measure of wood tor tuel, commodities, of various
In ship-huildiiig, chains are strong hnks lower end i)lates of iron, bolted at the the the ship's side, used to contam
to
the blocks called dead eyes, by which shrouds of the mast are extended. The warp in weaving, as in French. This consists of a long chain
little
CHALK, G. kalk Ir.
H.
is
[Sax. cealc;
I
D. Dan.
Sw. kalck ; W. calc ; Com. ; The Latin L. calr ; Fr. chaui. ; lime-stone, chalk-stone, and the calco is to kick and to tread. kalch
;
cailk
calx
to a flower; but
used. chaiik.
and
heel, In Italian calca
then
is
lump.
white color, soft and admitting no polish. It contains a large portion of carbonic acid, and is a subspecies of carbonate of lime. A two-wheeled carriage drawn by one It is used as an absorbent and anti-acid. a gig. It is open or covered. :iorse Cleaveland. Mcholson. Kirwan. Aikin. to chala. Pertaining CHALCEDON'I€, Black-chalk is a species of earth used by on blue paper. cedony. painters for drawing a €HAL'CEDONY, n. [from ChaUedon, Red-chalk is an indurated clayey ocher used and artificers. town in Asia Minor, opposite to Byzantiliy painters informs Pliny now with Constantinople. To rub t. V. chalk; to mark CHALK. um, of us that Chalcedon signifies the town with chalk. is the blind men. The last syllable then 2. To manure with chalk, as land. that the Celtic dun, English town, a fact 3. From the use of chalk in marking lines, Pliii. Lib. historian should not overlook. the phrase to chalk out is used to signify, 5. 32.1 to lay out, draw out or describe as, to called mineral a A subspecies of quartz, ch(dk out a ])lan of jiroceeding. diluted also wliite agate, resembling milk n. A man that digs CHALK-CUTTEB, H'oodivard. with water, and more or less clouded or
CHAISE, chair.
n. s
Q,».
It.
as
:.
[Fr
chaise,
a seat or
seggia.]
;
Encjjc.
connected by a chan
and used to cut down masts, or cut away shrouds and rigging. thick planks Chain-wales of a ship, broad and abreast ol projecting from a ship's side, ot and behind the masts, for the purpose for better supportextending the shrouds, the shrouds and the preventing masts, ing hncyc. from damaging the gunwale. of threads, Chain-work, work consisting in the cords and the like, linked together or tamform of a chain as lineal chaining reticulation or net work, ^c bour
;
;
work,
believe
'^i".
Dry den.
other below, passing downward and returning through a wooden tube a through another. It is managed by long be emwinch, on which several men may balls
pHed by Shakspeare
;
the
two
one
The sense is a crowd. a mass made com]jact, a clod or If the Gr. z"'-'?. flj"') gravel, is the assembly, speaker same word, the Latins deviated from their of a legislative company, particulariy usual practice in writing calx, for chalx. house also, the president or senior mem These words are probably connected in ber of a committee. origin with callus.] a chair. One whose business is to can-y A well known calcarious earth, of an opake
Chain-pump. number of equipped with a sufficient one above, valves, moving on two wheels,
ployed at once.
fi
liy
Belknap. a car, Curule chair, an ivory seat placed on used by the prime magistates of Rome. CHAIR-MAN, n. The presiding officer or association or of an
12.
Chain-shot,
'
drawn
or magistracy. Supreme^office When Governor Shute came to the chair, laid aside. several of the old councilors were
1
or
two-wheeled carriage,
Iiorsc
for other
len^tli.
11.
A
or soinetliing|
H A
C
H A
and spots. It opake, with veins, circles is used ill jewelry. Cleaveland. JVicholson. Encyc.
Ed. Encyc
a chain to sling Top-chain, on board a ship, to prevent the sail-yards in time of battle, that siii)port their falling, when the ropes Encyc. them are shot away. witl connect or CHAIN, V. t. To fasten, bind a chain to fasten or bind with any thing in the manner of a chain.
varieties of chalcedony are common chalcedony, heliotrope, chrysoprase, plasUre. ma, onyx, sard and sardonyx. CHAL'CEDONYX, n. A variety of agate, alternate. ill which white and gray layers
The
Pbalk.
CHALKINESS,
n. chauk'iness.
of being chalkv.
CHALK-PIT,
n'.
(]„„_
CHALK-STONE,
A
pit in
The
state
which chalk
is
Johnson. n. In medicine, a calcain the hands and feet of
rious concretion men violently aftected by the gout. Encyc. Isaiah. small lump of chalk. 2. Cleaveland. a. chauk'y. Resemblmg chalk ; in to Sulslavery. enslave keep 2. To as a chalkij taste. CHAL'CITE, n. [Gr. zttXxoj, brass.] coun his so far calcined 2. White w'ith chalk; consisting of chalk: And which more blest ? Wlio chauVd phate of iron of a red color, of its Rowe. try, say. as to have lost a considerable part as, chalky cliffs. ? Or he whose virtue sighed to lose a day Fonrcroy. 3. Impregnated with chalk ; as, chalky waacid. Puiie. n. [Infra.] An enter. as a harbor or |cHAL€OG'RAPIIER, ac 3. To guard with a chain, an CHAL'LENgE, n. [Norm, calenge, graver in brass. n. [Gr. x'>-'^'">i, l>rass, passage. , cusation ; chalunge, a claim ; challenger, to , , 4 To unite ; to torm chain-work. Gr. xa»^u, act or art ot of The root the from to claim call, ; and write.] a Ypa^u, CHA'INED, pp. Made fast, or hound by xiVKu, L. calo. See Call.] bound engraving in brass. chain ; connected by a chain ; the Literally, a calling, or crying out, CHALDA'IC, u. Pertaining to Chaldea, anenslaved. words expressing a country on the Frat or Euphraprimai-y sense of many or ciently CHAINING, ppr. Binding, fastening in scripture Shinar. as c^atm, L. clamo. Hence ca'lled a in demand, Asia, tes, or at connecting with a chain ; bindmg, Of this Babylon was the principal city. appropriately, tachinsr to ; enslaving. The language or dialect 1. A calling upon one to fight in single comcontracted CHALDA'le, n. or CH.\IR,"'". [Fr. c/wire, a pulpit, of the Chaldeans. bat; an invitation or summons, verbal catena from chain ; as from Norm, cadiere, n. .\n idiom or peculiarity written, to decide a controversy by a duel. CHAL'DAISM, L. Arm. cadani, or cador ; Ir. cathaoir ; Parkhurst. Hence the letter containing the summons in the Clialdee dialect. witl cathedra ; Gr. xa9£«pa, connected dial of a inhabitant An called n. is also challenge. xara and ffo^iai ; \V CHALDE'AN, xa9f?of.at, to sit, 2. A claim or demand made of a right or do a. cadair, a seat or stool.] CHAL'DEE, a. Pertaining to Chaldea. siijiposed right. movable seat; a frame with a bottom 1. or dialect There iiuist be no challenge of superiority. n. The ClIAL'DEE, language of| Collier. made of diflerent materials, useil for per the Chaldeans. sons to sit in originally a stool, and an the opening and crying CHAL'DRON, r, [Fr. chaudron; Sp. cala 3. .-Vmoiig hunters,first of pulpit in churches. of hounds at ciently a kind finding the scent of deron ; It. caUlerone, CHAL'DER, a <^"as of or authority ; scat of justice 2. &!Ci/c their game. The same word as caldron. Chal kettle. claiin chair of state. 4. Ill /aic, an exception to jurors; the der is not in use in the UnitedStates.] ofhce ; as the shall not sit 3. A seat for a professor, or his ofajiarty that certain jurors \ measure of coals consisting of thirty six chair. that his or him cause; is, a Chainhe-n professor's ill irial upon bushels. othcei or a 4. The seat for presiding The right of challenge speaker cahz ; It. calline tiieni oti'. the CHAL'ICE, 1). [Fr. calice ; Sp. of a public council or assembly, as calix ; Gr. is o-iveii both in civil and criminal trials, L. kclch G. I), kclk calice ; ; ; a metonymy, tlie to speaker's chair; and by fiir' certain causes which are supposed It should have been written calxv\4. the chair to be an impartial judge. speaker himself; as, to address disqualify a juror ice] 5. A sedan ; a vehicle on poles borne by The rifflit of challenge extends either to or bowl ; usuallv, a communion cup. A cup, men. the wliole panel or alray, or only to para cell or cup; apBiirnet. CHAL'ICED, a. Having ;
;
CHALCOGRAPHY,
.
;
A
;
A
r>.
A
i.ulpit.
A CHALKY,
H A
C A
allows without cause assigned. challenge to the favor, is when the party alledgcs a special cause. In criminal cases, a prisoner may challenge twenty This jurors, without assigning a cause. is called a peremptory challenge.
A
Blackstone. CHAL'LENgE, v. I. To call, invite or summon to answer for an offense hy single combat, or duel. 2. To call to a contest to invite to a trial
3.
4.
5.
retired place.
A
4:
5.
hollow or cavity
the chamber of a morthat part of the chase, where the
tar
is
])owder 7.
;
demand that jurors shall not upon a cause. [See the noun.]
sit
chamber; privy chamber; cham-
in trial
8.
CHAMBER LAINSHIP,
)
CHAMBERL.^INSHIP,
^
a
office of chamber-
CHAMBER-LYE, n. Urine. CHAMBER-MAID, i " A woman who has the care of CHAMBER-MAID, ^ chambers, making the beds, and cleaning the rooms, or who drcs.ses a lady and waits upon her in her a|)artment.
affairs,
lies.
The
"•
lain.
commerce, &c.
ber of
;
to
the exchequer, of London, of Chester, of North Wales, &e., are receivers of rents and revenues. Encyc. Johnson. A sei-vant who has the care of the chambers in an inn or hotel.
to
;
clesiastical
;
;
down
as the chamber of
;
the eye. Sharp. A place where an assembly meets, and the assembly itself; as star-chamber ; imperial chamber ; chamber of accounts ec-
6. In miiitary
asserts,
The chamberlains of
he called on
as,
Her house is the way to hell, going the chambers of death. Prov. vii.
;
;
man to prove what he implying defiance. To accuse to call to answer. Spenser. Shak. To claim as due to demand as a right as, the Supreme Being c/m^/eng'fs our reverence and homage. In law, to call off a juror, or jurors or challenge a
Any
;}.
H A
C ;
the judge at his chamber. Joseph entered into liis chamber and wept Gen. xliii.
the law
as, 1
H A
C
which a person occupies
ticular jurors, railed a challenge to the polls. principal challenge is that which
CHAMBER-POT,
A
n.
vessel used in bed-
rooms.
A
poivder-chamber, or bomb-chamber, a place under ground lor holding powder and bombs, where they may be safe and
secured from rains. The chamber of a mine, a place, generally of a cubical form, where the powder is
CHAMBER-PRACTICE, CHAMBER-PRACTICE,
} a,, ^'"^ P'"^'=\"of counselors at law, who give their opinions in private, but do not appear in
tice
court.
CHAM BREL,n.
The joint or bending of the of a horse's hind leg. In New uj)per part Camden. Qu. species of ordnance. England pronounced gambrel, which see. Ps. civ. clouds. n. [L. chamcelcon ; Gr. 11. Certain southern constellations wliicli Sadler. count. XO.fiOH7.£t^V.] hid from us. .\n animal of the genus Lacerta, or lizard, CHAL'LENgED. pp. Called to combat or arcThe clmmbers of the south. Job ix. with a naked body, a tail and four feet. to contest claimed demanded, as due Chamber-council, a private or secret council. The body is six or sevtm inches long, and called from a juiv. Shak. the tail five inches with this it clings to CIIAE'LENgER, )i. One who challenges a rounse\ov, who gives his Chamber-coujxsel, one who invites to a single combat one the branches of trees. The skin is cold to but does in a opinion private apartment, who culls on anotlier by way of defiance. not the touch, and contains small grains or advocate causes in court. Skak. eminences, of a bluish gray color, in the in or occupy I " ' To reside 2. One who claims superiority; one who shade, but in the light of the sun, all parts as a chamber. S of the body become of a grayish brown, claims any thing as his right, or makes 2. To be wanton to indulge in lewd or imor tawny color. It is a native of Africa Hooker. pretensions to it. modest behavior. Rom. xiii. and Asia. a 3. One who calls Encyc. juror, or a jury, from the To shut up as in a I , I v.t. '" ' LEONIZE, v.t. To change into trial of his cause.
To call to the performance of conditions. CHAL'LENtiEABLE, a. That may be that may be called to acchallenged
confined.
6.
A
9.
10.
The
CHAMELEON,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
CHAMBER, CHAMBER,
.
;
ppr. Summoning to a contest claiming as a right defying; calling off from a jury. CHALYB'EAN, a. [Infia.] Pertaining to steel well tempered. Milton. duel, or to
;
CHALYB'EATE,
;
a. [L. chahjbs
;
Gr.
xo-'t^v^,
Qu. from Chalyhs, a town near the
steel.
CHAMBER, CH AMBER, CHAMBERER, CH AMBERER,
particles
of
iron
;
as
n.
which
Any water
or other
Shak.
intrigues, or indulges in wanton-
CHAMBER-FELLOW, CirAMBER-FELLOW, the
i
"'
i
who
n.
)
"• I
Wanton, lewd, immodest behavior
1.
Johnson. 2.
arched
roof, vault
or
upper
;
gallery,
a
G. kammer ; Sw. chamber; D. kamer kammare ; Dan. kammer ; Cli. l^op to arch ;
;
Eth. 1.
^
or vault.] An apartment in an upper story, or in a story above the lower floor of a dwellin, house often used as a lodging room. ;
2.
Any
retired
room
;
any private apartment
fore
and
after dinner.
To him
also be-
longs the care of providing all things in the house of lord.s, in time of parhament. Under him are the gentleman usher of the black rod, and other officers. The Lord Chamberlain of the household has the oversight of all officers belonging to the king's chambers, excejit the precinct of the bed-chamber, of the wardrobe, ])hysicians, chaplains, barbers, &c., and administers the oath to all officers above stairs.
Bailey.
wrinkle. I
"•
i
hard material
}
;
a
Encyc, Shak.
A small gutter or furrow cut in
wood
or other
slojie.
pp. Cut into furrows, or
cut sloping.
CHAMFERING,
ppr. Cutting a gutter in ; cutting in a slope. ?!. Fossil remains of the Chaa shell. ma,
CHAM'ITE,
CHAMLET,
[See Candet.]
n. [Fr. fiom It. camozza ; Sp. gamuza, from gamo, a buck.] animal of the goat kind, whose skin is made into sofl leather, called shammy.
CHAMOIS, An
;
;
To
CHAM'FER, CHAM FRET,
;
most analagous and correct. [Fr. cham bre ; Arm. campr, cambr It. camera Port. Sp. camara ; L. camera; Gr. xafiapa, an
Diet. V. t. [corrupted from Fr. echancrer, to hollow, to cut sloping ; Arm. chancra ; said to be from cancer.] To channel ; to cut a furrow, as in a column, or to cut into a sloping form.
CHAM FERED,
xiii.
chambellan; "' [Fr. Arm. cambrelan ; CHAM, )!. kam. The sovereign prince of CHAMBERLAIN, ] Tartary. Usually written Khan. Sp. camarero ; Vort. camareiro ; It. earnerC'HAMA'DE, n. [Fr. from It. chiamata, a lingo ; D. kamerling ; Dan. kammer-herre ; L. camerarius.] L. clamo ; Sp chiamare, to call caUing llamada ; Port, chamada, from chamar, to 1. An officer charged with the direction and call. See Claim.] management of a chamber, or of chambers. The Lord Chamberlain of Great In ivar, the beat of a drum or sound of a Britain is the sixth officer of the crown trumpet, inviting an enemy to a parley To him belong hvery, and lodging in the as for making u proposition for a truce, or for a capitulation. king's court; on coronation day he brings Encyc. king his apparel, his sword, scab CHAMBER, } ^ iThe first pronunciation is to the&c. He dresses and undresses the CH'AMBER, ^ ''most common; the last, bard, on that king day, and waits on him be ;
various colors.
CHAMFER,
in
Tapestry or
chamber.
CHAMBERING, Rom.
CHAME
Spectator.
CHAMBER-HANGING, fur a
One '^'e'-ps
S
same apartment.
CHAMBERLAIN,
iron enters.
One who
Shak.
CHAMBERING,
chalybeate waters.
CHALYBEATE,
^ "' S
ness.
hangings
Euxine.]
Impregnated with
liquor into
chamber.
(,
CHAL'LENGING,
Johnson. It is
now
arranged with the Antelopes. Cuvitr.
CHAMOMILE,
[See Camomile.]
[Fr. champayer, I have not found. Qu. Gr. xanrio, for m is often casual before a labial, and in Gr. yaft^at. is the
CHA^MP,
V.
t.
jaws.] 1.
To as,
2.
To
bite with repeated action of the teeth ; a horse champs the bit. bite into small ])ieces to chow ; to ;
masticate
to devour.
Dryden. perform the action of biting by repeated motion of the ;
CHAMP,
V. i.
teeth
as, to
;
To chew
;
to
champ upon the
bit.
Hooker.
C 9.
H A
H A
C
C H A
A
A
two-wheeled carriage, siring of twisted wire, or soinetliing 7. horse a gig. similar, to hang a watch on, and for otlier
drawn by one
plied
believe little ^tsed. n. chunk.
;
8. Supreme office or magistracy. pinposns. 10. In France, a measure of wood for fuel, Wlien Governor Shute came to the chair several of the old councilors were laid aside. and various commodities, of various
by Shakspeare
CHALK,
hd I
to a flower;
D. Dan.
[Sax. cealc;
G. kalk ; Sw. kalck ; W. calc ; Com. hatch ; Ir. cailk ; L. calx ; Fr. chaux. The Latin calx is lime-stone, chalk-stone, and the ISelknap In sh!p-buildi>ig, chains are strong links Cunile chair, an ivory seat placed on a car heel, and cuico is to kick and to tread. In Italian bolted at the lower end calca is a crowd. The sense or plates of iron, used by the prime magistates of Rome. then is a mass made compact, a clod or to the ship's side, used to contain the CHA'IR-MAN, n. The presiding officer or blocks called dead eyes, by which the hnnp. If the Gr. ;ta^i|, ffint, gravel, is the speaker of an assembly, association or same the Latins deviated from their shrouds ofthe mast are extended. word, of a company, particularly legislative usual practice in writing calx, for chalx. 12. The warp in weaving, as in French. house also, the president or senior memThese words are probably connected in ber of a committee. Chain-pump. This consists of a long chain, origin with callus.] equipped with a sufficient number of 2. One whose business is to carry a chair. A well known calcaneus earth, of an opake valves, moving on two wheels, one above Dry den. white color, soft and admitting no polish. the other below, jjassing downward CHAISE, n. s as z. [Fr. chaise, a seat or It contains a large portion of carbonic acid, through a wooden tube and returnin chair, (in. It. scggia.] and is a subspecies of carbonate of lime. through another. It is managed by a long A two-wheeled carriage drawn by one It is used as an absorbent and anti-acid. winch, on which several men may be emhorse a gig. It is open or covered. Cleaveland. JVichoUon. Kirwan. Aikin. once. at Encyc. €lIALCEDON'I€, a. ployed Pertaining to chal- Black-chalk is a Chain-shot, two balls connected by a chain, species of earth used by cedony. on blue paper. and used to cut down masts, or cut away painters for n. €HAL'CEDONY, [from Chakedon, a Red-chalk is andrawing indurated clayey ocher used shrouds and rigging. town in Asia Minor, opposite to Byzanti Cluiin-waks of a ship, broad and thick planks by fjainters and artiticers. um, now Constantinople. Pliny informs abreast of V. t. To a rub with from chalk to mark CIL\LK, ship's side, projecting us that Chalccdon signifies the touni of with chalk. and behind the masts, for the purpose of The last then is length.
11.
;
;
;
blind men.
extending the shrouds, for better support shrouds ing the masts, and preventing the from damaging the gunwale. Encyc. Chain-work, work consisting of threatis, cords and the like, linked together in the form of a chain as lineal chaining or tam hour work, reticidation or net work, &c. Ed. Encyc. a chain to sling Top-chain, on board a ship, the sail-yards in time of battle, to prevent their falling, when the ropes that support them are si] ot away. Encyc. CHAIN,!!, t. To fasten, bind or connect with a chain to fasten or bind with any thing in the manner of a chain. to keep in slavery. 2. To enslave And which more blest ? Who chain''d his coun;
;
;
try, say,
Or he whose 3.
To guard
To unite CHA'INED,
>
day Pope.
as a harbor or
to
;
I\Iade fast, or
bound by a bound ;
;
Binding, fastening or binding, or atconnecting with a chain taching to enslaving. «. CHAIR, [Fr. chaire, a pulpit, contracted from Norm, cadiere, as chain from catena ; Arm. cadarn, or cador ; Ir. cathaoir ; L. cathedra ; Gr. xaScSpa, connected witli W. to sit, xara and i^ofiai jea9f Jofiai, cadair, a seat or stool.] a frame with a bottom 1. A movable seat made of ditferent materials, used for persons to sit in originally a stool, and anciently a kind of pulpit in churches. 2. A seat of justice or of authority; as a chair of state. 3. A seat for a professor, or his office as the ppr.
;
;
;
;
;
;
|)rofessor's chair. 4. The seat for a speaker or presiding officer
of a public council or assembly, as the s|)eaker's chair
;
and by
a
metonymy,
tin
speaker himself; as, to address the cliair A sedan a vehicle on poles borne by ;
men.
A
m
The
jiulpif.
common
of chalcedony are
varieties
lines,
the |)lnase to chalk out is used to signify, to lay out, draw out or describe ; as, to chalk out a i)lan of proceeding.
C1IALK-€LTTER,
n.
A man
chalk.
of being
that digs
Woodward.
CHALKINESS,
The
n. chauk'iness.
state
challvv.
CHALK-PIT,
?!."
A
pit
which chalk
in
is
Johnson. chalcedony, heliotrope, chrysoprase, plas- CHALK-STONE, n. In medicine, a calcaUre. ma, onyx, sard and sardonyx. rious concretion in the hands and feet of n. A of €HAL'C"EDONYX, variety agate, men violently affected by the gout. Encyc. in which white and gray layers alteinate. 2. A small Isaiah. lump of chalk. Cleaveland. CHALKY, a. chauk'y. Resembling chalk ; €HAL'CITE, n. [Gr. za?.xo«, brass.] Sulas a chfdky taste. calcined of iron of a red so far color, phate 2. White with chalk consistii>g of chalk ; as to have lost a considerable part of its cliffs. lug.
as,
acid.
Fourcroij. 3.
CHAL€OG'RAPIIER, and ypofw, engraving
[Infra.]
An
en-
n.
[Gr.
brass, act or art of
xo^>>'Oi,
The
to write.]
Pertaining to Chaldea, an-
a.
ciently a country on the Frat or Euphrates, in Asia, called in scripture Shinar. Of this Babylon was the principal city. €HALDA'I€, n. The language or dialect of the Chaldeans.
CHAL'DAISM,
n.
Chaldee
in the
€HALDE'AN,
An
idiom or pecidiarity Parkhurst. inhabitant of Chal-
dialect.
)(.
An
€HAL'DEE, CHAL'DEE,
a.
Pertaining to Chaldea.
n.
The language
or dialect of
the Chaldeans.
CHAL'DRON, CHAL'DER,
as, chalky
wa-
calenge, an ac cusation ; chalunge, a claim ; challenger, to claim ; from the root of call, Gr. xosuu,
xiMu, L.
cato.
ji.
See
[Norm,
Call.]
Literally, a calling,
or crying out, the
primary sense of many words expressing as claim, L. clamo. Hence appropriately, A calling upon one to fight in single combat; an invitation or summons, verbal or
a
demand,
written, to decide a controversy by a iluel. Hence the letter containing the sinnmons is also called a challenge. 2. claim or demand made of a right or
kettle.
The
right.
There must be no challenge of superiority. Collier.
chaudron ; Sp. cal- 3. Among hunters, the opening and crying "• [Fr. (ftroM ; h. calderone, a of hounds at tirst folding the scent ot" ^ same word as ckWco". Chaltheir game. Encyc.
CHAL'ICE, ;
supposed
)
der is not in use in the United States.] V measure of coals consisting of thirty six Chambers. bushels.
xv>.i|.
;
A
dea.
calice
Rowe.
chalky
Impregnated with chalk ter.
CHAL'LENOE,
in brass.
It. n. [Fr. calice ; Sp. caliz D. kclk ; G. kelch ; L. calix ; Gr. It shouhl have been written cal,-
ice]
A cup, or bowl usually, a communion cup. CHAL'ICED, a. Having a cell or cup; ap;
Burnet.
ji.
in brass.
CHALDA'IC,
enslaved.
a.
opake, with veins, circles and spots. It is used jewelry. Cleaveland. JVicholson. Encyc.
€HAL€OG'RAPHY,
form chain-work.
pp.
connected by a chain
CHAINING,
5.
subspecies of quartz, a mineral called also white agate, resembling milk diluted with water, and more or less clouded or
graver
4.
;
5. .32.]
A
To manure whh chalk, as land. From the use of chalk in marking
;
virtue sighed to lose a
with a chain,
passage.
chain
the syllable 2. Celtic dun, English tow7i, a fact that the 3. Plin. Lib, historian should not overlook.
In tau; an exception to jurors the claim of a party that certain jurors shall not sit in trial upon him or his cause; that is, a The right of challenge calling tliem off. is given both in ci\il an
the whole panel or array, or only to par-
C H A polls.
the judge at his chamber. Joseph entered into liis chamber and wept Gen. xliii.
A
mon
answer
to
an offense by single
for
combat, or duel.
To
call to a contest
;
to invite to a
trial
;
challenge a man to prove what he implying defiance. accuse ; to call to answer. Spenser. Shak. To claim as due to demand as a right as, the Supreme Being challenges our reverence and homage.
To
;
In law, to call off a jinor, oi' jurors or to demand that jurors shall not sit in trial upon a cause. [See the noun.] 6. To call to the performance of conditions. 5.
;
CHAL'LENtiEABLE, challenged
;
that
That may
a.
acSadler.
pp. Culled to combat oi demanded, as due
to contest ; claimed called fmin a jury.
CHAL'LENOER, one who
who
be
be called to
may
count.
CHAL'LENuED.
;
One who
n.
;
challenges;
invites to a single combat one on another by way of defiance. ;
calls
Shak.
One who claims superiority; one who claims any thing as his right, or makes Hooker. pretensions to it. 3. One who calls a juror, or a jury, from the trial of his cause. CHAL'LENuING, pjir. Summoning to a duel, or to contest claiming as a right defying; calling off from a jury. CHALYB'EAN, a. [Infra.] Pertaining to steel well tempered. Milton. 2.
;
€HALYB'EATE,
;
a. [L. chalyhs
;
Gr.
x'^T.vi,
Qu. from Chabjbs, a town near the
steel.
Any
as,
to hell,
way
is tlic
Prov.
going
down
Euxine.]
;
A
particles
of
iron
;
as
chalybeate waters.
chamber; privy chamber; cham-
CHAMBER LAINSHIP,
The
CH'AMBERLAINSHII\\n.
a
office of chamber-
lain.
CHAMBER-LYE, n. Urine. CHAMBER-MAID, " A woman WllO has the care of CHAMBER-MAID, \ >
chambers, making the beds, and cleaning the rooms, or who dresses a lady ami In military affairs, the chamber of a morwaits upon her in her apartment. tar is that part of the chase, where the CHAMBER-POT, n. A vessel used in bedpowder lies. rooms. 7. A powder-chamber, or bomb-chamber, a CHAMBER-PRACTICE, > "• „, ^"® ?"*"=" place under ground for holding powder CHAMBERPRACTICE, ^ and bombs, where they may be safe and tice of counselors at law, who give their secured from rains. opinions in private, but do not appear in 8. The ctuimber of a mine, a place, generally court. of a cubical form, where the powder is CHAM BREL,»!. The joint or bending of the confined. upper part of a horse's hind leg. lii New 9. A species of ordnance. Camden. Qu. England pronounced gambrel, which see. 10. The clouds. Ps. civ. n. [L. chamaleon ; Gr. 11. Certain southern constellations whicl ellAME'LEON, Xafiati.iui'.] are hid fiom us. An animal of the genus Lacerta, or lizard, The chambers of the south. Job ix. with a naked body, a tiiil and four feet. Chamber-council, a private or secret coimi-ii. The body is six or seven inches long, and Shak. the tail five iiiclu-s with this it clings to Chamber-counsel, a counselor, who gives his the branches of trees. The skin is cold to opinion in a private apartment, but does the touch, and contains small grains or not advocate causes in court. of a bluish gray color, in the CHAMBER, I "• '• To reside in or occupy eminences, shade, but in the light of the sun, all parts CH' AMBER, \ as a chamber. of the body become of a grayish brown, 2. To be wanton; to indulge in lewd or imor tawny color. It is a native of Africa modest behavior. Rom. xiii. and Asia. Encyc. ber
of commerce, &c.
;
.
To
CHAMBER,
CHAMBER, \CHAMBERER,
shut
up as
chamber,
a
intrigues, or indulges in wanton
CHAME'LEONIZE,
CHAMBER-FELLOWl\same apartment.
sleeps
who
n
chamber.
CHAMBERING, CH'AMBERING,
)
"' I
1.
in
Tapestry or
Wanton, lewd, im modest behavior
V.
t.
t.
To change
into Diet.
from
Fr.
[corrupted
echancrer, to hollow, to cut sloping chancra ; said to be from caiuer.]
Arm.
to cut a furrow, as in a col; to cut into a sloping form.
Johnson. 2.
;
To channel
umn, or
Spectator.
CHAMBER-HANGING, for a
One
v.
various colors.
CHAM'FER,
Shak.
ness.
CHAMBER-FELLOW, the
m
Shak.
O no who
I
CHAMBERER
hangings
Impregnated with
the exchequer, of London, of Chester, of North Wales, &c., are receivers of rents and revenues. Johnson. Jincyc. A servant who has the care of the chambers in an inn or hotel.
to
vii.
A hollow or cavity as the chamber of the eye. Sharp. place where an assembly meets, and the assembly itself; as star-chamber; imperial chattiber ; chamber of accounts ec
H A
The chamberlains of
he called on
retired place.
Her house
the chamljers of death. 4:
;
;
as, I
4.
3.
clesiastical
asserts,
3.
C
which a person occupies
called a cliallenf^e to the principal challeiigo is tliat whicl
the law allows without cause assigned. A challenge to the favor, is when the party allcdgcs a special cau.se. In crinni nal cases, a prisoner may challenge twenty This jurors, without assigning a cause. is called a peremptory challenge. Blackslone. CHAL'LEN(iE, v. t. To call, invite or sum-
2.
H A
C
Ticular jurors,
To
Bailey.
wrinkle.
CHAM'FER, CHAM'FRET,
Encyc. Shak.
\
A small gutter or furrow
S
cut
in
wood
or other
hard material a slope. FERED, pp. Cut into furrows, or chambellan; cut sloping. CLIAM, Arm. cambrelan ; sovereign prince of CHAMBERLAIN, I CHAM'FERING, ppr. Cutting a gutter in Tartary. Usually written Klian. Sp. camarero ; V ovt. camareiro ; It. camocutting in a slope. eilAMA'DE, n. [Fr. from It. chiamata, a lingo ; D. kamerling ; Dan. kammcr-herre ; CHAM'ITE, n. Fossil remains of the ChaL. camerarius.] calling chiamare, to call ; L. claino ; Sp. ma, a shell. llamaiia ; Port, chamada, from chamar. to 1. An oilicer charged with the direction and CHAMLET, [See Candet.] call. See Claim.] management of a chamber, or of cham- CHAMOIS, n. [Fr. fn mi It. c«nio::a ; Sp. bers. The Lord Chamberlain of Great gamiiza, from gamo, a buck.] In ivar, the beat of a drum or sound of a Britain is the sixth oflicer of the crown. .\n animal of the goat kind, whose skin is trumpet, inviting an enemy to a parley To him belong livery and lodging in tl as for making a proposition for a truce, made into soft leather, called shammy. or for a capitulation. Johnson. king's court on coronation day ho brings Encyc. king his apparel, his sword, scab- It is now arranged with the Antelopes. CHAMBER, ) ^j iThe first pronunciation is to the&LC. the He dresses and undresses Cuvitr. CH'AMBER, ^ '-most common; the last, bard, on that king day, and waits on him be- CHAMOMILE, [See Cainomile.] most analagous and correct. [Fr. chamfore and after dinner. To him also be- CHAMP, V. t. [Fr. champayer, 1 have not bre ; Arm. campr, cambr It. camera ; Port. all things in of the care found. Gr. for hi is often Qu. casual xa.tru, longs providing Sp. camara ; L. camera ; Gr. xa^apa, an the house of lords, in time of parliament. before a labial, and in Gr. ya^i^at is the arched roof, vault or upper gallery, a Under him are the gentleman usher of the jaws.] chamber; D. kamer ; G. kammer ;' Sw. black rod, and other otticers. The Lord 1. To bite wth repeated action of the teeth ; kammare ; Dan. kammer ; Cli. lap to arch Chamberlain of the household has the as, a horse champs the bit. Eth. 'f(J^Q kaniare, an arch or vaidt.] oversight of all oflicers belonging to the 2. To bite into small pieces to chew ; to 1. An ai)artment in an or in a upper story, masticate to devour. king's chambers, exce])t the precinct oil Dryden. story above the lower floor of a dwcUing the bed-chamber, of the wardrobe, phy- CHAMP, I', i. To chew to perform the achouse often used as a lodging room. tion of biting by repeated motion of the sicians, chaplains, barbers, &c., and admin2. Any retired room isters the oath to all officers above stairs.l any prnate apartment teeth as, to champ upon the bit. Hooker.
CHALYBEATE, liquor into n,
which
kam.
n.
Any water
or other
iron enters.
Rom.
xiii.
CHAMBERLAIN,
The
;
CHAM
)
"
[Fr.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
:
;
H A
)
A
CHAMPA'IGN, CHAMPA'IN,
C
C
same
A
root.]
flat
Bacon. Milton. In heraldry, champain or point champain, is a mark of dishonor in the coat of arm? of him who lias killed a prisoner of war after he has asked for )i.
quarter.
Encyc.
CHAMP'ED, pp. Bitten chewed. CHAMP'ER, ?!. One that champs or bites. CHAM'PERTOR, n. [See Champerty.] In laiv, one who is guilty of champerty, Avhich ;
see.
CHAM'PERTY,
n.
tation. If a bird's nest chance
Deut.
Ah
Casca,
CrPANCE, ual
a.
dispatches letters of the chapter, keeps the books, &c. Chancellor of the Exchequer, is an officer who ]iresidcs in that court, and takes care of fihak. the interest of the crown. He has power, chance caswith the lord treasurer, to lease the crown
be before thee.
us what hath chanced to day.
tell
Happening by
as a chance comer.
;
to
xxii.
CH'ANCEABLE,
a.
;
[Fr.
Sidney.
CHANCE-COMER,
«.
One who comes Addison.
unexpectedly.
CH'ANCEFUL, a. Hazardous. CH>ANCE-MEDLEY, n. [chance
;
species of maintenance, being a bargain plaintifl'or defendant, to divide the land or other matter in suit, between them, if they prevail; whereupon the champertor is to carry on the party's suit at his own expense. The purchase of a suit, or of the right of suing. Blackstone.
with a
CHAMPIGN'ON,
n.
shampin'yon. [Fr.]
A
he
is
tinually passing, after giving warning to l)assengers to take care, should kill a perBut if he son, this is chance-medley.
gives no warning,
pp. Biting with repeated ac-
and kiUs a man,
it
is
manslaughter.
CH'ANCEL,
kind of mushroom.
CHAMPING,
doing an unlawful act, it is felony. As if a man, when throwing bricks from a house into a street where people are conif
chancel or chanceau; L. cancelli, lattices or cross bars, inclosing the place Sp. cancel, cancilla, a wooden a wicker screen, gate ; It. rnncello, balustrades ; Gr. xiyx%ii ; Ch. kankel or n.
[Fr.
;
tion.
champion ; Ann. hplp campyon ; Sp. campeon Port, campeam, or kankail, net work Syr. id. See Cancel.] campiam ; It. campione ; D. hamper, or kampvegter ; G. kampfer. In all the Teu- That part of the choir of a church, between
CHAM'PION,
n.
[Fr.
;
;
camp or kamp signifies a combat, and in some of them, a cantp ; Sax. campa, a camp and a combat cempa, a tonic dialects,
:
soldier,
warrior or gladiator
;
W.
;
Latin campus. It was originally the plain or opeii place appropriated to games, 1.
3.
sports and athletic exercises.] man who undertakes a comliat in the Bacon. place or cause of another.
A
A man who
fights in his
own
cause n a
A
hero
who
;
is
for the truth. V.
t.
CHAM'PIONESS,
To n.
A
n. [Fr. chance
champion.
Norm, cheaunce
;
;
cfcancz D.kans; G. schanze. This seems to be from the particiiile of the French verb cheoir, to fall, Sp. cner, from the L. cado, or directly from the Latin ca
Arm.
;
dens, cadentia.] An event that happens, falls out or takes place, without being
contrived, intended exjiected or foreseen ; the eflect of an un known cause, or the unusual or iiiiex pected effect of a known cause ; accident casualty ; fortuitous event ; as, time and chance happen to all.
:
By chance 9.
3.
1.
came down
that
way
all
hospitals
and
;
;
;
Shak
luck.
Possibility
of an occurrence
;
opportunity.
nou law,
to direct the bishop in causes of|
the churchj
civil
and
criminal.
is
In Greaf Bn'ta'n, the highest court of jusnext to the parliament, consisting of distinct tribunals one ordinary, being a court of conunon law the other extraThe ordiordinary, or a court of equity. nary legal court holds pleas of recognizances acknowledged in the chancery, writs of scire facias, for repeal of letters patent, writs of partition, and all personal actions by or against any officer of the ;
;
But if the parties come to issue, in this court cannot try it by a jury ; but the record nuist be delivered to the From this court issue all king's bench. original writs that pass under the great seal, coniniissious of charitable uses, bankcourt. fact,
rii|)tcy,
idiocy, lunacy,
&c.
The
extraordinary court, or court of upon rules of equity and conscience, moderates the rigor of the common law, and gives relief in cases where there is no remedy in the common equity, proceeds
colle
ges founded by the king, guardian of all charitable uses, and judge of the liigh court of chancery.
of a
n.
two
;
science, visitor of
office
tice,
periiitendance of all charters, letters and other official writings of the crown, that required to be solemnly authenticated Hence this officer became the keeper of the great seal. From the Roman Empire this office passed to the church, and hence every bishop has his chancellor. TTie Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain, or Keeper of the Great Seal, is the highest officer of the crown. He is a privy coun selor by his office, and prolocutor of tiie To him house of lords by prescription. the belongs appointment of all justices of the peace he is keeper of the king's con
Fortune what foitime may bring; as, they must take their chance. Chancellor of an Ecclesiastical ConrI, is the An event, good or evil success or mis bishop's lawyer, versed in the civil and ca fortune
4.
a piiest
S.
The
[Fr. chancellerie ; Arm. cancellery ; Sp. chancilleria ; It. cancelleria ; L. cancellaria, from cancelli, lattices, or from the judge, who presided in the court.]
from
;
n.
the time during which one
CH'ANCERY,
;
cancello, to make lattice work, to can or blot out by crossing the lines or cancelli, lattices, because the secreta
;
chancellor.
ry sat behiml lattices.] Originally, a chief notary or scribe, nndei the Roman Emperors ; but in England, in challenge to a comlater times, an officer invested with jutii Shak. cial |)ovvers, and particularly with the siifemale
Fairfax.
CH'ANCE,
Luke
chancellor
;
bat.
1.
CHANCELLORSHIP,
.
from
a brave warrior. Hence, one bold in contest as a champion
CHAM'PION,
.
&c. The chancellor of Oxford is usually one of the prime nobility, elected by the students in convocation, and he holds the office lor fife. He is the chief magistrate, in the government of the university. The chancellor of Cambridge is also elected fi-om among the prime nobility ; he does not hold his office for life, but may be elected every three years. Chancellor of the Order of the Garter, and other military orders, is an officer who seals the comiTiissions and mandates of the chapter and assembly of the knights, keeps the register of their proceedings, and delivers their acts under the seal of their order. Johnson. Encyc. In France, a secretary is, in some cases, called a chancellor. In the United Slates, a chancellor is the judge of a cotirt of chancery or equity, established by statute. In scripture, a master of the decrees, or president of the council. Ezra iv.
;
eel,
duel. ,3.
the altar or communion table and the balustrade or railing that incloses it, or that part where the altar is placed formerly inclosed with lattices or cross bars, as now with rails. Encyc. Johnson CIPANCELLOR, n. [Fr. chancclier ; Arm chanceilher, or canceller ; Sj). cancilhr Port, chancclier ; It. cancelliere D. kansclier ; G. kanzler ; Sw. cantsler ; Dan. kanfsler or catitskr ; L. canctllariiis, a or chancellor scribe, secretary, notary, ;
camp, a
game, a feat campiaiv, to contend in a game. Here we have the origin of the
fruits.
Spenser. Chancellor of a University, is an officer who seals the diplomas, or letters of degree,
and med-
;
tire.]
lands, and with others, to compound for forfeitures on penal statutes. He has a great authority in managing the royal revcimes, and in matters relating to the first
casual:
Accidental;
fortuitous.
champart, fieldley, a mixture.] rent champ, L. campus, a field, and part, In law, the killing of a person by chance, a share, or partir, to divide, campum parwhen the killer is doing a lawful act for
A
H A
a chance to
S
S
open country.
CHAMPA'IN,
H A
Your ladyship may have
kind of brisk, spark-
I
France.
in
pagne
C
escape Chancellor of a Cathedral, is an officer wlio this address. hear.s lessons and lectures in the church, Swift. luig ^^'ine, from ChamCH'ANCE, V. i. To happen ; to fall out ; to by himself or his vicar, inspects schools, or arrive without or come hears causes, applies the seal, writes and design, expec[from camp or the
CHAMPA'GNE, CHAMPA'NE,
law courts. 2.
In the United States, a court of equity. »i. [Fr. chancre ; Arm. chancr. A venereal as cancer, canker.]
CHAN'CRE, The same ulcer.
CHAN'€ROUS, qualities
a. Ulcerous of a chaucre.
;
having the
C
H A
CHANDEUE'R, n.
[Fr. id.
It.
candeticre
Arm.
;
from L. candela, a
candle,
from coneo,
A
of candles, room.
Cir.ANDRY,
The
n.
place
4.
[Ft. changer
t.
Arm.
eceinch
ing.
Qu.
;
Norm,
Is
this
;
It.
A
A
1.
course.
The
Our fathers did, for change, to France repair, Dry den Alteration iu the order of ringing bells variety of sounds. Four bells admit twenty-four changes in ring Holder ing. That which makes a variety, or may be substituted for another. Tliirty changes of raiment. Judges xiv. Small coins of money, which may be giv-
en lor larger pieces. The balance of money paid beyond the price of goods purchased.
chainanl, exchangthe same
I
gave the clerk
a
bank note
for his cloth,
and
as It. camhio, camlnare, Sp. id. ?] he gave me the change. cause to turn or pass from one state 10. The dissolution of the body; death. to alter, or make different to to another All the days of my appointed time will I wait, vary in external form, or in essence as, to till my change come. Job xiv. change the color or shape of a thing to 11. Change for exchange, a place where merto change the change the countenance chants and others meet to transact busiheart or life. ness a building appropriated for mercan2. To put one thing in the place of another;
ship. 4.
a. 6.
7.
Be
; as, to change the clothes. clean and change your garments.
12.
Gen
In
variation permutation Thirteen numbers admit of|
arithmetic,
of numbers.
XXXV.
Channels of a
[See Chain-wales.] a channel to cut channels in to groove; as, to channel a field or a cohunn. H'otton.
CHAN'NEL,
V.
ship.
To form
t.
;
;
;
to shirt
gutter or furrow in a column.
An arm of the sea ; a straight or narrow between two continents, or between a continent and an isle as tlie British or Irish channel. ;
;
transactions.
A
sea,
;
tile
That through which any thing passes; means of passing, conveying, or transmitthe news was conveyed to us by
ting ; as, diflerent channels.
;
;
appropriately, the deeper i)art or hollowwhich the principal current flows. The deeper part of a strait, bay, or harbor, where the princij)al current flows, either of tide or fresh water, or which is the most convenient for the track of a in
3.
To
;
place where a river flows, including whole breadth of the river. But more
the
.
radically
In a general sense, a passage a place of passing or flowing; particularly, a water;
A
word
1.
Diet, of .Vat. Hist.
;
8.
A
71. [Ir. cainneal ; Fr. canal; L. canalis ; Arm. can, or canol. It is a different spelling of cana/.]
;
variety.
cangiare;
II
given to change. CHANGING, ppr. Altering; turning; putting one thing for another; shiftijig. CHAN'N.A, 7!. A fish taken in the Mediterranean, resembUng the sea-perch.
;
as a change of government. passing by the sim, and the beginning of a new monthly revolution as a change of the moon. different state by removal ; novelty ;
revoluiion
;
5.
B. Jonson. r.
CHAN'NEL,
;
;
3.
where candles
are kept.
CH.\NgE,
change of scenes.
;
to illuminate a public or large
CII' ANDLER, n. [Qr. Fr. chandelier, or rather Teutonic handler. See Corn-chandler.] An artisan whose trade is to make can Johnson dies, or one who sells candles. In America, I believe the word never signifies a seller of candles, unless he is the maker. A corn-chandler is a seller of corn, but 1 believe not used in the U. States. CH'ANDLERLY, a. Like a chandler. Milton. CH'ANDLERY, n. The commodities sold by a chandler.
i3.
;
2.
frame with branches to hold a number
2. In fortification, a movable parapet, scrv ing to support fascines to cover pioneers.
C One
ing from one state or form to another as a change of countenance a change of hab its or principles. A succes.sion of one thing in the place of another vicissitude as a change of seasons a change of objects on a journey a ;
to
shine.] 1.
HA
C
Sp. eandelero oantolozr, or cantukr ; ;
CHANNELED,
;
Having channels;
pp.
grooved longitudinally.
CHANNELING,
ppr. Cutting channels ; grooving longitudinally. tions. ; n. [Fr.] A song. CHAN'SON, Shak. n. Changeableness CH'ANT, V. t. [Fr. chanter ; L. canto, canlus; tvhich is generalh) used. Fleming. VV. afanu ; Arm. cana, cannein ; It. cajtfor another. o. That may change ; sub4. To give and take reciprocally tare ; Sp. Port, cantar ; L. cano. as, will See fickle ; inconstant ; mu ject to alteration you change conditions mith me ? Cant.] table ; variable ; as a person of a 5. To barter ; to exchange goods ; as, to change 1. To sing ; to luter a melodious voice ; that able mind. change a coacli for a chariot. is, to cant or throw the voice in modula6. To quit, as one place for another ; as, to 2. Having the quality of suffering alteration tions. of external appearance ; as changeable change lodgings. The cheerful birds do chant sweet music. silk.
3.
To
one thing or state for another followed hy for as, persons educated in a particular religion do not readily change it quit
6,227,020,800 changes, or different posi-
;
CHANGEABILITY,
CHANGEABLE,
;
;
7.
To give one kind of money for another to alter the form or kind of money, by receiving the value in a different kind, as to change bank notesjbr silver or to give
n. The quality of being changeable fickleness incon.stan cy instability mutability. of Susceptibility change, or alteration. Hooker. ;
;
;
pieces of a larger denomination for an equivalent in pieces of smaller denomination, as to change an eagle for dollars, or a sovereign for sixpences, or to change a dollar into cents or on the other hand, to c/iongc dollars /or or t'/i/o eagles, giving money of smaller denomination for larger. -. To become acid or tainted; to turn from a natural state of sweetness and purity as, the wine is changed ; thunder and lightning arc said to change milk. To change a horse, or to change hand, is to turn or bear the horse's head from one hand to the other, from the left to the right, or from the right to the left. Fairiefs Diet.
;
;
3.
To celebrate in song ; as, to chant the praises of Jehovah. To sing, as in church-service ; to repeat words
a kind of canting voice, with
in
modulations. CHANgEABLY, adv. Inconstantly. V. To CHANGED, pp. Altered varied turned CH'ANT, with the voice. i.
;
converted
;
:
Spe7iser.
CHANGEABLENESS,
;
a.
mutable
;
;
Full of change; inconfickle ; uncertain ; sub- 2.
ject to alteration.
CHANGELESS,
Constant
a.
;
Pope. not admit-
ting alteration.
CHANGELING,
They chant
To
rejjeat
to the
;
to
make melody
sound of the
words
viol.
Amos vi.
the church-service
in
with a kind of singing.
CH'ANT,
?!.
Song
;
melody
;
church-ser-
vice.
[change and ling. It is in a superstitious opinion that fairies steal children and put others that are ugly and stupid iu their said this
sing
;
shifted.
CHANGEFUL, stant
;
n.
word originated
CH ANTED,
pp.
Sung
;
uttered with
mod-
ulations of voice.
Cir.\NTER,
One who chants a
7!.
;
singer Pope.
or songster. places. 2. The chief singer, or priest of the chanJohnson.] child left or taken in the place of antiy. Gregory. other. ; Spenser. 3. The pipe which soimds the tenor or tre2. An idiot ; a fool. variation ; ble in a bag])ipe. Dryden. Locke. 3. One a])t to change ; a waverer. the better, often for the worse. Shak. n. [chant and ckar, Fr. I am Jehovah ; I chans;e not. Mai. iii. Any thing changed and put in the place of clair.] 2. To pass the sun, as the moon in its orbit; another. Shak. cock, so called from the clearness or loudas, the moon will change the 14th of this n. One who alters the form of ness of his voice in crowing.
CHaN6E,
1.
A
To be altered to undergo as, men sometimes change for
v. i.
CH'ANTI€LEER,
A
CHANGER,
month.
CHANtiE,
Any
variation or alteration in 2.
form, state, ouahty, or essence
Vol.
CH' ANTING, p^r. Singing;
any thing. n.
I.
;
or a pass-
One
that
pm])loyed changing and discounting monev a money-changer. in
is
;
35
lodious voice singing voice.
;
Dryden.
uttering a merepeating words with a
C H A CirANTING,
The
n.
tering with a song.
CII'ANTRESS, »i. A
female singer. Milton.
CH'ANTRY,
chantrene, from
n. [Fr.
A
chant.]
church or chapel endowed with lands, or other revenue, for the maintenance of one or more ])riests daily to sing or say mass for the souls of the donors, or sud Cowell. as they ap])oint. €HA'OS, n. [L. chaos ; Gr. x<>^(-] That confusion, or confused mass, in which matter is supposed to have existed, before it was separated info its different kinds and reduced to order, by the creating power of God. " Rudis, indigestaque moles."
Omd. mass, without due form or oras a chaos of materials. S. Confusion; disorder a state in whicli tlie Donne. parts are undistinguished. €HAOT'l€, a. Resembling chaos confused as, the earth was originally in a chaotic
der
chapel
C
;
1.
divine service for the royal Prinfamily. ces also, and persons of quality have chaplains, who officiate in their chapels. 3. A clergyman who belongs to a ship of war, or to a regiment of land forces, for tent was called capellanus, now chaplain performing divine service. Hence the word chapel came to signify a 3. clergyman who is retained to perform divine service in a family. private oratory. Encyc. Lunier.] A house fur public worship; primarily, a Chaplains of the Pope, are auditors or judges of causes in the sacred palace. private oratory, or house of worship be Encyc. longing to a private person. In Great CHAP'LAINCY, n. The office or station of a chaplain. Britain there are several sorts of chapeli as parochial chapels, distinct from the CHAP'LAINSHIP, n. The office or business of a chaplain. mother church clyipels which adjoin to and are a [lart of the church such were 2. The possession, or revenue of a chapel. ;
;
formerly built by honorable persons for chapels of ease, built in burying places large jiarishes for the accommodation of ;
;
;
the inliabitants; yVee chapels, which were founded by the kings of England chapels in the universities, belonging to i)articidar colleges domestic chapels, built by noble men or gentlemen for the use of thei
state. f.
jabba, to cut
,_»:^
[Ar.
ofl'
;
or out, to castrate
A.
:
tear, or cleave, to cut. lied to the G. and D.
per,
Fr. coupcr
;
to split, rend,
seems to be alhappen, Dan. kapIt
but these agree better
families. 2.
A
to
51A.
See Chop 'and Gape. pronounced chop.]
To
cleave,
Chap
is
workhouse
;
ed because printing was a chajiel.
CHAP'EL, with Ar.
Encyc.
printer's
r.
To
/.
said to be so call carried on in
first
Bailey. Encyc. deposit in a chapel.
Beaum.
cut.
sometimes
crack, or open longitudiof the earth, or the
CHA'PELESS, CIIAP'ELET,
CHAPLET,
)
I
a.
Without
a chape.
A
pair ofl stirrup leathers, with stii--
"• [Fr. chapelet.]
Johnson about Shak, .
CIIAP'LESS,
a.
Without any
the mouth.
2.
flesh
Bailey.
CHAP'LET,
;
ii.
H A who
Jias a chapel, or who performs service in a chapel. The king of Great Britain has forty-eight chaplains, vvho attend, four each month, to perform
ecclesiastic
;
;
CHAP,
An
A
1.
Any mixed
2.
H A
C
Sp. capilla, a chapel, a hood or cowl, a chapter of collegians, a proofsheet; Port, capella ; It. cappella; D.kapcl; from the same root as cap. It is said that the kings of France, in war, carried St. Martin's hat into the field, which was kept in a tent as a precious relic, whence the place took the name capella, a little hat, and the priest who had the custody of the
rups, joined at the to)) in a sort of leather buckle, by which they are made fast to the hand. Dry weather pommel of tlie saddle, after they have Encyc, tlie earth cold winds the chaps dry chap been adjusted to the length and bearing of 3. In architecture, a little molding, carved mhands. the rider. Fam'cr's Did. to round beads, pearls, olives or the like. CHAP, 1'. i. To crack to open in long slits CHAP'ELLANY, n. founded with4. In a which place see. horse77ianship, chapelet, as, the earth chaps ; the hands chap. in some church and dependent thereon. 5. tuft of feathers on a peacock's head. CHAP, n. A longitudinal cleft, gap or chink, .4(//tJf. Johnson. as in the surface of the earth, or in the n. The act of turning a G. A small CHAP'ELLING, or shrine. Hammond. chapel hands or feet. ship round in a light breeze of wind, when CHAP'MAN, n. jilu. chapmen. [Sax. ceap<^'HAP, n. [Sax. ceaj, a beak, or chap plu. close hauled, so that she w ill lie the same man ; D. koopman ; G. kaufmann ; Dan. ceafias, the chaps.] Mar. Diet. kiohmand. Sec Cheap.] way as before. The upper and lower part of the mouth the CHAP'ELRY, n. The bounds or jurisdic- 1. cheapener one that offers as a purjaw. It is applied to beasts, and vulgarly tion of a chapel. chaser. to men generally in the plural, the chaps CHAP'ERON, n. Thciv chapmen they betray. [Fr.] A hood or cap worn Dry den or mouth. the knights of the garter iu their hab- 2. A seller a market-man. Shak. CHAP, n. A man or a boy a youth. It is by its. It was ancieiuly worn by men, wopp. Cleft opened, as the surused also iu the sense of a buyer. " If nobles and populace; afterwards a])face or skin. men, you want to sell, here is your chap." In in to doctors and hcentiates as the surface propriated CHAP'PING, ppr. Cleaving, ihis sense it coincides with cluipimtn. [See The name then passed to ceror skin. colleges. Steele. Cheap.] on the foreheads of CHAP'PY, a. Full of chaps; cleft. tain devices CHAP, V. i. [Sax. ceapian.] To cheapen. horses whicli jilaced drew the herse iu pompous; iClIAPS, the mo'Lifh or jaws. [See Chap.] [M'ot used.] funerals. Johnson. Enci/c\ CIIAPT. [See Chapped.] CHAP'BOQK, n. [See Chapman and Oieap.] CHAP'KRON, t). <. To attend on a lady "in; CIIAP'TER, n. \Vr. chapitrc; h. capitulwn, A small book or pamphlet, carried about a a head It. capitolo ; Sj). cajiitulo from L. pid)lic assembl}'. Todd.\ for sale by hawkers. Ilav-! CHAP'-FALLEN, a. [chap and caput, the Leail.] CHAPE, n. [Fr. chape, the tongue of a ing the lower chap depressed fall.] division of a book or treatise hence, de- \. as, Genbuckle, a cover, a churchman's cope, B. Jon.foji. esis contains fifty chapters. Hence the jected dispirited silenced. the head of an alembic Arm. chap ; S]). CilAP'ITER, n. [Fr. chapiteau ; It. capiteUo ; ])hrase, to the end of the chapter, that is, a thin chapa, plate of metal covering some This is L. capitellum, from caput, a head. Joh7ison. throughout to the end. kind of work. Qu. co;).] a dilferent word f()r capital.] 2. In ecclesiastical polity, a society or com1. The catch of any thing, as the hook of a 1. The upper jiart or capital of a colinnn or munity of clergymen, belonging to a cascabbard, or the catch of a buckle, by thedral or collegiate church. pillar; a word used in the scriptures. [See Encyc. which it is held to the back strap. 3. .\ place where delinquents receive disciCajiital.] 2. A brass or silver tip f)r case, that strength- 2. That which is delivered by the mouth of pline and correction. Ayliffe. ens the end of a scabbard. the justice in his charge to the inquest. 4. A decretal epistle. Ayhffe. Johnson. Phillips. V. I. To tax to correct. Encyc. CHAPEAU, n. shappo. [Fr.] hat in her- CHAP'LAIN, n. [Fr. chapelain ; Sp. capelDryden aldry, a cap or bonnet. lan ; It. cappellano : L. capellanus ; fiom n. A house where a CHAP'EL, n. [Fr. chapelle ; L. capdla : chapel.] Bailey. chaiitor meets. S|)lit,
nally, as the surface skin and flesh of the ;
;
A
;
A
;
A
;
;
;
;
CHAPPED,
;
_
;
_
;
;
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
A
CHAPTER,
;
CHAPTER-HOUSE,
;
C
C H A CHAP'TREL,
n.
GHAR, day
;
land,
A
n.
All
capi-
is
pronounced
know not cerre,
The
Ma
troni return.
CnAR,i>.
which
see.
7.
We
cerran,
turn
cyrran,
8.
;
May. To perform a l)usiness. To work at others hou.ses by the
t. i.
servant to do day, without being a hired Johnson. small jobs. Bailei/. ;
OHaR-VVoMAN,
n.
A woman hired
work, or for single days. [Char-man and Char-woman
for
Johnson.
II.
are, 1 believe,
not used in ,>lmerica.]
Cir AR,
/.
I'.
or burn
or charyii, to roast, burn, or be burnt to sgaruyu or sgorayu,
and with a burn; Fr.
ffon/ii to
prefi.v,
;
Qu. Il(;h. Ch. charrie, ashes. Class Gr. No. 2-2. 'i:\. This Eth. Tin. seems to be the root of L. carho. See
To burn or reduce to coal or carbon ; reduce to charcoal, hy expelling all volatile matter from wood. This is done by bur of turf ing wood slowly under a covering to
and earth. 2.
To
expel
all
volatile
€11AR'A€T,
)
€HAR'E€T,
\
"
;
1.
all
foreign
Kirivan
[See Character.] scription.
€HAR'A€TER,
«.
An
in-
[JVotin nse.] Skelton Fr.carac;
[L. character
Sp. caracter ; It. carattere ; from the verb jtapadBu,
;t(X()a?u),
Gr.
jcap-
;(;o))art'u.
to scrape, cut, engrave.]
A mark made
by cvitting or engraving, as on stone, metal or other hard material; hence, a mark or figure made with a pen or style, on paper, or other material used to contain writing; a letter, or figure used to form words, and communicate ideas. Characters are literal, as the letters of an numeral, as the arithmetical aljihabet ; which figures ; emblematical or symbolical, express things or ideas ; and abbreviations, as C. for centum, a hundred ; lb. tor libra,
A. D. Anno Domini &c. A mark or figure made by stamping or impression, as on coins. the peculiar form 3. The mamierof writing of letters used by a particular person. You know the character to be your brother's. Shak. 4. The peculiar qualities, impressed by nature or habit on a person, which distinthese constitute guish him from others real character, and the cpialities which he is a i)ound
;
;
"2.
;
;
supposed
to possess, constitute his estimated
character, or rei>ulalion.
Hence we
say, a
is not formed, when the ])erson has not acipiired stable and distinctive
character
quahties. 5.
An account,
description or representation
of any thing, exhibiting its qualities and the circumstances attending it as, to give a bad character to a town, or to a road, A person as, the assembly consisted of various characters, eminent characters, and
describe
;
to distinguish
by
traits.
distinction.
CHARA'DE,
n.
Impression
mark
;
;
Shak.
[Xot used.]
name
[Said to be from the
n.
of the inventor.]
A composition,
in
which the subject must be
a word of two syllables, each forming a word and these syllables are to be concealed in an enigmatical description, first se|)arately and then together. ;
Example.
My Jirst, when
a
Frenchman
in learning
lisb, serves him to swear by. whole either hay or corn. the age. Gar-rick.
My
My is
Eng-
secotid
in
the delight of
Encyc.
Shak.
CH'ARCOAL,
i)articular
;
Mitford.
CHAR'AeTERlSM,
characters.
n.
The
character.
A
distinction of Up. H"ll.
vate families, &c. It is black, brittle, light and inodorous, and not beuig decomposaby water or an-, will endure lor age.s
of the particular aspect or configuration
heavens.
from
ble
without alteration.
Encyc.
€HARA€TERIS'TI€, ellARACTERIS'TICAL,
[Gr.
\
x'W°-''-
'•.jpifixo;,
S
n. [h'r. charde; L. carduus.] leaves of artichokes tied and wrap)ieil over, except the top, in straw, during This makes them autumn and winter. grow w liitc and lose .some of then- bitter-
CH'ARD, The
all
jfttpaxrjjp.]
that iiiarks constitutes the character the peculiar, distinctive (jualities of a perChambers. ness. son or thing. virtue of a Chards a characteristic Generosity is often of beet are plants of white beet transbrave man. planted, producing great tops, which, in It is followed by of. the midst, have a large, white, thick, Generosity is characfcrislie of tnie bravery. downy, cotton-like maiii shoot, which is €1IARA€TERIS'TI€, n. That which con- the true chard. Mortimer. which characthat a stitutes character; v.t. charj. [F v. charger ; Arm. terizes; that which distinguishes a person carga; S\xeargar; it. caricare, or carcare ; or thing tVom another. It « ould seem from the Port, carregar. Invention is the characteristic of Homer. Welsh that this word is from car, a cart or Pope. other vehicle, and that the noun charge or '2. In grammar, the principal letter of a word, cargo was first formeil, and therefore which is ])reserved in most of its tenses, in ought in arrangement to precede the verb. its derivatives and com|)onnds. If the verb was first formed, the primary The characteristic of a logarithm, is its index sense would be to load, to throw or put on or exponent. or in. I think the fact to be otherwise. The characteristic triaiigle of a cxirve, in geSee Cargo.] ometry, is a rectilinear right-angled trian- 1. To rush on; to fall on to attack, espemakes a part of gle, whose hypoteimse an army cially with fixed bayonets ; as, the curve, not sensibly different from a the enemy. charges Encyc. right line. as a musket or cannon; to thrust CHARA€TERIS'TI€ALLY, adv. In a 2. inTo ioad, or or ball shot. and powder powder, manner that distinguishes character. to throw on or imload or burden €HARA€TERIS'T1CALNESS, n. The 3. To that which oppresses; as, to charge pose characteristic. state or qualities of being the stomach with indigestible food; or to v. t. [Gr. zapaxr^HiC".] without oppressing as, to or to To give a character, or an account of the lay on, the fill, memory with niles and precharge describe by personal qualities of a man ; to cepts to charge the mind with facts. pecuUar qualities. to im])ose, as a tax ; as, 4. To set or lay on to mark, or express the 2. To distinguish the land is charged irith a quit rent a rent character; to exhibit the pecuhar qualities is charged on the land. of a person or thing; a.s, humility characTo lay on or impose, as a task. the hero is char- 5. terizes the true christian The gospel chargeth us with piety towards acterized hrascry and magnanimity.
That
;
CHARGE,
;
;
CHARACTERIZE,
;
;
:
;
;
;
hy The system of mediation has characterized entire scheme of divine dispensation. Thodey To engrave or imprint. [Little used.] Hale
tlie
;
low
To
marks or
;
6.
Desutute of any Shak.
a.
peculiar character.
CHAR'ACTERY,
7!. [c/ior and con/. See C/iar.] the remains Coal made by charring wood of wood burnt under turf, and from which other volatile matter has all and €HAR'A€TERED, pp. Engraved; watery been expelled by heat. It makes a strong bed; di.stinguished by a particular character. Mitford. heat, and is used in furnaces, forges, pri-
Milton.
scribe.
3.
matter from stone or
visible ingredients.
axTTjp,
CHARACTERLESS,
€HAR'A€TER,
2.
earth, by heat. The stone or earth charred from
tere
|)eciilar qualities.
ppr. Describing or distinguishing by peculiar quahties.
inscri-
Chark.]
1.
tinguished hy
Described or dis-
CHARACTERIZING,
charpose of discriminating minerals, are called Cleaveland acters. To engrave ; to inv. t.
[Riiss./rtri/u
or
;
In natural history, the peculiar discriminating qualities or i)roperties of animals, plants and minerals. These properties, when employed fortlie pur-
all
Jtrbuthnot.
characterized.
CHARACTERIZED,/);).
distinct
acter.
odd
with a peculiar stamp, or ligurc.
European, Asiatic, and African faces are
Roscoe By way of eminence, distinguished or good qualities those which are esteemed and respected an
lu Sax. the word. a time, a turn, occato
To mark
characters. friendship of distinguisheil
;
I
"t"
signifies
sion,
V.
origin
tlic^
cijrr,
chore,
C H A
H A
the characters in the play appeared lo 4.
advantage.
support
called imposts.
fish.
n. In England, work
it
CHAR,
pilasters, wliicli
commonly
arches,
CH-AR,
[from chapiter.]
and
tals (ifjjiUars
The
.3.
Tillotson.
God.
6.
To put or lay on as, to charge a building with ornaments, often implying super;
fluity. 7.
To
lay on, as a duty
;
followed by with.
C
HA
The commander cAargfd
H A
C
H A
C veying two
be used as synonymous with command,
the officer with the
men
each.
These
vehicles-
were sometimes armed with hooka or but sythes. always inqjUes solemnity. accusation. Inqmtation in a bad sense CHARIOT, V. t. To convey in a chariot. vii. this sin to their Acts not 9. To set to, as a debt to place on the debit charge. Lay Milton. account to a man 9. Tliat which constitutes debt, in conunerside of an as, charge Borne iu a chariot. with the price of goods sold to him. cial transactions ; an entry of money or CHAR'IOTED,;)?. Cotvper. 10. To load or lay on in words, something the price of goods, on the debit side of an CHARIOTEER, n. The person who drives account. wrong, reproachful or criminal to impute or conducts a chariot. It is used in speakto 10. Cost; expense as, the cftorg-&s of the war as, to charge a man with theft. ing of I7iilitary chariots and those in the 11. To lay on in words; to impute to; folare to be borne by the nation. ancient games, but not of modern drivers. lowed by on before the person as, to 11. Imposition on land or estate rent, tax Johnson. Addison. a on the crime offender to or or whatever constitutes a burden charge charge duty evil consequences on the doctrines of the 12. In military affairs, a signal to attack as, CHARIOT-MAN, n. The driver of a charstoics. 2 Chron. xviii. iot. to sound the charge. to accuse. 12. To censure 13. The posture of a weapon fitted for an CHARIOT-RACE, n. A race with charIn all this, Job sinned not, nor charged God attack or combat. iots a sport in which chariots were driven See Gen. xl. 4. execution of the project. To entrust to ; as, an officer is charged with
8.
direction, e.vhortation or injunction,
8.
dispatches.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
Job i. Their armed slaves in charge. Shak. foolishly. in contest for a jjrize. Addison. To lay on, give or communicate, as an 14. Among farriers, a preparation of the a. See Charity.] [Fr. order, conniiand or earnest request ; to consistence of a thick decoction, or beBenevolent and kind ; as a charitable distween an ointment and a plaster, used as enjoin ; to exJiort. position. Charge them that are rich in this world, that a remedy for sprains and inflammations. 2. Liberal in benefactions to the poor, and they be not high-minded. 1 Tim. vi. 15. In heraldry, that which is borne upon the in relieving them in distress ; as a charIn this sense, when the command is or the figures represented on the color itable man. given in the name of God, or w ith an oath, escutcheon, by which the bearers are dis 3. Pertaining to charity ; tlie phrase amounts to an adjmaticjn. springing fi-oni from one another. To adjiue ; to bind by an oath, 1 10.tinguishcd charity, or intended for charity ; benevoIn electrical experiments, a quantity of lent ; as a charitable institution, or Sam, xiv. 28. society ; electrical fluid, communicated to a coated a charitable to to instruct author14. To give directions ; puri)0se. jar, vial or jiane of glass. 4. Formed on charitable principles ; favoraas, the judge charged the grand A itatively charge of lead, is thirty-six pigs, each con ble dictated by kindness ; as a charitable jury to inquire respecting breaches of the raining six stone, wanting two pounds. construction of words or actions. peace. CH>ARUEABLE, a. That may be charged n. The disposition 15. To communicate electrical matter to, as that may be set, laid, impo.sed; as, a duty to be charitable or the exercise of charity. to a coated vial, or an electrical battery. of forty |)c.r cent, is chargeahle on wine. CH'AROE, 1'. i. "To hiake an onset. Thus 2. Subject to lie charged as, wLne is charge- 2. Liberality to the poor. adv. Kindly; liberally: like your heroes of antiGlanviUe says, able with a d\ity of forty per cent. benevolently ; with a disposition to help quity, he charges in iron ;" aiul we say, to 3. Expensive ; costly ; as a chargeable fam the poor; favorably. charge with fixed bayonets. But in this lyn. application, the object is understood ; to 4. Laying or bringing expense. [Fr. chariU ; L. chariias. or caritas ; W. cariad ; Sp. caridad ; Port. charge tlie enemy. Because we would not be chargeable to any caridade ; It. carita, carilade. Qu. Gr. xo-f'-iC'H'ARliE, «. [Fr. charge ; Arm. and W. 1 Tliess. ii. of you. The Latin caritas ii^ from cams, dear, costcarg ; Sp. cargo, cargo ; Port, carga, car- 5. Imputable ; that may be laid or attributed rega ; It. carica, carco ; lOng. cai-go.] ly, whence beloved, and the word was as a crime, fault or debt ; as afault c/io;g'f 1. That whicli is laid on or in ; in a general sometimes written chariias, as if from the able on a man. same load or burden. It is the Gr. zaptj. The Lat. cams would seem to sense, any a as 6. Subject to be charged or accused; word radically as cargo. be from the verb careo, to want, as deafman chargeable tciih a fault, or neglect. ?. The quantity of powder, or of (lowder ness arises from scarcitj'. Of this we have and ball or shot, used to load a musket, CH'ARGEABLENESS, n. E.xpensiveness ; an example in the English dear, whence cost ; co.stliiiess. Boyle. cannon or other like instrument. dearth, which shows the primary sense of at adv. ; Expensively aton an a rushing :!. An onset ; dear to be scarce. But qu. the Oriental enemy ; Ascham great cost. tack ; especially by moving troops «vith Class Gr. No. 56.] liT But it is used for an on- CH'ARgED, pp. Loaded ; burdened atfixed bayonets. tacked ; laid on ; instructed ; imputed ; 1. In a general sense, love, benevolence, good set of cavalry as well as of infantry. will ; tliat disijosition of heart which inaccused ; placed to the debt ; ordered command. I. An order, injunction, mandate, clines men to think favorably of their felcommanded. Numbers Moses gave Joshua a charge. CirAR6EFyL, a. Expensive ; costly. [JVof low men, and to do them good. In a theoxxvii. Shak. The kins g^ve charge concerning Absalom logical sense, it incluiles supreme love to used.] 2 Sam. xviii. God, and universal good will to men. CH"AR(iELESS, a. Not expensive; free 1 Cor. xiii. Col. iii. 1 Tim. i. from expense. Hence, That which is enjoined, conmiiilcd, en- CILAROER, n. In Scols laiv, one who char- 2. In a more particular sense, love, kindness, trusted or deUvered to another, implying aftection, tenderness, s])riiiging from natges another in a suit. ural relations ; as the charities of father, Num. vii. care, custody, oversight, or duty to be pcr- 2. large dish. son and brother. Milton. horse used for attack. Ibrmed by the person entrusted. 3. I gave Hanani charge over Jemsalem. Nch CH'AR(iING, ppr. Loading ; attacking ; 3. Liberality to the poor, consisting in almsvii. giving or benefactions, or in gratuitous laying on; instructing; conmianding; ac Hence the word includes any trust or services to relieve them in distress. cusing imputing. commission ; an office, duty, employment CHA'RILY, adv. [See Chary.] Carefully ; 4. Alms; wliatever is bestowed gratuitously It is followed by of or over ; more generally Shak. Du the poor for their relief. warily ; frugally. [Little tised.] by of. Hence, CHA'RINESS, n. Caution ; care nicety 5. Liberality in gifts and services to promote ti. The Shak. person or thing conmiitted to anoth))ublic objects of utility, as to found and scrupulousness. [Little tised.] er's custody, care or management ; a n. [Fr. chariot, from char, a car, siqiport bible societies, missionary societrust. Thus the people of a parish are which see ; Sp. It. carro ; It. carrelta.] ties, and others, called the minister's charge. 1. A half coach ; a carriage with four wheels 6. Candor; liber.ality in judging of men and Tlie starry guardian drove his charge away their actions; a disposition which inclines and one seat behind, used for conveni13.
CHARITABLE,
;
;
;
CHARITABLENESS, ;
;
CHARITABLY,
CHARITY,
CHARgEABLY,
.
;
;
.">.
A A
;
;
;
CHARTOT,
To some
7.
fresh pasture.
ence and pleasure.
Dryden.
Instructions given by a judge to a jury, or to liis clergy. The word may
by a bishop
2.
A
car or vehicle used formerly in war, horses, and con-
drawn by two or more
men
to think and judge favorably, and to the best conslruction on words and actions which the case will admit.
jiut
To
of charily, is charityl £uckminsttr.\ uncharitable.
of
tlie charities
8.
I
towards tlie Any act of kiniiiiess, or benevolence; as|
7.
A
D. JVebsler. charitable institution. is a school inaintaineil by voluntary contributions for educating poor children. Ar. V. t. char, or Ch.
6.
pn,
[Qu.
to a coal
;
See
[JVo< used.
to char.
from
ciarlatano, a quack, from ciarlare, to prate ; Sj). charlatan, from charlar, to prate ; Port, charlar, n.
[Fr.
To make powerful by charms. To sununon by incantation. Shak.
It.
Gr. yifnivu.] id.; L. garrulo, garrio ; One who prates much in his own favor, and makes unwarrantable pretensions to skill ;
an empiric
liroivn.
A
fish
Butler.
An
CH'ARMERESS,
77.
enchantress. Chaucer.
CHARTER,
CH'ARMFUL,
Abounding with charms.
See Card.]
a.
Cowley. CH'ARMING, ppr. Using charms enignorant. chanting. deCowley. 2. a. Pleasing in the highest degree CH'ARLATANRY, n. Undue pretensions fighting. to skill; quackery; wheedling; deioptiun Music is but an elegant and charming; species K. Porter. Johnson. of elocution. by fair words. CITARLES'S-WAIN, n. [Charles, Celtic CIPARMINGLY, adv. Delightfully in a See If'ain.] manner to charm, or to give delight. tar/, a man, or brave man. .Addison. smiled constellation She In astronomy, seven stars in the very charmingly. called Ursa Major, or the Great Bear. CH'ARMINGNESS, n. The power to Johnson. please. Encyc. CH'ARLOCK, n. [Sax. cerlice. Leac, in CH'ARMLESS, a. Destitute of charni.s. Sicift. Saxon, is a leek, but the same word occurs in hemlock, and it probably signifies, a plant Cir ARNEL, a. [Fr. chamel, carnal, fleshly Arm. or root.] charnier, a charnel-house, a larder carnell ; Sp. cnrncro ; It. carnaio ; L. car name of the The
eHARLATAN'I€AL,a. undue pretensions
Quackish; tuaking
to skill
the parallels are straight fines and each oth(-r, but the distance
between them increases from the equinoctial towards either pole, in the ratio of
;
a mountebank.
;
;
parallel to
Spenser,
harmonically. JiEUon. the secant of the latitude to the radius. resembling the sea- Globular chart, is a meridional projection in wolf. which the distance of the eye from the CIV AKUED, pp. Stibdiiedby charms; de plane of the meridian, on which the prolighted enchanted. jection is made, is supposed to be equal or has to the siiK^ of the angle of forty-five degrees. CirARMER, n. One that chann.s, power to charm one that uses or has the Selenographic charts, represent the spots 11 and appearances of the moon. j)ower of enchantment. Dent, xviii. 2. One who delights and attracts the affec- Topographic charts, are draughts of particular places, or siuall parts of the earth. n.
:
a quack
distant
Johnson.
To temper agreeably. CH'ARM, V. i. To sound 7.
;
Grew.
Char.]
CH'ARLATAN,
evil.
CH'ARMA,
baraka, to burn.]
To burn
of latitude and longitude are every where equal to each other. Shak. Mercalor's chart, is one on which the meridiJohnson. ans are straight lines, parallel iind equi-
fortify with charms against have a charmed life, which must not yield.
[J\rot inuse.']
life.
Charity-school,
CH^ARK,
C H A
C H A
H A
C
llie highest exercise
A
;
;
;
[Fr. chartre,
written instrimient, executed with usual forms, given as evidence of a grant, contract, or whatever is done between man and man. In its more usual sense, it is the instrument of a grant conferring pow-
America were settled, were given by the king of England, and incoqxirated certain persons, with powers to hold the lands granted, to establish a government, in
;
2.
and make laws for their own regulation. These were called charter-governments. Any instrument, executed with form and solemnity, bestowing rights or privileges. Dryden.
;
See Alarm.]
Words, characters or other things inia gined to possess some occult or unintellipower hence, a magic power or with the supposed assis.spell, by which tance of the devil, witches and sorcerers have been supposed to do wonderfid Hence, things. Spell encliantment. 1. That which has power to subdue opposigible
;
;
tion,
and gain the
afttjctiotis
;
that
which
can please irresistibly that wliich delights and attracts the heart generally in the ;
jdural. smiles of nature and the charms of art. .Addison.
Good humor
CH'ARM,
I',
t.
only teaches charms to
To subdue
last.
Pope. or control by in-
cantation or secret influence. which will 1 will send serpents among you not l)e charmed. Jcr. viii. 2. To subdue by secret power, especially by that which pleases and dchghts the mind to allay, or appease. Music the fiercest grief can charm. Pope. 3. To give exquisite pleasure to the mind or senses to delight. We were charmed with the conversation. witli her meloThe aerial songster charms
—
;
;
m
dious notes,
South.
Privilege; immunity; exemption.
My
mother, Vr\\o has a charter to extol her blood, Wien she does praise me, grieves me.
office
was
CIPARTER,
Shak.
V.
by charter.
to 2.
;
;
The
3.
t. To hire, or to let a ship [See Charter-party.] Buchanan. To establish by charter. ferry the soids of the deceased over the CHARTER-LAND, n. Land held by charCoke. waters of Acheron and Styx, for a ter, or in soccage. of 7i. [Fr. CHARTER-PARTY, money. charte-parlie, piece a divided charter; I'rom the i)ractice of CH'ARR, n. A fish, a species of Salmo. CH>x\RRED, pp. [from char.] Reduced to cutting the instrument in two, and giving a coal. one part to each of the contractors.] CIPARRING, /ipr. Reducing to coal; de- In commerce, an agreement respecting the matter. volatile of hire of a vessel and the fi-eight. This is privins CH'ARRY, a. [See Char.] Pertaining to to be signed by the proprietor or master charcoal like charcoal, or partaking of of the ship and by the merchant who Lavoisier. It must contain the its qualities. hires or freights it. the names CH'ART, n. [L. charta, the same as card, name and burden of the vessel,the of the master and freighter, price or which see.] A hydrographical or marine map; a draught rate of the freight, the time of loading and unloading, and other stipulated conof the earth's of some or
Erebus and Nox, whose
1.
£hci/c. charla.
and privileges, either from a king or other sovereign power, or from a as a charter of exemption, ])rivate person, that no |)ersoii shall be emjiannelled on The a juiy, a charter of pardon, &c. charters under which most of the colonies
;
cyrm,
from L.
ers, rights
;
Raphanus rapha English nistrum and Sinapis arvensis, very perni nalis, carnal, from caro, flesh.] Milton. cious weeds among grain. One kind has Containing flesh or carcasses. n. A place under or yellow flowers another, white, witli joint CirARNEL-HOUSE, near churches, where the bones of the dead Lee. Encyc. ed pods. CITARM, n. [Fr.charmc; Norm, canne o;- are rcposited. Anciently, a kind of portico or gallery, in or near a church-yard, garme ; Arm. chabn ; L. carmen, a song, over which the bones of the dead were It coincides verse, an outcry, a charm. with the W.garm, an outcrj', garmiaw, to laid, after the flesh w as consumed. Encyc. the son of shout. Sax. cirm, or outcry, noise: CHA'RON, n. In fabulous histon/,
7!.
.inon.
part projection ditions. the coasts, isles,i Encyc. superficies on paper, with Hired or let, as a ship. ;/;). rocks, banks, channels or entrances into 2. Invested with privileges by charter; privharbors, rivers, and bays, the points' iS7ia*. leged. of compass, soundings or depth of water,' &c., to regulate the courses of ships in 3. Granted by charter ; as chartered rights ; The term chart is applied D. Ramsay. chartered power. their voyages. to a marine ma|); map is apphed to a ppr. Giving a charter; draught of some portion of land. establishing by charter. 2. Hiring or letting by charter. of chart is a
CH ARTERED,
CHARTERING,
\ plane
some! representation of the globe, in^ j)art of the superficies w liicli the meridians are supposed parallel to each other, the parallels of latitude at equal distances, and of course the degrees!
CHARTLESS,
a.
VVithout
a chart;
of
which no chart has been made not delineated on paper as the chartless main. Barhu;
;
See
[Fr. chartulaire.
n.
Caiiulary.]
fur a record or register, as of a asteiT. fid
a.
That may be chased
V.
[Fr. chassei-
t.
;
Arm.
;
hrare.]
1.
;
30.
follow or jiursue, as an olijoct of deto imrsue for the puri>ose of taking as, to chase a ship. To drive to pursue. ;
chase away,
is
to
to depart
compel
profit,
fame, «tc.
That which may be chased
;
from chaste.] punishment pain inflicted for ])unislunenl and correction, either by castiz
Correction Ktri|ies
;
;
;
or otherwise.
1 so niuch dishonour my fair stars, equal terms to give him chastisement.
Shall
On
Shak. I
have borne chastisement,
I will
not offend
punisher; a corrector. for correcWhile they behold your chaste conversation. ClIASTrSIN(j!, ppi: Punishing tion
;
usually taken
liy
chase
;
;
genuine
;
uncorrupl
CHAS'TITY,
;
S]>.
1.
CHA'STE-TREE,
from a
place.
Having modest
eyes.
n.
The agnus
m
castus, or
;
2.
Miller. 3.
autumn.
CHASTELY,
adv.
In a chaste
manner
;
without unlavvfid commerce of .sexes without obscenity purely without barbarisms or unnatural phrases.
4.
;
;
CHASTEN, 1.
V.
t.
cha'sn.
;
Arm.
castien
property, beasts or game. [Fr. cha.^se
and Cash.]
;
See Case S\i. cara; An iron frame used by print cassa.
It.
ers to confine types,
when
set in column;^ the wiiple length of
Fr. chastelc
;
from L.
;
castus,
Purity of the body freedom from aU unlawful coiiunerce of sexes. Before marfrom all commerce of sexes ajler marriage, fidelity to the marriage bed. Freedom from obscenity, as in language or conversation. ;
;
Freeilom from bad mixture words and phrases.
;
purity in
as the chasGibbon. talk or prattle;
Purity unadulterated state tity of the gospel. ;
;
;
;
;
prate ; D. koeteren, to jabber, kwetteren, to chatter ; koulen, id.] talk in a familiar itianner; to talk with-
3£ujrt?i?Lio,
and L.
To
to
out form
To
Rev. iii. I chastened
(u-
talk
CHAT,
V.
CHAT,
n.
ceremony.
idly
To
t.
;
to
Milton.
prate.
talk of.
[JVot in
Dryden. Johnson. use.]
Shak.
my soul with fasting. Ps. Ixix. purifv from errors or faults. punished pp. Corrected correction. for afflicted
To
CHA'STENED,
CH.V'STENER,
;
v.i. [G. kosen, to ceadach, talkative; ceadac, a story or narrative S|). cotorra, a magjiie; cotorrera, Gr. a heii-])arrot, a talkative woman
;
An open groimd, or place of retreat for deer and other wild beasts; differing froiri a forest, which is not private property and is invested with ]irivileges, and from a park which is inclosed. A cliase is jmand well stored with wild vate
castita
Ir.
;
;
It.
CHAT,
[Fr. cluilier, for
Russ. rhischu.] To correct by ])unishment to punish to inflict pain for the jiurpose ol' reclaiming an oftender as, to chasten a son with a rod. chmten him with the rod of men. 2 I will Sam. vii. To afflict by other means. As many as 1 love I rebuke and chasten. cha.itier
n.^[L. castitas ;
riage, ])urity
a tree that grows to the highth of eight or ten feet, producing spikes of flowers at the end of every strong shoot
earnest
that which as beasts of
a.
castidad
chaste.]
Collins.
;
to or
;
expressions.
CHA'STE-EYED, vitex
correcting.
;
iii.
In language, pure
from barbarous words and phrases, and from quaint, affected, extravagant
to
That which is pursued or hunted; as, seek some other chase. So at sea, a ship chased is called the chase. In law, a driving of cattle
Peter
1
chase.
7.
kysk,\
free
KnoUes.
pleasure, seeking.
6.
:
Free from obscenity.
3.
their biothei"s endless malice.
as
5.
faults
|
disperse. chase metals. [See Enchase.] CHASE, n. Vehement pursuit; a running or driving after; as game, in hunting ; a at sea, &c. flying enemy, in war; a ship 2. Pursuit with an ardent desire to obtain,
is
Thomson.
by expunging
a poem.
any more. Job xx.viv. tion.] The chastisement of our peace, in Scripture, Pure from all unlawful commerce of sexwas the pain which Christ suffered to it es. Applied to persons before marriage, purchase our jjeace and reconciliation to all sexual commerce,! signifies pure from God. Is. hii. nndefiled; applied to married persons, true CHASTI'SER, n. One who chastises a to the marriage bed.
2.
To
4.
Arm.
D.
chistei, are probably from the same! Qu. Ir. caidh. I suppose the pri-i
;
;
Chased by
3.
from L. castus. G. keusch, Sw.
to purify
;
;
To
su-e
To
;
correct
pp. Punished ; corrected. n. chdtiment [Fr. Sax. CHAS'TISEMENT,
notes purity, a sense taken from separa-
;
4.
By decency
To
to be, separate, fiom the ori-| entai practice of sequestering females. Ifj of cas
press forward with vehemence hence, to pursue for the purpose of taking, as ganu^ to hunt. 2. To pursue, or drive, as a defeated or Lev. xxvi. 7. Deut. xxxii. flyuig enemy. 3.
casto
to res-
;
to repress.
CHASTI'SED,
It.
;
Russ.
kuisch,
;
social sense, ctiaslis'd.
as, to chastise
mary sense
Literally to drive, urge,
awe
to
;
The gay
Having gaps or a chasm.
a.
cusc,
root.
charzenl
reduce to order or obedience
train
Suckminster.]
Port,
Sp.
fit
;
in
propositions, that the gos-] it is false, what a fearfulj unsettled reason hovers over it in
The
.'
dismay.
Sp. cazar ; Port, cafar ; It. cacciare. Tlie elements are Cg or C'k and tlie change of a palatal to a sibilant resembles that 1.
To
i
CHAS'SELAS, n. A sort of grape. CHASTE, a. [Fr. chaste; Arm. chast
Gower.
for (he chase.
CHASE,
chasm
Shak.
frugal.
;
a vacuity.
;
and that
true
is
pel
mon- €HAS'MED,
[Sax. cearig. See Care.] Care-
a.
wary
;
CHA'SABLE,
void space
Between the two
officer in the ancient Latin church, had tlie care of cliarters and other papers of a public nature. Blackstone uses this
word
A
2.
who
An
CHA'RY,
C H A
C H A
H A
C CII'ARTULARY,
;
n.
One who
the puryjose of correction. n. Chastity
prate. ;
CHAT,
n.
Free, familiar talk
A
twig, or httle
;
idle talk
stick.
Chit.]
punishes, for
CHAT'EAU,
n. shat'o.
[Fr. a
;
[See
castle.
See
A castle a seat in the country. Castle.] CHAT ELET, n. A little castle. Chambers. CH.'V'STENING, ppr. Correcting afl!lict- CHAT'ELLANY, n. The i). A term in the gaiTie of tennis. [Fr. chateUenie.] ing for correction. or Chase guns, in a ship of war, guns used lordship or jurisdiction of a castellan, )i. Correction ; punishin chasing an enemy or in defending a CHA'STENING, governor of a castle. [See Castellany.] ment for the purpose of reclaiming. have their ports These chased. when ship a. [Fr. chat, cat, and aU, for the present suemeth to be CHATOYANT, No chastening head A gun at the at the head or stern. xii. eye.] joyous but grievous. Heb. is called a bow-chase ; at the stern, a sternundulating luster, or CHASTl'SABLE, a. Deserving of chastise Having a changeable, chase. Sherwood. color, like that of a cat's eye iu the dark. ii^Piif Pursued; ardently; sought OHA'SED, J);). chatier Arm. CHATOYANT, n. A hard stone, a httle Chase of a giln,
8.
is
the bore.
CHA'STENESS,
;
;
purity. ;
CHAsirSE,
driven.
a pursuer ; n. One who chases a driver a hunter. 2. An enchaser. [See Enchase.] CHASING, ppr. Pursuing; driving; hunt
CHA'SER,
custiza
;
tigo,
;
I.
ing.
€11 ASM, n. Gr. 1.
A
x*^^,
[(jr.
;taS;Btt,
;k^^'^"i ;^ati'io,
L. chasma, from
to open.]
properly, an opening made by disrupture, as a breach the earth or a rock. ill cleft;
a fissure; a gap;
;
; V. t. s as z. [Fr. lioin chasle, ca.itus. The Latin cus-
Sp. Port, castigar.
It.
sents on
;
;
|
1
will
chastise you seven times
Lev. xxvi.
for
your
which being cut smooth preits surface and in the interior, an It is of a yeluiululating or wavy light. lowish gray color or verging to an olive It" rarely exceeds the size of a !:rceu. Diet, of Nat. Hist. tillKnt.
transjiarent,
gastigare, are
formed with a different termination. We have chastise from the Armoric dialect. To correct by punishing to punish to inflict )uiin by stripes, or in other manner,] for the purpose of punishing an offender and recalling him to his duty. sins.]
CHATOY
JFENT,
n.
Changeable
colors,
or changcablencss of color, in a mineral Cleavelaml. pla\ of colors. CH.VT'TEL, n. chat'l. [See Callle.] Prima. ;
CHE rily,
article
any
CHE
of movable goods.
In
nioilern usage, the word chattels coninrelieuds all goods, niovahle or iiuitiovalile siu'li as have tlie nature of freehold " Chattels are real or Chattels i)ersoiial. real, are such as corirern or savor of the
except
term for years of lain), ward ships in cliivahy, the next presentation to a church, estates hy statute merchant, Chattels personal, ar elegit and the like. things movable, as animals, furnitme of a Blackstone. house, jewels, corn, &c." CII.\T'TKR, V. t. [See Chat.] 1. To utter sounds rapidly and indistinctly, as a magpie, or a monkey. 2. To make a noise by collision of the realty, as a
Wo
teotii. is
3.
chilly talk
say, th(! teeth chatter,
when one
and shivering.
To or
monkev
Sounds
n.
rapidly
;
to
those of a pie
like
idle talk.
;
CHAT T1:R-B0X,
CHEATING, ppr. Defrauding by deception; imposing on. have cheap.] CHE'.\TL\G, n. The act of defrauding by deceitful arts. Bearing a low price, in market that may lie pinchased at a low at a that r. t. CHECK, is, price [Fr. echec, plu. echecs, which we have changed into chess ; Sp. xaque, a. pri('e as low or lower than the usual price of the article or coiiiuiodily, or at a price move at chess xafpie de mute, check-mate ; less than the real value. The sense is Port, xaque, a check lagoale, a rebuke. always comparative for a price deemed Sp. and Port, xaquima, a halter It. scacco the squares of a chess-board scacchi, chesscheap at one time is considered dear at another. men scacco-malto, check-mate scaccato, checkered Low L. scaccarium, an excheIt is a principle wliicli the progress of political science has clearly cstahlislied a principle quer, Fr. echiquier ; G. schach, chess ; that illustrates at once the wisdom of the crea schachmatt, check-mate; D.schaak, chess; tor and iho blindness of huniau cupidity, that it schauk-mat, check-mate Dan. skak, chess, is cheaper to hire the labor oi" freemen than to crooked, cmving; «A«A-hu(/, check-mate ; Z,. Bacon compel tlic labor of slaves. to skakrer, barter, chafler, chop and 2. Being of small value; common; not reschange Sw. schach, chess schach-mail, as check-mate Russ. scharh, check, chess ; pected ; cheap beauty. Make not yourself cheap in the eyes of the scAar/i-ma/, check-mate. In Spanish ia^ue, world. Anon xeque, is an old man, a shaik, and xaco, a These latter words seem to be the CHEAP, n. Bargain purchase ; as in the jacket. gain.
1.
I
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
that talks inces
sounds, as birds talking idly moving rapidlv and clashina, as the teeth.
phrases, good cheap, better cheap original phrases from which we
;
n.
;
1.
inarticulat<
Rapid,
talkative. ;
pear. n.
A
V.
i.
[Fr.]
A
Johnson. sort of
gap. [JVut hi use. See Yawn.]
To open
;
to
;
in crowds the dangled females fly, Pretend to cheapen goods, but nothing buy.
[.Vol in
yawn.
CHEV'EN,
)
[Vr.
I'"-
chub, a
chei'csne.]
lessen value. n.
word
adv.
Dnjden
One who cheapens
At a small
price
;
at
or
:
;
;
consider.
J!. Lowness in price, considering the usual price, or real value. [See Cheer.]
CHE'APNESS,
CHEAR,
Obs. [a dilferent
V.
I.
[Sax.
ceatt.
In Ar.
- j,
I
gadaa, signifies to deceive, circumvent, seduce to fail, to hide, to disguise, to de;
fraud; i
L.^
\2. 13.
4.
But
in
S
Its
proper application
is
to
which a person uses some
commerce, arts,
in
also^.i
to
same
To stop to restrain to hinder to curb. put an entire stop to motion, or to restrain its violence, and cause an :
;
;
abatement To rebuke
;
;
to moderate. to chide or reprove.
To compare any
CHECK,
or misre-
paper with
its
Shak. counter-
is
A
fraud connnilt.ul by decepa trick imjiosition tion imposture. A person who cheats; one guilty of fraud n.
;
2.
:
;
To
stop
The mind checks
palatable.
CHEAT,
v.i.
;
to
make
a stop; with
at.
or withholds some fact by which he deceives the purchaser. presentations,
CHAW'DRON,
Chaya-root; the root of the Oldeiilandia umbellata, used in dyeing red. CllEAl', a. [Sax. <-co;>, cattle, business, or
find
to lay snares ; Eth. i (T\ chiet or liiet ter-register. 4. In seamenship, to ease off a little of a rope, signifies to cheat, to deceive, to defraud.] which is too stiflly extended ; also, to stop1. To deceive and defraud in a bargain ; to Mar. Diet. deceive for the purpose of gain in selling. per the cable.
modern
II.
we
"jDiy
at
any vigorous undertaLocke.
king.
To I
clash or interfere. love to check with business.
Bacon.
To
strike with repression. Dryden. [These applications are not frequent.] n. .\ stop himlrance; rebuff; sudden restraint, or contiinied restraint curb; control; government. That which .slops or restrains, as reproof, re[)riinand, rebuke, shght or disgust, fear, ajiprehensiiui, a person any stop or obShak. Dryden. Clarendon. struction. In falconry, when a hawk forsakes her proper game, to follow rooks, pies, or other fowls, that cross her in her flight.
CHECK,
CH.\Y,
u.se diligence, quasi, to
also, to abstain or turn
part or with a cipher, with a view to ascertain its authenticity ; to compare corresponding papers; to control by a coun-
kaida, signifies to deceive,
spelhng of jaw. See
jaw. Ezek. xxix. editions of the Bible it
render-
It signifies to
To deceive by anj' artifice, trick or device, ^vith a view to gaui an advantage contrary to common honesty ; as, to cheat 3. is \muloii jaw. a person at cards. It is followed by 2. In vulgar language, a cud ; as much as is 3. To impo.se on; to trick. put in the mouth at once. of or out of, and colloquially by into, as to ji. Entrails. cheat a child into a belief that a im flicine Shak. n.
is
^•] 1. i
Chaw, supra.]
The
the latter
hedge. We have, in these words, clear evidence of the manner, in which several modern nations express the Shemitic W, or
a low
rate.
The CHE.'VT,
V. t. [Sax. ceowan; D. kaauwen ; G. kauen ; Ir. cagnaim, or cognaim ; Arm jaoga, or chaguein : coinciding with jaw, which in Arm. is javed, gai'ed or chagell, and lis cheek a.nd jnw are often united, this word coincides with Sa.x. ceac, ceoca. It is most correctly written and pronounced chaw ; but chew is deemed most elegant.] to masticate, 1. To grind with the teeth as food in eating to ruminate, or to chew as the cud. 2. To ruminate iu thought to revolve and
J.
;
signifies to still, allay, sink, stop or check, to obstruct or hedge ; "W a
bargains.
CHE'APLY,
In Arabic
aside.
SwiJ}.
fish.
CHAW,
CHAW,
.i
doubt, hesitate, halt, and in Heb. the
'
To
use.]
CHAV'ENDER,
I.
j;.
former signifies to bend to or apjily
To shops
2.
CHE'APENER,
fuel.
Bailey. n.
or
ed to grow old, to be old, to blame or rebuke, under which we find shaik ; the
che'apn. [Sax. ceapian. See ;
;
CH.\T TING, ppr. Talking familiarly. CH.\T'TY, a. Given to free conversation
CHAUMONTELLE,
^[^
Ar.
have
;
;
Little sticks
the
;
Cheap, siijira.] To attempt to buy to ask the price of a conunodity to chafler.
idle talk as of birds rai)id striking of the teeth, as in chilliness.
.sounds,
CHAUN, CHAUN,
;
:
;
One
)i.
tinct
)i.
;
;
CIIAT'TI:RER, ». a prater; an idle talker. cheap. CIIAT'TF.RING, ;)/)r. Uttering rapid, indis- CHEAPEN,!'./,
CHAT'WQOD,
(
;
;
santly.
CHATTERING,
CHE
a good purchase or barHence probably, omitting good, we is
;
carelessly or
idly,
jalilii'r.
CHAT'TRR,
and good cheap
;
;
trade, a price, a pledge or pawn, a sel- 2. ling any thing that may be bought or sold ; by deceitful practices. n. Liability to be 3. rrnpian, ci/jian, to buy, to sell, to negoHammond. cheated. tiate, to gain ; 1). koop, a bargain or pur" te n. Fine bread purchaschase koop zettcn," to set to sale " Bailey. Encyc. ed, or not made in the family. [Little goed koop," cheap, good purchase ; koop 4. The correspondent cipher of a bank note ; en, to buy ; G. kanfen ; Dan. kiober ; Sw. a corresponding indenture ; any counterklipa ; Russ. kupayu ; L. caupo ; Eng. to CHE'ATED, pp. Defrauded by deception. ;
CHE'ATABLENESS,
;
cheapen, to chaffer, chap-man, chap-book, to chop and change. The sense is a purchase,
CHEAT-BREAD,
CHE'ATER,
71.
in commei'ce.
One who
practices a Iraud
register. 5.
A term in chess, when
Johnson.
one party obliges
CHE
CHE
CHE wove
the other either to
or guard
his
1.
The each
side of the face
A
below the eyes on
nance.
side.
king. An order for money, drawn on a banker 2. Among mechanics, cheeks are tliose pieces of a machine which form corresponding or on tlie cashier of a bank, payable to the as bearer. sides, or which are double and alike the cheeks of a printuig press, wliich stand This is a sense derived from that in definition 4. perpendicular and support the three som7. In popular use, checkered cloth mers, the head, shelves and winter; the check, for cheeks of a turner's lathe ; the cheeks of a checkered. the cheeks of a mortar, and Check or check-roll, a roll or book contaunng glazier's vise of a gun-carriage the cheeks of a mast, the names of persons who are attendants which serve to sustain the trestle trees, and in the pay of a king or great person &c. age, as domestic servants.
adv. In a cheerful manner with alacrity or wilhngness; readily ; with life, animation or good spirits. CHEE'RFyLNESS, n. Life animation ; good spirits a state of moderate joy or ;
;
;
;
gayety
;
He
enlivening ness.
or
Orient,
[from cAccA, or perhaps
1.
Norm,
board.
echiquier, a chess escheqir, or chekere, exche 2.
quer.] 1.
To
To
from the Fr.
directly
;
to
form
into little squares, like a chess board, l)y lines or stripes of difterent colors. Hence, 2. To diversify ; to variegate with different
er to
companies, to give cheers, and to salute a ship by cheers.
A common game on
To
dispel gloom, sorrow, silence or apathy ; to cause to rejoice ; to gladden to make cheerful ; as, to cheer a lonely desert
[See Check. Mate is from the root of the Sp. and Port, malar Ar. Ch. Syr. Heb. Eth. Sam. ma to kill.
moth, to 1.
n.
die, to kill.]
The movement on game of che.ss that or hinders
game 2.
them
a chess board or in the kills the opposite men, from moving, so that the
finished.
is
Defeat
;
Spenser.
To
SktUon. /icrnWn/, a border that has more than two rows of checkers, or when the bordure or shield is checkered, like a chess-board. Bailey. Encyc. CHEEK, n. [Sax. ccac, ceoca ; D. kaak ; tiiis is probably the same word as jau; Fr. joue. Arm. gaved, javed, connected with jftoga, chaguein, to chaw, or chew, for the words chin, cheek and jaw, are confounded, the same word which, in one dialect, signifies the cheek, in another, signifies the jaw. Genu in Latin is the Enghsh chin.] 7!.
v.
I.
;
heartily
;
having pov
-
;
gay. us hie, and quaff a cheery bowl.
77. s as z. [Sax. cese, or cyse caiva ; Corn, kes ; Arm. caus
Gaj). ; ;
Ir.
L.
squeeze.] 1.
."3.
Blirth
;
all
of good cheer, and they
some meat. Arts xx\ii. gayety jollity as at a ;
;
2.
The curd of milk, coagidated by rennet, separated from tlie serum or whey, and pressed in a vat, hoop or mold. A mass of pumice or ground apples placed on a
|5ress.
CHEE'SE-CAKE, curds, susar
butter.
CHEE'SE-MONGER,
Prior.
One who
7t.
deals
B. Jonson.
in or sells cheese.
CHEE'SE-F.'UIING,
The rind
n.
or paring
Beaum.
of cheese.
CHEESE-PRESS, for pressing
curd
A
77.
in the
CHEE'SE-RENNET,
press,
or engine
making of cheese.
A
77.
Gay. ladies
plant,
bed-straw, Galium verum.
CHEESE-VAT,
feast.
Invitation to gayety. Shak. Entertainment ; that which makes cheerfid ; provisions for a feast. Shak. Tlie table was loaded with good cheer.
JVe7« England. cake made of soft
A
7i.
and
The
n.
vat or case in
which curds are confined
for pressing. Glanville.
CHEE'SY, Having the nature, quahties, taste or form of cheese. 77. tropical insect that enters Irving. CHEG'OE, the skin of the feet and multiplies incrediG. Air of countoiance, noting a greater or less degree of cheerfulness. blv, causing an itching. E?tcyc. €HEI'ROPTER, 71. [Gr. ;t^eip, the hand, and His words their drooping cheer .Wilton. rtripov, wing.] Enlightened. CHEE'RED, pp. Enhvened ; animated An animal whose anterior toes are connected by a membrane, and whose feet thus made glad. sei-ve for wings, as the bat. Lunier. CHEE'RliIR, 77. One who cheers he or that a.
A
;
overthrow.
CHECK'-MATE, CHECK' Y, In
;
but below mirth, gayety and jollity. Son, be of good cheer, tliy sins are forgiven thee. Mat. ix.
spirits, -
or restrained.
sprightly
;
; Sp. queso ; Port, queijo ; D. kaas ; G. ktise ; Basque, gasna or gazla. The primary sense is to curdle, to congeal, from collecting, drawing or driving, W. casiaiv, to curdle. Perhaps it is alhed to
;
;
CHECK'-MATE,
Cheerfully
Gay
;
a checkered board.
CHECKLESS,
any
caseus
Mar. Diet
A
;
let
CHEESE, cais; W.
xip kara.]
salute with shoiUs of joy, or cheers.
;
;
adv.
a.
make
Come,
;
straining
destitute of
;
briskly.
CHEE'RY,
;
n. plu.
gloomy
;
CHEE'RLY,
the cheering rajs of the sun good news cheers the heart. To infuse life, spirit, animation to incite or events. to encourage qualities, scenes, as, to cheer the hounds. Our minds are, as it were, checkered with CHEER, V. i. To grow cheerful to be Addison. truth and falseliood. come gladsome, or joyous. n. who checks or One reAt of thee CHECK'ER, sight my gloomy soul cheers up. strains a rebuker. Phillips Cheer up, my lads. 2. A chess-board. CHEER, 71. A shout of joy; as, they gave CHECK'ER, I "• Work varied althree cheers. as to its CHECK'ER-WORK, \ ternately state of gladness or joy a state of anicolors or materials work consisting of cross lines. mation, above gloom and depression of
CHECK'ERS,
;
;
;
variegate with cross lines
comfort
animating. State of cheerful-
n.
Milton. use.] a. Without joy, gladness,
171
among seamen,
;
;
v.t.
encouraging
;
[jVoi
thing to enhveu or animate the spirits. Spenser. CHEE'RLY, a. Gay cheerful ; not gloomy.
;
CHECK'ER,
cheerfuhiess; with
ppr. Giving joy or gladness;
CHEERLESS,
;
in jovial
With
adv.
CHEE'RIS'HNESS,
;
;
xii.
spirit.
CHEE'RING,
Beaum. Bailey. Encyc. Cheek bi/joivl, closeness, proximity. Clerk of the check, in the British King's CHEE'K-BONE, n. The bone of the cheek. household, has the check and control of| CHEE'KED, a. Brought near the cheek. Cotton. the yeomen of the guard, and all the ush (!rs belonging to the royal family, the care CHEEK-TOOTH, n. The hinder tooth or Joel i. 0. tusk. of the watch, &c. Eiicyc. Bailey. Clerk of the check, in the British Royal Dock CHEEP, V. i. To chirp, as a small bird. Yards, is an ofiicer who keejis a register of CHEER, v.t. [Fr. chire : Arm. c/ier, cheer, entertainment Ir. gairim, to call, shout, all the men employed on board his maextol, rejoice Gr. ;i;aipu, to rejoice, to hail jesty's ships and vessels, and of all the ar or salute. The primary sense is to call tificers in the service of the navy, at the out or shout, as in joy a sense retained port where he is settled. ;
which glaildens. Thou chcerer of our Prime cheerer,
days.
CHEL
IVotion.
;
;
;
IDON,
71.
[Gr.]
A
brown
fly
wuh
silvery wings.
Thomson. CHEERFUL, Lively; ainmated having good spirits moderately joyful. This is the most usual signification of the word, expressing a degreeof animation less than niiith and jollity. Full of life gay animated ; mirthful musical as the cheerfxd birds. 3. p]xpressive of good spuits or joy; lively animated. light.
a.
;
;
€HELIF'EROUS, L./ero, to bear.]
[Gr. a^^»?, a claw, and Fm'nished with claws,
a.
as an animal.
CHEL'IFORM, form.]
a. [L. chela,a. claw, H.-Lving the form of a claw.
CilELMSFORblTE,
and
A
mineral arranged as a subspecies of schaalstein found in Chelmsford, Massachusetts. n.
;
Cleaveland.
;
CHELO'NIAN,
a.
[Gr. x^^v^ xf^^^n^ a tor-
CHE
CHE
CHE
Also, the Prunus padus. loise.] Pertaining to or ilesignating aniCornelian cherry, is the fruit of the mals of the tortoise kind. cornel-tree or dogwood. It is CHEL'Y, n. [L. chela. Gr. xi^, a claw.] The clawof Hshell-lish. Broten. acid, cherry-like, eatable berry.
Dwarf cherry, isthc fruit of a species of Lonicera, or honey-suckle. caimse, HoUentot'chcrry, is the fruit of a species of Tlie fruit is atrispermous berry Cassiiie. camicia ; Ar.
li.
caimis
Sp. camisa
;
kaniitzon
O^f-.*' 1.
H.
;
It.
;
Anili. id.]
;
of a dark purple color. a name of the fruit of the It is a Physalis, a genus of many species. berry of the size of a small cherry, inclosed in an iiiHated, bladder-like caly.v. This name is also given to a species of Solanum.
If'inter-r.herry, is
A sliift, or iHidcr garment worn by females. A wall that lines the face of any work of eartli.
Baiteij.
CHEMIST.
written also Sheriff. The »i. prince of Mecca; a high priest among the
Moliammcdans. I. ClIER'ISH, [Fr.
cherir
11.
from
(U'ar
F'r. clier,
W.
;
Fam. of Plants. a. Like a red cherry in color ruddy, blooming; as a cherry hp; checks. cherry CHER'RY, n. A cordial composed of cher-
;
Arm.
aV,
ry juice and spirit, sweetened, and diluted. The wild cherry is inost generally used
bounty
dr-
;
See Caress.] To treat with tenderness and affection ; to give warmth, ease or comf .rt to. We were geiillc among you, even as a nurse 1 Thess. ii. cherisheth Iter children. nie damsel was fair anil cherished the king 1
Kings
i.
To hold as dear ; to embrace with aflec tion ; to foster, ami cnciiurag'e as, to chcr ish the principles of virtue ; to cherish rcli gion in the heart. in a manner to 3. To treat encourage
moderately bitter and astringent. sometimes made of the mazzard.
CHER RY-CHEEKRD, cheiiks.
CHER'RY-PIT,
n.
A
mind
;
CHER'SONESE,
Treated with tender-
pp.
warmed comforted CHER'ISIIER, n. One who ness
;
;
encouragc'r
;
A
fostered.
cherishea
;
an
a supporter.
;
CHERISHING,
/);;/•.
ing encouraging with affection. ;
CHER'ISHING,
n.
;
Warming
;
fostering
;
comforttreating
Support; encourage
nient.
A
tree
coinfort.
CHERMES.
n.
Encouragement;
[.Vb( used.]
Spe»ser.
[See Kermes.]
[Fr. ceme ; L. cerasus ; It. cirlegia ; Port, cereja ; 8p. cereza ; trcresen ; D. knrs, or krick ; G. kirsche ; Sw. kirsbnr ; Dan. kirsebwr ; so nametl, it
CHER'RY,
n.
Arm
said, from Cerasus, a city in Pontus, near the Euxine, whence the tree was im is
ported into Italy.]
fruit is
n.
isle.]
peninsula; a tract of land of any indefinite extent, which is nearly surrounded by water, hut united to a larger tract by a neck of land or isthmus as the Cimhric Chersonese or Jutland; the Tauric Cher sonrse, or Crimea. CHERT, )!. In mineralogy, a subspecies of rhomboidal quartz called also hornstone It is less hard petrosilex or rock flint. than common quartz; its fracture usually dull and splintery, sometimes more or It is more or less trans less conchoidal. ;
;
CHERISHMENT,
whose
[Gr. xifcovrisor, xif^os., land or uncultivated land, and j'jjaot, an
])assion.
CHERISHED,
?i.
more appropriate sense of the word. The name is mostly given to the common cultivated trees, and to th,at which produces the black wild cherry. The wood of the latter is valued for cabinet work.
cherries, in the
to
as,
which
liole.
Shak.
CHER'RY-TREE,
;
the
is
CoKgrere. child's play, in
cherry stones are thrown into a
growth, by protection, aid, attendance, or supplying ninuishnient as, to cherish ten indulge and encourage in to cherish ill \\\l\, or any cvi'
It
Having ruddy
a.
;
der plants. To harbor;
Psalm
and
In 2 Sam. xxii. 11. and Jehovah is represented as
.x.
-wiii.,
riding on a cherub, and flying on l]u: wings of the wind. In the celestial hierarchy, cherubs are represented as spirits next in
days
2.
4.
E/.ek. iv.
for this purpose, being steeped for some in spirit, which extracts the juice of the fruit ; the tincture is then sweetened and diluted to the taste. This cordial is
cherifza;
iaw, to pity, to cherish. 1.
;
red,
CHER'IFF,
figure composed of various creature?, as a man, an ox, an eagle or a lion. Tiiu first mention of cherubs is in Gen. iii. 2-1, where the figure is not described, but their office was, with a flaming sword, to keep or guard the way of the tree of life. The two cherubs which Moses was cotnraanded to make at the ends of the Mercy seat, were to be of beaten work of gold and their wings were to extend over the Mer-
cy seat, their faces towards each other, and between them was the residence of the Deity. Ex. xxv. The cherub.s, in Ezekiel's vision, had each four heads or faces, the hands of a man and wings. The four faces w ere, the face of a bull, that of a man, that of a lion, and that ol' an eagle. They had the likeness of a man.
order to seraphs. The hieroglyphicaland emblematical figures embroidered on the vails of the tabernacle are called cherubs of curious or skilful work. Ex. xxvi. CHERUBIC, ) [The accent is usually CHERUBIC,^"' laid on the second syllable, but imiaoperly.] Sheldon. Pertaining to cherubs angelic. CHERUBIM, n. The Hebrew plural of ;
\^
cherub.
CHER'UBIN,
a.
Cherubic; angelic. Shak.
CHER'UBIN, n. A cherub. Dryden. CHER'UP, a corruption of chirp, which see. CHER'VIL, [Sax. cerfille, a contraction Ji.
of L. cha:rophyllum
Gr. xo-^pi^Mav, ;^oipu
;
and i^>.>.oi', leaf.] gemis of jilants, two species of which are cow-weed. CHES'APEAK, n. A bay of the U. States, whose entrance is between Cape Charles and Cape Henry, in Virginia, and whicli extends northerly into Maryland 270 miles. It receives the waters of the Susquehannah, Potoinack, Rappahannock, York, and
A
to rejoice,
called
James
Rivers.
CHES'IBLE,
n.
[Old Fr. casuble.]
A short
vestment without sleeves, worn by a poBale. ])ish ])riest at mass. lucent, sometimes at the edges, and some CHES'LIP, n. A small vermin that lies under stones and tiles. Skinner. times the whole mass, if thin, has the n. See echecs. An of certain horns. It CHESS, Check.] [Fr. strong translucency colors are numerous and usually dull. It ingenious game performed by two para checkties with different pieces, on is usually amorphous, sometimes globuered board, that is, a board divided into It occurs often in lar, or in nodules.
The success sixty four stpiares or houses. especially metallic, in primitive of the game depends almost entirely on mountains. Jameson. Cleaveland. Each gamester has eight dignified skill. Chert is also applied to other minerals besides hornstone. Aikin calls a variety pieces, called a king, a queen, two bishof flint, _^i'ii/_i/fAt'rf, and the Derliyshire miops, two knights, and two rooks or castles also eight pawns. The pieces of the pai'ners a|iply the term, blark chert, to a fusithis fruit was brought fiom Cerasus in ties are of different colors. ble mineral, whereas the hornstone above Encyc. Pontus to Italy, after the defeat of Mithridescribed is infusible. CHESS, II. [I do not find this word in any dates by Lnculhis, A R. (180., and introdu CHERT'Y, a. Like chert nor do I know its English Dictionary flinty. Pennant ced into England by the Romans, about CHERUB, n. plu. f/ifru6.s, but "the Hebrew 120 years afterwards, A. D. 5.5. plural cherubim is also used. [Heb. 2n3 In Persian, origin or affinities. L«,ii Barbadoes chern/, is tlic gciuis Malpighia, kerub. In Cii. and Syr. the correspondof several species. The berries are red, chas or gas, signifies evil, depraved, and ing verb signifies to i)low and the word is said to signify cherry-shaped, acid and eatable. or a useless properly any image weed.] Bird cherry, is a species of Prunus, tlie comfigure if so, it may have been named In New England, that weed which grows mon laurel or lauro-cerasv.s. Lee. from engraving. But this is uncertain. among wheat, and is supposed to be wheat
Tlie fruit of a tree, a species of Primus, of which there are many varieties, as the red or garden cherry, the red heart, the white heart, the black cherry, the black The fruit is a heart, and several others. It is related that |iulp inclosing a kernel.
veins,
;
;
;
;
;
Vol.
I.
36
CHE
CHE as iJeseiieiateJ or cliangcd,
most
ill
This
where tlie wheat is wintersome resemblance to oats. mentioned by Pliny, Nat. Hist.
(irids
bears
It
killed.
fact
is
Primum omnium fiuLib. 18. Ca. 17. menti vitium avena est: et hordeum in eam degeiierat. This change of wheat and barley into oats, he ascribes to a moist bad seed, &c. This soil, wet weather, opinion coincides with observations in America, as wheat is most liable to perish in moist land, and often in such places, almost all the wheat is killed, and instead of it chess often appears. CHESS'-APPLE, n. A species of wild
mired
n.
The board used
cist
Ir.
;
kist
cisde
Sw.
;
Gr.
;
kistu
;
xi.;ri
Dan.
Bacon.
G.
.
1.
a.
row •-'5.
species of phmi.
Levant.
An
n.
[.'Vbt itsed.]
;
kiste.
kiste
piece of timber traversed with
breach, or
;
See Chest-
chest.
In commerce, a certain quantity; asac/iesi
of sugar; a chest of indigo itc. Chest of drawers is a case of movable boxes called drawers. f'HEST, V. t. To reposit in a chest to
{.
A
make
a retrenchment to stop
kind of trimming. n. [Fr.from
f/,ei;«;,
a horse
n.
A
[Fr. chevesne.]
Encyc. river fish,
to the whitish prisms only.
the cludj. [Fr. chevreau, a kid, from chevre, a goat, L. caper, W. gavar. Arm. gavricq, gavr.] \ kid, or rather leather made of kid-skin; used as a noim or adjective. Shak.
CHEV'ERIL,
v.
t.
To make
as kid-leather.
CHI€A'NE, cicanerez.
cheat.
as phab'e
1.
s as z.
[Fr. chevir, to to the end, to perform, to prevail, n.
from
chef, the head, Chief and Achieve.]
literally the
71.
[Fr. ciboule.]
Cleaveland. small sort
A
Beaum.
of onion.
Montagu.
CHEV'ISANCE, come
CHIB'BAL,
71.
CHEV'ERILIZE,
;
tnineral, called also made, whose crystals The are arranged in a peculiar manner. form of tlie crystals is a four-sided prisin, whose bases are rhombs, differing little
;
;
CHEV'EN,
ted.]
from squares. But each crystal, when viewed at its e.xtremities, or on a transverse section, is obviously composed of different substances and its gentwo very eral as|)ect is that of a black prism, passing longitudinally through the axis of another The term made, prism which is whitish. as the name of a cUstinct species, appUes
;
Sp. caballcro. See Cavalry.] A kiiight a gallant young man. Shak. In heraldry, a horseman armed at a points.
;
Johnson. disease in
A
wooden
cavalry. 2.
'i.
hoard.
A
spUies, pointed with iron, five or six feet long ; used to defend a passage, stop a
A box of wood or
other material, in which goods are kept or transported. It differs from a trunk in not being covered with skin or leather. The trunk of the body from tlie neck to the belly, the thorax. Hence, iroarf-cAf sia broail or narerf, narrow-chested, having
made with
;
D
nut.]
I
pie,
CHEWING,
W, CHEVALIE'R,
;
kind of
CHEVAL DE
bolted perpendicularly on the side to con fine the clews of the main sail. L. cista
A
n.
chopped substances.
Johnson. Chian earth, a medicinal, dense, compact kind of earth, from Chios, used anciently expedition with cavChaucer. as an astringent, and a cosmetic. Encyc. FRifSE, generally used in the Chian turpentine, or Cyprus turjjentine, is procured tiom the Pistacia Terebinthus. jjlural, chevau.v de frise, jironounced shevo It is of the consistence of honey, clear and defreez. [Fr. citevnl, a horse, andyn'sf, any of a yellowish white. thing curled, rough, entangled the liorse of fiise, or frizzled horse. Hence called €HIASTOLITE, n. [Gr. ;naro;, decussaalry.
n. In ships, a piece
;
mas-
ticated.
CHEW'ET,
also turnpike, tournvjuet.]
CIIESS'OM, 71. Mellow earth. i;HEST, n. [Sax. cest or cijst
;
A
A
n.
CHEV'ACHIE,
in the
One who plays game of chess of wood
a cud.
;
teeth
€Hr
sutures.
A
n.
Ground by the
ppr. Grinding with the teeth ; Rose-chestnut, of the genus masticating ; rurmnating ; meditating ; nut, roundish, pointed and champing. four elevated longitudinal CHI'.'V, 7!. beautiful Mexican plant. A a. to Fani. Plants.' N, Chios, an isle in the Encyc. Pertaining oj'
CIIES'TON,
chess, and from the squares of chess has its name. (;UESS'-MAN, n. piece or puppet, for the
chess; one skilled in the
mouth at once
Vulgar.]
CHEWED, pp.
marked with
which
CHESS'-TREE,
[
held in the
is
Mesua, bears a
game of
game of chess. ClIESS'-PLAYER,
which
tor its beauty.
The Indian
service.
CHESS'-BOARD,
CHI
native of the North of Asia, and admired It is used for the beauty of its flowers. for shade and ornament, and its nuts are esteemed good food for horses. The scarlet-flowering horse-chestnut is a native of Carolina, Brazil and the East, and is ad
abounds
it
end. See
[Fr. chicane
71.
Qu. Gr.
;
Stxaro;,
Arm.
cican or a Sicilian, a
Limier.]
turn; trick; cavil an abuse In/oic, shift of judiciary proceedings, by artifices, un;
;
or idle objections, which tend to perplex a cause, puzzle the judge, or impose on a party, and thus to delay or fair practices,
pervert justice. 2. In disputes, sophistry ; distinctions and Obs. subtleties, that tend to perplex the question horses, like the pleurisy or peripnenmony tcrprize accomplished. Spenser. and obscure the truth. Farrier's Diet. 2. In law, a making of contracts; a bargain. Locke. in the human body. 3. Any artifice or stratagem. Stat. 13 Eliz. 7. Prior. ("HEST'NUT, »i. [Sax. ci/s(e/, and the tree 21 CHI€A'NE, V. i. [Fr. chicaner.] To use in Sax. is eystbeam or ei/stenheam ; L. eas 3. An unlawful agreetnent or contract. nut Fr. cavils or artifices. James. 17. ; shifts, chataigne ; tanea, the tree and the Arm. gistenen, or gesfenen ; W. castan 4. An agreement or composition, as an end CHICA'NER, 7!. [Fr. chicaneur.] One who uses shifts, turns, evasions or undue artifior order set down between a creditor and Sp. castena; Port. cas(an/ia ; h.castagna his debtor. G. kastanie ; Sw. Dan. kastanie ; from ces, in litigation or disputes; a caviller; a Enci/e. n. [Fr. a rafter; W.ceber; Arm. Locke. Welsh cast, envelopment, the root of castle, sophister; an unfair disputant. from separating, defending ; so named from OHlCA'NERY, )!. [Fr. chicanerie.] Sophgebr.] In herald)-y, an honorable ordinary, repreits shell or cover.] istry ; mean or untiiir artifices to perplex a cause and obscure the truth. The fruit, seed or nut of a tree belonging to senting two rafters of a house meeting at the top. the genus Fagus. It is inclosed in a prick Bailey. CHICH'ES, n. plu. Dwarf peas. > A vetch or pea, which contains two or more CHEV'RONED, a. Having a chevron, or CHICH'LING, ly pericarp, "• B. Jonson. CHICKLING-VETCH, I of the genus the form of it. seeds. n. Lathyrus, used in Germany for food, but (.'HEST'NUT, a. Being of the color of a [from Fr. chevre, a of inferior to otiier kinds. The smallest the kind. Miller. chestnut; of a brown color. It is perhaps antelojje oat.] G. /. ceowan a noun. D. D.kaamven; rarely used as ; [Hiix. CHICK, ('. i. To sprout, as seed in the n. The tree which kauen. See Chaiv.] round to vegetate. Todd. produces the chestnut. This tree grow; 1. To bite and grind with the teeth ; to mas- CHICK, ? [Sax. cicen ; D. kuiken ; to a great size, with spreading branches. ticate, as food, to prepare it for deglutiG. kiXchkin. Q,u. Russ. CHICK'EN, S tion and digestion. It is one of the most valuable timber trees, chikayu, to l»eop.] as the wood is very durable, and forms in 'i. To ruminate in the thoughts; to meditate 1. The young of lowls, particularly of the Shak. America the principal timber lor fencing as, to chew revenge. domestic ben, or gallinaceous fowls. The timber is also used in building, and 3. To champ to bite, hold or roll about in 2. A person of tender years. the mouth ; as, to cheio tobacco. for vessels of various kinds. •3. word of tenderness. Shak. Dwarf-chestnut, or chinkapin, is another spe 4. To taste, without swallowing. a. Timid; fearcies of To to ruminate. I', i.
CHEST'-FOUNDERING,
n.
A
1.
Achievement; deed; performance; cn-
CHEVRON,
CHEVROTATN,
CHEW,
CHESTNUT-TREE,
;
"
;
;
Fagus.
a tree of the genus ^Escu common tree of this sort is al
Horse-chestnut, )us.
The
is
CHEW, Oi'.l
CHEW,
champ upon
politicians
n.
That which
is
A CHICKEN-HEARTED,
;
chew on wisdom
past.
chewed;
Pope. that
ful
;
cowardly.
CHICK'EN-POX,
7!.
A
mild contagious
C H
CHI
I
eruptive disease, generally appearing in
CHICK'LING, n. A small eliick or cliicken. CHIEF, n. A commander the CniCK'-PEA, n. [L.cicer; G.kicher; Sp. military commander ;
jiarticularly a
person
;
A
who
heads an army e(]uivalent to the modern terms, connnander or general in chief, captain general, or generalissimo. 1 Cli.
chicharu.]
A
;
plant or p(Mi, constitiiling the genus Cioer a native of Spain, where it is uavA in olios.j It is snialli'i' iliaii the cornninn pea. CllICK'-WKKI), n. A plant of the genus ;
many
Jllsine, wliii'li iii(hi
common
for, at night, the leaves approach and inclose the tender rudiment.-
The
leaves are cooling and nutritive, and are di'cUHMl excel lent food for persons of a I'onsmnptive habit. They are deemed useful also for swelled breasts. IViseman. Encyc.
J). /. prel. chid, [chode. is obs.] part chid, chidden. [Sax. cirfiK, cA?rf«H, to chide, to scold ; \V. cuzi, to chide, to press, to
Num.
Job xxix
iii.
Math. XX.
4.
1.
In chief, in English law-, 7»i capile. To bold land j'n cltief into bold it directly from the king by honorable ])ersonal services. Blarkstone.
to scold,
DDp,
to brawl,
seems
it
to signify
as,
CHIDE, fault
V.
To
i.
scold
to contend in
;
times followed by Tlic pooplc
;
to
is to
drive
3.
clamor; ;
loith.
(lid chiile
withMoses.
Ex.
noise
xvii.
Shal,:
rough, clamorous, roaring as the chiding flood. Shak.
;
CHIUE,
n.
Miniuur; gentle
noise.
Thomson.
CIII'DER,
One who
n.
proves or relnikes.
ClII'DEKESS, buking
;
female
who
ppr.
chides.
CHIE'FAgE,
A
^ "•
CHE'VA()E, \ CIIIE'FDOM, n.
CHIE'FLESS,
making a harsh or continued CHIE'FLY, first
CHI'DING, ;
A
n.
It
scolding or clamoring;
parents,
An
is
;
a child.
infant.
Hagar cast the child under one of the shrubs. Gen. xxi. It signifies also a person of more advan-
ced years. Jephtha's daughter was his only child. Judges xi.
The Is.
child
behave
shall
himself proudly.-
iii.
A
curse will be on those who corrupt (he morals of their f/iiWren. J. Clarke. The application of child to a female in opposition to a male, as in Shakspeare, is
a.
tribute
adv. In a scolding or repro- 2.
One who
by the head. Chambers.
Ohs.
1.
Pope. eminently;
5.
adv.
Principally;
place. chiefly concerns us to obey the divine pre-
is
unfixed
in principles.
Eph.
iv.
Sovereigntv. Spenser. Without a chief or leader.
One who is born again, spiritually renewed and adopted as a child of God. One who is the product of another or ;
;
whose
principles
and morals are the pro-
duct of another.
Thou
Acts
child of the devil.
That which
cepts.
re|)roof.
CHI'DINGLY,
chiefly to a person w hen is applied to infants
and
chiefpersons. The i)rinci])al part ; the most or largest not legitimate. 2. One weak in knowledge, experience, judgpart, of one thing or of many. The people took of the spoil, sheep and oxen, ment or attainments ; as, he is a mere the chief of \he things which should have been child. 1 Sam. xv. utterly destroyed. Behold, I carmot speak, for I am a child. Jcr. i. He smote the chief of their strength. Ps. 3. One young in grace. Ixviii. I John ii. The chief of tlie debt remains unpaid. One who is humble and docile. Math, xviii. CHIEF, adv. Chiefly.
in the
noise.
rebuke
chides, clamors, re-
Chaucer. Scolding; clamoring; re-
[A'o^ iised.]
CHI'DING,
A
Ji.
race,
to find 7.
words of anger some-
To quarrel. To make a
2.
;
;
In these phrases, chief may have been primarily an adjective, that is, chief men,
away
Encyc. [Sax. cild ; in
children.
plu.
but the tinii- when they cease ordinarily to be so called, is not defmeerson of any age, in respect to the
folly
or negligence. chide from or chide nway,
)i.
Dan. kiild is jirogeny, kulde is coldness, and kider is to blow strong. Child is undoubtedly issue, that which is produced.] A son or a daughter a male or female
young. liom their birth
Qu. W. end, a battle.] Literally, 6. This word is often fight. used, in the singular to scold ; to clamor ; to utter noisy words ; nund)er, to express a ]durality. that is, to drive. Hence, I took the chief of your tribes, wise men and 1. To scold at; to reprove; to interwords known, and made them heads over you. Deut. in anger, or by way of disapjirobation ; to i. 15. rebuke ; as, to chide one fir his faults. Tliesc were the chief of (he officers, that were over Solomon's work. 1 9. To blame ; to reproach ; as, to chide Kings 9. by scolding or reproof
auJ
cold,
;
;
Johnson
Tu
cete,
The lurm
something
achievement, a mark of distinction chaplets wrought with a chief.
like
Sax.
a tumor produced by cold affecting the bands and feet, accompanied with inflannuation, pain, and sometimes
human
Encyc. In Spenser,
.5.
to
[chUl,
hiain or sore
descendant, in the first degree the immediate progeny of ]>arents; applied to the
In heraldr)), chief signifies the head or upper part of the escutcheon, from side to In chief side, representing a man's bead. imports something borne in this part.
;
Cli.
Straiten;
I
ulceration.
principal person of a tribe, family, or
congregation, &c. 3.
of plants;
of the young shoots.
The
2.
n.
blain.]
CHILD,
xi.
The
species.
white blossoms, of the sleep
afl'ords a remarkalile instance
in pairs,
CIIIL'BLAIN,
xvi.
children.
H
C Prov
whisperer separateth chief friends.
.\
is
xiii.
the product or effect of
For the most
something else. part. This noble passion, child of integrity. Shak. ving maimer. In the parts of the kingdom where the estates of the dissenters chiefly lay. CHIEF, a. [Fr. chef, the head, that is, the Swift. 6. In the plural, the descendants of a man Norm, chief; Sp. top or highest point small rent paid to the however remote; as the children of lsrae\ ; CIIIE'FRIE, n. Ir. It. e\ It is ; ; xefe ceap capo. idently lord ])aramount. the children of Edom. Spetiser's Ireland. from the same root as the L. caput, Gr. CHIE'FTAIN, »!. [from chief. Norm, cheven- 7. The inhabitants of a country ; as the chilxifa^Tj, and Eng. cape, but through thf dren of Seir. 2 Chron. xxv. teins, formed like captain, capitaine.] Celtic, probably from shooting, extendGen. xvi. be unth child, to be pregnant. leader or a To chief; commander; captain, ing.] II. xix. 36. the head of a troop, army or clan. It is 1. Highest in oflice or rank ; principal most commonly used in the latter sense. CHILD, f. i. To bring children. [JVot used.] as a chief priest; the cAie/ butler. Gen. Shak. The chieftains of the Highland clans in xl. 9. a. or ppr. [See Bear.] Scotland, were the piincipal noblemen and Among the chief rulers, many believed on children. Bearing or
A
;
A
CHILD-BEARING,
John
him.
gentlemen.
xii.
most eminent, in any quality or action most distinguished having most influence commanding most res most valuable taking the lead pect most important; a word of extensive use;
2. Princi])al or ;
;
ernment over
;
,
;
Agriculture
is
hath been
8. First in affection
;
most dear and
familiar.
captaincy; the gov-
^
a clan.
Johnson.
CHIE'VANCE,
Ji.
[Norm,
Smollett.
chivisance.
See
Chevisance.]
An rulers
the cAif/ employment of men.
Headship;
}
;
as a country chief in arms. The h;ind of the princes and chief in this tresp.iss. Ezra ix.
unlawful bargain
monev
is
extorted.
CHIEVEorCHIVE, Achieve.]
producing
Encyc.
CHIE'FTAINRY, CHIE'FTAINSHIP,
To come
to succeed.
Obs.
traflSck
;
Obs.
in
which Bacon.*
See [Fr. chevir. to au end ; to issue ;
t..
J.
Chaucer.
CHILD-BEARING,
n.
The
act of produ-
cing or bringing forth children; parturition. Milton. Addison.
CHILDBED, of a
w Oman
n.
[child
ami
bed.]
The
state
bringing forth a child or being
in labor: parturition. n. [child
CHILDBIRTH,
and
hiiih.]
The
act of bringing forth a child travail labor: as the pains of cAiWiiXA. Taylor. ;
CIIILDED, [JVol used.]
a.
Furnished
;
with a child. Shak,
CHI CHILD'ERMAS DAY,
C
n.
[child,
day-] All anniversary
of the church of England, held on the 28th of Decemhcr, in commemoration of the children of Bethlehem slain by Herod called also Innocents' Day. Encyc. Bailey. CHILD'HQOD, n. [Sax. cildhad. See ;
of a child, or the time in which persons are children, including the time Irom birtli to puberty. But in a more res tricted sense, the state or time from infancy Thus we say, infancy, childto puberty. hood, youth and manhood. Childhood ami youth are vanity. Eccl. xi. 2. Tlie properties of a child. Dnjden. CHILDING, ;);)(•. [The verb /o c/i/M is not now used.] Bearing children producing .drbuthnot as childing women.
The
;
CHILL, to
state
3.
fling
a.
I
became
1
Cor.
man,
a
;
age ; childish sports. 3. Pertaining to children weak as childish fear.
couraged.
ignorant;
;
in a trifling
;
manner.
CHILDISHNESS,
To
dejected
;
;
the
word lies in expressing shivering and shrinking caused by
force of this
cold, or cool; as, the evening air chills the earth. To blast with cold to check the circula;
silly
their
growth.
Blackmorc, or action to de-
To check motion, to discourage as, to to deject press of the spirits. chill the Rogers. life
;
gayety manner of a Made cool weak or fool- CHILLED,;*/). er dejected. CHIL'Li, 71. A Mexican
;
n. Triflingness, puethe state or quahties of a child, in reference to manners. But in reference to tlie mind, simplicity, harmlessness,
a;'i"o"P»>
;
made
to shiv-
;
mountain in Lycia, the to)) was the resort of lions, middle, that of goats, and the foot, that of to represent a volcanic
whose
Hence,
serpents.
In modern usage, a vain or idle fancy a creature of the imagination, composed of contradictions or absurdities, that can have no existence except in thought. ;
Encyc.
CHIMERICAL, a. ciful
Guinea
except
Merely imaginary
;
in
CMIMER'ICALLY,
rigors.
CHIMTCAL,
as the 3. A moderate degree of coldness weakness of intellect. chilliness of the air, which tends to c CHILDLESS, a. DestitiUe of children or a shivering. I Sam. xv. .33. ofFs])ring. CHILL'ING, ppr. Cooling ; causing to CHILDLIKf;, «. Resembling a child or shiver. that which belongs to children becoming CHILL'NESS, n. Coolness coldness a child; meek; submissive; dutiful; as shivering. childlike obedience. CHILL'Y, a. Cool; moderately cold, such as a chilly day, CHILDLY, a. Like a child. as to cause shivering CHIL'DREN, n. phi. of child. night, or air. CIHL'I.AD, n. [Gr. x'^>-m,t\om ;t:aia, a thou CHIL'OGRAM. [See Kilogram.] ;
;
;
;
fancifiilly
;
adv.
Wildly; vainly;
fantastically.
[See Chimistry.] Pertainchimistry as a chimical opera-
to
ing
fan-
thought.
pepper.
CHILLINESS, n. A sensation of shivering
;
fantastic ; wildly or vainly conthat lias, or can have no existence
;
ceived plant,
a
dragon, vomiting flames. The foreparts of the body were those of a lion, the middle was that of a goat, and the hinder parts were those of a dragon supposed
;
rihty,
Dryden. set of
;
;
;
harmony.
)!.
CHI'MER, n. One who chimes. €HIME'RA, n. [L: chimara Gr.
cause a shivering, or shrink-
and stop
in
cause to
goat, a monstrous beast.] dis- 1. In fabulotts history, a monster with three liead.s, that of a lion, of a goat, and of a
To make
tion in plants,
ringe and chimbe.
strike, or
[D. kim ; G. kimme, edge, brim.] The edge or brim of a cask or tub, formed by the enils of the staves.
;
The
may wel
To move,
t.
strike or cause to sound, as a
CHIME,
cold.
tri
To
V.
bells.
;
4. ;
t.
sound 2.
of the skin to check circulation or motion as, to chill the blood, or the veins.
as childish years or
In the way in a
V.
dispu-ited
;
in"-
3.
adv.
Depressed
Smith.
to clatter.
Chaucer.
;
;
;
Tlie sely tonge
;
;
;
CHILL,
put away chlhli.sh 3.
I
;
CHILDISHLY, ish
;
srfiivering
To jingle
CHIME,
Shivering with cold. Rowe. My chill veins freeze with despair. not warm, dull Cool distant formal animated or affectionate as a chill recep-
4.
xiii.
Pertaining to a child
child
a child
Heat.] cold ; chilliness in gives the sensation
;
puerile.
;
When things. 2.
to
Belonging
chil- 0.
tion.
;
CHILDISH,
animal body;
Cool; moderately cold; tending as the chill vapors of
a.
cause
CHI
I
night. 2.
Hood.]
1.
H
sensation of cold in an liness. [See Cold and A moderate degree of any body that which of cold.
mass and
a.
;
tion.
Resulting from the operation of the principles of bodies by decomposition, combination, &c. ; as chimical changes. 3. According to the principles of chimistry ^
as a chimical combination. adv. According to chim-
CHIM'lCALLY, ical
principles operation.
;
by chimical process or
chemin ; Sp. camino, a way.] [See Chime.] [Chaucer, chimbe Dan. kiiner, In law, a toll for passage through a forest. L. cam bell a Cou'cl. Bailey. to toll to tinkle, to tingle, Holder. It. CHI'MING, Causing to ppr. [from chime] pana, a bell, from its sound, whence 3. The period of a thousand years. Encyc. chime sounding in accordance. .^rampanare, to chime.] rHIL'L\GON, n. [Gr. ;^aia, a thousand, 1. The consonant or harmonic sounds of CHIM'IST, n. A person versed in chimisof a instrmnents. trv and yui'ia, a corner.] several correspondent yirofessor chimistry. Instriunents tliat made melodious chime A plain figure of a thousand angles and CHiM'ISTRY, )!. [Fr. chimie ; Sp. chimia : Milton. The orthography It. and Port, chimica. Math. Did. sides. sound. of this word has undergone changes CHILIAHE'DRON, n. [Gr. x^^m, a thou 2. Correspondence ofthe chime. Love harmonized Dryden. through a mere ignorance of its origin, sand, and iSpa, a base.] witl of struck sounds musical The 3. hells, can than which nothing be more obvious. A figure of a thousand equal sides. Shak. hammers. It is the Arabic €HIL'IAR€H, n. [Gr. ;;^aia, a thousand, and 4. La^a^Ss kimia, the Correspondence of proportion or relation. a chief.] afxoi, Grew. The military commander or chief of a thouoccult art or science, from 5. A kind of periodical music, or tune of a (S sand men. produced by an apparatus annexed kamai, to conceal. This was originally CHIL'IARCHY, n. A body consisting of a clock, to it. or science now called the the art thousand men. alchimy Milford. 6. A set of bells which chime, or ring in art of converting baser metals into gold. CHIL'IAST, n. [Supra.] One of the sect of larmony. The order of Diocletian, ilirecting search Millenarians. or sound in consonance To i. V. CHIME, to be made for books treating of the wonCHILIF ACTIVE. [See Chylifaclive.] larniony to accord. derful art of making gold and silver, and €HlLIOL'ITER. [See Kilotiter.] To make the rough recital apUy chime. all that should be found to be committed Prior. €HILIOM'ETER. [See Kilometer.] to the flames, proves the origin of this art To correspond in relation or propnition. CHILL, n. [Sax. cele, cyle, cyl, cf>ld celati, to be as remote as the close of the third correlaallied to Fr. husband and to be cold D. Ml and
CniMB, CHIME,
sand.]
1.
A
thousand a collection or sum, containing a thousand individuals or particulars. ;
CHIM'INAgE,
n. [Fr.
n.
71.
;
;
;
;
—
;
;
;
;
1.
Father
geler,
;
L. gelo, gelidus. See Cold, which appears to be radically the same word. The word cele in Saxon is a noun.] A shivering with cold rigors, as in an the cold fit that ague precedes a fever
tive terms,
3.
;
wife,
;
.Jrbvthnot.
;
;
son,
Locke. do readily chime. to fall in with. chimed in with the discourse.
To agree He often
4.
To
agree
;
to suit with.
Locke.
century, and it was probably somewhat It is not imearlier. Gibbon, Ch. 13.
probable that this art was used in counThe common orthograterfeiting coins. phy is from x^<->, to melt or fuse the old ;
CHI
CHI onhograpliy was from iliftereiilly
written
datinn, but a
;
;tru,
both
random
the
same word,
liaviiifj
guess.
no
fouii-
If lexicog-
contented ra])liers and writers liad been to take the ortliogra])hy of the nations in the south of Eurupf^, where the origin of
word was doubtless understood, and
tlie
through wlioiii tlic word was introduced England, the orthography would have been sealed, uinform, and corresponding into
exactly with the pronunciation.] is a science, the object of which is to discover the nature and properties of all bodies by analysis and synthesis.
Chimistry
Maequer. is that science which explains the intimate nmtual action of all natural bod-
Chimistry
CHIMNEY-MONEY,
C H
Hearth-money, a duty paid for each cliimney in a house.
common
1
root of these words.
Sax. cina, or cinu, a fissure.] small aperture lengthwise a cleft, rent, or fissure, of greater length than breadth ; CHIM'NEY-I'IECE,»i. An ornamental piece a gap or crack of wood or stone set round a fire-place. as the cliinks of a wall. Barret, CIIIM'NEY-SVVEEPEK, n. One whose oc- CHINK, V. i. To crack to open. cupation is to sweep and scrape chimneys, CHINK, i'.i. To open or part and form a to lean tliem of the soot that adheres to fissure. their sides. CHINK, V. t. [See Jingle.] To cause to CHIMPAN'ZEE, n. An animal of the ape sound by shaking coins or small pieces of metal, or by bringing small sonorous bodkind, a variety of the ourang-outang. ies in collision Diet. .Vat. Hilt. as, to chink a purse of It is now considered a distinct sjiecics. money. Pope. Cuvier. CHINK, V. i. To make a small sharp sound, as by the collision of little pieces of money, or other sonorous bodies. CHIN, n. [Sax. cinne ; Pers. • I -, D. Jlrhuthnot. n.
Eng.
A
;
:
;
I
;
;
kin ; G. kinn ; Dan. kind, the cheek Sw. kind ; L. gena ; Gr. ytn>(. The sense is probably an edge or side, and allied to ;
ies.
Fourcroy. Analysis or decomposition, and synthesis or combination, are the two metliods wliich its uses to accomplish purposes. chimistry
chine.]
n. The dwarf chestnut, Fagus pnmila, a tree that rises eight or ten feet, with a branching shrubby stem, producing a nut. CHINK'Y, a. Full of chinks, or fissures;
CHINKAPIN,
The lower extremity of the face below the gaping opening in narrow clefts. Fourcroy. Hooper. mouth; the point of the under jaw. Dryden. be defined, the science which CllI'NA, n. A species of earthern ware a. Having a long chin. made in China, and so called from the CHIN'NED, of material the investigates composition Kersey. substances, and the permanent changes of comitry called also chiiia ware and porceV. t. In naval to thrust CHINSE, affairs, lain. constitution which their mutual actions [See Porcelain.] oakum into the seams or chinks of a ship Ure. CHl'NA-ORANGE, n. The sweet orange, produce. with a chisel or point of a knife, as a teirisaid to ha%e he that the been liom science, defined, Cliimistry may originally brought Mar. Did. jiorary expedient for calking. China. object of wliich is to discover and explain n. [D. chits; G. -i7z; Sans, ehect ; the changes of composition that occur CHINA-ROOT, n. The root of a species CHINTS, Hindoo, cheent ; Per. chinz, spotted, stainSmilax, brought from the East Indies, of among the integrant and constituent parts ed.] a ]ialc reddish color, with no smell, and of ditferent bodies. Henry. Cotton cloth, jirinted with more than two very little taste. Chimistry is the science which treats of colors. those events and changes in natural bod- CHINCH, n. [Qu. It. rimice, L. cimex, corCHIOPPiNE, n. [Sp. chapin; Port, chapim. ies, which are not accompanied bj' sensirupted.] It is said lo be of Araliian origin. It canble motions. Thomson. A genus of insects, resembling the feathernot be the L. crepis, Gr. xfjijntj, unless wing moths. These insects live in th(! Chimistry is justly considered as a science, a letter has been lost.] flowers of ))lants, and wander from flower but the practical operations may be deA worn ladies. high shoe, Ibrmerly by to flower, but prefer those wliich are nominated an art. Shak. sweetest. ;
may
Chimistry
;
CIIIM'NEY,
n. plu.
MC Arm. ciminal,
rhimneys.
Diet. jVat. Hist.
[Fr. chemi-
or clieminal ; G. kamin ; Corn, chimbla; h: simileur ; S\>. chimenea ; Cli. It. cammino ; L. caminus : rnp Ar. s Russ. kamin. It C!r. xaaaoj A*i' ;
CHIN'-COUGH,
n. [D. kink-hoest, from kink, a twist or bend, and hoest, a cough G. keichhusten, from keichen, to pant. Qu.
:
;
'
seems
originally to
have been a furnace,
a stove, or a hearth.] In architecture, a body of brick or stone, erected in a building, containing a funnel or funnels, to convey smoke, and other volatile matter through the roof, from the hearth or fire-place, where fuel is burnt. This body of materials is sometimes called a stack of chimney.i, especially when it contains two or more funnels, or passages. the lower part of the body of 2. A fireplace brick or stone which confines and con1.
A
in Pers. ^XiL chonah is a cough.] contagious disease, often epidemic among It increases for some weeks, is attended with a difficulty of breathing, and in its worst stage, with a degree of con-
From it is
coughing,
names
eau.] 1.
children.
vulsion.
in the
of places, implj' a market: from Sax. ceapan, cypan, to buy or sell. [Sec Cheap.] CHIP, n. [from the root of chop. Fr. conp-
for
;
;
CHIP, CHEAP, CHIPPING,
a particular noise made in 2. also called hooping cough.
A piece of wood or other substance, separated from a body by a cutting instrument, particularly by an ax. It is used also for a piece of stone separated by a chisel or other instrument, in hewing. A fragment or piece broken off; a small piece.
I'. /. To cut into small pieces, oichips; to diminish by cutting awaj' a litto hew. tle at a tune, or in small pieces Shak. band of a sjilint wheel Russ. schina.] CHIP, V. i. To break or fly off in small pie1. The back-bone, or spine of an animal. ces, as in potter's ware. n. An ax for chipping. 2. A piece of the back-bone of an animal, CHIP-AX, Cut in chips, or small pieveys smoke. with the adjoining parts, cut for cooking. CHIP'PED, pp. ces hewed. CHIM'NEY-eORNER, n. The coiner of a 3. The chime of a cask, or the ridge formed CHIPPING, ppr. Cuttmg off in small piefire-])lace, or the space between the fire the ends of the staves. by and the sides of the fire-place. In the ces. Stat, of Pennsylvania. Northern States of America, fire-places V. t. To cut through the back- CHIPTING, n. A chip a piece cut off or were formerly made six or eight feet wide, CHINE,or into separated by a cutting or engraving instrubone, chine-pieces. and a stool was placed by or even more, ment ; a fragment. 2. The flying or breaking off in small pieces, the side of the fire, as a seat for children, CHI'NED, a. Pertaining to the back. Beaum. and this often furnished a comfortable sitof the edges of potter's ware, and porceAs fuel has become CHINE'SE, a. Pertaining to China. uation for idlers. lain. Encye. scarce, our fire-places are contracted, till CHINE'SE, n. sing, and ;;/». A native of| RI€AL, a. [from chiragra, handChina also, the language of China. in many or most of our dwellings, we have gout, Gr. xt'Pt the hand, and oypo, sei-
CHINE, chein.
man,
[Fr. echine
n. It
may
schiene
;
and rad-schiene
;
It.
schiena
;
Arm. CHIP,
be allied to ctiin. In Gerthe shin, also a clout, a
is
is
;
the
;
;
;
;
€HIRAG
;
no chimney-corners. 2.
CHIN'GLE,
In a more enlarged sense, the fire-side, or a place near the fire.
CHIM'NEY-HQOK,
"•
A
pots and kettles over a
hook
fire.
for holding
n.
Gravel free from
CHINK,
n.
[This word
dirt.
[See
zure.]
Donne. Having the gout
Shingle.]
may be
a derivative
from the Saxon cinan, or ginian, geonan, to gape, to yaicn, Gr. x'^vu,; or from the
ill the hand, or subject to that disease. Brown. a. churk. [Probably allied to chirp; D. drcken, obs. Chaucer uses the verb,
CHIRK,
CHI
CHI to chirk, in the sense of chh-p or chatter. The word is fouml in the Russ. chirkayu, It is in popular use in Newto rhirp.
CHIRUR'GEON,
H L
C
n. [Gr. ;t(ip(«jpyo5,
one
who
a service formerly deemed more honorable than service in infantry. called knights
operates with the hand,
;
;tftp, the hand, work L. chiriirgus ; Fr.chinirBacon. Sp. cirujano ; Port, surgiam, or ci- 9. The qualifications of a knight, as valor and dexterity in arms. in a comShak. in good spirits rurgiam ; It. chirurgo ; Arm. surgyan.] The to heal 3. of one whose is the A system fortable state. knighthood profession surgeon privileges, characteristics or manners of knights ; diseases by manual operations, instruChaucer. CHIRK, V. i. To chirp. Obs. CHIRM, V. i. [Sax. cynnan.] To sing as a ments or external applications. [This ill- the ]>ractice of knight-errantry, or the heroic defense of life and honor. bird. sounding word is oljsolete, and it now Dryden. [JVot in use] CllI'ROGRAPH, ji. [Gr. ;s:fip, the hand, and ajipears in the form of surgeon, which see.] 4. An adventure or exploit, as of a knight.
England.] Lively cheerful ;
and
fpyoi',
gien
;
;
;
;
;
ypa^u, to 1.
;
CHIRIIR'GERY,
v\'rite.]
71.
[Gr. xi'f"^V7'<^-
^ee
Chirurgeon.] Anciently a deed, which, requiring a coun was engros.sed twice on the same That part of the medical art which consists in healing diseases and woimds by instrupiece of ])archment, with a space between, terpart,
now ments and external applications which was written chirograph, througl written surgery. which the parchment was cut, and one to surgeIt answered to €HIRUR'Gl€, } part given to each party. "• Pertaining what is now called a churitr-purtij. Encijc. eHIRUR'GlCAL, ry, or to the art ofj so called from the njaiiner of en 'i. A fine, healing diseases and wounds by manual operations, instruments or external appligrossing, which is still retained in the cations. Ihm. chirographer's office in England. Having qualities useful in external applielllROG'RAPHER, n. [See Chirograph.] in
;
<,
He
that exercises or professes the art or In England, the ehibusiness of writing. rographer of fines is an oflicer in the common pleas, who engrosses fines ac in that coiu't,
knowledged
"' \
n.
Pertaining to chirographv.
One who
tunes by examining the hand. gitimate ivord.]
CHIROG'RAPHY,
tells for-
[.Vo/ a leJlrbuthnot
rology. >i.
;
Arm. DIJ,
gisell ; Sp. o"7ior NIJ, or Ar.
•
[Gr. x",', the hand,
~,
chazza, to cut, hew, carve.
See
Class Gs.] \n instrument of iron or steel, used in carpentry, joinery, cabinet work, masonry,
CHIS'EL,
1).
grave with
To
cut, jiare, a chisel.
t.
CHIS'ELEH, pp. Cut
gouge, or en
or engraved with a
chisel.
and
^o^'Of, discourse.] CHIS'ELING, ppr. Cutting with a chisel. One who communicates thoughts by signs CHIS'LEU, n. [Heb. l'70D, from the Ar. made with the hands and finders. CHIROL'OliV, n. [See Chirologist.] The V*v.r kasila, to be torpid or cold.]
art or practice of communicating thought' by signs made by the hands and fingers; The ninth month of the Jewish year, an a substitute for language or discourse swering to a part of November and a part of December, in the modern division of iiuich used by the deaf and dumb, and by the year. others who communicate with them. Bailey. CHIT, 91. [Sax. cith, a shoot or twig, from €IIIR'OI\IANCT.R, n. [See Chiromancy.] thrusting out.]
One who attem|>ts to
foretell future events, the fortunes and dispositions of| persons, by inspecting the hands. Dryden. CHIR'OMANCY,)). [Gr. ;t"Hithc hand, and
or to
(>.
The body
or order of knights. Shak. English taw, a tenin-e of lands by knight's service ; that is, by the condition of performing service on liorseback, or of lierforming .some noble or military service to his lord. This was general or general, when the tenant held special per servitium militare, without specification of the particular .service; special, when In
;
particidar service was designated. When the tenant held only of the king, the tenure was regal ; when he held of a common person, it was called common. Tliis service was also grand sergeantry, as when the tenant was boiunl to jjerform service to the king in his own person ; and petit
the
when he was boimd
sergeantry,
to yield to
the king annually some small thing, as a sword or dagger. Chivalry that might be held of a common per.son, was called escuage, scutagium, or shield service. Blackstone.
sculpture, &c., either for pariiii', hewingor gouging. Chisels are of ditierent sizes Court ofchii-alry, a com-t formerly and shapes, fitted for particular uses. fore the Lord High Constable
n.
[See Chirograph.' The art of writing, or a writing with one's own hand. €HIROLOG'l€AL, a. Pertaining to chi
eHlROL'OcilST,
n.
Enc!/i
?
CHIROG'RAPHIST,
now
ciseler, to engrave; cel ; Heb. TIJ, Cli.
and delivers the
indentures to the parties.
CHIROGRAPHIC, €lIIROGRAPH'I€AL,
It is
diseases or injuries. written surgical. s as :. [Er. ciscau, a chisel
for healing
cations,
CHIS'EL,
Sidney. o.
1.
tell
2.
A shoot or sprout the first shooting or germination of a seed or )ilant. Hence, A child or babe, m famiiiur language. ;
X A
a push. sprout to shoot, as a seed
freckle, that
is,
held be-
and Earl Marshal of England, l]a\ing cognizance
of contracts anil other matters relating to deeds of arms ami war. It had jurisdiction both of civil and criminal causes, but
no power
to enfcu-ce its decisions by fine or imprisonment, not being a court of record. It is now nearly extinct. Blackstone.
CHIVE,
[Fr. cive
)i.
;
L. cepa.]
A
species
of small onion.
CHIVES, or
JI.
In Jofnni/, slender threads in the blossoms of plants.
/i/i(.
filaments
[See Stamen.]
CHLO'RATE, pound of
n.
[See Chlorine.] A comacid with a sahfiable
chloric
base.
Ure.
CHLO'RIC,
a.
obtained from
Pertaining to chlorine, or Ure. it; as chlonc acid.
A
com-
CHLO'RIDE, > "• [See CWonne.] CHIT, JI. i. To navttia, divination.] CHLO'RID, the art or practice or ])lant. poimd of chlorine with a combustible body. Ure, of atteinpling to foretell events, or to dis- CHIT'-CHAT, 11. [See Chat, Chatter.] CHLORID'U;, a. Pertainhig to a chloride. cover the dispositions of a person, by in- Prattle familiar or trifling talk. Ure. specting the lines and lineaments of his CHIT'TERLING, n. The frill to the breast of a shirt. Brown. hand. Gascoigne. CHLORINE, ^ " [Gr. zxwpos, green so nanicd from its color.] CIIIROMAN'TIC, a. Pertaining to chiro- CHIT'TERLINGS, n. plv. [G. huttel, prob- CHLO'RIN, ^ Chloric gas a new name given to what has ably from the root of gut.] mancy, or divination by the hand. been called oxymiiriatic gas. This subGrcllman, or bowels Chiromantk deception. The guts sausages. stance has hitherto resisted all efforts to John.wn. Bailey. CHIRP, r. i. cherp. [Ger. zirpen.] To make the noise of certain small birds, or of cer- CHIT'TY, a. Childish like a babe. decom])ose it, and as it is not known to contain oxygen, and is apparently a simtain insects as a chirping lark, or cricket. Johnson. Thomson. 3. Full of chits or warts. ple substance, it has been denominated from its color, chlorine, or chloric gas. CHIRP. V. t. To make cheerful. Per Pope. CHIVALROUS, a. [Sec aiivalry.] Davy. CHIRP, n. A particular voice of certain taining to chivalry, or knight errantry of chlorine birds or insects. warlike bold gallant. Spectator. Spenser. CHLORIODTC, a. Consisting and iodine, or obtained from them. Davy. CIHRP'ER, n. One that chirps, or is cheer- CHIVALRY, n. [Fr. chevakrie, from chci-Tlic n. ful. [Gr. ;i>.«po;, green.] alier, a knight or horseman, from cheral, CHLO'RIS. CIHRP'ING. ppr. Making the noise of cer a horse Sp. cahnlUria ; It. cavatlcria. See i:reen finch, a small bird. ;
Divination by the hand
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
tain small binls.
CHH«I"ING,
n.
The
birds and insects.
noise of certain small
I.
ClILO'RITF,, n. [Gr. j:?."po5, green.] Cavalry.] Knighthood a military dignity, founded A mineral of a grass green color, opake, on the service of soldiers on horseback, nsually frial'le or easily pulverized, con\ ;
C posed of
H O
C H O
spangles, scales, prisms or shining small grains. It is classed Iiy Kirwan with the niuriutic genus. Tliere are four siibs))ccies, chlorite earth, common little
chlorite, chlorite slate,
and
€llLOIlO-€'ARIiOXOUS,
ring one thing to another
;
itiy
c
The
}
mind
and 2.
terms,
S
i.
4.
n. [green opal.] A newly observed mineral, ol" two varieties, the conchoidal and the earthy the conchoith(> other dal is of a pistachio green color has an earthy fracture, and both varieties are possessed of magnetic properties.
€HLdllO'PAL,
option.
n. $aifu, to show.]
x^'-'fo>,
green^
variety of fluor spar, from Siberia.
When
and
placed on a heated ful emerald green
[Gr.
it
Nor
let
thy conquests only be her choice.
Prior
iron,
The
any thing that which and properly the object of
best part of
is
preferable, choice.
;
In die choice of our sepulchers bury thy dead 16.
Gen.
xxiii.
The
act of electing to office
by vote
;
elec-
ti(m.
gives a beauti-
To
To make
choice of,
choose
to
to select
to
Sax.
key,
c(eg.]
tiie passage of the breath, by filwindpipe or compressing the neck. Tlie word is used to (•xpre.
stop
ling the
;
;
Eng.
ccecus,
!
selection.
Phxibi.jis
ellLO'ROPHANE,
A
is
choice.'
;
5.
compress, or bind
choice.'
Anon.\ Care in selecting judgment or skill in distinguishing what is to be preferred, and in giving a preference. 1 imagine Cesar's a;)0lhems were collected with judj^ment and choice. Bacon. The thing chosen that which is ajipro ved and selected in preference to others ;
;
sense of choke
is
j
;
Where there is force, there can be no Of these alternatives we have our own
bonic nrid and chluru-carbonous aciil, are and the ap|>lii!d, tlie former by Thomson, latter hy Ure, to a compound of chlorine and carbonic oxyd, Ibrmcil by exposing a to two the direct of the mixture gases It was discovered hy Dr. J. solar rays. Davy, and called by him phosgene gas.
The
to stufl" thrust down or stop ; or to tight. [The Sp. aliogar the Port, nfogar, L. suffoeo.] It is probably allied to the Sp. cegar, to shut, L.
election.
j;ood wliilu ago God that the Uenliles by inoulh should hear the word of the gospel,' tiolieve. Acts xv.
The power of choosing
chloro-car-
O
II
ness or comi)ression.
in prefer-!
Ve know how thul a made choice among u^<,
foliated hloKincaii. Ure.
rile.
€lILORO-€AKBON'IC,
C
the determination of the
;
cavises deatli
Mark
to suffocate
;
;
to
strangle.
v.
To
stop by filling to obstruct to block up; as, to choke tiii^ entrance of a harbor, or any passage. To hinder by obstruction or impediments ; to hinder or check growth, expansion, or progress as, to choke plants to choke the Bacon. spreading of the fruit. Thorns chohe them. Matt. xiii. Luke viii. To smother or suffiicate, as fire. Dryden. To suppress or stifle; as, to choke the Shak. strong conception. C. To offend to cause to take an exception ; as, I was choked at this word. Sivifl. ;
;
;
;
;
We
observe that this word generally imseparate and take in preference. CleavelanJ. Cue. A plies crowding, stuffing or covering. CHLO'ROPIIEITF,, 71. [Gr. xJiupof, greet!, CHOICE, a. Worthy of being preferred; channel is choked by stones and sand, but select; precious; very valuable. and iftuof, liluckisli.] not by a boom. choicest hours of life are lost. My Swift. CHOKE, I'. 1. To have the A rare mineral found in small nodules. wind-pipe stoprevenue is better tliau clioice silver. Prov. light.
n.
[Gr.
;K>.upo5,
ped
viii.
green, and
Holding dear; preserving or using with
leaf.]
cjju^jior,
;
My
Cleaveland.
€IIL0'R01'HYL,
;
care, as valuable ; frugal of time or of advantages.
The green matterof the leaves of vegetables. Pellelier.
;
as, to
be choice
Selecting with care, and due attention to preference as, to be choice of one's companv. CnOICE-DRAWN, a. Selected with parskin, weakness, palpitation, dyspepsy, &c. ticular care. Shak. ;
Coxe.
CHOICE' LESS,
a.
Pertaining to chlorosis as, chlorotic afflictions. Medical Ilepository. 2. Affected by chlorosis; as, clUorolic imns.
the
a.
Pertaining to chlorine
;
ving.
2.
'i.
;
It.
n. [Fr. chocolal ; Sp. Port. cioccolata ; from cacao.]
cinnamon or vanilla. The ground fine, mixed with the
2.
sugar, first
3.
company may be served with
n. [Fr. choir ; Arm. choas ; Sax. D. kens. See Choose.] act of choosing the voluntary act of selecting or separating from two or
CHOICE, ;
The
as possible
;
preferably
;
curi 2.
;
carefully
;
as a thing
preferred
;
or
Ar.^^
to
go round,
to
See Chorus.] of singers, especially in d vine service, in a church. Any collection of singers. That part of a church a|)propriated for
A
<-ollection
!
Full
11. One that chokes another ; one that puts another to silence that which cannot be answered. Johnson. ;
CHO'KE-WEED, CHO'KY, power
:
full.]
full.
CHO'KER,
;
a.
That
A
yoj,
A
plant so called. tends to suffocate, or has J^.
to suft'ocate.
CHOL'AGOGUE, from
;to?,);,
n. col'agog.
[Gr.
;to)iijya-
bile.]
medicine that has the specific quality of evacuating the bile. CHOL'ER, n. [L. cholera; Gr. xo^pa, from xo'f.i,
bile.]
the singers, sepanited fr
I
is
G. chor
and
a. [choke
quite
CHOKE,
;
jnore things that which
;
;
Clarissa.
])articular
;
;
n. A kind of pear that has a rough astringent taste, and is swallowed with difficulty, or which contracts the parts of the mouth. .\n as])ersion or sarcasm by which a person is put to silence. [J] low term.]
;
where
chocolate.
CHOCOLATE-NUT. [See Cacao.] CHODE, the old preterit of c/iif/e, which see. ei/se
excellently
collect or bind.
ingredients, and put in a mold. The liquor made by dissolving chocolate in boiling water.
CHOC OLATE-HOUSE, n. A house
1.
;
With great care
choor
1.
is
Valuably
ness
A paste or cake composed of the kernel of cacao, with other ingredients, usually a little
CHOKE-PEAR.
an encounter. [See Shock.]
chocolate
nut
CHOKE-FULL,
CHOICE'NESS,
CHOCOLATE, 1.
Hammond.
choicely preserved. n.
the rudder, are pieces of timber readiness to stop the motion of rudder, in ease of an accident, &c.
ke])t in
;
adv. chois'ly. With care in choosing with nice regard to preference with exact choice as a band of men
ously. 3.
astringent qualities.
pp. Surtbcated strangled obby fiUing; stifled; suppressed; smothered.
structed
not free.
chois'ness. Valuable value or worth as the choicencss of a plant or of wine. n. quire, [h. chorus ; Gr. jt"?"!; Fr. Mar. Diet. CHOIR, chceur ; Sp. Port. It. coro ; Sax. chor ; D.
Chocks of
CHOCK,
its
CHO'KED,
choicely collected.
[See Choke.] [from choke.] In marine language, a kind of wedge for confining a cask or other body, to prevent it from mo n.
filamentous or capillai-y Johnson.
n. The popular name of a species of wild cherry, remarkable for
;
ehlorous oxyd.
tlie
;
The
eat-
part of the artichoke.
;
as
CHOAK, (MIOCK,
power of choosing
n.
when
to take exceptions.
;
CHO'KE-CHERRY,
Not having
chois'less.
CHOICELY,
Battle.
€HLO'ROUS,
a,
are apt to choke
as, cattle
;
ing potatoes. To be offended
CHOKE,
3.
n. [Gr. j:Xu.po5, green.] The green sickness; a disease of females, characterized by a pale or greenish hue of the
CHLORO'SIS,
eULOROT'IC,
2.
;
Angry
iji
;
anger
;
n. Irascibility;
Raleigh anger;
C
to grind and mince with the teeth devour eagerly with up; as, to chop up an Dryden. entertainment. 4. To break or open into chinks or fissures to chap. to crack [See Chap.] CHOP, V. i. To catch or attempt to seize with the mouth. [JVot used.] To choji at the shadow and lose the sub-
To
aii- 3.
excited by
choleric spcecli. ger; as a
CHOL'ERICNESS,
H O
C
H O
C y.
;
The
1.
Millou. In music, the union of two or more sounds uttered at the same time, forming an enand as a fifth third, eighth, harmony which are perfect chords, or consonancies. The fourth and sixth are imperfect chords. In geometry, a right line drawn or supposed to extend from one end of an arch of a circle to the other. Hence the chord of an arch is a right line joining the extremities of that arch. Encyc.
;
'2.
;
peevishness.
a. Pertaining to choles obtained from it as cholesteric
eHOLES'TERIC, terin, or acid.
;
Ure.
€HOLES'TERINE, eHOLES'TERIN,
?
[Gr.
and
xo^-n, I'ile,
calcidi.
CHOLI.\M'BI€,
?!.
primary
To
fifth
To
Bentlei/.
n. A mineral, called occurs in grains or imperfect crystals, or in four-sided prisms with rhombic bases, truncated on the two acute lateral edges. It is translucent and its color varies from reddish or amber yel-
1.
1-2.
brown.
I
'3.
See Class Gs.
to collect.
To exchange ](lacc
I
G
brew has iam
give vent
to.
CHORD, V. To string. CHORDEE', n. [See Chord.]
;
of another
;
contraction of the frienuni, attending gonorrhea and accompanied with pain.
[JVol used.]
ic
Beaum.
CHORE,
;
;
to
\Vord or thing for another. Let not the council chop with
judge.
Bacon
Coxe. Encyc. [Eng. char.] In America, this .small work of a domestic
kind, as distinguished fnun the principal work of tlie day. It is generally used in the plural, chore's, which includes the daily or occasional business of feeding cattle
L'Estrange. return one
tlie
n.
word denotes
to put one thing in the as, to chop and change
our friends. To bandy to altercate
Dryden. In medicine
and surgery, an inflammatory or spasmod-
t.
change.
;
to grayish
[JVot ffilson.
to buy [Sax. ceapian, cypan, or sell. See Cheap.] To buy, or rather to barter, truck, exV.
;
f.
use.J
become modish.
to
cliop out, to
CHOP,
It
Cteavetand. CHOOSE, V. t. s as z. pret. chose ; pp. choIdezm ; sen, chose. [Sax. ceosan ; D. kicscH ; Sw. kesa ; Ice. kioosa ; Fr. choisir. Arm. choasa; Pers. ghozidan. The He-
low
common
not in
It is
in,
chop
used,]
last.
eHON'DRODITE, also Brucitc.
Johnson. light or fall on suddenly. it indicates [If this is a legitimate sense, sense is, to throw, thrust, that the
To
or strike.
A verse
[L. choliambi.]
having an iambic foot in the in the sixth or place, and a spondee
in poetry
.3.
VEsfrange
stance. 2.
iM. Chevreid, to the pearly or crystaline substance of human biliary
tire
;
;ipio;, solid.]
<,
A name given by
H O
string of a musical instrument.
and other animals, preparing
fuel,
sweep-
&c. ing the house, cleaning furniture, [See Char.] CHOREPIS'COPAL, a. [Gr. x^P"!, place,
To turn, vary, change or shift and .iece of CHORIAM'BUS, ^ and m/tSos, iambus.] Refuse the evil and choose the good. with See Chap, which, 2. A crack or cleft. In ancient poetry, a foot consisting of four S. To take in preference. first and last are the broad sound of a, is often pronounced syllables, of which the Job \xxiv. Let us choose to us judgment. that is, a chochop. to loug, and the others short 3. To prefer; to choose for imitation; .3. The reus or trochee and an iambus united as, chap the jaw plu. the jaws the follow. or mouth river's of a mouth the sides nobHitas. anrietas. Encyc. and choose none of not the No.
CHOP, wind
of pick out to select to take by way offerpreference from two or more things ed to make choice of
To
I.
V.
sudilenly
40. 70. 71.] ;
i. ;
cliops,
;
;
;
;
;
:
;
;
;
;
Envy
oppressor,
Piov. iii. 4. To elect for eternal hajjpiness; to predestinate to life. Many are called but few chosen. Matt, xx. his ways.
For
Mark .5.
To
his elect's sake,
whom
he
hatli
chosen
elect or designate to office or employvotes or suffrages. In the United
States, the
people c/joo^e representatives by votes, usually by ballot.
CHOOSE,
V.
f.
To
prefer;
I choose to go.
.as,
The power of choice. denotes ]>hrase, he cannot cltoose but stay, that he has not the power of choice,
To have
the
whether
to stay or not. The verb, iu these phrases, is really transitive ; the following verb standing as the
object, instead of a noun. II. He that chooses;
CHOOSER,
CHOP-CHURCH,
th ;
;
elector.
CHOOSTNG, prefei-ence
;
ppr. Selecting electing.
taking
;
in
or an
exchanger of benefices.
11.
A
a.
Pertaining to a rhori-
choriamb.
Ma3on.
anib. ;
;
the
hold,
sold.
is
or contain.] CHO'PIN," n. [Fr. chopinc.] liquid mcas Ill anatomy, the exterior membrane which ure in France, containing nearly a pint invests the fetus in utero. Scotland In Winchester measure. singing man CilO'RIST, n. [Fr. choiisle.] ill a choir. quart of wine measure. CHOP'PED, pp. Cut minced CHOR'ISTER, n. [from chorus, choir.] CHOP'PING, ppr. Cutting; mincing; buy- Literally, a singer one of a choir; a singer in a concert. Dryden. ing bartering. CHOP'PING, «. Stout; lusty; plump. a. One who leads a choir in church music. This is the sense in the United States. high-heel iCHOP'PING, n. [Sp. chapin.] n. in ladies worn ed shoe, [See Chorography.] Italy. [See by a particular reperson who describes Chioppine.] or one wlio forms a map from chop. a mincing 2. A cuttine gion or country block on or maps of particular regions or countries. CHOP' PIN G-ULOCK, n. Encyc. which any thing is laid to be chopped. knife for min CHOROGRAPH'ICAL, a. Pertaining to CHOP'PING-KNIFE, 11. descriptive of particular rechorography meat. cing down or markgions or countries laying CHOP'PY, a. Full of clefls or cracks. countries. ing the bounds of particular CHOPS, [See Chop.]
A
A
;
;
;
A
CHOROG'RAPHER, A
I
;
;
A
A
;
;
CHOOS'ING, n. Choice election. Dan. CHOP, [G. and D. kfippen ;
l.
An exchange
».
CHORIAM'BIC, CHORIAM'BIC,
CHOP'-FALLEN, a. Dejected dispirited. CHO'RION, n. [Gr. zopiov, or jjupw CHOP'-HOUSE, n. A house where provis- latter seems to be allied to x^p^^i to
;
he
has the ])ower or right of choosing
J',
[See Chap.]
ion readv dressed
.tiii.
ment by
2.
channel.
;
Norm,
kap-
Encyc.
to [from chorus.] Belonging or composing a choir or concert as, cho-
eHO'RAL,
a.
adv. In a clioin a manner descriprographical manner; tive of particul.ir regimis. a place .flinhursl. CHOROG'RAPIIY, n. [Gr. zcopos, Class Gb. No. 47.' 51.] or region, and ypa
per
Gr. xojtru
or coupe?-; Ar.
;
Fr. coupcr
ra^
;
copper.
CHOROGRAPH'ICAI.LY,
;
!_-«>.;
to cut.
ral
symphonies. Singing in a choir ;
Milton.
as, choral seraphs
I
;
;
:
H K
C H O from that of
whole earth
tlie
topography, as
tlie
and from The Cornish chough
;
a fowl of the genus^ Cori'us, nearly of the size of the crow, and mischievous, Uke the magpie. It is black, the except bdl, legs and feet, which are red. It is a native of the west of England. i>ic(. of ..Vat. Hisi
description of a country city or district
of a town,
diflers iVoin tliat
Encyc.
'GHO'ROID,
71.
[Gr.
membrane, and
t
xofnoi',
a
particu'liir
hkeness.] In anatomy, a term applied to several parts of the body that resemble the chorion; as the inner membrane investing the brain, or the pia mater ; the second coat of the eye the fold of the carotid artery in the brain, hi which is the pineal gland. Coxe. Jincyc. CHO'RUS, n. [L. chorus ; Gr. j'opo? S!i.\. chor; Fr. chceur ; I), choor or Iwor ; Sp. It coro ; Ir. cora ; W. cur. In Welsh, the word signifies a ronnd or circle, a choir. If the primary sense is a circle, or a eoiupaiiy, i5o;,
Chough
sing or shout,
The former 1.
it
to
repeat.
Class
If the radical sense
may
is nio.st
is
to
fraud
company of
per-
vulgar.]
CHOUSE,
A
persons
One who
7!.
is
Dryden. Suifl. easily cheated ; a
a simpleton.
;
trick;
sham
;
defrauded
;
2. 3.
action, urging, prosecution.
and Cause.]
Thursday
3.
CHO'SEN,
z,
Blackstone.
Encyc.
and pp. of choose. cho'tn. Selected from
oil
Encyc.
a pp. number picked out taken in preference elected predestinated designated to office. distinguished by preference ;
;
CHRIS'OM,
;
The
;
chuff. [Fr. choticas ; Ir. cag ; Sax. ceo or ceogh. This word may be the same as jack, in jackdaw. It appears to 71.
be a Cornish word.]
Vol.
I.
A
[See Chrism.]
A
71.
[Gr.
xt"?'>St
anointed,
from
who
characterized by real
is
In a general sense, the word christian.'; includes all who are born in a christian countrv or of christian parents. CHRIS tl.\N, a. [See the Noun.] Pertaining to Cliri-st, taught by him, or received
from
liim
;
as the christian religion
V.
t.
kris'n.
[Sax. cristnian
;
D. kerstenen. See Christ.] 1.
To
name
baptize, or ;
rather to baptize and to initiate into the visible church of
Cliri.st by the application of water; applied to persons. And as a name is given to the jierson in the ceremony, hence,
37
chris-
;
tian doctrines. 2.
3.
4.
Professing the religion of Christ
;
as a
chrLitian friend. Belonging to tlie religion of Christ; relating to Christ, or to his doctrines, precepts and example ; as christian profession and
practice. Pertaining to the church as courts f Am/inn.
CHRIS'TIAN,
;
ecclesiastical
;
Blackstone.
To baptize.
v.t.
{Yot used.] Fulke.
See
n.
[Gr.
xf^^'ay'^i^o^.
Christ.]
The The
christian religion.
nations professing Christianity. Johnson. n. A newly discovered Vesuvian mineral its primitive form is that of an obHque rectangular prism its colors brown, yellow or reddish.
CHRIS'TIANITE,
;
;
Jotirn.
CHRISTIANITY,
7i.
of Science.
[See Christian, from
Christ.]
The
to anoint.]
€HRIS'TEN,
of
;
in Christ
vessel to hold the 2.
a.noi.nted; an appellation given to the Savior of the world, and synonymous with the Hebrew 3Iessiah. It was a custom of anticpiity to consecrate persons to the sacerdotal and regal offices by anointing them with oil.
eminent.
THOUGH,
A
anointed with holy oil, which was formerly laid over a child's face when it was baptized. Alsci, the cloth itself Encyc.
;
His chosen captains are drowned in the sea. Ex. XV. Ye are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood. 1 Pet. ii.
n.
child that dies within a month after its birth ; so called from the chrisom-cloth, a linen cloth
;
;
2. a. Select
n.
for chrism.
cris-
Christ. real disciple of Christ one who believes in the tnilh of the christian religioiij and studies to follow the example, and obey the precepts, of Christ ; a believer
1.
jr(J'",
pret.
Arm.
;
See Christ.] in the religion of Christ. professor of his belief in tlic rehgion behever
CHRIS'TIANISM,
CHRIST,
transitory
movable.
act of apjilying
;
which
s as
The
A
Sp. christiano
;
;
A
is
initiaitioii
crislian.
the chrism, or consecrated oil in baptism, in contirmatioii, by the priest In ordination, it is u.sually styled
CHRIS'JMATORY,
CHOSE,
n.
A
W.
;
unction.
a recompense for damage the former pro; ceeding from an express, the latter from ;iii contract executed implied contract. is a chose in a contract execu; possession A tory conveys only a chose in action. rhose local is annexed to a place, as a mill or the like ; a chose is a thins ;
;
piety.
bislioi).
a chose in action
is
act or ceremo-
4.
ceremony,
by the
Bapti-
kris'ening.
The
n.
into the cliristian religion.
2.
.some cases, mi.xed with balsam. Encyc a. Pertaining to chrism. Brevint.
;
chose in action
Christianity.
ppr.
CHR1.S'TI.\N, 71. krysi'yan. [Gr. xi"-?""">i. L. Christ ia nus Sax. cristcn; D. krisleti ;
;
CHUIS'MAL,
;
done
;
ny of baptizing and naming
1.
ppr. Cheating imposing on. 71. In JYew England, a dish In Sjianbiscuit, &c. isli, chode is a paste made of mill;, (!ggs, and flour. In the west v{' England, sugar chowder-beer is a liquor made by boiling! black s])ruce in water and mi.xuig with it
See Thing €HRISiMA'TION,
In law, property in action a right to possession or that which may be demanded and recovered by suit or action at law. Thus, money due on a bond or note is a
;
CHRISTENING,
|
is,
territories,
Fr. Chretien
;
;
See
countries or regions inhabited by christians, or those who profess to believe in the christian religion. The whole body of christians. Hooker. the christian religion Chiisti.tiiity as., while Christendom prevailed. [Unusual.]
ten
of lisli boiled with
71. cosa, suit, [Fr. chose ; Sp. cause, thing It. cosa ; Port, coiisa : L, causa. See Cause. The primary sense
The
zing and iK;ming.
im-
CHOW'DER,
CHOSE,
dom,
rule, jurisdiction.
Christ.]
Johnson.
;
posed on.
who
[Sax.
and
christian,
cristtn,
power, judgmejit,
;
imposition. pp. Cheated
CHOUS'ED,
in the acts
applied tt> Burnet.
;
kris'ndom.
n.
;
Dryden.
The
what passes
cristendom,
;
Pope. Addison. are sujiposed to behold of a tragedy, and sing their sentiments between the acts. inelasses. Shak. Johnson. 3. Tlie song between the acts of a tragedy. CHOW'DER, V. t. To make a chowder. Johnson. CHOW'TER, IN t. To grumble like a fro^ 4. Verses of a song in which the company or a froward child. Phillips. join the singer or the union of a cumpa €HRISM, ?i. [Gr. xp^apa, from ;yptu, toj with a in certain ny singer, rei)eating anoint.] couplets or verses, at certain periods in a Unguent ; unction. In the Romish and Johnson. Encyc. Greek churches, oil consecrated by the song. 5. A musical composition of two or more bisho]), and used in the administration of^ parts. bapti.sm, confirmation, ordination, and ex(5. Among the Greeks, a chorus consisted of treme unction. It is prepared on holy a number of singers and dancers. with much and iii 2.
denominate
things.
CHRISTENDOM,
CHRISTENING,
followed by oj] in cheat, trick, defraud Hudibias; but in -America, by out of ; as, to chouse one out of his money. [It is now
CHOUS'ING,
probable.] ;
;
or cheat.]
be allied to Gr. x^H'"'
A number of singers a sons singing in concert.
H R
to
jj»l-i gausa, to deceive or de€HRIS'TENED,;)/i. kns'nd. Baptized' and Eth. ^m")® cliaso, to lie, deceive named initialed into
To
tool
karra, to return,
C ;
Ar.
za.
the
y^s
To name
2.
1.
jackdaw.
Cyc. [See Jowl] t>. t. [This word may be from the root of coz«7i. Arm. cougzein, or conche-
;
Gr. No. »2. 34.
also applied to the
is
CHOULE. CHOUSE,
;
word may be referred to the Ar. , ^ kaura, to go round, to collect, to bind, or to
is
religion of christians ; or the system of doctrines and precepts taught by Christ, and recorded by the evangelists and apostles.
Whilst politicians are disputing about monarchies, aristocracies, and republics, Christianiis alike applicable, useful and friendly to
ty
them
all.
CHRISTIANIZE,
v. t.
To make
to convert to Christianity ize
;
Paley. christian ;
as, to christian-
pagans.
CHRIS'TIANLIKE,
a.
Becoming a
tian.
CHRIS'TIANLY,
chris-
Shak. adv. In
a christian luan-
C H
H R
C
R
C
;
;
•
€I1RISTIAN()G RAPHY, tion of cliristian nations.
n.
A
j.i"
descrip-
[jVot used.]
Pagitt. n. [Christ and mass, Sax. .uassn, a holy day or feast ; D. kersmis.] The festival of the christian church ob-
CHRIST'MAS, I.
served annually on the 25th day of December, ill memory of the birth of Christ, and celebrated by a particular church serThe festival includes twelve days. vice. 9. Christmas-dav.
€HRIST'MAS-BOX, tie
A box in which
n.
lit
presents are deposited at christmas.
The twenty fifth day of December, when chii.itmas is cel-
€HRIST'MAS-DAY,
n.
ebrated.
CHRISTMAS-FLOWER, CHRIST'MAS-ROSE,
n.
n. Hellebore.
A
of the
filant
beautiful Helleboriis, producing white flowers about Christmas. CHRIST'S-TnORN, n. The Jihnmmis paliuras, a deciduous shrub, a native of PaIt ha: lestine and the South of Europe. two thorns at each joint, and is supposed to have been the .sort of which the crown of thorns for our Savior was made. Encyc. Hanbury.
genus
n. [Gr. xfoa, color.] In natural history, a genus of i>elhicid gems, comprehending all those of variable colors, as viewed in difl>;rent lights. [.Yot techni-
CHROAS'TACES,
cal.]
compound
with a base. ;tf>ufitt,
color,
a.
[Gr.
from
j-pu^anxo;,
xp"?'^, to color.
from Xpoa.
seem to be a dialectical orthography of the same word.]
;^poiJ^),
I. 'I.
Relating to color.
Dryden.
Noting a particular species of music, which proceeds by several semitones in succession.
Bushy. fHROMAT'IC, n. [Supra.] A luiid of music that proceeds by several consecutive semitones, or semitonic intervals. Rousseau.
Encyc.
lilROMAT ICALLY,
adv.
In the chro-
matic manner. 71. Thescionce of colors that part of optics which treats of the proof the colors of hght and of natural bodies. Encyc.
rllROMAT'IeS, lierties
A. Holmes. [Gr.
;tporos,
time,
and
A
liiifov,
;
—
;
CHRON
;
;
;
;
€HRON
;
I
€HRO.\IQLE,
A
n. chron'ik.
chronicle.
Addison.
A
tir;f)v'A%toi;
beryl.]
siliceous
gem, of a
color. [Gr. xpo. 05, time, and a letter or writing, from ypcujuo, 10 Chrysoberyl,
dilute yellowish
green Kirwan.
CHRONOGRAM,?!. ypau/ita,
the
cymophane of Hauy,
is
a mineral usually found in round pieces, about the size of a pea; but it is also found ciystalized in eight-sided prisms. It is next to the sapphire in hardness, and lire. Cleaveland. employed in jewelry. ClIRYS'OCOLLA, n. [Gr. xf^ooxeMa, glue of gold, ;^pii5o; and xoM.a; a name given Belongto a to mountain the to borax and Greeks ing by
write.] inscription in
An
which a certain date or epoch is expressed by numeral letters; as in the motto of a medal struck by Gusta vus Adolphus in IC'32. Christ Vs DVX: ergo trlVMphVs.
CHRONOGRAMMAT'IC, eHRONOGRAMMAT'l€AL,
1
"' \
chronogram, or containing one.
green.] writer of Carbonate of copper, of two subspecies, the blue and the green formerly called blue time and CHRONOG'RAPIIER, [Gr. ^poroj, green chrysocolla, also mountain blue and ypoijiu, to describe.] and mountain green. It occurs in crysOne wlio writes concerning time or the tals, stalactites and other forms. events of time a chronologer. Tooke Cleaveland. Fourcroy.
CHRONOGRAM MATIST,
n.
A
chronograms.
;
re.
;
CHRONOG'RAPHY, of time
])ast.
n.
The
description
CRYS'OLITE,
[Little used.]
CHRONOL'OgER, €HRONOL'OGlST,
xi8oj,
)
[See Chronology. A person who at tempts to discover the true dates of past events and transactions, and to arrange them under their proper years, or divi ions of time, in the order in which they "•
Nearest ; towards the person speaking as on the hither side of a hill the hither end of the budding. a.
;
1.
Washington.
;
of the scep-
Thomas Hobbes.
HOB'BLE,
Burke.
n.
The white
particles
dew
of or
71. [Sax. hord, from gathering, hiding, or depositing.] stock or large quantity of any thing
high
tical
mat HOB'BIST,
Spenser.
To become moldy
i.
as a
ice foriried by the congelation of
A store,
to the
Botany.
71. [Sax. hucse, or hucx, contempt, irony, derision or W. hoced, cheat, deceit, juggle, trick.] done for deception or mockery; Something a trick played off in sport.
?!.
v.i.
A
Skelton.
follower of Hobbes.
[W.
hobelu, to hop, to hobble.
See Hop.] To walk lamely, bearing chiefly on one
[Little used.]
HOAR-FROST,
HOARD,
whatever belongs perfection of man.
pubescence.
HOAX,
71.
as /loar frost; fcoor
;
couraged.] Hither we
;
or
watery vapors
;
refer
;
;
"
Gray white with age hoary ron grave and hoar. HOAR, n. Hoariness; antiquity.
2.
point to this argument or topic to this end. [Little xtsed and not to be en-
of approach. What noise there, ho? Hoa, who's within ? used. HOAR, a. [Sax. har; Heb. Ch. Syr, Ar. Iin fast-
now Lambeth. HITH'ER, arfi'.
3.
"fW™\
A
ichii,
white.]
See Hatchel.]
HITHE,
HO A,
Green
With a rough,
Dryden, Harshness or roughness
V. t. To deceive ; to play a trick upon for sport, or without malice. [A colloquial word, but not elegant.] [Dan. hob, a heap ; or W. hob, or to give notice HOB, ) that which swells.] HUB, S le nave of a wheel ; a solid piece of timber Shak in which the spokes are inserted. Shak
pronounced also
is
h wo.
;
&c.
A
croup, or cynanche trachealis; rattlesexclam. A word used by teamsters, to It has been used .is a stop their teams.
ti.
HOARY,
Mortimer. disease, the
HO,
;
We
adv.
HO.\RSENESS,
in aliive orshelter, that collects bees into a
hive.
JVew England.
HITCH,
One
n.
be rough
Dryden.
HIVED, pp. Lodged ;
j^ to
grating voice or sound.
Pope.
Grose ;
;
HOARSELY,
;
To move or walk. HITCH, V. To hook
[Syr. .se-
or hoarse.] Having a harsh, rough, grating voice, as when affected with a cold. Rough grating discordant as the voice, or as any sound. say, the hoarse raven ; the hoarse resounding shore.
;
;
5.
;
;
m
;
Moldy
HOARHOUND.
;
;
in store ; in secret.
2. a.
;
A
One who
71.
HOARDING, ppr.
;
are equal to a
Spenser.
Collected and laid up in
pp.
store.
HOARDER,
Shak one body against another the stroke or blow that toueiies any thing. HIVE, n. [Sax.hvfe; Eth. +
and lay up a large to amass and de-
;
Addison
art.
;
hoard
Josh,
;
to store secretly ; as, to grain or provisions ; to hoard silver ;
and gold. Dryden It is sometimes followed by vp, bu; without use as, to hoard up provisions. ample spirit HOARD, ti. i. To collect and form a hoard; Spensej to lay up store. To this place to a prescribed limit. Nor cared to hoard for those whom he did but no further. Job Hitherto shall thou
HITH'ERWARD, HITH'ERWARDS
;
accident.
HIT,
collect
quantity of any thing posit in secret
xxxviii.
;
fall
To
t.
than hitherto was wont.
succeed.
To
V.
xvii.
In any time, or every time time preceding the present. More
hits
it
and despair most
coldest,
is
HOARD,
this side.
HITH'ERTd,
;
And
Where hope
Nearest on
a.
Hate.
IVoodward
9.
HOB
H O A
T
I
or hitting on those Corpuscles meeting with bodies, become conjoined with them.
laid up ; a hidden stock as a hoard of provisions for a treasure winter ; a hoard of money. Shak. Woodward.
accumulated or ;
2.
or with crutches. The friar was hobbling the same way too. Dryden. To walk awkwardly, as when the feet are encumbered with a clog, or with fetters.
3.
To move
roughly or irregularly, as verse.
While you Pindaric truths rehearse, Prior.
Slie hobbles in alternate verse.
HOB'BLE,
V.
I.
To
perplex.
[AoJ
i»i
w«e.]
HOG
HOC HOB'BLE,
An
n.
unequal halting gait
encumbered awkward
He
has a hobble in his
2. Difficulty
Swift.
perplexity.
;
n. A cant phrase Swift. age of puberty.
at the
HOB'BLER, HOB'BLER,
rt.
HOCKEY,
that hobbles.
[from
hobbt/.]
HOB'BLINGLY, )i.
With a hmpmg
adv.
A
or
suddenly kind of hawk ;
A
n.
A
hawk
3.
plant, the mallows. jiinsworlh.
juggler
hog.
HO€USPOeUS,
V.
To
t.
bend, so as to resemble in ; as, a ship
lunching. HOG'COTE, n. [hog and house for swine a sty.
A
shed or Mortimer.
cote.]
;
pp. Scraped under water. having the ends lower than the
HOG'GED, Curving
;
Eton.
middle.
cheat.
A
sheep of the second
old ewe.
Ainsworth.
HOG'GEREL,
L' Estrange.
n.
./Ish.
year.
of the lure. Encyc.
A two year HOG'GET,
n.
two years 2.
A
[Norm,
sheep
Skinner.
old.
of a year
colt
A
hoget.]
old, called also hog-colt.
Grose.
[Local.]
A young boar of the second year. Cyc. HOG'GISII, «. Having the fjualities of a hog; brutish; gluttonous; filthy; meanly
3.
;
;
To
in
hogs
a cheat used Hudibras.
;
[Local.] V. i.
some degree a hog's back
HOD, J!. [Fr. hotte.] A kind of tray for carrying mortar and brick, used in bricklayHOB'BY, n. [Norm. Fr. hobyn, and allied ing. It is fitted with a handle and borne to the preceding.] on the shoulder. 1. A strong active horse, of a middle size, HOD'DY-DODDY, n. An awkward or foolsaid to have been originally from Ireland B. Jonson. Obs. ish person. a uag a pacing horse a garran. HODuE-PODliE, I "• [Qr. Fr. hocher, to Johnson. Encyc. shake, or hachis, HOTCH-POTCH, \ 2. A stick, or figure of a horse, on which minced meat.] boys ride. A mixed mass a medley of ingredients. 3. Any favorite object ; that which a person [See Hotchpot.] [Vnlgar.] pursues with zeal or delight. HODIERN'AL, a. hodiernus, from hodie) a
;
scrape a ship's bottom under
To carry on the back. Grose. cut the hair short, like the bristles of a
To
HOG,
Hanmer. Mason.
a cheat or or pwca, a hob-
a juggler's trick
;
by conjurers.
[W. hobel, what stops or starts Arm. hoberell ; Fr. hobereau.]
To
t.
E7icyc. 3. [G. hocken.] [Local.]
goblin.]
interrupted step.
HOB'BY,
V.
water.
[JVot used.]
and perhaps bwg
trick,
or interrupted step.
Mar. Did.
HOG,
[G. hoch, Sax. heah, high.
n.
HOCK'LE, v.i. To hamstring. To mow. HOCUS POCUS, a. [W. hoced,
light armor. Encyc. Bavins. ppr. Walking with a halting
on a hobby with
HOB'BLING,
a sort of scrubbing-broom for scraping a ship's bottom under water.
Among seawen,
;
Harvest-home.
Qu.]
One who by HOCK'HERB,
his tenure was to maintain a hobby for military service ; or one who served as a
soldier
( "• ^
for a
One
n.
HOI
High day a day of feasting and mirth, formerly held in England the second Tuesday alter Easter, to commemorate the destruction of the Danes in the time of Ethelred.
HOCK'DAY, HO'KEDAY,
an
atep. gait.
HOBBLEDEHOY, boy
;
;
selfish.
j
HOGGISHLY,
;
4.
A
ous or
stupid fellow.
/joc
HOBBYHORSE,
n.
A
[taulolopcal]
hob
rfi'e.
Of this day;
this day.]
;
HOB'GOBLIN, and
goblin.]
W.
n.
hob, hop [probably fairy a frightful appari-
A
;
A n. [Sp. hobus ; G. haiibitze.] small mortar, or short gun for throwing bombs. [See Howitzer, the common orthography.] a.
Clownish
;
boorish.
nail
;
|
and loosening the earth in fields and gardens. It is in shape something like an
n. [G. hufnagel, hoof-nail.]
A
adz, being a plate of iron, with an eye for
with a thick strong head, for shoeing Shak. Milton.
horses.
A clownish person HOBNAILED, o.
2.
contempt. Set with hobnails Druden. Sax. habban, nwoban, [Qu
rough.
HOBNOB,
in
adv.
have, not have.]
Take, or not take
a
;
;
See Hotigh.] The joint of an animal between the knee and
.
business
is
of swine. Ainsworth.
of the genus
Peucedanum.
HOGS'HEAD,
n.
A
n.
plant. AinsiBorth.
[H. oihoofd
;
G. oxhtft;
Sw. oxhvfvud that is, oxThe English orthography is grossly
Dan. oxehoved
gallons
pp. Cleared
from weeds, or
;
;
3.
ppr. Cutting, scraping or digging with a hoe. Clearing of weeds with a hoe.
HO'FUL,
a.
[Sax. hohfull, hogfutl; Obs.
n. [hog and closure for hogs.
HOG'WaSH,
hoga
a hog, a push or thrust ; probably so named from his snout, or from rooting Sp. hocico, the snout of a beast hocicar, to root.] n.
Arm.
[W.
htcc,
1.
to
hough
tendons of the ham. n. [from Hochheim, in Germany.] wine sometimes called
3.
HOCK,
;
.Mortimer.
A swine; a general name of that species of animal. In England, a castrated sheep of a year A A
bullock of a year old. brutal fellow; one who
filthy.
A
sty.]
pen or
in-
)i.
;
liouch
n. The mineral otherwise made, and chiastolite. n. [W. hoeden, a flirt, a wanton,
HO'HLSPATH, called
HOI'DEN,
A
a coquet.] rude, bold girl a romp. rude, bold man. [Not used in the United States.] Milton. .4sh. HOI'DEN, a. Rude ; bold inelegant rus-
old. 4.
me-
[hog and ivasL] Swill; the refuse matters of a kitchen or brewArbuthnot. ery, or like matter for swine.
;
2.
to disable
as a hogshead of spirit or
large cask, of indefinite contents.
HOG'STY,
ami fall.] Careful.
care,
HOG,
A
Bacon.
HO' E ING, 2.
;
lasses.
loos-
ened by the hoe.
by cutting the
hockamore.
One whose
HOG'S-MUSHROOMS,
head.
;
To hamstring;
A sort of Rhenish
keeper Browni
A
HO'ED,
Johnson.
the fetlock. 2. A part of the thigh.
"
n.
to put rings in the snouts
HOG'S-BEANS, n. A plant. HOG'S-FENNEL, n. A plant
HOE,
[Sax. hoh.
I
Spenser.
nus Spondias.
a hoe
Encyc [See Hautboy.]
HOCK'LE, j
an acute angle
set at
A
To cut, dig, scrape or clean with corrupt.] I', t. as, to hoe the earth in a garden ; 1. ; measure of capacity, containing 63 galto hoe the beds. lons. 2. To clear from weeds ; as, to hoe maiz ; to 2. In America, this name is often given to a hoe cabbages. butt, a cask containing from 110 to 120 familiar invitation to V. i. To use a hoe.
ble door.
HOCK,
is
Obs.
cliff.
.
HOG'-RINGER,
HOE,
;
Shak. reciprocal drinking. Hobson's choice, a vulgar proverbial expres It sion, denoting without an alternative. is said to have had its origin in the name ofapferson who let horses and coaches, and obliged every customer to take in his turn that horse which stood next the sta-
HOBOY. HOCK, n.
a handle, which with the plate.
a
;
[hog and herd.]
7!.
of hack and hew ; Sax. heawian ; D. houw-\ en ; G. hacken, Svv. hacka, Dan. hakker, Fr. houer.] to cliO]), to hack, to hew A farmer's instrument for cutting up weeds
Cotgrave.
HOB'NAIL,
n.
A hill
HOG' PEN, [hog sittA pen.] A hogsty. HOG'-PLUMBTREE, n. A tree of the ge-
;'
tion.
[See High.]
of swine.
ho.
?i.
n.
HOG'HERD,
[G. haue ; Svv. hacka, and this is the Dan. hakke, G. hacke, a mattock It seems this is from the root' Fr. houe.
HOE,
HO'BIT,
HOB'LIKE,
;
;
HOGH,
;
A
adv. In a brutish, glutton-
manner.
n. Brutishness; voracious greediness in eating beastly filthiness mean selfishness.
belonging'
to the present day.
a wooden horse on which boys ride. HOD'ftlAN, n. A man who carries a hod character in the old May games. a mason's tender. Douce. n. A shell-fish, otherwise HOD'MANDOD, Shak. 3. A stupid or foolish person. Bacon called dodman. 4. The favorite object of pursuit. 2. A shell-snail.
by
2.
filthv
HOG'GISHNESS,
[L.
2.
;
A
;
..ish.
is
tic.
mean and HOI'DEN, cently.
I',
i.
To romp
;
Young. rudely or indeSwift,
II
HOIST,
V.
ed, perhaps ;
holds
but corrupt-
;
beyond remedy.
Sw. hissa; Dan. Arm. igza ; Sp. izar
V.hysseii; isser
;
This appears by the German
9.
a word of general application. But the word has two appropriate uses, one by seamen, and the other by milkmaids, viz. To raise, to lift or bear upwards by means of tackle and to draw up or raise, as a sail along the masts or stays, or as a flag, though by a single block only. Hoist the main-sail. Hoist the flag. Mar. Did.
Shak.
and move the
tliat
can hold no water.
backwards
leg
;
a
word of command used by milkmaids to cows, when they wish them to lift and set back the right leg. HOIST, n. In marine language, the perpendicular highth of a flag or ensign, as opposed to the Jty, or breadth from the staff to the outer edge. Encyc. HOIST'ED, pp. Raised; lifted; drawn up. HOIST' ING, »;>/•. Raising; lifting. HOITY TOITY, an exclamation, denoting surprise or disapprobation, with some degree of contempt. Hoity toity, what have I to do with dreams ?
To
defend
to
;
Jer.
n.
[Gr. oTixaJioi.]
Greece, a large ship of burden. HOLD, V. t. pret. held; ])p. held.
propose
We
mean to Of empire.
To have
9.
as, to hold
;
to
;
main-
To have To
To To
13.
!
what
To keep To fix ;
serve or
do'st
?
fulfill
;
to with-
your peace. to compel to hold one
confine
to
;
Hold your
O, hold thy blow. Oiashaw.
as, hold
;
as,
to
his
promise. To confine; to restrain from motion. The Most High— /ifW still the flood till they had passed. 2 Esdras.
To
confine to hind in a legal or moral sense. He is held to j)erform his covenants. Congreve. 16. To maintain to retain to continue. But still he held his purpose to depart. In ancient Drydcn. Mitford 17. To keep in continuance or practice. ;
Holden
The
is
most
;
continue unbroken or unsubdued. Our force by land hath nobly field. [Little used.] Shak. To last to endure. Bacon.
3.
;
We now
say, to hold out. continue. While our obedience holds.
To
4.
To
5.
or
to
;
be firm
;
Milton. not to give way,
The rope is strong I believe The anchor holds well. ;
From weeping.
To
7.
Dryden.
The
stick or adhere.
plaster will not
hold.
To
hold forth, to speak in public to preach to proclaim.
angue
;
;
,
We
;
2.
L'Estrange.
To
hold in, to restrain one's self
tempted
to
laugh
;
To
To
continue in good luck.
hold
off,
to
keep
connect to keep from separation. The loops held one curtain to another. Ex ;
xsxvi.
pose. Observe the connection of ideas in the propositions whieh books hold forth and pretend to teach. Locke.
To rnaintain, as an opinion. He holds the 2. To reach forth to put forward to view. doctrine of justification by free grace. T). To consider Cheyne. to regard to think to To hold in, to restrain to curb to govern judge, that is, to have in the mind. by the bridle. I hold him but a fool. Sidft. Shak. 2. To restrain in general ; to check to reThe Lord will not hold him guiltless, that taHooker. press. keth his name in vain. Ex. xx. To hold off, to keep at a distance. Pojie. G. To contain, or to have capacity to receive To hold on, to continue or proceed in as, and contain. Here is an empty basket to hold on a course. that holds two bushels. This empty cask To hold out, to extend to stretch forth.
4.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
[Unusual.]
at a distance
Smjl. ;
to
avoid
connection.
To
hold
title
of, to be
from. crown
My
is
dependent on
To
hold on, to continue ed.
The 3.
To
;
;
derive
Dryden. not to be interrupt'
on many years. hold to cling to.
trade held
To keep fast To proceed in
2.
to
absolute and holds o/none.
;
To
He was
he could hardly hold
in. 2.
We
•3.
to har-
;
;
;
;
it
refrain. His dauntless heart would fain have held
;
;
;
fast
To
6.
;
;
be
|)art.
will hold.
;
;
cases.
To
2.
;
;
Locke.
In this application, we often say, to hold to hold good. The argument holds good in both cases. This holds true in
;
^,
lands as well as in other
in
things.
;
;
rule holds
;
true,
;
1.
view
;
;
And Night and Chaos, ancestors of nature, AoW obsolete in elegant writing. [Sax. heatdan ; Eternal anarchy. Jt-rdton. G.halten; D. houden, I suppressed; Sw. 18. To continue to keep to prosecute or htdla ; Dan. holder; Gr. xw/kiw, to hold or carry on. Heb. Sd, to hold or contain restrain Seed-time and harvest, heat and hoary frost. Shall hold their course. Ch. and Syr. to measure, that is, to limit .Milton. X^D to confine, restrain, or shut up Ch. 19. To have in session as, to hold a court or parliament; to hold a council. to keep, guard or Syr. id ; Ar. "^ 20. To celebrate to solemnize as, to hold a feast. preserve Ch. ^DN, to take, also to eat, to See Call. The primary 21. To maintain to sustain to have in use roar, to thunder. sense is, to press, to strain. Class Gl. No. or exercise as, to hold an argument or debate. 18. .32. 36. 40.] To stop to confine to restrain from es- 22. To sustain to support. Thy right hand shall Iwld me. Ps. cxxxix. cape to keep fast; to retain. It rarely 23. To carry to wield. or never signifies the first act of seizing or falling on, but the act of They all hold swords, being expert in war. retaining a Cant. iii. thing when seized or confined. To grasp. 24. To maintain to observe in practice. is to seize, or to keep fast in the hand Ye hold the traditions of men. Mark vii. hold coincides with grasp in the latter hold a 25. To last; to endure. The provisions will sense, but not in the former. horse by means of a bridle. An anchor hold us, till we arrive in port. So we say, holds a ship in her station. the provisions will last us but the phra.se To embrace and confine, with bearing or is elliptical for will hold or lastybr us, the verb being intransitive. hold an orange in the hand, lifting. or a child in the arms. To hold forth, to offer to exhibit; to pro;
Sidney. to
up
the prospect of gain. 5. To sustain ; to keep from falling. To hold one's own, to keep good one's present condition not to fall oflT, or to lose In seamen's language, a ground. ship holds her own, when she sails as fast as another ship, or keeps her course. To hold, is used by the Irish, for to lay, as a I hold a crown, or a dolbet, to wager. lar but this is a vulgar use of the word. HOLD, V. i. To be true not to fail to stand, as a fact or truth. Tliis is a sound argunient in many cases, but does not hold in the case under consideration.
;
;
Ao/
;
to ob-
;
14.
15.
[JN'ut
Shak.
up your head.
;
to restrain
;
Hold your laughter.
tongue. Death 12.
to stop
;
B. Jonson.
He
;
refrain
as rewards.
you
;
Milton. 3.
by copy of court-roll. hold.
to
cannot long hold out these pangs.
hold up, to raise as, hold sustain ; to support.
To
or possess by title as, he held his lands of the king. The estate is held
11.
oflfer.
'"<''*]
To
ofiice or 4.
a place,
to
;
continue to do or suffer.
He 2.
title.
10.
To
cisterns
With what arms hold what anciently we claim
v.
Fortune holds out these
ii.
keep possession
;
[Qu. Ice. hauta, to leap.]
HOLC'AD,
Esther
To
•3.
out broken
tain.
it is
;
lift
They have hewed them
held out to Esther the golden sceji-
ter.
A
seat.
To
The king
holds
two thousand people. G. hissen ; Ft. 7. To retain within itself; to keep from run- 2. ; vessel with holes Port. ipar. ning or flowing out. in its bottom will not hold fluids. to be radi-
1.
3.
The church
thirty gallons.
hisser
cally the same word as heat, wliicli see.] To raise ; to lift. We'll quickly hoist duke Humphrey from his 8.
In popular language,
H O L
H O L
O L
[originally hoist
t.
Swift.
;
a course. Job xvii. hold out, to last to endure to continue. consumptive constitution may hold out ;
;
A
He will accomplish the a few years. work, if his strength holds out. ?. Not to yield not to surrender not to be subdued. The garrison still held out. To hold to, to cling or cleave to; to adhere. ;
Else he will hold Matt. vi. other.
;
to the
one, and despise the
;
barons.
To
hold with, to adhere to
stand up
To
;
H O L
H O L
H O L To hold under, or from, to have title iioin as the petty barons holding under greaterj to side with
;
HOLDBACK,
n. Ilinderance
HOLDER,
One who
;
Hammond.
n.
holds or grasps in
;
embraces with liis arms. one who holds laud under an-
his hand, or
to 2.
Cor.
Sacredness the state of any thing hallowed, or consecrated to God or to hi.s worship applied to churches or temples. That which is separated to the service of God.
restraint.
;
A
tenant
;
was holiness unto the Lord.
Israel
Careiv.
other.
hold plow, to direct or steer a plow by the
Jer.
ii.
A
3. Something by which a thing is held. 5. title of the pope, and formerly of the ill tillage. Greek emperors. hold together, to be joined not to sepa- 4. One who owns or possesses; as a holder Lncyc. of stock, or shares in a joint concern. narrow ax for cutting rate ; to remain in union. IIO'LING-AX, n. 5. In ships, one who is employed in the hold Locke. in posts. holes Dri/den. Mar. Diet HOL'LA, ) ^^'"'' used in calling. To hold up, to support one's self; as, to hold errlnm a HOLLO'A, ^ misfortunes. n. Among seamen, it is the haranguer lip under answer to one that hails, equivalent to, 1 Hudibras. 2. To cease raining; to cease, as falling preacher. holds It and am hold weather ; used impersonally. hear, ready. HOLDFAST, n. thing that takes a catch a hook. Ray illOL'LA, \ ^- '• [Sax. ahlowan.] To call out up ; it will hold up. to run or HOLDING, or exclaim. [See WoKoo.] S 3. To continue the same speed ppr. Stopping; confining; reCollier. n. f^ine linen manufactured in move as fast. HOL'LAND, ; straining keeping retaining adhering Holland. But we now say, to keep up. maintaining, &c. tenure ; a farm held of a HOL'LANDER, n. A native of Holland. To hold a wager, to lay, to stake or to hazard HOLDING, ?!.
liands,
To
;
A
^
A
HOLDERFORTH,
;
I
A
;
I
;
HOLLO,
;
;
;
;
A
HOL'LEN, HOL'LOW,
Carew. a wager. Swift. su|)erior. Shak. Hold, used imperatively, signifies stop; 2. The burden or chorus of a song. Burke. influence 3. Hold cease; forbear; be still. power over. HOLD, n. A grasp with the hand an em HOLE, »i. [Sax. hoi ; G. hohle ; D. hoi ; Dan. brace with the ar/ns any act or exertion hul, hute ; Sw. hUl ; Basque, chiloa ; Gr, of the strength or limbs which keeps a ;
;
1.
;
Keep thing fast and prevents escape. your hold; never quit your hold. It is much used after the verbs to lake, and to lay ; to take hold, or to lay hold, is It is used in a literal sense to seize. as to lake hold with the hands, with the arms, or with the teeth or in a tigurative
xoaof,
Qu.
xoij.0;.
ClassGl.No.
1.
Sn or Ar.
Ileb.
a.
hi'dig
;
;
within a solid .substance ; not a hollow rock a
artificial,
^^
[See Holly.]
7!.
[Sax. hoi ; G. hohl D. hoi ; Dan. huled ; Arm. goullo, or Sec Hole.] houllu, emptied. Containing an empty space, natural or
Sw.
;
as a hollow tree hollow sphere. Solid
20. 23.]
;
;
;
Nollnw witli boards shalt thou make it. Ex. hollow place or cavity in any solid xxvii. body, of any shajie or dimensions, natural 3. unk deep in the orbit as a hollow eye. _ or artificial. It may differ from a rent or Deep low resembling soimd reverbeA cell a den a 3. rated fissure ill being wider. from a cavhy, or designating such a cave or cavern in the earth an excavasound as a hollow roar. Dryden. Is. xi. tion in a rock or tree; a pit, &c. 4. Not sincere or faithful; false; deceitful; Ezek. viii. Nah. ii. Matt. viii. as a hollow heart a hollow sound A perforation an aperture an opening not friend. Shak. Milton. in or through a solid body, left in the work Hollow spar, the mineral called also chiasor made by an instrument.
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
sen.so.
;
Sorrow
shall
Take
hold of instruction. soul took hold on thee.
My 9.
take hold on the inhabitants of
Kx. xv.
Palestina. fast
Prov.
2.
iv.
Addison.
Something which may be seized for sup port tliat which supports. If a man be upon a high place, without a good
3.
ready to
is
Power of keeping.
On
My 4.
5.
6.
7.
Bacon.
fall.
holii of this
your vigor now. all depends. Milton.
new kingdom
An
Dryden. opening or means of escape a subin the vulgar phrase, he has a ;
;
safe keeping. King Richard, he is in the mighty hold Shak. Of Bolingbroke. Power or influence operating on the mind advantage that may be employed in directing or persuading another, or in governing his conduct. Fear by which God and his laws take the ;
TUlotson. surest Iwld of us. Gives fortune no more hold of him than is necessary. ;
Dryden. as a i)lnce of security ;
the hold of a wild beast. A fortified place a fort ;
V. t. To cut, dig or make a hole or ; as, to hole a post for the insertion of rails or bars. 2. To drive into a bag, as in billiards.
HOLE,
holes in
HOLIBUT.
[See Halibut.] Ji. [holy and dame.] Blessed laHanmer. an ancient oath.
IIO'LIDAM, dy
;
HOLIDAY. HO'LILY,
adv. [i'tomholy.]
a castle
;
often
Piously; with
Sacredly
inviolably
;
;
without Shak.
breach.
;
is
like
thee, glorious in holiness
?
Ex.
;
;
called also a pause.
rose singularities.
;
;
;
I
[Sax. holian.] To make hollow, as by digging, cutting, or engraving to e.xcavate. Trees rudely hollowed did the waves sus-
HOL'LOW,
t.
I',
;
tain.
HOL'LOW,
V.
Dryden. [See HoUa and Dryden. Addison. excavapp. Made hollow
To
1.
Hollo.]
HOLLOWED,
shout.
;
ted. a.
Having sunken eyes.
HOLLOW-HEARTED, a.
Insincere denot sound and true; of practice or sentiment different from profession. ;
;
Butler.
HOLLOWING,
Rogers.
ppr.
Slaking hollow
;
ex-
cavating.
HOL'LOVVLY,
adv.
Insincerely
hollow
;
deceit-
Shak.
fidlv.
HOL'LOWNESS, ;
cavity
;
excavation. 2. Insincerity
XV.
that part immediately before the main- 2. Applied to human beings, holiness is purity of heart or dispositions sanctified affecmast, the main-hold that part about the tions Mar. Diet. piety ; moral goodness, but not fore-hatchway, the fore-hold. 11. In mH.siV, a mark directing the performer perfect. We sec piety and holiness ridiculed as moto rest on the note over which it is placed. :
;
Sidney.
JI. [from holy.] The state of purity or integrity of moral being holy character; freedom from sin; sanctity. Applied to the Supreme Being, holiness denotes iierfect purity or integrity of moral character, one of his essential attributes.
HO'LINESS,
Who
;
ceitful
sanctity. 2.
4. '5.
HOL'LOW-EyED,
[See Holyday.]
[Little used.]
;
called a strong kohl. Jcr. li. 10. The whole interior cavity of a ship, between the floor and the lower deck. In a vessel of oiie deck, the whole interior to the deck. space from the keel or floor That part of the hold which lies abaft the the main-mast is called the after-hold;
It is
3. I
hole to
;
Lurking place
2.
;
terfuge
creep out at. Arm-hole, the arm-pit the cavity under the The Bacon. shoulder of a person. Shak. 2. An opening in a garment for the arm. A prison a place of confinement. a hole. They laid hands on them, and put them in HOLE, V. i. To go into B. Jonson. hold till the next day. Acts iv.
Custody
cial;
lodging. 4.
71. A cavity, natural or artifiany depression of surface in a body; concavity; as the hollow of the hand. A place excavated; as the hollow of a tree. A cave or cavern a den a hole a broad Shak. Prior. open space in any thing. A pit. Addison. Open space of any thing ; a groove a channel a canal. Addison.
HOL'LOW,
A mean
seizing. law hath yet another hold on you.
—
9.
Jchoida took a chest, and bored a hole in the of it. 2 Kings xii habitation ; a narrow or dark
lid
3.
Power of
;
8.
;
tolite.
;
hold, he
;
;
;
;
The state of being depression of surface Bacon.
71.
;
deceitfulness
;
treachery. South.
n. A plant, tuberous moschatel, or inglorious, constituting the genus Adnxa a low plant, whose leaves and flowers smell like musk; hence it is
HOL'LOW-ROQT, ;
sometimes called
musk-croiifoot.
Encyc.
n o L
H O M
[Sax. hokgn; D. huhl; per In Welsli, the cor liaps L. Her, foi- hikx. responding word is cdxin, from the root of The ilex in Sw celu, to conceal, L. cdo.
per or dispositions free from sin and sinful affections. Applied to the Supreme Being, holy signifies perfectly pure, immaculate and complete in moral charac-
nOL'LY,
is
n.
called iron oak.]
ter
The
e\il
comes large, and is covered with a grayish smootli bark, and set with branches which form a sort of cone. The leaves are oblong oval, of a lucid green on the
degree to the image of God, and his life is regulated by the divine precepts. Hence, holy is used as nearly synonymous with
holy,
;
The (lowers grow in clusters and! are succeeded by roundish berries, which turn to a beautiful red about Michaelmas. This tree is a beautiful evergreen. Encyc. Knee-Holly, a plant, the butcher's broom, of the genus Ruscus. Sea-Holly, a plant, of the genus Eryiigium.
HOL'LYHOCK,
n. [Sax. holihoc]
A
plant
of the genus Alcea, bearing flowers of various colors.
It is
called also rose -mallow. Tate. plant.
HOL'LYROSE, n. A HOLM, n. The evergreen 2.
An
3.
A
islet,
low
of a
or river
oak; the
ilex.
isle.
of rich land on the banks
flat tract
river.
Cyc. n. A variety of carbonate of so called from Mr. Holme, who anCleaveland. alyzed it.
HOLM'ITE, lime
;
HOL'OCAUST, lauyoj,
?!.
burnt, from
o^oj.
[Gr.
whole,
and
xaiu, to burn.]
whole of a species of
burnt-sacrifice or offering, the
which was consumed by sacrifice in use
among
pagan nations.
HOL'OGRAPH,
n.
fire
the
;
Jews and some
Ray. Encyc. [Gr. o>,os, whole, and
ypafu, to write.] deed or testament written wholly by the Encyc. grantor's or testator's own hand.
HOLOGRAPHIC,
HOLSTER, or recess
;
n. [Sax. heolstei; a liiding place| Port, coldre ; from holding, or
concealing, L. celo. Sax. helan.] letherii case for a pistol, carried by a horseman at the fore part of his saddle. a. Bearing holsters; as a
BOLSTERED,
holstered steed.
Byron.
n. [Sax. holl, h: coillte, \V. celtt, a wood, from the root of Sax. helan, L. celo, W. celu, to hide, to keep close a word re-
HOLT,
;
tained in names.] or woodland
A wood
;
obsolete, except in
Drayton.
poetry.
is
conformed
in
some
;
;
;
I
;
;
;
j
;
I
;
HOMAGE,
;
a.
[Sax.
;
;
;
;
;
;
holi/
manner. day, n.
The
fourteenth of
is,
A
set apart for comim|)ortant event in hisa festival intended to celebrate some n.
day
be
memorating some tory
;
event deemed auspicious to the welfare of a nation particularly an anniversary festias val, devoted to religious solemnities Christmas hotydays. A day of joy and gayety. Shak. A daj' of exemption from labor; a day of ;
1.
;
2. 3.
amusement.
a. Pertaining to a festival; as a holyday suit of clothes. HO'LY-ONE, n. An appellation of the Supreme Being, by way of emphasis. Is. xhii. 2. An appellation of Christ. 3. One separated to the service of God. Deut. xxxiii. HOLY-ROOD rfay, n. A festival observed by Roman Catholics in memory of the ex-
of our Savior's cross.
HO'LY-THISTLE, Cnicus. blessed
The
unimpaired.] Properly, whole, entire or perfect, in a mural sense. Hence, pine in heart, tem-
)!.
A plant
Encyc. of the genus
commemorated.
The
4.
The
;
It.
omaggio
;
;
place of constant residence
Flandria, by plenty,
; the seat. the hoine of war.
made
Prior.
grave
Man
;
death
;
or a future state.
long hoi/ic. Eccles. 5. The present state of existence. Whilst we are at hoi7ie in the body, absent from the Lord. 2 Cor. v.
HOME,
gocth
a.
to his
Close; severe
1.
To
poignant
;
xii.
we ;
are
as a
thrust.
adv. [This being omitted.]
one's
own
is
merely
elliptical
;
to
as in the phrahome, bring home, carry
habitation
;
go home, come home. To one's own country. Home is opposed to abroad, or in a foreign country. My brother will return home in the first ship
ses,
from India.
Johnson.
Sp. ho/nefrom L. homo, man.]
hommage
[Fr.
i^^T
One's own country. Let affairs at home be well managed by the administration.
HOME,
Centaurea henedicta.
HOLY
nage
Ar.
;
home thistle,
71.
as
root
kamai, to cover. See Chimistry, and Class Gm. No. 7. 9. 20. 23.] A dwelling house the house or place in which one resides. He was not at home. Then the disciples went away again to their own home. John xx. Ho7ne is tlie sacred refuge of our life.
3.
Cyc.
HOM'A(5E,
same
Dryde7i. 2.
i;
I.
may
from the
Chesterfield.
HOL'YDAY,
altation
;
&c.
September.
HOL'YDAY,
we say, to bring /lonie arguments, that press them close to drive home a nail, If the radical sense is close, it
an
HOLY-CROSS
Browne.
^a%;
;
;
G. D. heilig; Sw. -THURSDAY, n. The day on which the ascension of our Savior is commemohelig ; Dan. heilig; from the root of heal, rated, ten days before Whitsuntide. hold, whole, and all ; Sax. hal, G. heil, D. Johnson. Sw. Dan. whole. See Heal heel, hel, heel, and Hold, and Class Gl. No. 31, 35. 42 HO' LY -WEEK, n. The week before Eas The sense is whole, entire, complete, sound, ter, in which the passion of our Savior
IIO'LY,
;
;
HOLOM'ETER,
pp. of help.
his heart
The ceremony of doing homage was thus performed. The tenant, being ungirt and
uncovered, kneeled and held up both his hands between those of the lord, who sat before him, and there professed that " he did become his man, from that day forth, good, pious, godly. of life and limb and earthly honor," and Be yc holy ; for I am holy. 1 Pet. i. then received a kiss from his lord. Hallowed consecrated or set apart to a Blackstone. sacred use, or to the service or worship of God a sense frequent in Scripture as 2. Obeisance ; respect paid by external action. the holy sabbath holy oil holy vessels a Go, go, with homage yon proud victors meet. holy nation the holy temple ; a holy priestDryden. hood. .3. Reverence directed to the Supreme Be3. Proceeding from pious princijdes, or di reverential worship devout affecing rected to pious purposes as holy zeal. tion. 4. Perfectly just and good; as the Ao/»/ law V. t. To pay respect to by exof God. ternal action to give reverence to to 5. Sacred as a holy witness. Shak profess fealty. Holy of holies, in Scripture, the innermost HOM'AgEABLE, a. Subject to homage. apartment of the Jewish tabernacle or Houell. temple, where the ark was kept, and HOM'AGER, n. One who does homage, or where no person entered, except the high holds land of another by homage. priest, once a year. Bacon. Holy Ghost, or Holy Spirit, the Divine Spirit Homberg's Pyrophorus, ignited muriate of lime. the third person in the Trinity the sancUre. 71. ha)n G. D. heim ; Sw. tifier of souls. ; HOME, [Sax. hem ; Dan. hie/n ; Gr. xu>/ir; properly, a Holy tvar, a war undertaken to rescue the house, a close place, or place of rest. holy land, the ancient Jiidea, from the inHence hamlet, Fr. hameau. Arm. hamell. a crusade an expedition carried fidels The primary sense is probably to inclose, on by christians against the Saracens in to cover, or to make fast. the eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth cenDerivatives in G. D. Sw. and Dan. signify secret, close ; turies a war carried on in a most un-
Written wholly by
a.
the grantor or testator himself n. [Gr. oxoj, all, and juffpfu, to measure.] An instrument for taking all kinds of measures, both on the earth and in the heavens; a pantometer. Cyc. HOLP, HOLPEN, the antiquated pret. and
We
when
In feudal law, the submission, loyalty and service which a tenant promised to his lord or superior, when first admitted to the land which he held of liini in fee or rather the act of the tenant in making this submission, on being invested with the fee. ;
more or less holy, as his less sanctified, or purified call a man dispositions. is
is
from
points.
A
man
more or
heart
upper suilace, but i)ale on the under surface the edges are indented and waved, with sharp thorns terminating each of tliej
A
and
;
liohn tree, of the genus Ilex, of several Tlie common holly grows from species. 20 to 30 feet high the stem by age be;
A
H OM !.
;
3.
Close; closely; to the point ; as, this consideration comes ho7ne to our interest, that
is, it
that
can trace them back to a homestead on Taoke. the rivers Volga and Ural. word [In the U. States, homestead is the
HOMOgE'NEALNESS,
}
HOMOgENE'ITY',
S
used.]
HOMOgE'NEOUSNESS,
We
Drive the uail homt.
nearly affects it. drive it close.
HON
HO M
H O M is,
^
To haul home the top-sail sheets, in seamen s of the toplanguage, is to draw the bottom sail dost to the yard-arm by means of the
words be
not
to
encouraged;
equivalent to
Sameness of
71.
kind or nature. [Sas. ham and Bacon. weard.] HOIM'0(iENY, 71. Joint nature. Toward home toward one's habitation, or HOMOL'OGATE, v. t. [It. omohgare ; Fr. An anchor is said to come home, when it toward one's native Gr. onn7.oyiu; 0^05, like, and country. ; violence homologucr the loosens from the ground by To approve to allow. Sidney. Milton. 7.tyu, to speak.] of the wind or current, &e. a. Destined for Jf'heaton's Rep. Vol. iv. HO'MEBORN, a. Native ; natural. home returning from a foreign country HOMOL'OGOUS, a. [Gr. o^oj, similar, and Do7in€. to the place where the owner resides ; as >.oyo5, proportion.] not foreign. Pope. 2. Domestic the homeward-bound fleet. spoke a Proportional to each other a term in geomHO'MEBRED, a. Native; natural; ashome- brig homeward-bound. sides etry, applied to the corresponding Hammond. bred lusts. a. [from homicide.] Pertain and angles of similar figures; as, homolfor- HOMICIDAL, not at home 2. Domestic originating to homicide; murderous; bloody. angles. ing Encyc. ogous evil. homebred Spenser., eign as 71. a. [Fr. from L. bomiddium [Gr. o^uw/jot; o/ior, uncultivated not HOM'ICIDE, rude artless 3. Plain
HO'MEVVARD, HO'MEVVARDS,
sheets.
?
.
S
;
;
HO'MEWARD-BOUND, ;
We
;
;
;
;
HOMONYMOUS,
;
;
;
;
;
polished by travel. Only to me two homebted youths belong.
1.
Dryden. Felt in one's own breast or de private as homefeli joys Milton. Pope.
IIO'MEFELT, inward
;
light.
a.
;
HO'MEKEEPING, a.
Shak
;
;
ness of features want of beauty. It ex presses less than ugliness. Rudeness coarseness ; as the homeliness Addison. of dress or of sentiments. HO'MELOT, n. An inclosure on or near which the mansion house stands. ;
2.
;
;
Staying at home.
Destitute of a home. n. [from homely.] Plain-
HO'MELESS, a. HO'MELINESS,
homo, man, and citdo, to strike, to kill.] like, and oiofta, name.] The killing of one man or human being Equivocal ambiguous that has different differby another. Homicide is of three kinds, significations, or may be applied to ff'atts. ent things. justifable, excusable, a\u\ felonious ; justifiable, when it i)roceeds from unavoidable HOMON'YMOUSLY, adv. In an equivocal Harris. manner. necessity, wilhoiil an intention to kill, and without negligence excusable, when it HOMON'YMY,7i. [Gr. See supra.] ojj.M^,.to. happens from misadventure, or in self-deAmbiguity ; equivocation. fense felonious, when it proceeds from Johnson. malice, or is done in the prosecution of HOMOPH'ONY, 77. [Gr. o^oj, like, andt"--":. some unlawful act, or in a sudden i)assion. sound.] Homicide comnjitted with picnjeditaled Likeness of s«und. Among the Greeks, a Suicide also, or selfkind of music performed in unison, in opmalice, is murder. to antiphony. murder, is felonious homicide. Ibmiicidel
;
position
comprehends murder and manslaughter.
HOMOT'ONOUS,
Blackstone.
A
who
a.
[Gr.
ofios,
and
Uke,
roroj, tone.]
a manslayer. person Equable; of the same tenor; applied to disHO'MELY, a. [from home.] Of plain feaeases which have a uniform tenor of rise, Dryden. as a homely facetures not handsome } HOMILET'le, [Or. o^.xi^rixo!, "from state, or declension. Quincy. "' It expresses less than ugly. HOMILET'I€AL, I ofiaiu, to converse in HONE, 71. [Sw. /if7i, ahone; Sax. hanan, to Let time, which makes you homely, make 1 he word is found in the Greek stone. company.] you wise. social 1. Pertaining to familiar intercourse axon; and in two dialects of the Burman like that which is made for com 3. Plain conversable companionable. Asial. Atierbvry. hin, heen, signifies a stone. men domestic use rude coarse not fine 2. Homiletit theology, a branch of practical empire, find the word Researches, 5. 228. or elegant as a homely garment a homely theology, which teaches the manner in also in the Syriac \i.o\ akana, ahone, house ; homely fare. which ministers of the gospel should adapt Cast. Hepi. coticula, Lapis Lydius. their discourses to the capacities of their Now Strephon daily entertains 21.3.] His Chloe in the hotneliest strains. Pope. hearers, and pursue the best methods of A stone of a fine grit, used for sharpening instructing them by their doctrines and instruments that require a fine edge, and HO'MELY, adv. Plainly rudely coarsely as homely dressed. examples. It is also called pastoral theol[Little used.] particularly for setting razors. [We never, The HO'MELYN, n. A fish. ogy. Encyc. I believe, call a hone, a whel-stone. HO'MEIMADE, a. Made at home being of] HOM'ILIST,n. One that preaches to a con- latter is a stone of coarse grit. See the ;
2.
kills
another
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
We
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
domestic manufacture
made
;
private families, or in one's
either
own
in
omelia
Liocke.
A
Hebrew measure coni > n. taining the tenth part of an epha, or about si,\ pints. )
HO'MER,
OMER, CHOMER,
Encyc. Pertaining to Homer, the great poet of Greece, or to his poetry ; re-
HOMER'IC, seml)ling
a.
Homer's
verse.
HO'MESPEAKING,
Forcible and
n.
cacious speaking. or
wrought
of domestic manufacture. 2. 3.
effi-
.Milton.
HO'MESPUN, a. Spun
at
home
;
Swift.
Not made
in foreign countries. Addison. not elecoarse rude homely a as ; gant homespun English proverb a Dryden. Addison home!>pun author.
Plain
;
;
;
;
;
HO'MESPUN, tic
n.
coarse, unpolished, rusShale.
person.
The place of a man5"' sion house; the inclosure or ground immediately connected with the mansion. Dryden. Native scat original station or place of
HO'MESTALL, HO'MESTEAD, 2.
A
;
residence.
\
Beaum.
gregation.
HOM'ILY,
country.
io
;
n. [Fr. homelie
Gr. o^e^ia, from
company,
; S\). homilia ; It. ouiXtio, to converse
a company or assem-
ouixoj,
word.]
HONE, W.
A
discourse or sermon read or pronounced an audience or a plain, familiar discourse on some subject of religion, such as an instructor would deliver to his puEncyc. pils, or a father to his children. H0M'3I0€, 71. [I suppose this to be an Indian word.] A hillock or small eminence of a conical form sometime'; covered with trees. Bartram. Encyc. HOM'MONY', 71. [Indian.] In.4mcnca,inaiz hulled and broken, but coarse, jirepared for food by being mixed with water and Adair. boiled. HOMOgE'NEAL, I [Fr. homoge7\e ; Gt. to
and
Ofxoyivr,i
S
;
t.
i.
I',
To rub and sharpen on a hone a razor. To
pine
haum, eager.]
HONE-WORT,
71.
;
A
Obs.
to long.
;
[Qu.
plant of the genus
Sison.
;
HOMOGE'NEOUS,
V.
as, to ho)ie
HONE,
honntle, for hon; Sp. Port, honesto ; It. onesto ; from L. honestus, from honos, honor.] Upright just ; fair in deahng with others; free from trickishness and fraud; acting and having the disposition to act at alltimes according to justice or correct
HON'EST,
a. on'est.
[Fr.
este
1.
0^05, like, 2.
;
moral principles
An
; applied to persons. honest man's the noblest work of God.
An
honest physician leaves his patient,
Pope. he can contribute no
when
farther to his health.
Temple. Fair; just; equitable; free from fraud ; as an honest transaction an honest trans;
ytioj, kind.]
fer of property. the same kinder nature; consisting of sincere unreserved according similar parts, or of elements of the like na- 3. Frank to truth as an honest confession. ture. Thus we say, homogeneous particles, from pure or just elements or principles homogeneous bod 4. Sincere proceeding or directed to a good object as ies.
Of
;
;
;
;
;
;
principles,
;
an honest inquiry after truth ; an honest endeavor; honest views or motives. Fair good uninipeached.
5.
Bees and ants are said to be fond 9. Dignity of mien noble appearance. Godlike erect, with native honor clad.
fretter.
;
of honey-dew.
HON'EYED,
;
;
HON
HON
HON C.
Seek seven men of honest report. Acts vi. 2. Decent honorable or suitable. honest in the sight of all men. Provide
7.
Rom. xii. Chaste faithful. Wives may be merry, and
a.
Encyc.
Milton. he or that which Milton. 10. That which honors ; confers dignity ; as, the chancellor is an
Covered with honey.
j
things
HON'EY-FLOWER, HON'EY-GNAT,
yet honest too.
on'est.
I.
To adorn
[JVotused.]
HON'ESTLY, justly 2.
;
;
adv.
HON'EYLESS,
By
3.
;
upright means
with upright conduct
;
I
;
as, to live honestly-
and Chastely; with conjugal loyalty
4.
fidel-
ity.
HON'ESTY,
[Fr. honnitete
n. on'esty.
;
L.
honestas.] 1.
In piinciple, an upright disposition; moral rectitude of heart a disposition to conform to justice and correct moral princiin fact, ples, in all social transactions. _ to upright conduct an actual confonnity ;
;
j\istice
2. 3.
and moral rectitude.
Fairness; candor; truth; as the honesty ff'ardlaiv. of a narrative. Shak. Frank
Honesty
sincerity. social transchiefly applicable to or mutual dealings in the ex-
is
actions,
change of property. n. hun'y. [Sax. /mm'g- ; G.homg; D. honig, honing; Sw. h&ning ; Dan. honning.] A sweet vegetable juice, collected by bees
HON'EY, 1.
from the flowers of in cells of the
comb in
plants, hives.
and deposited Honey, when
of a pure, is of a moderate consistence, whitish color, tinged with yellow, sweet to the taste, of an agreeable smell, soluble in water, and becoming vinous by fermen In medicine, it is useful as a de tation. It is supposed to tergent and aperient. consist of sugar, mucilage, and an acid. Ure. Encyc. 2. Sweetness; lusciousness.
The kiDE; hath fouiiil Matter against him, that forever mars The honey of his language. 3.
A word of tenderness
;
sweetness
one.
HON'EY, 2.
To
v.t.
To
sweet ; Dryden.
talk fondly. [Little used.[
Shak
The stomach
n.
HON'EY -eOMB,
of a honey Greiv.
n.
A
substance of a firm,
close textiue, formed by bees into hexagonal cells for repositories of honey, and for the eggs which produce their young. a. Having little flaws or
HONEY-eOMBED, cells.
IION'EY-DEW,
n.
A sweet
fViseman saccharine sub
stance, found on the leaves of trees and other plants in small drops like dew. It is said there are two species ; one secreted from the plants, and the other deposited by a small insect called the aphis, or vine
to
my
Shak.
honors.
Honey
collected.
Then here
To do
a slave, or if you will, a lord. the tumors, and to give the word.
That which adorns
;
ornament
;
Pope. decora-
tion.
The
sire
then shook the honors of his head.
Destitute of honey.
Dryden
.
A noble kind of seignory or lordship, held of the king in capite. Encyc. On or upon my honor, words accompanying a declaration which pledge one's honor or month afThe memfirst of it. The the truth for HON'EY-MOON, ( "' reputation bers of the house of lords in Great Britain HON'EY-MONTH, ^ ter marriage. Mdison. are not under oath, but give their opinHON'EY-MOUTHED, o. Soft or smooth in ons on their honor. Shak. Laivs of honor, among persons of fashion, speech. which their soHON'EY-STALK, ji. Clover-flower. signify certain rules by Mason. cial intercourse is regulated, and which are founded on a regard to reputation. HON'EY-STONE, n. [See Mellite.] of a A n. laws These plants, punctilious attention HON'EY-SUCKLE, genus require to decorum in external deportment, but the Louicera, of many species, one of admit of the foulest violations of moral duwhich is called woodbine. Paley. HON'EY-SWEET, a. Sweet as honey. ty. Chaucer. Court of honor, a court of chivalry; a court HoN'EY-ToNGUED, a. Using soft speech. of civil and criminal jurisdiction, having Shak. power to redress injuries of honor, and to HoN'EY-WORT, n. A plant of the genus hold pleas respecting matters of arms and deeds of war. Encyc. Cerinthe. HON'OR, v.t. on'or. [l.. honoro ; Fr.honorHON'lED, a. [m. See Honeyed.] er ; Sp. honrar ; It. onornrc] HON'OR, 71. on'or. [L. honor, honos ; Fr to tre.it with to respect honneur ; Sp. honor ; Port, honra ; It 1. To revere deference and submission, and perforin oiiorf ; Arm. enor ; Ir. oiioiV.] relative duties to. higl: 1. The esteem due or paid to worth Honor thy father and thy mother. Ex. xx. estimation. A prophet is not without honor, except in his 2. To reverence to manifest the highest veneration for, in words and actions to own country. Matt. xiii. entertain the most exalted thoughts of; 2. A testimony of esteem any expression to adore. of respect or of high estimation by words to worship or actions; as the honors of war; military That all men should honor the Son, even as; v. honors : funeral honors ; civil honors. they honor the Father. John or place ; distincrank exalted to raise to distinction or noDignity .3. To dignify tion. to exto elevate in rank or station tice 1 Kings I have given thee riches and honor Men are sometimes honored with tialt. tles and offices, which they do not merit. Thou art clothed with honor and majesty man the the whom done to Thus shall it be Shak
n.
14.
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
.
Ps. civ. In doing a good thing, there and pleasure.
is
both honor
;
;
vi. king delighteth to honor. Esth. To glorify; to render illustrious. I will he honored upon Pharaoh, and upon all xlv. Ex. his host. 5. To treat with due civility and respect in
Fra7ikli7i. 4.
or any act by Reverence veneration which reverence and submission are exto the Supreme pressed, as worship paid
The the ordinary intercourse of life. with a salute. troops honored the governor In commerce, to accept and pay when due as, to honor a bill of exchange. Fr. G. True nobleness of mind; magnanimity; HON'ORABLE, a. [L. honorabilis ; dignified respect for character, springing honorable.] from probity, principle or moral rectitude 1. Holding a distinguished rank in society ; a distinguishing trait in the character of illustiious or noble. !*hechcm was more honorable than all the good men. house of his father. Gen. xxxiv. 7. An assumed appearance of nobleness also of honorable scorn of meanness, springing from the fear ilany of them believed ivomen who were Greeks not a few. Acts of reproach, without regard to principle xvii. Forbid as, shall I violate my trust? it,| actuated by mind a 2. Possessing high honor. or a scrupulous regard principles of honor, 8. Any particular virtue much valued ; as He is to probity, rectitude or reputation. bravery in men, and chastity in females. an honorable man. Shak. .5.
bee.
A
n.
me
Civilities paid. Ainsworth. 12.
plant, the threethorned Acacia, of the genus Gleditsia. Enci/c.
Shak
sweeten.
HON'EY'-BAG,
a.
HON'EY-LO€UST,
;
;
Restore
insect.
Di-yden
;
witli integrity
n.
HON'EY-H ARVEST,
grace.
Mountag%ie. Uprightly on'estly. and fairness ; as a
contract honestly made. With frank sincerity without fraud or truth as, to condisguise according to fess ho7iestly one's real design.
ral.
An
species of Cuckoo, found in Africa, which will conduct persons to hives of wild honey. Encyc. 13.
HON'EY-GUIDE,
to grace.
Adornment;
n.
n.
I
Sandys.
[JVot used.]
HONESTA'TION.
honor to his profession. Milton. Shak. 11. Privileges of rank or birth; in the pluplant of the ge-
A
n.
nus Melianthus.
I
Shak. V.
;
I
;
HON'EST,
Sweet
;
;
as honeyed words.
Being. Reputation
;
good name
;
as,
his honor
is
6.
;
unsullied.
;
— ;
;
H O O
HO O
H O O
W. hod. Qu. from be off the hooks, to be unhinged, to be disConferring honor, or procured by noble HOOI>, n. [Sax. hod; turbed or disordered. the root of hut or hide.] Swift. deeds as honorable wounds. Dryden. It 1. A covering for the head used by females, 5. A forked timber in a ship, placed on the 4. Consistent with honor or reputation. keel. and deeper than a bonnet. is not honorable to oppress the weak, or to an advantage. [ Vulgar.] 2. A covering for the head and shoulders G. A catch insult tlie vanquished. 7. In husbandly, a field sown twoj'cars runused by monks a cowl. 5. Respected worthy of respect regarded „1insworth. 3. A covering for a hawk's head or eyes ning. [Local.] with esteem. used in falconry. By hook and by crook, one way or other by Marriage is honorable in all. Heb. xiii. ilirect or indirect. 4. Any thing to be drawn over the head to means, any Dryden. with marks 6. Performed or accompanied cover it. Hook, v. t. To catch with a hook; as, to of honor, or with testimonies of esteem hook a fish. 5. An ornamental fold that hangs down the as an honorable burial. 2. To seize and draw, as with a hook. back of a graduate to mark his degree. 7. Proceeding from an upright and laudable Shak. Johnson. cause, or directed to a just and proper end G. A low wooden porch over the ladder 3. To fasten with a hook. not base not reproachful as an honora leads to the steerage of a ship the 4. To entrap to ensnare. which hie motive. Nothing can be honorable JVorris. upper part of a galley-chimney the cov- 5. To draw by force or artifice. which is immoral. Mar. Diet. To hook on, to apply a hook. er of a pump. 8. Not to be disgraced. be 3.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
Let her descend
HOOD,
my chambers are honorable.
;
V.
To
t.
dress in a hood or cowl
;
HOOK, r. i. To bend to curving. HOOK'ED, a. Bent into the form of a hook;
to
;
put on a hood.
Shah.
The
9. Honest; without hypocrisy or deceit; fair, 2. His intentions appear to be honorable. as 10. An epithet of respect or distinction the honorable senate the honorable gentle- 3. ;
;
hooded, and the monarch crowned
friar
Pope.
To
cover
;
cover.
And hood
man. 11. Becoming men of rank and character, or
HOOD'MAN
suited to support men in a station of digas an honorable salary. nity Constilution of Massachusetts. n. The state of be-
2.
Shak.
ing honorable 2.
eminence
;
;
person blinded is his name blindman's ;
;
HON'ORABLY,
or or respect. The man was honorably received at court. Magnanimously ; generously with a no The prince honorable spirit or purpose. bebly interposed to prevent a rupture tween the nations. without reproach. 3. Reputably Why did I not more honorably stai-vc ?
9.
;
3.
A
Shak
buft".
Catching with a hook fastening with a hook. HOOKNOSED, a. Having a curvated or Shak. aquiline nose. HOOK'Y, a. Full of hooks pertaining to
HOOK'ING,
Dryden Conferring honor, or intended merely to confer honor as an honorary degree an honorary crown. 2. Possessing a title or place without performing services or receiving a reward as an honorary member of a society.
i.
;
HONORARY,
2.
A
n.
lawyer's fee.
The salary of a professor in science.
any
art
or
Encyc. pp. Respected revered reverenced elevated to rank or office dig nified exalted glorified ; accepted and paid, as a bill of exchange. HON'ORER, ?i. One that honors ; one that reveres, reverences or regards with res
Warburton. in composition. Sax. had, hade, G. D. heid, Sw. het, Dan. lied, as in manor fixedness, hood, childhood, denotes state hence quality or character, from some root signifying to set. Sax. hadian, to ordain. It is equivalent to the termination Ties* in English, and tas in Latin ; as g'oorf-
honored.
HQQD, heit,
ness,
G. gutheit
las.
Vol.
I.
;
brotherhood, L. fraterni-
t.
impose on.
to
2.
ppr.
;
;
cover; to hide. For Ibe prize I'll bring thee to. Shak. Shall hood-wink this mischance. To deceive by external appearances or d
hooks.
covering; hiding; deceiving. n. [Sax. hof; G. huf; D. hoef Dan. hov; Sw.hof, a hoof, and a measure, Class Gb. No. 31.] The horny substance that covers or terminates the feet of certain animals, as horses, oxen, sheep, goats, deer, &c. An animal; a beast. He had not a single hoof of any kind to Washington laughter.
"
[D- hoep, hoepd.] A band of wood or metal used to confine the staves of casks, tubs, &c. or for other similar purposes. Wooden hoops are usually made by sphtting an oak or hickory sapling into two parts but sometimes they are made of thin splints and of other species of wood. A piece of whalebone in the form of a circle or ellipsis, used formerly by females
HOOP,
Sidney.
HOOF,
.
;
V.
;
a.
;
blind-
HOOD'-WINKED, pp. Blinded deceived. HOOD'-WINKING, ppr. Blinding the eyes;
;
HON'ORARY,
;
To
;
as a hooked
;
Bromn.
A
[hood and ivink.] To blind by covering'the eyes. Shak. We will blind and hood-wink him.
guise
aquiline
;
nose.
ed.
Conformity to the principles of honor, probity or moral rectitude fairness ; ap2. plied to disposition or to conduct. adv. With tokens of hon
curvated
;
HOOK'ED,
IIQQD'ED, pp. Covered with a hood
HOOD'- WINK,
distinction.
Bent
pp. Caught with a hook; fasDryden tened with a hook. play in which a HOOK'EDNESS, 71. state of being bent to catch another and teli like a hook.
the flames. blind, n.
;
HON'ORABLENESS,
beast are hook-
ed.
to blind.
Vn hood my eyes.
To
The claws of a
curvated.
;
2.
to
extend their petticoats
;
a farthingale. Swijl.
Something resembling a hoop; a ring; Addison. any thing circular. '• To bind or fasten with hoops HOOP,
3.
t'-
;
hoop a barrel or puncheon. to encircle to surround. Grew. Shak. as cattle. HOOF, V. i. To walk, [Little HOOP, I', i. [Sax. heafian, heofian, to howl, Scott. used.] to lament, to weep also hueopan, to whip, HOOF'-BOUND, a. A horse is said to be to jveep, to howl, to whoop ; the latter is hoof-bound when he has a pain in the fore written also weopan, wepan, to weep ; Goth. feet, occasioned by the dryness and con u'opyan, to whoop. The Sax. heajian, seems traction of the horn of the quarters, which to be connected with heave, and the sense straitens the quarters of the heels, and ofis i)robalily to raise or throw the voice. Far. Did. ten makes him lame. Whether heofian and hiceopan are radically hoofs. a. Furnished with HOOF'ED, the same word, is not certain most probaOf all the hoofed quadrupeds, the horse is the bly they are, and whoop and weep are eviGreu\ most beautiful. dently the same. Weeping, in rude ages, G. hoc D. haak haken is by howling or loud outcries. See ; ; ; HOOK) [Sax. JfTtoop, Sw. hake ; Dan. hage ; W. hiog ; Heb. the same word differently written.] non Ch. 'jn. Class Cg. No. 22. 23. 24.] To shout to utter a loud cry, or a particular 1. A piece of iron or other metal bent into a sound by way of call or pursuit. curve for catching, holding and sustain- HOOP, V. t. To drive with a shout or outShak. ing any thing as ahook for catching fish cry. a tenter-hook ; a chimney-hook ; a jiot- 2. To call by a shout or hoop. hook, &c. HOOP, ji. A shout also, a measure, equal a trap. Shak. 2. A snare to a peck. [Sw. ho/.] 3. (W. hoc, a sythe.] A curving instrument 2. The hoopoe. for cutting grass or grain a sickle an HOOP'ER, n. One who hoops casks or tubs; instrument for cutting or lopjiing. a cooper. Mortimer. Pope. 4. That part of a hinge which is fixed or in- HOOP'ING, pp: Fastening with hoops. VVhence the phrase, to HOOP'ING, ppr. Crying out ; shouting. serted in a post. as, to
2.
To
cla.sp
;
;
;
;
.
«
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
102
;
HOP
HOP A
cough in which the patient hoops or whoops, with a deej:
HOOP'ING-€OUGH,
n.
HOP-YARD, HOP-GARDEN,
inspiration of breath.
HOOP'OE, HOOP'OO,
A
} I
upupa, epops ; Gr. irto^.] bird of the genus Upupa^ whose head is adorned with a beautiful crest, whicli it can erect or depress at pleasure. Encyc.
nOOR'A,
,„„ (Sw. """'"• ezclam.
}
HOORAW, A
1.
has
word never or rarely used.] V. i. rW. hwd or hwt, a taking
away
away,
hwtiaw, to take
;
to hoot
and
;
uduii; to
Fr. huer, a contracted in
hue and
word
off,
to
;
He
2.
3.
;
W
;
5.
G.
spray lo spray.
n. A leap on one leg a spring. A dance. [Colloquial.]
HOP, 2.
;
a leaji
;
a
jump;
)!. [D.hop; G. hopfen ; prohaWy hoop, from winding.] plant constituting the genus Huraulus. The stalk or vine, which grows to a great length, is weak and requii-es to be supportIn growing, it climbs or winds round ed. a pole or other support. This plant is ol' great importance in brewing, as it tends to preserve malt liquors, and renders them more aperient, diuretic and salubrious.
Encyc.
HOP,
To
impregnate with hops.
will
be the hope of his people.
pardoned.
V. i. [Sax. hopian ; G. hoffen ; D. hoopen, to hope, and to heap ; Dan. haaber ; Sw. hoppas.] To cherish a desire of good, with some expectation of obtaining it, era belief that it is obtainable.
t.
HOP' BIND,
n.
The
Hope for good success. Be sober and hope lo the
end.
1 Pet.
i.
The
2.
2.
To
confident expectation of good. Wiy art thou cast down, O my soul, and art
Hammond.
HOP'LITE,
n.
[Gr. orcurtji, from ort^i, a
weapon.] In ancient Greece, a heavy-armed soldier. Mitford. HOP'PER, n. [See Hop.] One who hops, or leaps on one leg. 2. Properly, a wooden trough through which so named from grain passes into a mill its moving or shaking. But we give the name to a box or frame of boards, which receives the grain before it passes into the trough, and also to a similar box which receives apples for conducting them into
thou disquieted within
God.
Ps. (.
me
?
which seed-corn
is
carried for
his
sloping plain between ridges Ainsworth. of mountains. [JVot in iise.]
prosecutes his scheme hopefully.
t.
A
To
dancing; a meeting for tie
to i)revent leaping
;
the feet near together hopple an unruly
as, to
a.
[L, horu,
an hour.
See Hour.]
Relating to an hour, or to hours.
IIO'RALLV,
HORARY,
Prior.
Iloutly. [JVot in use.] [L. horarius; Fr. hvraire;
arff.
«.
frou] L. hora, hour.] 1.
or fold. a herd.]
A
ex-
an hour; noting the hours; Encyc. Brown. [D. horde, a clan, and a hurdie G. Ao(rfc,a clan,anda pen This seems to he the Sax. heard,
Pertaining
to
as the horary circle. Continuing an hour.
HORD, HORDE,
Dryden.
HO'PED, ;)/>. Desired with expectation. HO'PEFUL, a. Having qualities which
n.
A
dancing.
2.
spear, Full in the gap, and hopes the hunted bear.
A
n.
HOP'PLE, V.
why HO'RAL,
To
being understood. So stands the Thracian herdsman with
fl.
in
KOP'PERS,
Hu2)e thou in
xlii.
elliptical, /or
HOPE,
mill.
A vessel sowing.
horse.
desire with expectation of good, or a belief that it may be obtained. But as a transitive verb, it is seldom used, and the phrases in which it is so used are II.
a 3.
stalk or vine
stalk of hops.
Confiding in. adv. With hope or desire of good, and expectation of obtaining it.
HO'PINGLY,
ilien,
soar.
;
n.
I
HOP'PING,
with trembling pinions Pope. place confidence in ; to trust in with
Hope humbly
hops griiw.
IIOPVINE,
Shak. indulging
;
Encyc. play in which persons Johnson. hop or leap on one leg. HOP'PING, ppr. Leaping on one leg; Taylor. dancing.
cite hope ; promising or giving ground to Mortimer. expect good or success; asa/iope/itiyouth; on which a hopeful prospect. Blackstone. 2. Full of hope or desire, with expectation. Jt. for In a kiln 1 was hopeful the success of your first atHOP'OAST, Kent, drying hops tempts would encourage you to the Uial of more nice and difficult experiments. Boyle. HOP'POLE, »i. A pole used to support Tusser HO'PEFULLY, adv. In a manner to raise hoi)S. in a way promising good. He HOP'-PICKER, n. One that picks hops. hope V.
state of being
;
iii.
opinion or belief not amounting to certainty, but grounded on substantial evidence. The christian indulges a hope, that
HOPE,
HOP,
A
1.
;
;
;
in our reli-
An
his sins are
Dryden
to limp to lialt. [We generally use hobble.] To move by leaps or starts, as the blood in the veins. Spenser. [JVut used.] To spring to leap to irisk about. Chaucer. To dance. ;
is,
HOPE,
;
;
A
desire of good with the expectation of obtaining it, or a behef that it is obtainable.
I
Messiah.
The Lord
D
leap, or spring on one leg; applied to persons to to spring forward by leaps 2. I'o leap skip, as birds.
4.
will die fasting.
n.
HO'PER, n. One that hopes. HO'PING, ppr. Having hope
C'rashaiv.
!
That which gives ho])e; he or that which furnishes ground of expectation, or promises desired good. The hope of Israel is Joel
4.
To
Hopping from
kind cheat
upon hope,
well founded scriptural 7iope,
tlie
Swift.
To walk lame
!
that lives
;
cry or shout in contempt.
ments of fay;er.]
;
desperate, or affording no hope.
viii.
Milton.
gion, the souice of inertable happiness.
kuppeleii ; Sw. hoppa ; Dan. hopper ; It has the elehobelu, to hop, to hobble.
3.
—
Confidence in a future event ; the highest degree of \Tfell founded expectation of as a hope founded on God's gragood cious promises a scriptural sense.
A
o«], that nightly hoots.
HOOT'ING, n. A shouting; clamor. HOP, V. i. [Sa.x. hoppan G. hiipfen
;
;
;
Glanville.
1.
Job
hypocrite's hope shall perish. wish'd, but not with hope
Sweet hope
He
.
A
a.
HO'PELESSNESS,
anxiety.
Franklin.
V. t. To drive with cries or shouts uttered in contempt Partridge and his clan may hoot me for a cheat
HO'PELESS,
;
yell
HOOT,
hopefully pious.
;
hence, hue,
cry.]
is
with ground to expect. n. Promise of good ground to expect what is desirable. ;
Wotton. Destitute of hope having no expectation of that which is desirable ; despairing. I am a woman, Shak. friendless, hopeless. implies some expectation of obtaining the 2. Giving no ground of hope or expectation of good or the of good desired, possibility possess|)romi.sing nothing desirable desperate as a hopeless condition. ing it. Hope therefore always gives pleas lire or joy whereas wish and desire may HO'PELESSLY, adv. Without hope. Beaum. produce or be accompanied with pain and
push
howl or
The young man
With hope
HO'PEFULNESS,
;
Dry den
n.
where
A
The
cry out or shout in contempt. Matrons and giils shall hoot ,it tlice no more Dryden. 2. To cry, as an q\\\.
HOOT,
3.
I
In a manner to produce a favorable opinion respecting some good at the present time.
n.
tend, to reach forward.] desire of some good, accompanied with at least a slight expectation of obtaining it or a belief that it is obtainable. Hope differs from wish and desire in this, that it
off,
To
The clamorous
[Sax. hopa ; D. hoop ; Sw. hopp ; G. hoffnung. Qu. L. cu^to ; The primary sense is to ex-
field
Dan. haab Class Gb.
The
hurra.
HOOT,
1.
HOPE,
VVelsli civara I play, sport; but the Swedish appears to be the English word.] shout of joy or exultation. [This is the genuine English word, for which we find in books most absurdly written, huzza, a foreign
off,
H O R 2.
"'
raised.
[Fr. huppe, the hoopoe, and a tuft ; huppe, lulled ; or L.
"
A
or inclosure hops are
}
>
^
;
company of wandering people dwelling in tents or wagons, and migrating from |)lacc to place to procure pasturage for their cattle. Such are some tribes of the Tartars in the north of Asia. A hord usually consists of fifty or sixty tents. Encyc. Mitford.
HORE,
n. [Sax. hure, or hor-ctven; G.hjire; D. hoer ; Dan. liore S w. hora, and hork&na ; huren,trom huriaiu, to hire. The common orthography whore is corrupt.] woman, married or single, who indulges unlawful sexual intercourse also, a proa:
W.
A
;
HOR titute
;
woman
a common of ill fame.
woman
;
a
1.
[This word compreand fornicalrix, and all lewd women whether paid for prostitution
H O R
hard substance growing on the heads
and particularly on
certain animals,
of]
V.
i.
To
commerce,
or deals in
Grew.
One who winds or blows
the horn. Shertvood.
HORN'ET,
n.
hymek; G.
[Sax. hymet,
horniss ; D. horzcl.] insect of the genus
An
Vespa or wasp, the Vespa crabro. It is much larger and stronger than the wasp, and its sting gives severe pain. This insect constructs a nest of leaves or other substance which resembles brown pajier of a light color. This is attached to the branches of trees, and often
A
A
One who works
n.
horns. 2.
;
indulge unlawful sexual as a male or female ; to be habitually lewd. HO'REDOM, 71. The practice of unlawful sexual commerce; habitual or customary Horn is an animal substance, chiefly lewdness of males or females. 2. In Scripture, idolatry. membranous, consisting of coagulated alHO'REMASTER, } "' man who is ad- bumen, with a little gelatin and phosphate Ure. of lime. dieted to lewdness, IIO'REMONGER, S The horns of deer possess exactly the or frequently indulges in unlawful sexual intercourse, properties of bone, and are composed of the same constituents, only the proportion bastard; HO'RESON, n. [hore and son.] of cartilage is greater. Thomson. the son of a here a term of reproach or made of contempt, sometimes used in a ludicrous 2. A wind instrument of music, horn a trumpet. Such were used by the sense expressing dislike. Israelites. unchaste loose ^iven 1 lO'RISH, o. Lewd to unlawful sexual intercourse applied to ;?. In modern times, a wind instrument made of metal. females onbj. 4. An extremity of the moon, when it is waxH'O'RISHLY, arfw. Lewdly; unchastely. HO'REHOUND, n. [Sax. hara-hune, white- ing or waning, and forming a crescent. Dryden. huiic.] The name of several plants of different 'f. The feeler or antenna of an insect. The common horehound is the (J. The feeler of a snail, which may be withgenera. drawn ; hence, to pidl or draw in the horns, Marruhium vulgare. It has a bitter taste, is to repress one's ardor, or to restrain and is used as an attenuant. Encyc. Johnson. HOR'IZON, 11. [Gr. opifw, from opifu, to pride. horns being used anbound, o(jo5, a limit Fr. horizon ; Sp. hort 7. A drinking cup
HORE,
HORN'ER,
clo-
ven-footed quadrupeds usually projecting to some length and terminating in a Horns are generally bent or curpoint. are spiral. of some animals and those ving, They serve for weapons of offense and defense. The substance of horns i.s gelatinous, and in Papin's digester it may be converted into jelly. Encyc.
liends adultress
or not.]
A
R
O
II a harlot
;
of the size of a half-peck measure. H. The garfish or sea-needle, of the genus Esox. Encyc. HORN'FQQT, a. Having a hoof; hoofed.
HORN'FISH,
Haketcitl.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
zonte test,
;
It.
orizzonte.
This word,
and others
in Milton,
[yVbi
cent.
HORN'ISH,
8.
A winding
stream.
Gregory.
Somewhat
a.
like
horn: hard. Sandys.
HORN'LESS,
Having no horns.
a.
Journ. of Science.
HORN'JIERCIRY,
HORN'OWL, from two
».
tufts
n. Muriate of mercury. A species of owl, so called of fethers on its head like
horns.
^'linsworlh.
71. An instrument of music in Wales, consisting of a wooden pipe with horns at the ends; one to collect the wind blown from the mouth the other to carry ofi' the sounds as modulated by the per-
HORN'PIPE,
ciently for cups.
like con-
must be
To bestow horns upon. V. t. used or vulgar.] Beaum. HORN'ING, n. Af)pcarance of the moon when increasing, or in the form of a cresHORN'IFY,
Dryden.
aspect, in poetry with the accent on the sec 9. Horns, in the plural, is used to character; He wears the horns. ize a cuckold. syllable ; a harsh, unnatural pronuu former. [W. pib-corn.] Encyc. elation, in direct opposition to the regular 10. In Scripture, /torn is a symbol of strength 2. An air or tune of triple time, with six or power. analogy of English words. With the accrotchets in a bar ; four to the descending cent on the first syllable, as in common The horn of Moab is cut off. Jer. xlvili. and two to the beat, ascending. Encijc. usage, it is an elegant word.] Horn is also an emblem of glory, honor, IIORN'SHAVINGS, n. Scmpings or raspThe line that terminates the view, when exdignity. B. Jonson. ings of the horns of deer. tended on the surface of the earth ; or a horn is exalted in the Lord. 1 Sam. ii. My n. Muriate of silver, or the of the circle sphere, dividing great In Daniel, horn represents a kingdom or chlorid of silver. world into two parts or hemispheres; the
read
ond
HORN'SILVER,
upper hemisphere which is visible, and the lower which is hid. The horizon is sensi The sensible, aphie, and rational or real. a lesser circle parent, or visible horizon, of the sphere, which divides the visible is
It part of the sphere from the invisible. the eastern is that is eastern or western wherein the sun and stars rise the westThe rational, ern, that wherein they set. true, or astronomical horizon, is a great circle whose plane passes through the center of the earth, and whose poles are the zenith and nadir. This horizon would bound the sight, if the eye could take in the whole hemisphere. Encyc. HORIZON'TAL, a. Pertaining to the hori zoii, or relating to it. on a level; as a 2. Parallel to the horizon honzontal line or surface. 3. Near the horizon; ashorizontal misty air. Milton. HORIZON'TALLY, adv. In a direction on a level ; as a parallel to the horizon ball carried horizontally. ;
;
;
state.
HOKN'BEAK, HORN'BEAM,
n.
A
n.
[See Seam.]
fish.
trees, the Carpinus, so hardness of the wood.
[See Hornjish. A genus of
named from
the
n.
;
HORN' BLEND, [G. horn and blende.] A mineral of several varieties, called by ji.
Haily amphibole.
It is
sometimes
in regu-
lar crystals or fibers, variously aggregaIts prevaihng colors are black and ted. '
green.
HORNBLOWER,
7i.
One
Cleaveland. that blows a
;
A
HORN'EDNESS,
1.5.]
horns.
appearance
A
ti.
siliceous
subspecies of quartz.
It
is
Jameson
stone, a
divided by
into splintery, conchoidal, wood-stone. [See Chert.]
HORN'WORK,
7t.
and
In fortification, an out-
work composed of two demi-bastions joined by a curtain.
Encyc. Consisting of horn or horns. .VUton. Resembling horn.
IIORN'Y,
."3.
Hard;
a.
callous.
HOROG'RAPHY, 1.
2.
horn.
A spoon made of horn. A gray siliceous stone.
Kirwan.
HORN'STONE,
Dryden. 7i.
[Gr.
^.^po,
hour, and
ypafu, to write.] An account of hours.
The
art
of constructing
HORN'BWK, n. The first book of children, HOROLOGE,
;
pp. Class Rn. No.
7i.
lar distinct crystals ; more generally the result of confused crystalization, appear2. ing in masses, composed of laniins, acicu-
or that in which they learn their letters and rudiments so called from its cover of Locke. horn. [.Vow little used.] HORN-DISTEMPER, n. disease of catof The state n. HORIZONTAL'ITY, being tle, affecting the internal substance of the Kirwan. horizontal. horn. Encyc. HORN, »i. [Sax. G. Sw. Dan. horn ; Goth. IIORN'ED, a. Furnished with horns ; as haurn; Ti. hoom : Sw. /lorn, a corner; W. horned cattle. L. corner cornu a a ; ; 2. com, horn, cornel, Shaped like a crescent, or the new moon. Mlton. Sp. cneriio ; It. Port, corno ; Fi-. come; The sense is Heb. Ch. Syr. Eth. Ar. ?i. The
a shoot, a projection.
71,
HORN'SLATE,
A
fowl of the genus Buceros, which has a flat bony forehead with two horns a native of the E. Indies.
HORN'BILL,
IIORN'SPOON,
gium
71.
dials.
Cyc.
[Fr. horloge ; L. horoloupa, hour, and ^yu, ;
Gr. upoXoytor
;
to tell.]
An
instrument that indicates the hour of the
day. used.
But
c^ro7io7ne<€r is
HOROLOli ICAL,
now
generally
Pertaining to the horologe, or to horology. a.
HOROLOGIOGRAPH'IC,
a.
thcBrt of dialhng.
HOROLOtilOG'RAPHY, of[
Pertaining to Chambers.
[Gr. upo, hour Xoyo;, discourse, and ypat«, to describe.] 7t.
HOR structinc dials.
HOROL'OgY,
traction of the skin into small wrinkles,
giving it a kind of roughness. An excessive degree of fear, or a painful emotion which makes a person tremble terror a shuddering witli fear but appropriately, terror or a sensation approacli ing it, accompanied with hatred or detesHorror is often a passion comtation. pounded of feai' and hatred or disgust. The recital of a bloody deed fills us with
Diet.
n.
[Gr. wpoxoyfu upa, hour, See Horologe.]
;
;
and
\(ya, to indicate. Tiie art of constructing
;
machines for meas uring and indicating portions of time, as Edin. Encyc. clocks, watches, &c.
HOROMET'RICAL,
a. [from horometry.] Belonging to liorometry, or to the measurement of time by hours and subordinate
HOROM'ETRY,
ployraent
them
measure.] art or practice of measuring time by hours and subordinate divisions. HOR'OSCOPE, n. [Fr. from Gr. apooxoKor, lusrpoy,
The
'loom And
excite horror or dread ; dreariness. breathes a browner horror on the woods.
A
;
•2.
3.
Milton. ;
4.
;
all
sides round. .Milton. 5.
IIOR'RIBLENESS, n. The ties that may excite liorror lerribleness
;
;
;
;
;
See Horror.] HOR'RID, [L. horridus. I. That does or may excite horror; dreadful ; hideous ; shocking ; as a horrid spechorrid sympathy. Milton. tacle or sight This
;
Horrid with
is the
literal
and
Shocking;
and
intricate
wKli
2.
2. tliorii.
offensive;
very
a
horror
'6.
Pope.
4.
In a
adv.
dreadfully
maimer
to e.xcite
shockingly. Tlic .pialities that do IIOR'RIDNESS, or may excite horror hideousness enor;
;
n.
;
Hammond.
mity.
HORRIF'IC,
n.
[L. horrificus.]
horror.
IIORRIS'ONOUS, to shake,
dreadfully
IIOR'ROII, shiver, or I.
;
Causing Thomson.
a. [L.
horrisonus; horreo, and sonus, sound.] Sounding uttering a terrible sound. n. [L. from horreo, to shake or to set uj) the bristles, to be ;
rough.] A shaking, shivering or shuddering, as in the cold fit which precedes a fever. This'
ague
is
usually
accompanied with a con
cloth to cover a
horse.
One
n.
that runs hor-
A
IIORSE-CU'eUMBER,
A
n.
green
large
cucumber.
Mortimer.
HORSEDEALER,
n.
One who buys and
n.
A dose
sells horses.
HORSEDRENCH,
of physic for Shak.
a horse.
face; ugly.
HORSEFLESH, HORSEFLY,
Johnson.
extending
while they loose, also, a thick rope for it.
To
To
t.
To mount on
To To
HORSEFOOT,
A
HORSEHAIR, HORSEHOE, V.
n.
body of cavalry
The hair of horses. t. To hoe or clean a
field
bv means of horses.
HORSEKNAVE,
A
n.
HORSE-KEEPER,
groom.
Ohs.
Chaucer. or
One who keeps
n.
takes care of horses.
HORSELAUGH,
A
n.
laugh.
HORSELEECH,
A
n.
loud,
boisterous
Pope. [See
large leech.
Leech.]
A farrier. HORSELITTER,
2.
Ainsworlh.
n. A carriage poles which are borne by and two horses.
hung on between Milton.
A man
Addison. skilled in riding. Drydtn. soldier who serves on horseback.
Hay ward.
n. The act of Vioing, and of training and managing horses.
HORSEMANSHIP, Btitler.
Shak.
MoHimer.
The
state of
in dress a stable boy.
boy employed ;
A
n.
for guards.
A
;
n.
Ainsuorth.
foot.
HORSEGUARDS,
3.
a deer.
ing and tending horses
that stings
plant, called also colts-
2.
being on a horse the posture of riding on a horse. Shak I saw them salute on horseback. IIORSEBEAN, n. A small bean usiuiiiy Mortimer. given to horses. HORSEBLOCK. )i. A block or stage that assists jiersons in mounting and dismounting from a horse. HORSEBOAT, ?i. A boat used in conveying horses over a river or other water. 2. A boat moved by horses ; a new species of ferry-boat.
HORSEBOY,
A
n.
Addison.
ride astride; as ridges horsed. hors'back.
fly
Mar. Diet. on horse-
a horse.
cover a mare, as the male. ?!.
of a horse. Bacon.
flesh
large
hoisting a
carry on the back.
HORSEBACK,
A
HORSELOAD, n. A load for a horse. HORSEMAN, n. A rider on horseback.
be covered, as a mare. V.
The
n.
n.
horses.
to its extremity,
lake horse, to set out to ride
The keeper, horsing
colloijuial
sense.
IIOR'RIDLY,
machine on which soldiers sometimes by way of punishment
HORSE,
I'crn,
Encyc.
A wooden
bark.
Vri/den. 3.
called.
To
;
Rough rugged. primary stnse.
;
extended near the mast yard or extending a sail on
a.
9.
machine by which something is supusually a wooden frame with legs. Various machines used in the arts are thus
to support the sailors reef or furl the sails;
as horribly
;
A
from the middle of a yard
adv.
horror dreadfidly terribly loud horribly afraid.
Creech.
ride ; called a timber-mare. In seamen''s language, a rope
state or quali-
dreadfulness hideousness. In a manner to excite
;
nOR'RIBLY,
A
n.
HORSEeOURSER,
;
ported
story.
dim^eon horrible on
constellation.
a body of troops serving on Cavalry horseback. In this sense, it has no plural termination. say, a thousand horse; a regiment of /iorae.
We
HOR'RIBLE,
A
A
;
;
;
vated for shade.
HORSECLOTH,
n. The dung of horses. D HORSEDUNG, HORSE-EMMET, n. A species of large ant. HORSEFACED, a. Having a long coarse
I
;
Creech large nut, the
A
n.
of a species of iEsculus or the tree that produces it. The tree is much culti-
;
I
a. [h. horribilis. See Horror.] or tending to excite horror terrible ; shocking dreadful hideous as a horrible figure or sight; a horrible
carry.
fruit
;
and axorttu, to view or consider.] Pope. In astrology, a scheme or figure of the twelve houses, or twelve signs of the zodiac, 4. Dreadful thoughts. scenes as the horrors of war in which is marked the disposition of the ;5. Distressing or famine. heavens at a given time, and by which asiHORSE, n. hors. [Sax. hors ; G. ross ; trologers formerly told the fortunes of perCOS.] sons, according to the position of the stars 1. sjiecies of quadrupeds of the genus at the time of their birtli. Enryc. Equus, having six erect and parallel fore 1. The degree or point of the heavens ariteeth in the upper jaw, and six somewliat sing above the eastern ])oint of the horithe dog prominent in the under jaw zon at any given time when a prediction teeth arc solitary, and the feet consist of an is to be made of a future event. Encyc. hoof. horse is a beautiful HOROS'COPY, n. TIjc an or practice of undividedand of The use for animal, great draught or predicting future events by the disposition conveyance on his back. Horse, in English, of the stars and planets. is of common gender, and may comprea. horrens. See HOR'RENT, Horror.] [L. hend the male and female. Bristled standing erect as bristles point-
Exciting
One whose em-
n.
break horses, or to teach
to
Ainsworlh.
That which may
3.
Ufa, hour,
;
is
draw or
HORSE-CHESTNUT,
;
1.
ing outward. With bright emblazonry and horrent arms.
to
A HORSECRAB,
hour, and
[Gr. «pa,
HORSEBREAKER,
horror. ses, or keeps horses for the race. A horror of great darkness fell on Abrara. Johnson. Gen. XV. 3. dealer in horses. Wiseman. Horror hath taken hold on me, because of n. crustaceous fish. that forsake law. the wicked Ps. cxix. thy
Asial. Jtes.
divisions. n.
H O R
H O R
account of instruments that show the hour of the day ; also, of the art of con-
An
Knolles.
HORSEMARTEN,
A
n.
Pope. kind of large bee. Ainsworlh.
HORSEMATCH, n. A bird. HORSEMEAT, n. Food for
Ainsworlh.
horses
HORSE-MILL,
A
a.
mill
provBacon. by a
;
ender.
turned
horse.
HORSE-MINT, n. A species of large mint. HORSE-MUSCLE, n. A large muscle or shell-fish.
HORSEPATH,
Bacon. path for horses, as by
n.
A
n.
Rough, rugged
canals.
HORSEPLAY,
HORSEPOND,
n.
A
pond
for
play.
Dryden. watering
horses.
HORSEPURSLANE, nus Trianthema.
n.
A
plant of the ge-
HO HORSERACE,
H O
S
A
a race by horses match of liorses in running. HORSERACING, n. The practice or act n.
of running horses.
;
HORSERADISH,
H O
S
a garment covering the legs and thighs, hke the modern long trowsers. Hence in G. hosen-gurt, a hose-girt, is a waistband and hosen-trilger, hose-sujiporter, or shoulder-strap, indicates that the hose was sustained, as breeches and pantaloons now are, by suspenders or braces.] Breeches or trowsers. Shak. Stockings coverings for the legs. This word, in mercantile use, is synonymous with stockings, though originally a very
HOS'PITATE, \.Yot
plant of the genus
t.
S To
lodge a person.
used.]
HOST,
[Fr. hole, for hoste ; Port, hospede ; and
n.
huesped
;
A
n.
V.
;
oste
It.
Sp.
;
L. hoslis,
a.
enemy, probably of the same See Hospitable. The sense is a i'amily. stranger or foreigner, that is, a wanderer or traveler, from some root signifying to wander, to go or pa.ss, or to visit. See Class Gs. No. .5. 14. IG.j
stranger, an
C'ochlearia, a species of scurvy grass, ha ving a root of a pungent taste. shoe for horses, con- 1. n. 2. ; sisting of a plate of iron of a circular form disease of inn. 1. One who entertains another nt his own fants, in which the sutures of the skull different garment. are too open ; opposed to headinold-shot. house, without reward. Homer never entertaiiieil guests or hosts with 3. leathern pipe, used with fire-engines, ) . , „f "°'^^^jiorses "• ^ *'®*'®'^ °' for conveying water to extinguish fires. long Bpeechcs. Sidney. J 2. One who entertains another at his Louse n. plant of the genus HO'SIER, n. ho'zhur. One who deals in for reward an innkeeper a landlord. The shrubby horsetail is of stockings and socks, &c. Equisetum. 3. A one who is entertained at the ; n. in guest Fam. of Plants. HO'SIERY, the genus Ephedra. ho'zhury. Stockings genhouse of another. The innkeeper says of eral ; socks. n. plant of the genus Ruscus. HOS'PITABLE, a. [L. hospilalis, from the traveler, he has a good host, and the traveler says of his landlord, he has a > hospes, a guest ; It. ospitalo and ospitabile. VETCH, plant of the Enryc. [See Guest.] VETCH, S geuus Hippo- Hospes, is from the Celtic ; W. osb, a kind host. stranger or wanderci", a guest ; Arm. osb. HOST, 71. [L. hoslis, a stranger, an enemy. crcpis. The sense is probably transferred from a See Host.] osp, hospyd. way or road in wliich I 1. and single foe to an army of foes.] travel. ""horses
A
HORSESHOE,
A
HORSESHOE-HEAD,
A
HORSESTEALER, HORSETHIEF, A HORSETAIL,
;
;
A
HORSETONGUE,
HORSE HORSESHOE-
A
A
HORSEWAY,
IIORSEROAD,
I
HORSEWHIP,
A
n.
may
\vh\[)
Receiving
driving or
for
HORSEWHIP,
V.
To
I.
with a horsewhip.
HORSEWORM, horses
A worm
n.
strike
to
lash;
that infests
to guests
a bott.
;
strangers
entertaining
and without reward kind and guests; disposed to treat guests with generous kindness; as a hospitable man. 2. Proceeding from or indicating kindness witli kindness
1.
;
manifesting generosity
;
;
An army
number of men emboHied
a
;
for war.
to strangers
striking horses.
Any HOST,
2.
fiom
multitude.
n. [L. hoslia, a victim or sacrifice, an enemy Fr. hostie ; appliefl Savior was ofli^red for the sins
hostis,
to the
as a
number or
great
;
who
of men.] n. [LJwrtatio, frotn hoHor, Dryden. hospitable table hospilubte rites. In the Komish church, the sacrifice of the 3. Inviting to strangers to e.vhort.] offering kind remass, or the consecrated wafer, representact of exhorting, or giving advice ; exception indicating hospitality. ing the body of Christ, or as the Catholics hortation ; advice intended to encourage. To wlicrc yon taper cheers the vale, allcdge, transubstantiated into his own Goldsmith. Willi hospitable ray. [But exhortation is gencrallu uscil.]
HORTA'TION,
;
;
The
;
HOR'TATIVE,
Giving exhortation
a.
;
ad-
visory.
Exhortation
n.
a jirccept Bacon.
;
given to incite or encourage.
HOR'TATORY, giving advice
;
HORTEN'SIAL,
a.
Encouraging; inciting;
as a hortatory speech. Fit for a. [L. hortensis.]
a garden.
Evclijn. [JVot ttsed.] IIOR'TI€ULTOR, n. [L. /wrfus, a garden,
and
ITOS'PITABLY,
adv.
With kindness
a
cultor,
One who
tiller.]
cultivates
HOS'PITAtiE,
HOS'PITAL,
n.
Piior.
Hospitality.
HOST, HOST,
Obs.
a.
Pertaining to the
culture of gardens.
HOR'TIeULTURE,
n. [L. horlus, a garden, cullura, culture, from colo, to till.] cultivation of a garden ; or the art of
and
The
cultivating gardi^ns.
HORTICULTURIST,
n.
One who
is skil
led in the art of cultivating gardens.
HOR'TULAN,
a.
Belong [L. hortidanus.] ing to a garden ; as a hortulan calendar. Evelyn.
IIORTUS SICCUS,
n.
[h.]
Literally, a dry
garden an appellation given to a collection of specimens of plants, carefully dried and preserved. Ena/c, IIORT'YARD, »i. An orchard, which see. ;
HOSAN'NA,
n. s
as
i.
[Heb. save,
I
be-
seech you.] exclamation of praise to God, or an inIn the Hebrew vocation of blessings. ceremonies, it was a prayer rehearsed on the several days of the feast of taber-
An
which
nacles, in
this
word was
often re-
Encyc. HOSE, )i. plu. hosen or hose ; pron. hoze, ho'zn. [Sax. hos, a heel, a thorn or twig, and hose G. hose ; D. kous ; W. hos, hosan, from hws, a covering, a housing ; Fr. peated.
;
chdusse
;
Ir.
word with
asan.
house.
The Welsh The hose or
\mites this hosaJi
was
j
n.
Howell.] L.
See
ysbyd. Hospitable.] act or practice of receiving and entertaining strangers or guests wiihoiit reward, or with kind and generous liber-
The
ality.
A
bishop
Tim.
— must be
fiice
to hospitality.
have found as
univei-sal
of man.
n. [from hospital.] Propone residing in a hospital for tliej purpose of receiving the poor and stran-' The hospilallers were an order of gers. knights who built a hospital at Jerusalem
They were called knights of and are the same as the knights
siness of a hostess.
a. [L. hostilis, from enemy, that is, a foreigner.] Belonging to a public enemy
HOS'TILE, 1.
an
designating einnity, particularly public enmity, or a stale of war inimical as a hostile band or army a hostile force hostile intentions. Possessed by a public enemy as a hosKent. tile country. ;
;
;
3.
hostis,
;
;
Adverse; opposite; unfriendly. [But the word is not properly applied to private enmity, or mere unfiiendliness.] adv. In a hostile
HOS'TILELY,
HOSTILITY, tas,
from
71.
hiislis,
[Fr. hoslilit,
,
manner. h.
fioslili-
an enemy.]
re-
under the roof of another.
Hostility being thus suspended with France.
Greu:
Hayward.
of Malta.
[JVot used.]
Dryden. inn. Temple. character or buShak.
of war between nations or the actions of an open enemy ; aggression attacks of an enemy. These secret enmities broke out in hostilities.
for pilgrims.
side or lodge
entertains guests at her house.
A woman who keeps an HOSTESS-SHIP, 7!. The
1
erly,
HOS'PIT.\TE,
Sprn.ier.
;
who
a? the
Ledyard.
[JVot
HOSTEL, HOSTELLER. [See Hotel] HOSTESS, n. A female host a woman
HOS'PITALLER,
St. John,
to.
gwystyl, a ])ledge, pawn, surety, hostage.] A |)erson delivered to an enemy or hostile jiower, as a pledge to secin-e the performance of the conditions of a treaty or stipulations of any kind, and on the performance of which the person is to be Bacon. Atterbury. releasetl.
2. I
up
Shak.
give entertainment
;
giveo
iii.
Hospitality
to take
;
[Little used.]
HOS'TAtiE, n. [Fr. otage, for oslage It. G. geisscl ; W. ostaggio ; Arm. ostaich
[Fr. hospitality;
;
lodge at an imi
[JVot in use.] 2.
Hospitable.
HOSPITALITY, W. hospitalitas
To To
;
A
HOS'PITAL,
1.
;
I
a.
r.
u.ied.]
L. hospilalis, supra.] 1. buikling appropriated for the reception of sick, infirm and helpless paupers, who are supported and nursed by charity also, a house tor the reception of insane' persons, whether paupers or not, or for, seainen, soldiers, foundlings, &c. who arc supported by the public, or by private charity, or for infected persons, &c. entertainment. 2. A place for shelter or Obs. Spenser.; ;
a garden.
HOilTIeUL'TURAL,
V. i.
entertainment.
Swift.
Spenser. [Fr. hdpital, for hospital ;
n.
Enn/c.
body.
to
"onerous and
strangers or guests with liberal entertainment. ;
HOR'TATIVE,
Encyc. I',
i.
[L. hospitor.]
To
1.
The
states
state ;
;
HOT We
lunnanity.
Private enmity
9.
HOS'TILIZE,
a sense
;
II.
hostilities
with
an enemy.
[Lilile tised.]
HOSTING,
HOT'LY,
army.] [from host, encounter a battle. [Little used.] Milton. Obs. 2. A mnster or review. Spenser. HOS'TLER, n. hos'ler. [from Fr. hotelier, an innkeeper. See Hotel.] at of horses The person who has the care an inn. HOSTLESS, (/. Inhospitable. [Not in use.] HOSTRY, n. A stable for horses. Dryden. Hoivell. 2. A lodging house. HOT, a. [Sax. hat ; G. heiss ; D. heet ; Sw.
With
heat.
of the diurnal revolution of the earth. An hour answers to fifteen degrees of the It consists of GO minutes, each equator. minute of 60 seconds, &c. Time a particular time as the hour of
1
as
a]
stag hotly pursued.
3.
An
an
n.
adv. [from hot.]
Ardently; vehemently; violently;
Jltterbury. 9. less proper.
To make
t.
H O U
H O U
on even our
have carried
I
Dryden.\
Lustfully.
HOT'MOUTHED,
a.
Headstrong; ungov-
;
;
death.
ernable. I
That hotmouthed beast
;
that bears
.lesus saith,
against
Dryden. Sensible lieat beyond a' moderate degree or warmth. Violence vehemence fury.
2.
3.
n.
n.
and
[hot
spur".]
A man
not yet
is
ii.
The
time marked or indicated by a cbronometer, clock or watch the particular time of the day. What is the hoitr ? At what hour shall we meet? 1 will be with ;
;
;
HOT'SPUR,
John
come.
the curb.
HOT'NESS,
woman, my hour
vio-
you at an early hour. lent, passionate, heady, rash or precipi-i Shak. Good hour, signifies early or seasonably. tate. You have arrived at a good hour. 2. A kind of pea of early growth. To keep good hours, to be at home in HOT'SPUR, a. Violent; impetuous. Dan. heed. See Heat.] hei good season ; not to be abroad late, or at Spenser.' Having sensible heat; opposed to cold; HOT'SPURRED, a. Vehement; rash; the usual hours of retiring to rest. hot a hot cloth as a hot stove or fire Pencham. Hours, in the plural, certain prayers in the headv ; headstrong. Hot expresses more than warm. liquors. Romish church, to be repeated at stated n. A native of the southHOT'TENTOT, Ardent in temper; easily excited or exastimes of the day, as matins and vesjiers. ern extremity of Africa. perated vehement. 2. A savage brutal man. Encyc. hot and is j
|
;
1.
;
;
2.
;
Achilles
revengeful.
impatient,
Dryden Violent furious ; as a hot engagement or assault. Dryden aniinated brisk keen as a hot 4. Eager or a person hot in a pui'suit. pursuit, ^ak. lewd. 5. Lustful
3.
;
[See Cherry.]
HOUGH, 1.
;
as stimulating pungent hot as mustard or pepper. HOT, HOTE, HOTEN, pp. Called; naGower. med. Obs. n. In garrfentng', abed of earth and horsedung or tanner's bark, covered with glass to defend it from the coid air, intended for raising early plants, or for nourishing exotic plants of warm climates, which will not thrive in cool or temperate
Acrid
6.
biting
;
;
;
;
2.
olent
rash
;
a.
Ardent
precipitate
;
in
as
;
HOTCH'POT,
temper
;
n. [Fr. hochepot,
Pro])erly, a
Bacon. Camden. ingredients. Thus land: 2. In latu, a mixing of lands. given sliall,
in frank-marriage to one daughter after the death of the ancestor, be
blended with the lands descending
and
HOT' COCKLES,
A
to
which one covers
play in
who
[See Hoiolet.]
n.
A
HOUND,
V.
To
t.
set
on the chase. Bramhall.
To hunt to HOUND'FiSH,
2.
guesses ced behind him.
hand
her
pla-
nus Cynoglossum.
palace. 2. An inn ; a house for entertaining stranIt was formerly a gers or travelers.
but the
for
HOUND'TREE,
n.
n.
A
genteel strangers or lodgers, is now given to any inn. a. Of ardent passions Arbuthnot. violent rash.
which
;
;
A
house kept warm to and shrubs from the cold air a place in which the plants of wanner climates may be reared, and fruits n.
shelter tender plants
A
3.
A brothel.
A kind
A
n.
keeping goods
re-
Dryden.
The
n. our'plate.
plate of
[from house.] in a house.
A
fee
for
[jVot in use.]
Chambers. hous. [Sax. Goth. Sw. Scot. D. huis ; Dan. huus ; L. ; Sp. and Port, casa ; W. hies, a covering or housing. If the primary sense is a covering, this word may be referred
HOUSE, hus
to
n.
G. haus
;
casa
of tree.
signifies to
come,
;
It.
Heb. Ch. Syr. nOD, Ar. L»».S5i
to
pi"
to
happen, to
Class Gs. No. 57. It corresponds to co<, in a different dialect.] In a general sense, a building or shed intended or used as a habitation or shelter but a|)|>roprifor animals of any kind atcly, a building or edifice for the habitation of man; a dwelling jilace, mansion or abode for any of the human species. It may be of any size and composed of any materials whatever, wood, stone, brick, on, to cover.
1.
fall,
Hence the
;
hora, afterward came certain portion or division of
But hour,
This has been different
&c.
in dif-
ferent nations.] 1.
fre-
;
rush or drive.
to signify a
cu|) in.
Shak. B. Jonson
Diet.
n. our.
the day.
and
Every hour;
a clock or other time-piece on which the hours are marked the dial. Locke.
HOUS'AGE,
[See Hoopoo.]
See Time.
;
ripened. 2. bagnio, or place to sweat
our'ly.
newed.
HOUR'PLATE,
Fr. heur signifies luck, good fortune, and heureux, lucky, fortunate, happy, that is, seasonable. So in L. tempestivus, from tempus. to
adv.
; continually. Great was their strife which hourly was
plant of the ge-
[L. Sp. hora ; Gr. upo It. ora ; Fr. hem-e ; Arm. heur ; W. awr ; Ir. uair; G. uhr ; Ji. uur. The primary .sense is time or season, occasion, from a root
name
vehement
;
quently
Ainsworth.
HOUP. HOUR,
IIOT'HEADED, IIOT'HOUSE,
Happening or done
;
HOUND'S TONGUE,
A
house
HOUR'LY,
Diet. .Yat. Hist.
A
and
Gay. n. [Fr. hotel, for hostel, a palace or dwelling house of a prince or lord.]
our'ly.
;
chase.
VEslrange. n. A fish, called also Gal eus laevis, with a long round body, and ash-colored sides and back. ;
Mar. his eyes,
a.
;
;
HOTEL', 1.
HOUR'LY,
[See Holt]
n.
equal portions
strikes him, or his
Bacon. or
every hour occurring hour by hour frequent often repeated. Observe the waning moon with hourly view. chien ; It. cane.] Dryden. generic name of the dog but in English it is confined to a particular breed or va- 2. Continual. has chase. It used in the long We must live in hourly expectation of having riety, the troops recalled. smooth, pendulous ears. Sii'i/},
from the same ances
coquUles, high shells.]
quarter.
The hand
»i.
species of shark, the Sqnalus miistelus. Crabbe. Cyc. Blackstone. HOUNDS, n. In seamen's lan^uas:e, the pron. plu. [Qu. Fr. haides jecting parts of the head of a mast.
to he<- sisters
tor, and then be divided in to all the daughters.
ora
Space of time.
;
hocher.
;
chronom'
pointed pin hamstring; to disa- HOUR'HAND, which shows the hour on a chronometer. ble by cutting the sinews of the ham. HOU'RI, n. Among Mohammedans, a To cut with a hoe. Obs. of Johnson. nymph paradise. n. An owl.
To
[Sax. G. Sw. Dan. Scot, hund ; D. hand; L. canis; Gr. xvuv, xvroj Fr.
hothrained
from
hour, a half hour,
I
;
v.t. hok.
HOULT, HOUND,
vi
A
n. our'glass.
measures the flux of time by the running of sand from one glass vessel to another, through a small aperture. Instead of sand, dry egg shells pulverized are sometimes used. The quantity of sand may be so proportioned as to measure an
eter that
;
HOUL'ET,
shake, and probably pot, a pot or dish.] mingled mass a mixture of
to 1.
2.
Dryden.
youth.
HOUR'GLASS,
plant.
Siltingfleet. 2.
Encyc.
HOT'BRAINED,
A
n.
Chambers. [Sax. hoh, the heel, or the
hough G. hacke, D. hak, a heel, a hoe.] The lower part of the thigh the liam the joint of the hind leg of a beast that connects the thigh with the leg. Encyc.', An adz a hoe. [.Vo< in use.]
HOUGH,
HOTBED,
air.
n. hok.
;
;
;
;
;
HOTTENTOT-CHERRY,
space of time equal to one twenty fourth part of the natural day, or duration
,
An
edifice or building appropriated to the
worship of God a temple the house of God. ;
;
a church; as
monastery
;
a college
;
as a religious
HOUSE-BREAK'ER,
He the table. keeps a good liouse, or a miserable house. 5. In astrology, the station of a planet in the heavens, or the twelfth part of the heavens. Johnson. Encyc. descendants and 6. A family of ancestors kindred a race of persons from the same stock a tribe. It particularly denotes a noble family or an illustrious race as the house of Austria the house of Hanover. So in Scripture, the house of Israel, or of Tlie
manner of
living
n. hous' -breaker.
who
;
HOUSE-BRE.\KING,
same crime committed
;
Two
houa'dog.
Dryden. as.sem-
kingdom
ill parliament or legislature a body of men united in their legislative capacity, and holding their place by right or by Thus we say, the house of lords election. or peers of Great Britain ; the house of commons the house of representatives. In most of the United States, the legislatures consist of two houses, the senate, and the house of representatives or del
bled
dog kept
to
Those who HOUSEHOLD, dwell under the same roof and comi)ose a
of a house few ages can afford.
estates of a
A
Addison.
;
;
egates.
A
house. n.
One
4.
A
skilled in
little
Johnson.
and
[house
hous'u-ife.
female economist
3.
hous'hold.
n.
One of the
7.
Ji.
guard the house.
at the time a fami-
new
unfe; contracted into mistress of a family.
Blacksione. 2.
HOUSEDOG,
n.
merry making
enters a
HOUSEWIFE,
at night isburglary.
;
Judah.
feast or ly
a
particular kind of
Did. hous' wanning. .\
HOUSEWARMING,
breaking, or opening and entering of a house by daylight, with the intent to commit a felony, or to steal or rob. The
;
erects
h'otton.
A
n.
snail.
hous' -breaking.
n.
One who
»i
house.
HOUSESNAIL,
The
;
;
One HOUSERAISER,
breaks, opens and enters a house by day with a felonious intent, or one who breaks or opens a house, and steals thereBlacksione. from, by daylight.
house. 4.
H O V
H O U
H O U A
3.
The
/iu«ic(/e, /luss^/.]
;
Pope. a good manager. .Iddison.
Dryden. female business.
Mdison.
case or bag for articles of female
work.
Shtlton.
HOUSEWIFELY,
hous'wifely. Pertaining to the mistress of a family. Stephanas 2. Taken from housewifery, or domestic af1 Cor. i. fairs as a houseicifely metaphor. 2. Eamily life domestic management. Blacksione. Shak. The busHOUSEWIFERY,?!, hous'wifery. a. hous'hold. to HOUSEHOLD, Belonging iness of the mistress of a family female the house and family domestic; ashoxisebusiness in the economy of a family fehousehold affairs. hold furniture male management of domestic concerns.
family I
who
those
;
belong to a family.
a.
baptized also the household of
;
;
:
;
;
;
The masHOUSEHOLDER, Temple. Taylor. ter or chief of a family one who keeps HOUSE-WRIGHT, ji. hous'-wright. An house with his family. Matt. xiii. architect who builds houses. fotherbi/. n. hous'holder. ;
n. hous' hold-stuff. HOUS'ED, pp. s as z. Put under cover; The quorum of a legislative body the HOUSEllOLD-STUEF, The furniture of a house the vessels, sheltered. number of representatives assembled who utensils and goods of a family. Bacon. IKJUS'ING, ppr. s as 2. Covering; shelterare constitutionally empowered to enact Hence we say, there is a sufficient HOUSEKEEl'ER,«. hous'keepcr. One who laws. in;,'. crooked, as a brick. number of representatives present to form occupies a house with his family a man 2. Warped or woman who maintains a family state in HOUSL\'(i, n. Houses in general. house. a house; a householder; the master or 2. [Fr. housse W. lavs, a covering.] A cloth 9. In Scripture, those who dwell in a house 8.
;
;
;
;
a.
:
and compose a family
a household.
;
Cornelius was a devout man, and feared with all his house. Acts x. 10.
Wealth; estate. Ye devour widows*
11.
The grave
;
houses.
Matt,
God
xxiii.
mistress of a family. Lock> female servant who has the chief care of the family and superintends the other servants. Surijl 3. One who lives in plenty. [JVot in use.]
12.
;
Set thy house in order.
3.
4.
2 Kings xx.
13. The body ; the residence of the soul ii 2 Cor. v this world as our earthly house. ;
One who keeps much
home.
[See Douseiine.] a. [See Housel.] Sacramentuahousling fire, used in the sacrament of Obs. Shak. marriage. Spenser. Sliak. HOUSS, a covering. [See ^oitsiH^.]
HOUS'LING,
used.]
al;
[JSI'ot
A hou.-;edog. [Js/ot tised.] HOUSEKEEPING, a. hous'keeping. Do
5.
used commodities. nicstic
;
in a family
;
Dryden.
as housekeeping
HOVE,
HOVEL,
family state in a dwelling. a plentiful and hospitable Hospitality table. [JVot tised in U. States.]
HOVEL,
The church among
HOUSEKEEPING,
15.
A
2.
cave.]
HOUS'EL,
n. houz'l.
;
1.
HOUSELEEK,
heavens.
Where Saturn houses. n.
hous'hoat.
HOUSEBOTE,
n.
hous'bote.
Dryden covered
;
flights of birds are bridge, aiul settling ou it.
2.
To hang
Sax. hot, supply.] In law, a sufficient allowance of wood to re pair the house and supply fuel.
A
place in a house.
JI.
hous' room.
Room
hovering mist came swimmiDg o'er his sight.
3.
4.
To
jyryden.
stand in suspense or expectation.
To wander the
Spenser. about from place to place in
to move back and neighborhood as an army hovering on our bor; a ship hovering on our coast. ;
forth
ders
;
HOV'ER,
HOUSEM.MD,
HOUSEROOM,
n.
hanging over.
A
Crunch's Rep. protection or shelter by Obs.
HOVER-GROUND,
n.
Light ground.
Ray. ppr. Flapping the wings hanging over or around moving with
|
HOVERING,
or|
Dryden:
hoveling about the Addison.
over or around, with irregular
motions.
Mar. Did.
seizings, &.C.
n. hous'maid. A female servant employed to keep a house clean, &c. [house and HOUSEPltiEON, n. A tame pigeon. Gregory.
A
;
Great
;
boat.
;
;
To
pp. ofheaw. I'. J. [W. hoviaw, to hang over, to fluctuate, to hover.] To flap the w ings, as a fowl to hang over or about, fluttering or flapping the wings, with short irregular flights.
;
HOUSEBOAT,
(.
HOV'ER,
;
;
t>.
H9VEN,
;
;
A shed
a house, a a cottage a mean house. put in a hovel to shel-
ter.
;
[Sax. husel. Lye supposes this to be from Goth, hunsa, a vicEncyc HOUSE, I', t. houz. [Sw. hysa.] To cover tim.] The eucharist the sacred bread. t. To r. from the inclemencies of the weather; to HOUS'EL, give or [Sax. huslian.] receive the eucharist. Obs. Chaucer. to protect by covering shelter as, to house wood to hoiise fanning utensils to HOUSELAMB, ?i. hoiis'lamb. A lamb kept in a house for fatting. house cattle. n. hous'leek. To admit to residence to harbor. [See Leek.] A plant of the genus Sempervivum, which Palladius wished him to house all the Helots Thelesser is found on the tops of houses. Sidney 3. To deposit and cover, as in the grave. houseleek is of the genus Sedum. Sandys. HOUSELESS, n. hous'less: Destitute of a; a Shak. To to shelter. 4. drive house or habitation as the houseless childi Coldsmith.i HOUSE, r. i. houz. To take shelter or lodg- of want. 2. Destitute of shelter. ings; to keep abode to reside. To house with darkness and with death. HOUSELINE, ) Among seamen, a small' ^ruton ''"c formed of three HOUS'ING, S 2. To have an astrological station in the strands, smaller than rope-yarn, used for ;
pret. oC heave. n. [Sax. hof, hofe,
Carew. [Little used.] n. [As above.] The
14.
the Jews. Moses was faithful in all his house. Heb. iii. Egypt is called place of residence. the house of bondage. Ex. xiii. 16. A square, or division on a chess board.
at
A
4.
tVotton
as the house appointed for
Job XXX. Household affairs domestic concerns.
all living.
over a saddle. Encyc. piece of cloth fastened to the hinder ]iart of a saddle, and covering the horse's croup; called also boot-housing. laid
A
;
;
!
short irregular flights.
HOW
HUD
HUF
In what V. t. To utter or speak with [Sax. hu ; D. hoe.] outcry. HUD'DLE, V. t. To put on in haste and I know not hoiv to answer. niaiiuer. disorder ; as, she huddled on her clothes. Go howl it out in desarts. Philips How can a man be born when he is old n. The cry of a dog or wolf, or 2. To cover in haste or carelessly. Hoiv can these things be John iii. Edwards. o rr. <2. To what degree or extent. How long other like sound. 3. lo perform haste and disorder. 2. The cry of a human being in horror or sliall we sufler these indignities.' Hoiv anguish. Dryden. nuich better is wi.sdom than gold 4. 1 o throw in confusion to crowd together n. huhtte from A ; O how love I thy law Haw sweet are thy HOWL'ET, [Fr. oivl] together without regard to order as, to fowl of the owl kind, which utters a words to my taste Ps. exix. huddle propositions together. mournful cry. It is as large as a pullet. Locke. from what cause. 3. For wliat reason crowd a number of perDiet. J\rat. Hist. HUD'DLE, n. How now, my love, why is your cheek so sons or things crowded Shak. HOWL'ING, ppr. Uttering the ci-y of a dog together without pale ? order or tumult 4. By what means. How can tliis effect be or wolf; uttering a loud cry of distress. regularity confusion. Glanville. Locke. produced ? HOWL'ING, a. Filled with howls, or howl- riiir.,r^T T^r. HLID DLED, 5. In what state. pp. Crowded together withing beasts dreary. out order. How, and with what reproacli shall 1 return' Innumerable artifices and stratagems arc actor HUD'DLING, ppr. Crowding ed in the howling wilderness and in the great Dryden throwing C. It is used in a sense together in disorder putting on careless'marking proportion deep, that can never come to our knowledge. as hoiv mucli less how )nuch more. lyAddison. n. [Sax. hiewe, hiw, Behold, he pulteth no trust in his servants HUE, imcolor, n. form, The act of a howhng ; loud hoio much less in them that dwell in houses ol HOWL'ING, age, beauty hiivian, to form, to feign, to outciy or mournful sound. Job iv. clay simulate. This may be contracted, for in adv. [hoxo, so, and ever._ HOWSOEV'ER, how much would diminish the By they presSw. hyckla, Dan. hykler, is to play the hypent extent of tlie sea, so much they would im- 1. In what manner soever. Raleigh. ocrite. Perhaps how is of this family.] 2. Although. Shak. pair the fertility and fountains and rivers of the Color dye. earth. [For this word, however is generally Beiithy. Flow'rs of all hue. Milton. 7. It is much used in exclamation. used.] in the phrase Aue and c/y, signifies a How are the mighty fallen 2 Sam. i. HOX, v. t. To hough to hamstring. [J^ot HUE, shouting or vociferation. In" law, a hue 8. In some popular phrases, how is superused. See Hough.] Shak. and cry is the pursuit of a felon or offendfluous or inelegant. small vessel, usually rigged as HOY, n. er, with loud outcries or clamor to give an Thick clouds put us in some hope of land a sloop, and employed in conveying pas alarm. Htte is a contracted word. Norm. knowing hoir that part of the South Sea was sengers and goods from place to place on hue, Fr. huer or hucher, Dan. hui, or Bacon utterly unknown. the sea coast, or in transporting goods to more propably it is from the same root as HOWBE'lT, adv. [how, he, and it] Be it as and from a ship in a road or bay. hoot. it may; nevertheless; notwithstanding; Encyc. Mar. Did. 71. One whose business is to cry Ohs. yet but however. HOY, an exclamation, of no definite mean- HU'ER, out or give an alarm. [JVbt in n. A midwife. Grose. [Local] use.]
now,
HOWL,
adv.
—
HOWL,
.'
m -
.
„
,
,
!
;
!
;
!
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
—
;
—
,•
;
!
;
A
;
;
;
HOWDY,
HOW D'YE, health
how do you
HOWEVER, 2.
?
ing.
how
your HUB. [See Hob.]
is
?
[how and ever.] In whatever manner or degree ; as, howevr good or bad the style may be. At all events; at least. Our chief end is to be freed from all, if it may
however from the greatest evils. Tillotson. 3. Nevertheless I notwithstanding yet. shall not oppose your design I cannot however approve of it. You might howe'er have took a fairer way. Zhyden. IIOW'ITZ, } ,, [Sp. hohus ; G. haubitze.] "• A kindof nxortarorshort mounted on a field and used gun, carriage, for throwing sliells. The diflerence between a mortar and a howitz is that the trunnions of a mortar are at the end, but those of a howitz are at the middle. be,
;
HOWITZER,
<,
)!.
HUCK,
A
vessel with
;
1.
To
v/o\{hoivls.
To
Howl
Ye
To
n.
Lord
is
at
;
James
hand. v.
in
A
A
it.
The
[infra.]
;
hip,
that
is,
a
Lewd
[G.^ocicr,abunch, and hack.] Having round shoulders. HUCK'LEBONE, n. [G. hocker, a bunch.]
The
hip bone.
HUCK'STER,
hocker; Dan. hokker. It seems to be from hocken, to take on the back, and to signify primarily a pedlar, one that carries goods on his n.
[G.
4. 31.]
swell of sudden anger or arrogance. Spaniard was wonderfully upon the huff about his extraction. L' Estrange. A boaster one swelled with a false opinion of his own value or importance.
river-
bunch.
hiicke,
shallow-brained huffs
make atheism
and contempt of religion the badge of
ivit.
South.
HUFF,
V.
To
t.
swell
;
to
enlarge
;
to pufT
Grew.
"P-
To
hector; to bully; to treat with insolence and arrogance to chide or rebuke with insolence. V. i. To swell to dilate or HUFF, enlarge back.] as, the bread huffs. retailer of small articles, of provisions, 2. To bluster; to swell with anger, pride or nuts, &c. arrogance to storm. 2.
;
;
1.
2.
A mean trickish
HUCK'STER, cles,
or
in
fellow.
V. i.
To
Hub.
Tale.
deal in small arti-
petty bargains.
Swifl.
;
This arrogant conceit made them huff at the doctrine of repentance. South. A huffing, shining, flattering, cringing cow-
ard. HUCK'STERESS, «. A female pedlar. HUD, n. The shell or hull of a nut. [lA)cal.] HUFF'ED,
to
Grose. [In Ger. hudeln signifies
V. i.
It
bungle.
may
be allied to hut, hide, or
cuddle.] 1.
To crowd
HUFF'ER,
Otwau. pp. Swelled pufied up. n. A bully; a swaggerer ; a ;
blusterer.
HUFF'INESS,
n.
Petulance
HUFF'ING,
ppr.
the state of
Hudibras.
being puffed up. to
press together promiscuously, without order or regularity. say of a throng of people, they huddle together. To move in a promiscuous throng without order to press or hurry in disorder. The people Middle along, or huddle into the house. ;
We
2.
;
A
;
men, weep and howl. roar as a tempest.
German
HUCK'LEBACKED, a.
Hence,
ye, for the day of the
rich
a
Did. kind of linen with
A
n.
raised figures on
utter aloud, mournful sound, expressive of distress ; to wail. Is. xiii.
[J\/'ot
Gb. No.
HUCK'LE,
cry as a
dog or wolf; to utter a particular kind of loud, protracted and mounifril sound. say, the dog howls; the
Caretv. n. [Sp. , chtifa, an empty boast ; chufar, to hector, to bully ; Sw. yfvas, yfva This word coincides in elements sig. with heave, hove, Dan. hovner, to swell ; but it may be a different word. See Class
HUFI
;
haggle in trading.
The name of
n.
HUDDLE,
We
2.
To
V. i.
HUCK' ABACK,
two
yell.]
;
trout.
;
HOWL,
great noise of many cona tumult uproar riot. Clarendon. Spenser.
;
use.]
HUCK,
Encyc.
Dutch
masts, a main and a mizen-mast also, a fishing boat with one mast, used on the coast of Ireland. Mar. Did. V. i. [D. huilen; G. heiden ; Sw. yla ; Dan. hyler ; Up. aidlrir ; L. idido ; Gr. i*oio Corn, hoalea. Qu. W. wylaw ; Arm. guela or iala ; Ir. giiilim ; It. guaiolare. The latter coincide with wail and
A
n.
fused voices
;
;
HOW'KER,
HUB'BUB,
cf(/i).
Swelling
puffing
up
;
blnstrring.
HUFF'lSir,
a.
Arrogant
;
insolent
hec-
toring.
HUFF'ISHLY,
adv.
With arrogance or
blustering.
HUFF'ISHNESS, lance
;
n.
noisy bluster.
Arrogance
petu-
HUM
HUM
H U L
V. t. To take out the entrails ; as, to Jlinsworth. hulk a hare. [Little used.] HULK'Y, a. Bulky ; unwieldy. [ATot used.] HULL, n. [Sax. /(!(/, the cover ol a iiut; G. W. cover a hiilse ; D. hulse ; huliaw, ; hul, See Hulk.] to cover, to deck, G. hulltn.
human voice human shape human nature; Auman knowledge /lunian life.
HUFF'Y, a. Swelled or swelling; petulant. HULK, HUG, V. t. [Dan. heger, to hug, to cherish, Dan. huger, to sit squat on ; Tlie latter seems to be the G.
Sw. hugna the hocken, to tail.
squat, to
sit
keep
close,
The
and
sense is to press, allied to hedge.] close in an embrace.
hukken.
D. this
word may be
To
1.
—pre.ss And hugged me
To embrace
2.
1.
Shak.
in his arms.
closely
;
to hold fast
;
to treat
We hug deformities,
if
To
To
gripe in wrestling or scuflling. hug the land, in sailing, to sail as near the
To
keep the ship close-haulMar. Did. HUG, n. A close embrace. Gay 2. A particular gripe in wresthng or scufthe loind, to
a ship.
HULL,
V.
or hulls
lasli
the helm on the lee-side of
Encyc.
t. ;
[Gr.
;
Ofof, God.] improperly applied to space and dis The doctrine or belief that matter is God, or in the sense of great, vast, iin that Ihere is no God, excejit matter and the as a a diU'cr mense huge s])ace huge universe. ence. This is inelegant, or rather vulgar. a tree. [D. Indst] H.
2. It is
tance,
;
HU'6ELY, arfi'. Very immensely. Doth it not flow
as
greatly
enormously;
;
hugely as the sea
HUL'VER,
;
mals
I', i. [G. hummen ; D. hommelen.] To sound of bees to buzz. njakc an inarticulate buzzing sound. The cloudy messenger turns me his hack, Shnk And bums
utter the
To
panse
HU'GUENOTISM,
n.
The
religion of the 4.
Sherwood. in size.
used.]
Obs.
n.
[Fr.
[See Usher.]
HUKE,
n.
HULCH,
[W. hug.]
A
II.
HULCH'IS,
a.
bunch.
huissier.]
An
usiier.i
B. Jonson.
A
cloke
;
a hyke. Bacon.
;
gibbous.
with humanity. 2.
ing doubt and deliberation. HU'MAN, a. [L. humanus ; Fr.
humano
It. umano. ; which are the radical
If
lodge,
a
[D. hidk; Sax. hulc. a cottage or vessel Dan. hoik, a hoy Svv. ;
;
Qu. Gr. o?.xas.] The body of a ship, or decked vessel of any kind but the word is applied only to the body of an old ship or vessel which is
li&tk.
1.
by as unfit for service. A sheer-hulk an old ship tilted with an apparatus to out the masts of a ship. Encyr. Mar. Did.
laid
lix or take
?.
Any
thing bulky or unwieldy. [JVot used.] Shak.
Vol.
I.
1.
Is ;\ldc all
IL'mtsual.]
huniatiity.
Glanville.
a debt
we owe
to
humanity. 'S.
3.
S. Smith.
The kind feelings, dispositions and sympathies of man, by which he is distinguished fiom the lower orders of animals kindness benevolence especially, a disposi;
;
;
tion to relieve persons in distress, and to treat with tenderness those who are helpless and defenseless; opposed to cruelty. 4. disposition to treat the lower orders of animals with tenderness, or at least to give
A
them no unnecessary ,5.
The
pain.
exercise of kindness
acts of tender-
;
ness.
poetry
I
am
humnin
;
Sp.J
not certain
izing.
HU MANIZE, mane
letters
V.
t.
Jiddison.
our natures?
HU'MANIZED, pp.
;
to render huto cruelty, feelings. to
humanize
Hltherspoon.
Softened; rendered hu-
mane.
HUMANIZING,
pp: Softening; subduing
cruel dispositions.
word. Heb. va form, species. The corresponding word in G. is menscklich [manSee Man.] like,] D. menschelyk.
HU'MANLY, adv.
n.
The race of man; man-
the human species. Pope. After the manner of men according to the opinions or knowledge of men. The present prospects, humanly speaking, promise a happy issue.
kind
;
;
soften
;
HU'MANKIND,
103
To
to subdue dispositions and render susceptible of kind Was it the business of magic
elements, this word is from the root of man, or rather is formed on the Teutonic
Belonging to man or mankind pertaining or relating to the race of man as a
teaching
;
there aie professors in the universities of Scotland. Encyc. n. The act of human-
HIMAMZA'TION,
;
;
is
he
It is
Spectator.
pause, implyPope.
of this word,, but am inrlined to believe them to be Mn that the first syllable is a prefix that homo in Latin is contracted, the n being dropped in the nominative and restored in the oblique cases hence homo, and the Gothic and Sax. guma, a man, may be the same word, but this is doubtful. If .1/n are the
[ATot
collectively ; the human race. to untie those l
Mankind to teach
;
Ji.
peculiar nature of man, by which he distinguished from other beings. T^us by his incarnation, was invested
Christ,
dull noise. Philology ; grammatical studies. Pope. Johnson. inarticulate sound, uttered by a in a pause ; as hums and haws. Humanities, in the plural, signifies grammar, Shak. Dry den. for rhetoric and which
An expression of applause. HUM, exdctm. A soinul with a
used.]
HULK,
The is
0.
5.
[.Vot used.]
Swelling
A iow
speaker
[jYot\
Carew.l
HUlSli'ER,
Any low
Scott.
;
in
;
Huguenots in France. HU'ciY, a. [from huge.] Vast
n.
;
it i.]
1.
;
3.
Tenderness.
n.
A
professor of granmiar a philologist a term used in the universities of Scotland. 2. One versed in the knowledge of human nature. Shajtesbury. HUMAN'ITY,?!. [L. humanitas ; Fr. human-
and rhetoric
;
;
France.
kindness, tender-
ings.
HU'MANIST,
To
speaking, and make an audible noise like the hununing of bees. IJudibras He hummed and hawed. To make a didl, heavy noise like a drone Still humnihig, on their drowsy com'se they look. Pope. To applaud. Obs. secrecy, and the word adverbially used, de- HUM, r. t. To sing in a low voice as, to notes secretly. [It is a lotu cant u-ord.] hum a tune. HU'GUENOT, n. [The origin of this word 2. To cause to hum; to impose on. [VulIt is conjectured to be a coris uncertain. gar.] ruption of G. eidgcnossen, confederates HUM, n. The noise of bees or insects. as eid, oath, andg'ejioss, consort.] 2. A low confused noise, as of crowds A name formerly given to a protestant in the busy hum of men. JMitton. 3.
With
adv.
HUMA'NENESS,
—
Shak. n. Enormous bulk or largeness ; as the hugeness of a mountain or of an elephant. HUG'GER-MUGGER, n. [Hugger contains the elements of hug and hedge, and mugger, those o{ smoke, VV. mug, and of smuggle.] lu hugger-mugger, denotes in privacy or
HU'tjENESS,
witli tenderness.
HUMA'NELY,
Holly,
HUM,
?
Cranmer. a. [supra.]
to treat others with kindness particularly in relieving them when in distress, or in captivity, when they are helpless or defenseless ; kind ; benevolent. Inclined to treat the lower orders of ani-
Tusser.
2.
P'.nducd with humanity.
a.
Having the feelings and dispositions |)roper to man; lur. ing tenderness, compassion, and a disposition
;
In colloquial language, very great; enormous as a huge feeder. Shak.
Brown.
ness or compassion ; as, the prisoners were strip off or separate the hull treated humanely. as, to hull grain. 2. In a humane manner ; with kind feel-
ox.
;
as a Au-
To
;
;
Sunfl. ;
06s.
laslied a-lee. Encyc a hidl, in a storm, is to take in the
and
2. To pierce the hull of a ship with a canfling. HU(jrE, a. [This word seems to belong to non-ball. the family of high, D. hoog, G. hoch. If so, HULL, V. i. To float or drive on the water the primary sense is to swell or rise. If Milton without sails. not, I know not its origin.] IIULL'Y, a. Having husks or pods; silienormous applied 1. Very large or great qUOUS. a huge HU'LOTHEISM. n. to bulk or size ; as a huge mountain v7.r„ matter, and
3.
HU'MANATE,
strike
sails,
ed.
not sacred or divine author. [JVot in use.] ;
HUMA'NE,
lie
helm
land as possible.
To hug
man
Mar. Diet a huU, in seamen's language, is to lie as a ship without any sail upon her, and her
they bear our names. Glanville
To
;
Profane
her masts, yards and rigging.
with fondness.
3.
The outer covering of aiiy thing, particuJohnson says, larly of a nut or of grain. the hull of a nut cveis the shell. The frame or body of a ship, exclusive of
;
;
Having the quahties of a man.
2.
;
Kindly
;
liuraauely.
;
Obs.
Pope.
HUM HUMA'TION, HUM'BIRD,
H U Hope humbly
n. Interment.
[Mot used.] A very small bird of the genus Troso called i'roni the sound of its chiliis wings in flight. The rostrum is subulate, the filiform, and longer than the head tongue is filiform and tubulous. It never lights to take food, but feeds while on the ?
HUMMING-BIRD,
soar.
„
Wait the great teacher, death, and God adore. Pope. In a low state or condition without ele-
S
;
;
;
vation.
[from Humhold.] A rare mineral recently described, occurring in small crystals, nearly colorless and transand transparent, or of a yellowish tinge lucent rarely separate, but usually aggretheir primary form, an oblique gated
HUM'BOLDITE, n.
wing. a. [Fr. humUe ; L. humilis ; sup be from humus, the earth, or its
HUJI'BLE, to
posed
HUM
31
then, with trembling pinions
The
act of abasing pride or the state of being reduced to lowliness of mind, meekness, penitence and submission. The doctrine he preached was humiliation and repentance. Swift. 4. Abasement of pride mortification. HUMIL'ITY, n. [L. humilitas ; Fr. humititi:. ;
1.
;
1.
Low
Q.
Low
;
Thy
rhombic prism.
HUM'BUG,
to lojly or great
opposed
;
mean
HUM'DRUM,
;
Anon.
Lowly
P,.
;
modest
;
meek
submissive
;
To
t.
abase
bled,
To tle
but not subdued. crush to break; to .'subdue. The batof Waterloo humbled the power of
or
in
mind;
cloth,
to
;
;
C.
The
mountains
liighest
To
self for sin
;
to
is
A
often
;
make
bumblebee, L.
bombus, a
buzzing.] bee of a large species, that draws chiefly from clover flowers.
food
its
Moisture
HU'MIDNESS, HUMIL'IATE,
HUM'BLEMOL'THED,
a.
Mild;
modest.
meek:
humble or low
;
n.
phint.
state of hein^' meekness. Bacon. Sidney. species of sensitive Mortimer.
UM'BLKS,
Fr. hu-
;
retina.
eye, a fluid contained a transparent memgreater part of the cavity of the eye, and all the space be-
"•
Johnson HUMBLY, «(/i'. Ill a humble manner with modest siibmissivencss with iuunilitv
;
;
tween the crystaline and the
retina. ffistar.
to de-
A
Eaton.
Humbled; depressed
pp.
.3.
ppr.
Humbling
;
a. Abating pride dence mortiiVing.
;
reducing
self-confi-
Boswell.
;
j'3.
I
?i.
The
act of
humbhng
:
the state of being humbled Descent from an elevated state or rank to one that is low or huniblc.
The former was
;
cutaneous erupFielding.
Turn of mind; temper;
disposition, or
;
IHUMILIA'TION,
<,
;
rather a peculiarity of disposition often temporary so called because the temper
depress
ing. |2.
disease of the skin
tions.
degraded.
1
He
;
[L. humilio
:
HUMIL'LVTING,
;
or that which humbles; he that reduces pride or mortifies. Entrails of a deer. HUM'BLES, > n.
t.
to lower in condition as humiliated slaves.
HUMIL'IATED,
The
humility
HUM'BLEPLANT,?!. A Hl'M'BLER,
press
Slint;.
HUM'BLENESS,
V.
the rays of light, so as to
fortn an image on the Vitreous h umor of the in the minute cells of brane, occupying the
;
;
;
;
in refracting
visible vapor, or
perceptible in the air. n. Humidity.
IIUM'BLED, pp. 3Iade low abased renmitier.] dered meek and submissive penitent. To humble ;
form of
to be nioi.st
tween the aqueous and vitreous humors, and directly behind the pupil. It is of a lenticular form, or with double convex surfaces, and is the principal instrument
soft to the touch.
in the
A!«7)ifo,
lens, a small transparent solid body, of a softish consistence, occupying a middle position in the eye, be-
humidity is perceptible, we say Quicksilver conjmunicates no dry. humidity to our hands or clotlies, for it does not adhere to them; but it will adhere to gold, tin and lead, and render them
humid and
[L. from moist.
7!.
and behind the pu])!!. Crystaline humor or
it is
2.
alow
of bees;
The pionunciation, Sans, ama, is odiously vulgar.] but the word is chiefly used to Bloisturo express the moistiue or fluids of animal But bodies, as the humors of the eye. more generally the word is used to express a fluid in its morbid or vitiated state. Hence, in popular speech, we often hear it But the saiil, the blood is full of humors. expression is not technical nor correct. Aqueous humor of the eye, a transparent the the between fluid, occupying space crystaline lens and the cornea, both before
when no
:
called
;
ceptible to the eye or touch, occasioned by the absorption of a fluid, or its adherence to the surface of a body. When a cloth has imbibed any fluid to such a degree that it can be felt, we call it humid; bui
contrite.
Ainsivorth.
low buzzing or
The soimd
yumor, 1.
;
)i. [G_ hummel B.hommel;' Sw. humla ; from hum. It
71.
murmuring sound.
HU'MOR,
n. Moisture; dampness; a moderate degree of wetness which is per-
deprive of chastity. Deut. xxi. one''s self, to repent; to afflict onc'>
Dan. hummel
HUM'MING,
kind of plain, coarse India
earth.
into
Cleaveland. that hums;
rournuiring sound.
HUMID'ITY,
To humble
nUM'BLEBEE,
A
One
[from/ium.]
HUM'MING, ppr. Making a
as the humeral
;
Hultewill
valleys.
7.
n.
;
made of cotton
;
humbles
may be humbled
the shoulder
)!.
an applauder.
;
to reduce.
;
they satisfied the young Da-cies.
HUM'MER,
from L. humerus, the
n. [L. humus, the ground, and cubo, to lie.] A lying on the ground. [Little used.] Bramhall HU'MID, a. [L. humidus, from humeo, to be moist Fr. humide.] Moist damp containing sensible moisture as a humid air or atniosphere. Somewhat wet or watery as humid
2 Chron. xxxii.
He
[Fr.
;HUMICUBA'TION,
;
his heait.
tliese humilities
Abm. Hume.
Having the power
a
a.
to
HUM'HUM,
gelicid sense. Humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God, that he may exalt you. 1 Pet. v. Hezekiah humbled himself for the pride of
To make to condescend. himself to speak to them. To bring
humility of mind.
all
king.
shoulder.]
lowly abase the pride of; to reduce arrogance and self-dependence to give a low opinto make meek ion of one's moral worth and submissive to the divine will theevan-
5.
With to water. [Little used.]
wet;
moisten.
HU'MERAL,
;
To mortify. To make "humble
4.
humeo,
5
HUME€'TIVE,
Buonaparte. 3.
humility. Prov. xv.
Act of submission.
Howell IIU'BIITE, n. A mineral of a reddish brown HUME€TA'TION, n. The act of moisten- color, and a shining luster; crystalized in octahedrons, much modified by truncation [Little used.] ing, wetting or watering. and lievelment. It is named from Sir Bacon
low state. This victory humbled the pride Belonging of Rome. The power of Rome was hum artery. 2.
to
;
is
Lord with
.Serving the
Acts XX.
to be moist; 2.
Brown.
to reduce to a
;
moisten
In theology,
,
Fr. htuneeter.]
To
Without a humble imitation of the divine au thor of our blessed religion, we can never hope to be a happy nation. Washington. V.
Before honor
;
I
worth.
will.
;
HUMECT', HUME€'Tx\TE,
op-
:
posed to proud, haughty, arrogant or assuming. In an evangelical sense, having a low opinion of one's self, and a deep sense of unvvorthiness in the sight of God. God resistelh the proud, but giveth grace to the humble. James iv.
HUM'BLE,
imposition. [A loiv u-ord.] [Qu. hum, and drone, or W. Dull stupid. Hudibras. Jlddison. a drone. n. A stupid fellow [L. humecto, from
a.
from, heavy.] ;
not magnificent as a humble cottage. A humble roof, and an obscure retreat.
Phillips.
An
71.
HUM'DRUM,
Cowley. ;
own
humility consists in lowliness of mind ; a deep sense of one's own unworthiness in the sight of God, self-abasement, penitence for sin, and submission to the divine
;
opposed to high or lofly. humble nest built on the ground.
See Humble.] In ethics, freedom from pride and arrogance humbleness of mind; a modest estimate of one's
;
root.]
;
a liuinitiation o{ dcily, the Hooker latter, a A UHii/ia(jo7t of manhood.
of mind has been supposed to depend on the fluids of the body. Hence we say, good humor ; melancholy humor ; peevish humor. Such hmnors, when temporary,
we
call freaks,
whims, caprice.
Thus a
person characterized by good natine may have a fit of ill humor ; and an ill natured So person may have a fit of good humor.
4.
was the /iitmorof the man at the was the humor of the iiiuUilude
time; it That quahty of tlie imagination whicli gives to ideas a wild or faiitastio turn, and tends to excite luugliter or mirth hy ludi crous images or representations. Humor
poignant and
Jess
is
)ience
Addison describes humorously jocosely. the manual exercise of ladies' fans.
it
say,
it is
HUN
HUN
H U M wc
brilliant
always agreeable.
than
ivit;
I
[2.
Capriciously whimsically ; in conformity with one's humor. We resolve by halves, rashly and humor;
Calamy.
ouslif.
HU'MOROUSNESS,
Wit,
n.
The
ity of being humorous; ceit ; jocularity.
ed against
state or qual-
oddness of con-
folly, often otfends by its severity ; humor makes a man ashamed of 2. Fickleness ; capriciousness. his follies, without exciting his resentment 3. Peevishness ; petulance. Humor may be employed solely to raise
5.
mirth and render conversation pleasant, or it may contain a delicate kind of satire Petulance; peevishness; better expressed by ill humor. Is
mors 6.
A
my
friend
all
perfection
2.
The commons do
Burke.
Odd humorous adapted ;
;
to excite laugh-
ter.
Shak
adv. Peevishly; petu-
Johnson.
lantly.
V. t. To gratify hy yielding to par- 2. Oddly ; humorously. n. ticular inclination, humor, wish or desire [L. limbo.] formed by a crooked to indulge by compliance. sometimes with one hump, or two humor children to their injury or ruin
HU'MOR,
;
We
The
2.
sick, the infirm, and the aged often require to be humored. To suit; to indulge; to favor by imposing no restraint, and rather contributing to promote by occasional aids. say, an actor humors his part, or the piece.
We
my
It is
cians to
part to invent, and that of the musi that invention. Dryden
HUMP,
n.
A
HUMPBACKED,
a.
HUMPBACK,
The protuberance back
as a camel humps. crooked back; high ;
shoulders.
Tatki
Having a crooked
back.
2.
Pertaining to or proceeding
;
;
;
n. One who conduct.^ him hy his own inclination, or bent of)' mind one who gratifies his own humor. The humorist is one that is greatly pleased or
self
;
greatly displeased with little things ; his actions seldom directed by the reason and nature of
Watts.
things.
2.
One
humor in speaking or has a playful fancy or genius. [See Humor, No. 4.] One who has odd conceits also, a wag a droll. Hull. liodley. that indulges
writing 3.
;
one
who
;
HU'MOROUS,rt. Containing humor;
full
of
wild or fanciful images; adajited to excite laughter; jocular; as a humorous essay 2.
a humorous stoiy. Having the power to speak or write in the style of humor fancifid playful; exciting laughter ; as a humorous man or au;
;
thor. 3.
can/, a circle, the
2.
For Aioi^cr of
HUN'GER,
storm, and
wind.
I
Dryden. or uneasi-
occasioned hy long abstinence from food to crave food. To desire with great eagerness to long ;
for.
Blessed arc they that hunger and Matt. v. righteousness. !'.
thirst after
To
/.
HUN
;
HUNGERING,
;
;
;
;
6-3; at least
word.
this
is
same
probably the
The Welsh hmguagi'
exhibits the true sense of the word, ^vhich is a circle, a complete series. Hence, W. cantrev, a division of a county, or circuit, a. canton, a
HUNGER-STARVED,
a. Starved with hunger; pinched by want of food. Shak. Dryden. HUN'GRED, a. Hungry pinched by want of food. Obs. Bacon. ;
HUN'GRILY,
hundred. See Canton. The word signifies a circuit, and the -sense of /iHii(/rerf is secondary. The centuria of the Romans, and the hundred, a division of a county in Kiigland, might have been a division, and not an exact hundmerely
keen appetite
When on
hundred men.
adv. ;
With
[from hungry.]
voraciously.
harsh acoms hungrily they fed.
Dryden.
HUN'GRY,
n. Having a keen appetite; pain or uneasiness from want of Eat only when you are hungry. an Having eager desire. Lean emaciated, as if reduced by hun-
feeling food. 2. 3.
;
ger. Casslus has a lean and A un^ry look. Shak. 4. Not rich or fertile ; reDryden. poor ; barren consisting of ten times ten individuals or substances to in enrich as a the units number 100. quiring itself; use.] [.Vo< Drayton. Mortimer. adv. With a wild or gro- 2. division or part of a county in Enghungry soil ; a hungry gravel.
Shak.
a
my gold die. To feel the pain
is
famish. [JVot in use.] rim of any thing, a complete circle or seGER-BIT, Pained, pinched I Corn, canz ; Arm. cant ; HUNGER-BITTEN, j"' or weakened by ries, a hundred Ir. ceanlr. in his Sa.\on and Gothic MiUon. Lye, hunger. Dictionary, suggests that this word hund is ppr. Feeling the uneasiness a mere termination of the Gothic word for of want of food desiring eagerly longing ten taihun-taihund, leu times ten. for But craving. this cannot be true, for the word is found HUN'GERLY, a. Hungry; wanting food in the Celtic as well as Gothic dialects, or nourishment. Shak. fj o , HUN'GERLY, adv. With keen appetite. and in the Arabic jvxA) Cla.ss Gn. No. Shak. ILittle used.]
;
as
i.
;
2.
;
Rough
V.
ness which
hoop of a wheel, the HUN'(JER,
red in nnudjer.] Subject to be governed by humor or cairregular; capricious; whimsical. Denoting the product of ten multiplied by as a ten, or the number of ten times ten I am known to be a humorous patrician.
price
or an appetite for food. Hunger therefore is the |)ain or uneasiness of the stomach of a healthy person, when too long destitute of food. Any strong or eager desire. ger,
;
HU'MORIST,
water
first
;
;
;
W.
distilled
made. Enci/c. HUNGER, n. [Sax. G. Dan. Sw. hunger, D. honger, Goth, huhrus, hunger Sax. hungrian, hingrian, (ioth. huggryan, to hunger. It apjiears from the Gothic that n is not radical the root then is Hg.] 1. An imeasy sensation occasioned by the want of food a craving of food by the stomach craving appetite. Hunger is not merely want offood, for [)crson8 when sick, may abstain long from eating without hun-
A
;
propensity; favoring; ing to aid by falling into a design or course.
A
;
whose use it was
for
;
3.
n.
prepared from the tops of flowers of rosemary so called from a queen of Hungary,
JS/ew
England. push or jerk with the fist or elbow from the humors as a humoral fever. HUNCH, V. t. To push wiih the elbow ; to Harvey. push or thrust with a sudilen jerk. Humoral pathology, that pathology, or doc2. To push out in a protuberance to crook trine of the nature of diseases, which atthe back. Dn/den. tributes all morbid phenomena to the disHUNCH BACKED, a. Having a crooked ordered condition of the fluids or humors. back. UEslrange. Dryden. Cue. a. [Sax. hund or hundred; HUND'RED, favored. HU'MORED, pp. Indulged Goth. /titJirf; D.honderd; G.hunderl ; Hiw. HU'MORING, ppr. Indulging a particular hundra ; Man. hundre, hundred ; L. centutn ; wish or contribut a.
and pp. of hang.
pret.
HUNGARY-WATER,
;
n. [See the Verb.] A hump; a protuberance; as the huneh of a camel. A lump a thick piece as a hunch of bread a word in common vulgar use in
HUNCH,
humor
IIU'MORAL,
HUNG,
Stoifl.
HU'MORSOMELY,
he belongs. One having the jurisdiction of a hundred. a. The ordinal of a hund-
HUNDREDTH, red.
not abet humorsome, fac-
tious anas.
South
.'
Goodman.
Peevish; petulant; in-
n.
humor of the moment.
fluenced by the
has he not hu- 2.
?
be endured trick ; a practice or habit. I like not the humor of lying. to
HU'MORSOMR,
or a hundred manors. [But as the word denotes primarily a circuit or division, it is not certain that Alfred's divisions had any reference to that number.] HUNDRED-COURT, n. In England, a court held for all the inhabitants of a hundred. Ulackslone. HUND'REDER, n. In England, a man who may be of a jury in any controversy respecting land within the hundred to which riors,
humorous
as the
HUND'RED,
n.
I
A
collection,
body or sum,
;
4.
Moist
;
himiid.
HU'MOROL'SLY,
;
A
tesque combination of ideas to excite laughter or mirth
in
; :
a manner
pleasantly
land, supposed to have originally contained a hundred families, or a hundred war-
HUNKS, ser
;
71.
A
covetous sordid
a niggard.
man
;
a
rni-
Dryden.
HUN HUNS,
Ji.
[L.
3.
conquered Pannonia, and gave it its present name, Hungary. This word does V. t. [Sax. Imntian.
of hunting,
HUR'DEN,
i
coarse
;
extreme violence of the wind, and by its sudden changes the wind often veering suddenly several points, sometimes a quarter of the circle and even more.
Donne. [made of hurds, hards, or A coarse kind of linen.
;
overthrow
him. Ps. cxl. To use, direct or manage hounds in the chase. Addison. He hunts a pack of Jogs. To hunt out or afler, to seek to search for. Locke. To hunt from, to pursue and drive out or
Any
2.
4.
9.
HUR'RIED,
;
away.
to bear down by to depress persecution or violence. To follow the chase. Gen. V. i.
orous action.
KUR'RIER,
3.
To
One who
n.
hurries, urges or
impels.
JHUR'RY,
V.
t.
[This
the root ofL. curro
W. gyru,
pressure, holding.] texture of tvrigs, osiers or sticks; a crate of various forms, according to its destinaThe English give this name to a tion. sled or crate on Avhicli criminals are drawn In this sense, to the place of execution. it is not used in America. In fortif cation, a collection of twigs or
word ;
evidently from Tr.courir; Sw.kora; is
to drive, impel, thrust, run, ride,
press forward. See Ar. \^
^^ j,-. jarai,
kaura, to go round', to hasten.
Gr. No.
and
Class
39. 36.]
7.
L To
hasten to impel to greater speed to drive or press forward with more rapidity to urge to act or proceed with more ceas, to hurry the workmen or the lerity work. Our business huriies us. The weather is hot and the load heavy; we cannot safely hurry the hoi-ses. To drive or impel with violence. ;
;
;
;
workmen against fire-works Encyc. In husbandry, a frame of split timber or sticks wattled together, serving for gates, the defense of or stones.
;
xxvii.
Dryden. [from /lurn/.] Hastened; to rapid motion or vig-
;?;>.
urged or impelled
Shenstone.
)!.
sticks interwoven closely and sustained by long stakes. It is made in the figure of a long square, five or six feet by three and a Hurdles serve to render works firm, half. or to cover traverses and lodgments for
HUNT,
violent tempest.
A
1.
;
To hunt down,
VEstrange. art or practice of a
qualifications
;
|
to
The
to
[Sax.hijrdel; G. hiirde, a hmD. horde, a hurdle, a dle, a fold or pen horde. The elements of this word are the same as of the L. crates, Hrd, Crd. It coincides also with herd, denoting closeness,
;
fowling by sliooting. To pursue to follow closely. Evil shall hunt the violent man
manage
edfrom eveiy other hind of tempest by the
it is
[Local or obs.]
HUR'DLE,
;
3.
n.
flax.]
n.
the
or
hunter.
not appear in the cognate languages. Seei Class Gn. No. 67.] To chase wild animals, particularly quadrupeds, for the pujpose of catching them; for food, or for the diversion of sportsmen to pursue with hounds for taking, as game as, to hunt a stag or a hare. To go in search of, for the purpose of shooting as, to hunt wolves, bears, squirThis is the common rels or partridges. use of the word in America. It includes
2.
servant whose office the chase.
The
HUNTS'MANSHIP,
HUNT, 1.
H U R
H U R
HunnL] The Scythians who
3.
Impetuous cra\ings of
lust
it.
hurries him on to satisfy the South.
seek wild animals for game, or for inclosures, &c. Encyc. 3. To urge or drive with precipitation and noxious HURDS, n. The coarse confusion for confusion is often caused killing them by shooting when part of flax or hemp. wixUfor; as, to hunt for bears or wolves by hurry. [See Hards.] And wild amazement hurries up and down to hunt for quails, or for ducks. n. An instrument of with'IjHUR'DY-GURDY, The httle number of your doubtful friends. to search 3. To seekby close pursuit of to be used in the streets said music, Shak. Todd. Loudon. for. To hurry away, to drive or carry away in The adulteress will hunt for the precious life. HURL, V. t. [Arm. harlua. This may be a haste. Prov. vi. different spelling of whirl.] HUNT, n. A chase of wild animals for catch- 1. To throw with violence to drive with IIUR'RY, I', i. To move or act with haste to proceed with celerity or precipitation. ing them. great force as, to hurl a stone. Chaucer. The business is urgent ; let us hurry. 2. A himtsman. [JSTot in use.] And hurl them headlong to their fleet and 3. A pack of hounds. Dnjden. main. Pope. HUR'RY, n. A driving or pressing forward Shak. chase. 4. Pursuit To utter with vehemence as, to hurl out in motion or business. 5. A seeking of wild animals of any kind for cannot vows. [.Vot in use.] Spenser. 9. Pressure urgency to haste. vi'ait long we are in a hun-y. Careiv. 3. To play at a kind of game. game ; as a hunt for squirrels. HUNT'ED, pp. Chased; pursued; sought HURL, n. The act of throwing with vio- .3. Precipitation that occasions disorder or confusion. HUNT'ER, n. One who pursues wild ani- lence. It is necessary sometimes to be in haste, but mals with a view to take them, either for 9. Tumult; riot; commotion. Knolles. never in a hurry. Anon. HURL' BAT, n. whirl-bat; an old kind of sport or for food. 4. Tumult bu.stle commotion. or is 2. A dog that scents game, Ainsworth. employed weapon. Ambition raises a tumult in the soul, and puts in the chase. HURL'BONE, n. In a horse, a bone near it into a violent hurry of Addison. 3. A horse used in the chase. thought. the middle of the buttock. Encyc. HUNTING, ppr. Chasing for seizure pur- HURL'ED, pp. Thrown with violence. HUR'RYING, ppr. Driving or urging to suing; seeking; searching. HURL'ER, n. One who hurls, or who plays greater speed precipitating. Carew. HUR'RY-SKURRY, fffiv. Confusedly; in a HUNT'ING, n. The act or practice of pur- at hurling. bustle. suing wild animals, for catching or killing HURL'ING, ppr. Throwing with force; [.Vol! in use.] Gray. them. Hunthig was originally practiced HURST, n. [Sax. hurst or hyrst.] A wood playing at hurling. of the for men a word found in many names, or grove procuring food, IHURL'WIND, n. A whirlwind, which see. purpose by
2.
;
;
;
|
;
;
I
;
;
;
;
;
We
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
;
as
it still is
among
by uncivilized nations. But men, it is practiced mostly
or diversion, or for the destruction of noxious animals, as in America a seeking. 2. A pursuit
HURL'Y,
game.
HUNT'ING-HORSE,
}
IIUNT'ING-NAG,
S
HUNTTNG-SEAT,
n.
^
hurl „ "' [Dan.
topsy
liurht-burlu,
bustle
;
inconsiderately.] confusion.
Hoora
om
turvy
;
burl.
Fr.
Tunndt
HURR.WV,
HURRAH,
>
, "'"'""•
t. pret. and pp. huH. [Sax. hyrt. h. urtare, Fr.heurter, to strike or dash against W. hyrziaw, to push, thrust or drive, to assault, to butt ; Ann.
|HURT, r. wounded;
;
;
Shak.
huzza. [See Hoora.] HUR'RI€ANE, n. [Sp. huracan, for furahorse used u) can, from the L. furio, furo, to rage; Port. furacam : It. orugano ; Fr. ouragan ; D. hunting. orkaan ; G. Dan. Sw. orcan. I know not Butler. resithe origin, nor the signification of the last temporary ;
1.
(,
A
dence for the pur])OSR of hunting. Gray. n. A female that hunts, or follows tho chase. Diana is called th
ture.
syllable.] 1.
A
most violent storm of wind, occurring often in the West Indies, and sometime: northern latitudes, and on the coast of the United States, as far north as New England. A hurricane is distinguish-
3.
n.
One who
practices hunting.
hunts, or whol ffaller.i
To harm
;
to
damage
We hurt
sioning loss. ing his property.
in higher
huntress.
heurda.] To bruise; to give pain by a contusion, pressure, or any violence to the body. hurt the body by a severe blow, or by tight Ps. cv. clothes, and the feet by fetters. To wound ; to injure or impair the sound state of the body, as by incision or frac-
We
A
HUNT'RESS,
HUNTS'MAN,
\
HURLY-BURLY,
;
A bugle; a horn Ji. used to cheer the hounds in pursuit of
HUNTING-HORN,
as in Hazlehurst.
Sandys.
1
civilized
for exercise
4.
;
to injure
by occu-
man by
destroy-
a
To injure by diminution to impair. man hurts his esWte by extravagance. ;
A
H U
u s
II .7.
To
injure by reducing of. pair tho strength, purity or beauty Hurt not the wiiiu and the oil Rev. vi.
—
G.
To barm
to
;
injure
to
;
damage,
Mar.
The male of animals of a lower
ini
general. 7.
To wound
to injure
;
to give pain to
;
as, to hurt tlie feelings. wound ; a bruise IIURT, n.
A
4.
that gives pain to the body. Locke The pains of sickncsB and hurla. niiscbief injury. 2. Harm I have slain a man to my wounding, and z young man to my hurt. Ucn. iv. ;
3. Injiu'y
ica, 5.
loss.
WTiy should damage grow to the hurt of the ? Ezra iv. HURT'ER, n. One who hurts or does harm. HURT'ERS, n. Pieces of wood at the lower end of a platform, to prevent tho wheels of gun-carriages from injuring tho parapet
adv. Injuriously; mischiev- 2.
ously. n. Injuriousness; tend- 3. loss or destruction ; mis-
To
;
;
now
To push
V.
To move
t.
HURT'LEBERRY, which
To
till
;
to cultivate
;
Spenser.
A
[Little used.
Shak.
Manageable with
a.
[///.]
Sliak.
HUS'BANDLESS,
a.
whortleberry,
see.
HURT'LESS, a.
Harmless; innocent; doing no injury innoxious; a.s hurllcss blows Dryden 2. Receiving no injury. HURT'LESSLY, adv. Without harm. [Lit;
a.
Frugal
;
[Little
thrifty.
1CS£d.\
J.
ttSSCT t
A
HUS'BANDMAN,
;
keep concealed.
hushed up.
A
n.
Pope. bribe to secure si-
;
n. The state of being dry rough, like a husk. Stripping off husks. HUSK'ING, n. The act of stripping oflT husks. In New England, the practice of farmers is to invite their neighbors to assist them in stripping their maiz, in autumnal evenings, and this is called a husking. HUSK'Y, a. Abounding with husks; coiisisting of husks. Dryden. 2. Resendding husks; dry; rough. 3. Rough, as sound hai-sh whi/zing. HU'SO, 71. A fish of the genus Accipenser, whose mouth is in the under jiart of the head the body is naked, or without prickles or protuberances. It grows to the length of twenty four feet, and its skin is so tough that it is used for ropes in drawing wheel-carriages. It inhabits the Danube and the rivers of Russia, and of its
and
Shak.
HUS'B.^NDLY,
to
HUSK'mG, ppr.
Destitute of a hus-
band.
Spenser.
;
HUSK'INESS,
with frugality.
to whirl. ?i.
and manage
with good manageBacon.
supply with a husband.
is
be silent or quiet
;
;
Shermood. HUS'BANDED, pp. Used or managed with economy well managed. to wheel HUS'BANDING, ppr. Using or managing
with violence or Obs.
forciblv
direct
still
to be silent.
;
;
;
ttsecL]
impetuosity. 2.
To
ment.
economy.
clash or to skirmish ; to
[from hurt.]
[JVot
HURT'LE,
To
t.
HUS'BANDABLE,
run against to jostle meet in shock and encounter suddenly.
V.
HUSH,
still;
lence money paid to hinder information, or disclosure of facts. Sipift. HUSK, n. [Qu. W. gwi.ig. Corn, quesk, a cover or It. guseio, bark or shell Sp. Port, casca, husks of grapes, bark. It signifies probably a cover or a peel.] The external covering of certain fruits or seeds of plants. It is the calyx of the flower or glume of corn and grasses, formed of valves embracing the seed. The husks of the small grains, when sci)arated, are called chaff; but in America we apply the word chiefly to the covering of the ears or seeds of maiz, which is never denominated chaff. It is sometimes used in England for the rinil, skin or hull of seeds. HUSK, V. t. To strip of!" the external integument or covering of the fruits or seeds of plants; as, to husknmW.. IIVSK'F.I), pp. Stripped of its husks. a. Covered with a husk.
A farmer ground. [In this sense, it is not used in America. always use husbandman.] Bacon. Dryden. ;
Otwaij
be
HUSHMONEY,
is little
estate, his means or his time. He is conscious how ill he has husbanded the great deposit of his Creator. Humbler
;
V. i.
word
?
Spenser. imperative of the verb, used as an
i.
This matter
;
;
HURT'LE,
tlie
To
V.
exclamation, be
with frugality in expending any thing to use or employ in the manner best suited to produce the greatest efl'ect; to use with economy. We .say, a man husbands his
health.
to occasion chievousness.
of
cares
HUSH,
make no noise. To hush up, to suppress
Cotiier. Davies. used.j a cultivator ; a tiller of the
all
HUS'BAND,
HURT'FUL, Injurious; mischievous tending occasioning loss or destruction to impair or destroy. Negligence is hurtful to property intemperance is hurtful to
ency
Dnjden. a man
We
a.
HURT'FULNESS,
;
[But in Amer-
a bad husband.
;
this ajiplication
or not at
kings
HURT'PULLY,
Hush my
Diet.
order.
a good manager
;
husband
;
;
An economist who knows and
S
Wilt thou then
practices the methods of In this sense, the frugality and profit. word is modified by an epithet; as agooti
any tbing
;
H U
S
In seamen's language, tlie owner of a ship who manages its concerns in person.
to im-
in quality;
n. farmer ; a cidtivator ortillerof theground one who labors in tillage. In America, where men gene;
rallj' own the land on which they labor, the proprietor of a farm is also a laborer or husbandman; but the word includes the lessee and the owner. tle used.] Sidney. HURT'LESSNESS, n. Frcodom from aiiy 2. The master of a family. [A'at in use in Chaucer. Johnson. America.] harmful quality. [Little used.] ITUS'BAND, ji. sas;. [Sax. husbontla ; hus IIUS'BANDRY, n. The business of a faror mer, and a farmer or comprehending agriculture tillage bouse, buend, cultivator, of the ground, the raising, managing and or an inhabitant, fiom bi/an, to inhabit or fattening of cattU? and other domestic anifrom bugian ; Dan. hmissounds is made isinglass. till, contracted Encyc. mals, the management of the dairy and honde ; Sw. hvsbonde ; S5w. t'/g£fi«, Dan HUS'S.\R, JI. s as :. [Tartar, uswar, cavalwhatever the land produces. bygger, to build D. bouwen, G. bauen, to ry Sans, usu'u, a horse. Thomson.] 2. domestic manFrugality; economy ; good A mounted soldier or horseman, in German baild, to till, to plow or cultivate G. baua; thrift. But in this sense we a builder, a counirynian, a clown, a rustic agement Tlie hussars are the national cavalry. a boor ; D. fiuiir, the last component part generallv prefix good ; as good husbandry. cavalry of Hungarj' and Croatia. Their of neighbor. Band, bond, in tliis word, is Swift. regimentals are a fur cap adorned with a 3. Care of domestic affairs. Shak. the participle ofbuan, byan, that is, buend, fetlier, a doublet, a pair of breeches to which the stockings are fastened, and a occupying, tilling, and husband is the far- HUSH, a. [G. husch ; Dan. hys, hyst. In mer or inhabitant of the house, in Scottish W. hez is peace hetu, to make peace Their anns pair of red or yellow boots. a farmer thence the sense of husbandry. cies is rest, s'eep; and h'usf is a low, buz are a saber, a carbine and "pistols. HusIt had no relation primarily to marriage sars now form a part of the French and zing sound Heb. riBTl to be silent. Class but among the common peo])lo, a woman Gs. No. 4G.] English cavalry. Enct/c. calls her consort, mj' man, and the man Silent still as, they are hush as HUSSITE, 71. A follower of John quiet Hnss,the calls his wife, my woman, as in Hebrew, deatli. This adjective never precedes the Bohemian reformer. and in this instance, the farmer or occu noun which it qualifies, except in the com HUSS' Y, 71. [contracted from huswife, housepier of the house, or the builder, was call pound, hushmoney. wife.] ed my farmer or by some other means, HUSH, V. t. To still to silence to calm 1. bad or worthless woman. It is used ; /iijstandcame to denote the consort of the also in to make quiet to i-epress noise ludicrously slight disapprobation as, to female head of the family.] or contempt. Go, hussy, go. hush the noisy crowd the winds were 1. A man contracted or joined to a woman 2. An economist a thrifty woman. Inished. man to whom a woman by marriage. Tusser. My tongue shall hunh acain this storm of war. is betrothed, as well as one actually united Shak. HUS'TINGS, 71. [Sax. hustinge ; supposed to be composed of hus, house, and by marriage, is called a husband. Lev. 2. To appease ; to allay to calm, as commoMing-, xix. Deut. xxii. tion or agitation. cause, suit; the house of trials.] ;
;
;
;
;
;
:
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
:
;
;
A
;
;
;
A
;
;
H Y D
H Y A 1.
A court held
London, before the lord mayor and aldermen of the the supreme court or council of the city
times transparent,
In this court are elected the aldermen and the four members of parliament. The place where an election of a member Burke. of parliament is held.
zircon.
in Guildhall, in
HUSTLE,
u.i.
Hyacinth
hus'l.
[D. fcu(ieten, to shake
;
To
n.
A
to
worthless woman
manager. 9.
[See Hussy.] female economist a thrifty
A
Ure.
Made
a.
of hyacinth resembling hyaMilton
;
cinth. n.
[Gr.
vot&i{,
from
;
V.
t.
push or In astronomy, a cluster of seven stars in the Bull's head, supposed by the ancients to a bad bring rain. Encyc. Shak. HY'ALINE, a. [Gr. Da>.wo5, from vaXos, ;
woman.
;
[G. hulle
n.
;
D. hut
;
; perhaps a dialectical orthography of Sax. hus, house, and cot ; W. cwt.] small house, hovel or cabin a mean lodge or dwelling a cottage. It is particularly
hutte
A
HYB'RID,
;
;
applied to log-houses erected for troops in winter. HUT, V. t. To place in huts, as troops encamped in winter quarters. Marshall. Smollett. HUT, V. i. To take lodgings in huts.
The
troops hutted for the winter.
T. Pickering.
HUT'TED, pp. Lodged in huts. HUT'TING, ppr. Placing in huts
Mitford. ;
taking
lodgings in huts.
HUTCH,
[Fr. huche
n.
Sp. hucha
;
;
Sax.
hwoecca.] 1.
HYBERNA€LE, ) HYBERNATE, } HYBERNATION. >
A chest or box case for rabbits.
A rat HUX,
2.
;
a corn chest or bin
;
a
Mortimer.
trap.
and
Encyc. V.
HUZZ'A,
i.
To
n.
A
buzz.
[Mt in
shout of joy
;
ttse.]
Barret.
a foreign word
used in wrilingonly, and most preposterousin practice. The word ly, as it is never used used is our native word lioora, or hooraw. [See Hoora.]
V.
n.
A
chimistry, a
n.
[Gr.
[Gr. v«up, water, mineral, called also
compound,
In vSup, water.] in definite propor-
of a metallic oxyd with water. Ure.
A ;
hydrate is a substance which has formed so intimate a union with water as to solidify it, and render it a component part. Slaked lime is a. hydrate of lime. Parke.
;
HYDRAUL'le, HYDRAUL'l€AL,
)
S
"' [Fr.
hydraulique
hydr'axdicus
;
L. Gr.
;
an instrument of music played by water v5up, water, and owjXot, a pipe.} Relating to the conveyance of water through pipes. Transmitting water through pipes as a
v&fiavU;,
;
1.
Blackstone. 2. hydraulic engine. [Gr. viaui, from x.8u>p, walime, a species of lime that hardA little transparent Hydraulic tcr.] ens in water used for cementing under vesicle or bladder filled with water, on water. Journ. of Science. of the as in any part body, dropsy. n. The science of the moDarwin. HYDRAUL'IeS, Qitincy tion and force of fluids, and of the conHydatids are certain spherical bodies, found struction of all kinds of instruments and occasionally in man, as well as in other machines by which the force of fluids is animals, lodged in or adhering to the difa branch applied to practical purposes Some of them, at least, ferent viscera. of hydrostatics. are considered as possessing an indepenis that branch of the science dent vitality, and as constituting a distinct Hydraulics of hydrodynamics which treats of fluids animal, allied to the tenia or tape-worm Ed. Encyc. considerecf as in motion. They consist of a head, neck, and vesicun. [Gr. i.8up, walar body filled with a transj)arent fluid. )
;
"
S
;
HYDREN'TEROCELE,
Cyc.
HY'DRA,
t.
To n.
receive or attend with Addison. Gr. wxii';
;
Gr.
vijia,
from
Parr vSup,
A water serpent. In fabulous history, a serpent or monster in the lake or marsh of Lcrna, in Peloponnesus, represented as having many heads, one of which, being
intestine, and xrfKf;, a tumor.] dropsy of the scrotum with rupture.
ter, tvTipov,
A
Coze. a. [hydrogen and iodic] Denoting a peculiar acid or gaseous substance, produced by the combination of hvdrogen and iodine. HYD'RIODATE, n. A salt formed by the
HYDRIOD'IC,
hydriodic acid, with a base.
HVDROC ARBONATE, ter,
n.
or rather hydrogen,
De
Claubry.
[Gr. vSup,
and L.
wa-
carbo,
a
coal.]
phytes, called polypus, or polypuses. 3.
A
An
HY'DROCELE, water, and
Cyc.
HYDRACTD,
Henry.
drogen.
southern constellation, containing GO
stars.
[Gr. vSup, water, and acid.] acid formed by the union of hydrogen a.
with a substance without oxygen. Core
xjjXij,
n.
[Gr. v&foxn-Kr,; a turnor.]
A
tery tumor, particularly one in the scrotum. Encyc. Coxe. Parr. dropsy of the scrotum.
n. hy'dragog. [Gr. v&t^a- IIYDRO'CEPH'ALUS, n. [Gr. vSup, water, and xfijjaXjj, the head.] 7uyo5 nSwp, water, and aywy»;, a leading or drawing, from ayu, to lead or drive.] Dropsy of the head a preternatural distenmedicine that occasions a discharge of sion of the head by a stagnation and exa name that implies a travasation of the lymph, cither within or watery humors Coxe. Encyc. without the cranium. supposition that every purgative has the ;
;
A
vbuf,
Any hernia proceeding from water; a wa-
HY'DRAGOGUE,
;
Its iirevailing color is a hyacinth which the red is more or less tinged with yellow or brown. It is some
;
Carbureted hydrogen gas, or lieavy inflammable air. Jlikin. farious evils. A technical name of a genus of Zoo- HYDROC'ARBURET, n. Carbureted hy-
is
lateral edges. Its structure is fol its luster, strong its fracture, con-
[h.hydra
cutoff, was immediately succeeded by an other, tndess the wound was cauterized. Hercules killed this monster by applying firebrands to the wounds, as he cut off the heads. Hence we give the name to a multitude of evils, or to a cause of multi-
[h. hyaciyithus
upright and succulent, and adorned with many bell-shaped flowers, united in a large pyrami
n.
water.]
botany, a genus of plants, of several species, and a great number of varieties. The oriental hyacinth has a large, pur plish, bulbous root, from wiiich spring sevthe flower stalk eral narrow erect leaves
red, in
HY'DRATE,
certain rate by the hyde.
In
ated ; choidal.
clay.]
Wavellite.
L. hybrida.]
HY'DATID, HY'DATIS,
Oos.]
on the
[Gr. uSptj, injury, force, rape
and apyaxo;,
;
1.
shouts of joy.
HY'ACINTH, 1.
aqueduct.
HYDR'ARGILLITE,
tions,
mongrel or mule an animal or plant, produced from the mixture of two species. Lee. Martyn. > HY'BRID, produced Mongrel " from the luixture of HYB'RIDOUS, I two species. HY'DAgE, n. In lau\ a tax on lands, at a
HIFZZ'A, V. i. To utter a loud shout of joy, or an acclamation in joy or ])raise.
HUZZ'A,
C Hibernacle, See < Hibernate, ( Hibernation.
n. [Gr. vSpau^u, to irrigate, ti6up, water.] pipe or machine with suitable valves and a spout, by which water is raised and discharged from the main conduit of an
;
To fish for i)ike with hooks 1). t. lines fastened to floating bladders.
HUZZ,
A
71.
plant which grows in the water, and bears a beautiful flower. Its capsule has to a cup. De TVieis, Gloss. Botan.
from
;
Tasser. Dan. hytte ; Fr.
Encyc.
[Gr. viup, water, and
n.
a vessel.]
HY'DRANT,
A
glass.]
To manage
oyyftoi',
been compared
and
HUT,
A
vu, to rain
Shak. Glassy resembling glass ; consisting of| with economy Milton glass. frugality. Dryden. HY'ALITE, n. [Gr. v(Aos.] Muller's glass It consists chiefly of silex, and is white HUS'WIFERY, n. The business of inana sometimes with a shade of yellow, blue or ging the concerns of a family by a female female management, good or bad. Cleaveland. green.
HUS'WIFE,
Quiyicy.
HYDRAN'GEA,
;
vifoi, rain.] ;
crowd.
ilUS'WIFE,
a subspecies of pyramidieal
consisting of hyacinth
HY'ADS,
quality of evacuating a particular humor. But in general, the stronger cathartics are hydragogues.
Cleaveland. is
HYACINTH'INE,
Sw.
hutla, to shuffle.] shake together in confusion
H Y D sometimes only
translucent.
;
city. 2.
and
;
HvDROeHLO'RATE, liydrochloric acid
A
n.
compound
and a base a ;
HvDRO€HLO'RI€,
a.
H Y E
H Y D
H Y D of
promontories, channels, soundings,
isles,
HY'DROG'L'RET,
A
n.
compound of hy
Containing water caused by extravasated water as a hydropic swelling.
;
uiiret.
IlYDROCYAN'Ie,
[Gr. tSup, water, or
a.
rather hydroo;ett, and xvavof, bkie.] Tlie liydrocyanic acid is the same as the prussic acid. HYDRODYNAM'IC, a. [Gr. vJup, water, and iviafti;, power, force.] Pertaining to the force or pressure of water.
HYDROLITE,
water,
[Gr. vS«p,
•3.
IIYDROLO(i'I€AL,
Pertaining to hy-
a.
drology.
;
H^DROFLU'ATE, drofluoric acid
?i.
A compound
of
IIY'DROMANCY,
n. [Gr. uSup, water, ftai'tna, divination.]
HYDROFLUOR'IC,
a.
[Gr.
uSup,
of divination or prediction of ovcnts by water; invented, according to Varro, by the Persians, and practiceil by the Romans. Encyc.
water,
an^Jluor.]
The Consisting of fluorin and hydrogen. hydrofluoric acid is obtained by distilling a mixture of one part of the pmest lluor spar in fine powder, with two of sulpliuric Manual. water, and
acid.
If'cbster's
UY'DROgEN,
n. [Gr. vS«p, .so called as being y.'irau, to generate considered the generator of water.] In chimistry, a gas which constitutes one of the elements of water, of which it is said by Lavoisier to form fifteen parts in a hundred but according to Berzelius and Oulong, hydrogen gas is 11. 1 parts in a ;
HYDROMAN'TIC, and
n.
a.
Pertaining to divina-
from Gr.
[Fr.
vSup,
is
a kind of hydropic
more we drink
tlic
more we
distemper, shall thirst.
Tillotsmi.
ter,
and
IGr. tJup,
a.
rtifv^oTixoj, inflated,
HYDROPSY. HY'DROSCOPE, A
from
wa-
niiviux,
^(>-<,
n.
[Gr. vSup, water,
and
axortiu, to view.]
kind of water clock, or instrument used
anciently for measuring time, consisting of a cylindrical tube, conical at the bottom, perforated at the vertex, and the w hole tube graduated. Encyc. } HYDROSTATle, " [Gr. v««p, water, HYDROSTAT'IeAL, I andraT«05,static, or standing settling.] Relating to the science of weighing fluids, or hydrostatics.
IIYDROSTAT'ICALLY,' to hydrostatics, or to
wa-
honey.] liquor consisting of honey diluted in waBefore fernientalion, it is called simter.
ter,
A
tlie
HYDROPNEUMAT'IC,
tion by water.
HY'DROMEL,
adv.
According
hydrostatic princiBentley.
ples.
IIvDROSTAT'I€S,
n.
The
science which
of the weight, motion, and equilibriums of fluids, or of the specific gravity and other properties of fluids, particularly ple hydromel ; after fermentation, it is called vinous hydromel or mead. of water. HYDROM'ETER, n. [See Hydromelry.] Hydrostatics is that branch of the science An instrument to measure the gravity, of hydrodynamics which treats of the Ed. Encyc. properties of fluids at rest. density, velocity, force, &c. of water and' other "fluids, and the strength of .spirituous HYDROSULPH'ATE, n. The same a.i liquors.
;
hundred, and oxygen 88. 9. Hydrogen gas is an aeriform fluid, the lightest body known, and though extremely inflammable itself, it extinguishes burning bodies, and is fatal to animal life. Its specific gravity is 0.0094, that of air being 1.00. In consequence of its extreme lightness,
and
A method
liy-
and a base.
and
a stone.]
n.
librium, motion, cohesion, pressure, reIt comprehends both hysistance, &c. Ed. Ena/c. drostatics and hydraulics.
Resembling dropsy. Everj' lust
and
That branch of llYUROI.'OtY, n. [Gr. vSuf,, water, and natural philosophy which treats of the Xoyo;, discourse.] phenomena of water and other fluids, The science of water, its properties and whether in motion or at rest of their equiphcnoinnna.
HYDRODYNAM'ICS,
;
breath, spirit.] mineral whose crystals are described as An epithet given to a vessel of water, with other apparatus for chimical experiments. six sided prisms, terminated by low six Med. Repos. sided pyramids, with truncated summits. [See Dropsy.] Cleaveland. ?.i5o;,
A
71.
;
;
is now scarcely used, except to give the derivative hydrogureted. Silliman Webster's Manual. HYDROG'URETED, a. Denoting a comn. Prussiate pound of hydrogen with a base. cya
Hydrochloric acid is muriatic acid gas, a compound ofchloriu and liydrogen gas.
llYDROeY'ANATE,
extravasated
2.
drogen with a base. Hydroguret
chloric]
with
Dropsical water.
&c.
iiiiiiiate.
Jovrn. of Science. and [hydrogen
diseased
1.
HYDROMET'RIC, HYDROMET'Rl€AL, to the 2.
)
„
^
Encyc. Pertaining to a
hydrometer, or
measurement of the
gravity, &c.
of fluids. IMadc by a hydrometer.
treats
hydrosutphuret.
HYDROSULPH'URET,
A
n.
[hydrogen and
sidptiurel.]
combination of ..sulphureted hydrogen with an earth, alkali or metallic oxyd.
HyDROSULPH'URETED,
a.
Combined
with suljihureted hydrogen. n. [Gr. v««p, water, and Hydrosulphnric acid, is called also hydrothimeasure.] The art of measuring, ortlie mensuration of onic acid, or sidphureted hydrogen. it is employed for filling air balloons. the gravity, density, velocity, force, &c. HYDROTHO'RAX, n. [Gr. v«up, water, Lavoisier. fVthsler^s Manual. of fluids, and the strength of rectified Coxe. and Supol.] Dropsy in the chest. IIY'DROgENATE, 1'. t. To combine hy- spirits. Encyc. a. [Gr. v6up, w ater.] Causing drogen with anv thing. HYDRO-OX YD, n. [Gr. uSwp, water, and HYDROT'le, a disciiarge of water. In combination HY'DROgENATED, pp. oxyd.] n. A medicine that purges with hydrogen. A metallic oxyd combined with water; a HYDROT'IC, off" water or phlegm. Arhulhnot. HY'DROgENIZE, v. t. To combine with metallic hydrate. Parke. Coie. II. HYDROXAN'THATE, [Gr. v6up, water, hydrogen. n. [Gr. t.6up, water, and and |ai9o5, yellow.] HY'DROgENIZED, pp. Combined with HY'DROPIfANE, ijiotfu, to show.] In chimistry, a compound of hydroxanthic hydrogen. In mineralogy, a variety of opal made trans acid with a base. HY'DR6GENIZING,/);jr. Combining with Kinoan. parent by immersion in water. HYDROXANTHIC, a. A term used to dehydrogen. Hi DROGRAPHER, )!. [See Hydrography.] IIYDROPH'ANOUS, a. Made transparent note a new acid, formed by the action of Kirwan. immersion in water. One who draws maps of the sea, lakes or alkalies on the bisulphuret of carbon. It by other waters, with the adjacent shores HYDROPHOBIA, ^ is called also carbo-sulphuric acid. [Gr. vhuf,, w ater, and one who describes the sea or other waters. HY'DROPIIOBY, \ "' ^t^wnai, to fear.] Henry. n. A combination of dread of a water A HY'DRURET, hydroBoyle. symptom preternatural ) of canine madness, or the disease itself, HYDROGRAPH'le, Relating to" or gen with sulphur, or of sulphur and sulUre. This dread which is thus denominated. HYDROGRAPH'ICAL, S containing a phureted liydrogen. of water sometimes takes place in violent HY'DRUS, )!. [Gr. i«op, water.] A water description of the sea, sea coast, isles, shoals, depth of water, &c. or of a lake. inflammations of the stomach, and in hyssnake also, a constellation of the southern hemisphere. Encyc. HYDROG'RAPHY, 11. [Gr. v&up, water, teric fits. and ypa^u), to describe.] HYDROPHO'Bl€, a. Pertaining to a dread HYE'IMAL, a. [L. hiems, winter; Sans. The art of measuring and describing the of water, or canine madness. Slav, zima.] hima, cold Belonging to and other waters Med. rivers or winter done in winter. sea, lakes, Repos. the art of forming charts, exhibiting a HYDROi' l€, } [h.hydrops:Gr.vS(,i.>^:i HY'EMATE, v. i. To winter at a place. representation of the sea coast, gulfs, bays, HYDROP'ICAL. ^"- dropsy; i^6«p. water.] [Aoi in use.]
HYDROM'ETRY, ;UETpoi',
;
;
;
;
;
;
HYP
H Y M HYEMA'TION, The
n.
of
or
HYP
And when they had sung a hymn, they went out to the mount of Olives. Matt. xxvi.
to winter.]! a winter in a
Memo,
[L.
is
;
this figure.
He was owner ger than If a
n.
[Gr. typos, moist, and
measure.] instrument for measuring the degree of moisture of the atmosphere. Encyc. fitrpoi/,
An
HYGROMET'RI€AL, hygrometry
;
a.
made by
Pertaining to or according to
hymns. Donne. composer of|
to
A
Busby.
liynnis.
!HYMNOL'OgY,
A
collection of
n.
[Gr.
vfiioi
and
Mede.
lar-
Longinus.
Ipse arduus, ajta que pulsat Sidera.
Virgil.
He was so gaunt, the case of a flageUet was a mansion for liini. Sliak.
HYPERBOLIC, HYPERBOLICAL,
I
"•
J
Belonging to the hyperbola; having
the nature of the hyperbola, Relating to or containing hyperbole ; e.xaggerating or diminishing beyond the fact exceeding the truth as a hyperbol-
^xyyos.]
hymns.
of a piece of ground not
Lacedemonian letter. can number the dust
xiii.
i'lg-
iHYM'NI€, a. Relating jlIYMNOL'OGlST, 11.
a
man
of the earth, then shall thy seed also be numbered. Gen.
1
HYGROM'ETER,
effect attends
expresses this momentary conviction. The following are instances of the use of
HYMN,
I
The same
reality.
and figurative grandeur or littleness hence the use of the hyperbole, which
spending passing Admonishing one another in psalms and particular place. hymns. Col. iii. HYE'NA, n. [L. hyana ; Gr. natra.] A To praise in song ; to V. t. hym. quadruped of the genus Cauis, having Milton. worship by singing hymns. small naked ears, four toes on each foot, to celebrate in song. 2. To sing ; They a straight jointed tail, and erect hair on hymn tlieir maker's praise. the neck ; an inliabitant of Asiatic Turin or adoTo i. V. HYIMN, sing praise hym. key, Syria, Persia and Barbary. It is a Milton. ration. solitary animal, and feeds on flesh ; it celebrated HYM'NED, ;)p. Sung; praised; and will and on flocks herds, open preys in song. graves to obtain food. It is a fierce, cruel in song ; singand untamable animal, and is sometimes IllYM'NING, ppr. Praising called the tiger-wolf.
In
2.
n. A new vegetable alkali, extracted from the Hyoscyamus nigra, or
HYOSCIA'MA,
;
;
ical expression. Ure. henbane. HY'P, n. [a contraction of hypochondria.] Hyperbolic space, in geometry, the space or content comprehended between the curve A disease depression of spirits. measuring the moisture of the air. HY'GROSCOPE, n. [Gr. fypoj, moist, and HYP, V. t. To make melancholy ; to depress of a hyperbole and the whole ordinate. tiie
hygrometer.
HYGROM'ETRY,
The
n.
act or
art of
;
the spirits.
(jxortfu, to
view.] The same as hygrometer. chiefly used.
HYGROS€OP'l€, groscope
;
a.
The
hy
Mams.
classibus
moist,
[Gr. nypoj,
sor^x>J.]
science of comparing degrees of moisEvelyn. n. [Ar.] blanket or loose gar-
A
matter, and Presiding over matter.
aj>X'>l>
rule.]
«.
[Gr.
v\rj,
»!.
[Gr.
v%ri,
matter, and
if"'?.
Ufe.]
One who
holds matter to be animated.
HYM,
A
Clarke. ?i.
HY'MEN,
species of dog.
n.
[L.
from Gr.
Qu.
v^i^v,
Shak.
n. [Gr. »jrtctarttf»js a shield.] soldier in the armies of Greece, a particular manner.
HYPER,
adv. In the form of a hyperbola. With exaggeration in a manner to exmore or less than the truth. press
2.
Gr.
Eng.
urttp,
over or beyond. )i. hypercritic.
—
is Scylla hyperbolkally as inaccessible.
vrto
;
and
HYPER.\S'PIST, ai^nii,
n.
HYPER'BATON,
\ \
[Gr.
A
over, is
Mitford.
used
Johnson.
hyperbola.
HYPER'BOLIST,
in
One who
n.
vrfjpaffrttj-jjs
Prior. ;
HYPERBOLIZE,
v.
HYPER'BOLIZE,
To speak
i.
"
gress, or go beyond.] In ancient mythology, a fabulous deity In grammar, a figurative construction, invertthe son of Bacchus and Venus, supposed ing the natural and proper order of words to preside over marriages. and sentences. The species are the anas2. In anatomy, the virginal membrane. trophe, the hysteron proteron, the hypal3. In hotany, the fine pellicle which inclolage, the synchysis, the tmesis, the parenses a flower in the bud. thesis, and the proper hyperbaton, which last is a long retention of the verb which HYMENE'AL, ? Pertaining to marriage HYMENE'AN, ^ Pope. completes the sentence. Encyc.
HyMENE'AL, \ "" A marriage song. HyPER'BOLA, [Gr. vntf, over, beyond, Milton. HYMENE'AN, ^ and /3aW.u, to throw.] HY'MENOPTER, I " [Gr. vfxT,'; a mem In conic sections and geometri/, a ciu"ve forHYMENOP'TERA, S brane, and nti^ov, med by cutting a cone in a direction par-
A
To
exaggerate or
n.
[hyperbola,
and Gr.
form.]
hyperbolic conoid a solid formed by the revolution of a hyperbola about its axis. ;
Ed. Encyc.
HYPERBO'REAN, iirttpSopto;;
vitip,
a.
[h. hyperboreus
beyond, and
;
/Joptas,
Gr. the
north.] 1.
Northern
belonging to or inhabiting a region very far north most northern. ;
;
2.
Very cold
;
frigid.
HYPERBO'REAN,
An
inhabitant of the most northern region of the earth. Tlie ancients gave this denomination to the the and to northward of the people places Scythians, people and regions of which The they had little or no knowledge. Hyperboreans then are the Laplanders, the Samoiedes, and the Russians near the White Sea.
»!.
a wing.] allel to its axis. Encyc In entomology, the hymenopters are an or- A section of a cone, when the cutting plane der of insects, having four membranous makes a greater angle with the base than the side of the cone makes. fl'tbber. wings, and tlie tail of the female mostly armed with a sting. iThe latter definition is the most correct. HYMENOP'TERAL, a. Having four mem IIYPER'BOLE, n. hyper'boly. [Fr. hyperbranous wings. bole ; Gr. i'X£p8o^)j, excess, from vrttfiSaXKa, to throw beyond, to exceed.] HYfllN, n. hym. [L. hymnus ; Gr. v/ivo; In rhetoric, a figure of speech which expresEng. hum.] ses much more or less than the truth, ori song or ode in honor of God, and among pagans, in honor of some deity. hymn which represents things much greater or among christians is a short poem, compo- less, better or worse than they really are. sed for religious service, or a song of joy An object uncommon in size, either great and praise to God. The word primarily or small, strikes us with surprise, and this emotion produces a momentary conviction expresses the tune, but it is used for tli'e ode or poem. tiiat the object is greater or less than it
I.
Fotherby.
HYPER'BOLOID, Ei6o5,
or write
Mountagu. v.
extenuate.
vTitf
defender.
Milner. Chillingu'orth. [Gr. vHipSafoi; fronj iinepto^u, to trans-
uses hyper-
boles.
pclJicnIa, Ijymen.]
A
and
[hyperbola
form.]
in
1.
A
Ho-
Broome.
a.
Having the form, or nearly the form of a
armed
{JVot used.]
a shield.]
membraua HY'PERBATE,
described by
mer
with exaggeration.
A
and
;
HYPERBOL'IFORM,
composition'to denote excess, or something
Hallywell.
HyLOZO'IC,
a species of hyperbaton
arrrti;,
A
Parkhurst
ment.
is
HYPAS'PIST,
ture.
HYLAR'CHI€AL,
HYPERBOL'lCALLY, 2.
austros, for dare classes aiistris.
Hypallage
HYKE,
hypal'lagy. [Gr. vjiax^oyj;,
change, from lutowaffou ii;(o and aXKaaau. to change.] In grammar, a figure consisting of a mutual change of cases. Thus in Virgil, dare ;
Pertaining to the
n.
Bailey.
Spectator.
now HYPALLAGE, n.
latter is
capable of imbibing moisture.
HYGROSTAT'ICS, and
The
n.
HYPERCARBURETED, reted
;
a. Supercarbuhaving the largest proportion of
carbon.
Silliman.
HYPERCATALEC'TIC,
a.
[Gr. vxefixara-
and xara^^i;, termination.] hypercatalectic verse, in Greek and Latin
^.jjxrixos; vTtffi .\
poetry,
is
a verse wliich has a syllable or just measure.
two beyond the regular and
Bailey.
HYPERCRIT'Ie, I'rtfp,
Critic]
Encyc. Gr.
n. [Fr. hypercrilique ;
beyond, and
xfitixo;, critical.
See
beyond measure or
is critical
son; an over rigid
critic
Over
„
I
rea-
critical
critical
S
rhetoric, a figure in which several things] are mcntionecl that seem to make against the argument or in favor of the opposite side, and each of them is refuted in order.]
beyond
use or reason animadverting on faults with unjust severity ; as a hypercritical
HYP'0€AUST,
reader.
1.
;
2.
In
a captious cenDryden
;
sor.
HyPER€RIT'l€, H*PER€RIT'I€AL,
Swift.
Excessively nice or exact
;
Excessive rigor
Med. Repos.
criticism.
HtPERDU'LIA,
n. [Gr. vrtip,
of|
Romish church,
perUsher.
formed
to the virgin Mary. Hi'PER'ICON, n. .lohn's wort.
Stukcly.
HV-PER'METER,
n. [Gr. vjtfp, beyond, ajid measure.] thing greater than the ordinary stand Addison. ard of measure. A verse is called a hypermeter, when it contains a syllable more than the ordinary measure. When this is the case, the following Une begins with a vowel, and the redundant syllable of the former line blends with the first of the following, and they are read as one syllable. a. Exceeding the conmion measure having a redundant Ramhier. syllable. fiitfiov,
Any
HYPERMETRICAL, ;
HyPEROX'YD, Acute
a.
[Gr.
vm? and
ojyd.]
is
I
Darwin. HI? PEROXYMU'RIATE,
is
n. a.
character
S
HYPOCHONDRIACAL,
yy;,
i
HYPOellONDRI'ACISM,
n.
.'V
A
disease of
men, characterized by languor or
n.
HYP'OCIST,
n. [Gr. njtoxifts,
sub
cisto,
un
a.
HYPOPHOS'PHOROUS,
evaporation, till it becomes viscid. It has a very sour taste, reddens vegetable blues, and does not crystalize. Ure.
vrto,
HYPOPHOS'PHITE,
A
n.
acid
hypophosphorous
compound of
and a
salifiable
base.
Ure.
HYPOSTASIS, HYPOS'TASY from
vrto
[L. hypostasis ; Fr. hypostase ; Gr. vrtofooiSj to stand.]
and
;
;
We
;
;
Broton.
A
2.
;
which is hypocrisy. Luke xii. deceitful appearance false Simulation pretence. Hypocrisy is tJie necessary burden of vilRambler. lainy.
HYP'OCRITE, xpiT);5.] ll.
|
;
;
;
to cast.l
and
contains less oxygen than the pho.sphorous, and is obtained from the phosphuret of baryte. It is a liquid which may be concentrated by
terfeiting of religion. Bevv.ire ye of the leaven ol the Pharisees,
;
I.
vrto
The hypophosphorous acid
;
a. [Gr. vrfro;, sleep.] Having the quality of producing sleep; tending to produce sleep narcotic ; soporific.
[Gr.
to feign viia and xpiiu, to separate, Properly, subsistence or substance. Hence discern or judge.] it is used to denote distinct substance, or Simulation a feigning to be what one is subsistence of the Father, Son, and Holy a concealment ot not; or dissimulation, the Spirit, in the Godhead, called by one's real character or motives. More (jireek christians, three hypostases. The Latins more generally used persona to exgenerally, hypocrisy is simulation, or the of virtue a false of api)earance assuming press the sense of hypostasis, antj this is or religion a deceitful show of a good the modern practice. say, the Godcharacter, in morals or religion a counhead consists of thtee persons.
(uai,
1.
n.
phosphorus.]
Encyc. un-
[Gr.
[Gr. vno, under, and
n.
a female.]
term applied to plants that have their corols and stamens inserted under the pistil. Lunier.
cistus.]
hemorrhages.
HYPOti'YNOUS,
A
inspissated juice obtained from the sessile asaruin [Cytinus hypocistis,] resembling the true Egyptian apacia. The juice is expressed from the unripe fruit and evaporated to the consistence of an extract, formed into cakes and dried in the sun. It is an astringent, useful in diarrheas and
HYPOCRATER'IFORM,
earth.]
name given by ancient architects to all the of a building which were under ground, as the cellar, &c. Encyc. jail');,
Hypochondri
acism.
HYPN0T'I€,
Vol.
;
I)arts
debility,
depression of spirits or melancholy, wilh| Darwin. dyspepsy.
;
and SaJAu,
;
;
;
under,
assuming appearance appiiedto persons. Dissembling; concealing one's real char-
\
Kirwan. Phillips. der, xpoT-ijp, acnp, and /orm.] under one, or to Salver-shaped tubular, but suddenly expanding into a flat border at top; applied to a monopetalous corol. mark or short line made between two Bigelow. words to show that they form a compound HYPOCRISY, n. [F^. hypocrisie ; L. hypoword, or are to be connected as in preurtoxpirocrisis; Gr. iirtoxpiBt;, simulation
vrto,
terfeiting a religious a false and deceitful
,
n. [Gr. i^"',
oxygen than sulphuric acid. H^f POB'OLE, n. hypob'oly. [Gr.
^
I
Its color is
n. medicine that produces, or tends to produce sleep; an opiate; a narcotic a soporific. •Hypo, a Greek preposition, iJto, under, beneath iised in composition. Thus, hypo sidphuric acid is an acid containing less
Simulating; coun-
n. plu.
one.]
HYPNOT'IC,
I
;
2.
The hypcrory- An
occupied ; five-leafed ; ink-stand. In writing and printing, the hyphen is used to connect the syllables of a divided word, and is placed after the syllable that closes a line, denoting the connection of that syllable or part of a word with the first syl lable of the next line.
to cheat in vain.
Dryden.
Jameson.
A
you seek
A
}
HY'PHEN,
Job
a false
j
the chloric acid.
between grayisli and greenish black, but nearly copper-red on the cleavage. So named from its dithcult frangibility. [Gr. vjtfp and aSivo^.]
who assumes
one
;
HYPERPHYS'I€AL, a. Supernatural. A mineral, LahraHY'PERSTENE, "' dor hornblend, or HY'PERSTHENE, \ schillerspar.
;
Fair hypocrite,
[Sec Hypochon-' dna-]
I
HYPOCHONDRIASIS, as
dissembler
;
Med. Repos.
The same
destitute of
HYPOGASTRIC,
der the
mxinalic acid
is
shall perish.
HYPOCRITICALLY,
cidorale.
HYPEROXYMURIAT'le,
A
HYPOCRIT'IC, HYPOCRIT'ICAL,
;
beyond,
\
hope
acter or motives. [Gr. from vrto 3. Proceeding from hypocrisy, or marking and x'i'ft"'!, a cartilage.] hypocrisy; as a h>ipocriticaJ face or look. 1. In anatomy, the sides of the belly under adv. With simulathe cartilages of the spurious ribs the tion with a false appearance of what is spaces on each side of the epigastric re-| good falsely without sincerity. Coxe. Encyc.' o. [Gr. i.jto, under, and gion. Taller. Jlypochondriac complaints. yofjjp, the belly.] HYPOCHON'DRIAC, a. Pertaining to thej 1. Relating to the hypogastrium, or middle hypochondria, or the parts of the body so part of the lower region of the belly. called as the hypochondriac region. 2. An appellation given to the internal Affected by a disease, attended with debilbranch of the iliac artery. Encyc. ity, depression of spirits or melancholy. n. [Gr. vrtoyoj-pto. HyPOGAS'TROCELE, Producing melancholy, or low spirits. and xjj?.);, a tumor.] HYPOCHON'DRIAC, n. person afiected .\ hernia or rupture of the lower belly. with debility, lowness of spirits or melanCoie. cholv. 11YP0(5E'UM, n. [Gr. ujto, under, and yoMt a. The same as or the
and oxygenated, or oxygenized.] Super-saturated with oxygen.
2.
modems, the place where a fire warm a stove or a hot-house. Encyc
HYPOCHONDRIA,
[Gr. vHt?.
"'
EncycJ and
the
kept to
when he
the hypocrite^s
appearance.
hypochondriac.
Cleaveland.
And
Greeks and Romans, a subterwhere was a furnace to heat
the
IIYPOCIIONDRES, IIYPOCHON'DRY,
to excess, as a crystal.
H'VPEROX'YGENATED, HYPEROX'YtiENIZED,
Atnong
aiid
imXtM, service.] Super-service in the
.3.
Bailey.
beyond,
Among
a.ssumes an appearance of
viii.
v;to
;
who
piety and virtue, true religion.
iani!ous place baths.
JUvelyn.j
n.
n. [Gr. vrtoxav;ov
power, or
xaia, to burn.]
as a hyptrcrit'
ical punctilio.
HV^PERCRIT'ICISM,
HYP
HYP
HYP One who
n.
IIYPO.^TAT'IC,
?
llYPOSTAT'ICAL,
i
"•
Relating to hypostasis
;
constitutive.
Let our Cameades warn men not
to subscribe grand doctrine of the chimists, touchuig their three hyjwstatical principles, till they have a little examined it. Boyle.
to the
2. Personal, or distinctly personal ; or con[Fr. hypocrite; Gr. irtoPearson. stituting a distinct substaiice.
One who feigns to be what he is not one who has the form of godliness without the ;
104
HtPOSLL PHATE, posulpluiric acid
n.
A compound
and a base.
ofhy-
HYPOSULPHITE, posiilpliiiroua acid
A compund
n.
and a
of
HYP0THE€A'TI0N,
liy
Ilyposulphuric acid, is an acid combination of sulphur and oxygen, intermediate between sulphurous lire. and suluhucic acid.
HVPOSUL'PHUROUS,
a.
Hyposulphurous acid is an acid containing less oxygen than sulphurous acid. This acid is known with salifiable bases. in combination only Vre.
[Gr.vnoti^vovaa^pnrUoi: vrtatii.i'u, to subtend.] In geometry, the subtense or longest side of a right-angled triangle, or the line that subtends the right angle. Encyc. HYPOTH'EeATE, v. I. [L. hypolheca, a Gr. vnodrixTi, from vnonSrifii, to pledge i
1.
put under, to suppose.] To pledge, and properly to pledge tlie keel of a ship, that is, the ship itself, as security for tlie repayment of money borrowed to carry on a voyage. In this case the lender hazards the loss of his money by the loss of the ship; but if the ship returns .safe, he receives his principal, with the
premium or
may
interest agreed on, though it e.\ceed the legal rate of interest. Blackstone. Park
To pledge, as goods, riYPOTH'ECATED, pp.
Pledged, as secu-
money borrowed.
11YP0TH'E€ATING,
ppr. Pledging as se-
ciiritv.
I
n. One who pledges a ship or other property, as security for the
and the
letter,
third
vowel of
machine, intrigue. guage, most English words this long sound shortened, as in holi7icss, pity, gift;
is
in
which words the sound of i coincides with that ofy in hypocrite, cycle, and at the end of words,
unaccented
in
holy, glory.
French and
It
is
syllables, as in this short sound of the
Italian
pronunciation
of
i,
which we hear in the which we pro
bee>i,
bin. After 1, this letter lias some times the liquid sound of y, as in million,
nounce
pronounced milyon. This .sound cones ponds with that of the Hebrews, as in Joseph, which in Syria is pronounced Yostph, and with the sound of the Ger-
man j, as 'mja,jahr, that is, ya, yahr. The sound oft long, as mjinc, kind, arise,
is
diphthongal it begins with a sound ap preaching that of broad a, but it is not exactly the same, as the organs are not open ;
plant, or genus of plants, one species of which is cultivated for use. The leaves have an aromatic smell, and a warm pungent taste. Hyssop was much used by
Jews
tlie
in purifications.
HYSTER'le,
I "•
[Fr.
Encyc. Gr. ;
hysterique
from i-ffpa, HYSTER'I€AL, S v;t(,ixos, repayment of money borrowed. the womb.] Judge Johnson. HyPOTH'ESIS, n. [L. from Gr. ujtoflfsis, a Disordered in the region of the womb ; supposition
and 1.
A
to
vnotiQtmi,
;
suppose
which
troubled with
vno
;
disease of women, proceeding from the womb, and characterized by fits or spasmodic affections of the nervous system. Encyc. A spasmodic disease of the prima via, attended with the sensation of a ball rollabout the stomach and abdomen, ing
a proposition or principle supposed or taken for granted, in
is
;
draw a conclusion or inference proof of the point in question something not proved, but assumed for the purof Encyc. argument. pose A system or tlieory imagined or assumed to account for what ii not understood. order to for
2.
;
Encyc
HtPOTHET'IC, HYPOTHET'ICAL,
Including a suppo-
)
sition
S
;
conditional
assumed without proof for the purpose of Watts. reasoning and deducing proof.
HYPOTHET'I€ALLY, supposition
;
adv.
By way
of]
conditionally.
HYSSOP,
\
,
«•%«»/'• n.hy'sop. ' i^
[I L--
from
%«»;"«; Gr
U„«oi. iirtnuwoc.
It
and
A
species of hernia, caused by a displaceLunier. Coxe-
A
last,
and
[Gr.vffpo.,
npottpoK, first.]
rhetorical figure,
when
that
said last
is
Peacham
first.
n. [Gr. .^rtpo, the uterus, and ro/ij;, a cutting.] In surgery, the Cesarean section ; the operation of cutting into the uterus for taking
out a fetus, which cannot be excluded by the usual means.
HYTHE,
71.
ed
as in
prefix ge
The sound,
is
womb,
the
ment of the womb.
sound begins a
it
v;i(,a,
A rupture containing the uterus. HYS'TERON PROT'ERON, n.
would
be well to write this word hysop.]
word,
[Gr.
a tumor.]
xrj'Kt],
HYSTEROT'OMY,
China. ?
Coxe.
throat.
HYS'TEROCELE, n.
which was done
71.
IIY'SOP,
or nervous affections.
fits
HYSTER'I€S, n. A
rtSijfti.]
supposition
to the same extent, and therefore the little above that of aiv.\ if continued, closes with one that nearly approaches to that of e long. Sheiiiitic jod, je, or ye, in Greek lura, This sound can be learned only by the ear. whence our English word jV. This vowseveral digraphs, as in el in French, and in most European lan- This letter enters into fail, field, seize, feign, ircin, friend ; and guages, has the long fine sound which we in oil, join, coin, it helps to form a witli express by e in me, or ee in seen, meek. proper diphthong. This sound we retain in some foreign words which are naturalized in our lan- No English word ends with i, but when the sound of the letter occurs at the end of a as in But in IS till- iiinlh
English Alpliabet. We receive it ihrough the Latin and Greek from the
the
A
HYPOTHEC ATOR,
HYRSE,n. Airs. [G.hirse.] Millet. A wood, [See Hurst.] HYRST, Park HY'SON, n. A species of green tea
2.
rity for
act of pledg;
Henry.
HYPOT'ENUSE,n.
The
n.
ing, as a ship or goods, for the repayment of money borrowed to carry on a voyage otherwise called bottomry.
salifiable base.
H YPOSUL'PHURIC, a.
ibuill,
written I,
pron.
;
A
[See Hithe.]
port.
is a contraction of the Saxon and more generally this was
J/.]
[Sax. ic
Goth. D.
;
ik
;
G.
ich ;
Sw. jag; Daa.jeg; Gr. tyu;
L. fg-o ; Port. ; Vr.je; Sans, again. the nominative so W. Either ego ia mi, Fr, moi, Hindoo, me. contracted from mego, or I and me are from different roots. It is certain that m€ See Me.} is contracted from meg or mig.
eu In
S]>.
;
yo
;
It.
Armoric me
io
is
;
expressed by
y. The pronoun of the first person the word and stands for which expresses one's self, or that by repeated in times, which a speaker or writer denotes himWhen it stands II, two, HI, three, self. It is only the nominative case of the before V or X, it subtracts itself, and the pronouu ; in the other cases we use me. numerals denote one less than the V or /am attached to study study delights me. the X. Thus IV expresses four, one less often hear iu popular language the than V, five IX stands for nine, one less phrase it is me, which is now considered than X, ten. But when it is placed after But the for it is I. V or X, it denotes the addition of an unit, to be ungrammatical, phrase may have come down to us from or as many units as the letter is repeated the use of the Welsh mi, or from the Thus VI is five and one, or six, in times. French use of the phrase, c'est moi. and XI is ten and one, or eleven ; VIII In the plural, we use tee, and us, which stands for five and three, or eight, &c. Among the ancient Romans, Ij stood for appear to be words radically distinct 500 from /. CIo, for 1000 ; loo, Cor 5000 CCIoo. for 10.000; loOO, for 50,000 ; and Johnson observes that Sbakspeare uses / CCCIooO. for 100,000. In this he is not followed, for ay or yes. and the Use is incorrect-. I, formerly prefixed to some English words.
As a numeral as as
many
;
I
signifies one,
units as
it
is
&c.
;
We
;
;
ICE
I
ICO
C H
is of the eggs and young n. [Fr. iamhique ; Encyc. latitudes. Gr. MifiStxoj.] [See IchnograI foot con- This term is applied to such elevated raass-] ICIINOGRAPII'IC, Pertaining to the iambus, a poetic ?%•] Pertaines as exist in the valleys of the frigid ICHNOGRAPH'l€AL, S one folshort a of two syllables, sisting ing to ichnography describing a groundzones; to those which are found on the lowed by a long one. surface of fixed ice and to ice of great plot. In lAM'BIe, } [L. iambus ; Gt. lajiSoi.] thickness and highth in a floating state. leHNOG'RAPHY, n. [Gr. i;ivo,-, a footlAM'lJUS, S '"'poeliy, a foot consisting of These lofty floating masses are sometimes step, and ypcKfu, to describe.] two syllables, the first short and the last detached from the icebergs on shore, and In perspective, the view of any tiling cut oflf line long, as in ddighl. The following sometimes formed at a distance from any by a plane parallel to the horizon, just at consists wholly of iambic feet. the base of it a ground-plot. Encyc. land. They are found in both the frigid He scornslthe forceithat darolhiM fulry stay. n. [Gr. i;tup.] .\ thin watery huzones, and are sometimes carried towards I'CHOR, short of I AM'BI€S, n.plu. Verses com))osed Ed. Encyc. mor, like serum or whey. the equator as low as 40°. and long syllables alternately. Anciently, 2. Sanious matter flowing from an ulcer. seamen 11. A name by ICEBLINK, given certain songs or satires, supposed to have Encyc. to a bright appearance near the horizon, given birth to ancient comedy. occasioned by the ice, and observed before I'CHOROUS, a. Like ichor; thin ; watery ; serous. IBEX, n. [L.] The wild goat of the genus the ice itself is seen. Encyc. Capra, which is said to be the stock of the ICEBOAT, n. A boat constructed for mov- 2. Sanious. tame goat. It has large knotty horns ref ICH'THYOeOL, [Gr. t^Sv;, a fi.sb, ing on ice. and xo»^, glue.J clining on its back, is of a yellowish color, to- ICHTHYOCOL'LA, ^ and its beard is black. It inhabits the ICEBOUND, a. In seaman's language, a glue prepared Fish-glue isinglass to be in so as with surrounded ice, tally Tooke. Encyc, from the sounds offish. Alps. Diet, Mar. capable of advancing. The Mgagrus, or wild goat of the mounleH'THYOLITE, n. [Gr. i.x9vi,a. fish, an.l ICE BUILT, a. Composed of ice. tains of Persia, appears to be the stock of Xt9o5, a stone.] 1. Loailed with ice. a distinct Gra^. is The Ibex the tame goat. speFossil fish or the figure or imfiression of a A
accumulated
L. iamhicus;
lAM'BIC,
in valleys in
as the ichneumon of the crocodile.
high northern
;
;
;
;
;
ICEHOUSE,
Cuvier.
cies.
n.
[ice
and house.]
;
reposi-
Hitchcock.
fish in rock. tory for the preservation of ice during to IBIS, n. [Gr. and L.] A fowl of the genus warm weather a pit with a drain for con l€HTHYOLO(iTCAL, a. Pertaining Tantalus, and grallic order, a native of iehthvology. off"tfie water of the ice when dis veying and bill is long, subulated, Egypt. The ICllTllYOL'OcirST, ti. [See Ichthyology] a roof. with covered and solved, usually somewhat crooked the face naked, and One versed in ichthyology. the feet have four toes palmated at the ICEISLE, 71. iceile. [ice and isle.] A vast ICHTHYOLOGY, n. [Gr. i;t9v;,afish, and • base. This fowl was much valued by the body of floating ice, such as is oflen seen xoyo(, discourse.] ofl' the banks of Newis in the It for Atlantic, destroying serpents. The .science of fishes, or that part of zoology Egyptians J. Harlow. foundland. 8ald by Bruce not now to inhabit Egypt, which treats of fishes, their structure, When flat and extending beyond the form and classification, their habits, uses, but to be found in Abyssinia. Encyc. reach of sight, it is called field ice ; when The ibis of the Egyptians is a species of the &c. Encyc. Ed. Encyc. smaller, but of very large dimensions, it is leHTHYOPH'AGOUS, a. genus Scolopax. It was anciently vene[Gr. cx9v(, fish, a fioe ; when lofty, an iceberg. called rated cither because it devoured serpents, and ^rwyu, to eat.] Eating or subsisting on There are numerous other terms for thej fish. or because the marking of its phimage re D'Jlnville. diflerent appearances of floating ice. aembled one of the phases oftl)o moon, or n. [supra.] The pracICHTHYOPH'AgY, Ed. Encyc. because it appeared in Egypt with the ristice of eating fish. Cuvier. ing of the Nile. ICELANDER, n. A native of Iceland. ICHTHYOPHTHAL'MITE, n. [Gr.
;
I
;
m
;
;
;
;
to any attempt ; to remove the first obEncyc. destroying rats and mice. structions or difficulties; to open the way Ichncumon-fiy, a genus of flies, of the orderj Shak of hymenopters, containing several hun-j
to convert into ; ICE, V. t. To cover with Fletche ice. 2. To cover with concreted sugar ; to frost. ice
'
Puller. 3. To ICEBERG, n. chill
;
to freeze. [ice
or inouutaiii of
berg, a hill.] A hill or a vast body of ice
and G. ice,
These animals have jaws,' .species. the antennas have more than thirty joints, and are kept in continual motion. The abdomen is generally petiolated, or joined to the body by a i)cdThese animals are great destroyers icle. of caterpillars, jilunt-l;ce and other insects
Enci/c. a.
ICONOGRAPHY,
ti.
and
dred
but no tongue
leONOCLAS'Tle,
Breaking images." [Gr. tixov, an intjage,
ypo^i", to describe.]
The
description of images or ancient statues, busts, semi-busts, paintings in fi-esco, mosaic works, and ancient pieces of miniature.
;
ICONOL'ATER, I
and
ii.
[Gr.
xorpfvj, a servant.]
axm, an image,
IDE
D E
1
One that worships images a name ;
have an idea of any thing
given to
n. [Gr. tt*«i', an image, and a discourse.] doctrine of images or representations. Johnson.
tjoyos,
The
F€OSAHE'DRAL, and
seat, equal sides.
a.
leOSAHE'DRON,
n.
Having twenty
[supra.]
A
solid of
twenty equal sides. In geometry, a regular solid, consisting of twenty triangular pyramids, whose vertices meet in the center of a sphere supposed to circumscribe it, and therefore have their highths and bases equal. Encyc. Enfield. ICOSAN'DER, n. [Gr. uxoai, twenty, and onyp,
2.
a male.]
In botany, a plant having twenty or more 3. LAnne. stamens inserted in the calyx. Note. A writer on botany has suggested
Her
sweet
idea
wandered
class,
Calycandria.
Journ. of Science.
n. Pertaining to the class of plants, Icosandria, having twenty or
more stamens inserted in the calyx. } ictericus, from icterus, I€'TERIe, °- [L.
V. i. To become the same; to coalesce in interest, purpose, use, effect,
IDEN'TIFV, &.C.
—
An enlightened self-interest, which, when well understood, they tell us will identify witk an interest more enlarged and pubUc. Bterke.
IDEN'TlFtING, ppr. Ascertaining or,provng 2.
[Fr. ideniiU.]
Sameness,
Roman calendar, -eight days each month the first day of which fell on the 13th of January, Februaiy, April, June, August, September, November and December, and on the 15th of March, May, July and October. The ides came between the calends and the nones, and were reckoned backwards. This method of reckoning is still retained in the chancery of Rome, and in the calendar of the in
These
Existing in idea intellectual as ideal knowledge.
a. ;
n.
We
sity.
law.
mental
same.
&c.
IDEN'TITY,
decithe idea, that the principles are derived froin the civil
IDE'AL,
to be the
Making the same in interest, purpose, use, efficacy,
through his tained.] Fairfax. In the ancient
thoughts.
An
is
as distinguished from simihtude and diverspeak of the identity of goods found, the identity of person,s, or of personal identity. Locke. South. even pur- IDES, n. plu. [L. idus. Q,u. the Hetrurian iduo, to divide, the root of wide, divide, individual. The etymology is not ascer-
and
ception, thought, opinion, pose or intention. Image in the mind.
I
taken to identify the interests of the people, and of the rulers. Jiamsay.
Every precaution
InJ|
perceptions. Darwin uses idea for a notion of external things which our organs bring us acquainted with originally, and he defines it, a contraction, motion or configuration of the fibers which constitute the immediate organ of sense ; synonymous with which he sometimes uses sensual motion, in contradistinction to muscular motion. Zoon. In popular use, idea signifies notion, con-
that as the proper character of plants of tliis [jj bad use of the word.] class is the insertion of the stamens in the ca- 4. opinion ; a proposition. lyx, it might be expedient to denominate the sions are incompatible with
iCOSAN'DRIAN,
it.
According to modem writers on mental philosophy, an idea is the object of thought, or the notice which the mind takes of its
[Gr. uxoai, twenty,
basis.]
iSfia,
conceive
philosophical use, it does not signify that acton the mind which we call thought or conception, but some object of thought. Reid.
the Romanists.
leONOL'OOY,
D
I
is to
;
;
;
always be a wide interval between Rambler. practical and ideal excellence. the jaundice. breviary. Encyc. 2. Visionary existing in fancy or imagina 2. Good in the cure of the jaundice. IDIOC'RASY, n. [Gr. iSw;, proper, pecultion as ideal only good. ICTERIC, n. remedy for the jaundice. 3. That considers ideas as iar to one's self, and xpaii;, mixture, temimages, phanSwift. from to mix.] xijxuj, xcpaii'tviii, perament, tasms, or forms in the mind as the ideal ICTERI"TIOUS, a. [L. icterus, jaundice.] Peculiaiity of constitution ; that temperatheory or philosophy. Yellow having tlie color of the skin or state of constitution, which is IDE'ALISM, n. The system or theoiy that ment, to a when it is affected by the jaundice. peculiar person. and makes to consist in ideas, every thing I'CY, a. [from ice.] Abounding with ice ; as IDIOCRAT'IC, I "• Pecuhar in constidenies the existence of material bodies. the icy regions of the north. tution. Walsh. IDIOCRAT'lCAL, 2. Cold ; frosty Shak. as icy chains. ID'IOCY, n. [Gr. .b^utna. See Idiot.] i. V. To form ideas. 3. Made of ice. IDE'ALIZE, defect of understanding properly, a natu4. Resembling ice ; chilling. IDE'ALLY, adv. Intellectually mentally ral defect. in idea. Brown. Religion lays not an icy hand on the true joys Idiocy and lunacy excuse from the guilt of Buckminster. IDE'ATE, V. t. To form in idea to fancy. of life. crime. Encyc. 5. Cold; frigid; destitute of affection or pasin Donne. [J^Tot use.] IDIOELEC'TRIC, a. [Gr. tSioj, separate sion. Shak. IDENTIC, [Fr. identique ; Sp. idenfrom others, peculiar to one's self, and 0. Indifferent ; unaffected ; backward. tico ; from L. idem, the electric] Shak. same.] I'CY-PEARLED,a. Studded with spangles The same ; not different as the identical Electric ;;erse, or containing electricity in its natural state. of ice. Milton Gregory. the identical proposition. person found on the thief the identical goods that ID'IOM, n. [Fr. idiome ; L. idioma, from Vd, contracted from I would, or I had. Gr. (Siioua, from i&wi, proper, or peculiar to were lost. IDE'A, n. [L. idea ; Fr. idee ; Gr. liia, from one's self. The root of tSio; is that of diL. to n. The act of ma
JCTER'IeAL,
I
jaundice.]
Aftectedwith
There
will
;
A
;
;
;
.
<,
A
;
;
;
IDENTICAL
;
\
I
;
We
;
£i8u,
1.
see,
video.]
IDENTIFICATION,
Literally, that which is .seen ; hence, form, king or proving to be the same. image, model of any thing in the mind IDEN'TIFiED,;)/j. Ascertained or made to that which is held or comprehended by be the same. the understanding or intellectual facul IDEN'TIFV, V. t. [L. idem, the same, and ties. facio, to make.] I have used the word idea, to express what- 1. To ascertain or prove to be the same. ever is meant by phantasm, notion, species, oi The owner of the goods found them in the whatever it is which the mind can be employpossession of the thief, and identified them. ed about in thinking. Locke 2. To make to be the same to unite or com Whatever the mind perceives in itself, or is bine in such a manner as to make one in terest,
purpose or intention
having the
same
same use
;
to
;
Hetrurian
badda, to separate.
iViio,
tvide,
Class. Bd.
Ar.
No.
A mode of expression peculiar to a lanpeculiarity of expression or phraseology. In this sense, it is useil in the plural to denote forms of speech or phraseology, peculiar to a nation or language
;
guage.
And
to treat as
to just
idioms
consider as the
in effect.
Eng. widow,
!•] 1.
;
the immediate object of perception, thought or Locke understanding, that I call an idea. The attention of the understanding to the olijects acting on it, by which it becomes sensible of the impressions they make, is called by logicians, perception ; and the notices them selves as they exist in the mind, as the materi als of thinking and knowledge, are distinguish cd by the name of ideas. Encyc. art. Logic. An idea is the rellex perception of objects, sfter the original perception or impression has been felt by the mind. Encyc. In popular langimge, idea signifies the same To thing as conception, apprcheosion, notion.
inde,
^j
2.
fix
our doubtful speech. Prior.
The
genius or peculiar cast of a language.
Paul has identified the two ordinances, circumcision and baptism, and thus, by demonHe followed the Latin language, but did not have one and the same use Dryden. comply with the idiom of ours. and meaning, he has exhibited to our view th 3. Dialect. seal (jod's same of covenant. JJ\L Mason. very } Peculiar to a lanThat treaty in fact identified Spain with the IDIOMATIC, "' to IDIOMAT'ICAL, pertaining ^ guage republican government of France, by a virtual the particular genius or modes of expresacknowledgment of unqualified vassalage, and sion which belong to a language ; as aii by specific stipulations of unconditional defense.
strating that they
;
British Declaration, Jan. 1805.
idiomatic phrase.
D L
I
IDIOMAT'ICALLY, ndv. idiom of a
a.
Why
to the
2.
;
proceeds from some but sympathetic, when the brain consequence of some other disorDaninn. Encyc.
fault
m
it is tlie
der.
4.
;
Useless
vain
;
Down
thetically. n.
and rtaSoj,
iJioj,
[Gr.
7.
suffering,
applied
I'DOL,
is idle.
lum
as idle rage.
;
1.
n. [Fr. idole ; It. Sp. idolo ; L. idoGr. jiSuXov, from njoj, form, or iiiu,
An
image, form or representation, usualof a man or other animal, consecrated as an object of worship q pagan deity. Idols are usually statues or images, carved out of wood or stone, or formed of metals, particularly silver or gold. ly
vast and idle desarts.
SJuik.
;
;
Hooker.
ftaa-
;
to see.]
idlt:
Shak. Idle weeds. Obs. Trifling ; vain of no importance ; as an idle story ; an idle reason ; idle arguments.
proper, i)ecul-
disease, from
;
Afilt^n. weapons dropped. barren ; not productive of
their
Of antres
8.
IDIOPATHY,
ineffectual
;
;
good.
not
then
It
vacant; not occupied; ;
is
symsignifies, pathic fever. not arising from pathetic or symptomatic, Good. any previous disease. IDIOPATH'leALLY, adv. By means of its own disease or affections ; not sympa-
;
idle hours.
;
Remaining unused unemployed to things ; as, my sword or spear
also applied to idiopathic 6. Unfruitful well as local diseases, as idio-
general as
mineral, the vesuvian of AVenier, sometimes massive, and very often in shining Its primitive form is prismatic crystals. a four-sided prism with square bases. It is found near Vesuvius, in unaltered rocks ejected by the volcano also in primitive rocks, in various other localities. Cleaveland. ;
it
The term
iar,
;
Affording leisure as idle time
;
when
A
Matt.
to labor or
msui
D O
I
the day idle ?
all
Rambler. To be idle, is to be vicious. Slothful; given to rest and case; averse employment; lazy ; as an irf/e an idle fellow.
Per
[See Idiopnlhy.]
a disease taining to idiopathy indicating oftJio body, peculiar to a particular part and not arising from any preceding disease as idiopathic licad-ach. The epilepsy is idiopathic,
st«nd ye here
XX.
liiiigdage.
IDIOPATHIC,
D O
I According
Dryden.
The gods
Steijl.
Unprofitable ; not tending to edification. Every idle word that men shall speak, they shall give an account thereof in the day of judg-
2.
of the nations are idols.
Ps. xcvi.
An
image. Nor ever idol seemed
so
much
alive.
Dryden. ment. Matt. xii. Xu, to suffer.] loved and honored to adoraAn original disease in a particular part of Idle differs fiom lazy ; the latter implying 3. tion.person The [irince was the idol of the peoin-: the body a disease peculiar to some part aversion or or hal)itiial constitutional ple. of the body and not proceeding from andisposition to labor or action, sluggish- 4. Any thing on which we set our affections; Coxe. Encyc. other disease. ness; whereas trf/c, in its proper sense, dethat to which we indulge an excessive and More. 2. Peculiar affection. notes merely unemployed. An industri.sinful attachment. ithe caimot be but be ous man may idle, IDIO-REPUL'SIVE, a. Repulsive by Little children, keep yourselves from idols. of heat. as the
A
1.
;
self;
idio-repulsive
power
lazy.
1
in inacn. [Gr. liioi, proper, I'DLE, V. i. To lose or spend time tion, or without being employed in busiaw, with, and xpaTi;, temperament.] ness. or organization of peculiar temperament a transitive sense, to spend a body, by which it is rendered more lia- To idle away, in in idleness as, to idle aicay time. ble to certain disorders than bodies differa. [idle and head.] FoolCoxe. Encyc I'DLEUEADED, ently constituted. Careiv. unreasonable. ish ID'IOT, n. [L. idiota; Gr. i4t«r»i«. private, 2. Delirious infatuated. [Little used.] that from iSioj, unskilled, peculiar, vulgar, L'Estrange. Fr. It. idiota ; simple Sp. is, separate, IDLENESS, 1%. Abstinence from labor or See Idiom.] idiot. the state of a person who is A natural fool, or fool from his birth ; a employment; in labor, or unoccupied in Imman being in form, but destitute of rea- unemployed business; the state of doing nothing. Llleof intellectual powers son, or the ordinary ness is the parent of vice. man. Through the idleness of the hands the house A person who has umlerstanding enough to droppeth through. Ecclcs. x measure a yard of clotli, number twenty corAversion to labor reluctance to be em&c. is not an rectly, tell &ie days of the week, or ployed, or to exertion cither of body tlie law.
John
lDIOSYN'€RASY,
A
of
V.
An idol is any thing which usurps the place God in the hearts of his rational creatures. S. Jildlfr.
I
A
1.
;
;
2.
.
A
one unwise. Like au idiot : foolish
foojish person
IDIOT' I€, a
is ;
sot-
idiocy
a.
Like an
idiot
Pahy.
foolish.
;
It. Sp. idion. [Fr. idiolisme Gr. iSturis^mj, a form of spcecli ta-
ID'lOtiSM, tismo .
;
pai'taking of 3.
;
:
ken from the vulgar, from iStoj.] An idiom a ])eculiarity of expression a mode of expression peculiar to a Ian a peculiarity in the structure of ; ;
;
guage words and phrases.
to thciv
2; Idiocy.
But
it
would be well
word
Unimportance
;
for
v.i.
IDOL'ATRiZE,
v.
this'
t.
;
a.
;
ship.
Shak. 2. Consisting in or partaking of an excessive attachment or reverence as an idolatrous veneration for antiquitvIDOL'ATROUSLY, adv. In an idolatrous manner with excessive reverence.
Ai)es of idleness.
;
;
;
;
tria
who
1.
;
Whitlock.
[.Vo( used.]
Hooker. n. [Fr. idoUUrie ; L. idololaGr. nSuXoXorptu» ; uSufjof, idol, and tarpivu, to worship or serve.] The worship of idols, images, or any thing made by hands, or which is not God. Idolatry is of two kinds; the worship of images, statues, pictures, &c. made by hands ; and the worship of the heavenly bodies, the sun, moon and stars, or of demons, angels, men and animals. Encyc. Excessive attachment or veneration for any thing, or that which borders on ado-
IDOL'ATRY,
Overhury.
and keep I'DLY, adv.
female worshiper of
To worship idols. To adore to worship.
;
it.
n. One who does nothing; one spends his time in inaction, or without being engaged in business. a sluggard. 2. A lazy person Raleigh. Beddoes, Hygeia. I'DLESBY, 11. An idle or lazy person.
to restrain this
di-
Pertaining to idolatry ; part:d
trivialuess.
Hale
to its proi)er signification, irfion/and idiotism distinct.
who pays
one
Ainsiporth.
InefRcacy; uselessness. [Little used.] Barrenness worthlessness. [Little used.] 6. Emptiness; foolishness; infatuation; as Bacon. idleness of hra'w. [Little used .] I'DLEPATED, a. Idleheaded stupid. 5.
A
n.
lDOL'.\TRIZE,
I'DLER,
terminations and native language, to
Scholars sometimes give iJiotism.i suitable
words newly invented.
word may be used
;
;
IDOLATROUS,
laziness; sloth ; sluggishness. This properly laziness ; but itileness is often
the effect of laziness, and sometimes
tish.
ID'IOTISH,
Idolatry.]
idols.
mind;
;
See i
IDOLATRESS,
;
Enci/c.
A
vine honors to images, statues, or representations of any thing made by hands ; one who worships as a deity that which a pagan. is not God An adorer a great admirer. Hurd. ;
.
eye of
£i^i-Xo>.orp);5.
worshiper of
Gr.
;
idiot in the
representation. Spenser. [.Vol in use.] ri. [Fr. idolalre ; L. idololatra ;
IDOL'ATER,
;
In an idle manner; without
em])loyment
;
V. i. To become stupid. 2. Lazily sluggishly. 2. Pers. Letters. 3. Foolishly uselessly in a trifling way. A shilling spent idly by a fool, may be saved; [Sax. idel. ydel, vain, empty ration. Franklin. wiser a D. idle, frivolous; person. by n(f/, mere, pure, ydel, without attention. Prior. MUton. I'DOLISH, a. Idolatrous. Sw. idel, jnere 4. Carelessly vain, empty, idle Dan. to reason idly I'DOLISM, n. The worship of idols. [Litpure, unmixed. Class Dl. No. 6. IG. 25. 5. Vainly ineffectually as, tle used.] Milton. against truth.
ID'IOTIZE,
;
|
I'DLE,
a.
;
;
;
G
;
;
;
;
29.] 1.
|
Not employed ness
|
;
inactive
;
unoccupied with busidoing nothing.
;
ID'bcRASE, mixture
;
a
n. [Gr. tito, form,
mixed
figure.]
and
xpaatj,; i
I'DOLIST,
n. .A
poetical word.
worshiper of images
;
n.
MUton
.
G N
I
[L. ignominia ; in and name or reputation Fr. ignominie.] IG'NIFY, V. I. [L. ignis and/acio.] To formj Pubhc disgrace ; shame reproach ; dishonor infamy. into fire. Stukely. Their generals have been received with honIGNIF'LUOUS, a. [L. ignijluns.] Flowmg
Many other stones, besides cents, produce a real scintillation
;
;
[L. ignis,
to
tens, powerful.] Presiding over fire.
Vulcan
probably to be strong,
GNIS FATUUS, ra. IGNIS
to reverence.
IDO'NEOUS,
a.
[L.
idoneus
power
;
;
Boyle. [Liltle used.] n. [L. idylUutn; Gr. nhvXUm ; supposed to be from fi5o<, form.]
poem
IGNI'TE,
iegland ; composed of le, ca,\ water, Fr. eau, contracted from L. aqua,\ and land. This is the genuine English; word, always used in discourse, but for
of Fr.
is
V.
or set on
tiax. ealond,
which
Pope
with ignominy after ; yours Addison. conquest. Vice begins in mistake, and ends in igno-
miny.
IGNORA'MUS, 1.
More
9.
t.
[L. ignis,
To
fire.]
kindle,
fire.
generally, to
communicate
fire ;
ous coal. used island, an absurd compound V. and land, which signifies land IGNI'TE, with heat.
To
i.
take
fire
;
to
;
J?!
1.
;
;
is
It
in-
ness.
IGNI"TION, on
n-
The
know
;
from L. ignorantia
;
ignarus, ignorant
;
and gnarus, knowing.]
Want, absence or destitution of knowl;
|
from gifan, Goth, giban, to give. used as the sign of a condition, or it
[Fr.
edge the negative state of the mind which has not been instructed in arts, literature or science, or has not been informed of facts. Ignorance may be general, or it
become red
IGNl'TED,;;p. Set pn fire. portion of land surrounded by water; 2. Rendereil red or luminous by heat or fire as Bermuda, Barbadoes, Cuba, Great BritIGNI'TING, ppr. Setting on fire becoming Borneo. ain, red with heat. 2. A large mass of floating ice. 9. Communicating fire to heating to red 2. IF, V. t. imperative, contracted from Sax. f^if,
South. n.
ignoro, not to
isle
A
Rambler. are ignorant;
knowledge.
IG'NORANCE,
in water-land, or rather ietand-land.]
1.
we
[L.
are stopped, and the accused person is discharged. a vain pretender to All ignorant person
to, as.
or to render luminous or red by heat Anthracite is to ignite charcoal or iron. than bituminignited with more difticulty
n.
from ignoro.] The indorsement which a grand jury make on a bill presented to them for inquiry, when there is not evidence to support the charges, on which all proceedings
Ed. Encyc.
;
;
'
;
or after their defeat
po-
called the
is
A
tvisp,
properly, a short pastoral poem as the idyls of Theocritus. stands for L. id est, that is. /. e. I'ELAND, n. i'land. [G. and D. eiland;
short
and
grounds, extricated from putrephosphoric matter or by fying animal or vegetable substances, some inflammable gas; vulgarly called Jack with a lantern. and the tvitli }fill
adequate.
iDYL,
A
ignipotent.
fire,
meteor or light [L.] that appears in the night, over marshy supposed to be occasioned by
;
from tlieroot of Gr. gtna^tai, able or sufScient.j Fit ; suitable proper ; cojivenient
nomen, against
Cockera7i,
fire.
IGNIP'OTENT,
ppr. Loving or revering an excess bordering on adoration.
struck
Fourcroy.l
;
with
j
idolizes, or loves
I'DOLIZING,
when
n.
;
adoration.
One who
IG'NOMINY,
class of ignes-\
against steel.
;
n.
L E
I tliis
to V. t. To love to excess )oyej or reverence to adoration as, to idolize^ to idolize children ; toi gold or wealth idolize a virtuous magistrate or a hero. I'DOLIZED, pp. Loved or reverenced to,
IDOLIZE,
I'DOLIZER,
G N
I
act of kindling, or set-
may be limited to particular subjects. norance of the law does not excuse a for violating venial.
Ignorance
Ignorance of facts
it.
preferable to error.
is
Jefferson.
Ignorances, in the plural, is used somebut the times for omissions or mistakes use is uncommon and not to be encoura;
ged.
IG'NORANT,
a.
2.
3.
De.stitute
[L. ignorans.]
of knowledge; uninstructed or uninformA man ed unenlightened. untaught may be ignorant of the law, or of any art He may be ignorant of his or .science. own rights, or of the rights of others. Unknown; undiscovered; a poetical use ; as ignorant concealment. Shak. Unacquainted with. ;
;
Ignorant of
guilt. I fear
not shame.
Dryden
;
;
;
Unskilfully made or done. mate.] Poor ignorant baubles.
informed
^.
IGNO'BLENESS,
IGNOBLY,
or not.
Uncertain if by
augury or chance.
Want
n.
of dignity Ainsworth
meanness.
Dryden
oil'.
Of low family or birth;
ignobly born. Meanly; dishonorably
as
'
reproachfully ;dis The troops ignobly fly. IG'NEOUS, a. [L. igneus, from ignis, fire. gracefully basely. See Sans, aghni, Bengal. aag,ogin, Slav, ogn.] IGNOMIN'IOUS, a. [h. ignominiosus. as igneous particles Ignominy.] 1. Consisting of fire; 1. Incurring disgrace cowardly; of mean emitted from burning wood. character. fire 2having the nature of fire.
So
in
French,
soil que, let
it
be that.
2.
;
;
;
Containing
3.
Resembling
;
fire
as an igneous appear-
Then with
pale fear surprised,
Denham.
adv. Without knowledge, instruction or information. Whom therefore ye ignorantty worship, him Acts xvii. declare 1 unto you.
IG'NORANTLY,
use.
Whether
Sliak.
n. A person untaught or unone unlettered or unskilled.
;
Did I for this take pains to teach Our zealous ignorants to preach ?
;
the son of God, command that Matt. xiv. these stones be made bread.
[jVol legiti-
IG'NORANT,
;
;
art
Ig-
man often
fire.
ting troduces a conditional sentence. It is ai 9. The act or operation of commimicating In verb, without a specified nominative. fire or heat, till the substance becomes red like manner we use grant, admit, suppose, or luminous was Regularly, ,/ should be followe.l, as it ^ .j,,^^ ^^^^^ ^j. ^^j^^ kindled; more geneor substitute the pronoun formerly, liy of being heated to redness rally, the state that, referring to the succeeding sentence sr luminousness. or proposition. If that John shall arrive Calcination. in season, I will send him with a message. JGNI'TIBLE, a. Capable of being ignited But that is now omitted, and the subseIGNIV'OMOUS, a. [I., ignivomus ; ignis. quent sentence, proposition or affirmation fire, and voino, to vomit.] may be considered as the object of the Vomiting fire as an ignivomous mountain Give John shall arrive grant, sup verb. Derham. a volcano. that he shall arrive,! will send admit in pose, a. [Fr. from L. ignohUis ; The sense of if, or IGNO'BLE, liim with a message. and nohilis. See J^obte.] cause to not noble; not give, in this use, is grant, admit, 1. Of low birtli or family be, let tlie fact be, let the thing take place. illustrious. is equivalent to grant, allow, ad^' then worthless ; as an ignoble plant " make me 2. Mean mit. If thou wilt, thou canst 3. Base not honorable as an ignoble motive. whole," that is, thou canst make me whole, IGNOBIL'ITY, n. Ignobleness. [.\~ot in wilt Ball give the fact, that thou ff thou
is
9.
Unskilfully inexpertly. A man may mistake blunders for beauties and ignorantty ;
admire ihcm.
IGNO'RE,
1'.
t.
To
be ignorant.
o.
[J.,
[M'ot in
Boyle.
use.]
IGNOS'CIBLE, donable.
IGNO'TE, used.]
ignoscibilis.]
Par-
[jYot used.] a.
[L. igneius.] Unknov.'ii. [J\'ot
Mllon IGU*.\NA, 11. A species of hzard, of the genus Lacerta. reproachful dishonoraTo be hanged for acrimr ILE, so written by Pope for aite, a walk or ble ; infamous. from ignis, fire.] and is ignominious. alley in a church or public building. [Ao( with struck cropping when Whipping, of fire Emitting sparks in use.] branding are jgjiominious punishments. steel; scintillating; as igntscent slones. worthy of contempt as an 2. An ear of corn. [Ao( used.] Ainsworth. Fourcroy. 3. Despicable I'LEX. n. [L.] In botany, the generic name Swift.\ IGNES'CENT, r?. A stone or mineral that ignominious projector. of the Holly-tree. Also, the Qiiersus iter, adv. Meanly; dis gives out sparks when struck with steel or IGNOMIN'IOUSLY, or sre.1t scarlet oak. ; iron. gracefully shamefully. ;
ance.
IGNES'CENT,
a.
[L. ignescens,
igiiesco, 9.
Fled ignominious.
Very shameful
;
;
;
;
ILL
L L
I
from
[L. iliacus,
ilia,
;
four books. The subject of this poem is the wrath of Achilles ; in describing which, the poet exhibits the miserable effects of disunion and public dissensions. Hence the phrase, llias malorum, an Iliad of woes or calamities, a world of disasters. each. This is retained from the Saxon elc, each. [supposed to be contracted from ;
in Scottish,
ILL,
71.
;
Sax. i/jfel ; but this is doubtful. It is in Swedish, ilia, and I>an. ilde.] Bad or evil, in a general sense contrail to good, physical or moral applied to
evil.
1.
;
;
;
;
;
things
evil
;
as, his 2.
wicked
;
are
ways
ample. Producing
;
ill;
wrong he
iniquitous
;
an
sets
Bad
4.
;
evil
as an
;
as an
;
insalubrious
;
as an
;
ill
ill
climate. :
;
;
;
fever.
Diseased
;
impaired
as an
;
laqueo, to ensnare
I
To
Discordant; harsh; disagreeable; as an sound. Homely ugly as ill looks, or an HI coun tenance. 10. Unfavorable; suspicious; as when we say, this aftair bears an ill look or aspect. ill
;
;
as iH breeding
Rude; unpolished;
ing
;
like
;
;
e\
il
;
disease
;
all
sense of other's
2.
is ill
Not is ill
Not well
;
»i.
[\..iUnlio;
More. ILLEV'I.\BLE, raise or levy.]
;
a.
that
at ease.
;'
Locke.l
consequence.
n.
as an illative therejore.
That which denotes
easily ; with pain nr difiiculty. able to sustain the burden.
Dri/den.
[ill ai^ii favored.]
wanting beamy
;
or dispraise. adv. In a manner unwor-
Worthy of censure
ILLAUD'ABLY,
thy of praise; without deserving praise.
eral
VOREDNESS,
n.
Ughness;
;
a. [See Liberal,] not free or generous.
Not
;
;
4.
;
tt'oodward.
;ifts. .5.
C.
Not becoming a well bred man. Harris. Not pure; not well authorized or elegant : illiberal words in Latin. [Unusual.]
as
Chesterfield. »i. Narrowness of mind; contractedness; meanness; want of cath-
ILLIBER.VL'ITY, olic opinions. 2.
Parsimony
;
want of munificeDce. Boron
unpoliteness. in
bad order or
a.
[See Condition.].
;
;
;
ILLIB'ERALLY,
state.
Al ILL, prefixed to participles of the present ILLE'CEBROUS, a. [L. illecebrosus.] Elyot. luring; full of allurement. tense, and denoting evil or wrong,' may be considered as a noun governed by the par- ILLEGAL, a. [See Legal.] Not legal; unillicit as an to law illelawful contrary of a compound ticiple, or as making apart word as an ill meanivg man, an ill deged act illegal trade. that is, ILLEGALITY, 71. Contrariety to law; nnsigning man, an ill boding hour lawfulness as the z'HcgaW]/ of trespass, or a man meaning ill, an hour boding ill. It of false imprisonment. is more consonant, however, to the genius of our language, to treat these and similar ILLE'GALIZE, v. t. To render unlawful. ;
Not permitted or allowed as an i7/tci< lawful course or connection. ;
;
in and
ILLICITLY,
Zif?
prohibited untrade illicil intei'w ;
;
;
;
;
lib-
Not noble not ingenuous notcathohc; of a contracted mind. Cold in charity in K. Charles. religion, illiberal. Not candid; uncharitable in judging. Not generous; not njunificent sparing of ;
;J.
;
ILL-€ONDI "TIONED, Being
;
Howell. de-
Roughly; rudely.
ILLIB'ERAL, 2.
Broome.
;
Ugly deformed.
VOREDLY,
3.
;
act.
ing
face.
Gen. xli. Ill-/avirrcd and lean lleshed. ILL-FA' adv. With deformity.
illation
a.
,1.
bears the sex the youthful lovers" fate, When just approaching to the nuptial state.
Having an ugly
liirniity.
I
Not well bred Hiipolite. He ILL-BRED, ILL-BREE'DING, n. Want of good breed-
Ill
[in, not, and Fr. lever, in That cannot be levied or
a.
a.
;
Bp. Hall. [See Laudable.] Not not worthy of approbation or laudable commendation ; as an illaxidable motive or
;
escape, Tate. shape.
Bacon. Martin.
Hale-
ill-looking;
[See Illation.] Relating tol ILL-F.i be inferred as an illa-\
may
:
of one
slate
Hall.
fa/io, a
a conclusion
That denotes an inference; word or particle, as then and
IL'LATIVE,
pain or
ilia
human
The
n.
collected.
ILL'-F.\CED,
[Little
in and
;
illation
ha]i[)iiiess,
not rightly or perfectly.
Not in wedlock
not born in wedlock. to 2. Want of genuineness.
ILL-FA' VORED,n.
IL'LATIVE,
2>
Is but a brute at best in
ILLEcilTLMA TION,
snare.
ILLAUD'ABLE,
(7/.
adv.
without aulhoritv.
;
2.
ff'otton.
ILLEtilT'I.'MATELY,
ft'atts.
prevents success.
Who can
A
to
;
to bi'sttirdize.
liroum.
bearing /a(««, from fero.] An inference from premises deduction. [Little used.]
Dryden. ;
mate
ensnar-
a catching or entrapping.
;
live
strong nature, struggles
then tlirows off the
Misfortune calamity
He
to entangle;
entrap;
v. t. To render illegitiprove to be born out of wedlock ;
ILLEGITIMATE,
I
or inference.
itself vi
whatever annoys or impairs
urfy.
laqucus, a snare.]
{Little used.]
ILLA'TION,
slill,
Exerts
ILL,
to
;
;
;
Strong virtue,
'2.
ill
;
manners. not regular or legitimate 12. Not proper as an ill expression in grammar. ILL, n. Wickedness depravity evil.
2.
[^te Lacerate.]
used.]
8.
11.
ensnare;
catch.
health.
9.
;
gitimale word.
rent.
ILLAQ'UEATED,pp. Ensnared. ILLAQUEA'TION, n. The act of
state of|
ill
That
ILLAPSE,
;
7.
a.
A shn. iltaps'. [Sec Lapse.] diiigin; ;in initnission or entrance of one air or JVorris. thing into another. Thomson. 12. A falling on; a sudden attack. as ill ilLLAQ'UEATE, v. t. [L. illaquco ; in and end
Cross crabbed surly ; peevish ; nature ill temper. disordered ; sick or indisposed 6. Diseased applied lo persons ; as, the man is ill ; he he is ill of a has been til a long time 5.
ILLAC'ERABLE,
ill
cannot be torn or
unfortunate
;
an ill fate. Unhealthy
;
;
misfortune
evil or
star or planet. 3.
;
;
e«
ill
;
;
Cicero.
The same
a.
;
;
IL'IAD, n. [(torn Ilium, Ilion, Troy.] An epic poem, composed by Homer, in twenty
ILK,
L L
I
word.s as compounds. In some cases, as ILLE'GALLY, adv. In a manner contrary before the participles of intransitive verbs, to law as a man illegally unlawfully ill must he considered as a part of the comBlackstone. imprisoned. pound, as in ill-looking. When used be- ILLKtilBIL'lTY, n. The quality of heuig fore the perfect participle, ill is to be conillegible. sidered us an adverb, or modifying word, ILLEti'lBLE, a. [See Legible.] That canor to be treated as a part of the compound not be read obscure or defaced so that as in ill-bred, ill-governed, Hl-fated, ill-fallie words cannot be known. It is a disIn these and vored, ill-formed, ill-minded. grace lo a gentleman to write an illegible all similar connections, it might be well to hand. The manuscripts found in the ruins unite [he two words in a compound by a of Herculaneum are mostly illegible. hyphen. Asillm&y be prefixed to almost ILLEti'IBLY, adv. In a manner not to be read as a letter written illegibly. any participle, it is needless to attempt to collect a liht of such words for ijisertion. ilLLECilT'lMACY, n. [See Legitimate.) II, prefixed to words begni!:iiig with /, stand* 1. The state of being born out of wedlock ; for in, as used in the Latni language, audi the Slate of bastardy. Blackstone. usually denotes a negation of the sense of 2. The stale of being not genuine, or of lethe simple word, a.s illegal, not legal or it gitimate origin. denotes to or on, anil mcrnly augments or ILLEtilTIiMATE, a. [See Legilimate.] enforces the .sense, as in illuminate. 1. born out of wedUnlawfully begotten ILLABTLE, a. [See Labile.] Not liable to lock spurious ; as an illegitimate son or infallible. fall or err [Mil used.] daughlcr. 2. Unlawful to law. Cheyne. contrary ILLABIL'ITY, n. The quality of not being 3. Not genuine not trf genuine origin as an ilUgitiviaie inference. liable to err, fall or apostatize. [JVot userf.J Cheyne. 4. Not authorized by good usage as an ille-
the flank, or sniall intestines; Gr. n%iu, to wind.] Pertaining to the lower bowels, or to the ileum. The iliac passion, is a violent and dangerous kind of colic, with an inversion of the peristaltic motion of the bowels, Encyc. Parr. a.
IL'IA€,
adv. Unlawfully.
ILLIC'ITNESS, >!. Unlawfulness. ILLIC'ITOUS, a. Unlawful.
ILL
ILL ILLI'GHTEN, To enlighten.
v.
ILL'-TRAINED,
[See Light, lAghlen.' Raleigh [jYot in use.] t.
,
ILLIMITABLE,
a.
[in, not,
and
limii,
Without
adv.
Without
:
deceiving. [Fr. Ulimiti
a.
not limited
;
in
and L. ILLU'ME,
ILLU'MINE,
ILLIM'ITEDNESS,
Bp. Hall Boundlessness the
n.
1.
;
n.
[L. illinilus, illinio, lino, to besmear.]
[from
;
uable part of the riches preserved in the Encyc.
h.illu-
mino ; in and lumino, princi|)al libraries in Europe. from lumen, light. See Lumi From this word, by contraction, to enlighten ; to throw or to make light or bright. ;
;
[T^ese words are used chiedy in poetry. to cause to enlighten, as the mind understand. To brighten to adorn.
To
ILLUMINEE', I A church term ancientILLUMINA'TI, s"-ly applied to persons who liad received baptism in which ceremony
.
;
or affords light.
Boyle.
untaught or unlearned ; want ILLU'MINA'f E, V. t. [See lUume.] To en of a knowledge of letters; ignorance lighten to throw light on to supply with' ;
;
used in poetry or prose, Encyc. light. [This in and 2. To adorn with festal lamps or bonfires. u-ord is
ILLIT'ERATE,
[L. iUiteratus
a.
;
a letter.] un ignorant of letters or books uninstructed in sci unlearned taught ence; as an illiterate man, nation or tribe.
literatus
from
;
litera,
;
;
4.
5.
Boyle.
ILLIT'ERATURE,
Want
n.
of learning. A'/liff"^-
[Little used.]
ILL-LI' VED, Leading a wicked Hfe. [LUDp. Hall. tle used.] ILL-NA'TURE, n. [ill and nature.] Crossness crabbedness habitual bad temper, a.
To adorn
overthrow the existing religious institutions, and substitute reason, by which they expected to raise men and society to
with pictures,
portraits
to
and
;
;
or science. ignorance of letters, books
Encyc.
The name given to certain associations of men in modern Europe, who combined
3.
other paintings as, to illuminate manuto ancient scripts or books, according Encyc. practice. To illu.strate to throw light on, as on Jf'atts. obscure subjects.
ff'ofton.
ILLIT'ERATENESS, n. Want of learning
works.
To
enlighten intellectually with knowledge or grace. Heb. x.
3.
;
;
they received a lighted taper, as a
symbol of the faith and grace they had received by that sacrament. Encyc. The nameof a sect of here tics, who sprung up in Spain about the year 1575, and who afterward ajjpeared in France. Their principal doctrine was, that by means of a sublime manner of prayer, they had attained to so perfect a state as to have no need of ordinances, sacraments and good
;
state of being
Unlettered
formed
is
limner. ;
The mountain's brow, Tho})iso7i gold— ILLU'MINANT, n. That which illuminates
The
illiterate.]
began among the Romans, and was continued during the middle ages. The manuscripts containing portraits, pictures and emblematic figures, form a valpractice
artifice;
Illum'd with fluid
sometimes disguised by a thin crust or Kirwan. illinitwn of black manganese. It is
n.
luUo, to 2.
Milton.
to 2.
formed on minerals.
ILLITERACY,
[Fr. ilhiminer
^
nous.] To illuminate
in and ; thin crust of some extraneous substance 3.
anoint
A
t.. '
spread light on
of being without limits or restriction The absoluteness and illimitedness of his Clarendon commission was much spoken of.
state
iLLINI"TION,
and
Playing on by
to enlighten,
interminable.
;
in
;
ppr.
ILLU'DING,
limes, a liinit.]
Unbounded
[L. illudo
t.
;
possibility
limits.
ILLIM'ITED,
Milford. V.
;
of being bounded. 2.
n. He or that whick illuminates or gives light. One whose occupation is to decorate manuscripts and books with pictures, portraits and drawings of any kind. This
ILLU'MINATOR,
See Ludicrous.]
play.
ILLIM'ITABLY,
trained or dis-
To play upon by artifice; to deceive; to mock to excite hope and disappoint it ILLU'DED, pp. Deceived mocked.
as the
;
Thomson.
iUimitable void.
ILL
Not well
ciplined.
ILLU'DE,
or
L. limes.]
That cannot be limited or bounded
a.
ILLU'MINATE,
a.
Robison^
perfection.
ILLU'MINISM,
The
n.
principles of the
Illunnnati.
;
ILLU'MINIZE,
V.
To
t.
initiate into tlie
Enlightened
doctrines or principles of the Illuminati. Bp. Hall Am. Review. of a sect of hereILLU'MINATE, V. s as z. ILLU'SION, [Fr. illusion; L. tics pretending to possess extraordinary illusio, from illudo, to ilhute.'] n.
One
and knowledge. Deceptive appearance false show, by which pp. Enlightened; rena jierson is or may be deceived, or his exillustrated dered light or luminous pectations disappointed mockery. as books. adorned with pictures, Ye soft illusions, dear deceits, arise Pope. ILL-NA'TURED, a. Cross crabbed surly ILLU'MINATING, ;>;». Enlightening; rena. Deceiving by false show; of habitual bad temper peeintractable dering luminous or bright; illustrating; ILLU'SIVE, deceitful false. ill-natured with An fractious. person vish may pictures. adorning WhWe the fond soul, ILLU'MINATING, n. The act, iiraetice or disturb the harmony of a whole parish. Wrapt in gay visions of unreal bliss, art of adorning manuscripts and books by 2. That indicates ill-nature. Thomson. Slill paints th' illusive form. Mdison. paintings. The ill-naf.ured task refuse. n. The act of illumina- ILLUSIVELY, adv. By means of a false not yielding to cidture ; as ILLUMINA'TION, 3. Intractable show. the act of luminous ; sup ting or rendering ill-natured land. [Xot legitimate.] ILLU'SIVENESS, n. Deception; false piving with light. Philips. •^sh. show. The act of rendering a house or a town or adv. In a ;
;
or
want of kindness;
light
;
ILLU'MINATED,
fractiousness.
;
;
;
South
!
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
ILL-NATUREDLY,
peevish
froward manner; crossly; unkindly. want ri. Crossness of a kind disposition. ILL'NESS, n. [from ill] Badness ; unfavorableness as the illness of the weather
ILL-NA'TUREDNESS,
at the windows, or light, by placing lights in elevated situations, as a manifestation
;
3.
;
disorDisease indisposition ; malady der of health sickness. He has recover
ed from
liis
—
is
fight.
an illumination created. Baleigh
;
iniquity
;
5.
wrong moral conStutk.
ILLOG'ICAL,
[See Logical] Ignorant or negligent of the rules of logic or correct reasoning; as an illogical disputant. 2. Contrary to the rules of logic or sound a.
reasoning; as an illogical inference. ILLOG'IeALLY, adv. In a manner contrary to the rules of correct reasoning.
ILL0g'I€ALNESS,
n.
Contrariety to sound
a.
to be unllutunatp.
6.
7.
Brightness; splendor. Infusion of intellectual light; an enlight ening of the understanding by knowledge, or the mind by spiritual light The act, art or practice of adorning manuwith pictures. Encyc scripts and books the special comnnnucatioii
[ill
and
star.]
Fated Beddoes.
from L.
illu-
illusory.
a.
[Pi-,
Having the power of giving
illuminatif.] fight.
Digby
;
r. t. [Fr. ilhislrer ; L. illusin and lustro, to illununate. See Lus-
ter.] 1.
2.
To make clear, bright or luminous. To brighten with honor to make distinguished. ;
Matter
to
me
of glory
!
whom
3.
4.
tlieir
hate .Milton.
Illustrates—
Inspiration;
of knowledge to the mind by the Supreme Being. Hymns and psalms— are hamed by meditation beforehand, or by prophetical illumination Hooker are inspired.
Hammond ILLU'MINATIVE,
reasoning.
ILL'STARRED,
[Fr. illusoire,
ILLUS'TRATE, tro
4.
illness.
Wickedness duct.
a.
sus, illudo.]
;
;
;
3.
That which gives The sun
Loehe.
[JVot used.] 2.
ILLU'SORY,
of joy ; or the state of being thus rendered Deceiving or tending to deceive by false light. appearances; fallacious. His offers were
to make glorious, or to disbrighten the perplay the glory of; as, to illustrate fections of God. To explain or elucidate to make clear, what is dark or intelligible or obvious, of obscure as, to illustrate a jiassage of a profane Scripture by comments, or
To
;
;
;
author by
a* gloss.
IMA ILLUS'TRATED,
bright or glo-
7.
rious.
1MB
MA
I
Made
pp.
An
idea ; a representation of any thing to the mind a conception ; a picture drawn by fancy. Can we conceive of Image aught delightful, soft or great
with following the order prescribed by nature, or suggested by arcident, it selects the parts of different conceptions, or objects of memory, to form a whole more pleasing, more terrible, or more awful, Oian has ever been presented in tlie ordinary course of nature. ficd
;
2. Explainer]
elucidated
;
made
;
clear to the
understanding.
ILLUS'TRATING, glorious dating.
bright or
Making
ppr.
rendering distinguislied
;
;
.'
Prior.
eluci-
In
rhetoric, a lively description thing in discourse, which
of any
n. The act of renderpresents a kind of picture to the mind. Ertcyc. ing bright or glorious. 2. Explanation ; elucidation a rendering 9. In optics, the figure of any object, made clear what is obscure or abstruse. by rays of light proceeding from the sevLocke. ILLUS'TRATIVE, a. llnving the quality eral points of it. Thus a mirror reflects the image of a person standing before it, of chicidating and inaliing clear what is as dnes water in a vessel or strean), when ob;!Ciire as an argument or simile illusundisturbed. trative of the subject. Broum. r. t. To imagine; to copy by the 9. Having the quality of rendering glorious, IM'AtiE, to form a likeness ill the or of displaying glory. imagination mind by the fancy or recollection. of illusILLUSTRATIVELY, adv.
ILLUSTRATION,
;
By way
[Fr. iUuslrc
a.
Conspicuous
illustrioiis
ations,
Rich carvings,
renowned; eminent
general or magistrate
;
an
illustrious prince.
Conspicuous renowned conferring honor ; as illustrious actions. Glorious as an illustrious display of the divine perfections. 4. A title of honor. ILLUS'TRIOCSLY, adv. Conspicuou.sly 2.
;
3.
;
;
;
with dignity or dis-
nobly; eminently; tinction. 2.
a way to manifest glory. The redeiTiption of man displays illustriously the justice as well as the benevolence of God. Gloriously
in
;
;
We arc apt to think that space, in itself, is to wliich imagination, the actually boundless Pope idea of spare of itself leads us. Locke. n. im'ajry. Sensible represent5. First motion or statues. purpose of the mind. i)ictures, ;
L. iUua-
;
portraitures
Gen.
and imagery.
vi.
IMAg'INATIVE,
a. [Fr. imaginatif.yThal forms imaginations. Taylor. Full of imaginations; fantastic. BaconIMAG'INE, t'. /. [Fr. imaginer ; Sp. imagin3. Forms of the fancy ; false ideas; ar ; L. imaginor, from imago, image.] imaginary phantasms. L To form a notion or idea in the mind to The imagery of a melancholic fancy fancy. VVe can imagine the figure of a Atterliury horse's head united to a human body. 4. Representations in or writing speaking In this sense, fancy is the raore proper which the imlively descriptions impress word. ages of tilings on the mind figures in dis2. To form ideas or coin-se. representations in the 1 wish there mind, liy modifying and combining our may be in this poem any instance of good imagery. Stewart. conceptions. Dryden 3. To contrive in 5. Form make. purpose ; to scheme to IM'AgE-WoRSHIP, n. The worship of devise. How long will ye imagine mischief against images idolatry. a man ? Ps. Ixii. IMAG'INABLE, (I. [Fr. See Imagine: to have a That may he imagined or conceived IMA(5'INE, V. i. To conceive notion or idea. I cannot imagine how this This point is proved with all imaginable should have happened. clearness.
distinguished by the repu2.
;
tation of greatness;
as an
4.
;
IM'AfiERY,
iiis.] 1.
.Sidney.
linage charros he must behold no more.
illustrates
or makes clear.
ILLUS'TRIOUS,
And
Brown.
One who
her imagina-
all
His imagination* were often as just an ihcy were bold and strong. Dennis. Contri^ ance scheme formed in the mind device. Thou hast seen all their vengeance, and all their imaginations against me. Lam. iii. Conceit an unsolid or fanciful opinion. ;
;
n.
;
.Sometimes despair darkens tions.
;
tration or elucidation.
latter definitions give the true
of the word, as now understood. Conception image in the mind idea.
;
ILLUS'TRATOR,
Ed. Encye.
The two seii.se
Show
Drydcn
appearance. thy imagery and sorrow mean
;
What can
2.
?
Prior
—
;
;
;
;
;
ILLUS'TRIOUSNESS, character
greatness
;
ILLUXU'RibUS, ILL-WILL',
n.
n.
;
One
another. I'AT, contracted from
Eminence of
grandeur
;
Not
a.
Enmity
ILL-WILL'ER,
n.
;
gloj-y.
luxurious.
a.
IMAG'INARY',
a.
a
in
as in I'mJtic, immense, impajlial. use the same prefix in compounds not of Latin origin, as in imhody, imbitler. For im, the French write em, which we also labial,
We
use in words borrowed from their !an
image ; Tu.imago; Sp. im agen It. image, immagine ; Ir. iomaigh. 1. A representation or similitude of any per son or thing, formed of a material substance as an image wrought out of stone, wood or wax. Whose is this image and superscription ? n.
[Fr.
;
;
Matt. xxii. 2. A statue. 3. An idol ; the representation of any person or thing, that is an object of worship. The
second commandment forbids the worship of images. The likenetis of any thing on canvas; a picture a resemblance painted. ;
5.
6.
Any copy, representation or likeness. The child is the image of its mother. Semblance show appearance. ;
The
;
conceiving.
;
Existing only in imagin fancied ; not visionary
Imaginary
ills
and fancied tortures. .Addison n. [L. imaginaiio ; Fr.
IMAGINATION,
image
bears.
Bryden.
Vol.
I.
cied
;
IMAG'INER,
n.
One who forms
mind
one Bacon. ;
IMAti'INING, mind
;
IM'AM, IM'AN,
ppr. Forming ideas in the devising. minister or priest among the "•
(A3Iohammedans.
I
See
Imhalm, Imhargo. Imbark, Imbase.
imagination.]
fan-
;
ideas
v^•ho contrives.
Em-
balm. Embargo, Embark, Embase. The power or faculty of the mind by which it conceives and forms ideas of things com IMBAN', V. t. [in and ban.] To excommu-
municated
to
it
by the organs of sense.
Imagination I understand to be the represent ation of an individual thought. Bacon. Our simple apprehension of corporeal objects, if present, is sense ; if absent, is imagination Glanville. [conception]
nicate, inacivil sense; to cut off from the rights of man, or exclude from the com-
mon privileges authorized.] IMBAND',
II.
t.
of humanity.
[in
[Mt
well
Bartow.
J.
and band.] To form
into
a band or bands.
-
Imagination, in its proper sense, signifies a It is dislively conception of objects of sight. tinguished from conception, as a part from a whole.
The business of conception is with an exact ti-anscript of what or perceived.
But we have
Seid. to present us
we have
also a
fell
power
of;
modifying our conceptions, by combining the parts of (iifferent ones so as to Ibrm new w-holes I shall employ the word of our own creation.
imagination to express this power. I apprehend this to be the proper sense of the word, if imagination be the power which gives birth to the productions of the poet and the painter.
Beneath
full sails
IMB.AND'ED,
/>;).
imbanded nations
Formed
rise.
J.
Barlow.
into a
band or
bands.
LAIB.XNK', r. with a bank
t. ;
[in and bank.] To inclose to defend by banks, mounds
or dikes.
IMBANK'ED,
pp.
Inclosed
or defended
with a bank.
IMB.ANK'ING,
ppr. Inclosing or surround-
ing with a bank. n. The act of surrounding or defending with a bank. by a bank; the banks or earth that are raised to de-
IMBANK'MENT,
Stewart. 2. Inclosure
;
lace of things a frightful
pp. Formed in the contrived.
IMAti'INED,
;
real.
Encyc.
guage.
IM'AgE,
4.
Imagining
Bacon
ation or fancy
/am.
composition, is usually the representative of the Latin in ; n being changed to »M, for the sake of easy utterance, before|
IM,
;
Drury. malevolence. IMAG'1N.-\NT, who wishes ill to [J^ol used.]
We
would defme imagination to be the will working on the materials of memory not sati«;
105
mounds of
tend a place, especially against floods.
1MB
1MB IMB'ARN,
V.
To
t.
IMBOD'IED,
deposit in a barn. [JVot
which
v.
To
t.
see.
IMBE'AD,
V.
t.
and
[in
IMBOD'Y,
bastardize, Milton. To fasten
bead.]
a body
V.
t.
The
strong bright bayonet imbeaded
IM'BECILE,
A
fast.
tem
[L. imbecillis ; Fr. to be a compound
[h. imbecillitas
Want
of strength weakness feebleness of body or of mind. speak of the mbecility of the body or of the intellect when either does not possess the usual ;
We
Impotence of males
inability to procre-
;
ate children.
and
To
sink or lay in a bed to place in a mass of earth, sand or other substance, so as to be partly in-
IMBED',
V.
t.
[in
bed.]
closed.
Of
IMBEL'LIC,
[L. in
a.
warlike or martial.
and
bellic^ts.]
Not
[Liltle used.] JUTTi'lUS
IMBENCH'ING,
n.
[in
and
raised work like a bench. IMBI'BE, V. t. [L.imbibo;
beiich.]
A
Parkhuist. irt
and
bibo, to
drink Fr. imbiber.] To drink in to absorb; as, a dry or porous body imbibes a fluid a spunge imbibes moisture. To receive or admit into the mind and to imbibe retain as, to imbibe principles errors. Lnbibing in the mind always im;
1.
;
;
2.
;
;
plies retention, at least for a time. 3. To imbue, as used by Newton ; but
IMBOD'Y,
V.
collection
To
i.
Dryden Locke.
into a
jIMBOD'YING,
ppr. Forming investing with a corporeal body.
I
'2.
sorbed
pp. Drank received into
;
To
r. i.
IMBOLDEN,
V.
effervesce.
imboldn. [in and
t.
much
IMBOLDEN,
Bacon. [in
and
bitter.]
To make
bitter. 2.
To make inihappy or grievous to render distressing. The sins of youth often Grief imbitters our enimbitter old age. ;
joyments. :{. To exasperate to make more severe, poignant or painfid. The sorrows of true penitence are imbitfered by a sense of our ingratitude to our Almighty Benefactor. ;
4.
Encouraged
pp.
IMBOLDENING,
having re-
;
To exasperate to rentier more violent or malignant as, to imbitter enmity, anger, ;
;
rage, passion, &c. Made unhappy or pp. painful ; e,xasperated. iMBIT'TERING, ppr. Rendering unliappy or distressing exasperating.
JMBIT'TERED, ;
ppr. Encouraging; giv-
ins confidence.
IMBORD'ER,
Bacon.
To
t.
IMBREE'D, V. IM'BRICATE, 1.
inclose in a box.
v.
t.
To
t.
}
To
entangle.
Hudibras. generate within. imbricatus, imbrico, fioia imbrex, a. U\e.]
"• [L.
^
Bent and hollowed
like
a roof or gutter Johnson.
tile.
2.
ma-
a vault.
;
In botany, lying over each other, like tiles on a roof; parallel, with a strait surface, and lying one over the other as leaves in
Lee. Martyn. concave indenture, Derham. tiling. IMBROWN', V. t. [in and brown.] To make brown to darken to obscure. The unpierc'd shade Imbrown'd the noon-tide bowers. Milton 2. To darken the color of; to make dirty. The foot grows black that was with dirt irnurown'd. Gay. •3. To tan to darken the complexion. IMBROWN'ED, pp. Made brown darkened tanned.
IMBRl€A'TION,
n.
A
of tiles;
like that
;
;
V.
t.
To border.] to adorn ;
and
[in
furnish or inclose with a border with a border.
;
;
IMBROWN'ING,
ppr. Rendering brown ; 2. To terminate to bound. Milton. darkening; tanning. IMBORD'ERED, pp. Furnished, inclosed IMBRUE, V. t. imbru'. [Gr. fftSpf^u, to moisten tti and )3pt;tu. Hence it is allied or adorned with a border; bounded. IMBORD'ERING, ppr. Furnishing, inclo- to embrocate, and Sp. embriagar, to intoxicate. See Ehiety, Brook and Rain.] sing or adorning with a border; bound1. To wet or moisten to soak to drench ing. in a fluid, chiefly in blood. See Bush.] imboscare. IMBOSK', V. t. ;
;
;
;
[It.
To
conceal, as in bushes
Whose arrows
to hide.
;
V.
t.
s as
:.
;
— Tlie Father
By whom
in bliss
imbosomcd
infinite.
sat the Son.
or affection
to the heart
;
caress.
4.
to
—
imbosom'd guest Sidney To inclose in the midst; to surround. Thomson Villages imbosomcd soft in trees To inclose in the midst to cover as pearls itnbosomed in the deep.
But glad
To pour out liquor. IMBRU'ED, pp. Wet;
2.
Obs.
Spenser.
moistened; drench-
ed.
JUilton.
To admit
blood their wings im-
Sandys. Lucius pities the offenders. That would imbrue their hands in Cato's blood. Addison.
and bosom.] To
[in
hold in the bosom to cover fondly with the folds of one's garment. To hold in nearness or intimacy.
my
in
brue.
Milton.
IMBO'SOM,
3.
t.
V.
IMBRAN'GLE,
;
as mercy.
Shak.
;
V.
arch
;
to give confidence to.
Notliing imboldens sin so
IMBI'BER, n. He or that which imbibes. IMBI'BING, ;»;)r. Drinking in absorbing;
IMBIT'TER,
An
n.
the hud.
Spenser. bold ; It.
imbaldajizire.]
To encourage;
he
receiving and retaining. IMBIBl"TlON, n. The act of imbibing.
IMBOX',
body
Collecting and uniting in a body.
IMBOIL',
in, as a fluid ; abtlie mind and re-
tained.
trees.
ppr. Arching; vaulting;
a circular form.
IMBOWMENT,
mass or
unite in a body, Milton.
to coalesce.
;
has not been followed.
IMBI'BED,
king of
IM'BRIC.\TED,
troops imbodied.
ceived confidence.
pp. Laid or inclosed, as in a bed or mass of surrounding matter. IMBED'DING, ppr. Laying, as in a bed.
IMBOWING,
bow-
Covering with a
ppr.
;
;
IMBED'DED,
pp. Covered with a sheltered with trees.
>
To bring into a band, company, regiment, brigade, army, or other regular as semblage to collect as, to embody the forces of a nation. Then Clausus came, who led a numerous
;
strength and vigor that belongs to men, and which is necessary to a due perform ance of its functions. This may be natural, or induced by violence or disease. 2.
in
band
becilliti.} 1.
;
bower or with
Dryden. or sys-
imbody the laws of a state
to
;
Fr. im-
;
er
a code. 3.
;
n.
IMBOW'ERED,
IMBOW'ERING,
cloud reveals
into a body, collection
as,
;
To
cover [in bower.] to shelter with trees.
;
Thomson.
heavenly form, imbodied and array'd
To form
2.
imbecile. This seems word, of which the primitive bee, is not now to be found or recognized.] Weak; feeble; destitute of strength, eitlier of body or of mind impotent. Banow.
IMBECiL'ITY,
An opening
B and
t.
form into
With robes of light.
/. Barlow Fastened with a bead.
a. im'becil-
To
body.]
with matter; to make imbody the soid or spirit.
as, to
;
with a bead.
IMBE'ADED, pp.
and
[in
to invest
;
corporeal
V.
with a bower
into a body.
Herbert.
zised.]
IMB'ASTARDIZE,
M
I
Formed IMBOW'ER,
[See Imbody.]
pp.
desire, his late
—
IMBRU'ING,
Wetting; moistening;
;);)r.
drenching.
IMBRU'TE,
V.
t.
and
[in
brute.]
grade to the state of a brute brutality.
— And mix with
;
to
To
de-
reduce to
bestial slime
and imbrute. Milton. sink to the state of a Milton. brute. IMBO'SOMED, pp. Held in the bosom or IMBRU'TED, pp. Degraded to brutism. surrounded in caressed to the breast IMBRU'TING, ppr. Reducing to brutishthe midst inclosed covered. IMBO'SOMING, ppr. Holding in the bo- ness. V. t. imbu'. [L. imbuo ; in and the som caressing; holding to the breast; IMBUE, root of Eng. buck, to buck cloth, that is, inclosing or covering in the midst. to dip, drench or steep in water.] To inand t. V. IMBOUND', bound.] [in to dye ; as, to imbue 1. To tinge deeply close in limits to shut in. [Little used.] cloth. Boyle. Shak deeply to cause to imbibe ; IMBOW, V. f. [in and bow.] To arch to 2. Tototincture imbue the minds of youth with good as, Milton vault as an imboived roof principles. as imbowed 2. To make of a circular form Bacon. IMBU'ED, pp. Tinged; dyed; tinctured. windows. made IMBU'ING, ppr. Tinging; dyeing; tincturpp. Arched ; vaulted of a circular Ibrm. ing deeply.
5.
;
;
;
;
This essence
IMBRU'TE,
to incarnate
V. i.
To
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
IMBOWED,
;
I
M
IMITABIL'ITY, The
n. One that follows in manners or deportment. One that copies, or attempts to make the resemblance of any thing. IMITA'TORSIIIP, n. The office or state of an imitator. Marslon. IMMAG'ULATE, n. [h. immacuMus ; in and macula, a spot.] unstained undefiled 1. Spotless pure as immaculate reputa without blemish tion immaculate thoughts. (Jur Savior has set us an example of an immaculate life and conversation. not tinged with impure 2. Pure limpid matter as an immaculate fountain. Shak. Immaculate conception, the conception of our Savior by the virgin Mary.
The dignified style of hardly imitable. Johnson is scarcely imitable. 2. Worthy of imitation. IMI'TATE, V. t. [Fr. imiter ; Sp. Port It.
;
imitare
haps to Gr.
1.
;
L. imitor
;
allied
IMMATE'RIALNESS, being immaterial
;
;
;
IMMACULATELY,
With
adv.
spotless
purity.
IMMA€'(JLATENESS, n. Spotless purity. IMMA'ILED, a. Wearing mail or armor. Browne.
IMMAL'LEABLE, Not malleable
orators. 3. To counterfeit.
f.
put manacles on
from
restrain
and
[in
malleable.]
Med.
IMMAN'ACLE,
This hand appear'd a shining sword to wield, And that sustain'd an imitated shield.
a.
that cannot be extended by
;
hanmiering. <. ;
liepos.
[in ami manacle.] To to fetter or confine; to
Milton.
free action.
IMMAN'A€LED, pp. Fettered confined. IMMAN'A€LING, ppr. Fettering; con-
Uryden
;
the course of a composition, so
as to use like images and examples. Johnson.
The
n.
of
state
immateriality. a. Not consisting of matter; incorporeal; innnaterial. [Lillle ;
Bacon.
used.]
IMMATURE,
a.
immaturus
[L.
;
in
and
malurus.] 1.
;
;
;
manner not
manner unimportant.
IMMATE'RIATE,
;
To pursue
In a
IM'ITATOR,
;
painting, a sound, an action, when we make or do that which resembles it. should seek the best models to imitate,an\\ in morals and piety, it is oin- duty to imilate the example of our Savior. 15ut as we cannot always make an exact similitude of the original, hence, To attempt or endeavor to co])y or resemble as, to imitate the colors of the rainbow, or any of the beauties of nature. Cicero appears to have imilated the Greek
adv. Iq a
depending on matter. 2.
Not mature or
ripe
unripe
;
;
that has not
arrived to a j>erfect state applied to fruit. Not perfect; not brought to a complete state; as immature (ilans or counsels. that comes before the Hasty too early natural time. Taylor. ;
2.
;
We
4.
IMMATE'RIALLY,
2.
;
per-
similar, equal.] To follow in manners: to copy in form, imilate another in color or quality. dross or manners ; we imilate a statue, a ofioj,
We
2.
intended to
is
sions,
Imitate.]
MM
I
which
that
is
resemble some natural operation, the pas and the like. Busby.
JVorris. imilabilis.
Let us Tliat may be imitated or copied. follow our Savior in all his imitable conduct and traits of character. Tljere are some works of the ancients that are
imitar
MM
I
I
[See ImitaUe, Imilate.] Imitalive music,
n.
3.
;
;
[In this sense, premature is generally used.] IMMATU'RELY, adv. Too soon ; before ripeness or coni|>letion ; before the natural time.
IMMATU'RENESS, IMMATU'RITY,
Unripeness; incompleteness
)
"' I
;
the state of a thing which has not arrived to perfection. and meo, to IMMEABIL'ITY, n. [L. Arbuthnot. pass.] Want of power to pass. The proper sense is, the quality of not being permeable, or not aflbrding a passage through the pores. [Little ttsed.] a. immezh'urabte. [in
m
IMMEASURABLE,
and measure.] That cannot be measured distance or space
;
immense
;
in-
as an immeasurable an immeasurable abys-.
definitely extensive
fining.
;
;
Milton. Addison. Gay. IMMA'NE, a. [L. immanis.] Vast; huge; IMMEAS'URABLY, adv. To an extent not IM'ITATED, pp. Followed copied. very great. [Little used.] to be measured immensely; beyond all IM'ITATING, ppr. Following in manner; IMMA'NELY, adv. Monstrously; cruellv. ;
;
measure.
MUto'n.
copying.
IMITA'TION,
n.
[Fr.
from L.
imitatio
IM'MANENCY,
;
Milton.
IMMEAS'URED,
n. Internal dwelling.
a.
common
Exceeding
measure. Pearson. 1. The act of following in manner, or of IM'MANENT, a. [L.in andmaiicn*, maneo, IMMECIIANTCAL, a. [in and mechanical.] Not consonant to the laws of mechanics. internal. Inherent ; intrinsic to abide.] copying in form ;. the act of making the South. or of a similitude of any thing, Clieyne. attempting resemblance. I$y the imitation of bad men jIMMAN'ITY, n. [L. immanitas.] Barbari- Ii\i;ME'I)I.\CY, n. [from immediate.] Power Shak. of acting without dependence. Shak. orofevil examples, we are apt to contract savageness. ty In the imitation of natural IMMARCES'SIBLE, a. [L.in and marcc^co, IMMEDIATE, a. [Fr.immediat ; ll. immevicious habits. diato ; L. in and medius, middle.] Did. to fade.] Unfading. forms and colors, we are often unsuccess Not 1. Proximate; acting without a medium, or Imitation in music, says Rousseau, is IMM'ARTIAL, a. [in and martial.] ful. without the intervention of another cause martial not warlike. a reiteration of the same air, or of one Chapman. imilor, to imitate]
;
;
;
I
which
is
similar, in several
parts
where 'IMM'ASK,
repeated by one after the other, either in unison, or at the distance of a fourth, a fifth, a third, or any interval whatever.
I'.
/.
mask
as with a
it is
I
[in and mask.] to disguise.
To
or means producing its effect by its own direct agency. An immediate cause is that
cover,
;
Shak.
;
Covered; masked. IMM'ASKING, />pr. Covering; disguising. a. That cannot be Imitation in oratory, is an endeavor to re- IMMATCH'ABLE, matched peerless. semble a speaker or writer in the qualities which we propose to ourselves as patterns IMM.VTE'RIAL, a. [Fr. immuteriel; in and
IMM".\SKED,
which
;)p.
;
2.
I
Encyc. 2. That which is made or produced as a ropy likeness resemblance. \Ve say, a of nature. thing is a true imitation 3. A method of translating, in which modern examples and illustrations are used for ancient, or domestic for foreign, or in which the translator not only varies the words and sense, but forsakes tlieni as he Johnson. Dryden sees occasion.
1.
;
;
3.
material.]
I
I
I
2.
Incorporeal; not material; ing of matter; as imnm(cri«/ mind or soul is immaterial.
;
that is used in resemblance forming resemblances, Painting is an imilative art. Formed after a model, pattern or original.
Aiming
the
3.
at
;
business of
This temple, less in form, with equal grace, Was imitative of the first in Thrace.
Dn/den
—
;
;
Mdmoth.
^likin.
Hayley.
IMMATE'RIALISM,
Ruffliead.
—
—
Miiton. adv. Without the intervention of any other cause or event op-
IMME'DI.\TELY,
The
doctrine of the existence or state of immaterial substances or spiritual beings. n.
n.
».
The
;
riality
;
of the soul.
IMMATE'RIALIZED, immaterial.
;
posed The
One who
professes Suift. quality of being innnaterial, or not consisting of matdestitution of matter as the immateter
IMMATERIAL'ITY,
made
;
;
IM'ITATIVE, a. Inclined to follow in man- IMMATE'RIALIST, ner as, man is an imilativc being. immateriality. 2.
The
not maUnimportant without weight of no essential consequence.
terial
;
We
not consistspirits.
exerted directly in producing its effect, in opposition to a mediate cause, or one more remote. Not acting by second causes ; as the immediate will of God. Abbot. Instant without the intervenpresent tion of time. must have an immediate supply of bread. Immediate are my needs Shak. Death inflicted by an immediate stroke. is
a.
Rendered
or Glanvilk.
2.
to mediately.
whether accepted immediately by himself, or mediately by his agent, vests in him the propertj'. .9non. without Instantly; at the present time delay, or the intervention of time. transfer,
;
And Jesus put
forth his hand, will, be thou clean.
liim, saying, I diately his leprosy
was cleansed.
IMME'DIATENESS, gard to time.
and touched
And immeMatt. vUi.
n^ Presence with re-
MM
1
MM
1
Exemption from second or intervening!
2.
to
engage deeply
as, to
;
ness or cares.
causes.
IMMRD'I CABLE,
It
;
IMMELO'DIOUS,
into a fluid
;
plun-
enveloped in the hght of the sun, as a star, or in the shadow of the earth, as the moon. Not to IMMERSTNG, ppr. Plunging into a fluid Johnson. dippuig overwhelming deeply engabering. IMMEMO'RIAL, a. [Fr. from L. in and gi"gIMMER'SION, n. The act of putting into a memor, memoria.] below the surface the act of plungfluid an to time Beyond memory epithet given ;
IMMEM'ORABLE, in
[h. imtnemorabilis
a.
to
;
To [in and tningle.] to unite with numbers.
v.l.
mix
;
Thomson.
is
Not melodious. IMMERS'ED, pp. Put Drummond. ged deeply engaged
a.
IMMIN'GLE, mingle
impossible for a man to have a lively hope in another life, and yet be deeply immersed in the enjoyment of this. Atterbury.
[L. iiiimedicalilis ; in and mtdicabilis, Irora medico, to lieal.] Not incurable. Mitlon. to be liealed a.
or duration, &c., whose beginning is not ing into a fluid till covered. remembered, or cannot be traced and as- 3. The state of sinking into a fluid. certained ; as when it is said a man has 3. The state of being overwhelmed or deeply engaged ; as an immersion in the affairs possessed an estate in fee from timei?rtmc-
of life. Such posAtterbury. morial, or time out of mind. session constitutes ^rcicn'^h'on, or prescrip- 4. In astronomy, the act of entering into the tive right. So we speak of immemorial light of the sun, as a star, so as to be enor the In England, a use, custom or practice. veloped and invisible to the eye state of being so enveloped. Also, the enthing is said to be immemorial, when it trance of the moon into the shadow of the commenced before the reign of Edward II. earth, at the commencement of an eclipse ; or the state of being enveloped in the ado. Beyond memory. shadow. It is opposed to emersion. Bentley. The time when a star or planet is so a. immens'. [Fr. from L. imnear the sun as to be invisible ; also, the mensus ; in and mensus, metior, to meas-
n.
mix.]
mixed.
;
;
to
misceo,
;
;
A
in and minuo, to lessen.] diminution; decrease.
;
;
See Memory.] be remembered not worth remem-
and memombitis.
IMMIS'CIBLE,
a.
Ray. and Incapacity of being
and
[in
Not Med. Repos.
miscible.]
capable of being mixed.
IMMIS'SION,
n. [L. immissio, immitto ; in mitto, to send.] The act of sending or thrusting in ; injection contrary to emission.
and
;
IMMIT',
v.
[L. immitto ; in and mitto, to in ; to inject. Greenhill.
t.
To send IMMIT'IGABLE, send.]
a. [in and mitigate.] That cannot be mitigated or appeased.
Harris.
;
IMMEMO'RIALLY,
IMMENSE,
Unlimited; unbounded;
J.
O goodness
infinite. .'
!
v.t.
and mix.]
[in
To mix;
to
mingle.
IMMIX' ABLE,
Not capable of being
a.
mixed.
H'ilkins.
IMMIX'ED, IMMIXT'
>
"
.
,T
rr
,
.
^
Herbert.
^"ro'-'*^''.
s
IMMOBILITY,
the moon begins to be dark ened, and to enter the shadow of the earth.
goodness immense jWlton. as an imvery great
infinite
IMMIX',
[Fr. imynobUite
7^.
L. im-
;
from immobilis ; in and mobilis, from moveo, to move.] Encyc. Unmovableness; fixedness in place or state;
moment when
ure.]
;
lessening;
[L. immisceo; in
mobilitas,
To entangle resistance to motion. Arbuthnot. V. t. [in and mesh.] Brown. of a net, or in a web. Ob- IMMOD'ERACY, n. Excess. serve whetlier the fly is completely im FMMOD'ERATE, a. [L. immoderatus ; in and modcraius. See The spider used his efforts to meshed. as the immense Moderate.] 3. Goldsmith. Exceeding just or usual bounds; not conimmesh the scorpion. exIMMENSELY, adv. immens'hj. Infinitely IMMESH'ET), pp. Entangled in meshes or fined to suitable limits excessive webs. travagant; unreasonable; as immoderate without limits or measure. demands; immoderate passions, cares or 2. Vastly very greatly. IMMESH'ING,;);)r. Entangling in meshes grief. IMMENS'ITY, n. Unlimited extension an or webs. adv. Excessively; to extent not to be measured infinity. a. and methodical Vast in e.\tent mense distance. Huge in bulk very large body of Jupiter.
2.
;
IMMESH',
in the tneshes
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
Vastness
2.
extent or bulk
in
IMMENSURABIL'ITY,
n.
;
der or regularity
—a
terra of
[MMERgE, and mergo,
To
y.
merse,
which
is
[See 7m-
person that removes
v. i.
[L.
immigro
;
permain
and
generallj' used."
i. To enter the light of the sun, as a star, to hang over.] or the sh.idow of the earth, as the moon. IMMER'IT. n. Want of worth. [JVotused.] Properly, a hanging over, but used by Shak rt. sjteare for impending evil or danger. [Lit Unmerited.
[ATot used.]
a.
Undeserving.
[jVot
used.]
IMM ERSE, V. 1.
immers'. [L. immersua, from iiiimergo ; in and mergo, to plunge.] To put under water or other fluid; to
plimge 2.
To
as, to
3.
To
;
t.
to dip.
to cover wholly ; be immersed in a wood. Dryden.
plunge
;
to
overwhelm
;
;
to involve
;
L. immoSee the
due bounds. immoderate ;
2.
;
;
;
;
OIMOD'ESTLY, serve
Without due
adv.
re-
indecently: unchastely obscenely. n. [L. immodestia.] Want tie used.] of modesty indecency imchastity. 2. Want of delicacy or decent reserve. a. from immi imminens. IM'MINENT, [L. in and minor, to threat lM'MOLATE,t'. <." [Yr.immoler; h.immolo, neo, to hang over en. to sacrifice See Menace.] in and mola, meal sprinkled with salt, which was thrown on the head Literally, shooting over ; hence, hanging over im|)ending threatening ; near apof the victim.] pearing as if about to fall on used of evils ; 1. To sacrifice to kill, as a victim offered in as imminent danger ; imminent judgments, sacrifice. Boyle. Hooker. Milton. 2. To offer in sacrifice. evils or death. ;
;
IMMOD'ESTY, ;
;
;
;
;
sink or cover deep
[Fr. immodeste
Literally, not limited to Hence, in a general sense,
;
2. V.
IMMER'ITED, IMMER'ITOUS,
a.
and modestus, modest.
in
latter.] 1.
;
to plunge.] fluid.
;
ex-
Shelford.
Hammond.
migro, to migrate.] To remove into a country for the purpose of permanent residence. [See Emigrate.]
Unmeasured. fV. Mountagu. immerj'. [h. immergo ; in
<.
destus
as, to
Excess; want of
n.
moileration.
of
;
Excess;
exorbitant; unreasonable; arrogant. Appropriately, wanting in the reserve or restraint which decency requires wanting in decency and delicacy. It is immodest to treat superiors with the fainiliarity that is customary among equals. Belknap 3. Wanting in chastity unchaste; lewd; as IMMIGRA'TION, n. The passing or remoan immodest female. ving into a country for the purpose of per- 4. indelicate as an immodest Impure manent residence thought. Dryden. _ IM'MINENCE, n. [L. imminentia, immineo, .5. Obscene as an immodest word.
IM'MIGRATE,
«.
plunge into or under a
A
n.
n.
travagance.
IMMOD'EST, Want
unreasonably
nent residence.
Ward
IMMEN'SURATE,
irregularly. n.
;
;
immoderately.
IMMODERATION,
confusion.
into a country for the purpose of
immensurable
extent.
;
IM'MIGRANT,
;
;
The law of nature
1.
method
and mensufrom meiisura, measure mensus, immeasNot to be measured
urable.
Without or
adv.
IMMETHOD'l€ALNESS,
;
impossibility to be measured. IMfllEN'SURABLE, a. [L. in metior.]
Addison
confused.
IMMETIIOD'ICALLY,
rable.]
rabilis,
weep
IMMOD'ERATENESS,
;
[from immensu-
The quality of not being capable of measure
an undue degree
[in
See Method.] Having no method without systematic arrangement without order or regularity
greatness.
;
IMMODERATELY,
IMMETHOD'IeAL,
;
the power we find in ourselves of repeating, as often as we will, any idea of space, we Locke get the idea of immensity.
By
;
;
;
;
1
Now
MM
IM'MOLATED,
1.
i
sac.iitico.
From shall
the
same
on which the small states rise the smoke of aacrimust be the dread-
altar
Alexander bad no name.
be immulated, will
IMMOLATION,
The
n.
wlio offers in sacri[JVol Englisk.]
IMMOR'AL,
a.
[ill
a.
;
a.
;
'.i.
disobedience.
Having no
a.
Lee.
Change
[L.immutatio.]
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
Not
originally used by falconers, who repair a hawk's wing by adding fetliers. Imp out our drooping country's broken wings. Shak.
as immovable estate. Blackstoiie.
Ayliffc.
shaken or agitated.
to be
IMMoV'ABLENESS,
The
n.
quality
—
The false north displays Her broken league to imp her serpent
of]
being iuunovable.
wiiigs.
Jifuton
This verb is. I believe, used only in poetry moved Ircin place or i)ur[)Ose; or in matuier not to be shaken unalterably IMPA'CABLE, a. [L. in and^jaco, to apjiease.] Immovably firm to their uncluuigoahly. Not to be appeased or quieted. Spenser. duty iminovahly fixed or established. its
n.
;
;
;
;
IMMUiVD',
principle of alteration or cor lite
m
A
;
;
the himian soul.
—Jesus Christ, who hath abolished death, and
hath brought life and immortality through llie gospel. 2 Tim. i.
to
light
v.
t.
[Vr. immorialiser
;
in
IlMMU'NITY,
n.
Momitagii. [Fr. immunite ; L. imviu-
To
I',
t.
and pango,
drive close
;
[L. impactus, to drive.]
from impingo
Woodward.
gether.
IMPACT,
:
to press or drive firmly to-
Touch
n.
;
impression.
exempt; in and Dancin. IMPACTED,;)/). Driven hard made close I. Freedom or exemption from obligation. bv driving. H'oodward. To be exempted from observing the rites V. t. To paint; to adorn with IMPA'INT, or duties of the church, is an immunity. colors. Shak. i. Excnii)lion from any charge, duty, ollice, liMPA'lR, V. t. [Fr. empirer; Sp. empeorar ; tax or imposition ; a particular privilege Port, empeiorar, from peior, worse, Sp. as the immnnities of the free cities of GerFr. from L. peor, pire, ptjor.] many the immunities of the clergy. 1. To make worse; to diminish in quantity, as an immunity from error. 3. Freedom value or excellence. An estate is impaired Dryden. by extravagance or neglect. The profligate impairs his estate and his reputation. IMMU'RE, r. t. [Norm, emmun-fr, to wall Sw. inmura ; L. in and mums, a wall in Imprudence impairs a man's usefulness. nilas,
from
iniinunis, free,
miiHus, charge, office, duty.]
;
;
;
;
;
To inclose within walls to shut Uj) to confine; as, lo immure nims in cloisters. student iinmure.i himself voluntarily. to surround with walls. 2. To wall 1.
;
;
The
;
Lysimachus immured
niortalizing.
IMPACT',
[L.immundiis.] Unclean. »i. Uncleanuess.
ITY,
it
with a wall.
To imprison. IMMU'RE, 71. A
[JVot
Sandys.
usiial] ;
;
a.
IMMUNDIC
oblivion.
Perpetuity existence not limited as the immortality of a corporation. J. Marshall. IMMORTALIZATION, n. The act of im
Sp. immortatizar.]
Boyle.
ed.
IMMUTA'TION, n.
;
nent in place
Rudeness Bp. Taylor. See Mor[L. immortalis.
IMMOR'TALIZE,
a manner that ad-
;
Stackhouse.
Exemption from
in
[L.immutatus.] Unchang-
;
mortal soul. To the King eternal, iiiimortal, invisible, tlie 1 forever. only wise God, be honor and glory Tim. i. 2. Never ending; everlasting; continual. 1 have Shak. hninortal longings in me. 3. Perpetual; having unlimited existence. is called an immortal being. corporation this of 4. Destined to live in all the ages world; imperishable; as i.'«H!o?-/a/ fame. So Homer is called the immortal bard. IMMORTAL'ITY, n. The quality of never exemption from ceasing to live or exist death an
3.
a.
;
t).
ruption; e.\empt from death; having or being that shall never end; as au
2.
IMMU'TATE,
;
;
tal.] 1.
Unchangeably;
terably ; invariably mits of no change.
[howL.immoriger.] IMMt)V'ABLY, adv. In a manner not to b
IMMORKi'EROUSNESS, IMMOR'TAL,
IMML'TABLV,
and mortitiof the pas-
;
;
Wickedly; viciously; a.
:
;
tliau immorality.
uncivil.
maud
;
;
of law or duty.
IMMORIti'EROUS,
;
;
[in
;
adv.
[h. immutabiiis
;
;
;
more
a.
viutubilis.]
;
vicious or unjust in practice as an immoral man. Every man who violates a divine law or a social duty, is immoral, but we particularly apply the term to a person who habitually violates the laws. IMMORALITY, n. Any act or practice which contravenes the divine commands or the social duties. Injustice, dishonesty, fraud, slander, profaneness, gaming, in are immoralities. teiMjierance, lewdness, All crimes are immoralities but eri)/ie ex
in violation
To become immor-
T.\BLE,
alteration. More. and movahle.] That cannot be moved from its place; as an IMP, n. [W. imp, a shoot or cion Sw.ymp, Dan. yinpc, id.] immovable foundation. Not to be moved from a purpose sted- 1. A son offspring; |)rogeny. Tbe tender imj) was weaned. fixed that cannot be induced to fast fairfrtr. A lad of life, an imp of fame. Shak. as a man who remains change or alter 3. A subaltern or puny devil. immovable. Hooker. Milton. That cannot be altered or shaken una IMP, V. t. [W. impiaw, G. imp/en, Sw. terable unchangeable as an immovable ympa, Dan. ymper, to engraft D. tnt, a purpose or resolution. enlen, to engraft.] gi aft That cannot be affected or moved not 1. To Cluxucer. grail. impressible not susceptible of compassion 3. To lengthen to extend or enlarge by or tender feelings: unfeeling. Dryden. a term something inserted or added Fixed not liable to be removed perma-
IMMOVABLE,
dishonest;
IMMOR'ALLY,
God.
IMMU
Bp. Taylor. IMMoVABIL'ITY, n. Sledfastness that cannot be moved or shaken.
ent with moral rectitude wicked moral or divine law unjust dishonest; vicious. Every action is im moral which contravenes any divine pre to the duties cept, or which is contrary which men owe to each other.
Wicked
v. i.
inqjossible ; invariaImmutabilitti is an attribute of
bleness.
per-
sions.
Inconsistcontrary to the
;
make
;
vioral.]
;
;
IMMORTIFICA'TION, n. [in Want of subjoition calion.]
Unimportant. Seward.
and
to
;
Shak.
IMMOMENT'OUS,
change or alteration
immortalize his T. Dawes.
in use]
\J\tot
IMMOR
fice.
a. Trifling.
to
invariable unalterable not Popt. Unchangeable or susceptible of change. TALIZEU, pp. Rendered innnor- capable That by two immutable things, in which il tal or (jcrpetnal. was impossible for God lo lie, wc might have IMMOR'TALIZING,/)/)r. Making immorstrong consolation. Heb. vi. tal or perpetual. IMML'TABLENESS, n. UnchangeableIM3IOK'TALLY, adv. With endless existness iiMmiitaliility. ence with exemption from death. adv. unaltal.
2.
IMMO'MENT,
Homer
oblivion
petual.
act of sacrificing.
Brown.
A sacrifice offered. IM'MOLATOR, n. One
To exempt from
IMMOR'TALIZE,
as a victim.
Rude
;
guilty 2.
U. Tracy. Sacrificing ; offering,
lM'MOLATING,;);jr.
presses
P
;
;
ticed liberty, and despotiaiii ful successor.
2.
M
I
render immortal to make p^ri)etnal; IMMIJTABIL'ITY,n. [Fr. immutabilile L. immutabilitds t;i and mulabilis, mutable, to cause to live or exist while the world from muto, to change.] shall endure. The Iliad has immortalized the nuuie of Homer. Unchangeableness the quality that renders
To
;
Sacrificert; ofterediii
pp.
MM
I
immolate the tongues and mil the wine, Pupe.
Dcnham.
.1.
3.
To weaken
tion
;
to enfeeble.
The
constitu-
is impaired by intemperance, by inand by age. The force of evidence bo impaired by the suspicion of inter-
firmity
may
est in the witness.
IMPA'IR,
V.
i.
[Little used.]
To
be lessened or worn out. Spenser.
Shak. IM'PAIR, a. [L. impar, unequal.] In crystalography, when a different number of faces IMMV'RED, pp. Confined within walls. is presented by the prism, and by each L^IMU'SI€AL, a. [in and musical.] Not summit ; but the three mimbers follow no not accordant: musical; inbarraonious law of progression. Cleaveland. Bacon. Brown harsh. wall. [jVo< «serf.]
;
IMP
IMP IMPAIR,
b
IMPAIRMENT, IMPAIRED,
Diminution decrease ;
[jVo( used.]
injury.
IMP Bacon.
1.
Inequality
;
2.
Oddness
indivisibility into
3.
Difference of degree, rank or excellence
;
disproportion.
injured
;
;
IMPA'IRER,
He
or that which impairs.
IMPA'LE,
V.
[L. in
t.
and palus, a pole, a
IMP'ARL,
To
fi.v
on a stake
ing on an
to put to death by fixupright sharp stake. [See Em;
pale.]
To
inclose with stakes, posts or palisades. 3. In heraldry, to join two coats of arms 2.
Encyc.
fjiile-wise.
IMPAL'LID,
V.
t.
To make
pallid or pale.
yVot 171 use.] IJNIP'ALM, V. t. implant. [L.
Ftllham.
and palma,
iJi
the hand.]
To
grasp
;
to take in the n.
or
being palpable, touch.
IMPAL'PABLE,
hand.
J.
Barlow.
The quality of not perceptible by the
IMPALPABILITY,
Jorlin. a.
[Fr.
and
from L. in
palpo, to feel.
V. i.
[Norm, emperler
1.
[Sp. impartible
in
;
and
Not
partible or subject to partition ; as an Blackstone. impartible estate.
IMP'ARTING,;7pr. Communicating; grant-
hold mutual discourse appropriately, in law, to have hcence to settle a lawsuit ;
amicably
have delay
to
;
for
ing
bestowing.
;
IMP ARTMENT,
n. The act of imparting ; the communication of knowledge; discloShak.
mutual adBlackstone.
justment.
Digby.
in and Fr.
;
parler, to speak.]
To
stake.] 1.
a.
partible.]
V. t. [in and part.] for a park ; to make a ))ark by inclosure ; 2. [from impart.] That may be imparted, conferred, bestowed or communicated. to sever from a common. Johnson.
;
used.]
IMPARTIBLE,
Sancroft. To inclose
IMP'ARK,
tVarburtoii.
lessenppr. Making worse ing; injuring; enteebhng. IMPAL'ATABLE, a. Unpalatable. [Little
IMPA'IRING,
quality of being capable of being
communicated.
Brown.
weakened. n.
The
2.
equal parts.
Broivn.
Diminished
pp.
;
sure.
IMP'ASSABLE,
See
[in ai\A passable.
a.
Properly, leave for muPass.] discourse appropriately, in law, That cannot be passed not admitting a pasthe licence or privilege of a defendant, sage as an impassable road, mountain or graiited on motion, to have delay of trial, Milton. gulf Temple. to see if he can settle the matter amicaIMP'ASSABLENESS, n. The state of bebly by talking with the plaintiff, and thus ing impassable. to determine what answer he shall make adv. In a manner or deIMP>ASSABLY, to the plaintiff's action. Hence, gree that prevents passing, or the power 2. The continuance of a cause till another of passing. Blackstone. day, or from day to day. } IMPASSIBILITY, [from impassiIMPARSONE'.E', a. A parson imparsonee, is IMPAS'SIBLENESS, \ "• ble.] a parson presented, instituted and inductExemption from pain or suffering insused into a rectory, and in full possession. ceptibility of injury from external things. Blackstone.
IMP'ARLANCE, n. tual
;
;
;
;
[See Palpable.] Dnjden. Not to be felt tiiat cannot be perceived by IMP* ART, V. t. [L. impertior ; in aadpartio, IMPAS'SIBLE, a. [Fr. impassible ; Sp. imto divide from pars, a part.] as an impalpable |)o\vder, the touch pasible ; L. impassibilis, from passus,patior, be1. To or communicate to to so minute that they ca)iwhose parts are give, grant sufler.] stow on another a share or portion of Incapable of pain, passion or suffering that not be distinguished by the senses, particcannot be affected with pain or uneasisomething as, to impart a portion of proEncyc. larly by feeling. visions to the poor. Warton. ness. Whatever is destitute of sensation 2. Not coarse or gross. is impassible. IMPAL'SY, v.t. s as 2. [in anA palsy.] To 2. To grant to give to confer ; as, to imto deaden. to paralize strike with palsy part honor or favor. Thougli naked and impassible^ depart. Dry den IM'PANATE, a. [L. in and panis, bread.] 3. To communicate the knowledge of someto make known to show by words IMPAS'SION, V. t. [in and passion.] To Cranmcr. Embodied in bread. tliing move or affect strongly with passion. IM'PANATE, V. t. To embody with bread. or tokens. ;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
.
;
iraterla7id. n. The supposed substanpresence of the body and blood of Christ, with the substance of the bread and wine, after consecration, in the eucha a tenet of tlie Lutheran church otii rist erwise called consubstantiation. Encyc.
When
IMPANA'TION,
;
Gentle lady. first I did impart
IMPAS'SIONATB,
—
love to
my
you Milton
fully.
Shak.
IMPAS'SIONATE,
tial
;
;
IMP^ARTANCE, share
;
n.
Comriumication of a
2.
or conferring.
n.
The
[jYot
act of imparting
much
by passion. The tempter
used.]
a.
Without passion or
IMPAS'SIONED,
grant.
IMPARTA'TION,
v.
all
t.
To
affect
power-
More. Strongly affected. Burton.
feeling.
Actuated or agitated
a.
impassioned, thus began. jmiton,
V. t. [)n and panne?.] To write Chauncey. or enter the names of a jury in a list or or IMP'ARTED,^);?. Communicated granted 2. Animated excited having the feehngs conferred. a piece of parchment, called a pannel; to warmed as an impassioned oiator. form, complete or enroll a list of jurors in IMP'ARTIAL, a. [in and partial, from paii 3. Animated expressive of passion or arL. pars.] a court of justice. dor ; as an impassioned discourse. the names 1. Not partial ; not biased in favor of one IMPAS'SIVE, a. IMPAN'NELED, pp. Having [L. in and passus, patior, entered in a paunel formed, as a jury. to suffer.] party more than another indifierent un IMPAN'NELING, ppr. Writing the names prejudiced disinterested as an impartial Not susceptible of pain or suffering as the on a pannel forming, as a jury. air judge or arbitrator. impassive ice. impassive IMPAR'ADISE, V. t. [It. imparadisare ; in 2. Not favoring one party more than an Dryden. Pope. and paradise.] other; equitable; just; as an impartial IMPAS'SIVELY, adv. Without sensibility To put in a place of felicity to make happy. judgment or decision an impartial opinto pain or suffering. ion. IMPAR'ADISED, pp. Placed in a cond' IMPAS'SIVENESS, n. The state of being made IMP-ARTIALIST, n. One who is impar tion resembling that of paradise insusceptible of pain.
IMPAN'NEL,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
Mountagu.
;
tial.
happy.
[Little used.]
Boyle.
?i. The quality of being insusceptible of feeling, pain or suffering. Paitsanias, Trans
IMPASSIVITY,
IMPAR'ADISING, ppr. Making very happv. IMPARTIALITY,
IMPAR'ALLELED,
a. Unparalleled.
n. imparshaVily. Indifference of opinion or judgment freedom from bias in favor of one side or party
[j\ot
;
Burnet.
used.]
IMPARASYLLAB'IC,
a.
[L. in, par,
and
more than Impartiality
sijllaba.]
Not consisting of an equal number of syllables. An imparasyllabic noun is one which has not the same number of syllables in all the cases
;
as lapis, lapidis
IMPARDONABLE, IMPAR'ITY, equal.]
71.
[in
;
tneris,
mentis.
Bryant. a.
Unpardonable.
and parity
;
South. L. par,
2.
another is
judge. Equitableness justice ity of a decision. ;
IMPARTIALLY,
as
;
tlie
;
equitably
IMPARTIBIL'ITY,
n.
impartial-
IMPA'STE,
;
justly.
the
being subject to partition.
quality of not
n.
[in
and
paste.]
The
mixtion of various materials of different colors and consistences, baked or united by a cement, and hardened by the air or Chambers. by fire.
Without bias of
adr.
judgment; without prejudice; without inclination to favor one party or side more than another
IMPASTA'TION,
disinterestedness.
;
indispensable to an upright
V. t.
[Fr. empater
;
in and pate,
jiaste.]
make
1.
To knead
2.
In painting, to lay on colors thick
;
to
into paste.
and
bold.
IMPA'STED,
a.
Concreted, as into pa«te. Shak.
M
I 2.
Pasted over
P
I
A
defluxloii terancc.
covered with paste, or with
;
thick paint.
IMPAT'IBLE, ble
that cannot he
;
IMPA'TIENCE, from
;
impeached
my
ut-;
home.
Jluwell:
peccable
;
impeccable. IMPE'DE, V. t. [Sp. impedir
[See Impeachment.]
3.
|
To accuse ; to censure ; to call in ques-1 tion ; as, to impeach one's motives or coii' duct.
To call to account ; to charge as answerimpatiens.] Uneasy or able. not bearing jiain fretful under suffering n. Hinderauce. Obs. with composure ; not enduring evil with- IMPE'ACH, IMPE'ACH ABLE, a. Liable to accusation; out frctfulness, uneasiness, and a desire or chargeable with a criiue ; accusable ; ceneffort to get rid of the evil. Young men surable. are all apt are impatient of restraint. 2. Liable to be called in question ; accountto be impatient under wrongs; but it is a
To
Owner.i! of lands in fee simple
2.
Pope. 3.
not enduring delay. The impatient man will not wait for information he often acts with precipitance. Be not impatient for the return of spring. Not to be borne as impatient smart.
Hasty
;
eager
for
;
;
arc not im2.
;
IMPE'ACHER, one who
Ji.
An
accuser by authority,!
culls in question.
IMPEACHING,
We
inents.
With eager as,
causing uneasiness to wait impatiently for the arrival of desire
one's friend.
Passionately
;
Clarendon. Absolute seign-
ardently.
IMPATRONIZA'TION",
n.
ory or possession.
IMPAT'RONIZE, v. To gain to one's self t.
[Fr.
the
Cotgrave. impatroniser.]
to pledge
i. [in ami paivn.] To to deposit as security.
I',
;
pawn
;
Shak.
Great Britain, the house
to glut.
L.
It
V.
t.
D.
belongs to the
pango, pactus
;
Ar.
i'auiily
^j
of pack ;
bakka,
to
press or compress. Class Eg. No. 18. 20. The literal sense of impeach is to 61. thrust or send against hence, to hinder, ;
to stop.] 1.
To
This sense is hinder to impede. found in our early writers. These unpacious practices of his sons did impeach his journey to tb» Holy Land. ;
Dairies.
r./. ;
in
\t.
[Sp.impeler;
and
To
impeUere
;
L.
pelfo, to drive.]
drive or urge forward to press on ; to excite to action or to move forward, by the application of physical force, or moral suasion or necessity. A ball is impelled by the three of powder a ship is impelled by wind a man may be impelled by hunger or a regard to his safety motives of jKilicy or of safety impel nations to cou;
;
;
;
Icderate.
The surge impelled me on
a craggy coast.
Pope.
Aai
men impel
several
to sevetal ends.
Pope. pp. Driven forward urged force or power, pby8>
IMPEL'LED, on
;
moved by any
;
or moral.
icai
act of impeaching. Censure accusation a calling in question the purity of motives or the rectitude of conduct, &,c. This declaration is noi impeachment ol his motives or of liis judgment. The act of calling to account, as for waste.
IMPEL LENT,
n.
drives forward
;
[Fr. empechtr ; Arm. ampeich, ampechein ; Port. Sp. eynpacliar ; It. G. The state for waste. impacciare ; to hinder, to stop. It signifies also in Portuguese, to surfeit, to overload,
IMPE'ACH,
impello
ofj
The
;
Bacon.
IMPAWN',
Sanderson.
IMPEL',
peachment. 3.
power of any
seignory.
In
peers, and in the U. States, the senate of the United States, and the senates in the several states, are the high courts of im-
;
Hindering; stopping;
ppr.
obstructing.
IM PEDITE, f. t. To impede. [.\ot in use.] l.MPED ITIVE, a. Causing hinderance.
impeach-'
try
3.
i
IMPEACHMENT,
impatiently. 2.
.Mounlagu.
IMPEDING,
|
Oki.
a.
striictiHg.
;
followed by
is
Bp. Reynolds. Hindering; ob-
use.]
LMPEDIMENT'AL,
ppr. Hindering. 2. Accusing by authority ; calling in <|uestion the purity or rectitude of conduct or Spenser. motives. or This word of, at, for, n. Hinderance; impediarc impatient of restraint, or under. ment ; stop ; obstruction. Obs. o/" wrongs; impatient at the delay of e.\Spenser. Shak. jiected good ; impatient for the return of a 2. An accusation or charge brought against friend, or for the arrival of the mail ; ima public officer for maladministration in The patient under evils of any kind. his office. In Great Britain, it is the priv-, proper use of these particles can be learnt ilege or right of the house of coimnons to! only by practice or observation. and the right of the house of IMPA'TIENT, n. One who is restless un- impeach, lords to-try and determine inipeachnients.l der suffering. [Unusual.] In the estates, it is the right of the house! IMPA'TIENTLY, adv. With uneasiness or of representatives to impeach, and of the restlessness ; as, to bear disappointment and determine senate to
4.
;
are impediments in marching and travelling. Idleness and dissipation are impediments to improvement. The cares of life are impediments to the progress of vital religion. That which prevents distinct articulation ; as an impediment in speech. v. t. To impede. [JVol in
IMPEDIMENT,
waste, Z. SwiJI.
without being impeached.
[L.
Bad roads
Obs. pp. Hindered. charged with a crime, misde-
;
;
n.
erery subject, physical or moral.
cable to
Accused meanor or wrong; censured. The first donee in tail may commit ;
;
;
impedimentum.) That which hinders progress or motion hinderance obstruction obstacle ; appli-
Z. Swift.
waste.
to stop in progress to obstruct ; impede the progress of troops. obpp. Hindered; stopped
IMPEDIMENT,
able.
peachable
;
.^tructed.
IMPE'ACHED,
suffering quietly ; not enduring. Fame, impatient of extremes, decays Not more by ciivy than excess of praise.
hinder
as, to
We
of Providence.
impedire
IMPE'UED,
;
christian duty not to be impatient in sickness, or under any afflictive dispensation
;
the feet.]
;
a. [L.
Not
No mere
L.impedio; supposed to be compounded of in iind pedes, feet, to catch or entangle
word is now restricted to accusations made by authority as, to impeach a judge.
;
It.
exempt
;
;
public oliicer before a competent tribunal,' that is, to send or put on, to load. Thei
;
2.
[Sp. impecable ; Fr. i/«pecable, Fr. peccable,
a.
and Sp.
in
;
;
[Fr. ; L. impatientia in uiui palioi; to suft(;r.]
Uneasiness under pain ur suflcring the not enduring pain with composure restlessness occasioned by suffering positive evi' or the absence of expected good. Impatience is not ra^e, nor absolute inabitity to bear pain but it implies want of fortitude, or of its exercise. It usually springs from irritability of temper.
IMPA'TIENT,
IMPE€'€.\BLE,
To
11.
inipaliens
IMF
P tliroat
from L. pecco, to err, to sin.] [This application of the word is ob.wlete.] accuse to charge with a crime or Not liable to sin not subject to sin misdenjcanor but appropriately, to exhibit from the possibility of sinning. man is charges of maladministration against a;
[L. impatibilis.] Intolera-
a.
M
on njy
;
A power
or force that
impulsive power. Glanvilte.
IMPELLER,
He or that which impels. ppr. Driving forward urg-
n.
IMPEL'LING, ing
;
])ressing.
;
IMPEN',
r.
/.
[in
and
To
^cr».]
pen
;
to shut
or inclose in a narrow place. Feltham. of being liabje to account, as IMPl'^ND, t'. 1. [L. im^enrffo ; in and pendeo, to hang.] IMPEARL, V. t. imperi. [in and ;je«r/ ] To L To hang over to be suspended above to form in the resemblance of pearls. over the threaten. A dark cloud ;
Impearls on every
leaf,
decorate with pearls, or with things resembling pearls. The dews of the morning inipeart every thorn. Digby.
being hable to sin error or offense.
;
?
land. Destruction sure o'er
and every tlower. Milton
To
IMPE€CABIL'ITY, IMPEC'CANCY,
('See
;
impends
— Dew-drops which the sun
Impeccable.]
The quality of not exemption from sin,
\"-
Pope.
2.
To
be near
;
all
your heads impends. Pope.
to be a])proachiDg
and ready
to fall on.
expresses our deep sense of God's impendSmatridge. ing wrath. Nor bcir advices of impending foes. Pope. It
IMPENDENCE,
\
IMPEND'ENCY,
\
"'
a menacing attitude.
The
state of
over
;
hanging
near approach
;
Hammond.
IMP ;
;
impendent
in
;
ppr. Hanging ; threatening.
over
;
ap-
n.
1.
Irahte.]
The
The stnte of being not perforated, or without any aper-
.Norris. a.
[Fr.
;
in and per-
ture.
1.
;
and
penetrabilis,
from
penetro, to
2.
;
IMPERCEP'TIBLE,
pen
That cannot be penetrated or pierced not admitting the passage of other bodies
%
3.
;
;
as an impenetrable shield. Not to be aftected or moved ; not admitThe hard ting impressions on the mind. ened sinner remains impenetrable to the admonitions of the gospel. Not to be entered by the sight as impen ;
darkness. Hence, Not to be entered and viewed by the eye of the intellect as impenetrable obscurity or abstruseness.
to
;
IMPEN'ETRABLENESS, bility,
which
n.
see.
IMPEN'ETRABLY,a(fj). With 2.
as impenetrably
IMPER'FECT,
wanting a part impaired. of Livy are imperfect. ;
penitcnza ; L. in and panitens, from pteni teo, to vepenl, pcena, pain.] Want of penitence or repentance absence of contrition or sorrow for sin obduracy Final impenitence hardness of heart. dooms the sinner to inevitable punish-
4.
IMPENITENCE,
)
IMPEN'lTENCy,
I
Not perfect
He
will
;
writings
JirUton.
[in
1.
n. [Fr.
from L.
Commanding
;
and
peril.]
[L.
dictatorial
;
haughty
ar-
;
as rogant overbearing domineering an imperious tyrant an imperious dictator; an imperious man; an imperious temMore. Shak. per. 2. Commanding indicating an imperious temper authoritative as imperious word.*. Locke. 3. Powerful overbearing not to be opposed by obstacles as a man of a vast and TiUotson. imperious mind. 4. Commanding; urgent; pressing; as imperious love imperious circumstances ;tn!perious appetite. Dryden. S. S. Smith. 5. Authoritative commanding with right:
;
;
;
;
;
Busby.
IMPERFECTION,
a.
Fr.
;
manner.
To bring Spenser. imperiosus ; It. Sp. See imperieux. Imperial.]
t.
i'.
IMPE'RIOUS,
;
:
died
adv. In a royal
IMPER'IL,
into danger.
;
;
IMPE'RIALLY,
imperioso
-,
They
relinquished her imperialities on the private mines, viz. the tenths of the copper, iron, silver and gold— Tooke.
;
not finished. In music, incomplete not having all the accessary sounds as an imperfect chord. An imperfect interval is one which does not contain its complement of simple soimds.
advance from one degree of iinpeui C. Rogers a. in and penitent, [Fr.
not repenting of sin not conobdurate; of a hard heart.
The
In grammar, the imperfect tense denotes an action in time past, then present, but
fence to another.
trite
n. Imperial power. The right of an emperor to a share of the produce of mines, &c. The late empress having by ukases of grace,
imperfect.
;
ment.
supra.] Not penitent
IMPERIAL'ITY,
men
;
IMPEN'ITENT,
peror. The denomination, imperialist.?, is often given to the troops or armies of the emperor of Austria.
in intellect liable to err as, are imperfect ; our minds and under standings are imperfect. Not perfect in a moral view; not according to the laws of God, or the rules of Our services and obedience are right. ;
Encyc.
emperor; a subject or soldier of an em-
a.
;
3.
empire.
(if the German empire. Encyc. IMPE'RIALIST, n. One who belongs to an
a
[h. impcrfectus ; in anA perfectus, finished, perfect ; perficio, to perfect ; per smA facio, to make.] Impenetra- 1. Not finished not complete. The worK or design is imperfect. solidity that 2. Defective ; not entire, sound or whole
tliill.
;
city, a city in Gertnany which has no head hut the emperor. Imperial diet, an assembly of all the states
Baxter. {N'ot
;
maintaining supremacy democracy of Athens.
;
Imperial
Not perceiving or
a.
Commanding
German
quality Hale.
Not destructible.
imperial arts. Dryden. royalty denoting sove-
;
Pertaining to
Mitford. Imperial chamber, the sovereign court of the
Addison
a.
;
as the imperial
legitimate word.]
Pope. [Fr. impenitence ; Sp. "impenitencia ; It. im-
;
4.
manner not
having power to perceive.
IMPER'DIBLE,
admits not of being penetrated. With hardness that admits not of impression
adv. In a
be perceived.
IMPERCIP'IENT,
etnthle 4.
The
n.
of being imperceptible.
IMPERCEPTIBLY,
;
reignty.
That which can
IMPERCEP'TIBLENESS,
;
imperial palace 3.
not be perceived by the senses on account of its smallness. [Little nsed.] Taller.
etrate.] 1.
n.
impe-
;
diadem imperial authority or edict ; power oi- sway. Royal belonging to a monarch as an
imperial
;
in
a. [Fr. from L. imperialis, from impero, to command. See Emperor.] Pertaining to an empire, or to an emperor as an imperial governraeiit an
rial
2.
;
n.
IMPE'RIAL,
Not to be perceived ; not to be known or discovered by the senses. say a thing is imperceptible to the touch, to the eye or sight, to the ear, to the taste or smell.
quality of heing impenetrable. \n philosophy, that quality of matter which Hence, prevents two bodies from occupying the 2. Very small ; fine minute in dimensions or very slow in motion or progress as Good. same space at the same time. the growth of a plant or animal is imper0. Insusceptibility of intellectual impression. Johnson. ceptible ; it is too slow to be perceived by IMPEN'ETRABLE, a. [h. impenetrabilis ; the eye. 1.
P
Commanding. [Xot IMPERFORA'TION,
tise.]
We
[from impene-
M
1
ceptible.]
proaching near
IMPENETRABILITY,
P
a.
IMPERCEP'TIBLE,
Hale.
evil.
IMPEND'ING,
M
I
IMPERATO'RIAL,
IMPEND'ENT, Hanging over; imminent threatening pressing closely as an a.
;
;
impe'r-
;
;
fectio, supra.]
j
Defect; fault; the want of a part or of someIMPEN'ITENT, thing necessary to complete a thing moral )ipnt: a hardened sinner. equally applicable to physical or IMPEN'ITENTLY, adv. Without repent- subjects. When fruit fails to come to ma-' ance or contrition for sin obduratelv. turity, and after it begins to decay, we deful authority. a. and Wantnominate the defect, an imperfection. Laws' IMPEN'NOUS, [in pennous.] sometimes fail of the intended effect, eiThe commandment high and imperimis in its ing wings. claims. D. A. Clark. ther from their imperfection, or from thel IMPE'OPLE, V. t. To form into a commuBeaum Men' IMPERIOUSLY, adv. With arrogance of nity. [See People.] imperfection of the administration. a. to ai'e all chargeable with IM'PERATE, command with a haughty air of author[L. imperatus, impero, imperfeciions, both: in character and in conduct. in a domineering manner. command.] South. ity Done by impulse or direction of the mind IMPER'FE€TLY, adv. In an imperfecti 2. With ureencv or force not to he opposed. South. Hale. manner or degree not fully; not entirely: IMPE'RIOUSNESS, n. Authority air of [A-ot used.] a. L. mnot IMPER'ATIVE, [Fr. imperatif; command. completely not in the best manner; South. See not without fault or failure. 2. Arrogance of command peraliviis, from impero, to command. haughtiness. Empire.] IMPER'FECTNESS, n. The state of be-j Imperiousness and severity is an ill way of 1. Commanding: ex]iressive of command ing imperfect. men who have reason to guide them. treating containing positive command, as distin- IMPER'FORABLE, o. [infra.] That can-! Loekc. not be perforated or bored through. guished from advisory, or discretionary. IMPERISHABLE, a. [Fr. imperissable; in Tlie orders are imperative. IMPER'FORATE, a. [h. in and perforatusj and perish.] 2. In grammar, the imperative mode of a perforo.] Not subject to decay not liable to perish; verb is that which expresses command Not perforated or pierced having no open-i indestructible enduring permanently as entreaty, advice or exhortation ; as, go ing. Sharpe.\ an imperishable monument ; imperishable mite, attend. IMPER'FORATED, a. Not perforated. Impenitent.
n.
One who
does not re-
;
:
;
;
;
;
|
;
;
;
i
;
'
'
;
;
;
IBIPER'ATIVELY, authoritatively.
adv.
renown.
With command;
Broicn.\ 2.
Having no
pores.
Sir
J. Ba)iks.\
;
—
Elegant discourses on virtue will not supply the consolations of imperishable hope.
IMP
IMP IMPER'ISHABLENESS,
IMPERTINENT,
quality
one
who
belong to
hin).
dler
of being imperisliable.
IMPER'MANENCE,
The
n.
Want of perma-
n.
nence or continued duration.
;
n.
An
interferes in
IMPERTINENTLY,
fV.
Mountague.
tion to the
matter
in
a. [L. in and permeo; per and meo, to pass.] to be passed through the pores by a as fluid; impermeable lether. IMPER'SONAI., a. [Fr. impersonnel; L.
IMPERTRAN'SIBLE,
;
;
2.
;
Officiously; intrusively; rudely.
driven or impelled.
Addison.
of not being capable through.
IMPER'MEABLE,
Iransto
n.
2.
The
quality
of being
passed Hale.
a. [L.
and per-
in
per and transeo, to pass over or
;
;
IMPERTURBABLE,
a.
[L.
m
to
be
impersonalis in and personalis, from perbo, to disturb per and turbo.] See Person.] sona. Tliat cannot be disturbed or agitated perIn grammar, an impersonal verb is one which manently quiet. Encyc. second and is not employed with the ,tirst IMPERTURBA'TION, n. Freedom from calmness. persons, I and thou or you, we and ye, for agitation of mind fV. Mountague nominatives, and which has no variation of ending to express them, but is used only IMPERTURB'ED, a. Undisturbed. [Mt ;
;
in use.]
2.
in and
;
per and
;
libet
;
;
pugnatur.
IMPERSONALITY,
Draper. adv. In the
;
of
Indistinction
n.
personality.
2.
manner of
an impersonal verb.
IMPERSONATE,
To
Not penetrable by
light ; not permeable Glass is pervious to light, but impiivious to water. Paper is impen-ious to light. In the latter sense only, imper-
personify. Jf'arlon.
IMPER'SONATED,
a.
Made
«.
Want
of perspicui-
or clearness to the mind.
IMPERSPIe'UOUS, a. Not perspicuous
;
[in
and perspicuous.]
not clear; obscure.
svnonvmous with impermeable. adv. In a manner
viotis is
IMPERVIOUSLY,
The
n.
state
admitting a passage.
Bailey.
IMPIG'NORATE,
J.
per
That which
is
hold.]
not pertinent; that which
does not belong to the subject in hand Bacon that wliieh is of no weiglit. The state of not being pertinent. Folly ; rambling thought. [Little used.]
IMPETRA'TION, by prayer or
:
2.
Ill
71.
The
;
3.
fatten
;
to
make
a.
fat.
[L. impius
;
[jYot in
imc] Bacon.
in and pius,
Irreverent towards the Supreme Being; in veneration for God and his
wanting
authority fer
;
irreligious ; profane. The scofhis authority is
God and
at
impious.
The profane swearer is impious. When vice prevails and impious men
;
sense.]
;
pious.] 1.
;
[This
To
IM'PIOUS,
;
;
;
I.
fat.]
Herbe
jietition.
pawn-
upon.
act of obtaining
the picobtaining of benefices from
tnii;
act of
LMPINOTNO, p;)r. Striking against. IMPLN'GUATE, v. [L. in and pinguis,
the church of Rome, which belonged to the disposal of the king and other lay patrons of the realm. Encyc Sliak. IM'PETRATIVE, a. Obtaining tendina 4. Rudeness improper intrusion interferto obtain by entreaty. Bp. Hull. ence by word or conduct which is not cona. conBeseeching sistent witli the age or station of the per- IM'PETRATORY, Taylor. ayu taining entreaty. is the most usual son.
2.
The
n.
The cause of reflection is not the impinging of light on the solid or impervious parts of bodiesA''ewton.
;
teneo,
pawn.
[JVbt in use.]
to clash
;
;
;
or
V. i. impinj'. [L. impingo; in of not IRIPlNtiE, and pango, to strike. See Pack.] To fall against to strike to dash against a
sibilis.
tain
To pledge
[J^ot in use.]
a. [L. impetigo, ringa. [L. in and persua- IMPETIG'INOUS, worm.] See Persuade.] or tetters covNot to be moved by persuasion not yield- Resembling the ring-worm ered with scales or scabs scurfvDecay of Piety. ing to arguments. a. [Sec Impctrate.] That IMPER'TINENCE, ) " [Fr. impertinence, IM'PETRABLE, may be obtained by petition. IMPERTINENCY, ) from L. imperii IMTETRATE, To obv. i. [L. impetro.] nens ; in and perttnens, perlineo, to per tain hv request or entreaty. Usher. and to
IMPERSUA'SIRLE,
v.t.
IMPIGNORA'TION,
to
ing.
prevent passage or penetration
IMPER'VIOUSNESS,
;
;
to tluids.
of.
persons
Jl'arton.
[See Personated.]
IMPERSPI€U'ITY,
;
shield.
v.t.
;
;
;
ttedet
IMPER'SONALLY,
ty,
[L. impervius
a.
irreverence towards the Ungodliness contempt of the divine character and authority ; neglect of the divine precepts. These constitute different degrees of impiety. Any act of wickedness, as blasphemy and scoffing at the Supreme Being, or at his authority jirofaneness. Any expression of contempt for God or his laws, constitutes an impiety of the highest degree of Disobedience to the divine criminality. commands or neglect of duty implies contempt for his authority, and is therefore impiety. Impiety, when it expresses iho temper or disposition, has no plural but it is otherwise when it expresses an act of wickednej^s, for all such acts are impieties.
Supreme Being
via, way.] passable Not to he penetrated or passed through impenetrable as an imperviotis gulf; an impervious forest. Not penetrable not to be pierced by a pointed instrument ; as an impervious
pervitis,
;
L.
[See Umpire.]
in and pietas, pius.]
1.
Bailey. a.
motion
in
Painted; impressed.
IMPIERCEABLE,
;
IMPER'VIOUS,
a.
Spenser.
IMPIER.
;
;
which one body
IMPIC'TURED,
1
with the termination of the third person singular, with it for a nominative in English, and withfiut a nominative in Latin as, it rains ; it becomes us to be modest
The force with strikes another.
impers'oMe. [in and Not to be pierced or penetrated. pierce.] Spenser. and ;>erturIMPIETY, n. [Fr. impieli ; L. impietas;
Not
through trans and eo, to go.] passed through. [Little used.]
Not
n.
IM'PETUS, [L. supra.] Force of rac tion the force with which any body is
;
IMPERTRANSIBIL'ITY',
P
A driving or rushing with haste and violence furiousness ; fury violence. Vehemence of temper ; violence.
IMPET'UOUSNESS,
n.
hand.
2.
Not permanent
;
UEslrange. Without rela-
adv.
a. [in and permnnent.] not enduring. Gregon/. IMPERMEABIL ITY, n. The quality of being impermeable by a fluid. Cavallo. Jbiat. Res.
IMPER'MANENT,
M
I a medwhat does not
intruder
bear
sway. The post of honor
is a private station. [See Impetuous.] A .Addison. rushing with violence and great force nence of ]>edants. Swift. Irreverent towards God ; fury : violence. proceeding from a thing of little or no value. trifle 5. 2. Vehemence; furiousness of temper. or manifesting a contempt for the Supreme There are many subtile impertinencies learnt IMPETUOUS, L. a. to ; dishonor God or his [Fr. impetueux Being tending JVatts in school.s laws, and bring them into contempt as impetuosus, from impetus, impelo ; in and an impious deed impious language ; imIMPER'TINENT, a. [L. impeHinens, su- peto, to urge, to rush. See Bid.] 1. Rushiiig with great force and violence; pra.] pious writings. l. Not pertaining to the matter in hand ; of moving rapidly furious; foi-cible fierce IIIM'PIOUSLY, adv. With irreverence for no weight having no bearing on the subGod, or contempt for his authority ; proraging as an impetuous wind an impetu ' ous torrent. faneiv; wickedly. ject ; as an impertinent remark. Hooker. Tillotson. 2. Vehement of mind; fierce; hasty; pas IM'PIOUSNESS, n. Impiety; contempt of sionatc violent as a man of impetuous intrusive God and his laws. .2. Rude ; meddling with that which does not belong to the person as > temjicr. IiMPLA€ABIL'ITY, "• [from implaca-
We
should avoid the vexation and imperti-
A
IMPETUOS'ITY,
n.
;
—
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
I
I
;
;
;
I
;
3.
an impertinent coxcomb. Trifling foolish neghgent of the pres;
ent purpose.
Vol.
I.
:
Pope.
IMPET'UOUSLY, ly
;
forcibly
;
adv.
Violently
;
fierce
with haste and force. Addison
106
iIMPLA'€ABLENESS,
J
We.]
Thequal-
of not being appeasable inexorablcness irreconcilable enmity or anger.
ity I
;
;
M
I
IMPLA'€ABLE, ilis
and
in
;
a.
P
[Fr.
placabilis,
ing involved
involution.
;
;
1.
;
adv. Witli enmity not to ;
as,
2.
;
now seldom or neveriised in its [/( is sense for setting jAants or seeds in the
literal
act of setting or heart, as princi-
or infixing in the mind Brown. ples or first rudiments. IMPLANT'ED, pp. Set infixed in the mind, as principles oi' rudiments. IMPLANT'ING, ppr. Setting or infixing in the mind, as principles. IMPLAUSIBIL'ITY, n. [from implausible.] The quality of not being plausible or spe-
2.
;
3.
in
V.
I.
[in
and
To
pleach.]
V. t. [in and plead.] To instiand prosecute a suit against one in
IMPLE'AD, tute
2.
The corporation plead and be impleaded. Let them implead one another. Acts xix. IMPLE'ADED, pp. Prosecuted sued in court. subject to answer to a suit IMPLE'ADER, n. One who prosecutes ancourt
shall
sue at law.
to
;
have power
to
;
3.
;
ppr. Prosecuting a suit. a. [jVot in IJnpleasing.
use.]
IMPLEDgE, r. IM'PLEMENT,
t.
to
;
in
used, tools, utensils, vessels, instruments the tools or instruments of labor as the ~the vessels used in a kitolien, &c. is implements of trade or of husbandry. [It ;
a word of very extensive signification.]
IMPLE'TION, n. [L. impleo,to The act of filling; the pleo.]
fill
;
state
and of be
in
The impletion is either
in
simple or compound
The impletion of simple tloweis, is flowers. by the increase eitlier of the petals, or of the Lee.
nectary.
Infolded
See Implicate.] [L. impleriis. intricate ; entangled ; compli-
a. ;
cated.
Every poem simple,
when
is
simple or implex
tliere is
;
it is cailet]
no chanjic of fortime
in
it
ing
IMPLY', It.
2.
1.
implex, wlicn liic fortime of the dtief actor changes from bail to good, or from good to bad. Spectator.
fethers.
5 t.
implunj'.
Johnson.
To
plunge; to
virtual-
Fuller.
11.
t.
[Fr. impliquer; Up. implicar ; L. implico ; in and plico, to
;
See
Implicate.] Literally, to infold or involve
to
;
wrap
Obs. Spejiser. involve or contain in substance or essence, or by fair inference, or by construction of law, when not expressed in words. up.
2.
To
Where a
a malicious act is proved, a malicious is
Sherlock.
implied.
man employs
a laborer
to
work
for
him, or an a£;ent to transact business for him, the act of hiiing implies an obligation, and a promise that he shall pay him a reasonable re-
implico.
ward
for his services. Contracts are express or implied ; express contracts are those in which an agreement or promise is expressed by words or in writing; implied contracts are such as aiise from the presumption of law, or the justice and reason of the transaction. Blackstone.
IMPLY'ING,
ppr. Involving; containing in substance, or by fair inference, or by construction of law.
IMPOCK'ET, IMPOIS'ON,
t-.
/.
v.l.
To
pocket.
[J^Tot used.] [Fr, empoisonner.
s as z.
See Poison.]
1.
To poison ; to impregnate with poison with poison. To embitter to impair as, grief impoisons the pleasures of life. To kill with i)oison. [Rare.] Shak.
;
to corrupt 2.
?.
;
;
pp. Poisoned
IMPOIS'ONED,
corrupted;
;
eiuliittcfed.
IMPOIS'ONING, ing
;
ppr. Poisoning
;
corrupt-
embittering.
with something else IMPOIS'ONMENT, n. The act of poisonwith unreserved confiing. Pope. dependently dence without doubting, or without ex- IJl'POLARLY, adv. Not according to the
By
connection
:
;
;
We
are disposed to amining evidence. believe implicitly what a man of veracity testifies. to dispute the
methods of
his prov-
idence, but lnm}bly and implicitly to acquiesce in and adore them. Attcibury. n. The state of being the state of trusting without reimplicit
directii'U
of the poles.
[JVot used.]
Brown.
IMPOL'ICY,
n.
nn6
Inexpedience imsuitableness to the end proposed; bad policy defect of wisdom a tcord ap[in
policy.]
;
;
;
serve.
plied to private as well as public affairs. ff'ashington, IMPOLI'TE, a. [in ami polite.] Not of polished manners ; unpolite ; uncivil ; rude
[See Imply.] Involved pp. contained virtually, though not express ed as an implied promise.
IMPOLI'TELY, adv. UncivillvIMPOLI'TENESS, n. Incivility want of
IMPLICITNESS, ;
IMPLI'ED, ;
;
Having no plumes or
}
t'.
implicare
fold.
When
inference deduci-
words:
praying f5 earnestly. J
IMPLUNgE,
;
in
;
IMPLU'MED, ),
intention
;
[N'ot
Spenser.
Earnestly supplicated;
pp.
IMPLO'RER, n. One who prays earnestly. IMPLO'RING, ppj'. Beseeching; entreat-
complic'ated.
;
Learn not
full.
IM'PLEX,
;
Pope
be.sought.
a differ-
in reality, but not in name. He tliat denies the providence of God, implihis existence. Benlley. citly denies
;
;
from
[L. implicitus,
to
;
inmierse.
1 Pope [^Little used.'\ cling imii/icit. Implied tacitly comprised fairly to be understood, though not cxi)ressed in words as an implicit contract or agreement. Resting on another; trusting to the word or authority of another, without doubting or reserve, or without examining into the truth of the thing itself Thus we give to the declaimplicit credit or confidence rations of a person of kno^vn veracity. We receive with implicit faith whatever God has clearly revealed.
ly
now
ing
a.
entangled
;
the gods that reign above.
used.]
Myliffe
To pawn. [Ao< used.] LMPLIC'ITLY, atlv. By [Low L. implementum, ble, but not expressed
fill
;
as
;
n.
and pleo.] Whatever may supply wants particularly,
from impleo,
supra.]
in supplication
for,
;
all
IMPLU'MOU,' JS,
;
other.
IMPLE'ADING, IMPLE'ASING,
Infolded
Sp. imploin and ;
;
Imploring
In his woolly fleece
Shak.
[.Vo< in %(se.]
terweave.
1.
in-
;
implore
To ask earnestly to beg. IMPLO'RE, v.i. To entreat; to beg. IMPLO'RE, n. Earnest supplication.
Buck.
Without an appear- IMPLICIT, supra.]
adv.
ance of probability.
IMPLE'ACH,
or
2.
IMPLICATIVE, a. Having implication. IM'PLICATIVELY, adv. By implication.
Swift.
IMPLAUSTBLY,
by implication, of
L.
;
words.
Tlie doctors arc, ent opinion.
[in
as an implausible harangue.
;
jnoving
;
Involution; entanglement. Three principal causes of firmness are, the grossncss, the quiet contact, and the implication of the component parts. Boyle An iiriplying, or that which is implied, but not expressed a tacit inference, or something fairly to be understood, though not
expressed
and plausible.] Not specious; not wearing the appearance of truth or credibility, and not likely to be believed
Involving
ppr.
be concerned.
;
cious.
IMPLAUS'IBLE, a. s as z.
;
IMPLICA'TION, n. [L. implicaiio, 1 The act of infolding or involving.
The
n.
IMPLICATING, to
earth .]
IMPLANTA'TION,
Infolded; involved. concerned proInvolved connected ved to be concerned or to have had a part. Twenty persons are implicated in the plot. ;
;
;
;>p.
;
[Fr. implorer
;
IMPLO'RED,
conspiracy.
IMPLICATED,
;
heart.
;
;
h. planto.]
t.
implornre
call u])on
beseech to pray earnestly to petition with urgency to entreat as, to implore the forgiveness of sins to implore mercy
;
in its literal sense.] Boyle To involve to bring into connection with also, to show or prove to be con neeted or concerned as, the evidence does not implicate the accused person in this ;
purpose of growth as, to implant the seeds of virtue, or the principles of knowledge in the minds of youth to implant grace in the
It.
;
To
dom used 2.
be pacified or subdued ; inexorably to hate a person implacably.
v.l. [Fr. impliquer ; It. im plicare ; L. implico, impiicatns ; in and phjgu.] plico, to fold, Gr. jtXfscio, To infold to involve ; to entangle. [Sel-
W.
revenge.
IMPLANT', v.t. [in and pUmt, To set, plant or infix for the
rar
v.
ploro, to cry out.] 1.
IM'PLICATE,
;
;
IMPLACABLY,
IMPLO'RE,
[Little u,sed.]
Did
Not to be appeased that can not be painexoracified anil rendered peaceable stultboni or constant in enmity; as an implacable prince. as Not to he appeased or subdued implacable anger; implacable enmity, malice or ble
2.
IMP
P
n. [See Implicate.] The act infolding or involving ; the stale of be-
of
pease.]
1.
M
I
IMPLEX'ION,
from L. implacabfrom placo, to ap-
in
manners. ;
IMPLI'EDLY, adv. By implication. good manners. IMPLORA'TION, n. Earnest supplication. IMPOL'ITIC, a. Not Bp.
Hall.
Chesterfield.
wise; devising and to injure the
pursuing measures adapted
M
I public interest minister. 2.
Unwise terest
aa an
IMPO'RTABLE, 2.
adapteil to injure the public in-
;
;
;
IMP
P
aa an impolitic prince or
impolitic law,
measure or
Insupportable
IMPORT' ANCE,
scheme. 3.
welfare
private concerns ; pursuing suited to promote private
in ill
2.
Nor bound thy narrow views
and ponderable, "• Not ^ ponderous.] Brown. having sensible weight. IMPOOR', v.t. [in mnd poor.] To impover-
IMPON'DERABLE, IMPON'DEROUS,
)
{in
Browne.
[JVot in use.]
ish.
IMPOROS'ITY,
n.
[in
and
3.
He 4.
compact
Brown.
;
m
bring from a foreign country or jurisdiction, or from another state, into one's own country, jurisdiction or state opposed to export. import teas and silks from China, wines from Spain and France
We may say also that Connecticut, Massachusetts and Maine import flour from the middle states. 2. To bear or convey, as signification or India.
mean
to
;
to signify
;
;
to imply.
understand by a term, what
2.
3.
To
consequence to of, or to have a bearing on. Her length of sickness, with what ;
1.
else
more
2.
3.
.'
from implication
connection
less
is
less
in this,
that the in
obscurely expressed. on inference or de-
philosophical discussions, it is usethe import of the terms In the construction of laws employed. and treaties, we are to examine carefully the import of words and phrases. 5. That which is imported or brought into a country from another country or state Our imports e.xgenerally in the plural. the balance nnist be ceed our exports paid in specie hence the scarcity of coin.
distant state. Bearing, as a signification
quence.
;
foreign or 3.
weight consequence. [For;
merly accented on the second
s;ill
Skak.
Drydtn:
n.
act of importu-
a.
4.
See
Bearing on pressing or urging in request or demand urgent and pertinacious in solicitation as an importunate suitor or petitioner. as an importunate dePressing; urgent;
mand. urgently for gratification portunate passions and appetites.
3. Inciting
;
Pope. by authority or by force. rapacious governors on their colonics and conquered countries. To lay on, as a command to enjoin, as a duty. Tliou on the deep imposest nobler laws. ;
Waller.
Impose but your comm'^nds Dryden. fix on to impute. [Little used.]
To
;
To lay on, as hands in the ceremony of ordination, or of confirmation.
To
obtrude fallaciously.
Our poet thinks not fit T' impose upon you what he writes for wit.
;
;
—
place over
Brown. a.
[L. importunus.
;
2.
plagues
To
—
Shak.
The
Importune.] 1.
impious realms and barb'rous kings im-
The Romans odenimposcd
;
importunateness.
IMPORT'UN.\TE,
;
;
;
On Thy
pose 2.
ones
into
[J^ot used.]
IMPORT'UNACY, ning
;
He
IMPO'RTING, ppr. Bringing own couim-y or state from a 2.
v.t. sasz. [Fr. imposer ; L. impositum, from impono ; in and pona, to put. Pona, as written, belongs to Class Bn ; and posui, positum, to Class Bs. or Bd. The latter coincide with Eiig. ;)u;.] To lay on to set on ; to lay on, as a burden, tax, toll, duty or iienalty. The legislature imposes taxes for the support of toll is imposed on passengovernment to maintain roads, and penalties are gers imposed on those who violate the laws. God imposes no burdens on men which they are unable to bear.
Brought from another
pp.
that imports; the merchant who, by himself or his agent, brings goods from another country or state.
;
;
1.
of the last. Conveyance.
n.
Hammond.
laid on.
fore
country or state.
all
Importance
;
from import.]
meaning. 3. Having weight or consequence. also apa. Of no weight or conse woi-J. IMPORTLESS,
ful to ascertain
3.
;
Hammond. IMPO'SE,
;
home. The wares or commodities imported. The importations, this season, exceed those
IMPORTER,
Import depends duction than implication, and is plied more frequently to a single In
Weightily
[Fr.
at
IMPORTED,
)i.
meaning of a term or number of words
adv. n.
The act or practice of importing, or of bringing from another country or state opposed to exportation. Nations forbid the importation of commodities which are produced or manufactured in sutficient abun dance
Shak
Dry den That which is borne or conveyed in words; meaning; signification; the sense which svords are intended to convey to the understanding, or which they bear in sound interpretation. Import diflers
;
;
;
it
serious
hnporteth thee to know, tlus bears. If I endure it, what imparts it you
IM'PORT,
;
bly.
to
;
;
IMPORT' ANTLY,
be of moment or to bear on the interest
be of weight to
;
IMPORTA'TION,
clearly imports. 3.
;
;
;
and dry goods from Great Britain. Great Britain imports cotton from America and
to
syllable.] ;
Shak.
;
Ray.
[Fr. importer ; L. importo teee Bear.] porta, to bear,
We are
Form-
[L. importunus.
request; urgent; troublesome by frequent demands vexatious unreasonable. Bacon. Spenser. 2. Unseasonable. Milton. [Tills word is obsolete ; being superseded by importunate, unless perhaps in poetry.]
;
IMPO'RT, V. I.
meaning
a.
on the second
in
Pressing
;
in texture; solid.
We
1.
a. [Fr.] Literally, bearing to. Hence, weighty momentous adv. With urgent soliof great con.sequence liaving a bearing IMPORTU'NELY, citation troubon .some interest, measure or result by incessantly continually Obs. which good or ill may be produced. lesonicly. Spenser. Truth is important to happiness as well as 2. Unseasonably improjierly. Obs. Sanderson. to knowledge, but none so important as The connnerce of (ireat IMPORTU'NITY, n. [Fr. importuniti ; L. religious truth. Britain is important to her navy, and her importunitds.] urgent request; apnavy is important to her independence. Pressing solicitation Men often forget the important end for plication for a claim or favor, which is urwhich they were created. ged with troublesome frequency or perti3Ien are .sometimes overcome by nacity. Bearing on forcible drivitig. the importuniti/ of their wives or children. He fierc('ly at him Hew, And with important outrage him assailed. IMPO'RTUOUS, a. [L. importuosus ; iti and Without a i)ort, haven or harbor. Spenst partus.] Shak. IMPO'SABLE, a. That may be imposed or Importunate. [J^ot used.]
on or
;
;
close or
of importance
[In these senses, obsolete.]
Swift,
erly accented
in self-estimation.
man
believes himself a
demands.
IMPORTU'NE,
Pope.
IMPORTANT,
Want
porosity.]
;
below.
Thing implied; matter; subject; importunity.
of porosity closeness of texture comBacon. pactness that excludes pores. mPO'ROUS, «. Destitute of pores very ;
Weight or consequence
to things
;
;
ble
Thy own importance know,
Absolute levity;
n.
destitution of sensible weight.
To
;
being.
est.
IMPONDERABIL'ITY,
1.
[Fr.; Sp. importancia
religious education is of infinite importance to every human being. Weight or consequence in the scale of]
;
and
n.
imporlanza
Weight;
;
not prudent.
;
Not
suited to promote private interest. IMPOLIT'IeAL, Cor impolitic, is obsolete. IMPOL'ITl€LY, adv. Not wisely; not with due forecast and prudence in a manner to injure public or private inter4.
1.
adv. With urgent with pressing solicitation. n. Urgent and ])ressing solicitation. Digby. IMPORT'UNATOR, n. One that importmies. in use.] Sandys. [yVoi IMPORTU'NE, V. /. [Vr. importuner; Sp. importunar ; h. impartunarc ; from h. importunus ; in and porta, to bear on.] To request with urgency to press with solicitation to in-gc with frequent or unceasing application. Their iiiinislcrs and residents here have perpetually impurtuned the court with unreasona-
request
IMPORTUNATENESS,
Spenser.
from import.] ; consequence; a bearing on some interest that quality of any thing by which it may alfect a measure, interest or result. The education of youth is of great importance to a free government. A It.
Not wise measures
IMPORTUNATELY,
Ohs
not to be endured.
;
P
I 31
That may be imported.
a.
Dryden. Among printers, to put the pages on the stone and fit on the chase, and thus prepare the form for the press. as im- To impose on, to deceive to mislead by a trick or false pretense ; vulgarly, to put 7.
;
contrary to the law of naA thing is said to be morally imposture. sible, when in itself it is possible, but attended with difficulties or circumstances which give it the appearance of being im-
are liable to be imposed on by otbeis, and sometimes we impose on our-
sibility,
selves. n. s as z. Command injunction. Shak. pp. Laid on, as a tax, burden, or duty penalty enjoined. Imposed on, deceived.
IMPOSE,
;
[JVot used.]
fMPO'SED,
n.
One who
lays on
;
one
who
enjoins.
— The imposers of these oaths might repent. Laying on
ppr.
;
enjoining
Commanding adapted ;
to
1.
—
groves of some rich valley.
Bishop Hobart
LMPO'SING-STONE,
n.
Among
printers
the stone on which tlie pages or columns of types are imposed or made into forms.
IMPOSITION,
n. s as z.
[Fr.
portation. toms.
impress for
from L. im-
2.
Imposts are also
se-
;
law or duty.
5.
Constraint oppression burden. Let it not be made, contrary to its own nature ;
Milton.
;
the occasion of strife, a narrow spirit, and unreasonable impositions on tlie mind and practice
Walts Ci.
Deception
;
imposture.
Being acquainted with reason 7.
to
suspect an imposition.
had no Smollet
A
supernumerary exercise enjoined on students as a punishment. Jf'arton.
TMPOSSIBIL'ITY, 1.
his hand, I
n.
That
[from impossible.^
whicli caimot be tlie state of being not possible to exist. Tliat a thing shoidd be and not be at the same time, is an im ;
possibility.
Moral
the want of power or inability to resist or overcome habits ;
inclination
tion.
abscess; a collection of pus or purident matter in any part of an animal body.
Encyc. derivatives, being mere corrujitions, might well be sufl'ered to pass
[This word and
a Laiin
significa-
Milton^
from L. impotens.] wanting strength or power unable by nature, or disabled by disease or accident to perform any act. I know thou wast not slow to hear, Nor impotent to save. Addison. Wanting the power of propagation, as ;
[Fr.
;
;
2.
males. 3.
Wanting ving the tongue.
power of restraint not hav-
the
;
command
IM'POTENT,
over
One who
n.
as impotent of
;
Dryden. is
feeble, infirm,
or languishing under disease.
IM'POTENTLY,
Shak.
Weakly; without
adv.
Ijower over the passions.
IMPOUND',
V.
t.
and pound.
[in
See
Pound.] 1.
2.
stand.]
An
;
[Little used.]
IM'POTENT, a. 1. Weak feeble
;
;
Injunction, as of a
2.
impos'tumate.
;
lions.
:
and natinal propensities.
;
4.
;
young fatherless children, old decrepit persons, idiots and cripples. Hayioard. The impotence of exercising animal motiou attends fevers. Arbuthnot.
by govern-
[See Imposthume.] See Impose.] positio. To form an abscess to gather to collect 1. In a general sense, the act of laying on. pus or purulent matter in any part of an 2. The act of laying on hands in the cereArbuthnot animal body. mony of ordination, when the bishop in IMPOS'THUMATE, v. t. To affect with an the episcopal church, and the ministers or abscess. imposthume in congregational churclies, place their hands on tlie liead of the person whom IMPOS'THUMATED, ;;/). Affected with an imposthume. they are ordaining, while one prays for a on his labors. The same cerenio IMPOSTHUMA'TION, n. The act of formblessing ny is used in other cases. ing an abscess also, an abscess an im 2. The act of setting on or affixing to as Core. Bacon. posthume. the imposition of names. Boyle IMPOS'TLIUME, n. impos'tume. [This word 3. That which is imposed a tax, toll, duty is a corruption oi' apostem, L. apostema. Or. or excise laid by authority. Tyrants op a.no;r,^a, froina^i^rifu, to separate, to withpress their subjects with grievous imposv draw, or to stand off; ano and is''7f"j t" ;
and
as
called cus-
In architecture, that part of a pillar vaults and arches, on which the weight of the building rests; or the capital of a pillar, or cornice which crowns the pier and sui)ports the first stone or jiart of^ an Ainsioorlh. Ash arch. v. i.
in
possum,
;
;
3. Inability to beget. in 4. Ungovernable passion
IMPOS'THUMATE,
;
weakness; feebleness; inabilimbecility defect of power, natural or adventitious, to perform any thing. Some were poor by the impotency of nature
ity
;
cured by the importer at the time ofitn-
[L. impotentia potens, from
thu root of It. poterf,Sp.poder. See Poioer.] Want of strength or power, animal or intellectual
[Sp. It. imposta; Fr. imput, for impost ; L. impositum, impono.] Any tax or tribute imposed by autliorify
ment on goods imported, and paid or
;
in the
1.
n.
particularly, a duty or tax laid ;
cibly as an imposing air or manner. Large and imposing edifices, embosomed
IM'POTENCE,^ " „ IM'POTENCY, ^
[See Possible, Practicable and Encyc.
IM'POST,
deceiving. 2. a.
is
Impracticable.']
Walton
iMPO'SING,
which
])Ossible.
;
IMPO'SER,
IMP
IMP
IMP We
upon.
To
put, shut or confine in a pound or close pen ; as, to impound unruly or
stray horses, cattle, &c. To confine to restrain within limits. ;
Bacon.
IMPOUND'ED,
IMPOUNDER,
pp. Confined in a pound. )!. One who impounds the
beasts of another.
its
IMPOUND'ING, ppr.
Confining in a pound
;
restraining.
into oblivion.]
IMPOSTHUME,
V. i.
The same
as impos-
IMPOVERISH,
v.t.
[Fr. appauvrir,
ap-
from pauvre, poor; It. imSee Poor.] LMPOS'TOR, n. [Fr. imposteur ; Sp. Port. porerire. 1. To make poor to reduce to poverty or It. impostore from Low L. imimpostor indigence. Idleness and vice are sure to See Impose.] postor, from impono. impoverish individuals and families. One who imposes on others a person who To exhaust richness or fertility; strength, assumes a character for the purpose of deas, to impovensh land by frequent cropception a deceiver under a false characping. ter. It seems to be yet unsettled, whether Perkin Warbeck was an impostor. A re- IMPOVERISHED, pp. Reduced to poverexhausted. ty hgious impostor may be one who assumes pauvrissant,
thumate.
;
;
;
;
;
or quality of Impracticability the character of a preacher, without au- IMPOVERISHER, n. One who makes being not feasible or possible to be done. others poor. That a man by liis own strength should thority ; or one who falsely pretends to lift a an extraordinary commission from heaven, 2. That which impairs fertihty. ship of the line, is to him an impossi and terrifies people with denunciations of IMPOVERISHING, ppr. JIakmg poor; bility, as the means are inadequate to the end. exhausting. [See Impossible.] judgments. Encyc. n. Depauperation; IMPOSS'IBLE, a, [Fr. fromL.impossibilis; IMPOS'TURAGE, n. Imposition. [.Vol in a reducing to indigence exhaustion in and possibilis, from possmn, to be able." Bp. Taylor drain of wealth, richness or fertility. L That cannot be. It is impossible that two use.] n. [Fr. from L. impostura. IMPOWER. IMPOS'TURE, and two should make five, or tliat a circl [See Empower.] See i Impose.] IMPRACTICABIL'ITY, and a square should be the same thing, or [See 7munder a false or assu- IMPRA€'TI€ABLENESS, that a tiling should be, and not be at the Deception practised \ ^practicable.] med character fraud or imposition prac- 1. The state or quality of being same time. beyond huticed by a false pretender. man power, or the means proposed in2. Impracticable; not feasible; that cannot Form new legends, be done. fcasibility. And fill the world with follies and impostures 2. Untractableness; stubbornness. With men this is impossible ; but Avith God Burnet.
2.
;
tlie
state
;
IMPOVERISHMENT,
;
;
;
—
Matt. xix. things are possible. Without faith it is impossible to please Ileb. xi.
There are two kinds of impossibilities ical
and moral.
That
is
;
Irene
all
God
;ioft7/s-
a physical impos-
IMPOS'TURED,
rt.
IMPOS'TUROUS,
Having the nature
of
Beaum.
imposture. a.
IMPRA€'TI€ABLE, a.
Deceitful [JVot used.'
Beaum
Fr. impraticablc. I.
[in
and practicable
;
See Practice]
That caimot be done or performed;
in-
not to be efiected by human means, or by the means proposed. It is feasible
;
IMP
IMP
IMPREJU'DIeATE,
a tun by impraclicable for a man to lift unassisted strength ; but not impracticable for a iiiaii iiitled by a nieclianieal power. stubborn: 2. I, ntractable ; unnianageable Roive. as a fierce, impracticable nature. as an 3. That eannot be passed or traveled
his
sessed
a colloquial
;
In a
adv.
— Morality not impracticably V.
t.
rigid.
[L. imprecor
;
wax. ;
;
IMPRESCRIP TIBLE, scriptiblc,
a.
from L. prcescribo
;
[Fr. prce
;
IMPRECATORY,
;
I'.
/. ;
impre'ne. [It. impregnare ; L. in and prwgnans. Sec
to infuse the seed of
impregnate; or other prolific principle.
Milton.
a. [Fr. imprenabk.] stormed, or taken by assault able to that cannot be reduced by force
to be
;
;
resist attack 2.
Not
;
as an impregnable fortress.
be moved, impressed or shaken
to
or figure on any thing by pressure; as, to impress coin with the figure of a man's head, or with that of an ox or sheep to impress a figure on wax or clay. To print, as books. ;
Thomson.
IMPREG'NABLE, Not
;
in po-
See Impregnat';.]
etry.
1.
IMPRESS', V. t. [L. impresstim, from imprimo ill and premo, to press.] to stamp; to make a mark 1. To imprint ;
young
[Used
;
2. 3.
To mark
4.
To
We
from preand scribo
to
write.] Calling for evil on That cannot bo lost or impaired by nonone's self or another. or by the claims of another founded IMPRECA'TION, n. [L. imprecaUo.] The user, on prescription. act of imprecating, or invoking evil on any Rights of more ability which a man may use one a prayer that a curse or calamity may or not at pleasure, without any person's having fall on any one. a right to prescribe to mc on that subject, arc a. Containing a prayer Vatlel, Trans. imprescriptible. for evil to befall a person. The rights of navigation, fishing, and others IMPRECIS'ION, n. sasz. [in and />remthat may be exercised on the sea, belonging to of deWant or exactness ion.] precision the right of mere ability, are imprescriptible. fect of accuracy. rattet. Taylor.
Fr. impregner Pregnant.]
The effect which objects produce on the mind. Thus we say, the truths of the gospel make an impression on the mind they make no impression, or a deep and lasting
Tlie heart is impressed with impression. love or gratitude. lie open to the imliable to be lost or iini>aircd by the prepressions of flattery. non4. of own or one's in the mind ; idea. another, scription Image by user. The artillery made no FaUel, Trans. 5. Sensible effect.
evil.
IMPRE'GN,
3.
n.
[Fr. imprcscriptibilile, from imprescriptihte.] Johnson. The state of being independent of prescripin and tion ; the state which renders a thing nol
IM'PRE€ATING, ppr.
To
;
;
of preparation unpreparedness unreadmess. [I/ittle used.] Hooker.
;
some
The
act of impressing, as one body on another as a figure made by impression.
tion.]
or
See Pray.] to pray invoke, as an evil on any one that a curse or calamity may fall on one's self or on another person. IM'PRE€ATED, pp. Invoked on one, as precor, to pray.
To
IMPRESSION,
not prepos-
;
P
n. [Fr.; L.iuipressio.]
Urown. 2. Mark indentation ; stamp made by press[JVot tuied.] n. ure; as, a seal makes an impression on [in and prepara-
IftlPRESCRIPTIBIL'ITY,
degree that hinders practice.
IMPRECATE,
impartial.
Want
sense.
manner
;
IMPREPARA'TION,
;
impraclicable road
[L. in, prre,
unprejudiced
;
M
I
and
judico.]
Not prejudged
;
1MPRA€'TI€ABLY,
a.
ti.
;
;
indistinct remembrance. I have Slight, an impression that the fact was staled to me, but I cannot clearly recollect it. IMPRESSIVE, a. Making or tending to make an impression having the [lower of affecting, or of exciting attention and feel-
7.
;
to touch sensibility or the as an impressive discourse; an impressive scene. 2. Capable of being im])rcsscd ; susceptible. Spenser. LMPRESSTVELY, adv. In a manner to touch sensibility, or to awaken conscience ; in a manner to produce a powerful effect on the mind.
adapted
ing;
conscience;
IMPRESS'IVENESS,
to indent.
;
impression on the fort. The attack made no impression on the enemy. A single edition of a book the books printed at once as a cojiy of the last imThe whole impression of the pression. work was sold in a month.
The
n.
quality
of
being impressive.
deep; as, to impress truth on the mind, or fads on the memory. Hence, to convict of sin. fix
IMPRESSMENT, ing
men
The
act of impressinto public service ; as the I'mn.
pressmctit of seamen. The act of compelling into any service; seize and take into service by as the impressment of nurses to attend the South cemed and imprtgnable. sick. compulsion, as nurses in sickness. In tliis adv. In a m.inner to resense, we use press or impress indifiercntly. 3. The act of seizing for public use ; as the sist penetration or assault ; in a manner to C. To seize to take for public service ; as, impressment of provisions for the army. as a place imprtgnably fort to impress provisions. Marshall. defy force Marshall. ;
invincible.
5.
Tile man's aflbclion remains wholly nncon-
To compel seamen to
to enter into public service, as 2.
;
IMPREG'NABLY,
;
;
tied.
Sandys. IMPREG'NATE, v. t. [It. impregnare ; Fr. See Preg impregner ; Sp. impregnar.
IM'PRESS,
71.
A mark or indentation, made IMPRESS'URE,
by pressure. 2.
The
image of any thing made by
figure or
nant.] pressure; stamp; likeness. 1. To infuse the principle of conception ; to 3. Mark of distinction stamp; character. make jiregnant, as a female animal. God leaves us this general impress or charac2. To deposit the fecundating dust of a flow ter on the worksof creation, that they were very eron the pistils of a plant to render i)roSouth. good. ;
;
lific.
3.
To
4.
infuse
of one
particles
thing into
another to communicate the virtues oi one thing to another, as in pliann.'icy, by
&c.
mi.xture, digestion,
ed
prolific
;
a.
fecundated
;
Made filled
5.
IMPKEG'NATING,
jiregnant or
;
;
ppr.
Infusing seed or ;
fecundating and rendering fruitful applied to animals or plants. The communication of the particles or virtues of one thing to another. That with which any thing is impregnated.
4.
Saturation.
Dcrham. Ainswoiih.
Ji.
The
quality of be-
ng impressible.
;
IMPRESSIBLE,
a.
That may be impress
ed; that yields to pressure ceive impressions.
;
3.
;
;
IMPRESSIBILITY,
IMPREGNA'TION, 2.
The act of compelling to enter into public service. Ultak [See Press.]
;
rendering pregnant fructifying fecundating; filling by infusion or mixture. The act of ii. [Fr.] pollen
—
pp. Imprinted; stamped; marked by pressure; conijielled to enter public serv ice seized for public use fi.\ed in the mind made sensible convinced.
with something
.\
figure
[L. let
license to print a book,
IMPRIM'ERY.Ji.
of pre-
be printed.]
&c.
[Vr.imprimerie.]
a printing-house
impression
;
ing.
in use.]
[.\'ot
it
;
art
A print; of print-
IM'PRIMIS, mis.]
adv. [L. imprimis, for in priIn the first place ; first in order.
IMPRINT',
v.t. [It. imprimere ; ii\t.imprimir ; Vr. imprimcr : L. iynprimo ; tn and premo, to press. See Print.] 1. To impress; to mark by pressure; as a character or device imprinted on was or
;
that
may have
stamped on another body.
IMPRESS'IN'G,
n.
that may re cloth. Solid bodies are not 2. To stamp letters
pressure; indentation; dent; impression. Shak. n. A kind of [It. imprestare.] earnest-money; loan; money advanced. Burke. IMPREST', V. t. To advance on loan.
IM'PREST,
ppr. Inn>rinting;' stamping; fixing in tlie mind ; compelling into service.
3.
and words on paper bv means of typos; to print. To fix on the mind or memory; to imLet press. your father's admonitions and
instructions be imprinted on your mind. pp. Maiked "by pressure; printed ; fixed in the mind or memory.
IMPRINT'ED,
M
I
P
ppi: Marking l)y pressiire on the mincl^or memory printing;; fixing IMI'Rlri'ON, v.t. impriz'n. [Fr. emprison ner ; in and prison.] in a pris1. To put into a prison ; to confine on or jail, or to arrest and detain in custody in
a
in chains remediless.
imprison the
to
Try
resistless
Spenser. winds. 4.
Dryden. a prison pp. Confined in restrained from escape or from
on
;
IMPRIS'ONMENT,
;
a. [See Improve.] Suscapable of ceptible of improvement that may growing or being made better be advanced in good qualities. ;
;
;
act of patting
We
capable of infinite advancement. Decay of Piety. Man is accommodated with moral principles, improvable by the exercise of his faculties. Hale.
improvahle nature, that
;
ously.
and confining in prison the act of arrest 2. In a manner not according with estab lished usages inaccurately ungranunating and detaining in custody. Confinement in a place restraint of lib as, to speak or write improperly. ically at pleasure. IMPROPP'TIOUS, a. Not propitious uncrty to go from ])lace to place
have stock enough, and that too of an
I
have a
;
;
2.
;
;
of a crimiAppropriately, theconfinement nal or debtor within the walls of a prison, or in the custody of a sheriflT, &c. False imprisonment is any confinement of the without legal person, or restraint of liberty, or sufficient authority. The arrest or de tention of the person by an officer without warrant, or by an illegal warrant, or by a legal warrant executed at an unlawful time, is/a/»e
[The
tionable.
use.] o. Not
proporB. Jonsun.
[Ldttle used.]
IMPROPO'RTIONATE, tionate; not adjusted.
:1
;
Blackstone.
Capable of
tillage or cidtivation.
scarcity of improvable lauds these colonies.
Hist. Carolina.
Ramsay,
Smith.
imprisonment.
lands.
began
to
be
felt in
[Little used.]
V. t. [L. in and proprius, proper.] to take to 1. To apjjropriate to private use one's self; as, to impropriate thanks to Bacon. one's self. [JVot used.] church of the To annex the 2. possessions or a benefice to a layman. Spelman. IMPRO'PRIATE, a. Devolved into the
n. [See Improbable.] or not quality of being improbable,
odmprovable
Addison for the
A
Not propor-
a.
IMPROV'ABLENESS,
IMPRO'PRIATE,
IMPROBABIL'ITY, The
word in
latter is the
fine spread
That may be used to advantage, or increase of any thing valuable.
The essays of weaker heads Afford improvable hints to better. Brown.
Ji'otton.
propitious.
IMPROPO'RTIONABLE,
is
.
;
;
%
success;
Hammond.
better.
;
The
n.
Ill
IMPROVABLE,
;
in pris
confining in a place.
n.
n.
[See Improvable.] The state or quality of being capable of improvement susceptibility of being made
Not fitly in a manIMPROP'ERLY, in a manner ner not suited to the end not suited to the company, time, place and circumstances; unsuitably incongru-
going at large.
lMPRIS'ONING,;jpr. Shutting up
unfortunately.
;
Boyle.
IMPRdVABIL'ITY,
the office. adv.
unprosperously
;
want of prosperity.
;
;
;
IMPRIS'ONED, or jail;
ly
IMPROS'PEROUSNESS,
;
3.
imprismicd was
Vnprosperous is the word most generally used in this sense.] IMPkOS'PEROUSLY, adv. Unsuccessful[
;
cell.
He
in and
;
not decent not suited to as improper the character, time or place conduct in church; improper behavior before superiors an improper speech. Not according to the settled usages or principles of a language; as an improper word or phrase. Not suited to a particular place or office unqualified as, he is an improper man for
Not becoming
restrain from
;
IMP
P
[L. improprius
tion. 2.
any place.
a.
pruprius, proper.] Not proper ; not suitable ; not adapted to its end; unfit; as an improper medicine for a particular disease ; an improper regula-
1.
To confine to shut up; to to escape; to deprive of the liberty movej from place to place ; as, to be imprisoned in^
2.
M
I
IMPROP'ER,
IMPRINT'ING,
n. Susceptibility
of
capableness of being made of being used to advantage.
improvement better, or
B. Trumbull.
;
IMPROVE,
V. t. improov'. [Norm, prover, to The improve improwment, improving. French and Italians use the same compound in a different sense. It is from the Latin in and probo, to prove, or the adjec;
likely to be true ; unlikelihood. a. [Sp. Fr. from L. imtive ^coIh*.] from probo, hands of a layman. to advance in value or probabilis ; in and probabilis, 1. To make better ; to prove.] IMPRO'PRL\tED, pp. Appropriated to good qualities. amend a bad, but imutinot to be Not likely to be true; one's self. expected Johnson. [See Appropriated.] a good thing. prove der the circumstances of the case. It 2. Put in possession of a layman. good cdncalmn improves the mind and always improbable that men will knowingly IMPRO'PRIATING,;j/)r. Ai)i)ropriating to A judicious rotation of the manners. the fact is, own their interest; self. one's yet oppose crops tends to improve land. It is improbable that snow will 2. Annexing to a lay proprietor. to possible. 2. To use or employ to good purpose n. The act of putting fall in Julv, but not incredible. make productive ; to turn to profitable acIMPROB' ABLY, adv. In a manner not like- an ecclesiastical benefice into the hands of count to use for advantage ; to employ be true. to a -^'i/Te. or ly for advancing interest, reputation layman. hapOhs. 2. In a manner not to be approved. 2. The benefice impropriated. piness. n. Boyle occur of monlayman who has
IMPROBABLE,
We
A
i
;
IMPROPRIATION,
;
IM'PROBATE, allow
;
V.
t.
Ainsii'orlh
IMPROBA'TION,
The
n.
church or possession of the lands of the
an
ecclesiastical living.
IMPROPRI'ETY,
.
act of disappro-
Ainsworth [JVot in use.] n. [L. improbitas ; in and to approve.^ probitas, from probo, ving.
1.
IMPROB'ITY,
That which is disapproved or disallowed want of integrity or rectitude of principle
A
IMPROPRIATOR,
To dis[L. improho.] [JVot used.]
not to approve.
n.
•^H^IFf-
[Fr. impropriety, from
See Improper.] L. improprius. Unfitness; unsuitableness to character time, place or circumstances; as improof behavior or manners. Levity of
prietij
conduct is an impropriety in a religious assembly and at a funeral. Rudeness or forA man of known improbiti/ is wardness in young persons before their dishonesty. Indecency and always suspected, and usually despised. superiors, is impropriety. Not a. indecorum are improprieties. IMPRODU'CED, produced. [JVol in ttse.] Ray. 2. Inaccuracy in language a word or phrase IMPROFI'CIENCY, n. Want of profi- not according with the established usages Bacon or principles of speaking or writing. ciency. IMPROF'ITABLE, a. Unprofitable. [JVot Many gross improprieties, however authori;
;
in use.]
zed by practice,ought to be discarded.
Ebjot
IMPROMP'TU,
adv.
[L. in promptu,
IMPROSPER'ITY,
in
from promptus, ready, quicli hand without previous study as verse uttered or written impromptu.
of success.
readiness, Oflf
;
IMPROMP'TU,
A
made
oflf
a. [in nnd prosperous. Not prosperous; not successful imfortu not advancing natc not yielding profit interest as an improsperous undertaking or voyage. Dryden ;
I
Melissus was a
man
joying and improvini;
improving he may not afterRambler.
of parts, capable of en-
Ibm.
life.
True policy as well a-igood fiiilh, iu ion, binds us to imj^rove the occasion.
my
opin-
Washington. .Marshall. This success was not improved. Those who enjoy the advantage of better inimprove their privileges. jrdner. They were aware of the advantages of their skill and jiosition, and improted them with equal struction, should
diligence.
Wahh,
Rev. of Hamilton's Works. diligently improved. Gibbon
Those moments were
.
The
candidate improved his advantages.
Gibbon. do not remember to have seen Addison. Spect. iii. opened and improved. the throne of Whatever interest we have at in behalf of others. grace, should be improved
A
hint that
I
Scott.
;
;
;j
an extemporaneous composition,
;
;
hand, at the moment, or without previous study piece
.Swift.
Unprosperity want JVaunton.
IMPROS'PEROUS,
;
n.
»i.
Many opportunities man misses,
ey, which, if a wards recover.
The tiiuiu'.
court seldom
fails to
Com. Ex.
xxxiii.
improve the opporBhckstone.
M
I
P
M
I
P
light.
TIic shorter the
they
to iiiipruve
A young casion
—
tinjc
eager were
To
,5.
6.
5.
;
;
T. Scott. ;
;
to cultivate.
now
The
improved by an
induBtrious tenant.
This
8.
n|)pli(alii)n ])crliaps peculiar to It however parts of th(^ U. States. deviates little from that in some of the fore is
oiiitr
di'fmitions.
lji\ IMl'UliVE,
or wiser
;
V.
i.
advauce
to
in
To grow
goodness, knowl-
We
grace and piety.
in
We
;
Use
;
Is to
occupancy.
Improvements, i)lii., valuable additions or melioration, as biiiliiings, clearings, drains, Kent. fences, &c., on a farm.
IMI'ROV'ER, n. One who improves; one who makes himself or any thing else betas an improver of horses or cattle. That which improves, enriches or meliorates; as, chalk is an improver of lands.
ter
bad
in
IMPUDENTLY,
indecent assurance. At once assail With open mouths, and impudently
;
;
in
and
providence.
To improve on, to amendments to
make
useful additions or
to bring nearer to peras, to improve on the mode of tillage usually practiced. Made IMPKoV'EI), pp. better, wiser or more excellent advanced in moral worth, knowledge or manners. 9. Made better advanced in fertility or oth cr good qualities. 3. Used to i)rofit or good purpose as oppor-
fection
;
;
;
;
;
ttmities of learning improved. 4.
Used
occupied
;
IMPR-OVEMENT,
;
;
;
in music improvement in holiness. Melioration a making or growing better, or more valuable as the improvemetit of the improvebarren or exhausted land ment of the roads the improvement of the breed of horses or cattle.
menl 3.
;
;
;
;
;
a.
[L. in
and providens
impu'ne. [Fr. impugner ; L.imjnigito ; in aiulpugno,
t.
?p. impugnar ; to fight or resist.] to attack by words or argu-
ments lots is
;
;
The
to contradict.
lawfidiicss of
impugned by some, and defended by
others.
The
tnith hereof I or over-boldly affirm.
IMPUGNA'TION,
will not rashly
impugti,
Peacham.
ti.
Opposition.
[Little
Bp. Hall.
used.]
IMPU'GNED,
pp. Opposed; contradicted;
dis|iutcd.
L'MPL'GNER,
One who opposes
n.
or con-
tradicts.
IMPU'GNING,
pro and video, .'^upra.] forecast not foreseeing what will be necessary or convenient, or neglecting the measures which foresight would dictate wanting care to make provision iiir Seamen are proverbifuture exigences. sometimes followed ally improvident. It is by of; iis improvident of harm. IMPKOV'IDENTLY, adv. Without forewithout care to provide sight or forecast against future wants. IMPROVING, ppr. Making better; growto better advantage. using ing IMPROVIS'ION, n. a as :. [in and /)roti«-
Wanting
v.
ppr. Opposing; attacking;
;
contradicting.
IMPU1S'S.\NCE,
;
;
;
as iinproved land. n. improov'ment. Ad vancement in moral worth, learning, wis doin, skill or other excellence as the im provement of the mind or of the heart by cultivation improvemetit in classical learn improvejng, science or mechanical skill ;
IMPROVIDENT,
ImmodSheldon.
To oppose
of
(.4
n. [L. impudiciiia.]
esty.
IMPU'GN,
Morlimer. a. [h. iinprovisus provideo, to foresee or provide.]
rail.
Sandy.'.
IMPUDIC'ITY,
;
word.]
;
;
we behold an angel, not to fear be impudent. Vryden. adv. Shamelessly; with
W'hcji
unexpected ; not provided Atterbury. Unforeseen ; Obs. Spenser. against. to grow qualities IMPKOV'IDENCE, n. [L. in and providens, worse. from pro, before, and video, to Domitian improved in cruelty toward the end providentia, Milner. of his reipn. see.] word thus used, or Want of providence or forecast ; neglect of [/ regret io see this which forerather perverted.] foresight, or of the measures to be to eidianced ; rise. 3. To increase ; sight might dictate for safety or advanHalf the inconvcnienees and losses The price ot" cotton improves, or is improvtage. which men suffer are the effects of immercantile and modem use the ed.
To advance
;
;
;
;
9.
2.
.-
Shamelessness want of modesty effrontery assurance accompanied with a disregard of the ojiinions of others.
diligence.
2.
71. [Kr. from L. im;7iirff>M and pudens, from pudeo, to be asham-
Those clear truths, that either their own evimon. dence forces us to admit, or common experi1 shall make some improvement of this docence makes it impudence to denv. lA>cke. Tillotson. trine. 1M'PUDI;NT, a. [Fr. from E. impudens.] Hence, !»linmeless The part of a discourse intended to enwanting inodesly bold with of others is called the and the contempt force saucy. doctrines,
IMPnOVI'DED,
take care to improve in our frugality and
IMPIDENCE,
improvement.
better
edge, wisdom or otiier excellence. are pleased to see our children improve in knowledge and virtue. A farm improves The artitinder judicious management. san improves by experience. It is the duty, as it is the desire of a good man, to improve
as the improvement Practical application of the doctrines and principles of a ser-
10.
improov'.
of prudence; indiscrctelv.
a[)ply
some
and then repeats them. «rfr. Without the excr-
his mistakes, ci.se
ed.] S. Clarke.
7.
;
IMPRU'DENTLY,
of his reason.
;
To use to occupy house or the farm is
indiscrete; injudicious; not attentive to the consequences of words or actions; rash; heedless. The imprudent man often laments
1(1
A good improvement
a. [Fr. from L. imprudcns; and prudens, prudent.]
Wanting prudence or discretion
privileges.
Let even the coach, the inns, or the ships he improved as openings for useful instruction. C.
neighbors. in
edification.
I look upon your city as the best place of imSouth. provement. Use or einployinent to beneficial purposes a turning to good account; as the i7n;)roi'f menl of natural advantages or spiritual
;
I.AIPRU'DENT,
is
fineinent
sense. I fear we have not a little improved the wretched inhcrilauce of our ancestors. \_Ill.'\ Porteus. To tise ; to employ as, to improve a witness or a deposition.
state to a
a design of publishing the history of ajchitecturc, with its several inijirovements and JIddisun. decays. Instruction; growth in knowledge or re-
There
minister wishing to improve the ocC. Simeon.
npply to practical purposes; as, to improve a discourse, or the doctrines stated Owen. and proved in a sermon. 4. To advance or increase by use; in a bad 3.
Advance or progress from any belter.
Lardnei
safely,
;
;
Jlddisoji
S. Clarke. 4.
— the more
it.
interest,
reputation or happiness of one's self or others heedlessness inconsideratencss rashness. Let a man of sixty attempt to enmncrato the evils which his imprudence has brought on himself, his family, or his
—
(he faidt of [lersons not improving that
P
on the
efl'ecls
probable
;
It is
M
I
My lunls, no time should be lost, wliich may 3. A valuable addition excellence added, or iu America. a change for the better; sometimes witi Jiroiiiij^e to improve this disposition Lord Chatham. on. If we neglect to im/irofc our knowledge to the The parts of Sinon, Camilla, and some few Locke. ends for wliicli it was given others, arc inijirovements on the (jreek poet.
Impotence
IMPULSE,
71.
2.
[Fr.
;
in
and puissance.] Bacon. from
Obs.
im'puls. [L. impulsus, Impel.]
See Force communicated; the effect of one body acting on another. Impulse is the effect of motion, and is in ])ro[)ortion to the quantity of matter and velocity of the
impello. 1.
»i.
weakness.
;
impelling body. Influence acting on the mind
These were
my
;
motive.
natural impulses for the un-
Dryden.
dertaking.
;
3.
Impression supposed supernatural ence on the mind. ;
ion.]
Want
of forecast
improvidence.
;
used.]
[TMlh Brown.
Meantime, armed.
by
influ-
Jove's impidse, Mezentius
—
Succeeded Turnus Dryden. [Fr. from L. imprudenand prudeniia, |>rudencc.] IMPUL'SION, 71. [Fr. from L. impulsio. Want of prudence indiscretion want of See Impel.] caution, circumspection, or a due regard 1. The act of driving against or impelling ; the agency of a body in motion on another to the consequences of words to be utterBacon. ed or actions to be performed, or their body.
IMPRUDENCE, n. tia
;
in
;
;
IMP Influence on the
2,
mind
;
I .3.
impulse. Milton.
a. [Fr. impulsif. See Impel.] Having the power of driving or impeUing; moving; impellent. Poor men poor papers We and they Do some impulsive force obey. Prior. IMPULSIVELY, adv. With force; by im-
IMPULS'IVE,
!
tas
[Fr. impuniti ; L. pumo, to punish.] n.
in and
;
Exemption from punishment or penalty. person should be permitted to violate the laws «ith impunity. Impunity encoiirafjes men in crimes. 3. Freedom or e.xemption from injury. Some ferocious animals are not to be en-
No
countered
witli impunity. a.
impur
[Fr. purus, pure.]
1.
;
pure
;
in
;
salt or
Obscene
;
Unchaste
3.
;
magnesia. as impure language or ideas. lewd ; unclean as impure ac;
tions.
sons. 5. 6.
;
;
;
Moses. V.
To
t.
[Atot used.]
IMPU'RELY,
adv.
render foul: to defile. Bp. Hall. In an impure manner
;
with impurity. <,
[Fr. impureii ; L. im'"puritas, supra.]
;
foulness; feculence
IMPU'RENESS, IMPU'RITY, 1. Want of purity
I
;
the
admixture of a foreign substance in any thing as the impurity of water, of air, of spirits, or of any species of earth or metal.
The
Want
;
yn
Want
of sanctity or holiness
;
defilement
;
;
;
;
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
;
We
We
We
to
of ceremonial purity
Foul language
;
legal pollu-
obscenity. Profaneuess, impurity, or scandal, is not wit. Buckminster.
IMPUR'PLE,
;
v.t.
[in a.nA purple
;
Yt.em-
pourprer.] color or tinge with purple; to make red or reddish ; as a field impurpled with blood.
The
bright Pavement, that like a sea of jasper shone,
Impurpled with
celestial roses, smil'd.
Milton.
IMPUR'PLING,
ppr.
Tinging or coloring
piir])le.
imputed
To
attribute
Rom. ;
iv.
to ascribe.
have read a book imputed
to lord Bathurst
Swift
some things in that they are blinded with error.
men
misled and'
Hooker. In these and similar phrases, that is an antecedent, substitute, or pronoun relating to the subsequent part of the sentence, or the
subsequent clause. God commendeth his love towards us, in that while we were yet
That is, in the sinners, Christ died for us. fact stated in the latter clause, for which that is the substitute. Rom. v. It has been held that Adam's sin is this being imjntted In as much, seeing; seeing that to all his posterity. the fact. I will ride for health, inasmuch Encyc as I am infirm. Thy merit shall absolve them who renounce Imputed In is often used without the noun to which Their own both righteous and unrighteous it properly belongs. I care not who is in, deeds. Milton or who is out, that is, in office, or out of ofIMPU'TED, pp. Charged to the account of; Come in, that is, into the house or fice. attributed ; ascribed. other has or will come in, IMPU'TER, n. One that imputes or attrib- that place. vessel has come in, is, into ofiice. utes. that is, into port, or has arrived. IMPU'TING, ppr. Charging to the account To be or keep in with, to be close or near. of; attributing; ascribing. IMPUTRES'CIBLE, a. [in and L. putreseo, Keep the ship in with the land. to putrefy.] INABILITY, n. [Fr. inhabilite ; L. inhahilis ; in and habihs. Norm, hable, Not subject to putrefaction or corruption. able.] IN, a prefix, L. in, is used in composition as 1. Want of sufficient physical power or a particle of negation, like the English un, strength as the inability of a man to raise an arm or a leg. of which it seems to be a dialectical orthography ; or it denotes ivithin, into, or 3. Want of adequate means as an inability to purchase a farm, or to fit out a ship. among, as in inbred, incase ; or it serves only to augment or render emphatical the 3. Want of moral power. Moral inability is sense of the word to which it is prefixed, considered to be want of inclination, disas in inclose, increase. position or will, or a deep-rooted aversion to act, and therefore improperly so called. In, before I, is changed into il, as in illusion ;
To
reckon
to
one what does not belong to
him.
;
Who
A
;
[See Impute.] That may charged to a person chargeable. Thus we say, crimes, sins, errors, trespasses are imputable to those who commit them. That may be ascribed to in a good sense. This favor is imputable to your goodness, or to a good motive.
IMPU'TABLE,
impute misfortunes and miscarriages imprudence. And therefore it was imputed to him foi
I
3.
To
2.
;
;
the 2.
By the Mosaic law, a person contracted impurity by touching a dead body or a leper.
be
;
;
;
righteousness.
among
guilt.
with
;
We
Atterbury.
clergy.
fiou or uncleauness.
6.
;
antu.]
The
quality of be- In denotes present or inclosed, surrounded JVbiris. by limits as in a house in a fort in a. IMPUTA'TION, n. [Fr. from imputer.] The city. It denotes a state of being mixed, act of imputing or charging attribution as sugar in tea or combined, as carbonic acid in coal, or latent heat in air. It degenerally in ati ill sense; as the imputation of crimes or faults to the true authors of] notes present in any state as in sickness them. are hable to the imputation oi or health. It denotes present in time as numerous sins and errors ; to the imputa in that hour or day. The uses of »'n, liovvlion of pride, vanity and self-confidence ever, cannot, in all cases, be defined by to the imputation of weakness and irreso equivalent words, except by explaining or of rashness. the lution, phrase in which it is used as in deed 2. Sometimes in a in fact in essence in quality in reason good sense. in courage in spirits, &c. If I had a suit to Master Shallow, I would man in humor his men with the imputation of beingspirits or good courage, denotes one who near their master. Shak. possesses at the time spirits or courage in reason is equivalent to imth reason one in 3. Cliarge or attribution of evil ; censure ; ten denotes one of that number, and we reproach. say also one often, and one out often. Let us be careful to guard ourselves against In the name, is used in tliese groundless imputations of oui enemies phrases of invokand to rise above them. Addison ing, swearing, declaring, praying, &c. In prayer, it denotes by virtue of, or for 4. Hint notice. intimation. Qu. slight the sake of In the name of the people, deShak notes on their behalf or part in their IMPUTATIVE, a. That may be imputed. stead, or for their sake. IMPU'TATIVELY, adv. By imputation. In, in many cases, is equivalent to on. This Encyc. use of the word is frequent in the ScripIMPU'TE, v. t. [Fr. imputer ; It. impularc tures as, let fowls multiply in the earth. Sp. imputar ; L. imputo ; in and pjito, to This use is more frequent in England than think, to reckon properly, to set, to put, to in America. AVe generally use on, in all throw to or on.] similar phrases. 1. To charge to attribute ; to set to the acIn In thee shall all signifies by or through. count of; generally ill, sometimes good. nations be blessed. I am glorified in impute crimes, sins, trespasses, faults, them. blame, &c., to the guilty persons. In that, is sometimes equivalent to because. impute wrong actions to bad motives, or Some things they do in that they are men; to ignorance, or to folly and rashness n.
ing imputable.
lewdness.
foul iminirities that reigned
monkish
5.
;
posterity.
foul matter.
Unchastity
by
set to the account of anoth- IN, prep. [L. in ; Or. (v Goth, and Sax. in ; has been a question much agitated, Fr. en ; Sp. en ; It. in ; G. in or ein D. ; wliether Adam's sin is imputable to his in; Dan. ind ; Sw. in; W. Sans. It
IMPU'TABLENESS,
;
4.
-
material, impatient.
^yliffe
That may be
er.
;
IMPU'RE,
3.
N A
before a labial, as in imUtter, im
;
Unhallowed unholy as things. Unclean in a legal sense ; not purifi ed according to the ceremonial law of
% Any
m,
;
Defiled by sin or guilt; unholy.; as per-
4.
into
;
L. impurus
;
and Not pure; foul; feculent; tinctured: mixed or impregnated with extraneous substance as impure water or air iin
2.
[J^ol
;
impuni
I.
IMPU'RE,
I
proper.] 4.
!
pulse.
IMPU'NITV,
N
Accusable; chargeable with a fatilt.
a.
or
;
;
;
and before
r,
into
ir,
as in irregular; and
Moral inability aggravates our
guilt.
Scott.
N A
I 4.
Want
2.
an inability to cotriprclieud a inatlieinatic demonstration. Want of knowledge or skill as an inability to read or write. in
[j\'ot
n.
A
and
[in
3.
being inadequate
not
to
ty
[from inac-
"'
cessiblc] inaccessible, or accessible.] inacce.isibte
as the inactivity of matter. or habitual idleness; action or exertion sluggishness.
Inert-
INACTUATE,
i'.
/.
To
want of Swijl
put in action. [JVot Olanville.
%ised.]
INACTUA'TION,
n.
n. [L. in
and amor,
love.]
Marslon.
;
Operation. [Xot used.] Glanville.
n.
[Fr.
from
i
n.
Heedlessly attention
Reservedness
;
in-
id con-
versation.
fected I7ianner.
INA'IDABLE,
[in
;
vacuity.
and appetencf, I'.
appetentia.]
Want
tence.]
Want of desire or incliaation. INAPPLICABILITY, n. [from The quaUty of not being
Cheyne. inapplicaapplicable ;
unfitness.
INAPPLICABLE,
a.
[in
and
applicable.]
that cannot be applied; not suited or suitable to the purpose. The argument or the testimony is inapplicable to the case. ;
INAF'FABLE, a. Not affiible reserved INAFFECTA'TION, n. Destitution of af- INAPPLICA TION,
INAFFECT'ED,
Burton.
from inanis,
void space
;
inanis.
of appetence, or of a disposition to seek, select or imbibe nutriment. [See Appe-
Not applicable
INAFF.^BIL'ITY,
inanitas,
[L.
INAP'PETENCE, I " INAP'PETENCY, I
ble.]
adv.
n.
Emptiness
void.]
L.
as inanition
;
advertens.] 2.
heedless; care
;
;
;
;
want of
from carelessly considerately.
sluggishly;
without motion, labor or employment
2. Idleness,
and
[L. in
tiiind to
;
Idly;
stale of not
animated.]
oversiglit,
less; negligent.
;
adv.
The
[L. inanis,
INANI'TION,
.Iddison.
INADVERTENT, a.
diligent or industrious; ;
INACTIVELY,
a.
INAN'ITY, any
;
of a great genius, with malapses and inadvertencies, are inlinitcly preferable to works of an iufeiior l
not busy idle. Also, habitually idle indolent sluggish as an inactive officer. ;
inadvertence. The effect of inattention
The productions
Not active; move. Matter
;
void
ny
se, inactive.
Not active; not
INA'NE,
n.
lost.
;
active.]
having no power to
;
per
0.
("• from L. tu and See Mvert.]
mistake or fault which proceeds from negligence of thought.
Want Pope
INACTIVE,
INAMORATO, A lover.
[in and adhea not adhering.
;
forbearance of labor; idleness
rest.
being liable to be
mind to; inattention; empty.] heedlessness. negligence Many mis- Emptiness want of fullness of body or of the vessels. takes and some misfortunes proceed from
inaccurate; the
;
INAMIS'SIBLENESS,
of exact cor-
;
;
INACCURATELY,
a. [L. in and amillo, to to be lost. [Little used.]
Hammond.
inequaU
Puller.
INADVERTENCY, advertens, adverlo. 1. A not turning the
;
is
Not
j
;
the transcript or copy
lose.]
;
Not
accurate.]
«.<(•.]
INAMISSJBLE,
;
not exact or correct not according to truth erroneous as an inache is inaccurate in narration curate man ;
Want
HakeiciU.
;
;
;
ing, in a transcript, or in a calculation.
;
[«Vo( in
iiic()iiq)ltteness.
n.
unalterable.
INA'MIABLE, a. Unamiable. [jVoi in a«e.] INA'MIABLENESS, n. Unmniablcness.
as inad-
quality of ;
;
a.
;
;
accurate
inadequacy
of not
empty.] Empty; sometimes used as a noun, to exPorcelain clay is distinguished from colorific Locke. press a void space. earths hy inadhcsion to the fingers. Kirwan. INAN'GU'LAR, a. Not angular. [LiUle INADMISSIBIL'ITY, n. [from inadmissi- used.] Brown. The quality of being inadmissible, INANIMATE, v. t. ble.] [infra.] To animate. or not proper to be received as the I'n-I [Little used.] admissibility of an argument, or of evi- INAN'IMATE, a. [L. inanimatua ; in and dence in court, or of a proposal in a neanimu, animalus.] gotiation. 1. Destitute of animal life. Plants, stones INADHII.S'SIBLE, a. [Kr.; in and admissi-\ and earth are inanimate substances; a bit, from admitto, to admit.] corpse is an inanimate body. Not admissible not proper to be admitted,! 2. Destitute of aiiinialion or life. allowed or received as inadmissible tesINAN'IMATED, a. Destitute of animal life. timony an inadtnissible proposition. Cherme. INADVERTENCE, ) [Fr. inadvertancej 2. Not animated not sprightly. [See tin-
Not to be obtained. The necessary vouchers are inaccessible. Not to be approached; forbidding ac cess as an inaccessible prince. INA€CESS'IBLY,arft>. So as not to be apIf'arton. proached. INACCURACY, n. [from inaccurate] Want of accuracy or exactness mistake fault defect error as an inaccuracy in writ ;
;
res])ondence.
3.
INACCURATE,
The
n.
INADHE'SION, n. s as z. sion.] Want of adhesion
2.
;
not just
;
a.
;
liighth or rock. inaccessible.
;
;
INADEQUA'TION,
be reached.
INA€CESS'IBLE, [in and be reached as an 1. Not to
;
;
INAD'EQliATENESS,
L. jVorth.
INA€CESSIBIL'ITV, > INACCESS'IBLENESS, S The quality or state of being
defective
;
INADEQUATELY,
;
quality
changeable.
IN.^L'TEKABLE, changed
Incomplete t(juale
;
h.
[from inalterable.] being alterable or Fourcroy. [in and aUerabk.] That caiuKit or may not be altered or
The
;
representation or description. adv. Not fully or sufficiently not completely.
abstinence.]
a partaking indulabstaining gence of appetite as the inabstinence of Eve. Milton. INABU'SIVELY, adv. Without abuse. ;
N A
INALTERABILITY,
services.
Bacon n.
not
of] ;
[See Enable.] Ability.
use.']
INAK'STINENCE,
I
to the real stale or condition
;
;
INA'ULEjMENT,
Not equal
a thing; not just or in due proi)ortion I>uriial incomplete as inadequate ideas; of God, of his perfections, or moral gov crmiient; an inadequate compensation for
al
5.
N A
I
of intellectual strength or force ; as
n. [Fr.
;
in
and
appli-
ccttion.]
a.
INALIENABLE, from L.
Unaffected. [Mit used.
Want
of application ; want of attention or That cannot be assisted assiduity; negligence; indolence; negShak. lect of study or industry. a. in and aliena- INAPPOSITE, a. s as z. [in and [Fr. apposite.]
a.
;
Not apposite ; not fit or suitable ; not perble, alieno, alienus.] n. [from inadequate.] The Unalienable ; that camiot be legally or justly tinent ; as an inapposite argument. quality of being unequal or insufficient for alienated or transferred to another. The INAPPRE'CIABLE, a. [in tmd a purpose. appreciable, dominions of a king are inalienable. All from appreciate.] The inadequacy and consequent inefficacy men have certain natural rights which 1. Not to he appreciated ; that cannot be of the alledged causes Dvoight. arc inalie7iable. The estate of a minor is 2. Inequality. duly valued. inalitnabte, without a reservation of the 2. That cannot be estimated. Dr. Price considers this inadequacy of repreUre. sentation as our fundamental grievance. right of redemption, or the authority oft IBLE, a. Not intelligible. the legislature. Burke AlUton. 3. Incompleteness ; defectiveness ; as the JNA'LIEN.ABLENESS, n. The state a. Not apprehensof^ INAPPREIIENS'IVE, inadequaci/ of ideas. ive: regardless. ScoW.j being inalienable. Taylor. adv. In a manner that INAPPROACHABLE, a. [in and INAD'EQUATE, a. [in and adequate, L. approachforbids alienation ; as rights inalienably. admquatus, fiom adcvqiio, to equal.] able.] Not to be approached : inaccessible. 1. Not equal to the purpose ; insufficient to vested. INAPPRO PRIATE, a. [in and approprieffect the object ; unequal ; as inadequate INALIMEXT'AL, a. [in and alivient.] Afate.] Not appropriate unsuited ; not proppower, strength, resources. Bacon er. J. P. Smith. fording no nourishment.
INAD'EQUACY,
—
INAPPREUENS
INALIENABLY,
:
Vol.
I.
107
INC
N A
I
Not appropriate; not belonging
2.
INAPT'lTUDE, of aptitude
;
and
n. [in
unfitness
INA'QUATE,
Repos.
Want
;
Cranmer.
bodied in water.
INAQUA'TION,
The
n.
Gardner.
INAR'ABLE,
and
Not
To
2.
state of being ina-
qiiate.
act or process of uniting lands, revenue? or other rights to the pope's domain.
Encyc.
;
and aquatus.] Em-
[L. in
a.
jMeil.
aptihide.]
unsuitableness. Burke.
;
N C
I
The
the college of augurs. Kings and empea rors are inaugurated by coronation and the presiprelate, by consecration dent of a college bj' such ceremonies and forms as give weight and authority to the transaction.
to.
begin with good omens.
INCANDES'CENCE, A
[J^ot used.]
Invested with
a.
;
be white,
eo, to
;
We
Wofton.
INAUGURATE,
n. [L. incandescens, in and candesco ; candeo, canto shine canity, white.] white heat; or the glowing whiteness of a body caused by intense heat. say, a metal is heated to incandescence.
incandcsco
office. ;
ara-
Drayton. INCANDES'CENT, a. White or glowing ble INAUGURATED, pp. Inducted into office with heat. with appropriate ceremonies. Diet INCANTA'TION, n. [L. incantatio, incanIN'ARCH, V. t. [in and arch.] To graft by INAUG'URATING, ppr. Inducting into to ; in and canto, to sing.] office with solemnities. approach to graft by uniting a cion to a jThe act of enchanting enchantment; the n. act of inductThe from its it stock without separating act of using certain formulas of words and parent INAUGURA'TION, investiMiller. tree. ing into office with solemnity Encyc. ceremonies, for the purpose of raising ture with office by appropriate ceremoTN'ARCHED, pp. Grafted by ai)proach. spirits. Encyc. Bacon. IN'ARCHING, ppr. Grafting by approach. nies. |IN€ANT'ATORY, a. Dealing by enchantBrown. IN'ARCHING, )i. A method of ingrafting, INAUG'URATORY, a. Suited to induction ment magical. into office pertaining to inauguration INCANT'ING, a. Enchanting. [JVot used.] by which a cion, without being separated as inauguralory gratulatioiis. from its parent tree, is joined to a stock IN€AN'TON, V. t. [in and caitton.] To Johnson's Lives oflhe Poets. near. unite a or to canton Encyc. standing separate community. Addison. INARTI€'ULATE, a [in and articulate.] INAURA'TION, n. [L. inauro, inauratus ; in and atirum, gold.] Not uttered with articulation or junction ? IN€APABIL'ITY, [from incapable.] not articulate; The act or process of gilding, or covering INCA'PABLENESS, S "' The quality of of the organs of speech Arbuthnot. with gold. not distinct, or with distinction of syllanatural being incapable incapacity or Buck. bles. The sounds of brutes and fowls are, INAUS'PI€ATE. a. Ill omened. want of power as the incapableness of a IMAUSPU'CTOUS, a. [in and auspicious.] for the most part, inarticulate. child to comprehend logical syllogisms. unlucky evil 2. Want of legal qualifications or of legal INARTI€'ULATELY, adi: Not with dis- Ill omened unfortunate unfavorable. The war connnenced at an tinct syllables; indistinctly. power as the incapability of holding an ;
a.
[in
arable.]
not capable of being plowed or
tilled
;
;
;
I
;
;
;
;
;
;
n. Indistinctness
want of
of utterance by animal voices; distinct articulation.
INARTKULA'TION, sounds
n. Indistinctness of|
in sjieaking. a.
1.
and
[in
Simple
;
an artless manner
Without
adv.
art;
The want of
[in
IN'BRED,
attentive.]
Not ;
;
spectator
If'atls.
tive habit.
INATTENTTVELY, carelessly
adv.
Without
;
atten-
Johnson.
heedlessly.
n.
Unluckiness;
being.]
Inherence
a.
a.
[in
and
;
Sh'ik-
.?"'•]
.
Made
.
.
PertauiUig to inauguration ceremonies.
;
INCA'gEMENT,
not to be
Cotebrooke. a. [h.inavguro; in and au-
INAUG'URAL,
2.
manner
adv. In a
heard.
0.
,
vond
v.
i.
lesco, caleo, to
[supra.]
To
intro-
duce or induct into an office with solem with nity or suitable ceremonies; to invest an otfice in a formal manner a wordhor rowed from the ceremonies used by the ilotnans when they were received into ;
;
inipcaclunent is disqualified, anil therefore incapable of holding any office ot* honor or |)rofit under the government. a Incapable properly denotes a want of passive is ap|iowcr, the power of receiving, and to the mind; unable ]p|icable jiariicularly denotes the want of active power or power of performing, and is apjilicable to the body or the mind. [See Incapacity.]
cal-
A
growing
[L. incalescens, incalesco ; in and ca-
? (,
INCAPA'CIOUS,
;
incipient or increasing
heat.
INCALES'CENT,
;
in
n.
[in
chamber, or arched roof]
and camera,
and capacious.]
Burnet.
INCAPA'CIOUSNESS,
n.
Narrowness
;
want of containing space.
ci'easine in heat.
IN€AMERA'TION,
[in
cious soul.
Ruy-
Growing warm
a.
a.
Not capacious; not large or spacious; narrow; of small content; as an incapa-
be hot.]
warm
Unqualified or disqualified, in a legal sense not having the legal or constituA man not thirty tional qualifications. years of age is unqualified, and therefore incapable of holding the office of jiresident of the United States a man convicted on
to
calculation.
INCALES'CENCE, INCALES'CENCY,
as an inaugural adilress.
INAUG'UKATE,
in
That cannot be
to any purpose. not your father grown incapable Of reasonable affairs? Shak. [See No. 2.] W'anting moral power or disposition. He is incapable of a dishonorable act.
Wanting ])ower equal
;
Shctton. a.
;
of reparation.
Is
culated; beyond calculation. INCAL'CULABLY, adv. In a degree bc-
asinaugural
or ])ronounced at an inauguration
Confinement
71.
(•a"e.
IN€AL'€ULABLE,
is
essence of tlie Divine Being. An idiot is incapable of learning to read. Not admitting not in a state to receive; not susce|)tible of; as, a bridge is incapable
4.
;
of time.'
1.
3.
;
;
;
IN.VUDTBLY,
Man
Bred
bred, breed.]
within; innate; natural; as inbred worth affection. Dryden. INBREE'D, v. t. To produce or generate within. Bp. Rey7wlds. IN'CA, )!. The name or title given by the natives of Peru to their kings and to the the conquest princes of the blood, before of that country by the Spaniards. INCA'GE, v.t. [in amicage.] To confine in a cage to coop up to confine to any Shak. narrow limits. IN€A'GED, pp. Cooped up confined to a
natural power or capacity to know, understand or comprehend. incapable of comprehending the
Wanting learn,
breathe.] Infu-
Mtllon.
and
[in
capable.]
;
quantity.
That a. [in and audible.] cannot be heard as an inaudible voice or cage or to narrow limits. sound. lN€A'(ilNG, ppr. Confining to a cage or narrow limits. Making no sound as the inaudible foot
a vessel is incapable of. q/'containing or holding a certain quantity of liquor; but 1 believe we rarely or never say, a vessel is incapable of that
inseparableness.
;
[Fr.; in
a.
Wanting capacity sufficient not having room sufficient to contain or hold followed by
;
heedless fixing the mind on an object an careless negligent ; regardless ; as or hearer; an inatteninaUentive ;
1.
;
inbred
Pope
and
omens
sed by inspiration.
;
a. [in
ill
;
and
and
[in
IN'BREATllED,
n. [in and attention.] attention, or of Jixing the
INATTENTIVE,
a.
planted by nature inborn worth.
uiind steadily on an object heedlessness; neglect. Novel lays attract our ravished cars. But old, the miad with inattentio7i hears.
;
IN'BORN,
Collier.
of art.
With
IVatls. 2.
INATTEN'TION,
tion
n.
inherent existence
contrary to the rules
;
adv.
unfavorably.
artless.
INARTIFI'CIALLY, in
IN'BEING,
;
;
;
;
office.
IN€A'PABLE,
unfavorableness.
Not done by art; not made or performed by the rules of art formed without art as an inartijicial style of composition.
2.
INAUSPP'CIOUSLY,
INAUSPI'CIOUSNESS,
ariijicial]
;
inauspicious time, and its issue was inausof a bad man have picious. The counsels an inauspicious influence on society.
mifortunately
INARTIFI"CIAL,
;
;
;
INARTICULATENESS,
a
INCAPACITATE, 1.
To
v.
t.
[in
and
capacitate.}
deprive of capacity or natural
power
men
incapacitate
% :3.
Nadab and Abihu, the sons
In surgery, the process of healing wounds and filling the part with new flesh. Encyc.
.3.
to exercise tlie otKce of
a. [Fr.
;
;
;
;
power or ability. This is an improper use of the word. The loss of INCA'SE, a case. an arm disables a soldier, but does noti»i-
To render unfit one for marriage. ;
To
5.
di.iqiiality
stitulioniU
something
infancy incapacitates
as,
V.
t.
inclose
Rich
;
and
[in
To
case.]
to cover or
as, to
;
crime incapacitates one
INCAPACITATION, [in
incapacity in children to comprehend dif ficult propositions in logic or metaphysics, and a natural incapacity in men to comprehend the nature of spiritual beings, The defect of understanding proceeding from intoxication, or from an injury don( to the brain, is a casual incapacity. 2. Want of qualification or legal requisites inability ; as the incapacity of minors to make binding contracts.
passions to jirovoke to asperate to heat less than enrage. ;
Pope. as in a case,
Inclosed
pp. sheath or box.
;
of capacity, intellectual power, or tin power of receiving, containing or understanding; applied to the mind, and it maxj There is a natural be niilural or casual.
priest or prelate, and the choir. Encyc. V. t. incens.' To enkindle or inflame to violent anger; to excite angry
surround with IISCENSE,
plates of gold the folding doors incase.
INCA'SED,
Want of capacity iNCA'SING, Burke INC" ASK, V. and capacity.] Want
n.
disqualification. Ji.
conviction ofu be a witness.
;
How
ppr. Inclosing as in a case. To put into a cask.
ger
Sherwood.
Confined or
n.
;
to irritate It
fire.
to ex-
;
expresses
could uiy pious son thy power incense ? Dry den. pp. Inflamed to violent an-
exasperated.
;
INCENSEMENT,
inclo-
n.
incens'ment.
irritation of the pa.ssions ration. It expresses less
sed in a castle.
INCATENA'TION,
;
INCENS'ED,
t.
INCASTELLATED, a.
and
Acceptable prayers and praises. Mai. i. 4. In the ^Materia Medica, a dry resinous substance known by the name of thus and olibanum. Encyc. IN'CE.NSE, V. t. in'cens. To perfume with incense. In the Romish church, it is the Encyc. deacon's oftice to incense ihe officiating inclose in 3.
solid.
to deprive of legal or con-
;
recpiisites
INCAPACITY,
To
2.
capacitatf him.
of Aaron, took ei-
them
his censer, and put fire theieiu Lev. x. put incetue tliercon.
ther of
incamatif.] Causmake incapable as, infaning new flesh to grow healing. Encyc. n. A medicine that tends cy incapacitates a child for learning alge- INC'AKNATIVE, to promote the growth of new flesh, and bra. To disable to weaken to deprive of assist nature in the healing of wounds.
INC'ARNATIVE,
a judge. To render or
coinpetetit
4.
INC
INC
INC of learning, knowing, understanding or Old age and infirmityoflcn perfoiniing.
[L. cct/ena, achain.]
;
Violent
heat; exaspethan rage and
.Shak. fury. Goldsmith. together. INCENS'ING, ppr. Inflaming to anger ; ir[in and cautious.] Not exasperating. ritating cautious not unwary circumspect INCU'^N'SION, 71. [L. incensio, from tncenheedless not attending to the circumstando, to burn.] ces on winch safety and interest depend The act of kindling the state of being on as incautious youth. fire. Bacon. adr. heedINCAUTIOUSLY, Unwarily INCENS'IVE, a. Tending to excite or prolessly without due circumspection. voke. Barrow. INCAU'TIOUSNESS, n. Want of caution INCENS'OR, 71. [L.] A kindler of anger unwariness; want of forusiglit. an inflnmer of the angry passions.
The act of hnking INCAU'TIOUS, a.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
:
;
IN'CAVATED,
[L. in
a.
and
to
make
n. The vessel in which inMade hollow; bent round or in. INCENSORY, cense is burnt and offered. [We generalof power; as the incapacity of a convict INCAVA'TION, n. The act of making hol.linsworth. Iv use cfii.je;-.] low. to give testimony in a court of law. INCEN'TIVE, a. [Low L. incentivus, from 2. A hollow made. incendo, to burn.] Inciting encouraging INC>ARCI:RATE, v. t. [L incarcero-, in INCEND', V. t. [L. incendo.] To inflame or moving. and career, a prison, Sp. carccl. Sax
3. Disqualification
;
disability
crti'o,
hollow.]
by deprivation
;
;
to excite. Marston. [Little used.] Goth, karkara, G. 1). kerker, \V. INCEND'I.VRY"^, n. [L. inccndiarius, from carcar. Career stems to be allied to W. care, in and candeo, to shine, incendo, to burn Eng. cark, care showing that the primaor be on fire.] ry sense is to press or strain.] 1. A person who maliciously sets fire to to confine in a jail. 1. To imprison another man's dwelling house, or to any 2. To confine; to shut np or inclose. outhouse, being parcel of the same, as a Harvetj barn or stable one who is guilty ofi INC\\RCERATE, a. Imprisoned; confi- arson.
Competency
carca;r(i,
;
;
;
;
More
ned.
INCARCERA'TION,
The
n.
act of impris
oning or confining; im)>risonment.
INC'ARN,
v.t.
[L. incarno;
2. 3.
tions,
in and caro,
cover with flesh
to invest with flesh. Jl'iseman.
;
I',
;
and
L. in
caro, flesh.]
of a carnation color
;
red.
INCARNADINE, flesh-color.
r.
t.
To dye
[Little used.] v.t. [Fr. incarner
INCARNATE, carnar
;
It.
incarnare
;
L. incarno
4.
pale Shak. red or' ;
in
caro, flesh.]
To
;
to
embody Milton.
2.
in flesh.
Res.
.Isiat.
a.
;
;
In Scotland, of a red color; flesh-colored. n. The act of clothing 2.
INCARNA'TION, with
;
flesh.
The act of assuming flesh, or of taking a human body and the nature of man as ;
ihe incarnation of the Son of God.
;
;
;
INCEP'TION, to begin
;
til
11.
and
[L. inceptio, frotn incipio, capio, to take.] Begin-
Bacon.
ning. I
this society nil! not
hope
be markeil
witli
vivacity of inception, apathy of progress, and Hawle. lireniaturcness of decay. INCEP'TIVE, a. [L. inceptivus, from inci-
pio, to begin.] as an incen- Beginning noting beginning ; as an inceptive proposition an inceptive verb, which expresses the beginning of action. A point is inceptive of a line, and a line is iii-
encens.] 1.
;
Pertaining to the ma-
binning of a dwelling
and IN'CENSE, n. in'cens. [L. iHceiisum, burnt,' from incendo, to burn It. incenso ; Fr.
Invested with flesh cm flesh as the incarnate Son
INCARNATE,
2.
a.
That which kindles or inflames used now in a figurative sense only.
That which moves the mind or operates on the passions; that whii-h incites or has a tendency to incite to determination or action that which prompts to good or ill motive spur. The love of money, anil the desire of ])n)rnotion, are two most
;
diary purpose. Tending to excite or inflame factions, sedition or quarrels. ;
clothe with flesh
bodied in of God.
Jlddlwn.
or that which excites.
licious
Sp. en-
;
He
INCEND'IARY, 2.
;
a^ in-
Benllq/.\
detestation.
;
incarnatino Flesh-colored
them out
Incendiaries of figure and distinction, who tlic inventors and pn!>lishors of gross falsehoods, cannot be regarded but with the utmost
i.
1.
powerful incentives to action.
are
To breed flesh. Jt'iseman. INC^ARNAniNE. a. [Fr. incamadin It. INC'ARN,
j
and ))romotes quarrels.
Several cities of Greece drove cendiaries.
carni.i, flesh.]
To
Any person who sets fire to a building. A person who excites or inflames fac-
INCEN'TIVE,
the most incentive to industry-. Decay of Piety. n. [Low L. incenlivutn.)
is
Perfume exhaled by
fire
;
the odors of
spices anil <;ums, burnt in religious rites, or as an oflering to some deity. A thick cloud of incense went up. Ezek.
;
ceptive of a surface.
INCEPTOR,
11.
A
beginner; one in the
rudiments.
IXCERA'TIOX,
Walton. n. [L. incero,
from
The act of covering with wax. INCER'TAIN, a. [in and certain.]
cera.]
Uncer-
doubtful; unsteadv. Fair/aT. IN( FRTAINLY, adv. Doubtfullv. viii. The materials burnt for making perfumes. INCERTAINTY, n. Uncertainty; doubt. Da vies. The incense used in the .Jewish offerings was a mixture of sweet spices, stacte, ony- INCERTITUDE, ii. [L. incertUudo, from incertus ; in and certus, certain.] Uncercha, galbanuin, and the gum of the frankincense tree. tainty; doubtfulness; doubt. tain
;
Unceasing
a.
INCES'SABLE,
tliose parts,
on foot some of those arts inl would be looked on as the first in-
INCH, I', i. To advance or retire by small Johnson. [Little used.] degrees. of number as Inched, is added to words Shak. four-inched.
ness
;
n. [in
impurity V
t.
To
Edwards.
and meal.]
i.
V.
t.
[L.
inchoo.]
[Little used.]
To
begin.
More
a. Begun ; commenced. neither a substance perfect, nor a sub-
Raleigh
stance inchoate.
IN'CHOATELY,
Happening
;
mCI'TANT,
adv. In
an incipient de-
Having the
quality of cut-
By some
persons,
n.
religious
An
INCITA'TION,
ly
1.
incident.
[Little
;
when
I
treat
the way.
occasionally
either purposely or incidentally of
Darwin. See In-
;
;
by Occasionally Bacon.
D.
To move
t.
[h.inciio; in
and
ci
to call,
mind
to action by persuasion or motives presented to stir up ; to rouse ; to spur on. Antiochus, when he incited Prusias to join in war, set before liim the greatness of the Ro-
the
Bacon.
mans.
£oyle.
adv.
[Mot used.]
incitatio.
;
the conversation took
colors.
IN'CIDENTLY,
[L.
to stir u]).] 1.
place.
;
n.
The act of inciting or moving to action; Brown. incitement. that incentive ; motive Incitement which excites to action that which rousthe Government es or prompts. Tongue. of
INCI'TE,
Pope
present
That which
;
adv. Casually ; \yithout I was incidental accidentally.
Beside the main design
incite.]
cite.]
duties appear to 2.
INCIDENTALLY,
2.
[from
;
be regarded as an incidental business.
used.]
n.
excites action in an animal body.
coining
as accidental without design ; casual an incidental conversation ; an incidental occurrence. Not necessary to the chief purpose ; oc
intention
IN'CHOATE, It is
a.
casional.
piece
Shak.
an inch long.
lN'€HOATE,
A
a.
.
Drt/den.
put into a chest.
[inch
an
INCT'SORY,
;
Sherwood.
INCH-MEAL,
;
;
Lewd INCIDENTAL,
chastity.] J.
INCHEST',
out
falls
Rogers
and
a sub-
;
A
That which
carry
unchastity.
;
n.
INCIDENT' AL,
;
INCHAS'TITY,
Hooker
A
ting. aside of the main A cut; a an episode or subordinate action. INelS'URE, n. [L. incisura.] place opened by cutting ; an incision. No person, no incident in a play but must Derham. on the main design be of use to
But in America the. common practice is add only inch as a seven-inch cable a. Uncharitable. [The word used.]
affairs is
rarer in-
A
stance. cut a gash ; the separation of the surface of any substance made by a sharp instrument. The surgeon with his knife makes an incision in the flesh, and the gardener, in a tree ; but we do not say, an incision is made with a plow or a
That which happens
INCHAR'ITABLE, latter is the
incido, to cut.] cutting;, the act of cutting into
should be with
casualty.
;
design
;
to
I.
3.
A
event
Dnjden. ;
cir-
;
drive by inches or small de-
[Little used.]
and
fire
A proposition introduced by who, which, spade at least such phraseology is unuwhose, whom, &c. is called an incident i)ro sual. surname was position; as, Julius, whose i. Separation of viscid matter by medicines. JVatts. Cesar, overcame Pompey. Bacon. Obs. as to intempehappen Happening; apt INCI'SIVE, a. [Fr. incisif.] Having the rate passions incident to human nature quality of cutting or separating the superdiseases incident to a climate misfortunes ficial part of any thing. incident to the poor. Incisive teeth, in animals, are the fore teeth, the chief or Appertaining to or following the cutters. court baron is incident to a principal. cutter; a fore tooth, INCrSOR, n. [L.] manor. Encyc. which cuts, bites or separates.
•^*«'f
[Little used.] grees. To deal out by inches
;
;
IN'CIDENT,
A
INCH,
n.
;
equal
ches.
2.
Cranmer.
INCIR€UMSPEe'TION,
;
ley corns. 3. 2. Proverbially, a small quantity or degree ; to gain ground by inas, to die by inches ;
at
That can-
;
:
[Unusual.}
a.
not be circumscribed or limited.
acci-
Shak.
cident necessities and utilities special equity considered.
state or qual-
time. precise point of Beldame, I think, we watch'J you
whence, an
with the main design. As the ordinary course of common so man's disposed of by general laws,
;
foot,
;
INCIRCUMS€RIP'TIBLE,
incido, to
;
L. uncia, the_ twelfth INCH, Gr. my/ia, but said to be from the l)art Latin.] lineal measure in Great Britain and the 1. United States, being the twelfth part of a to the length of three bar and n. [Sax. ince
;
;
fortuicasual ff. Falling tous coming or happening occasionally, or not in the usual course of things, or not according to expectation or in connection
of incest. of being incestuous.
Obs. as medicines. Quincy. Arhuthnot
[h. mcidens cado, to fall.]
IN'CIDENT,
incestuous person. as an in 2. Involving the crime of incest ; cestuous connection. INCEST'UOUSLY, adv. In an incestuous manner; in a manner to involve the crime
INCEST'UOUSNESS, n. The
in
;
;
;
as an
;
on
;
as the incipient ;ginning commencing stage of a fever incipient light or day. INCIR'CLET, n. A small circle. Sidney.
Want of circumspection ; cumspection.] direction heedlessness. Brown. in which one body falls on or strikes an V. t. s as z. [Fr. inciser.] To cut other. The angle which the line of fall INCrSEl, in to carve. Carew. of a moving body ing, or the direction the plane INCrSED, a. [L. incisua, from incido, to striking another, makes with cut.] incidence. the is called angle of struck, made by cutting ; as an incised wound ; ; When rays of light striking a body are re Cut Wiseman. incised lips. an fleeted, the angle of incidence and the INCrSELY, adv. In the manner of incigle of reflection are equal. sions or notches. Eaton. In equal incidences there is a considerable inJVewton. INCIS'ION, n. s as z. [Fr. ; L. incisio, from equality of refractions.
It is also understood of a vicar or other beneficiary, who holds two benefices, the one depending on the collation of the
other.
to
The manner of falling on, or the
tion.
3.
;
n.
in and Literally, a falling on dent or casualty. fall
and castus, chaste.] The crime of cohabitation or sexual com merce between persons related within the is prohibited by degrees wherein marriage the law of a country. is a like crime committed Spiritual incest, a spiritual allihave who between persons ance by means of baptism or confirma-
INCEST'UOUS,
and cado,
;
a. [L. incipiens, incipio capio, to take.]
;
to separate
;
IN'CIDENCE,
Spenser. L. incestum ;
;
in
act of reducing
ment.
and :
The
INCIP'lENT,
strike.] ;
;
continually.
ity
Noting beginning;
n.
by combustion. Boyle. Encyc. n. Beginning commence-
INCIP'IENCY,
in-
as an inchoative verb, otherwise
;
called inceptive. INCT'DE, V. t. [L. incido
incessayit as incessant rains Milton. Pope.
;
INCES'SANTLY, IN'CEST,
ununerrupted
;
a.
to ashes
Hale.
[Little used.]
INeHO'ATIVE,
cesso, to cease.]
INCINERA'TION,
setting
;
INCESSANT,
INC
INC
INC
2.
To move
to action
by impulse or
influ-
;
ence. our arms incite.
No blown ambition docs INCIN'ERATE, v.t. [L. in and cinis, cineris, Bacon. ashes.] To burn to ashes. to encourage. 3. To animate INCIN'ERATED, pp. Burnt to ashes. INCIN'ERATING, ppr. Reducing to ashes INCITED, pp. Moved lo action;
Shak.
;
gree.
jNCHOA'TION, commencement
;
The
act of beginning inception.
n.
by combustion.
up
;
spiu'red on.
stirred
INC INCI'TEMENT, moves
miiiil
or
tive
impulse.
;
n.
to action
motive
;
Love
incites the
incen-
;
5. g.
Pope.
INCI'TER, moves
He
n.
which
or that
Exciting to action
p}ir.
stir-
;
7.
ring up. In general, incite denotes to operate on the mind or will tidte has the same sense, but it extends also to the passions and to material substances as, to txciU action in
IN€LI'NATORILY,
a.
\iii
2.
and
n.
rude
civil.] Uncivil ; is generally
[But uncioii
;
used.]
company, are and indecencies.
;
Judges
Encyc. [Fr. inclemence; L.
kind temper ciful
;
;
severe
;
;
void of tenderness harsh.
2.
to
:
have some
mg. to shut 1.
an appetite
;
to be disposed
;
as,
to cause to stoop or
;
reverence or
;
head or the body
bow ; as, in acts of
INCLU'DING,
Leaning; tending; as a loner to
2.
inclinahle
Having a propension of will
disposition ; somewhat mind inclinable to truth.
IN€LINA'T10N,
Inclined plane, in
n. [Fr.
leaning in
;
disposed
from L.
as a Milton.
;
mechanics,
a plane that
is
makes an oblique angle with the plane of
Bentley.
fall.
the horizon
a sloping plane.
;
IN€LI'NER,
An
Ji.
inclined dial.
IN€LI'i\ING, ppr. Leaning
;
causing
lean.
inctinatio.
Containing; compris-
/);».
ing.
INCLUSION,
civility.
a leaning or ten See INCLI'NED, pp. Having dency disposed.
Incline.]
;
ed.
To bend
to incline the
n. s as
z.
[L. incluiio.]
The
act of including.
INCLUSIVE,
;
1.
;
;
;
cxix. 3.
[L. inclinabilis.
;
To
;
Pope. a.
V. t. [L. includo ; in and dudo, up Fr. enclorre.] confine within to hold to contain ; of a nut i/tdudes the kernel ; the shell as, a pearl is included in a shell. [But in these senses we more commonly use in-
INeLU'DE,
ix.
;
;
;
dispo.-ied
;
unmer-
;
;
inclement sky.
IN€LI'NABLE,
act of inclosing.
ground
;
We
;
The
V. t. To cause to deviate from close.] erect, perpendicular or parallel line; to the coluin 2. To comprise to comprehend to contain. give a leaning to as, incline The history of England necessarily inor post to the east incline your head to The cludes a ])ortion of that of France. the right. To give a tendency or propension to the word duty, includes what we owe to God, to our fellow men, and to ourselves it tnto dispose. will or affections to turn to the also a cludes tax governpayable Incline our hearts to keep this l.rw. ment. Comnwn Prayer. Ps, INCLU'DED, pp. Contained ; comprehendIncline my heart to thy testimonies.
stormy ; boisterous rainy rigweather orously cold, &c. as inclement
Rough
n.
The
Brown. in and clino,
;
;
applied to persons. boisterousness storminess 2. Roughness or simply raininess severe cold, &c.; apwere detained by weather. plied to the the inclemency of the weather. IN€LEM'ENT, a. Destitute of a mild and
2.
;
INCLO'SURE,
an
;
;
;
fining.
INCLI'NE,
See Clemency.]
;
passing
to be inclined to eat.
of clemency ; want of mildness of temper unmercifulness ; liarshness se ;
;
To have
3.
Want
verity
ppr. Surrounding ; encomshutting in covering and con-
INCLO'SING,
Their hearts iiiclhied to follow Abimelech.
;
n.
grounds by a fence.
I
;
to be wish or desire.
pension
;
inclementia.
fenced.
I
of patriotism unfriendliness to the state or government of wliich one is a citizen. Ames. IN€L'ASP, V. t. To clasp to hold fast. Cudworth. IN'€LAVATED, a. Set fast fixed. Did. IN'€LE, n. A kind of tape made of linen
1.
;
;
;
I
quality of 2.
Having the
a.
;
sealed
INcLO'SER, n. He or that which incloses one who separates land from common
;
;
IN€LEM'ENCY,
ed
;
Surrounded; encompossconfined on all sides covered and pp.
[
incivili-
INCIV'ILLY, adv. Uncivilly rudely. INCIV'ISM, n. [in and civism.] Want of civisra; want oV love to one's country or
yarn.
INCLO'SEI),
j
;
Loud laughter and uncomely
ties
{
with
;
;
;
j
separation of land from common into distinct possessions by a fence. 3. The appropriation of things common. INeLI'NK, V. i. [L. inclino ; Gr. xXivu, Sax. hlinian, hleonian, lUynian, Taylor. D. Russ. G. to leunen, lehnen, 4. State of being inclosed, shut up or eulean, Eng. Fr. kloniiu and nakloniayu, Ir. cleonaim ; Rai/. conipassed. incline r ; Port. Sp. inclinar ; It. inclinare, 5. A space inclosed or fenced ; a space comClass Ln.] inchinare, chinare. prehended within certain limits. 1. To lean; to deviate from an erect or par- ,(j. Ground inclosed or comfrom separated to tend. allel line toward any object nion land. Converging lines inclijie toward each oth j7. That whicli is inclosed or contained in an A road inclines to the north or south. envelop, as a ])aper. er. Washington. Connecticut river runs south, inclining in INCLOUD', V. t. [inand doud.] To darken ; Shak. some part of its course to the west, and to obscure. below Middletown, it inclines to the east. INCLOUD'ED, pp. Involved in obscurity. in a moral sen.ie ; to have a pro- INCLOUD'ING, ppr. Darkening; obscur2. To lean
courtesy; rudeness of manners towards l^Uotson others; impoliteness. Any act of rudeness or ill breeding with
a plural. jests in respectable
ObUquely
leaning or inclining.
Want of
[Fr. incivilM.]
cover with a wrapper or envelop to cover under seal as, to inclose a letter or a bank note.
Brown
INCLI'NATORY,
;
unpolite.
adv.
inclination.
the heart and arteries.
INCIVILITY,
To
5.
;
music, oiheisyor painting. Shak Disposition of mind. The dip of the magnetic needle, or its tendency to incline towards the earth also, the angle made by the needle with the horizon. Enfield. The act of decanting liquors by stooping or inclining the vessel. i^uincy.
;
INCIV'IL,
desire ; with regard have an inclination for
;
;
incites or
to action.
INCITING,
affection
Some men
for.
From ihe long records of a distant age, Derive iucittments to renew thy rage.
;
INC
N C
I
That which
a.
encircling. 2.
indunf]
Inclosing ; Shak. in the number or sum ;
[Fr.
Comprehended
as from Monday to Saturday iiidusive, that is, taking in both Monday and Saturday. to INcLU'SIVELY, adv. Comprehending the as from Monday to thing mentioned ;
Saturday inclusively. INC LIP', v.t. [in grasp; to INCOAG'ILABLE, a. [in and coagulable.] clip.] any deviation of a body Stuik. That cannot be coagulated or concreted. inclose to surround. from an upright position, or from a paralas the in- INCLOIS'TER, i>. t. [in and cloiMer.] To INCOER'CLBLE, a. [in and coercible, from lel line, towards another body [But shut up or confine in a cloister. clinalion of the head in bowing. coerce.] two lines is cloister the angle made by Not to be coerced or compelled ; that cangenerally used.] a^ In geometry, enclos ; Sp. It. Black. not be forced. or planes that meet; as, the inclination of INCLO'SE, V. t. s as z. [Fr. incluso ; L. inclusus, include ; in and clauaxis of the earth to the plane of the eclip INCOEXIST'ENCE, n. [in and coexist-
See
1.
INC'LI'NING,
Incline.]
A leaning;
a.
Leaning.
To
and
or line
;
;
tic is
3.
do, or cludo
23^ 28'.
A
leaning of the sion or propensity
mind or
will
;
propen
a disposition tnore fa vorable to one thing than to another. The The to peace. prince has no inclinidion bachelor has manifested no inclination to, nation \o, marry. Men have a natural incli pleasure.
A
1.
To
^
surround
;
to
shut in
;
to confine
2.
To separate from common grounds by a] fence as, to inclose lands. To include to shut or confine as, to] inclose trinkets in a box.
3.
;
;
To environ
;
to
encompass.
A
not existing together.
[contracted from incognito.] In concealment in disguise in a manner not to be known.
INCOG',
adv.
;
i
[.Vof
Locke.
common.]
;
;
mere inclination to a thing is not properly Sovth. 4. a ivilling of that thing.
ence.]
on
sides as, to inclose a field with fence ; to inclose a fort or an army with troops ; to inclose a town with walls.
all
;
INCOG'ITANCY, and
cogito,
Want of
;
7!.
[L. incogitanlia
;
in
to think.]
thought, or thinking.
want of the power of Decay of Piety.
a.
Not think'mg
eration.
as,
adv. [L. incognitus
or
in and
;
That cannot be recognized, known or
n.
[from
Hakewill.
IN€OMMU'Nl€ATED,
in-
,.
dis-
,
;-
»!.
V. i.
INeOMMO'DE,
Not
adv.
A
V.
I.
[L.
Brown. incommodo ; in
give inconvenience to ; to give trouble to disturb or molest in the quiet enjoyin the facility of acft denotes less than OHHoi/, vex quisition, are incommoded by want or harass. to
;
ment of something, or
We
of room to sit at ease. Visits of strangers at unseasonable hours, incommode a family Often we are incommoded by a fashionable dress.
SafeHowell.
ence
[Ill formed.]
;
INCOMMO'DING,p;?r. le
[from incom-
bustible.]
quality of being incapable of being burnt or consumed. Ray.
to create
Incombust-
and come.] That [i)i gain which proceeds from labor, business or property of any kind the jiroduce of a farm the rent of houses the proceeds of
adv.
In a
ence
;
professional business; the profits of com inerce or of occupation tlie interest of money or stock in funds. Income is often used synonymously with revenue, but in come is more generally applied to the gain of private persons, and revenue to that of a sovereign or of a state. speak of: the annual income of a gentleman, and the' annual revenue of the state. 2. A corning in; admission; introduction.' [JVot in use.] ;
pitv.
We
i
I
Burke.^
?
"•
Bacon. l-"o'i>
INeOMMU'NICABLE,
a.
[in
'i.
That cannot be communicated or impart ed to others. Tlnit cannot or may not be communica South. ted, told or revealed to others.
Without
n.
n.
Want
of
Granger. [from incompati-
;
man and
wife.
INCOMPATIBLE,
a. [Fr. from the L. t« be jiroper or convenient con and pelo, to press toward, to or on. was It seek, press formerly incom-
and competo,
to suit, to
;
and commu
nicable.]
adv.
tliat quality or state of a Inconsistency thing which renders it impossible that it should subsist or be consistent with someelse. There is a permanent incomthing patibilily between truth and falsehood. Irreconcilable disagreement. During the revolution in France, incompatibility of temper was deemed a suiricient cause for
divorcing
.<•
(,
The quality of not beincommunicable.] ing communicable, or capable of being imparted to another.
\.
destitute of ten-
ble.] 1.
;
[Fr. incommodite ; L 2. trouble.
IN€OMMUNl€ABILITY, INCOMMU'NICABLENESS,
and com-
Johnson.
INCOMPATIBILTTY,
unsuitableness n.
;
INCOMPAS'SIONATENESS,
Inconveni-
n.
Inconvenience; incommoditas.] [JVow little used.]
;
[in
pity or tenderness.
manner
inconvenience; inconveniently
IN€OMMOD'ITY,
;
Spenser. a.
INCOMPAS'SIONATELY,
unsuitably.
in'cum.
in.
less.
INCOMPAS'SIONATE, Void of compassion or pity
[L.
IN€0Mi\l6 DIOUSNESS,
ibility.
Coming
;
incomparably the greatest philosopher the English nation had jiroduced. INCOMPA'RED, a. Not matched peer-
derness. a.
1N€0MM0'D10USLY,
stance.
of good qualities, or of some excellence that raises him above comparison or equalSo we say, incomparable ity with others. excellence, virtue, wit, &c. But incomparable baseness or malignity may be used with propriety. INCOM'PARABLENESS, n. Excellence beyond comparison. INCOM'PARABLY, adv. Beyond comparison without competition. Newton was
passionate.]
Subjecting to troub
or inconvenience.
;
[in and combustible.] Not to be burnt, decomposed or consumed by fire. Atnianth is an incombustible sub-
INeOMBUST'IBLE, a.
;
inconveni-
to
incommodus. Inconvenient; not affording ease or ad vantage unsuitable; giving trouble, with out much injury. A seat in church, or the site of a house may be incommodious.
The
n.
Put
pp.
molested.
INeO:\IiMO'DIOUS,
INCOMBUST'IBLENESS,
;
not solid.
;
;
INeOMMO'DED,
Milton. n.
[in and compact.] Not compact not
"'
\
When we ])roperly used in a bad sense. say, an incomparable man, we mean a man
state of being
and commodo, con and modus.]
and
To differ.
Ch. Relig. Appeal. }
in
To
coincident.] agreeing in time,
INCOMBUSTIBIL'ITY,
a.
n.
unmixed.
as, to talk
[L.incolumitas.]
commuted with Without recipro-
adv.
having the parts firmly united
mixed.
place or principle. ty; secnritv. INeOMBI'N E,
;
That cannot be commixed or mutually
INCOIN'CIDENCE, n. [in and coincidence.] Want of coincidence or agreement.
INCOLU'MITY,
[in
be exchanged or
INCOMPACT', INCOMPACT'ED,
not adeare incommensurate to
INCOMMIX'TURE,
;
incoherenlbj.
not
in-
and commuta-
Boyle. INCOM'PARABLE, a. [in anA comparable.] equal or due tneasure or proportion. That admits of no comparison with othCheyne. ers in a but it a. and ; sense, usually good may be INCOMMIS'CIBLE, [in commix.]
\
;
Our ineans
IN€OMMEN'SURATELY,
;
Not coincident
a.
cal change.
More.
Il'oodward.l^
[in
to
INCOMMU'TABLY,
our wants.
;
without coherence of parts;
quality
""of being
anotlier.
Not of equal ineasure or extent quate.
^
ble.]
and commen- Not
;
;
INCOMMUTABLE,
Not admitting of a common measure.
I.
or agreement incon-| gruous; inconsistent; having no dejjend-; eiice of one part on anotlier as, the! thoughts of a dreaming man, and the language of a madman, are incoherent. IN€OHE'RENTLY, adv. inconsistently;
a.
a. [in
The
?
commutable.
surate.]
;
INCOIiV'CIDENT,
is
INeOMMEN'SURATE,
;
Wanting coherence
Buchanan.
Quantities are incommenthird quantity can be an aliquot part of both. Encyc.
Want of coherence; want of cohesion or looseness or unconnected adherence state of parts, as of a powder. Boyle.' incon2. Want of connection incongruity sistency, want of agreement, or dependence of one part on another; as tlie incoherence of arguments, facts or principles. that which does not agree 3. Inconsistency with other parts of the same thing. INCOHE'RENT, a. [in and coherent.] loose unconnected 1. Wanting cohesion ; not fixed to each other applied to m'.de-\ 1.
rial substances.
—
INCOMMUTABIL'ITY, INCOMMU'TABLENESS,
when no
surable, found that
Hale.
Not communi-
a.
cative ; not free or apt to impart to others in conversation. Not disposed to hold communion, fellowship or intercourse with. The Chinese an incommunicative nation.
ineasure both.
coherence 1 ^'" "'"' ^'""''^^"'^^•J
;
hands.
and com-
[in
Not imparted. Having nocom-
or intercourse with each other ; as an administration in incommunicating
INCOMMUNICATIVE,
mensurable.]
Tooke. ?
a.
a.
munion
will not exactly
Having no common measure. Two lines are incommensurable, when, compared to each other, they have no connnon measure, that is, no measure that will exactly
Lettish race, not a primitive stock of the Slavi, but a distinct branch, now become incog-
INCOHE'RENCE, " INCOHE'RENCY, \
same thing
the
INCOMMEN'SURABLE, and
The
nizable—
when
a.
INeOMiMU'NICATING,
measure both.
in a
tinguished.
IN'eOMING,
adv. In a manner not to be imparted or comintuiicated.
Tooke
tions.
cognizable.]
n.
IN€OMMU'Nl€ABLY,
;
are subject to great fluctua-
IN€OMMENSURABIL'ITY,
cogitative.]
In conceahnent ; cognitus, known.] disguise of the real person. IN€OGN'IZAJ5LE, a. incon'izable. [in
IN'COME,
Income
come.]
;
INCOG'NITO,
2.
and
commensurable.] wanting the power ofj it has a vegetable is an incogitative The cpiality or state of a thing, when no common measure with another thing, Locke.
Not thinking ;
and
[in
[ire
Many incomings
Boyle. a.
n.
gain.
Without consid-
adv.
INeOG'ITATIVE, tliought being.
IN'eOMING,
thouglitMilton.
;
)ess.
INC^Oci'ITANTLY,
INC
INC
INC IN€0(i'ITANT,
petible.] 1.
Inconsistent; that cannot subsist with something else. Thus, truth and falsehood are essentially incompatible, as are virtue and vice. A degree of cold that congeals water is incotnpatible with vege-
N C
I fation.
N C
I
incovipatible with
is
Dissipation health, repiitiitioii aiiH virtue. ln(MOiicil;ihly ditleixiit or disagreeing ; inconfinioiis; as incompaiihh tempers. 3. Legally or constiliuif nally inconsistent : that raniiol hrj united in tlie same person, witliont violaiing the law or constitution. By (iur constitution, the oftices of a legislator and of a judge are incompatible, as
quality of not being jiossible but by the negation or ilestruclion of somelhing ; in-
INCOMPOS'SIBLE,
a.
[in, con,
An argument
a doubtful question.
or evi-
consistency with somelhing. [JJllle used.] More. Hale.
2.
N C
I
The
and posii-
an end to debate or doubt.
INCONCLU'SIVELY,
Ide.]
Without such
adv.
Not
possible to be or subsist with something else. [This and the precedinp; word are tittle used, and can hardly be considered as le-
evidence as to determine the understanding in regard to trulh or falsehood. INCONCLl'SIVENESS, n. Want of such evidence as gitimate A'/ic/jsA words.] satisfy the mind of truth or they cannot he held at the same time hy n. the INCOMPKLilENSlBlLITY, falsehood, and put an end to debate. the Siinie person. [See next W(ird.] INCONCOCT', a. Inconrocied. PAT' I ULY, adv. Inconsistently: IN The quality of being incomprehensible, or INCON'COCT'EI), a. [in and roricoc*.] Not incongruously. not matured; unripened. beyond the reach of Inmian intellect; infully digested INCOM'PETENCE, f [Fr. incompetence, Bacon. conceivableness. Campbell. INeOM'PETENCY,
m
COM
"
1.
Inahility
2.
Want
sufticiont intellectual
oi
talents;
as the incompetency of
or idiots. of natural
of
powers or iid'auts
;
iruuniicompetent.]
j
want
;
INCOMPHEHENS'IBLE,
to be contained.
of adequate means. 5. Insufficiency inadequacy petency of testimony.
;
;
INCOM'PETENT,
as the incom-
Wanting adequate powers of mind or
as an incompetent jmi^e. Infancy, derangement, want of learning or dotage may render a person incompetent to fill an ottice or to transact business. 2. Wanting due strength or suitable facul unable. ties 3. Wanting the legal or constitutional qualiA person convicted of a crime, fications. is an incompetent witness in a court of law suitable faculties
prehensihilitv,
which
;
;
INCONDENSABIL'ITY,
Hooker: InconiJ
densable.
INCONDENSABLE,
hocke.
INCOMPREHENSION,
Want
n.
prehension or understaniling.
INCOMPKEIlENS'iVE,
of comBacon.
;
Not
to be
converted from a state of vapor
INCONDITE,
[See Incom-
n.
pressible.]
and condensa-
to a fluid.
ff'urtoni
not extensive.
INCOMPKESSIBIL'ITY,
J
quality of resisting compression, or of being incapable of reduction by Ibrce into' a smaller compass.
The
[in
that canNot capable of condensation nrit lie maile more dense or compact.
Black. 2.
Not comi)re-
a.
a.
ble.] 1.
;
;
Reynolds. [See Incon-
«.
quality of being not con-
j
In a man-]
adv.
which the human mind cannot comprehend or understand inconceivably.
iier
hensive
The
densable.]
see.
INCOMPKEliENS IBLY,
[Fr. from I., in and See Incompatible.]
a.
competens, competo. 1.
INCOMPREllENS'IBLENESS, n.
;
shaken.
[Little used.]
;
Want
unripeness ; Bacon.
;
[in and concurring, Not concurring not agreeBrown. ing. INCONCUS'SIBLE, a. That cannot be a.
from concur.]
by us.
Not
and concoction.]
[in
imnialurity.
INCONCUK'RING,
;
spiritual being is incomprehensible to us, orl 2.
11.
The state of being indigested
Comprehend.] That cannot be comprehended or under-' that is beyond the reach of human The nature oti intellect; inconceivable. stood
;
4.
INCONCOC'TION,
C-ce
[Fr.
,
i.
a(h'quate strength body or of suitable faculties as the incoin the motions petenci) of the eyes to discern of the heavenly bodies. 3. Want of legal or constitutional qualifications as the incompetency o( a witness.
a.
[L. inconditus
a.
condo, to buihi.] unpoli.shed
Rude
;
in and
[Little used.]
irregular.
;
;
Philip.i.
INCONDI'TION AL, a.
[in
and
cotiditional.]
Without any condition, exception or limINCOMPllESS IBLE, a. [in and compress- itation nb.solute. [.Vot now used. See or ecpiity. Brown. Unconditional.] ible.] 4. Destitute of means; unable. of not INCONDI be TIONATE, a. [in and condicapable being as incompetent Not to compressed insutiicient 5. Inadeqiuite reduced by force into a smaller conqiass: tion.] testimony, Water is not Not limited or restrained by conditions; abresisting compression. 6. Unfit; improper; legally unavailable. I
;
i
;
;
;
It is incomjictent for' the this defense.
derenih\iil lo
.Mans. Rep.
solute.
wholly incompressible.
ni.T
INCONCE AL.\BLE,
a.
and
[in
Boyle. [.Vo< Jioif used.] for uncon/irmerf, is not in
INCONFIRMED,
coticeal'
INCOMPETENTLY, inadequately
;
The
2.
Imperti»ct
;
a.
[in
ble
imperfectness a.
;
[in
unfinished defectiveness.
Not
and complex.]
uncompounded
;
2.
simple.
n. [in and complidncc] Defect of compliance; refusal to compi} with solicitations. Untr.-iclablcness unyielding temper or ;
constitution. Self-conceit produces peevishness and incomlawful and indilferpliance of humor in (hings Tillotsun ent.
INCOMPLl'ANT,
a.
[in
Fr. inconcevable.] It
and compliant.]
in religion.]
INCONFU'SED,
;
The
INCONFU SION,
quality
incomprehensi-1
biliiv.
manner
composite.]
Uncompounded; n.
[in
simple.
and compos
more com-
Not confused
Not congenial
yond comprehension, or beyond of hiunan intellect.
tlie
reach
;
a.
[in
;
Bacon. Bacon.
and congenial.]
not of a like nature
;
un-
suitable.
be-
INCONgENIAL ture
South.
ITY,
Unlikcness of na-
»i.
unsuitableness.
;
congrtiftict.] [in INCONCEP TIBLE, a. Inconceivable. [Lit-, INCONGRUENCE, Want of congruence, adaptation or agreelie
INCONCIN'NITY,
n.
ment
now
[L. inconcinnilas.]
want of proportion. More. and conc/uDENT, a. L.
Unsuitableness
;
j
and
n.
Hale.
used.]
m
a. [in and conclusive.] Not producing a conclusion not closing, ;
[Little
a.
Elpot.
n. [in and congrmty.] of congruily; impropriety; inponone absurdity: unsuilablenessof of youth in thing to another. The levity a crave divine, is deen.ed an incongruity between manners and profession. want of symmeDisagreement of pans Donne.
Want
sistencv
2.
Wc
Boyle.
sistent.
1.
used.
Unsuitable; incon-
INCONGRUITY,
llNCONCLU'SIVE,
debate or concluding or setthng a point in
unsuitableness. use incongrt/tVi/.] ;
INCON'GRUENT,
;
situ.]
t.
Distinctness.
Ji.
INCONOE'NTAL,
I
adv. In a
INCOMPO'SED,
INCOMPOSSIBIL'ITY,
s as
a.
distinct.
n.
not INCONCLU solicitation Unyielding to re(iuest or dens, concltido, to conclude.] disposed to conqdy. or consequence n. [in and composed.] Dis- Not iiiferrinsr a conclusion -^yl'ffe. [LillU used.] ordered distmbed. [But this word is little a. use we of it Instead Inferring no conse used. discomposed.] INCONCLU'DING, Pearson. INCOM'POSITE, a. incom'pozil. [in and quence. ;
and conformity.]
is
the will acts in producing muscumotion.
being inconceivable
[in
[The latter word formity. monly used, especially to express dissent
;
to|
That cannot be understood. (]f
n.
;
inconceivable
how
JNCONCETV.\BLY,
ITY,
;
\
is
ilNCONCE'IVABLFNESS,
INCOMPLI'ANCE, 1.
us, lar 2.
[in
That cannot be conceived by the mind incomprehensible.
An
n.
;
«.
Want of conformity inconqiliancc with the practice of others, or with the requisinon-contions of law, rule or custom
Brown. and conceiva-
cr
INCONCEIVABLE,
adv. Imperfectly.
INCONFORM
not to he hid or kept se-
Not concealable;
1.
INCOMPLEX', comple.\;
Not
complete.]
is i)icomp/((c.
ablc]
defective.
INCOMPLE'TENESS, ;
anA
building
INCOMPLETELY, state
Insufficiently
not suitably.
INCOMPLE'TE, finished.
adv.
;
;
try.
INC
of a man formity; as the inconsistency with himself. 4. Unsteadiness; changeableness. IN€ONSIST'ENT, a. Incompatible; incongruous; not suitable. Loud laughter in grave company is inconsistent with good breeding. Habitual gloom is inconsistent with health and happiness. Not consistent; contrary, so that one infers the negation or destruction of the other ; or so that the truth of one proves the other to be false. Two covenants, one that a man shall have an estate in fee, and the other that he shall hold it for years,
«. [L. incongruus.] Not fitting; inconThe dress of a seaimproper. man on a judge, would be deemed inconaruous with his character and station. irfcON'GRUOUSLY, adv. Unsuitably unfitly; improperly.
INeON'GRUOUS,
not congruous; unsuitable; sistent
;
;
[in and connection.] loose, disjointed ;
INCONNE€'TION, n. Want of connection
Bp. Hall.
state.
IN€ON'SCIONABLE, of good and
Having no sense
a.
evil.
INC
N C
I
Spenser.
IN€ON'SE(iUENCE, n. [L. inconsequenWant of just inference; inconclutia.]
too clear to be controverted incontrovertible; as incontestable evidence, truth or facts. INCONTEST'ABLY, adv. In a manner to preclude debate indisputably incontroting debate
;
;
;
vertibly
;
Iteid.
indubitably.
;
INCONTIG'UOUS, Not contiguous
a.
[in
not
;
adjoining
touching; separate.
See
^
Continejice.] of restraint
Want
;
not
Boyle. [L. incontinentia; Fr. incontinence.
INCONTINENCE,^ INCON'TINENCY,
and contiguous.]
of the passions or appe-
free or uncontrolled indulgence of ; the passions or appetites, as of anger. tites
are inconsistent. Stillingjleet Gillies' Aristotle. being contrary at different a. Not following from 3. Not uniform Men are sometimes inconsistent 2. Want of restraint of the sexual appetite times. without regular inference the premises lewdfree or illegal indulgence of lust with themselves. as an inconsequent deduction or argument. ness; used of either se,x, but appropriately Brown. IN€ONSIST'ENTLY, adv. With absurd of the male sex. Incontinence in men is with self-contradicincongruously ty INeONSEQUEN'TIAL, a. Not regularly tion without steadiness or uniformity. the same as unchastity in women. following from the premises. n. Inconsistency. 3. Among physiciajis, the inability of any of not of importance INCONSIST'ENTNESS, 2. Not of consequence More. the animal organs to restrain discharges [J\^ot in use.] of little inonient. Chesterjield. of their contents, so that the discharges Inconsistent. a. [MjI INeONSID'ERABLE, a. [in and considera- INCONSiST'ING, are involuntary also, the involuntary disDrtjden. M.sed.] ble.] and a. consolable.] charge itself; as an incontinence of urine [in Not worthy of consideration or notice un- INeONSO'LABLE, in diabetes. Not to be consoled grieved beyond susof trivial. small; speak important; Addison. INCON'TINENT, a. [L. incontinens.] Not of comfort. ceptibility inconsideraan an inconsidcrahlc distance; INeONSO'LABLY, adv. In a manner or restraining the passions or appetites, parble quantity or amount inconsiderable of consolation. does not admit that indidging ticidarly the sexual appetite No sin is inconsiderable in the degree value. lN€ON'SONANCE, ?!. Disagreement of lust without restraint or in violation of sight of a holy God. law unchaste ; lewd. sounds discordance. Busby siveness.
INCON'SEQUENT,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
We
;
;
;
INCONSID'ERABLENESS,
Small im
n.
gree
adv. In a
amount
to a small
;
[in and consonancy.] 2. Unable to restrain discharges. In music In the sense of immediate or immediately, Disagreement; inconsistency. obs. disagreement of sounds; discordance.
IN€ON'SONANCY,n.
Tillotson.
portance.
INCONSIDERABLY, INeONSID'ERACY,
n.
very
;
sjniall
de-
little.
IN€ON'SONANT,
Thoughtlessness;
want of consideration.
1.
ous.] 1.
;
;
;
thoughtless; heedless; inattentive. are generally inconsiderate.
adv. Without due consideration or regard to consequences impru rashly heedlessly ; carelessly Addison. dently. INCONSID'ERATENESS, n. Want of due regard to consequences carelessness inadvertence ; inattenthoughtlessness
INCONSID'ERATELY,
;
;
;
;
;
Want
tion
;
Tillotson.
imprudence. n.
[Fr.
;
in and
consideration.]
Want of due
consideration
;
want of thought;
inattention to consequences.
INeONSIST'ENCE, INeONSIST'ENCY, 1.
\ \
"•
[in
Taylor.
and
of uniformity
INCON'STANT,
unchaste. B. Jonson.
There is a perfect inconsistency between that which is of ilebt and that which is of free gift.
;
;
contracted not Blackwall. ;
[in
and
controlla-
ble.]
that cannot be reto be controlled strained or governed uncontrollable.
Not
;
;
IValsh.
INCONTROLLABLY,
adv. that admits of no control.
Fr. in
INCONTROVERTIBLE,
a.
In a
manner
[in
and con-
INCONTROVERT'IBLY, or controversy.
things.
INCON'STANTLY, manner; not
adv. In an inconstant
steadily.
INCONSU'MABLE,
a.
to
INCONVE'NIENCE, INCONVE'NIENCY,
and consuma-
[in
[in
and consum-
I.
;
not finished
;
not com-
n. State
INCONSUMP'TIBLE,
a.
[L. in
Not fire.
to
be spent, wasted or destroyed by
[jYot used.]
Digl>y-
;
trouble or uneasiness;
any thing that disturbs qui-
prosperitj', or increases the
eler; want of utensils is a great inconvenience to a family; but the great inconvenience of human life is the want of money
and con-
sumptus.]
2. Not to be destroyed. [7Vb< used.] stroys the other; self-contradiction. Johnson. INCONTEST'ABLE, a. [Fr.] Not con3. Incongruity ; want of agreement or unitestable ; not to be disputed ; not admit-
impedes
Rain and difficulty of action or success. bad ro.ids are inconveniences to the trav-
of be
ing incomplete.
1.
That which gives et,
plete.
INCONSUM'MATENESS,
[L. inconveniens : in and convenio,
Unfitness; unsuitableness; iucxpedience.
disadvantage
mate.]
Not consummate
S
They plead an;ainst the inconvenience, not Hooker. the unlawfuhiess of popish apparel.
be consumed : that cannot be wasted. Broicn a.
"
\
coitveniens.] 1.
ble.]
Not
Soutli.
argument or narration argument or narrative where one part de-
a.
Mutable ; subject to change of opinion, trovertible.] inclination or purpose ; not firm in reso- Indisputable ; too clear or certain to admit of dispute. lution ; unsteady; fickle; used of persons ; adv. In a manas inconstant in love or friendship. ner or to a degree that precludes debate 2. Mutable; changeable; variable; used of
INCONSUM'MATE,
as that one pro])osition infers the negation of the other; sucii contrariety between things that both cannot subsist together.
INCONTROLLABLE,
dissimilitude.
[L. inconstans
a.
shortened.
See
constant.]
consist-
ence.]
;
One who is
1.
Such opposition or disagreement
2. Aljsurdity in
n.
INCON'TINENTLY,
INCONTRACT'ED, a. Not n. [L. inconstanlia.
Woodward.
;
INCONSIDERA'TION,
conspicu-
Constancy.] Mutability or instability of temper or afunsteadiness ; fickleness. fection Addison.
2.
Not duly regarding; with o/, before the subject; as inconsiderate of consequences.
and
[in
;
Proceeding from heedlessness; rash; as
inconsiderate conduct. 3.
;
a.
Not conspicuous.
INCON'STANGY, ;
The L
yoimg 2.
Not discernible the sight.
2.
;
;
INCON'TINENT,
adv. Without due restraint of the passions or appetites ; unnot to be perceived by chastely. 05^. Pope. Boyle. 2. Immediately.
INCONSPICUOUS,
[L. inconsideratus
a.
See Consider.] Not considerate not attending to the cir cumstanccs which regard safety or pro careless priety hasty rash imprudent
Not agreeing; incon-
a.
sistent; discordant.
[Unusual.] Cheslerjield.
INCONSID'ERATE,
;
;
and the means of obtniniiig
INCONVENIENT,
a.
[Fr.
it.
from the L.
siqna.] 1.
unsuitable ; disadvantagiving trouble or uneasiness in-
Incommodious geous
;
;
;
INC
N C
1
creasing the difficulty of progress or success as an inconvenient dress or garment an incojivenient house ; inconvenient customs an inconvenient arrangement of business. Hooker. unsuitable. 2. Unfit IN€ONVE'NIENTLY, adv. Unsuitably in a manner to give incommodiously trouble unseasonably.
or parish
;
;
;
;
INCONVERSABLE,
a.
[in
and
convtrsa-
ahle.\
Not
inclined to free conversation nicative ; unsocial ; reserved.
;
incommuMore
IN€ON'VERSANT, n. N ot conversant familiar; not versed.
;
not
insurance company, &c. New Haven was January 1784; Hartford in Slat, of Connecticut. May 1784. INCOR'PORATE, V. i. To unite so as to make a i)art of another body to be mixed or blended to grow into, &c. ; usually followed by mth. Painters' colors and ashes do better incorporate unth oil. Bacon: INCORPORATED,;)/). Mixed or united in one body associated in (he same political, body united in a legal body. INCOR'PORATING, ppr. Mixing or uniting in one body or mass as.sociating in the ;
porating. vertible into something else ; as the in2. Union of convertibilily of bank notes or other curmass. H'alsh rency into gold or silvei-.
INCONVERT'IBLE,
a.
[in
and
that cannot be transmuted One 4. into something else. ;
Bank is inconvertible into another. notes are sometimes inco/iwrti We into spe
metal
INCONVIN'CIBLE,
a. [in
and
forming a legal body.'
;
The
n.
different
act of incor-i
ingredients
m
INCORRUPTIBLE, ruptible.]
supposed to he incorruptible. Our bodies shall be changed into ble
2.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
INCORREC'TiON,
&c.
It is
•
ity
;
as,
;
Incorrectness
Encyc. substance in anto incorporate copper with sil-
may
consist in defect or in
redundance.
INCOR'RItilBLE,
a.
ble; li.corrigo: con
ver.
[Fr.
and
;
and
in
corruption.
2.
;
is
it
corruption.] raised in »n-
Cor. xv.
Not
a.
liable to
Exemption from
decay or corruption. Purity of mind or manners tegrity
;
honesty.
;
probity inH'oodward. ;
[L. incrasso, incrassa; in and crassiis, thick.] 1. To make thick or thicker to thicken ; ; the contrary to attenuate. 2. In pharmacy, to make fliuds thicker by the i'.
t.
tus
mixture of other substances less by evaporating the thinner parts. .\cids dissolve or attenuate tate or incrassate.
INCRAS'SATE,
v.
i.
Mdison. INcOR'RItilBLENESS,
To embody The
;
idolaters,
to give a material
who worshiped
gods, supposed some therein.
spirit to
form
jYewton.
To become
things.
Stilling/ieet.
INCORRIGIBLY,
2.
Fattened.
INCRAS'SATED,;);). Made thicker
all
To
thick-
er.
INcRAS'SATING,;)^-. Rendering growing
thicker;
thick or
thicker.
n. The act of thickenof becoming thick or thicker. Broum. INCRAS'SATIVE, a. Having the quality of
INCRASSA'TION, ing, or state
thickening.
That which has the
n.
to thicken.
Harvey.
INCRE'AS.\BLE, a. That may be increased. Sherwood.
INCRE'ASE, co, to
V.
[L. incresco; in
1.
grow, Fr.
croitre,
Sp.
and
cres-
crecer, It. cres-
As the Latin prct. is cresqi. word and the Eng. groic, are probably of the same familv. Class Rd. Arm.
cert.
crevi,
No. 1.
this
5').
75.]
To become
greater in bulk or quantity;
grow to augment as plants. Hence, become more in number; to advance iu value, or in any quality good or bad. Anto
;
;
to
Locke. a degree of de-
imal and vegetable bodies increase by natural growth wealth increases by industry heat increases, as the sun advances towards the meridian a midtitude increases by accession of numbers knowledge
means of amendment.
;
Roscommon.
;
INCORRUPT', INCORRUPT'ED,
;
I.
beyond
pravit}'
adv.
thick or
) In Muiiy, thickened " or J becoming thicker towards the flower, as a peduncle. Martyn.
\
;
;
Vol.
Thequahtyof ^"beingbad, er-
or
INCRAS'SATE, INCRAS'SATED,
power
roneous or depraved beyond correction hopeless depravity in persons and error in
images a: be incorporated
To form into a legal body, or body polto constitute a liody, composed of one or more indiviiluals, with the quality of perpetual existence or succession, unless limited by the act of incorporation as, to incorporate the inlmbitants of a city, town itic
INCORRIGIBILITY,
to.
their
fluid,
alkalies precipi-
;
thicker.
INCRAS'SATIVE,
rfg"o.]
corrup-
Jlkenside. n.
To
ment.
6.
1
INCRAS'SATE,
;
5.
anA
[in
in corniplion
tion or decay.
corrigi-
1. That cannot be corrected or amended: unite ; to blend ; to work into another bad beyond correction ; as incorrigible ermass or body ; as, to incorporate plagia ror. risms into one's own composition. 2. Too depraved to he corrected or reform 4. To unite ; to associate in another govern as an incorrigible sinner; an incored ment or empire. The Romans jncor^oraifrf rigible drunkard. conquered countries into their govern-
3.
sown
INCORRUPT'IVE,
;
;
;
INCORRECT NESS,
To mix and embody one other
of correction.
testimony incorrectly stated. n. Want of conformto truth or to a standard inaccuracy.
copied
n.
Incapacity of being corrupted.
^1rnu-ay.
;
2.
Want
n.
INCORRECT'LY, adv. Not in accordance with truth or other standard inaccurateas a writing incorrectly ly ; not exactly
incorpornr ; It. in and corpus, a bo
quality
liable to de-
Boyle.
INCORRUP'TION,
;
Shrtk
The
ii.
;
;
Bacon.
Wake. inflexibly just
;
of being incorruptible, or not
;
[Fr. incorporer ; Sp. incorporare ; L. incorporo
incorrupti-
inuiiorlal substances.
INCORRUPT IBLENESS,
;
t.
and
That cannot be bribed and upright.
INCORUUPTNESS,
incorpord; L.in
a. [Fr.
;
INCORPORATE, v.
;
Thus gold, glass, merting of corruption. cury, &c.. are incorruptible. Spirits are
;
;
That cannot corrupt or decay not admit-
1.
corporalis, incorporeus.]
convincible.]
[from incorrup-
quality of being incapable of decay or corruption. a. [Fr. ; in and cor-
one
that cannot be convinc Not consisting of matter not having a ma inunaterial. terial body are not capable of conviction. Spirits INeONVIN'CIBLV, adv. In a manner not deemed incoiporeal substances. INCORPO'REALLY, adv. Without body admitting of conviction. Bacon INCO'N Y, a. or n. [Qu. in and con, to know.] immaterially. Unlearned artless an accomplished per- INCORPORE'ITY, n. Thequality of being not material Shak. immateriality. son, in contempt. [III.'] t. V. To incorps'. incorporate. INCOR'PORAL, a. [in and corporal.] Not INCORPSE, Shak. [Barbarous.] consisting of matter or body immaterial a. [in and correct.] Not corliakigh INCORRECT', [Incorporeal is generally used.] to a copy rect not exact not ?i. The of not according INCORPORAL'ITY, quality or or to established rules inaccumodel, ; consisting of matter; inmiateriality. INCOR'PORALLY, adv. Without" matter rateThe faulty. piece, you think, is incorrect. Pope. or a body imniateriallv. 2. Not according to truth; inaccurate as an a. and INeOR'PORATE, corporate.] [in incorrect statement, narration or calcula1. Not consisting of matter; not having ; tion. ni.iterial body. [Little used.] associated 3. Not according to l.aw or morality. 2. Mixed ; united in one body
Not convincible
ed
ii.
.
tible.]
cay.
INCORPOREAL,
fValsh
cie.
body
Association in the same political body as the incorporation vt'coiMiuaied countries into the Roman republic. Formation of a legal or political body by the union of individuals, constituting an artificial ])erson. Blackstone.
converti- 3.
hie.]
Not convertible or changed
INCORRUPTIBILITY, The
;
political
:
;
;
;
;
INCORPORATION,
quality of not being changeable or con-
;
;
?n<:or/;ora
same
vertihle.]
The
not marred, impaired or spoiled not defiled or depraved |mre sound untaiiued applicable to persons, principles or substances. Milton.
;
[from incon
n.
Not corrupt
;
Shaio's Zool.
INCONVERTIBILITY,
INC
to incorporate the proprietors of
a bridge, the stockholders of a bank, of an
;
;
;
I
nipius
;
\
[h.incorruplus; in
and rorrumpo, corS con and rumpo, to break.]
108
;
;
)
increases with age
and study
;
passion and
N C
I
INC
N C
I
and misery That cannot be believed not to be credited IN'€UBUS, n. [L. from incubo, to lie on.] too extraordinary and improbable to ad- 1. The nightmar; an oppression of the
piimity increase by irritation, increases with vice. The Lord make you to increase and abound in love one toward another. 1 Thess. iii. 2. To become more violent ; as, the fever increases ; the pain increases ; cold, wind or
a storm increases. 3.
To become more
4.
light increases. swell ; to rise.
Hliy should with you, that
John
To
IN€RED'1BLENESS, which
dead
Acts
?
1.=;
A
n.
In a
adv.
manner
to pre-
n. [Fr. incredidiU.] The quality of not believing; indisposition to believe ; a withholding or refusal of belief Raleigh.
must decrease.
I
disk.
To augment
or
Bp. Hall.
INCULCATE,
is
species of incredulity, religious uninfinitely the most irrational. Jinckminster.
make INCRED'ULOUS,
incredulus
a. [L.
;
J'. /. [L. inculco, to drive or in and calco, to tread, calx, the
heel.]
impress by frequent admonitions; to teach and enforce by frequent repetitions to urge on the miud. Our Savior incul:
cates
on his followers humility and
for-
giveness of injuries.
INCULCATED,
m and
;
on
To
Of every belief
;
force
INCREDU'LITY,
iii.
IN€RE'ASE,
tlie
clude belief.
enlarge, as the enlightened part of the t.
breast in sleep, or sense of weight, with an almost total loss of the power of moving the body, while the imagination frightened or astonished. 2. demon an imaginary being or fairy. Incredibility,
a thing incredible
see.
INCRED'IBLY,
increase, but
I',
be thought
it
God should raise
xxvi.
vii.
moon's
;
mit of belief
To swell; to become louder, as sound. To become of more esteem and authority. He must
7.
as, the
waters increased and bore up the ark.
The
6.
;
To
Gen. .5.
bright or vivid
;
Impressed or enfor-
pp.
ced by frequent admonitions.
credulus ; credo, to believe.] INCULCATING, ppr. Impressing or engreater in bulk, quantity or amount as, Not forcing by repeated instruction. believing; indisposed to admit the truth to increase to increase wealth or treasure of what is related refusing or withhold- INCULCA'TION, n. The action of imprcs.a sum or value. Bacon. ing belief. ing by repeated admonitions. to add to any 9. To advance in quality INCRED'ULOUSNESS, n. Incredulity, INCULP'ABLE, a. [L. in and as, to increase the culpabV.is, quality or affection which see. from a fault.] strength of moral habits to increase love, INCREM'ABLE, a. [L. in and crcmo.] That Withoutculpa, fault unblamable that cannot be zeal or passion. Brown. camiot be burnt. [jVo< used.] accused. to lengthen South. 3. To extend as, to increase IN'CREMENT, )!. [L. incrementum, from n. Unblamablenes.;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
A.
To
extend
to spread
;
as,
;
To
aggravate
1.
to increase
as,
;
guilt or
trespass.
INCREASE, larger
;
n.
Augmentation; a growing
extension.
;
profit
3. 4.
;
;
;
;
INCUL'TIVATED,
quantity.
;
INCREPA'TION,
increpazione.]
[It. ;
rebuke
INCRESCENT,
A
reprehen-
;
issue
;
See In-
a. [L. incrcscens.
growing; augmenting
INCRIM'INATE,
Shak.
Generation.
The waxing of the moon
the augmentation of the luminous part of the moon, of the earth. presented to the inhabitants and herbs will Seed.fl, hair, nails, hedges
grow soonest,
if
;
set or cut in tlie increase of
tlie
Bacon. Augmentation of strength or violence as increase of heat, love or other passion increase offeree. inoon.
;
IN€R.E'ASED, grown larger.
1N€RE'ASER,
;
t.
;
bloody
;
[L.
INCUM'BENCY,
m and cnminor,
incruentus.]
[L.
Un[jYol
and
cncsto,
t.
[L. incrusto
;
in
1.
cover with a crust or with a hard coat to form a crust on the surface of any subas iron incntsted with oxyd or stance a vessel incrusted with salt. rust
;
made
or
INCRUST'ATE,
v.
t.
To
incrust.
an
a.
cumbo, to
incumho
[L. incwnbens, lie
down
;
load they Jlddison.
try.
2.
o.
Abundant of produce INCRUSTA'TION,
He
Shak. or that which in
Supported buoyed up. And lly inciiiiibent on the dusky ;
air.
Dryden. 3.
Leaning on, or resting against as incumbent stamens or anthers, in botany.
4.
Lying on, as duty or obligation imposed and emphatically urging or pressing to performance indispensable.
[Less
A
[P'r.
from L. incrus-
crust or rough coat of any thing on the
surftice
creases.
n.
tatio.] 1.
A
of a body.
covering or lining of marble or other ppr. Growing becoming 2. Jlddison stone. larger; advancing in any quality, good or INCRYS'TALIZABLE, a. [in and crystal bad.
1N€RE'ASING,
;
;
Martyn.
formed into
tised.]
INCREDIBIL'ITY, )!.
[Fr. incredibilite.
See
Incredible.]
IN'CUBATE, to
lie
;
;
All men, truly zealous, will perform those good works which are incumbent on all christians.
Sprat.
INCUM'BENT,
The
»i.
person
who
is
I)rescnt possession of a benefice, or of
Uncreated, which sec. izable.] INCP.EA'TE, ) INCRE.VTEl), S"' [The latter is the word That will not
crystalize
;
that cannot be
V. i.
[L. incubo
To
office.
well as
crystals.
down.]
sit,
as
;
in and cubo, on eggs for
;
Sp. incumbir.]
Lying or resting on. And when to move th' incumbent
frequentlil tised.]
n.
A
[from incuynhent.]
;
;
;
INCUM'BENT,
to crust.]
To
n.
Berington. or neglect of culFeltham.
lying or resting on something. The state of holding or being in possession of a benefice, or of an office.
'.n
V.
un-
;
These fines are to be paid to the bishc^, only during his incumbency. Swi/t. There is no test of the tenure, but incumbenE. Everett. cy on the part of the king.
fault.
not attended with blood.
cultivated
Neglect or want of
Want
n.
tivation.
swell- 2.
with a crime or
n.
cultivation.
INCUL'TURE,
in use.]
INeRUST',
increase of
ai;
Augmented
;)/;.
INCRE'ASEFUL,
mostly
INCULTIVA'TION,
See Crime.]
to accuse.
To accuse to charge INCRUENT'AL, a.
;
Augmentation of degree happiness or misery.
v.
;
Not
a.
cultivated.
Hammond.
sion.
offspring. Increasing; All the increase of thy house shall die in the ing. flower of their age. 1 Sam. ii. ;
ti.
8.
n.
chiding or rebuking
chide;
ci'case.]
Progeny
.').
7.
To
«.
1).
[L.increpo.] [JVot in use.]
to rebuke.
Ixvii.
4.
Mounta^u. Increase a growing in bulk, quantity, INCULP'ABLY, a. Unblamably; without number, value or amount augmentation. blame. South. Produce production. a. incuUus in and INCULT', ; [\j. cultus, Matter added increase. from colo.] In mathematics, the quantity by which a Untilled uncultivated. Thomson. variable quantity increases; a differential
which IN'CREPATE,
interest ; that tlie original stock. Take Ihou no interest of him or increase ; but fear thy God. Lev. xxv. n. Produce, as of land. Then shall the earth yield her increase. Ps.
Increment is added to
INCULP'ABLENESS,
Increase.]
;
2.
Of the increase of his government and peace, there shall be no end. Is. ix.
3.
See
incresco.
to increase
fame or renown. 5.
;
;
distance.
[It is applied to to ecclesiastical.]
INCUM'BER,
j;.
civil
[Fr. encombrer
«.
;
in
any
officers It.
as in-
gombrare.]
To
bindcn with a load to embarrass. [See too extraordinary to admit of belief. Encumber, and its derivatives.] INCUBA'TION, ?!. [Fr. from L. incubaiio.] The act of sitting on eggs for the purpose INCUM'BRANCE, n. A burdensome and Dryden troublesome load any thing that impedes Ray. IN€RED'IBLE, a. [h. incredibilis ; in and of hatching young. credibilis, credible.] INGU'BATURE, n. Incubation. [N'ot used.] motion or action, or renders it difficult or
The
quality of sin'passing belief, or of being
hatching.
;
;
INC iaborious
clog
;
;
;
embarrass'
meut.
INCURVA'TION, 2.
A legal claim on the estate of another. INeUM'BRANCER, n. One who has an
9.
3.
incumbrance, or some legal claim on an estate.
INeUM'BROUS, some.
a.
Cumbersome
;
Obs.
Kent. troubleChaucer.
I.
I act of bending.
The state of being bent, or turned from a rectilinear course; curvity ; crookedness. The act of bowing, or bending the body Stiltingjleet,
To bend
;
to
make
A
;
ness
a bending inward.
;
Brown.
[L. indago.] To seek or [JVot used.] to. INDAGxVTION, n. The act of searching
IN'DAGATE,
v.
t.
search out.
N D
INDECI'SIVELY, adv. Without decision. INDECI'SIVENESS, n. The state of being undecided ; unsettled stale state of not being brought to a final issue. ;
INDECLI'N.UJLE, clinabilis
;
in
Not declinable
crooked. n. [from L. incurvus.] state of being bent or crooked ; crooked
INCURV'ITY,
run against; hence, to be-
Literally, to
The
INCURVE,
;
incurrir.] 1.
u.
in respect or reverence. V. t. incurv'.
[L. incurro, to run against in and curro, to run It. incorrere ; Sp.
INCUR',
V.
N D
I
impediment
and
a.
[Fr.
from L. inde-
declino.]
not varied by terminations; pondo, in Latin, is an indeclinable noun.
come hable to to become subject Not capable of decomposition, or of being search examination. Thus, a thief incurs the punishment of inquiry [LitUe resolved into the primary constituent elethe law by the act of stealing, before he Brown. used.] Boyle. ments. Enciic. is convicteil, and we have all incurred the IN'DAGATOR, n. A searcher one who INDECOMPO'SABLENESS, h. Iiica|)aof God's seeks or law. with penalties inquires diligence. [Little blcness of decomposition. 2. To bring on to inas, to incur a debt ttsed.] Boyle. a. [L. inderorus; in and cur guilt to incur the displeasure of God IND'ART, v.t. [in and dart.] To dart "in; INDECOROUS, decor, decus, deceo, to become.] to incur blame or censure. to thrust or strike in. Shak. Unbecoming; violating good manners conIndebitatus assumpsit. [See Assumpsit.] 3. To occur to meet to press on. Obs. trary to the established rules of good Bacon. INDEBT, a verb, is never used. breeding, or to the forms of respect which INCVRABIL'VTY, n. [Fr.incurabiliU.] The INDEBT'ED, a. indet'led. [It. indcbitato.] age and station require. It is indecorous state of being incurable; impossibility of 1. Being in debt; having incurred a debt in a young person to take the highest held or obliged to pay. A is indebted to cure; insusceptibility of cure or remedy. when his superiors are B he is indebted in a large sum, or to a place in compajiy, Harveij. Indecorous is sometimes equivapresent. INCU'RABLE, a. [Fr. in and curable.] large amount. lent to indecent but it is le.ss frequently 1. That cannot be cured not admitting of 2. obliged by sometliing received, forwhici a[)j)licd to actions which offend modesty cure beyond the power of skill or medi restitution or gratitude is duo. We are and chastity. cine as an incurable disease. indebted to our parentsybr their care of us adv. In an unbecomin infancy and youth. 2. Not admitting remedy or correction irreWc are indebted to INDECOROUSLY, ing manner. God for life. We are indebted to the mediable; remediless; as incurable evils n. Violation of good INDEC'OROUSNESS, christian the of advan n. religion A person diseased befor many IN€U'RABLE, manners in words or behavior. tages, and much of the refinement of mod yond the reach of cure. INDECO'RUlM, n. [L. in and decorum.] INeU'RABLENESS, n. The state of not ern times. INDEBT'EDNESS, n. indet'tedness. The Impropriety of behavior that in behavior admitting cure or remedy. or manners which violates the established INeU'RABLY, adv. In a manner or degree state of being indebted. of civility, or the duties of respect INDEBT'MENT, n.indet'ment. The state of rules that renders cure impracticable. which age or station requires an unbeHall. being indebted. [Little used.] INeURlOS'ITY, n. Want of curiosity in- INDE'CENC coming action. It is sometimes synonyY, n. [Fr. indeceiice ; It. indeindifference. Wotton. attentiveness; mous with indecency but indecency, more cenza ; L. indecens, indeceo ; in and deceo, INCU'RIOUS, a. [in and curious.] Desti- to become.] frequently than indecorum, is applied to words or actions which refer to what natute of curiosity not curious or inr^uisi- That which is unbecoming in language or and propriety require to be concealed inattentive. ture tive Swijl. manners; any action or behavior which INCU'RIOUSNESS, n. Want of curiosity is ileemod a violation of modesty, or an or suppressed. adv. [in and deed.] In reality; INDEE'D, as rude or or inquisitiveness. offense to wanton Ckesterfield. delicacy, in truth in fact. IN€UR'RED, pp. Brought on. actions, obscene language, and whatever; The carnal mind Is enmity against God for INCUR'RING, ppr. Becoming subject or tends to excite a blush in a spectator. it is not subject to the law of God, neither inliable to Extreme assurance or impudence may bringing on. ji. L. incur of behavior to-l deed can be. Rom. viii. incursion also be deemed ;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
IN€UR'SION,
indecency Indeed is usually emphatical, but in some [See Indecorum.] 1. INDE'CENT, a. [Fr. from L. indecens.] cases more so than in others; as, this is true it is indeed. Unbecoming; unfit to be seen or heard; ing into a territory with hostile intention an inroad applied to the expeditions of offensive to modesty and delicacy as inI were a beast indeed to do you wrong. small parties or detachments of an ene decent language; indecent manners; an Drydeti. .'>ome sons indeed, some very few we sec, indecent posture or gesture. my's array, entering a territory for at Drydcn.' Who keep tliemselves from this infection free. tack, plunder or destruction of a post or INDE'CENTLY, adv. In a manner to ofZh-yden. fend modesty or delicacy. magazine. Hence it differs from invasion There is indeed no greater pleasure in visitwhich is the hostile entrance of an army INDECID'UOUS, a. [iii and deciduous.] Addison. for conquest. Not falling, as the leaves of trees in au-; ing these magazines of war During the revolution, the h It is used to British troops made an incursion to Dantunm lasting evergreen. note concession or admission ; as, ships not so large indeed, but better bury, and destroyed the magazines. In INDEC'IMABLE, a. N6t liable to the pay-' Cowel. ment of tithes. manned. opposing this incursion, Gen. Wooster was and 7!. as z. killed. s INDECISION, [in decision.] Indeed is used as an cspression of surprise, 2. Attack; occurrence; as sins of daily I'reWant of decision want of settled pur- or for the purpose of obtaining confirma'" cursion. South. of a tact stated. Indeed! is it possi tioii II of [Unusttal.] pose of of firmness in the determinations ble ? is it so in fact ? INCURV'ATE, V. t. [L. incurvo; in and of the will a wavering of mind irresoln [Fr.
;
See Incur.] sio, from incurro. Literally, a running into hence, an enter-
wards superiors.
I
;
;
;
;
—
;
;
I
;
'
j
|
;
;
tion.
curvus, bent.]
To bend
;
to
crook
;
to turn
from a right
line
INDECISIVE,
or straight course.
INCURV'ATE, •
a.
a.
[in
and
mDEFAT'lGXBLYl,
Not
decisive.]
in
and
|
a.
[L.indefaligabais;
rfiyo/igo, /afig-o, to fatigue.]
not bringing to a final close or 'Unwearied not tired not exhausted by ladecisive ultimate issue as an indecisive battle or bor not yielding to fatigue; as indefatigaengagement an argument indecisive of ble exertions ndefaligablc attendance or the question, perseverance. Milton Unsettled Upborne with iiulefatigable wings wavering vacillating; hesi tating; as an inrfccmve state of mind an lINDEFAT'IGABLENESS, n. UnweariedParneir indecisive character. ness; persistency. ;
Curved inwards or up-
;
;
;
wards.
;
;
INCURV'ATED,
pp. rectilinear direction.
INCURV'ATING, from a right
Burke.
line.
Bent
ppr.
;
turned from a 2.
Bending
;
turning
;
.
;
;
N D
I
ness ;
INDEFATIGA'TION,
n.
Dryden. Unweariedness.
n.
[ttom indefeasi-
INDELIB'ERATELY,
adv.
indelible.
delib-
bilis
in and
;
The
quality of being Horsley. a. [Fr. indelebile ; h. indeledelebilis, from deleo, to blot »i.
of being not subject to the indefeasibility of a
1.
Not
be blotted out ; that cannot be efas indelible letters or faced or canceled characters. Indelible ink is such as cannot be taken out of paper or cloth, or not by ordinary means. Not to be annulled. They are endued with indelible power from
title.
o. s as z. {in and defeasible; Fr. defaire, defuit, to undo, to de2. feat ; de and /aire, to make, L./rto'o.] Not to be defeated ; that cannot be made
above, to feetl and govern this household. as an indefeasible estate or title. [Unusual.] Sprat. adv. In a manner not 3. That cannot be effaced or lost as, immade void. on the mind may be indelible INDEFE€TIBIL'ITY, n. [from indefecti- pre.ssions or stain on reproach reputation may be in-
void
;
INDEFE'ASIBLY, be defeated or
;
;
ble.]
The
quality of being subject to no defect or Ch. Observer. decay. INDEFECT'IBLE, a. [in and defect] Unfailing
;
not liable to defect, failure or de-
fect
;
Not
o.
defective;
complete.
INDEFE'ISIBLE,
a.
Indefeasible.
INDEFENSIBILITY,
;
of delicacy
[jYoI
[from indefensi-
ble.]
i.
and
cause
is
be indefensible.
A
cent
indefensible.
2.
;
The margins
;
;
;
points, like teeth. 2.
3.
;
indelicate behavior Offensive to good
mind.
manner
tings
1.
m
;
;
is
one which has not a precise
damnificus
in
some places discontinued, but
INDENT'MENt, A INDENT'URE,
;
Indentures are generally du-
contract.
together and indented, so two papers or parchments coreach other. But indenting is respond plicates, laid
that the
to
often neglected, while the writings or counterparts retain the name of indentures.
loss.
(I. [L. indefnilus 3. Reimbursement of loss, damage or pendefnitus, definio, to define ; de and finio, alty. to end, finis, end.] Not limited or defined ; not determinate INDEM'NIFIED, pp. Saved harmless ; se cured against damage. as an indefinite not precise or certain lime. An indefinite proposition, term or INDEM'NIFY, v. t. [in and damnify; L.
phrase,
is
the term remains in use.] indelicate customs. INDENT'ING, ppr. Cutting into notches. manners, or to purity of] 2. Binding out by covenants in writing. n. Indenture. adv. Indecently ; in a n. writing containing a ;
jicnalty.
Reynolds. 2. Security against and ;
INDEFINITE,
Bound out by indented writings; as an indented apprentice or servant. Bound out by writings, or covenants in writing. [The practice of indenting wri-
;
;
fined.
;
—are indented.
Wbodtoard. 2. To bind out by indentures or contract ; as, to indent a young man to a shoemaker to indent a servant. INDENT', V. i. To contract ; to bargain or covenant. [From the practice of using indented writings or counterparts.] Shak. INDENT', 11. Incisure a cut or notch in the margin of any thing, or a recess like a notch. Shak. 2. A stamp. IN'DENT, n. A certificate or indented certificate issued by the government of the United States at the close of the revolution, for the principal or interest of the public debt. Ramsay. Hamilton. A notch a cut in JDENTA'TION, ) JDENT'MENT. ^ the margin of paper or otiier things. ff'oodward. 2. A recess or depression in any border. INDENT' ED, pp. Cut in the edge into
;
to offend against good manners or purity of mind. INDEFI"CIENCY, n. The quality of not INDEMNIFICA'TION, n. [from indembeinsf deficient, or of siiftering no delay. 1NDEFI"CIENT, a. Not deficient; not i. nify.] of indemnilying, saving harm'I he act failing perfect. or securing against loss, damage or INDEFI'NABLE, a. That cannot be de- less,
Herbert.
endenize, which see.
;
;
INDEL'ICATELY,
Having no defense.
To
points or inequalities, like a row of teeth as, to indent the edge of paper.
a. Wanting delicacy inbut it expresses less than indeas an indelicate word or expression
decent
indefensible.
a.
nice sense of propriety, or nice regard to refinement in maimers or in the treatment of others rudeness coarseness of manners or language that which is offensive to refined taste or purity of mind. .a
INDEL'ICATE,
to
INDEFENS'IVE,
of
;
bad
An be vindicated or justified. improper action or indecent expression is Not
Want
;
defensible,
from defend.] That cannot be defended or maintained.
A military post may '2.
[in
and delicacy.] Want want of decency in language [in
Mdison. 2.
quality or state of not being capable of if'alsh. defense or vindication. a.
;
»i.
or behavior, regarding wliat nature and manners require to be concealed.
The
INDEFENS'IBLE,
In a manner not to be
adv.
blotted out or effaced too deeply imprinted to be effaced, or to vanish.
perSouth.
used.] n.
INDEL'IBLY,
INDEL'I€ACY,
cay.
INDEFE€T'IVE,
delible.
t.
i>. t. To invest with the privileges of a free citizen. Overbury. INDENT', v. t. [in and Fr. dent, L. dens, a tooth Fr. denleler ; Arm. danla.] 1. To notch ; to jag ; to cut any margin into
to
;
INDEFE'ASIBLE,
to
IN'DENIZE, V. INDEN'IZEN,
out.]
ble.]
The quahty or state be made void; as
N D
I Without
eration or premeditation.
INDELIBIL'ITY,
INDEL'IBLE,
[Xol used.]
INDEFEASIBIL'ITY,
N D
I
adv. Without weariwithout yielding to fatigue.
INDEFAT'IGABLY,
damnum,
loss.]
INDENT'URE,
v. f.
To
indent
;
to bind
by
indenture an apprentice. n. [in and dependence.] state of being not dependent complete exem|)tion from control, or the power of others as the independence of the
indentures;
as, to
INDEPEND'ENCE, 1.
A
;
;
Supreme Being.
1. To save harmless; to secure against loss, limited signification. 2. A state in which a person does not rely damage or penalty. Tliat has no certain limits, or to which on others for subsistence ; ability to sup2. To make good to reimburse to one what the human mind can afiix none as indefport one's self he has lost. a man, by giv indemnify inite space. 3. A state of mind in which a person acts space may be indefinite, make a fu sufficient to good iug security without bias or influence from others ; though not infinite. ture or by actual reimbursement of INDEF'INITELY, adv. Without any set- loss, loss, exemption from undue influence; self-diafter it has occurred. tled limitation as space indefinitely exre("tion. Independence of mind is an imharmless tended. INDEM'NIFYING, ppr. Saving portant qualification in a judge. 'i. Not Declaration of Independence, the solemn decsecuring against loss ; reimbursing loss. precisely ; not with certainty or precision ; as, to use a word indefinitely. INDEM'NITY, 71. [Fr. indemniU; Sp. in- laration of the Congress of the United States of America, on the 4th of July INDEF'INITENESS, n. The quality of demnidad ; It. indennita ; L. in and dam177(5, by which they formally renounced being undefined, unlimited, or not pre num, loss.] cise and certain. their subjection to the government of 1. Security given to save harmless; a wriGreat Britain. INDEFIN'ITUDE, n. Quantity not limited ting or pledge by which a person is secured against future loss. by our understanding, though yet finite INDEPEND'ENT, a. [in and dependent.] Hale 2. Security against punishment. 1. Not dependent ; not siibject to the con[JVoJ used.] not subonlinate. God is trol of others a. [in and demonINDELIB'ERATE, a. [in and deliberate ; Fr. indeliber^'.] the only being who is perfectly independThat cannot he demonstrated. strable.] Done or i)crformed without deliberation or INDENIZA'TION, n. The act of naturalent. consideration ; sudden ; unpremeditated ; izing, or the patent by which a person is 2. Not holding or enjoying possessions at as the indeliberate commission of sin. the will of another ; not relying on others ; made free.
meaning or
'i.
;
;
A
We
;
INDEMON'STRABLE,
;
N D
I
We
3.
4.
INDKTERM'INATELY,
wants.
2.
all
Affording the means of independence an independent estate.
Not subject
;
|)recise limits
;
believed the soul may exist inrfp/>cnrfen( of matter. 6. Free easy self-commanding; bold; unconstrained ; as an independent air or 7.
It
is
;
ui genunder which we conceive ourselves bound obey a law, independent of those resources which the law provides for its own enforceWard. ment. Pertaining to an independent or congreeral,
8.
It is followed by ofitr both of which arc well authorized. most conforinublu to analogy, for always follows depend, but of is most
gational church. on,
On it
is
common.
INDEPEND'ENT,
One who, in
n.
religious
maintains that every congregation of christians is a coniphuc (liuroli, subject
affairs,
ness
no superior authority, and competent to perform every act of government in eccle-
1.
othei-s;
without
3.
Without undue bias or influence
:
;
INDEPREIIENS'IBLE,
a.
That cannot be Bp. Morton.
fouiid out.
INDEPRI'VABLE,
That cannot be
o.
INDES€RI'BABLE, INDESCRIP'TIVE,
1.
descriptive or
containing just description.
INDESERT', n. s as :. [in and desert.] Mdison. Want of merit or worth. INDES'INENT, a. [L. in and desino, to petual.
INDES'INENTLY, adv. Without 1NDESTRU€TIBIL'ITY,
n.
;
quality of resisting decomposition, or of being incapable of destruction. destnicti
that
ble.]
i
Tastes are the indexes of the difTcrent qualiof plants. Jlrbulimot. that points to any thing, as the hour of the day, the road to a place, &e.
3.
The hand
Boyle. a.
[in
and determ-
1.
finger.
G.
arithmetic
and
algebra,
that
which i.
adv. In the [in
IN'DIA, n. A country from the river Indus.
j2.
in and dico,
to a
or
;
to discover;
to
knowledge of somesomething that will
tell
;
to disclose.
;
;
Showing; pointing
ppr.
directing.
Mark
;
token
The act of pointing out. sign symptom whatever
n. ;
;
;
serves to discover what is not before known, or otherwise obvious.
The frequent stops they make in the most convenient places, are plain indications of their weariness. 3.
Addison.
In medicine, any symptom or occurrence a disease, which serves to direct to suitable remedies. in
made
4.
Discovery
5.
Explanation
;
;
intelligence given. Bcntliy. [Little used.]
display.
Bacon.
INDICATIVE,
a.
[L. indicativus.]
Show-
ing ; giving intimation or knowledge of .something not visible or obvious. Reserve is not always indicative of it modesty may he indicative of prmlence. In grammar, the indicative mode is the form of the verb that indicates, that is, which affirms or denies ; as, he writes, he ;
;
;
mind
INDICATION,
Harvey.
named
;
ilirected.
dexterity.]
[from India, and this from 1. That cannnot be determined, ascertained Indus, the name of a river in Asia.] Brown. Pertaining to either of the Indies, East or or fixed. 2. Not to be determined or ended. West. INDETERM'INATE, a. [in and determin- IN'DI.^N, n. A general name of any native of the Indies; as an East Indian, or West ate.] not settled or fixed It is particularly applied to any Indian. 1. Not determinate ; uncertain ; as an indetermnative of the American continent. not definite of INDIAN Arroio Root, n. X plant of the ge-| inate number years. nus Maranta. 2. Not certain ; not precise. a.
To
out
readiness in the use
in Asia, so
inxixfti.] to point out
IN'DICATING,
mannerof an
an.l
dico,
be done
In medicine, to show or manifest by sympto point to as the proper remedies; as, great prostration of strength indicates the use olstimidants. IK 1)1C.\TE\), pp. Shown; pointed out ;
Swift.
INDEXTER'ITY, n. 1. Want of dexterity or
To show;
toms
Encyc.
index.
aiii\
to
rain. 2.
ved
to whatpoweratiy quantity is involthe exponent. Encyc. The index of a f^lobe, or the s^nomon, is a little style fitted on the north pole, which hy turning with the globe, serves to point to certain divisions of the hour circle.
in
is
probably occur in future Thus, fermentation indicates a certain degree of heat in a A heavy sv\'ell of the sea in calm liquor. weather often indicates a storm at a distance. .'\ particular kind of cloud in the west at evening, indicates the approach of
shows ;
;
Coxe.
[L. indico
V. t.
thing not seen,
ff'atts.
Ill
what
show, Gr.
direct the
table of references in an alphabetical order. In anatomy, the fore finger, or pointing
IN'DI.\N,
inable.]
to
A
4.
;
INDICATE,
Bentley. table of the contents of a book.
A
[h. indicans
a.
show.]
pointing out for the cure of disease.
ties
caiuKit be destroyed; incapable of 2. occupation. dccomixisition ; as a material substance.
INDETERM'INABLE,
enne.
which shows Showing
of the hands; chimsiiiess; awkwardness. Want of skill or readiness in any art or
That
by incision from the syringe tree of Cay-
IN'DICANT,
in and
to ;
[from
and
;
m
The
[in
show
\
That which points out
INDEX'IC.\LLY, a.
lui/jco, to
5fix»vw.]
;
tructible.]
INDESTRUCTIBLE,
I
7. In music, a direct, which see. per- Index catholic countries, a ex-purgatory, catalogue of prohibited books. cessation. INDEX'ICAL, a. Having the form of an inRay. dex; pertaining to an index. indes-
Not ceasing
de and sino.]
;
or manifests.
2.
.5.
Not
genus
Ink, n. .\ substance brought from China, used for wafer colors. It is in rolls or in square ,cakes, and is said to con.«ist
Want
dico, (Jr.
That cannot be
a.
of the
plant
INDIAN
Want of determination an unsettled or wavering state, as of the tnind.
fL. connected with
de-
described.
A
n.
Cactus.
Paley.
and determ
n. [in
I
prived. a.
Tropieohnn.
want of pre INDIA.V Fig,
INDEVOUT'LY, orfr. Without devotion. INDEX, n. plu. itidt.res, sometimes indices.
deprecated.
;
;
Indefinite
n.
limits
;
not
Without connection with other things. a. That cannot he
plant of the genus
;
want of certain
;
INDEP'RE€ABLE,
cease
;
;
control.
obsequiously.
A
of lampblack and aniiiial glue. Encyc. of fixed or stated direction. IN'Dl.VNITl', H. [lioin India.] A mineral Bramhall. occurring in musses having a foliated INDETERM'INED, a. [in and dthrmined.] structure and shining luster. Its color is Undetermined unsettled unii.xed. white or gray. Ckaveland. INDEVO'TE, a. Not devoted. Bentley. INDIAN Reed, n. A plant of the genus Canna. INDEVO'TED, a. Not devoted. Clarendon. INDIAN Red, n. A species of oclier, a very INDEVO'TION, n. [Fr.; in and devotion.] fine purple earth, of a firm, compact texWant of devotion absence of devout af- tiire aii(l great weiiiht. Hill. fec'tions. Decay of Pieti/. INI)I.\ Rubber, n. The caoutchouc, a snbstance of extraordinary elasticity, called INDEVOUT', a. [Fr. inderot.] Not devout also ela.ilic gum or resin. not having devout affections. Jbm. It is produced
Without de-
adv.
pending or relying on
plant of the genus
Menispermum. INDI.\N Bread, n.
ination.]
siastical affairs.
INDEPEND'ENTLY,
A
Jatropha.
INDETERMINA'TION,
to
2.
;
INDETERM'INATENESS,
2.
to
n.
any ^INDIAN Bern),
Not with certainty or precision of signifi I\DI.\.\ Corn, n. A plant, the maiz, of the as an idea indeterminately exgenus Zea a native of .Vmerica. INDl.V.N Cress, n. A plant of the genus pressed.
cation
;
mamier. Separate from exclusive. 1 mean the account of that obligation
in
not with indefinitely as a space indeterminately
;
cision.
Not connected with. ;
;
D
I J\ Not
adv.
large.
as
not obto bias or influence self-directing ; as a man of an
manner
settled
sequious independent mind. ;
5.
N D
I
wish to be inde; yet few men are wholly independent, even in property, and none independent for the supply of their
not dependent. pendent in property
2.
N D
I is
I
run ; vvc misimprovt advanwriting ; they It also asks questions; as, Aosthe
show
or signify.
IN'DICATOR,
In a
adv.
manner to^
shows
or that which
IN'DICATORY, show
or
inal<;e
?.i9o5,
a stone.]
In mineralogij, a variety of shorl or tourmahn,of an indigo blue color, sometimes with Cteaveland.l a tinge of azure or green. INDICT, V. t. indite. [L. indidus, from indico ; in and dico, to speak.] In law, to accuse or charge with a crime or misdemeanor, in writing, by a grand jury under oath. It is the peculiar province of a grand jury to indict, as it is of a house
That may be ;
grand
pp.
;
indi'led.
jury.
INDICTEli,
Accusing, or making a foroial or written charge of a crime by a grand jury. ppr.
from L.
;
[m and
a.
indigent. .Addison.
[ATot used.]
Shak. L.
digested;
Not digested not concocted in the stomach ; not changed or prepared for nourishing the body undigested crtide. Not separated into distinct classes or ornot regularly ders, or into proper form ;
;
indiffer-
one
not inclined to side, party to another.
;
more than
3.
;
3.
4.
endless happiness. It was a remarkable law of Solon, that any person who, in the coininotions of the rcpuli lie, remained neuter, or an indifferent spectator
1.
condemned .iddison
5.
;
;
Not prepared by heat. Not brought to suppuration, as the contents of an abscess or boil
;
wound.
2.
as an indigested ff'iseman.
Not digestible not chyme, or j)repared
[in and digestible.] easily converted into in the stomach for
nourish.ing the body.
Arbuthnot.
INDIgESTTBLE,
a.
;
Not
to
be received or patiently endured.
INDIGES'TION, n. [in and digestion.] Want of due coction in the stomach a ;
failure of that change in food which preHaving no influence or preponderating pares it for nutriment crudity. having no difference that gives a Encye. that state of the It is indifferent which load As a disease, dyspepsy ])reference. we take. stomach, in which it is incapable of performing its natural healthy functions. Neutral, as to good or evil. Things in
weight
indi'ting.
disposed and arranged. Chaos is represented as a rude or indigested mass. Not methodized not reduced to due form crude as an indigested scheme. ;
Mdison. ; feehng no interest, anxiety or care respecting any thing. It seems to be impossible that a rational being should be indifferent to the means of obtaining
of the contending parties, should be to perpetual banishment.
Accused by a
One who indicts.
n. indi'ler.
INDICTING,
[Fr.
vegeta-
indigestus.]
Cato knows neither of them. die. Indifferent in his choice to sleep or
offense.
INDICTED,
INDIgEST'ED,
Unconcerned
Subject to be presented by a grand jury as an indictable
subject to indictment
Neutral or thing
indicted; as an indictable offender. 2.
a.
to
;
1.
It is fol-
indi'table.
indifference.
ens.]
arson. a.
;
State in which there is no difference, or in which no moral or physical reason prei;(ponderates; as when we speak of the in themselves. difference of things
INDIF'FERENT,
a country
in
applied
o. [L. indigens ; Fr. indigent,] Destitute of property or means of comfortable subsistence needy poor.
Hooker
of representatives impeach. lowed by of; as indicted of treason or
INDICTABLE,
;
IN'DIgENT,
;
4.
or indico, and
to
not exotic
is
poor with
INDICE. [See Index.] IN'DICOLITE, n. [indigo,
;
when it
serving to
Showing; known.
produced naturally
a state of the mind Unconcernedhess feels no anxiety or interest in what Charity consists in relieving the presented to it. No person of humaniof the INDIgEST', n. A crude mass. wretchedness the behold can ty
3.
Smith. a.
;
bles.
first definition
Greiv-i
He
)!.
or points out.
Native
or climate
;
mail arrived ?
N D
I 2.
prejudice, Impartiality; prepossession or bias as when we read a book on controverted points with indifference. [This is~ a different application of the
tages.
INDI€'ATIVELY,
N D
freedom from
.
;
;
;
4.
n. [Fr.from Low L. indiclio themselves indifi'erent, may he rendered INDlG'ITATE, V. t. To point out with the Brown. evil by the prohibition of law. finger. Bacon. 5. Declaration proclamation. Impartial; disinterested; as an indifferent INDIGITA'TION, n. The act of pointing in a of fifteen 2. In chronology, years, cm with the finger. cycle More. judge, juror or arbitrator. stituted by Constantine the Great origin- G. Passable of a middling state or quality INDIgN, nf. indi'ne. [L. indignus.] Unworof taxation. Constantine Obs. CJiaucer. neither good, nor the worst as indifferent ally, a period thy disgraceful. which the Rothe time reduced n. or having INDIG'NANCE, Indignation. paper. [jYot in writing mans were obliged to serve in the army Indifferent, used adverbially, as indifferent use.] Spenser. to fifteen years, imposed a tax or tribute INDIG'NANT, a. [L. indignans, from inhonest, is ungraramatical and vulgar. at the end of that terra, to pay the troops dignor, to disdain in and dignor, dignus,] INDIF'FERENTLY, adv. Without distiiic once with anger and disdain ; discharged. This practice introduced the tion or preference ; as, to ofier pardon in- Affected at keeping of accounts by this period. But Addison. feeling the mingled emotions of wrath and to all. differently as it is said, in honor of the great victory scorn or contempt, as when a person is without favor, pre 2. Equally ; impartially of Constantine over Mezentius, Sep. 24, exasperated at one despised, or by a mean or bias. A.D. SV2, by which Christianity was more judice action, or liy the charge of a dishonorable —They may tndy and indifferently minister Goliath was indignant at the chalCoin. Prayer act. effectually established, the council of Nice justice. ordained that accounts of years should no lenge of David. without concern 3. In a nentral state longer be kept by Olympiads, but that the He strides indignant, and with haughty cries without wish or aversion. indiction should be used as the point from To i' th' other. Set honor in one eye and death single figlu the fairy prince defies. which to reckon and date years. This Tickell. And I will look on deatli indfferently. Shak INDIGNA'TION, n. [Fr. from L. indignayvas begun Jan. 1, A. D. 313. Johnson. Encyc. Not well tolerably passably as indiflio.] INDIe'TIVE, a. Proclaimed declared. to be indifferently enter- 1. Anger or extreme angei-, mingled with ferently well ; Kennet. tained. contempt, disgust or abhorrence. INDICTMENT, n. indvtemmt. A written IN'DIGENCE, ? When Haman saw Mordecai in the king's [Fr. indigence, from L. accusation or formal charge of a crime or IN'DIgENCY, S gate, that he stood not «p, nor moved for him, indigentia, from indiglie was full of indignation against Mordecai. misdemeanor, preferred by a grand jury eo ; in or ind, and fg'fo, to want, to lack.] Blackstone. Want of Esth. V. imderoath to a court. subof comfortable estate, or means The anger of a superior extreme anger 2. The paper or parchment containing the sistence ; penury poverty. A large poraccusation of a grand jury. particularly, the wrath of God against sintion of the Innnan race live in indigence, ful men for their ingratitude and rebellion. IN'DIES, n. plu. of India. while others possess more than they can 2. Kings iii. INDIFFERENCE, n. [Fr. from L. indif- enjoy. IN'DIuENE, n. [L. indigcna; in or ind, 3. The effects of anger the dreadful effects ferenlia : in and differo, to difTer. Indifft of God's wrath; terrible judgments. Is. and geno, gigno, to beget, or to be born.] ency is little used.] xxvi. a native animal or 1. Er(uipoise or neutrahty of mind between One born in a country 2 Vattel. 4. Holy displeasure at one's self for sin. a state in different persons or things Evelyn. plant. Cor. vii. which the mind is not inclined to one side INDKi'ENOUS, a, [L. indigena, supra more than the other as when we see a [l. Native; born in a country; applied to INDIG'NIFY, r. t. To treat disdainfully. Spenser. contest of parties with indifference. [jYotused.] persons.
INDIC'TION, indico,]
1.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
"
;
;
;
;
;
;
I
;
N D
1
INDIGNITY,
n.
1
Unmer-
[L. htdignitas.]
contemptuous conduct towards another; any action towards another whicli manifests contempt for him contumely with inincivility or injury, accompanied sult. Contemptuous words resi)ecting one, the in foul or presence of persons language of character and delicacy, and indecent heChrist on the iiavior, are indignities. cross was treated with the foulest indig-
|3.
4.
adv.
INDIciNLY,
It.
Unworthily.
indi'nely.
06s. n.
[L. indicum, Sp. indigo.]
HaU. from India; Fr.
A substance or dye, prepared from the leaves and
which are
stalks of the iniligo-i>lant,
steeped
when
water
in
till
the tincture
is
the pulp is extracted, off and churn-
drawn
till the dye begins to granuflakes are thcu lefl to settle
The
drawn
men-
is
the
is
ipialiiy
',i.
;
'
tion,
and
[in
That cannot be discerned
ser
discernible.] 1.
;
n.
Incapabihty
In a
Hammond. manner not
of being discerned.
INDISCERN'IBLY,
adr.
to be seen or perceived. u. Indisccrplible.
INDISCERl'IBLE,
INDISCERPTIBM, ITY,«. The INDISCERP'TI BLE, a.
[in
'2.
!
t
quality
.d'
being incapable of dissolution, or sejiara tion of parts.
3.
and discerptiUe.]
in
m
tinctoria, indigothe anil, a larger species, and the disptrma, which furnishes the Guatimala indigo. Encyc. Miller. Edin. Enryc.
dent; inconsiderate
plant,
INOIL'ATORY,
Ji.
[in
and
dilatory.]
dilatory or slow.
INDIL'ltiENCE,
Want
N\il
Cornwallis. 71.
and
[t»
B. Jonson.
INDIL'ItiENT,
a.
Not
diligent
;
idle
;
sloth-
Felt ham.
ful.
INDIL'IGENTLY,
adv.
Without a.
INDlStRE'TE,
Milton
[L. indirectus ; in and di rectus, froin dirigo.] 1. Not straight or rectilinear deviating from a direct line or course ; circuitous. Froui
a.
inconsiderately
;
;
Not
;
Slightly disordered
;
not
INDISPO'SEDNESS, aversion
slight
its
Disinclination
unwillingness
;
;
unfuvor-
vorable. 2.
Disordering
rendering
;
INDISPOSI'TION,
with
unfit.
n. [Fr.
1.
[in
and
Disinclination
;
in
and dispo-
aversion; unwillingness;
;
dislike ; as the indisposition of men to submit to severe discipline ; an indisposition to abandon vicious practices.
diserelion.]
A general
indisposition towards believing.
Mterlmry.
indiscretions.
INDISCRIMINATE,
a.
[L. indiscrimina-
See Discriminate.]
Slight disorder of the healthy functions of the body tendency to disease. Indisposition is a slight defect of healthy action in bodily functions, rather than settled or marked disease. Want of tendency or natural appetency or affinity as the indisposition of two substances to cond)ine. ;
1.
;
honest; tending to
3.
:
INDIS'PUTABLE,
a.
[Fr.
;
in
a.
.'
to be disputed
testable
;
incontrovertible incontoo evident to admit of dispute. ;
;
Addison. n. The state or quality of being indisputable, or too clear
INDIS'PUTABLENESS, to
in a
5. Indirect tar, is
adv.
manner or degree
controversy
Skelton.
a tax or duty on articles of INDISPENSABLE, a. [Fr.; in and dis consumption, as an excise, customs, &c. pensable.] lNDIKE€'TION,n. [in and direction.] Ob- Not to be dispensed with that cannot be Shak. lique course or means. omitted, remitted or spared ; absolutely 2. Dishonest practice. Obs. Shak. Air and water necessary or requisite. INDIRECT'LY, adv. Not in a straight line arc indispensable to the life of man. Our or course obliquely. duties to God and to our fellow men are 2. Not by direct means. of indispensable obligation.
admit of controversv.
INDISPUTABLY,
Indispensable
[Little used.]
and dilu-
table.]
Not
Donne.
INDISPENSAI5IL ITY, ness.
;
lNDISPO'SING,/>pr. Disinchning; rendering somewhat averse, unwilling or unfa-
;
or deceive. Tillotson.
;
disordered state.
;
Indirect dealing will be discovered one time
functions
in i)erfect health.
n.
ahlencss.
;
or other.
averse nnwilling Disordered ; disqualified for
2. Unfitness;
;
;
towards
Clarendon.
or a. Disinclined; unfavorable.
pp.
unfit. 3.
;
fair;
sulliciently indinposed
;
2.
Undistinguishing ; not making any dis as the indiscriminate voracious tinction ness of a glutton. Chesterfield. 2. Not having discrimination; confused. Now York to England by Bordeaux, is an 3. Undistinguished or undistinguishable. indirect course. INDISCRIMINATELY, u(/i'. Without dis 2. Not direct, in a moral sense; not tnidiiig in confusion. tinction to a purpose by the shortest or plainest INDISCRIM IN'ATING, ppr. or a. Not ma course, or by the obvious, orilinary means king any distinction ; as the victims of an but obliquely or consequentially; by reindiscriminating spirit of rapine. mote means as an indirect accusation an Marshall. indirect attack on reputation an indirect INDISCRI.MINA TION, n. Want of disanswer or jiroposal. Hence, crimination or distinction. Jefferson. 3. Wrong; iiuproper. Shak Not not mislead INDISCUS'SED, a. Not discussed. 4.
unfavorable or disinclined; with
The king was
imprudence. The grossest vices pass under the fashionable
tus.
To make
ples.
Pownal Ji.
a.
per functions; to disorder; as the disletnGlanvUle. peraturc of iiirfis/joserf organs. To disorder slightly, as the healthy functions of the body. It made him rather indisposed than sick.
the person!!, or the principles of Calvin's disci-
discrete or separa-
ted.
name,
men indispose them to religious duties. To render unfit; to discpialify for its pro-
sition.]
INDlSCRE"TION, Want of discretion
Hall
That cannot be
diminished.
INDIRECT',
;
without prudence out judgment.
diligence. lip.
INDIMIN'ISHABLE,
as per-
;
More.
disper.sed.
Dispose. ] To disincline; to alienate the mind and render it averse or unfavorable to any love of pleasure indisposes the thing. mind to severe study and steady attention to business. The jiride and selfishness of
INDISPOSED,
2.
diligence.]
of diligence; slothfulness.
injudicious
;
Not
a.
s as :. [Fr. indispodisposer, to dispose or fit. See
and
towards.
sons.
Not according to discretion or sound judgment as indiscreet behavior. INDISCREE'TLY, adv. Not discreetly
w ant.
v. t.
IVallon. 4.
;
;
;
in
A
Obs More.
omission or
INDISPO'SE,
not visible or Denliam. perceptible; not (lisco\erablc.
INDlSCEKN'IBLENESt5,
adv. Necessarily ; in or degree that forbids dispensa-
INDISPERSED,
Mountagu
dishonesty. a.
manner
a
indirectly lieM.
Obliquity; devious
n.
INDISCERN'IRI.E,
tant
n. Tlie state or
of being absolutely necessary.
LNDISPENS'ABLY,
ort', and indigo Incapable of being destroyed by dissolubags and dried in boxes. It is tion, or separation of jjarls. lip. Butler. u.sed for dyeing blue. Edwards, ff. bid. INDIS'CIPLINABLE, a. [in an.l discipliINDIGOM'ETEK, n. An instrument for as- nable.] Ure. certainiug the strength of indigo. That cannot be disciplined or subjected to IN'DIGO-l'LANT, n. A plant of the genus discipline; not capable of being improved Indigofera, from which is prepared indigo Hale. by discipline. It is a niitive of Asia, Africa and America, INDISCOV'ERABLE, a. [in and discovers and called by the native Americans, anil. That cannot be discovered undis ble.] The calyx is patent; the carina of the co coveralilo. rol is furnished with a subulate, patulous INDISCOV'ERY, n. [in and discovery.] spur on each side; the legume or pod is Want of discovery. [LhmsuaL] Broicn linear. Several species are cultivated for INDlSeREK'T, a. [in and discreet.] Not making indigo, of which the most impordiscreet discretion ; iin])ruwanting or common are the
the liquor
drained
INDISPENS'ABLENESS,
Shak.
ed or agitated, late.
indirectly
I
INDIRECT'NESS,
nity.
IN'DIGO,
He
Unfairly.
course. Unfairness
N D
1
r>
Your crown and kingdom
;
;
N
in express terms.
tioned the subject.
ited,
•
Not
;
Without dispute; not admitting of
nn(|uestionably
;
without op-
position.
INDISPU'TED, verted
;
;
a.
Not disputed or contro-
undisputed.
INDISSOLUBILITY, lity.
I.
;
1
See
The
Encyc. n.
[Fr. indissolubi-
Indissoluble.]
quality of being indissoluble, or not capable of being dissolved, melted or li-
quefied.
Locke.
N D
I
INDISTINCT'NESS,
a. [Fr. from L. in and dissoluhilis, from dis; dis anil solvo, to loosen.]
INDIS'SOLUBLE, soluhilis ;
Not capable of being
1.
faintness
Hooker.
;
as the indistinct-
;
Obscin-ity ; ness of vision.
3.
INDISTINGUISHABLE,
melted or
tlissolved,
;
should that subsist solitarily by itself, which hath no substance, but individually the very same whereby others subsist with it ?
tainty.
indis- 2.
a.
[in
and
tinguishable.]
;
—incommunicably. attribute individually prop-
INDIVID'UATE, INDiyiD'UATE,
Hakewill.
Undivided.
a.
V. t. To make single ; to distinguish from others of the species. Life is individuated into intinite numbers, that have their distinct sense and pleasure.
;
More.
;
;
Not
;
er to the
;
cept
Inseparably
Omniscience an Godhead.
dis-
Few sub- That cannot be distinguished or separated liquefied, as by heat or water. stances are absolutely i»i(/mo/«We by heat undistinguishable. Tytler. INDISTIN'GUISHING, a. Making no difmany are indissotuUe in water. ference as indistinguishing liberalities. 2. That cannot be broken or rightfully vioJohnson. lated perpetually biuding or obligatory as an indissoluble league or covenant. IN DISTURB' ANCE, n. [in and disturbThe marriage covenant is indissoluble, ex3.
N D
I
How
Want
of distincconfusion uncer-
n.
tion or discrimination
Warhurlon.
binding force.
solvo
N D
I
quality of being incapable of a breach; perpetuity of union, obhgation or
The
2.
in certain specified cases. firm ; stable to be broken ;
sotable friendship love.
ance.]
Freedom from disturbance asindis-
;
])ose tle
n. The quality of being incapable of dissolution, separation Hale. or breach indissolubility.
INDIS'SOLUBLENESS, ;
In a manner refirmly united beyond sisting separation the power of separation in a manner not to be dissolved or broken.
EVDIS'SOLUBLY,
and
[in
;
to
write
to
;
commit
in writing. Hear how learn'd Greece her useful indites.
2.
Milton. a.
t.
re-
to
words
move
Indissolublif llim.
V.
;
Temple.
[Litbury in a ditch. Bp. Hall. [J^ot used.] [L. indico, indicium ; in and INDIVIN'ITY,
I.
To compose
adv.
INDISSOLV'ABLE,
calmness
To
ers.
n.
dico, to speak.] 1.
;
they
V.
used.]
INDI'TE,
;
On
;
tranquillity.
;
bands of INDITCH',
indissoluble
;
a. The act of making single or the same, to the exclusion of othWatts. 2. The act of separating into individuals by analysis. Elymol. Voeabulan/. INDIVIDU'ITY, n. Separate existence.
INDIVIDUATION,
rules
Pope.
To
direct or dictate what is to be uttered or written. The late President Dvvight indited his sermons.
dissolvable.]
Want
of divine power. Brown.
INDIVISIBIL'ITY, n. [See Indivisible.] The state or property of being indivisible. Locke.
INDIVIS'IBLE, a. s as z. [in and divisible. See Divide.] That cannot be divided, separated or broken not separable into parts. Perhaps the particles of matter, however small, ;
My heart is inditing a good matter. Ps. xlv. not capable of cannot be considered as indivisible. The INDI'TE, V. i. To compose an account of being melted or liquefied. mind or soul must be indivisible. A mathJValler. 2. Indissoluble; that cannot be broken perematical point is indivisible. is from the same original as indict. petually firm and binding as an indis- [Tills The different applications of the word have INDIVIS'IBLE, n. In ^coroetn/, indivisibles solvnUe bond of union. are the elements or principles into which a each in a difauthors to induced into of Not express 3. parts by separation capable body or figure may be resolved ; elements ferent orthography, but without good reanatural process. infinitely small. Encyc. son.] INDIS'TANCY, n. Want of distance or n. Indivisibility, written dic- INDIVISTBLENESS, INDI'TED, Composed pp. and word not bad iised.] [A which see. separation. tated. Pearson. adv. So as not to be capaINDIVIS'IBLY, n. The act of inditing. ble of division. INDISTINCT', a. [Fr. I., indistinclus ; in INDI'TEMENT, That cannot be dissolved
1.
;
;
;
;
;
1.
ill
such a manner as
ppr. Committing to words in dictating what shall be written.
INDI'TING,
and dislindus. See Distinct.] Not distinct or distinguishable arate
;
;
not sep-
to be percepti-
writing
;
INDIVI'DABLE,
Not capable of
n.
itself.
per-
separate
eye
ceive
Sounds are jnear cannot separate
when
the
them. Hence, Obscure not clear
confused as indisor notions. 3. Imperfect; faint; not presenting clear as indistinct and well defined images an indistinct view. vision 2.
vidmis
them as separate.
distinct,
;
;
;
e.vactly discerning.
[Unustial.]
Shak.
[Little used.]
Not divided, or not to be divided single one as an individual man or city. Under his great vicegerent reign abide ;
docilis ;
—
United, as one individual soul. a.
Pertaining to one only bor or exertions.
INDIVID'UAL, n. A man being. This is tion of the
a. Undistinguishable. ff'arton.
n.
Want of distinction
want of distinction.
Indiscrimination;
3.
Equality of condition or rank.
;
;
to select
distinguish
Coxe, adv.
Without
JIfiltim.
;
3.
Not as /»/
marked.
ableness Intractableness, as of a beast.
INDOCTRINATE,
;
will unitedly
With separate or
Unteach-
v.
Bp. Hall.
t.
;
cijiles.
He
look
much
delia;ht in indoctrinating his favorite. Clarendon.
youns unexperienced
INDOCTRINATED,;)/). Taught; ed
in
instruct-
the jirinciples of any science.
INDO€'TRINATING,
ppr.
Teaching;
in-
structing in principles or rudiments. n. Instruction in the rudiments and principles of any science ; Brotvn. Drake. information. Distinguished a IN'DOLENCE, )!. [Fr. from L. indolentia ;
accomplish what each of them individualb/ cannot perform. 2.
M. [Fr.indociliU.] dullness of intellect.
[Fr. endoctriner ; h.in and doctrina, learning.] not an in- To teach to instruct in rudiments or prin-
pp. Drake. a particular person or thing. ppr. "Distinguishin as an individual. INDIVIDUALLY, adv. Separately by itself; to the exclusion of other.s. Thirty
men
;
Benllcy.
;
2.
INDIVID'UALIZING,
;
instructed
;
INDIVIDUALIZED,
not with precise limits the border of a thing is indistinct
definitely
when
;
h. doceo,
Intractable, as a beast.
INDOCIL'ITY,
as individual la-
v. t. To distinguish mark as an individual, or to the peculiar properties of a
person from others.
Stiiilz.
distinc-
separation ; as when parts of a thing are indistinclly seen. as 2. Confusedly not clearly obscurely when ideas are indistinctly comprehend;
or
not easily
;
dull.
single person or huthe common applica-
INDIVID'UALIZE,
tion or
;
doceo, to teach.]
;
Not teachable
2.
Sprat.
INDISTINCT'LY,
1.
2.
;
2.
docible
;
;
word as, there was dividual present. A single animal or thing of any kinil. INDISTIN€'TION, But this word, as a noun, is rarely appliconfusion uncertainty. ed except to human beings. The imUsthiction of many of the same n.ime- INDIVIDUAL'ITY, n. Separate or distinct liath made some doubt. Brown. existence; a state of oneness. Arbuthnot.
INDISTIN€T'IBLE,
and
[in
Unteachable not capable of being taught, or not easily instructed dull in intellect. Patrick. Bp. Hall. h. indi2. Intractable, as a beast. in and dividuus, from divido, to INDO'CILE, a. [Fr. L. indocilis ; in and
;
;
;
Not
a.
to teach.] 1.
;
divide.] 1.
tinct ideas
4.
;
INDO'CIBLE,
divi-
Shnk.
sion. The parts of a substance by a. Undivided. are indistinct, when they are so blended INDIVI'DED, INDIVID'UAL, a. [Fr. individuel; cannot that the them, or
ble
distinct existence.
INDO€TRINA'TION,
and dolcn, to be pained.] Burnet. freedom from pain. Habitual idleness; indisposition to labor; laziness inaction or want of exertion of body or mind, proceeding from love of ease or aversion to tgil. Indolence, like laziness, implies a constitutional or habitidleness docs not. ual love of ease
in 1.
2.
Literally,
;
;
1
N D
I
IN'DOLENT,
a.
motives.
;
;
;
;
as an indolent life. as an indolent tumor. 3. Free liom pain IN'DOLENTLY, adv. In habitual idleness and ease witliout action, activity or exertion lazily. ;
idle
;
;
;
mankind, the evidence
indolently
Untamable.
a.
[Mt
INDOMPT'ABLE,
a.
[Fr.
Not
L. domo, to tame.] {Unusual.]
in
all
In (Jreat Bridignity to the transaction. tain, induction is used for giving possesIn the Unision of ecclesiastical offices. ted States, it is applied to the formal introduction of civil officers, and the higher
of opinions and of property.
To introduce ; to bring into view. The poet may be seen tndw:ing his personaPope. ges in the first Iliad. be subdued. 5. To offerby way of induction or inference. 4.
;
officers
to
dorsement.
INDORSEMENT,
The
n. indors'ment.
;
to.
Brown. INDU'CED, pp. Persuaded by motives influenced ; produced ; caused. INDU'CEMENT, n. Motive any thing that leads the mind to will or to act ; any argument, reason or fact that tends to persuade or influence the mind. The love of ease is an inducement to idleness. The love of money is an inducement to industry in good men, and to the perpetration of crimes in the bad. INDU'CER, n. He or that which induces, ;
persuades or influences.
or
;
;
V.
t.
;
in and in or introduce. Hence, appropriately, To introduce, as to a benefice or oflice to put in actual possession of an ecclesias tical living or of any other office, with the customary forms and ceremonies. Clerks or ))arsons are inducted by a mandate from the bishop to the archdeacon, who usually issues a precept to other clergymen to perform the duty. In the United States, cer-
is written on the back of a or other paper, as a name, an order for payment, the return of an officer, or the verdict of a grand jury. bill,
;
71. The person who indorses, or writes his name on the back of a note 6r bill of exchange, and who, by this act as the case may be, makes himself liable to pay the note or bill.
INDORS'ER,
IN'DRAUGHT, n. in'drhft. [in and draught An opening from the sea into the land an
tain civil officers and presidents of colleges, are inducted into office with appropriRaleigh. ate ceremonies. pp. Introduced into office [in and drench.] To with the usual formalities. water ; to drown ; to Shale. INDU€T'ILE, a. [in and ductiJe.] Not ca;
Obs.
INDRENCH',
V.
t.
overwhelm with drench.
INDU'BIOUS,
a.
[L. indubius
;
pable of being drawn into threads, as a metal. [See DuctHe.] n. The quality of being
in and du-
2.
Not dubious or doubtful certain. INDUeTIL'ITY, inductile. Not doubting unsuspecting as indubi;
ous confidence.
Harvey
INDU'BITABLE, tabilis
a. [Fr. from L. indiM-
in and dubitabilis, from dubito, to
;
INDUCTION, See
doubt.]
Not
be doubted
to
dent
;
unquestionable evi certain ; too plain to
apparently
1.
;
;
admit of doubt.
Jf'atts
INDTI'BITABLENESS,
n. State
2.
INDU'BITABLY, in
adv.
a
Undoubtedly un to remove all ;
manner
3.
n.
from L.
[Fr.
;
INDU'BITATE,
;
en-
called premises.
Walts.
of reasoning from particulars to generals, or the inferring of one gene
Sprat.
a.
V. t. [L. induco ; in and duco, to the sake of argument. Encyc. Fr. indture ; It. indurre.] 5. The introduction of a clergyman into a ; To lead, as by persuasion or argument benefice, or giving possession of an eccleto prevail on ; to incite ; to influence by siastical living ; or llie introduction of a
lead
Yd.
I.
By
m-
induction or
n.
The person who
another into an
office or benefice.
inducts
v.t. indw. [L. induo ; Gr. nJvu; This word coincides nearly Fr. enduire. in signification with endow, that is, to put Duo is evidently a conon, to furnish.
tracted word.]
To put on something to invest ; to clothe indue matter with forms, or man with intelligence. to endow. to supply with 2. To furnish INDU'ED, pp. Clothed invested. INDUEMENT, n. indu'ment. A putting on; 1.
:
;
;
;
;
endowment.
Mountagu.
ppr. Investing putting on. This V. t. indulj'. [L. indulgeo. compounil, but the primitive simverb is not known, nor the radical ple If allied to G. and D. dulden, to sense.
INDU'ING,
;
INDULGE, word
is
bear, to tolerate,
it is
from the root of L.
tolero.] 1.
To
permit to be or to continue
to sufler ; ; not to restrain or oppose as, to indulge to indulge the passions ; to indulge sloth or inclinations. jiride, selfishness To gratify, negatively; not to check or restrain the will, ap|)etite or desire ; as, to ;
;
2.
indulge children in amusements. To gratify, positively ; to grant something not of right, but as a favor to grant in compliance with wishes or desire. Yet, yet a moment, one dim ray of light Indulge, dread Chaos and eternal Night
inductio.
introduction
The method
INDU'CE, 1.
adv.
ftreDCC
INDUCT'OR,
!
Pope. ;
ral proposition from several particular ones. drawn from [L. indubitatus.] Not 4. The conclusion or inference questioned; evident; certain. [J^ot used. premises or from propositions which are Bacon. admitted to he true, either in fact, or for
questionably doubt.
as inductive reason-
;
ing.
4.
109
In general, to gratify
mor
trance. Hence, In logic and rhetoric, the act of drawing a
which are
in-
drawing conclu-
in
employed
Un-
proceeding by
;
Indrict.]
Literally, a bringing in
tions,
>Ash.
indubitable.
;
INliUeTiVELY,
of-
consequence from two or more proposi-
of being
to inferences
;
ppr. Introducing into with the usual formalities.
INDU€T'1NG, fice
[
Hale.
Leading
sions from premises
;
;
Tending to induce or cause. They may be inductive of credibility. usual. \
duction
INDUCTED,
bius, doubtful.] 1.
Milton.
of Eve.
as, to
[L. inducius, from induco duco, to lead.] Laterally, to brin
INDUeT',
That which
inlet.
3.
Broum. Barrow. or moving by ])ersuading pro
That may be caused. INDU'CING, ppr. Leading
act
bill,
2.
.'•in
INDUE,
INDU'CIBLE, a. That may be induced that may be offered by induction.
reason or arguments ducing causing.
brutish vice,
Inductive mainly (o the
;
;
of writing on the back of a note, other written instrument.
A
[JVot used.]
2.
of colleges.
INDUCT'IVE, a. Leading or drawing with
and dompttr,
;
note,
for
must be
;
Tooke. INDORS'ABLE, a. That may be indorsed, assigned and made payable to order. INDORSE, V. t. indors'. [L. in and dorsum, the back.] 1. To write on ihe back of a paper or written instrument; as, to indorse a note or to indorse a receipt or bill of exchange assignment on a bill or note. Hence, 2. To assign by writing an order on the back of a note or bill ; to assign or transfer by indor.-^ement. The bill was indors ed to the bank. To indorse in blank, to write a name only on a note or bill, leaving a blank to be fdled by the indorsee. INDORSEE', n. The person to whom a note or bill is indorsed, or assigned by in-
2.
it
Herbert.
used.]
•
inducing
fever induced by extreme fatigue. The revolution in France; has induced a change
sit.
Addison.
INDOM'ITABLE,
for
N D
I
person into an office by the usual forms and ceremonies. Induction is applied to the introduction of officers, only when certain oaths are to be administered or other formalities are to be observed, which are intended to confer authority or give
could not be in-
of that nature as to accommodate itself to all Forbes. species of men. to cause ; as a 3. To produce ; to bring on
;
Calm and serene you
The emperor
duced to take part in the contest. To produce by influence. As this belief is absolutely necessary
indisposed to labor lazy listless sluggish; indulging in ease applied to persons.
•
2. Inactive
N D
I
Habitually idle or
[Fr.]
;
to yield to the
;
to
to huof; to with-
favor
wishes
;
hold restraint from. It
remarked by Johnson, that
is
if
the
matter of indulgence is a single thing, it has with before it if it is a habit, it has in. He indulged himself tnVA a glass of wine; he indulges himself in sloth or intemper;
ance.
INDULGE,
t'. t.
indulj'.
To
permit to enjoy
or to yield to the enjoyment without restraint or control as, to indulge in sin, or in sensual pleasure. This form of expression is elliptical, a pronoun being omitted ; as, to indulge myself or himself.
or practice or practice :
;
of,
N D
I Most men
more willing
are
in easy
indulge
INDURA'TION,
To
yield
to
;
comply
Johnson. 2. favorable.
to be
;
[Little %ised.]
pp. Permitted to be aud to operate without check or control ; as love of pleasure indulged to excess.
Hardness of heart
Gratified
or desires
;
;
1.
I
Free permission
"•
to
mor, desires, passions or will to act or operate forbearance of restraint or control. How many children are ruined by indulgence ! Indulgence is not kindness or tenderness, but it maybe the effect of one or the other, or of negligence. as the indulgence of lust or 2. Gratification of appetite. 3. Favor granted liberality ; gratification.
Rogers. 4. In the Romish church, remission of the punishment due to sins, granted by the pope or church, and supposed to save the
absolution from sinner from purgatory the censures of the church and from all ;
Encyc. LNDUL'tiENT, a. Yielding to the wishes desires, humor or appetites of those unnot opposing der one's care comphant or restraining ; as an indulgent parent. favorable ; not severe as the in2. Mild Jf'aller. dulgent censure of posterity. 3. Gratifying favoring with of. transgressions.
;
;
dulgencies of
o/" their
Romish
i!ie
adv.
enjoyment. Mildly ; favorably
1.
;
I
ease.
INDWELL'ING,
and
[in
dwelling.]
churcli.
;
;
[J^/ot
Panoplist.
INDWELL'ING, n.
not severely.
Macknight. Milner. Residence within, or in Inebriate.] Intoxicat-
[It. indxdto, a pardon indultus, indulged.]
;
L
Encyc. In Spain, a duty, tax or custom, paid to '1. the king for all goods imported from the West Indies in the galleons. Encyc. IN'DURAT E, r. i. [h.induro; in aiid duro, to harden.]
Any
n.
;
INE'BRIATE,
v.
[See Inefficacious.]
INEFFECTUALLY,
[L. inehrio, inebriatus; in aud ebrio, to intoxicate ebrius, soaked, drenched, drunken. The Latin ebrius is ;
Without
arfv.
effect;
in vain.
INEFFECT'UALNESS,
n.
Want
of effect,
or of power to produce it; inefBcacy. James speaks of the ineffectualness of some men's devotion. JVake.
INEFFERVES'CENCE,
n.
[in
and
effer-
vescence.]
of effervescence
;
vescing.
a state of not efferKirwan.
INEFFERVES;CENT, a.
Not
effervescing,
or not susceptible of effervescence.
INEFFERVESCIBIL'ITY,
n.
The
quality
of not effervescing, or not being susceptible of effervescence. Kinvan. INEFFERVES'CIBLE, a. Not capable of effervescence. a.
[It.
and Fr.
incffi-
L. inefficax ; in and efficax, ; to effect; ex anAfacio, to make.]
cace
Encyc f.
;
;
thing that intoxi-
cates, as opium.
Not
effectual.]
;
INEFFICA'CIOUS,
ing.
INE'BRIANT,
indulges.
ppr. Permitting to enjoy or gratifying.
"
a.
and
a. [in
producing its proper effect, or not able to produce its effect inefficient weak as an ineffectual remedy the Spaniards made an ineffectual attempt to reduce Gibraltar.
Want
inhabitant.
Dwelling within remaining in the heart even after it is renewed as indwelling sin
In the church of Rome, the power of presenting to benefices, granted to certain persons, as to kings and cardinals.
efficio,
Not eiScacious not having power to produce the eflect desired, or the proper effect; of inadequate power or force. ;
contracted from ebrigits or ebregus, as ap- Ineffectual, says Johnson, rathei- denotes an actual failure, and inefficacious, an hapears from the Spanish cmbriagar, to intoxicate embriago, inebriated It. briaco, bitual impotence to any effect. But the drimk imbriacare, imbriacarsi. The sense distinction is not always observed, nor can is to wash or drench, and it is evidently for we cannot always know whethit be from the common root of the Gr. lipex'^t to er means are inefficacious, till experiment water or irrigate. See Rain.] has proved them ineffectual ; nor even 1. To make drunk to intoxicate. Sandys. then, for we cannot be certain that the 2. To disorder the senses to stupefy, or to failure of means to produce an effe<'t is to make furious or frantic to produce efbe attributed to habitual want of power, fects hke those of liquor, which are varior to accidental and temporary causes. ous in different constitutions. Inefficacious is therefore sometimes synonINE'BRIATE, v. i. To be or become intoxymous with ineffectual. ;
;
;
;
;
;
;
To grow
hard ; to harden or become hard Clay indurates by drying, and by extreme heat V.
t.
To make
hard.
Extreme
heat indurates clay. Some fossils are in durated by exposure to the air. 2.
;
Spenser.
With unrestrained the heart or soul. Hammond. INE'BRIANT, a. [See
One who
n.
\
IN'DURATE,
An
n.
effect.
INEFFECT'UAL,
;
INDWELL'ER,
;
Producing no
.3.
;
;
Taylor.
to the service inas ineffective troops ineffective
;
force.
Fr. indusword, and the
[L. industria
n.
;
;
tended
;
;
;
ineffective letter.
Not able not competent
habitual
trie. This is a compound root probably of the Class Ds.] Habitual diligence in any employment, either bodily or mental steady attention to business assiduity opposed to sloth aud We are directed to take lessons idleness. of industry from the bee. Industry pay; debts, while idleness or despair will in crease them.
Mountagu to practice
With
adv.
;
IN'DUSTRY,
Brevint.
INDUL'gENTLY,
INDULT', INDULT'O,
and
;
;
Relating to the in-
well authorized.]
INDUL'GING,
producing any effect, intended inefficient useless. of God, without the spirit, is a dead
The word
;
a.
;
;
;
feeble old, indulgent
INDUL'GER,
effect
assiduous as the industrious ap; Watts. plication of knowing men.
with steady application of the powers of body or of mind. with care ap assiduously Diligently He attempt plied to a particidar purpose. ed industriously to make jjeace. He in concealed his name. dustriously
Dryden
2.
dili
;
Carefid
diligence
;
The
Given to industry characterized by gence as an industriotis life.
INDUS'TRIOUSLY,
If all these gracious indiilgencies are without on us, we must perish in our folly
INDULgEN'TIAL,
{vom h. ineffahUis
effor, to
;
;
4.
effect
;
[Fr.
from
;
3.
;
;
a.
effabilis,
;
;
;
Warlon.
in and
;
hu-
the appetites,
ed.
INEF'FABLE,
;
Granted. )
Drunkenness; intoxicaDarwin. and edited.] Unpublish-
;
;
INDUL'GENCY,
a. [in
speak.] in business or study ; constantly Unspeakable unutterable that cannot be expressed in words regularly or habitually occupied in busiusually in a good sense ; as the ineffable joys of heaven ; the ness assiduous ; opposed to slothful and idle. ineffable glories of the Deity. Frugal and industrious men are commonly INEF'FABLENESS, n. Unspeakableness ; friendly to the established government. Scott. quality of being unutterable. Temple INEF'FABLY, adv. Unspeakably in a manDiligent in a particular pursuit, or to a ner not to be expressed in words. end to or slack remiss ; particular opposed Milton. as industrious to accomplish a journey, or INEFFECT'IVE, a. [in and effective.] Not to reconcile contending parties. effective not or the
yielded to humored in wishes as a child indulged by his pa
INDULGENCE,
a. [L. industrius,
n.
tion.
INED'ITED,
du stria.] Ddigent
rents. 3.
INEBRIETY,
Bacon.
obduracy.
;
N E
I
act of hardening,!
Decay of Piety. from in-
INDUS'TRIOUS,
INDUL'GED, 2.
The
n.
or process of growing hard.
vices, than to practice laborious virtues. 2.
N E
I to
To make unfeehng;
to deprive of sensi bility ; to render obdurate ; as, to indurate the heart. Goldsmith.
Bacon
icated.
INE'BRIATE, Some
n.
A
;
IN'DURATING, ing insensible.
cacy or
Darwin
INEBRIATED, ;7p. Intoxicated. IN'DURATE D, pp. Hardened made ohdu- INE'BRIATING, ppr. Making drunk rate.
INEFFICA'CIOUSLY,
habitual drunkard.
inebriates have their paroxysms of inemuch pale urine, profuse
briety terminated by sweats, &c.
er to produce the eflect, or
Hardening; render-
INEBRIATION, cation.
in-
INEF'FICACY, 1.
Want
Drunkenness;
n.
[in
and
efficacy,
L. f^-
of power to produce the desired or effect
ji.
effi-
want of effect.
cacia.] ;
toxicating.
ppr.
Without
adv.
effect.
INEFFICA'CIOUSNESS,?!. Want of pow-
intoxi-
Broivn.
12.
as the
inefficiency proper cacy of medicines or of means. Ineffectualness; failure of effect. ;
;
ineffi-
N E
I
INEFFP'CIENCY, Want of power or produce the
eft'ect
INEFF1"CIENT, efficient
n.
[in
a.
[in
and
Not
inefii
;
;
as an inef-
;
Chesterfield.
adv.
Ineflectually
effect.
wrought with
INELAS'Tle, wanting
Not elaborate
a.
not
;
;
Cockeram
care.
[in and elastic.] Not elaselasticity ; uuelastic. n. The absence of elas
a.
;
;
;
INELASTICITY,
want of elastic power.
the
;
Want "' [Sec Inelegant.] of elegance want of \ beauty or polish in language, composition or manners want of symmetry or orna-
INEL'EGANCE, INEL'EGANC Y,
?
;
;
ment
in building
want of dehcacy
;
in col
&c.
oring,
INEL'EGANT, eg(ins,
a. [L.
inelegans
in and
;
el-
from the root ofeligo, to choose.] wanting beauty or polish, as
Not elegant
;
language, or refinement, as manners want ing symmetry or ornament, us an edifice in short, wanting in any thing which cor ;
adv. In
e()uitul)le
unbecoming manner; coarsely; roughly.
a.
[in
and
eligible.]
[in
and
not
;
fluent, ;
not err
Without
adv.
;
a.
Not
[L. inehictahilis.]
to be resisted by struggling overcome. UVot used.]
INELU'DIBLE,
and
[in
;
adv.
a.
Gtanville inenarrabilis.
[L.
2.
unfit
;
;
Unfitness; inaptitude; as an ineptitude to motion. Arbuthnot.
adv. Unfitly
INERT'LY,
equal
Uifl'erenoe or
;
;
in
move
indisposed to
of activity
quantity, length, or quality of any kind ; the state of not having equal measure, de-
;
want
ble folly.
or
;
;
tion. Tills
till
n.
Without
sition that
quality •2.
Want
is
they
knew
South.
guilt or folly tion.
INEXECU'TION,
Dunciad.
non-performance
of activity or exertion
;
habitual in-
disposition to action or motion ness.
;
sluggish-"
adv.
With a degree of
beyond excuse or
activity; slug-
called vis inertia:, or inertia. JVewton.
is
him.
The
per se ; that quality of passiveness by which bodies persist in a state of rest, or of motion given to them by external force. In the language of philosophy, this
stated on the suppoGod, but did not glorify
inexcusableness
INEXCUSABLY,
n. ;
justifica-
Neglect of execution;
as the inexecuiion of a
troatv.
INEXER'TION,
n. [in
and
exertion.]
Want
of exertion; want of effort; defect of acDarwin. tion.
move
and
in degree,
Not exact
eiact.]
Thomson INEXcij'SABLENESS, n. The quality of want of not admitting of excuse or justification enormity beyond forgiveness or pallia-
state or quality of being inert, or destitute of the power to
Fr. inegahti.]
want of equality
adv.
gisldy.
INERT'NESS,
;
n. [L. inwqualitas
and
[in
of precision.
Good.
Slienstone.
various.
(equalis,
;
Want
or a tendency to remain quiescent impelled by external force to move.
n. Unfitness.
INEQUAL'ITY, 1.
n.
ert,
;
;
a.
not precisely correct or true. n. Incorrectness;
INEXACT'NESS,
These vicissitudes ef exertion and inerlion ofl the arterial system, constitute the paroxysms of Darwin. remittent fever. n. The state of being in-
unsuitably foolGlanviUe. More. INE'tiUAL,rt. [in and egual.] Unequal un;
sluggish
action or exertion.
ishly.
INEPT'NESS, even
;
INER'TION,
More.
foolish.
n. ;
!
;
Dull
unsuitable. ff'oodward.
Improper; unbecoming; unsuitableness
;
inemtably docs unmoderate laughter South.
in a si^h
INEXACT',
INERT'ITUDE, fit
INEPT'lTUDE, INEPT'LY,
er-
unavoidably
;
How end
INEXCI'TABLE, a. [in and excitable.] Not susceptible of excitement; dull; lifeless; English sense is drawn not from art, but torpid. from the |)rimary sense, strength or vigorINEXCU'S.\BLE, a. s as z. [L. inexcusabious action.] See jExlis ; in and eicusabilis, excuso. Destitute of the power of moving itself, cu.^e.] or of active resistance to motion impressNot to be excused or justified ; as inexcusaed as, matter is inert. act.
fit
apt.]
Not apt or
1.
That
eludible.]
escape
security from er
Pans. Trans.
Pearson
That cannot be narrated or told. INEPT', a. [L. ineptus; in and aptus, 1.
With
;
not to be
cannot be eluded or defeated.
INENAR'R.\BLE,
Hammond.
inerrability.
INER'RABIA',
elo
quence. a.
;
;
;
INER'RINGLY, adv. Without error, misGlanviUe. take or deviation. not INERT', a. [L. iner^; in and nrs, an. The
;
INEL'OQUENTLY,
;
;
infallible.
graceful or pathetic as language or composition Milton
INELUCT'ABLE,
a.
INER'RABLE,
;
;
Not
{
;
Not INERRAT'i€, a. [ui and erratic.] Not fixed. ratic or wandering
eloq^ient.]
;
persuasive
INEV ITABLE,
lent";
eloquent not speaking with fluency, pronot persuasive priety, grace and pathos used of persons. 2.
[from inevitable.] avoided; certainty to Bramhall. from L. inevitabi[Fr. lis; in and evitabihs, from evito, to shun.] Not to be avoided that cannot be shunned ; unavoidable that admits of no escape or evasion. To die is the inevitable lot of tnan we are all subjected to many inevit-
happen.
ror; infallibly.
expedient. o.
^"-arms.]
n.
Impossibility
valves. ; in and arma.
destitute of prickles or thorns, as a botanical word. Martyn.\ ITY, n. [from mcrraWe.] Ex-i emption from error or from the possibility of erring; infallibility. A'ihjd- Charles.
a
error
pable of being elected to an oflice. Not worthy to be chosen or preferred
INEL'OUUENT,
Having unequal INEVITABIL'ITY, to be
able calamities. a. [in and err.] That can-' INEV'ITABLENESS, n. The state of beexempt from error or mistake ing unavoidable. Hammond. adv. Without possibility of INEV'ITABLY, Not ca INER'RABLENESS, n. Exemption from certainor evasion
2. State
INELIGIBLE,
"' <,
INERRAIUL
Cheste^ield. n. [from ineligibk.] In capacity of being elected to an ofiice. or quality of not being worthy of choice.
)
[L. inermis
)
INERM'OUS, Unarmed
an inelegant or
INELIGIBILITY,
not Just.
;
INE'aUIVALVE, INECiUIVAL'VULAR, INERM',
rcct taste requires.
INEL'EGANTLY,
2.
;
;
INELAB'ORATE,
;
;
;
;
;
ficient force.
ticity
;
;
effidenl]
effecting nothing
;
INEFFI"CIENTLy,
tic;
to
inefficacy.
not producing the effect
;
cacious. 9. Not active
without
power
N E
I
actually existing gree, dimensions or amount as an ine-\ In esse, [L.] in being distinguished from in posse, or in potentia, quality in size or stature an inequality of which denote that a thing is not, but may nuMiliers or of power inequality of disbe. tances or of motions. Unevemiess; want of levelness the al- INES'CATE, v.t. [L.inesco.] To bait; to ternate rising and falling of a surface as lay a bait for. the inequalities of the surface of the earth, INESCA'TIO.\, n. The act of baiting. or of a marble slab. Hatlowell. 3. Disproportion to any office or purpose; INESTIMABLE, a. [L. inaslimabUi^. See tne as the inadequacy incompetency Estimate.] quality of terrestrial things to the wants of 1. That caimot be estimated or computed a rational soul. as an inestimable sum of money. 4. Diversity want of uniformity in different 'i. Too valuable or excellent to be rated betimes or places ; as the inequality of air or ing above all price as inestimable rights. temperature. The privileges of American citizens, civil 5. Diflercnce of rank, station or condition and religious, are inestimable. us the inequalities of men in society ; ineINESTIMABLY, o/ii'. In a manner not to qualities of rank or property. be estimated or rated. a. Not INEQUIDIS'TANT, being equally INEV'IDENCE, n. Want of evidence ; obdistant. Say. Barrow. scurity. INEQUILAT'ERAL, a. Having unequal INEV'IDENT, a. [in and endent.] Not evisides. Say. dent; not clear or obvious; obscure. Not a. and 1NEQ'UIT.\BLE, equitable.] [in Brown.
effu:iency.]\
exertion of ;
N E
I and
INEXH.VLABLE, exhalo.] to be
Not
a.
[in
orable.
INEXHAUST'ED, 1.
Not exhausted ed.
&nd exhalabU, L.
exhaled or evaporated
;
n.
[in
;
not evap-
Broun. and exhausted.]
not emptied
;
unexhaust-
resources
;
;
not having lost unexhausted.
INEXHAUST'IBLE,
a.
INF
INF
NE
I Not spent
2.
all strengtli
or
INEXPLE'ABLY,
adv.
Insatiably.
exhausti-
applied
Sandys.
used.]
and
[in
[Fr. from L. inex;)/iexplico, to unfold.]
INi;X'PLI CABLE,
cabilis; in and That cannot be exliausted or emptied; That cannot be explained or interpreted not capable of being rendered plain and as an inexhaustible quantity or uiirailliig as an inexplicable mystery. intelligible supply of water. 3. That cannot be wasted or spent; asinex INEX'PLI€ABLY, adv. In a manner not ble.]
;
INEXHAUST'IBLENESS, being inexhaustible.
INEXHAUST'IVE,
a.
Not
71.
to
The
INEXPLO'RABLE,
existence.']
Broome.
INEXPRESS'IBLE,
a.
[in
and
from
Not
Inherence.
INEXIST'ENT,
a.
[in
and
existent.]
Not
express.] to be expressed in
tered
2.
;
1.
that cannot be
made
INEX'ORABLY,
bend. Gibbon
to
immov-
Not
to be
n. State
Feltham.
INEXPEeT'ED,
a.
a.
Not expected.
[JVot
a.
;
notoriously vile ; used of peran infamous liar an infamous ; as rake or gambler. Odious detestable ; held in abhorrence that renders a person infamous as an in-
scandalous
[in and extension.] unextended state.
INEXTEN'SION, n. Want of extension ;
INEXPE'DIENT,
a.
and
[in
expedient.]
not tending to promote a purpose not tending to a good end ; un unsuitable to time and fit improper Whatever tends to retard or de place. feat success in a good cause is inexpedient. What is expedient at one time, may be in-
Not expedient
;
;
;
;
expedient at another.
I?JEXPE'RIENCE, n. Want of experience
[in
and
experience.]
or experimental as the inexperience of youth or their inexperience of the world.
knowledge
;
INEXPE'RIENCED, riencc
;
a.
Not having expe
unskilUed.
INEXPERT',
a.
[in
and
expert.]
Not ex
pert not skilled destitute of knowledge or dexterity derived from practice. In letters and in laws Prior Not inexpert. iNEX'PIABLE, a. [Fr. from L. inexpiabi;
lis.
1.
See Expiate.]
That admits of no atonement or
satisfac
as an inexpiable crime or offense. That cannot be mollified or appeased by atonement as inexpiable hate. Milton.
tion 2.
;
;
;
INEX'PIABLY,
adv.
To
mits of no atonement.
a degree that ad-
Roscommon. JNEXPLA'INABLE. a. That cannot be explained inexplicable. [The latter word ;
js generally used.]
o.
;
;
;
famous vice. Branded with infamy by conviction of a crime. witness.
An
infamous person cannot be a
INFAMOUSLY,
;
;
fama, 1.
Not quenched
;
and
exiin-
That cannot be extinguished ble ; as inextinguishable desire.
unquencha-
;
flame, thirst or
and despis-
;
3.
a. [in
guishuble.]
to infamy. Qualities which are detested
ed qualities notoriously bad and scandalous as the infamy of an action. In laiv, that loss of character or public disgrace which a convict incurs, and by which a person is rendered incapable of ;
not ex-
tinct.
INEXTINGUISHABLE,
report.]
Total loss of reputation ; public disgrace. Avoid the crimes and vices which expose
men
2.
Rush.
;
INEXTINCT',
;
;
3.
Encyc.
unsuitableness to the pur to pose. The inerpedience of a measure is be determined by the prospect of its adthe vancing purpose intended or not.
auAfama, fame.]
inexsuperabi-
[L.
INEXPE'DIENCE, } " [in and expedience INEXTERM'INABLE, a. [in and exlermiWant of fitness; nable.'] That cannot be exterminated. INEXPE'DIENCY, ^ impropriety
in
;
'
of having no
expectation.
[ATot used.]
infame; h.infamis:
Of ill report, emphatically ; having a reputation of the worst kind; publicly branded with odium for vice or guilt base ;
passed over or surmount-
ed.
INEXTEND'ED,
able by intreaty.
INEXPE€TA'TION,
defame.
a. [Fr.
adv. In a manner or degree to render Infamous scandalously ; shamefully. ilisgracefully 2. With open reproach. [Fr. infamie ; L. Having no extension. IN'FAMOUSNESS, } Good. IN' F AMY, infamia; in and \
Ray.
impregnable.
INEXSU'PERABLE, lis.]
To
t.
sons
;
;
V.
Bacon.
;
Inexorable equality of laws. adv. So as to be
;
infamo, to defame
;
;
;
—
IN'FAMOUS,
;
;
God
of erring or mistaking. Smalridge. Certainly without a possibility of failure. Our Savior has directed us to conduct that will infallibly render us happy.
INFA'ME,
;
by assault
certain
;
;
;
;
;
judge. 2. Unyielding
prerogative of
or to deceive confias infallible evidence ;
fail,
To whom he showed himself alive after his Acts i. by many infallible proofs INFAL'LIBLY, adv. Without a possibility
expressible
words not to be utunutterable ; as inunsjieakable expressible grief, joy or pleasure. having being ; not existing. South. Brown. INEXPRESS'IBLY, arft;. In a manner or 2. Existing in something else. Boyle. degree not to be told or expressed in INEXORABILITY, n. The quality of be- words unspeakably unutterably. Hammond. ing inexorable or unyielding to entreaty a. Not tending to ex Paley. INEXPRESS'IVE, not expressing inexpressible. l)ress L. inexorabi a. from INEX'ORABLE, [Fr. INEXPO'SURE, n. [in and exposure.] A lis; in and exorabilis, from exoro, to enstate of not being exposed. Med. Repos ex and oro, to pray.] treat 1. Not to be persuaded or moved by en- INEXPUGNABLE, a. [Fr. from L. inexex and pugin and too firm and determined or ; ; expugno pugnabilis prayer treaty as an in purpose to yield to supplication no, to fight.] inexorable prince or tyrant an inexorable Not to be subdued by force ; not to be taken
2.
liable to
infallible success.
Tooke
covered.
or spent.
INEXIST'ENCE, n. [in and 1. Want of being or existence.
liability to mistake; is infaUihle ;
No man
passion,
a. [in and explorable, from explore.] be exhausted That cannot be explored, searched or dis-
state of
Not
dence
;
to be explained.
persons.
only. 2.
;
haustible stores of provisions.
to
to be infallible is the
a.
1.
exempt from
tirely
[JVo<
being a witness or juror.
IN'FANCY, 1. The first
n.
Encyc.
See
[L. infanlia.
part of
Infant.]
beginning at the INEXTIR'PABLE, birth. In common usage, in/ancy extends tirpated. not beyond the first year or two of life, INEX'TRI€ABLE, a. [Fr. from L. r')ie.Wri- but there is not a defined limit where tnSee Extricate.] cabilis. fancy ends, and childhood begins. not to be freed 1. Not to be disentangled In law, infancy extends to the age of from intricacy or perplexity as an inextwenty one years. Sherlock. 3. The first tricable maze or difficulty. the beginage of any tlfing as an inextricable knot. 2. Not to be untied ning or early period of existence as the INEX'TRICABLENESS, n. The state of tii/uiic!/ of the Roman republic; the inDonne being inextricable. fancy of a college or of a charitable sociINEX'TRIeABLY, adv. To a degree of ety the infancy of agriculture, of manufactures, or of commerce. perplexity not to be disentangled. Pope. a.
Thr
*
cannot be ex-
life,
;
;
;
;
;
;
INEYE,
ti.
t.
To
inoculate,
bud. wrouglit.
as a tree or a Philips.
INFAB'RI€ATED,
a.
Unfabricated
INFAND'OUS,
a.
[L. infandus.]
ous to be expressed.
un-
;
INFANG'THEF,
[JVot used.]
n.
Too
odi-
[jYot in use.]
Howell. [Sax. in, fangan, to
) take, and theof thief.] [from infallible.] S"' The quahty oft In English law, the privilege granted to lords to judge thieves taken on their being incapable of error or mistake ; enintire exemption from liability to error manors, or within their franchises. Coivel. No human being can justly errability. in lay claim to infallibility. This is an attri- IN'FANT, n. [Fr. enfant ; L. infans ; bute of God only. awXfaiis, speaking, fari, to speak.] INFAL'LIBLE, a. [F. infaillible ; in and 1. A child in the first period of life, beginning at his birth a young babe. In comfaillir, L. fallo.] 1. Not fallible; not capable of erring; en mon usage, a child ceases to be called an
INFALLIBILITY, INFAL'LIBLENESS,
;
;
INF
I
infant within the first or second year, but In some cases, auat no (letiiiite period. thors indulge a greater latitude, and extend the term to include children of several years of age. 2. In law, a person under the age of twenty
one years, who
2.
incapable of making
is
first
2.
INFAUST'ING,
period of life.
Young; tender; not mature;
n. In Spain and Portugal, any princess of the royal blood, except the eldest daughter when heiress apparent. INFANT' E, n. In Spain and Portugal, any son of the king, except the eldest or heir apparent.
INFANT'ICIDE, uwi 1.
2.
;
infans, an
^
INFE'ASIBLE, Fr.
;
infants.
a. [L. infaniUis.] Pertaining an infant; pertaining to period of life. IN'FANTINE, a. Pertaining to infants or first
children.
young
1.
;
See Infant.] fanteria ; It. fnnterin. In military affa%rs, the soldiers or troops that serve on foot, as distinguished from cavalry ; as a company, regiment or brigade o: In some armies, there liave infantry. been heavy-armed
INF^ARCE,
V.
t.
infantry,
To
infurs.
from
a. s
as
z.
[in
and
make
feasible,
or do, L,
Glanville
t.
I',
,
stuff; in
The
of malignant fevers. In some cases, persons can be infected only by contact, as in syphilis; in most cases, they may be infected without contact with the diseased sles,
man-
[L. infarcio, infercio, to 2.
n.
and ^arcto.]
act of stufhng or filling; constipation.
INFASH'IONABLE,
a.
[JVot used.]
INFAT'IGABLE, INFAT'UATE, v.
Harvey. Unfashionable. Beaiim. Obs.
a. Indefatigable. t.
[L.
infatuo
;
in
and
fatuus, foolish.] 1.
To make
to
weaken
3.
To taint or affect with morbid or noxious matter; as, to infect a lancet; to infect clothing; to infect an apartment. To comujunicate bad (pialities to to cor;
rupt
Mankind
are
by the communication of noxious or pernicious. It is
to taint
;
3.
Contaminating with illegality and forfeiture.
;
exposing
to seizure
Contraband
articles are said to
tious nature. 4.
be of an infecKent.
Capable of being communicated by near approach. (irief as well as joy is infectious. Kamei.
INFECTIOUSLY, adv. By infection. INFECTIOUSNESS, n. The quahty
of
infectiou.s, or capable of communicating disease or taint from one to anyoung infected melancholy other. corrupted by vicious examples, or the INFECTIVE, a. Having the quality of minds of our citizens infected with errors, communicating disease or taint from one To contaminate with illegality. to another. Sidney. ;
any thing
[.Xot used.]
pp. Tainted with noxious corrupted by poisonous cxiiala
INFECT'ED, matter
;
being
and
to see the
foolish ; to affect with folly ; 4. the intellectual powers, or to INFECT', a. Infected.
deprive of sound judgment. In general, this word docs not signify to deprive absolutely of rational powers and reduce to idiocy, but to deprive of sound judgment,
art.
quahties. gay or serious by infection. Rambler. INFECTIOUS, a. Having qualities that may taint, or communicate disease to ; as tilential or noxious air or substance by an fever infectious clothmg ; infectious which a disease is produced. Persons in infectioiLs air; infectious miasma. health are infected by the contagion of the 2. Corrupting tending to taint by commuplague, of syphilis, of small pox, of meanication as infectious vices or manners. verb.] To taint with disease; to infuse into a healthy body the virus, miasma, or morbid matter of a diseased body, or any pes-
body.
lNFAR€'TION,
exhalations
Plague. Kusli. Infection is used in two acceptations ; first, as denoting the efHuvium or infectious matter exhaled from the person of one diseased, in which sense it is synonymous with co>\tagion; and secondly, as signifying the act of communication of such morbid effluvium, by which disease
done; that cannot be accomplish-
impracticable.
Pestilential
infection.
are called infections. Tooke, Russ. Encyc.
;
[jYot in
stuff.
[from in
;
and light-armed
or light infantry, according to their ner of arming and equipping.
;
[Fr. infecter; Sp. infectar infittare ; L. inficio, infectus ; in and is transferred. Cyc. In this application of inficio, as in 3. That which facio. taints, poisons or corrupts to deny, we find the radical sense inficior, by communication from one to another ; of facio, to make, which is to thrust, to as the infection of error or of evil examTo infect is to thrust in ; to deny drive. ple. is to thrust against, that is, to thrust away, 4. Cuntamination by illegality, as in cases And here we observe the difto repel. of contraband goods. ferent effects of the prefix in, upon the 5. Communication of like
to infancy, or to
to
ships and conveyed in clothing persons are said to take the tn/ec/ton-from a diseased person, or from the air of apartments where the sick are confined. The infection spreads in a city, or it is free
act
feasible.]
to JaisaUe, from faire,
facio.] n. [Low L. infanticidi- Not to be ed infant, and cado, to kill.]
IN'FANTLIKE, a. Like an infant. Shah Btaum. IN'FANTLY, a. Like a child's. IN'FANTRY, n. [Fr. infanterie Sp. t;i-
*
excites disease
a healthy or uninfected body. Thia cause iMuy be contagion from a diseased body, or other poisonous or noxious matter received iiitu the body or under the skin. The infection of the plague and of yellow fever, is said to be imported in
Bacon.
""' "*
N F
The morbid cause which in
Impracticability; the quality of not being capable of being done or performed.
IN'FANTILE, the
The
06*. }
INFE'ASIBLENESS,
The intentional killing of an infant. INFECT', The slaughter of infants by Herod. Matt It.
A slayer of
[L. infaustus.)
INFEASIBIL'ITY,
ii.
3.
n.
of making unlucky.
as infant
strength.
INFANT' A,
I 2.
tion.
Pertaining to infancy or the
a.
N F
mind in which the intellectual powers are weakened, either generally, state of
or in regard to particular objects, so that the person affected acts without his usual judgment, and contrary to the dictates of reason. All men who waste their substance in gaming, micmperance or any other vice, are chargeable with infatua-
valid contracts.
IN'FANT,
A
INFE'CUND,
and [L. in/(Fcundus ; Lnfruitful; not profmcundiis, prolific] ducing young barren. a.
in
;
tions ; corrupted by bad (jualities comnm- INFEcUND'ITY, n. [L. infrectindUas.] nicated. Med. Repoa. Unfruitfulness; barrennes,':. so that a person infatuated acts in certain INFECT'ER, n. lie or that which iufects. INFELICITY, Ji. [Fr. infeliciti ; L. in/aicases as a fool, or without common dis INFECT'ING, ppr. Tainting ; corrupting. citas. See Felicity.] Unhappiness ; misGod incretion and prudence. from L. )!. The misfortune. [Fr. inficio.] ery ; tends to destroy, he first infatuates. act of infecting, or the act by which poi- 2. Unfortunate state ; tmfavorableness ; as the infelicity of the times, or of the occaThe judgment of Gcd will be very visible in sonous matter, morbid miasmata or exsion. halations produce disease in a healthy infatuating a people, ripe and prepared for destruction. Clarendon. body. The words contagion and infection INFER', V. t. [Fr. infercr ; L. infero ; in are frp(iuently confounded. The properdis8. To prepossess or incline to a person or and/cro, to bear or produce.] tinction between them is this. Contagion is 1. Literally, to bring on ; to induce. [Little thing in a manner not justified by pru dence or reason ; to inspire with an ex the virus or efHuvium generated in a disused.] Harvey. eased body, and capable of producing the 2. To deduce ; to draw or derive, as a fact travagant or foolish passion, too obstinate or consequence. From the character of to be controlled by reason. Men are often specific disease in a healthy body by conMarsh miasm is not tact or otherwise. God, as creator and governor of the world, infatuated with a love of gaming, or o:'
Whom
sensual pleasure.
INFAT'UATED, pp. Affected with folly. INFAT'UATING, ;;;;(. Aftecting with folly. INFATUA'TION, n. The act ofaflTecting with
folly.
INFECTION,
properly contagion. Infection is anything that taints or corrupts; hence it includes contagion, and any other morbid, noxious matter which may excite disease in a
healthy body.
Hence,
we
infer the indispensable obligation of all his creatures to obey his commands.
We
one proposition or truth from anothperceive that if one is true, the other must be true also.
infer er,
when we
INF y.
To
to
offer;
produce.
used.]
[JVot
Shak.
INFER'ABLE,
ling
;
Burke. or deduced from premises. n. [Fr. from inferer.] truth or proposition drawn from another wliich is admitted or supposed to be true; a conclusion. Inferences result from rea
when
INFEOFF.
[See Enfeoff.] a.
greatly
degree as, I am condescension.
IN'FINITENESS, a.
[in
and
festive.]
;
to a great extent or
infinitely
;
[in
[L.
comp. from
infinity.
;
Taylor.
and festivity.] Want
of festivity, or of cheerfulness and mirth
at
ous.
obliged by your
Boundless extent of
n.
time, space or quahties
Having
no mirth.
INFESTIV'ITY, n.
|)ropositions called
INFE'RIOR,
Immensely
;
Immensity; greatness.
INFINITESIMAL,
Indefinitely small.
a.
Johnson.
tlie
premises are true, the conclusions or propositions deduced from tliem must also be true.
certain
[in and/e«
2.
Annoying; harassing;
;);w.
entertainments. mind perceives such soning, a connection between ideas, as that, if INFEST'UOUS, a. OiS
Rank
disturbing.
A INFEST'IVE,
IN'FERENCE,
a.
inveterate.
That may be inferred INFEST'ING,
a.
INF
N F
I
INFES'TERED,
[h. infesUis.]
[JVot used.]
MischievBacon.
INFINITES'IMAL,
An
n.
Encyc.
indefinitely
small quantity.
Encyc.
INFEUDA'TION,
n. [in andfeudum, feud.] INFIN'ITIVE, a. [L. infinitivus ; Fr. infinThe act of putting one in possession of an estate in fee. Hale. In grammar, the irifinitive mode expresses 2. The granting of tithes to laymen. the action of the verb, without limitation inferos, 1.
of person or number as, to love. Blacksto7ie. Sp. id Fr. inferieur.] IN'FIDEL, a. [Fr. inf dele ; h.infidelis; in INFIN'ITUDE, n. Infinity; infiniteness; 1. Lower in place. and Jidelis, faithful.] the quality or state of being without limits 2. Lower in station, age, or rank in life. infinite extent; as the infinitude of space, disbelieving the inspiration of Pay due respect to those who are superior Unbelieving the or the divine institution of of or of
low
;
;
;
;
;
and due civility to those who are inferior. 3. Lower in excellence or value ; as a poem of inferior merit; cloth of inferior quality or price.
Subordinate of less importance. Attend and safety ease and convenience are inferior considerations. INFE'RIOR, n. A person who is younger, or of a lower station or rank in society A person gets more by obliging his inferior, 4.
The
INFERIORITY,
n.
INFIDEL'ITY,
3.
Pertaining to hell inhabiting bell as in fernal spirits. Hellish resembling the temper of infernal spirits; malicious: diabolical; very ;
An
n.
inhabitant of hell, or of
the lower regions. forInfernal stone [lapis infernalis,] a name merly given to lunar caustic, a substance ])repared from an evaporated solution of Hill. silver, or from crystals of silver. Lunar caustic is nitrate of silver fused and cast in small cyhnders. Wehsler''s
INFER'TILE,
[Fr. from L.
a.
Manual.
infertilis
;
in
;
INFEST',
stices
IN'FINITE,
71.
life.
Addison.
The
act of infesting;
Bacon.
molestation.
INFEST'ED, harassed
;
pp. Troubled plagued.
;
a.
annoyed
inferm'.
act or process
filling
[L. inpnitus
;
h. in-
[Fr. infirme; ;
;
;
;
Shak.
purpose.
Not
solid or stable.
He who
fixes
on
principles, treads
false
V.
I.
on
South.
infirm, ground.
To weaken.
inferm'.
n. infcrm'ary.
place where nursed.
INFIRMITY,)),
the
sick
[JYof
Raleigh.
A
hospital or
are lodged
infcrm'ily.
and
[Ft. infirmiti
;
L. infirmiias.] 1.
An unsound
body
:
or unhealthy state of the
weakness
;
Old age
feebleness.
is
subject to infirmities.
the cavities of 2.
Kirwan in and finitus
Weakness of mind A friend should bear ;
failing; fault foible. a friend's infirmities. ;
Shak. 3.
Weakness of resolution. particular disease ; malady ; applied ather to chronic, than to violent diseases.
Any
;
Hooker. weakness as the 5. Defect ; imperfection He is also infinite in presence, or infirmities of a constitution of government. Hamilton. omnipresent, and his perfections are infi nite. also speak of infinite space. INFIRMNESS, n. inferm'ness. Weakness; That will have no end. Thus angels and feebleness unsoundness. Boyle. men, though they have had a beginning INFIX', V. t. [L. iiifiius, infigo ; in andfigo, ;
;
istence.
We
I.
;
3.
will exist in infinite duration. to fix.] That has a beginning in space, but is in 1. To fix by piercing or thrusting in ; as, to finitely extended ; as, a line beginning at infix a sting, spear or dart. a point, but extended indefinitely, is an in- 2. To set in ; to fasten in something.
infest the coast. fnite line. said the genius, are envy, avarice, suwith tlie like cares and pas- 4. Infinite is
INFESTA'TION,
The
terminated Fr. infni ; Sp. infinito.] AVithout limits; unbounded; boundless: not circumscribed applied to time, space and qualities. God is infinite in duration having neither beginning nor end of ex-
These,
human
n.
a.
firmus
1.
the
of entering the pores or cavities of a body The substance which has entered the pores or cavities of a body. Calcarious infiltrations, other stones.
;
perstition, love, sions that infest
INFIRM,
INFIRMARY,
of a substance.
INFILTRA'TION, 2.
a hyperof
infinity
beauties.
;
pores or interstices.
To
flies fested with niusketoes and gnats The sea is often infest horses and cattle. Small parties of the infested with pirates.
enemy
princi-
INFIL'TRATING,;)p-. Penetrating by
Hale
v.t.
in
;
Endless or indefinite number; of the loord : as an
bolical use
most used.
this sense, unfaithfulness is
;
[Fr.infester;l,.infesto.] trouble greatly; to disturb ; to annoy ; to In warm weather, men are inharass.
power, his goodness and holiness. Immensity indefinite extent.
}.
; in and firmus.] Not firm or sound weak feeble; as an infirm body an infirm constitution. married 2. Weak of mind irresolute as infirm, of
one
Knox.
particularly
L. infinitas.]
;
his 2.
INFIL'TRATE, v. i. [Yr.fdtrer, to filter.] INFIRM, To enter by penetrating the pores or inter- used.]
;
fertiliti/ofldnd.
is
Addison.
[Fr. infiniU
;
;
;
;
no doubt that vanity
Unfaithfulness,
not fruitful or productive baras an infertile soil. unUnfruitfulness n. productiveness; barrenness; as the infertile
ren
is
n.
Unlimited extent of time, space or quanboundlessness. We apply in/?m'
1.
persons a violation of the marriage covenant by adultery or lewdness. Breach of trust; treachery; deceit; as the infidelity of a friend or a servant. In
1.
INFERTILITY,
INFIN'ITY,
h.infdel-
;
and fertilis.]
Not
;
In general, want of faith or behef; a withholding of credit. Disbelief of the inspiration of the Scriptures, or the divine original of Christianunbelief ity
There
wicked and detestable.
INFERN'AL,
[Vr.infideliti
pal cause of »'«/ideWy.
;
;
»i.
;
itas.] 1.
lower state of dignity, age, value or qualWe speak of the infeiiority of rank, ity. of office, of talents, of age, of worth. INFERN'AL, a. [Fr. from L. infernus.] 1. Properly, pertaining to the lower regions, or regions of the dead, the Tartarus of the ancients. Hence. 2.
n.
perfections.
Immensity greatness. Boundless number.
to society. 3.
Knox.
A
[Fr. inferiorUe.]
enemy
One who
disbelieves the inspiration of the Scriptures, and the divine origin of Christianity.
South.
liini.
infidel writer is a great
IN'FIDEL,
;
than by disdaining
2.
Christianity.
;
to health
time,
Scriptures,
in station,
3.
used loosely and hyperbolically immense, of great
for indefinitely large, size or extent. Infinite
INFIX'ED, ;)p. Thrust in
canon, in music, a jterpetual fugue.
IN'FINITELY, limits.
adv.
To implant or fix, as principles, thoughts, instructions; as, to infix good principles in the mind, or ideas in the memory.
Without bounds
;
set in
;
inserted;
deeply implanted. or
INFIX'ING, ppr. Thrusting implanting.
in
;
setting in
;
«.
INF
N F
I
INFLA'ME,v.
[h. iiiflammo ;
INFLATION,
inanAJlam-
burn
a.
3.
erally,
The
state
of being distended with
state of being puffed vanity.
up,
3.
To
exaggerate
to
;
L To bend
aggravate in descrip-
V.
t.
To heat; to e.\cite excessive action in the blood as, to inflame the blood or body to inflame with wine.
2.
to
;
presumption.
V. i:
To grow
hot,
painful.
INFLA'MED,
pp.
Set on
fire;
angry and Wiseman. enkindled;
heated; provoked; exasperated. n. The person or thing that Addison. INFLA'MING, ppr. Kindling; heating; provoking exasperating. INFLAMMABILITY, n. Susceptibility of
INFLA'MER,
In grammar, to vary a noun or a verb in
varying modidating, as the voice.
;
taking
bustion
;
INFLAM'MABLENESS,
n.
The
quality
1.
The The
[L. inflammaiio
act of setting on fire or inflaming. state of being in flame.
M'ilkins. Temple. In medicine and surgery, a redness and swelling of any part of an animal body and febrile with attended symp heat, pain toms. Knci/c. heat 4. Violent excitement animosity turbulence as an inflammation of the body politic, or of parties.
3.
;
;
a. Inflaming; tendas ing to excite heat or iuflanniiation medicines of an inflammatory nature. 2. Accomjjnnied will) preternatural heat and excitement of arterial action as an inflammatory fever or disease. ;
1.
maimer
in
;
n. [L. infloructna, in and floreo, to blos-
mode of
flowering, or the
which flowers are supported on
their fool-stalks or peduncles. Inflorescence affords an excellent characteristic
;
mark
in distii^ui'^hing the species of plants.
Atitne.
Modulation of the voice
A flowering;
ly
followed by
God hath
in speaking.
of
inflection gives significance
;
into.
INFLEX'ED,
[L.
;
Fettha
trology.
Moral power power of truth operating on the mind, rational faculties or wdl, in ;
'
persuading or dissuading, as the influence of motives, of arguments, or of prayer. We say, arguments had no influence on the
L. in uudfleribiJis, (niuflecto, to bend.]
2.
tilings. It is
inflexus.]
bent.
LNFLEXIBIL'ITY, ?„ [Ft.infl^.xihiUte, from inflexible; INFLE-X'IBLENESS, ^ 1.
his influence into the
all
-E.
to tones.
;
;
INFLAM'MATORY,
infloresco, inflorto
som.] In botany, a
:
More commonly
;
n.
flict.
Hook
being susceptible of flame, or capable of Boyle. taking fire inflaramabihty.
INFLAMMA'TION,
applied.
very essence Hooker. now followed by on or icith. Porter 2. In a general sense, influence denotes powinvisible and known er whose is operation Point of inflection, in geometry, the point oidy by its effects, or a power whose cause where a curve begins to bend the contrary and operation are unseen. Encyc. way. The power which celestial bodies are supINFLECT'IVE, a. Having the power of posed to exert on terrestrial; as the irflubending ; as the inflective quality of t' ence of the planets on the birth and forDcrha air. tunes of men an exploded doctrine of asa. Turned;
4.
oil
The punishment
INFLORESCENCE,
Encyc.
a. That may be set on enkindled; susceptible of com as inflammahle oils or sjiirits.
fire; easily
;
His severest inflictions are in themselves act; of justice and righteousness. Rogers. INFLICT'lVE, a. Tending or able to in-
n.
fire.
INFLAMMABLE,
2.
3.
;
lays on or ap-
the unfolding of blossoms. Journ. of Science. IN'FLUENCE, n. JFr. from L. influens, incourse. flow in in and _/?uo, to flow Sp. _/7iio, to In optics, a property of light by which its It. are bent influtncia ; influenza.] Literally, a flowrays, when they approach a body, ing in, into oron, and referring to substantowards it or from it. Encyc. Cyc. ces spiritual or too subtil to be visible, like In grammar, the variation of nouns, &.c. Hence the word was formerinspiration. by decleusion, and verbs by conjugation.
of bonding
2.
applied as pun-
Laying on applying. 71. [L. inflictio.] The act of laying on or applying; us the infliction of torment or of punishment.
The act [L. inflectio.] or turning from a direct line or
LNFLEC'TION,
inflames.
;
He who
Ji.
INFLICTION, 2.
terminations ; to decline, as a noun or adjective, or to conjugate, as a verb. 5. To provoke ; to irritate ; to anger. 8. To modulate, as the voice. a 6. To increase; to exasperate ; as, toin/?"'"* INFLEtT'ED, pp. Bent or turned from the enmity of parties, or the spirit of sedidirect line or course ; as an itflected ray of tion. light; varied in terminatioti. 7. To increase ; to augment ; as, to inflame a INFLECT'ING, ppr. Bending or turning Kent. in termination from its course;
INFLA'ME,
INFLICT' ER,
turn from a direct line or
its
;
;
word.
INFLICT' ED, p^. Laid on plies.
[L.inflecio-jinundflecto,
Arc not the rays of (lie sun reflected, refracted and inflected by one and the same princiA'ewton. ple ;
ene-
Addison.
4.
as with
course.
tion.
A friend exaggerates a man's virtues, an my inflames his crimes. [ Unusual.']
air in-
not an authorized use of the
B. Jonson. INFLICT'ING, ppr.
tite
anger.
terfield, is
ol]
ishment or judgments.
The
To excite or increase, as passion or appeto enkindle into violent action ; as, 4. Conceit. ; to inflame love, lust or thirst ; to inflamt INFLECT', to bend.] desire or
2.
act
jected or inhaled.
;
N F
I
The
[L. inflatio.]
inflating.
ma, flame.] To set on fire ; to kindle ; to cause to in a literal sense. But more gen-
1.
»i.
The
or not ca (|uality of being inflexible, pable of being bent; unyielding stiftness. Obstinacy of will or temper firmness of purpose that will not yield to importunity or persuasion; unbending pertinacity.
The magistrate is not popular ; he or he has tcith the people great influence with the prince. Physical power power that affects natural bodies by unseen operation as, the rays of the sun have an influence in whitening cloth, and in giving a green color
jury.
;
has no irfluence t>.
;
;
L. infleiibHis.] ; ; 1. 'I'hat cannot be bent; as an inflexible ouk. 2. That will not yield to prayers or argututo excite 3. Tending anger, animosity, ments; firm in purpose; not to be preto vegetables. mult or sedition ; as inflammatory libels, vailed on ; that cannot be turned ; as a G. Power acting on sensibility ; as the influwritings, speeches or ])ublications. man of upright and inflexible temper. ence of love or pity in sympathy. .'Iddison. INFLA'TE, V. t. [L. inflatus, from inflo ; in 7. Spiritual power, or the immediate power 3. Not to be changed or altered. anilflo, to blow.] of God on the mind ; as divine i>i/7i(cnce; jratts as, 1. To swell or distend by injecting air; The nature of tilings is inflexible. the influences of the Holy Spirit. to inflate a bladder; to inflate the lungs. INFLEX'IBLY, adv. With a firmness that IN'FLUENCE, v. t. To move by physical 2. To fill with the breath ; to blow in. resists all importimity or persuasion; with power operating by unseen laws or force ; Dryden. to affect. unyielding pertinaciousness ; inexorable. to puff up; to elate ; as, to t?i3. To swell Tliese experiments succeed after the same judge should be inflexibly just and im one with pride or vanity. flate iiartial. manner in vacuo, as in the open air, and therefore arc not influenced by the weight or pressINFLA'TE, I "' In botany, puflbd ; hoi INFLEXION. [See /(i/?ec
INFLEX'IBLE,
A
a.
[Fr.
;
3. 4.
To move,
as the passions
;
as, to iji^u-
known
...
lowed by
fected
;
persuaded
;
excited; af-
Moved;
pp.
induced.
IN'FLUENCING, ;);>r. Moving;
affecting;
inducing.
IN'FLUENT,
Flowing
a.
[LMk
in.
used.]
Arbuthnot.
INFLUEN'TIAL,
a.
INFORM'IDABLE,
a.
Not formidable;
not
[in and formidable.] to be feared or
dreaded.
Foe not informidable.
INFORM'ING, ligence
Milton.
ppr. Giving notice or intel-
telling.
;
facts
Communicating
2.
by way of accusa-
tion.
Informing officer, is an officer whose duty it is to inform against persons for breaches of law, as an attorney-general, a sheriff, usually
In this application the verb is A in/ornierf against B. ; as, V. i. To give intelligence.
constable, or grand juror. common informer, is any person who informs against another. He might either teach in the same manner INFORM'ITY, n. [h. informis.] Want of Brown. or inform how he had been taught regular form shapelessness. Monthly Rev INFORM'OUS, a. [Fr. infonne ; L. inTo inform against, to communicate facts byj formis.] Of no regular form or figure ; Brown. Wilford. way of accusation ; to give intelligence of shapeless. a breach of law. Two persons came to INFOR'TUNATE, a. [L. infoHunatus.] the magistrate, and informed against A. Unlucky unfortunate. [The latter is commonly used.] INFORM', a. [L. informis.] Without regu INFOR'TUNATELY, adv. Unfortunately. larform; shapeless; ugly. Jl
Shak
possess
—
INFLUEN'TIALLY, adv. By means of in fluence, so as to incline, move or direct. [It.
usually
intransitive
the power of inclining or controlling the Hamilton. minds of others.
n.
knowledge of the violations of law, and bring the offenders to trial.
fol-
INFORM',
MUner.
INFLUEN'ZA, An epidemic
;
Acts xxiv.
as physical power by invisible operation, causes on bodies, or as moral causes on the mind. It is particularly used to excauses. press the operation of moral
who
by word or writing
Tertullus informed the governor against Paul
Exerting influence or
Influential characters, persons
to
Before we judge, we should of. be well tn/ormed o/" the facts relating to the case. A messenger arrived and informed the commander of the state of the troopsLetters from Europe informns <)/"the commencement of hostiUties between the Persians and Turks. To communicate a knowledge of facts to one by way of accusation.
ence one by pity. e To lead or direct. This revelation is sutficient to ivfluence our faith and practice.
INFLUENCED,
INF
INF
INF
influenza, influence.] The influenza of
catarrh.
October and November, 1789, and that of or April and May, 1790, were very general universal in the United States, and unu-
A
;
;
INFORM' AL,
a.
[in
mA formal]
Not
in
like influenza prevailed the regular or usual form ; as an informal sually severe. in the winters of 1825 and 1826. writing informed proceedings. IN 'FLUX, n. [L. influxus, influo ; in and 2. Not in the usual manner; not according to custom ; as an informal visit. fluo, to flow.] 1. The act of flowing in ; as an influx of light 3. Not with the official forms as, the secre
[jVot used.]
INFOR'TUNE,
n. 3Iisfortune.
[J^oi used.]
Elyot.
;
;
or other 2. Infusion
The
fluid. ;
tary
intromission.
infl^ix of the
tion to everlasting
to the
envoy an informal com
inhnitely of
in rela-
moment Hale. Hale.
[JVb< used.]
To
;
intromission.
little
from
infrin-
used.] n. [Fr.
The
from L.
infractio.
act of breaking breach violation nonobservance as an infraction of a treaty, TVatts. compact, agreement or law. INFRACT'OR, n. One that violates an ;
;
;
;
agreement, &c.
INFRAMUND'ANE,
gives intelligence. One %vho offers an accusation.
2.
[L. infraclus, to break.]
and frango, ;
and ren-
silver.
n. Infusion
t.
break to violate. [This is synonymous with infringe ; it is an unnecessary word
A
INFLUXTON,
;
in
V.
INFORMAL'ITY, n. [from informal. INFRACTION, Want of regular or customary form. The See Infract.]
informality of legal proceedings may 3. ; power. der them void. 4. coming in ; introduction ; importation INFORM'ALLY, adv. In an irregular or in abundance ; as a great influx of goods informal manner; without the usual forms, into a country, or an influx of gold and INFORM'AJVT, >i. One who informs, or
Influence
go
munication.
knowle^e of God,
life, is
made
INFRACT',
o.
[L. infra, below,
/)
[See and mundanus, mundus, the world.] Lygenerally used.] or being beneath the world. INFLUX'IOUS, a. Influential. [JVot used.] INFORMA'TION.re. [Fr. from L. informa- ing INFRAN'GIBLE, a. [in and frangible.] INFLUX'IVE, a. Having influence, or hav- tio.] 1. Not to be broken or separated into parts; Halesworth. in. flow to ing a tendency I. Intelligence; notice, news or advice comas infrangible atoms. Cheyne. INFOLD, I', i. [in and fold.] To involve re- 2. Not to be violated. municated by word or writing. to wrap up or enwrap to inclose. ceived information of the capture of the INFRE'QUENCE, ) [L. ijifrequentia.] Blackmore. "" in bands. limbs his Infold Uncommonness ; ship by an arrival at Boston. Tlie infor- INFRE'QUENCY, ^ mation by the messenger is confirmed by 2. To clasp with tiie arms to embrace. rareness the state of rarely occurring. letters. Broome. Noble Banco, let me infold thee, inor Shak from derived heart. reading And hold thee to my Knowledge INFRE'QUENT, a. [L. infrequens ; in and Bacon.
former, which
is
We
;
;
;
;
struction.
INFOLDED,
Involved; enwrapped; pp. inclosed; embraced. Involving; wrapping ppr. up clasping. INFO'LIATE, ti. t. [L. in and folium,
He should get some information in ject he intends to handle.
INFOLDING,
ulties.
leaf]
cover or overspread with leaves.
much
v.l.
[Fr.informer
Sp. informar;
;
in and It. informare ; L. informo, to shape to give formo, forma, form.] Properly, form or shape to, but in this sense not ;
used. 1.
To
;
life to
;
to actuate
by
Let others better mold the running mass Of metals, and inftrrm the breathing brass. Dry den Breath informs this fleeting frame. Breathes in our soul, informs our
Prior.
frequens, frequent.]
Rare; uncommon; seldom happening or occurring to notice
INFRWIDATE, cold.]
Communication of
facts for the purpose of accusation ; a charge or accu.sation exAn in hibited to a magistrate or court.
a common formation is the accusation of the acinformer or of a private person cusation of a grand jui-y is called an inBlackstone dictment or a presentment.
INFORM'ATIVE, a. Having power
to ani-
More.
mate.
INFORM'ED, pp.
Told
;
instructed
;
chill
;
unfrequent.
v.
t.
;
to
[L. in
make
and frigidus, cold.
[Little
act of
making
Boyle.
used.]
INFRIfilDA'TION,
South 4.
To
n.
The
Taller.
cold.
infringo ; in and frango, to break. See Break.] 1. To break, as contracts; to violate, either positively hy contravention, or negatively by non-fulfillment or neglect of performance. prince or a private person infringes an agreement or covenant by negas well lecting to perform its conditions, as by doing what is stipulated not to be
INFRINtiE,
V.
t.
infiinj'. [L.
A
made
done. To break
to violate ; to transgress ; to ; a neglect to fulfill or obey ; as, to infringe law. forms or use or is intelligence. gives wholly poetical.] \This chiefly effiTo instruct ; to tell to ; to acquaint ; to 2. One who communicates, or whose duty 3. To destroy or hinder; as, to infringe Hooker. it is to communicate to a magistrate cacy. [Little used.] communicate knowledge to; to make vital part.
Pope
%
active informations of the intellect
—
;
animate to give vital powers.
—
The
\Jvot
Howell.
used.]
INFORM',
sub-
Swift.
Knowledge derived from tlie senses or from the operation of the intellectual fac-
;
To
tlie
2.
acquainted.
INFORMER,
n.
One who
animates, in
INF gressed. violating
;
;
;
INFR1N6EMENT, breach
2.
n. infrinj'ment. Act of violation ; non-fulfill;
ment as the infringement of a treatycompact or other agreement the infringe;
One who
n.
4.
transgressing
failing to
observe or
The
is
;
;
of
order
[vermes] coniprehciuls those mi nute and simple animalcules which are INFUNDIB'ULIFORM, [L. infundihuseldom ca[)able of being traced except by lum, a funnel, ani\ form.] Good. the microscope. In botany, having the shape of a funnel, as the corol of a flower moiiopetalous, hav Ing, in Saxon, signifies a pasture or meadow, tube. Goth, uinga. [See English.] ing a conical border rising from a
Martyn. [L. in
INGANNA'TION,
and furiatus, from
Cheat
n.
[It.
fraud.
;
native
new combinations
;
ingene-
The qual-
for saving labor
ingenious-
;
How many
used of persons.
skill;
;
machines
has the ingenu-
of men devised and constructed. Curiousness in design, the eflect of ingeas the ingenuity of a plan or of
ity 2.
nuity 3.
;
mechanism. Openness of heart
fairness
;
;
candor.
[This sense of the word was formerly common, and is fouiiil in good authors down to the age of Locke, and even later; but it is now wholly obsolete. In lieu of
to
ingannarc,
inbred
South.
forming
;
a.
;
n. [Pr. ingenuite.] ;
iiess
a.
INFU'RIATE,
inborn
;
or power of ready invention quickness or acuteness in combining ideas, or in
power of infuThomson
infusory
;
in and gen-
;
ity
worms
smoke.
mecbanistn
[h. ingenilus
rate.
INGENUITY,
Coxe.
the
a.
ilus, born.]
which plants are steeped, impregnated with their vir
;
N G
Curiousness of design or used of things.
INgEN'ITE,
liquor in
tues or qualities.
fulfill.
IN'FUCATE, V. [L. infu€o in and fuco, INFU'SIVE, a. Having sion. To stain to paint to daub. to paint.] INFU'MED, a. [L. infumalus.] Dried in INFU'SORY, a. The t.
2.
In pharmacy, the process of steeping in Innate
and which
Breaking; violating;
ppr.
;
I
whisper. His folly and his wisdom are of his own growth, not the echo or infusion of other men ;
liquor, an operation by which the medicinal qualities of plants may be extracted by a liquor without boiling. Encyc.
violates; a vio-
lator.
INFRING'ING,
Suggestion
Swijl 3.
;
ment of a law or constitution.
INFRING'ER,
N G
I
Broken violated trans
INFRINGED, pp.
it, ingenuousness is used.] INgEN'UOUS, a. [L. ingenuus.] Open ; frank fair ; candid ; free from reserve, Spenser. INGATH'ERING, n. [in and gathering.' disguise, equivocation or di-ssimulation ; INFU'RIATE, V. t. To The act or business of collecting and se used ofpersons or things. mad; to enrage. Decay of Piety. speak of an INFUS'CATE, ti. t. [L. infuscatiis, infusco, curing the fruits of the earth ; harvest ; as ingenuous mhid ; an ingenuous man ; an Ex. xxiii. the feast ol' ingathering. to make black; in and/»MCO, /«scu*, dark.] ingenuous declaration or confession. That a. and as an 2. Noble ; generous ; To darken ; to make black. INtiEL'ABLE, [in gelable.] ingenuous ardor or zeal ; ingenuous detestation of falseINFUSCA'TION, n. The act of darkening cannot be coijgealed.
Enraged
furia, fury.]
;
mad
raging.
;
cheat.]
IN'GATE,
Thomson.
Milton.
sage
n.
;
[in
[JVot used.]
and gate.] Entrance
;
pas-
Obs.
in.
;
render furious, or
Wc
•
1N6EM'1NATE,
or blackening.
V. t. s as :. [Fr. infuser, from L. in amlfundo, infusus, infundo, to pour in ; to pour.] 1. To pour in, as a liquid. That strong Circean liquor cease t' infuse.
INFU'SE,
Denham
To instill, as Why should
principles or qnalities. he desire to have qualities infused into his son, which himself never possessed ? Swift 3. To pour in or instill, as into the mind minds a noble ardor. Infuse into young 4. To introduce ; as, to infuse Gallicisms into 2.
a composition. 5. To inspire with; as, to infuse the breast Shak. with magnanimity. [JVot used.] 6. To steep in liquor without boiling, for the of extracting medicinal qualities.
purpose One scruple of dried leaves is infused in ten Co.ve, ounces of warm water. To make an infusion with an ingredient. Bacon. [JVot used.]
a.
Re
[L. ingeminatus.]
doubled.
Taylor
3.
hood. Of honorable extraction
Locke. freeborn ; as
;
INgEM'INATE, v. [L. ingemino in and ingenuous blooil or birth. Sandys. INGENUOUSLY, adv. Openly; fairly; gemino.] To double or rejieat. INOEMINA'TION, n. Repetition; reducandidly without reserve or dissimula:
t.
;
Halsall
plication.
INgENDER. [See Engender.] INgENERABIL'ITY, n. [infra.] city of being
tion.
Incapa-
Boyle [h.ingenero; in and To generate or pro-
r./.
genera, to generate.] duce within.
INgEN'ERATE,
a.
Fellows.
Generated within
innate; inbred; as iiig-eneraJe
born ers of body. ;
in-
;
;
2.
pp. Produced within. Hale Noble habits ingeneratcd in the soul. INGEN'ERATING, ppr. Generating oi
;
IN'gENY,
n.
Wit; ingenuity.
Obs.
Bacon. [L. ingestus, from iugero ; in and g-ero, to bear.] To throw into the stomach. [Little used.] Brown. n. The act of throwing into
INGEST',
pow-
Ifotton.
INGEN'ERATED,
;
;
engendered.
a. [in and generate.' That cannot be engendered or produced
INgEN'ERABLE, IN6EN'ERATE,
Drydcn. ji. Openness of heart; freedom from refairness frankness serve or dissinuilation as, to confess our faults with ingetiuousness. Fairness candidness ; as the ingenuousness of a confession.
INtiEN'UOUSNESS,
V.
t.
INGESTION, the stomach other food.
;
as the ingestion of milk or Harvey.
n. [Qu. L. igniculus, ignis.] Flame ; in use.] blaze. Bay. [.Yot INgE'NIOUS, a. [L. ingeniosus, from in- 2. In Scottish, a fire, or fireplace. Bums. INFU'SE, n. Infusion. Obs. Spenser. in and genius, geno,gigno, to hegenium: INGLO'RIOUS, a. [L. inglorius ; in and INFV'SKD, pp. Poured in ; instilled ; steeped. Gr. yfiioftat.] get, gloria.] INFU'SER, n. One who infuses. or the 1. Possessed of genius, faculty of in- 1. Not glorious; not bringing honor or gloINFUSIBIL'ITY, n. [from infusible.] The vention ; hence, skillful or prompt to inry ; not accompanied with fame or celebcapacity of being infused or poured in. vent having an aptitude to contrive, or to of ease. rity ; its an ing'lorious life 2. The incapacity of being fusetl or dissolvform new combinations of ideas as an 2. Shameful disgraceful. He charged his ed.
7.
producin" within.
IN'GLE,
;
;
INFU'SIBLE, be infused.
ingenious author an ingenious mechanic. The more ingenious men arc, die more apt
minds of youth.
are they to trouble themselves.
Temple
Proceeding from genius or ingenuity of curious design, structure or mechanism as an ixgeiiious performance of any kind fuse] Not fusible incapable of fusion that can an in n-c«ioHS scheme or plan an ingennot be dissolved or melted. ious moi\e\ or macU'me ingenious fabric: The best cnicibles are made of Limoges ingenious contrivance. well formed well adapted ; as an 3. Witty cartli, which seems absolutely infusible. into the
INFU'SIBLE,
a.
[in, not,
2.
and
ftisible,
;
;
[from the verb.] That may Good principles are infusible
a.
troops with inglorious flight.
INGLO'RIOUSLY, rv
adv.
With want of glo-
dishonorablv; with shame.
IN'GOT,
n.
[Fr.'tingot.
Qu. L. lingua.]
mass or wedge of gold or silver cast mold a mass of un wrought metal.
;
;
;
;
;
from
INFU'SING,
ppr.
in
Pouring
;
instilling
The
act of pouring as the infu sion of good principles into the mind ; the infusion of ardor or zeal. Ji.
in or instilling
Vol.
I.
« as ;
:.
instillation
;
nal
ingenious reply. 4.
Mental
;
intellectual.
INOE'NIOUSLY,
stcepine.
INFU'SION,
INGR'AFT,
;
;
adv.
[JVot ttsed.]
With ingenuity
with readiness in contrivance
INliE'NIOUSNESS,
n.
Shak.
;
with
1.
ing ingenious or prompt used of persons. geiniitv ;
no
a
word
is
V.
t.
[in
and
graff.
ingraff or graff,
The
but
origi-
it is
cor-
rupted beyond recovery.] To insert a cion of one tree or plant into another for propagation as, to ingraft the cion of an apple-tree on a pear-tree, as its stock to ingraft a peach on a plum. ;
;
skill
The
quality of be in invention; in
.\
Encyc.
;
Lavoisier.
in
;
;
;
2. 3.
To To
.Way. propagate by insition. plant or introduce something foreign
N G
I into that
which
is
N H
I
native, for
tlie
purpose
of propagation.
wondered
was not thought
a proper ingredient in tlie education of a woman of quality or fortune. n. IN'GIvESS, [L. ingressus, ingredior, supra.] introduced 1. Entrance as the ingress of air into the for growth and propagation It is particularly applied to the lungs. or fixed set stock into a native deep. entrance of the moon into the shadow of INGR'AFTING, ppr. Inserting, as cions in the earth in eclipses, the sun's entrance instocks; introducing and inserting on a naThis fellow would ingraft a foreign name Dryden. Upon our stock. 4. To set or fix deep and firm. Shak. Cesar. Ingrafted love he bears to INGR^AFTED, pp. Inserted into a stock
that learning
;
;
;
tive stock
what
is
foreign
INGR*AFTMENT,
n.
fixing deep. act of ingraft- 2.
;
The
ing.
The thing IN'GRAIN,
2.
t.
and grain.] To dye
[in
in
the grain, or before manufacture. pp. Dyed in the grain or in the raw material as ingrained carpets.
IN'GRAINED,
in tlie
;
entering.
;
entra
Dighy. a. [from L. inguen, the groin.] Pertaining to the groin as' an inguinal tumor. ;
raw ma-
INGULF',
terial.
V.
t.
[in
and
To swallow
gulf.]
vastdeep, gulf or whirlpool. INGRAP'PLED, a. Grappled Milton entwined. Drayton. 2. To cast into a gulf. Hayicard. in and > IN'GRATE, ingratus; [L. "" pp. Swallowed up in a gulf INGRA'TEFUL, S grnlus ; Fr. ingrat.] INGULF'ED, or vast deep cast into a gulf. not having feel1. Ungrateful; unthankful INGULFING, ppr. Swallowing up in a received. ings of kindness for a favor gulf, whirlpool or vast deep. Milton. Pope. ;
seized on
up
;
to
demand support from
the town, city or
parish in which he lives, otherwise called a legal settlement, which subjects a town to support a person, if a pauper. Laws of Mass. Blackstone. dweller; one who INHAB'ITANT, n. dwells or resides permanently in a place, or who has a fixed residence, as distinguished from an occasional lodger or visitor as the inhabitant of a house or cottage ; the inhabitants of a town, city, county or state. So brute animals are inhabitants of the regions to which their natures are adapted and we speak of spiritual beings, as inhabitants of heaven. 2. One who has a legal settlement in a town, The conditions or quahficity or parish. cations which constitute a person an inhabitant of a town or parish, so as to subject the town or parish to support him, if a pauper, are defined by the statutes of different governments or states. INHABITATION, n. The act of inhabiting, or state of being inhabited. Raleigh. 2. Abode; place of Milton. dwelling. 3. Population; whole mass of inhabitants.
A
;
;
ingressio,
IN'GUINAL,
;
IN'GRAINING,;)^-. Dyeing
Power of entrance means of was prohibited.
All ingress
INGRES'SION, n. [Fr. from L. ingredior.] The act of entering
ingrafted, J>.
&c.
to a sign,
N H
I
say, an ointment or a decoction is composed of certain ingredients ; and Addison
in a
;
;
2.
Unpleasing
He
INGUR'GlTATE,
to the sense.
gives no ingrateful food. n. [Fr. ingrat.]
IN'GRATE,
An
in
Brown. [This ivord
is little used.]
INHABITED,
pp. Occupied by inhabitand gurges, a gulf.] To swallow greedily ants, human or irrational. ArMon. or in great quantity. Did. INHABITER, n. One «: ho inhabits a an ungrateful INGUR'GlTATE, v.i. To drink largely ; to inhabitant. Derham, dweller; v.
t.
[L. ingurgito
;
;
INHABITING,
swill.
person.
pjtr.
DweUingin; occupy-
INGRA'TEFULLY, adv. Ungratefully. INGURGITA'TION, «. The act of swal ing as a settled or permanent inhabitant INGRA'TEFULNESS, n. Ungratefulness. lowing greedily, or in great quantity. residing in. INGRA'TIATE, v. Darwin. INIIAB'ITRESS, n. A female inhabitant. ingra'shale. [It. inin and L. in favor.] a. and to gratia, grazianarsi INGUST'ABLE, [L. gusto, Bp. Richardson. ;
t.
;
1.
To commend
one's self to another's good
confidence or kindness. It is always used as a reciprocal verb, and followed by with, before the person whose favor is Ministers and courtiers ingratiate themselves ivith their sovereign. Demathe popingratiate themselves with
sought.
gogues
That cannot be
taste.]
will,
1.
and habilis, Not apt or
To recommend
to render easy
;
things.
INGRA'TIATING,
ppr.
fit.]
until; not convenient; as
;
2.
Unskilled
unready
;
unqualified ; See Unable.]
;
com INHAB'IT,
self to another's favor.
v.t. [h. inhabilo
;
in
and
ness for favors received insensibility to favors, and want of a disposition to repay them unthankfulness. Ingratitude is abhorred by God and man. L'Estrange.
the forest
;
and
Thus
;
himself guilty of ingrati
rivers
to
occupy as a place of
Wild beasts inhabit fishes inhabit the ocean, lakes men inhabit cities and houses
;
;
saith the higli
—
II.
and
lofty
Retribution of evil for good. Nor was it with ingratitude returned. Dryden.
To bury. INGRA'VE, INGRAV'IDATE, v. [L. t'.
t.
i.
To
t.
v.
t.
To make
gravidus.] great.
To
Fotherhy.
use.]
INGRE'DIENT,
n.
[Fr.
from L.
ens. entering into ; ingredior dior. See Grade.]
;
i7igredi-
in and gra-
That which etJters into a compound, or is a component part of any compomid or mixture.
It is particularly ap|ilied to the medicinal compositions, but ad mits of a very general a^jplication. Wei
.xiniples in
They
to
hve
;
to
say wild beasts inhabit here.
2.
IValler.
;
as, to
expire.
Encyc. ppr.
Drawing
into the lungs;
breathing.
INHARMON'IC, INHARMON'IGAL, INHARMO'NIOUS,
?
"' I
a. [in
Unharmonious
;
discordant.
and harmonious.]
Not harmonious; unmusical
;
discordant.
Broome.
INIIARMO'NIOUSLY,
adv.
mony discordantly. INHE'RE, v.i. [h.inhareo;
Without har-
INHAB'ITANCE,
in
and
hcereo,
;
affording habitation to animals. The stars may be inhabitable worlds. Some regions of the earth are not inhabitable by reason of cold or sterility. building may be too olfl and decayed to be inhabitable. Not habitable. [Fr. inhabitable ; 1: inhain Shak. use.] bitabilis.] [JVot ers.
and
to hang.] [from inhabit.] Habit- To exist or be fixed in something else as, colors inhere in cloth a dart inheres in the inhabited; capable of
A
[JVot in
to inspire
;
to exhale
])laints.
One, that inhab-
dwell;
abide.
Fuller.
impregnate.
INGRE'aT,
opposed
;
INHAB'ITABLE, a. able; that may be
[J^ot used.]
;
Martin was walking forth to inhale the fresh breeze of the evening. Arbuthnot and Pope. INIIA'LED, pp. Drawn into the lungs. INHA'LER, n. One who inhales. 2. In medicine, a machine for breathing or drawing warm steam into the lungs, as a remedy for coughs and catarrhal com-
Is. Ivii.
tude. 3.
[h.inhalo; in and halo, to
the lungs
into
INIIA'LING,
iteth eternity
INHAB'IT,
v.t.
breathe.]
habito,
to dwell.] ;
own
Encyc. used of
Inability.]
of
INGRAT'ITUDE, n. [Fr.; in ant\ gratitude. To live or dwell in settled residence. 1. Want of gratitude or sentiments of kind-
will
;
[Little used.
persons.
used of
INIL\'LE,
To draw
inhale air
apt, (it
;
self to the favor of another. n. The act
No man
[Little
Hammond. INHABIL'ITY, n. [froin inhahile.] Unaptwant of skill. ness unfitness [Little Commending one's See iised.
INGRA'TIATING, mending one's
;
a. [Fr.
inhahile matter.
ulace. 3.
tasted.
Drown. from L. inhabUis ; in
used.]
INHAB'ILE,
Residence of dwell-
n.
Carew.
[Little used.]
;
flesh.
Existence in something; INHE'RENCE, a fixed state of being in another body or n.
substance.
INIIE'RENT,
a.
Existing in something else,
so as to be inseparable Irora
it.
Inherent baseness. 2.
Innate
Shak.
pertaining to as the inherent qualities of the magnet the inherent right of men to hfe, liberty and pro;
naturally
;
;
n. Residence; habitan cy permanent or legal residence in a town, city or parish or the domiciliation which the law requires to entitle a pauper
INHAB'ITANCY, ;
;
tection.
INHERENTLY,
adv.
By
inherence. Bentlty,,
I
N H
I
lNHE'RING,ppr. Existing or fixed
in
some-
thing else. II. t. [Sp. heredar; Port, herdar ; eredare; Fr.heriter; from L. hares, an
INHER'IT, It.
heir.
See
Heir.]
INHERSE,
V.
t.
N H
inkers',
[in
I
and
herse.]
N
I
stances by burying the vessel containing them in warm earth, or a like substance.
Toj
inclose in a funeral monument. Shak.\ n. s as z. [L. inhwsio, inhareo.] Inherence ; the state of existing or being fixed in something.
INHE'SION,
Encyc.
INHlj'MED, pp. Buried; interred. INIIU'MING, ppr. Burying; interring.
intake by descent from an ancestor ; to] INHIA'TION, n. [L.inliiatio.] A gaping af- INIMAti INABLE, o. Unimaginable Pearson. conceivable. ter; eager desire. take by succession, as the representative of [JVut used.] to receive, as a INHIB'IT, V. t. [Fr. inhibcr; L. inhibeo ; in INIMICAL, o. [L. inimictis; in and amicus, the former possessor a friend.] an and habeo, to hold, properly to rush or right or title descendiljle by law from 1. Unfriendly having the disposition or temancestor at liis decease. The heir inherdrive.] 1. To restrain ; to hinder to check or re per of an enemy; applied to private enmiits the lands or real estate of his father ty, as hostile is to public. the eldest son of the nobleman inherits his press. hurtful 2. Adverse father's title, and the eldest son of a king Their motions also are excited or inhibited rej)ugnant. Savage violences inimical to commerce. inherits the crown. Bentley by tlie objects without them. H'ard. 2. To receive by nature from a progenitor. 2. To forbid to prohibit; to interdict. n. INIMITABIL'ITY, [from inimitable.] father The son inherits the virtues of liis All men were inhibiletl by proclamation at The ipiality of being incapable of imitathe daughter inherits the temper of her the dissolution so much as to mention a parATorris. tion. Clarendon. liament. motlier, and cliildren oflen inherit the INIM'ITABLE.a. [Fr. from L. ini«ii7atiVi» constitutional infirmities of their parents. INHIBITED, ;)p. Restrained; forbid. in and imitabilis, from imilor, to imitate.] to enjoy to take as a posses3. To possess be imitated That cannot orrojiied surpassrepress INHIBITING, ppr. Restraining; as, sion, by gift or divine appropriation ing imitation as itiimilablc lieauly or exing prohibiting. to inherit the to inherit everlasting life cellence an inimitable description inimINHIBI"T10N, n. [Fr. from L. inhibitio.] promises. itable eloquence. That thou mayest live, and inherit the land 1. Prohibition; restraint; embargo. In a manner not to be which Jehovah tliy God giveth thee. Deut 2. In law, a writ to forbid or inhibit a judge INIM'ITABLY, ailv. imitated to a degree beyond imitation. xvi. from farther proceedings in a cause deCharms such as thine, inimitably great. The meek shall inherit the earth. Matt. v. pending before him commonly, a writ isBroome. INHER'IT, v.i. To take or have possessuing from a higher ecclesiastical court to INIQ'UITOUS, a. sion or property. [^cc Iniquity.] Unjust; Cowel. an inferior one, on appeal. wicked; as an innjuitons bargain an inThou shall not inherit In our father's house, INHOLD, V. t. pret. and pp. inheld. [in and iquilous proceeding. [It is applied to xl. .ludges INHER'ITABLE, a. That may be inherit- Tohold.] things rather than to persons, but may be have inherent; to contain in itself. [Lited transmissible or descendible from the applied to persons.] tle used.] Raleigh. n. [Fr. ini^uili ; L. iniquitas ; ancestor to the heir by course of law as INIQUITY, INHOLDER, n. An inhabitant. Obs. in and cequitas, eciuity.] an inheritable estate or title. Spenser. X. a deviation the from be transmitted 2. That may unrighteousness parent Injustice V. t. [in and hoop.] To confine or INHOOP'. from rectitude as the iniquity of war ; to the child ; as inheritable qualities or inShak. inclose in any place. the iniquity of the slave trade. firmities. INHOS'PITABLE, a. [in and hospitable.] 2. Want of rectitude in principle ; as a mali3. Capable of taking by itdieritauce, or of not disposed to entertain 1. Not hospitHl)le cious prosecution origiimting in the inireceiving by descent. strangers gratuitously; declining to enterquity of the author. By attainder the l)lood of the person attain guests, or entertaining thern with re .3. A no tainted is so corrupted as to be rendered particular deviation from rectitude; a or Blarkstone. hictance as an inhospitable person peowickedness ; any act of insin or crime longer inheritable. INHER'ITABLY, adv. By inheritance ple. justice. Sherwood. 2. Affording no conveniences, subsistence or Your iniquities have separated between you desas is. llx. derived to God. estate n. An shelter and inhospitable strangers; INIIER'ITANCE, your Mlton. Dryden. 4. erts or rocks. from an ancestor to an heir by succession Original want of holiness or depravity. Ps. li. or in course of law or an estate which INHOSPITABLY, adv. Unkindly to stran I was shapen in iniquili/. Milton. the law casts on a child or other person, gcrs. a. Unjust. [.Vol used.] AVantofhos INIQ'UOUS, as the representative of the deceased an- INIIOS'PITABLENESS, ? INIRRITABIL'ITY, »i. [in and irritability.] or INHOSPITAL'ITY, pitality cestor. S The cjuality of being inirritablc, or not susrefusal or unwilkindness to strangers 2. The reception of an estate by hereditary ceptible of contraction by excitement. which an estate or lingness to entertain guests or strangers Dartpin. right, or the descent by without reward. Chesterfield. title is cast on the heir as, the heir receivINIR'RITABLE, a. [in and irritable.] Not inheritance. ed the estate by not susceptible of irritation, or INIIU'MAN, a. [Fr. inhumain ; L. inhumairritable 3. The estate or possession which may desnus ; in and humanus, humane.] Darwin. contraction bv excitement. cend to an heir, though it has not des- 1. Destitute of the kindness and tenderness INIR'RIT.VTIVE,a. Not accompanied with cended. that belong to a human being cruel barexcitement; as an inirritative fever. And Rachel and Leah answered and said, is as an inhu barous savage unfeeling Darwin. tliere yet any portion or inheritance for us in our man person or people. INISLE, i". t. ini'le. [in and isle.] To surfather's house ? Gen. xxii. 2. Marked with cruelty; as an inhuman act. round to encircle. [J^ot in use.] 4. An estate given or possessed by donation Crun. Drayton. INHUMAN'ITY, [Fr. inhumanite.] or divine appropriation. Num. xxvi. savageness of heart INI 'TIAL, a. [Ft. from L. initialis, inielty in disposition 5. That which is possessed or enjoyed. used of persons. tium, beginning.] Ask of me, and 1 will give thee the heathen actions.' 1. used act in the at 2. barbarity; of Cruelty beginning as Beginning placed for thine inheritance. Ps. ii. adv With cruelty barbathe initial letters of a name. INHERITED, pp. Received by descent rouslv Swifl. 3. Beginning; incipient; as the iniiioZ sympfrom an ancestor ; possessed. > toms of a disease. [Fr.inhumer ; L.inhu, INHERITING, ppr. Taking by succession INHU'MVTE, ""O' '"'"'O' '" IJi'ry-] INI 'TIAL, n. The first letter of a name. S or right of representation; receiving from INHUME, to inter ; to deposit in the earth, INl'TIALLY, adv. In an incipient degree. 1. To bury ancestors possessing. a dead body. Barrotc. INHER'ITOR, n. An heir one who inher- 2. as To digest in a vessel surrounded with INI'TIATE, V. t. [Low L. initio, to enter its or may inherit. warm earth. or begin, from initum, ineo, to enter ; in Enct/c.l INHER'ITRESS, ) " An heiress a female and to of inThe act n. eo, go.] burying ; INHERITRIX, I who inherits or is en- INHUMATION, 1. To instruct in rudiments or principles; or terment. titled to inherit, after the death of her anto introduce into any society or sect by ina method of digesting sub2. In 1.
To
;
;
;
;
—
.
—
;
;
;
;
,•
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
'.
;
;
—
;
;
—
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
—
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
INHUMANLY
;
;
;
;
;
;
I
cestor.
chimistry,
;
N
I
J
in structing the candidate
its
INJUDl"CIOUSLY,
principles or
ceremonies; as, to initiate a person into the mysteries of Ceres. or society 2. To introduce into a new state Addison. a chib. as, to initiate one into to acquaint with as, to ini3. To instruct tiate one in the higher branches of math-
ment
Without
unwisely.
The
n.
detraction, are utation.
judg-i
INJUNCTION, go, to enjoin
in
;
A command;
1.
andjungo,
to join.]
order: precept; the direc-
of a superior vested with authority. For still they knew, and ought t' have still remembered The high injunction, not to taste that fruit.
tion
ematics. Clarendon,
To begin upon. INI"TIATE, v.i. To do
4.
perform the
first
tlie
act; to
Pope Hhak INI"TIATE, a. Unpracticed. A tenant by the 2. Begun; commenced. birth of curtesy initiate, becomes so by the first rite.
a child, but his estate is not consummate Blackstone. the death of the wife.
till
1NI"TIAT£,
One who
n.
is
Urgent advice or exhortation of persons not vested with absolute authority to com In latv, a writ or order of the court of chancery, directed to an inferior court, or to parties and their counsel, directing them to stay proceedings, or to do some act, as to put the plaintiff in possession for want of the defendant's appearance, to stay
Barloiv
INI"TIATED, pp- Instructed in the principles entered.
first
;
INI"TIATING, struction, or
Introducing
ppr.
by appropriate
i
INITIA'TION,
in-
by
erem J.
When the waste or other injury, &c. reason for granting an injunction ceases,
nies.
M. Mason The act or
n. [L. imhaito.] a process of introducing one into
tlic
by instructing him in its principles, rules or ceremonies as, to initiate a person into a christian community.
ciety,
;
act or process of making X)ne acquainted with principles before unknown. 3. Admission by application of ceremonie or use of symbols as, to initiate one into
1.
The
2.
Injury.]
To hurt or wound, as the person; to impair soundness, as of health. To damage or lessen the value of, as
6.
Two initiatory rites of the same general im- 7. /. M. Mason port cannot exist together. n. [supra.] Introductory
to grieve as sensibility or feelings. To impair, as the intellect or mind. To hurt or weaken as, to injure a good cause.
L. Addison
any
—
n. [Fr.
from
h.injectio.]
;
Wrongfully; hurtmischievously.
;
The
quality of being injuiious or hurtful; injury. n. [L. injuria; in and jus, juris, It. ingiuria ; Sp. ittjuright ;Fr. injure; n.
IN'JURY, ria.]
In general, any wrong or damage done to a man's person, rights, reputation or goods. That which impairs the soundness of the body or health, or gives pain, That which impairs the is an injury.
1.
mental faculties, is an injtiry. These injuries may be received by a fall or by other violence. Trespass, fraud, and nonfulfillment of covenants and contracts are Slander is an injury to injuries to rights. reputation, and so is cowardice and vice. Whatever impairs the quality or diminishes the value of goods or property, is an may receive injury by misinjury. fortune as well as by injustice.
We
,
.
Mischief; detriment. cause by Many times we do injury to Watts. dwellinfi; on trifling arguments. Any diminution of that which is good, valuable or advantageous.
INJUS'TICE, and justitia, 1.
Iniquity;
n. [Fr.
from L.
injusfitia
;
ire
justice.]
wrong; any
er's rights, as
violation of anoth-
fraud in contracts, or the
withholding of what is due. It has a particular reference to an unequal distribution of rights, property or privileges among
as, to injure rights.
great rains injure
the roads. persons who have erjual claims. In general, to wrong the person, to dam- 2. The withholding from another merited age the property, or to lessen the liappipraise, or ascribing to him unmerited ness of ourselves or others. A man inblame.
jures his person by wounds, his estate by negligence or extravagance, and his hap-
piness by vices. He injures his neighbor by violence to his person, by fraud, by cal umny, and by non-fulfillment of his con-
The
particularly that of
in,
injurious. adv.
with injustice
INJU'RIOUSNESS,
;
;
;
10.
thing into the mouth or stomach. To cast or throw on. And mound inject on mound. Pope. INJE€T'ED, pp. Thrown in or on. INJECTING, ppr. Throwing in or on. act of throwing
;
;
9.
anA
;
To impair to violate To make worse as,
INI"TIAT011Y,
INJECT'ION,
estate.
To
5.
;
;
[Fr. injure, injurier; L. injuIt. ingiuriare.
Sp. injuriar;
injurj';
See
piness. To give pain to
emonies.
rite.
Blackstone.
dissolved.
4.
INI"TIATORY, Initiating or serving to initiate introducing by instruction, or by the use and application of symbols or cera.
v.t. [L. injedus, injicio ; in jacio, to throw.] to dart in ; as, to inject 1. To throw in
is
slander, tarnish or impair, as reputation or character. To impair or diminish ; to annoy ; as hap
;
Hammond.
t.
ria,
goods or 3.
the visible church by baptism.
INJECT',
injunction
so- IN' JURE, V.
new
fully
mand. 3.
initiated. /.
deemed
INJU'RIOUSLY,
Milton
2.
sometimes injurious to rep-
whatever gives pain to the body or mind, whatever impairs or destroys property or rights, whatever tarnishes reputation, whatever disturbs happiness, whatever retards prosperity or defeats the success of a good cause, is
quality of 7. In general,
fVkittock. being injudicious or unwise. n. [L. injundio,{rominjun-
;
2.
;
INK
J adv.
INJUDI'CIOUSNESS,
;
;
2.
N
I
tracts.
n. [D. inkt ; Fr. encre.] A black liquor or substance used for writing, generally infusion of galls, copperas
INK,
made of an
and gum-arabic. 2.
Any
liquor used for writing or forming
letters, as
red ink, &c.
throwing a liquid medicine into the body IN'JURED,;>p. Hurt; wounded; damaged; 3. A pigment. impaired weakened ; made worse. by a syringe or pipe. Printing ink is made by boiling lintseed oil, 2. A liquid medicine thrown into the body IN'JURER, n. One who injures or wrongs and burning it about a minute, and mixIN'JURING, ;>/)?. Hurting; damaging; imby a syringe or pijie a clyster. ing it with lampblack, with an addition of 3. In anatomy, the act of filling the vessels of pairing weakening rendering worse. soap and rosin. an animal body with some colored sub- INJU'RIOUS, a. [L. injurius ; Fr. inju Ink for the rolling press, is made with lintseed their to render visible order figstance, in oil burnt as above, and mixed with Fi'ankrieux.] ures and ramifications. furt black. Encyc. 1. Wrongful unjust hurtful to the rights INJOIN. [See Enjoin.] of another. That which impairs rights or Indian ink, from China, is composed of INJUCUND'ITY, n. [L. injucundilas.] Un the of is them, enjoyment injurilampblack, and size or animal glue. prevents ;
;
;
;
;
;
pleasantness
tlisagreeableness.
;
2.
Not cognizable by a
a.
[Little used.]
judge.
INJUDI"CI.\L,
a.
Not according
to the 3.
Did
forms of law.
anA judicious.] Not judicious; void of judgment acting with out judgment unwise as an injudicious
lNJUDI"CIOUS,
o.
[in
4.
;
5.
;
;
person. ?}.
Not according cretion live.
;
to
unwise
;
sound judgment or as an injudicious
dis
meas
JVicholson.
ous.
[Little
used.]
INJU'DICABLE,
[6.
Hurtful to the person or health. Vio- Sympathetic ink, a liquor used in writing, which exhibits no color or appearance lence is injurious to the person, as intemtill some other means are used, such as perance is to the health. holding it to the fire, or rubbing someAffecting with damage or loss. Indolence is injurious to property. thing over it. Encyc. as the injurious Mischievous hurtful INK, V. t. To black or daub with ink. consequences of sin or folly. INK'IIORN, n. [ink and horn ; horns being Lessening or tarnishing reputation. The formerly used for holding ink.] very suspicion of cowardice is injuiious to 1. A small vessel used to hold ink on a Writa soldier's character. ing table or desk, or for carrying it about Inkhorns are made of horn, the person. Detractory contumelious ; hurting reputation as, obscure hints as well as open glass or stone. ;
;
;
;
1
INN
N L
INN
of In limine, [L.] at the threshold ; at the be-, INN, V. t. To house ; to put under cover. portable case for the instruments Johnson. Bacon. ginning or outset. writing. INK'INESS, n. [from inky.] The state or INLIST', V. i. [in and list.] To enter into IN'NATE, a. [L. innalus, from innaacor ; in and nascor, to be born.] military service by signing articles and requaUty of being inky. Inborn native natural. Innate ideas are ceiving u sum of money. [See List.] INK'LE, n. A kind of narrow fillet; tape. such as are supposed to be stamped on Shak. INLIST', V. t. To engage or procure to enter into military service. the mind, at the moment when existence liint or whisper ; an inti[See Enlist, a INK'LING, n. common but inlist is Bacon. Mr. Locke has taken great pains mation. [LilUe used.] prefcnible.J spelling, begins. INK'MAKER, n. One whose occupation is INLIST'ED, pp. Engaged in military ser- to prove that no such ideas exist. vice, as a soldier. to make ink. Encyc. INKNOT, V. t. innoV. [in and knot.] To INLIST'ING, jipr. Entering or engaging in INNATED, for innate, is not used. bind as with a knot. military service. INNATELY, adv. Naturally. IN'NATENESS, n. The quality of being INK'STAND, n. A vessel for holding ink INLIST'MENT, n. The act of inlisting. These inlistincnts were for one year only. innate. and other writing utensils. Marshall. INK'-STONE, n. A kind of small round NNAV'IG.^BLE, a. [L. innavigaUlis ; in The milthe terms of or bla(-k writing and navignhilis. See J^'avigate.] containing a stone of white, red, gray, yellow and a list of of those names service, itary That cannot be navigated; impassable by color, containing a quantity of native vitwho enter into the service. riol or sulphate of iron ; used in making ships or vessels. Dryden. V. t. To lock or inclose one thing ink. INNER, a. [from in.] Interior farther inEncyc. INLOCK', within another. ward than soinelliing else ; as an imier of ink a. resembling INK'Y, Consisting a. [in and like.] Internal; interior; IN'LY, chamber the inner court of a temple or ink black. secret. Shak. 2. Tarnished or blackened with ink. jialace. in the 3. Interior adv. within Internally internal not outward ; as the INLA'CE, V. t. {in and lace.] To embellish IN'LY, heart secretly as, to be inly pleased or inner man. Fletcher. with variegations. E|)h. iii. Milton. grieved. Spenser. IN'NERLY. adv. More within. Barret. INLA'ID, /)/>. o{ inlay, which see. »i. or and IN'MATE, inn, tnate.] [ill pera. Farthest inward; most IN'LAND, a. [in and land.] Interior reson who lodges or dwells in the same IN'NERMOST, remote from the outward part. Prov. mote from the sea. Worcester in Massahouse with another, occupying difterent xviii. chusetts, and Lancaster in Peimsylvania, rooms, but using the same door lor passing I', t. innerv'. [in and nerce.] To are large inland towns. in and out of the house. C'ou-et. INNERVE, remote from the ocean as to strength2. Within land give nerve to ; to invigorate A lodger one who lives with a family, en. an inland lake or sea. Spenser. Dmght. hut is not otherwise connected with it 3. Carried on within a country domestic, IN'NING, Ji. The ingathering of grain. than as a lodger. 2. A term in cricket, a turn for using the not foreign as inland trade or transportaIN'MATE, a. Admitted as a dweller. Milton. bat. tion inland navigation. a. [in and inost.] Deepest witli drawn and paya- IN'MOST, n. Lands recovered from the 4. Confined to a country in remotest from the surface or external INN'INGS, as an inland l)ill sea. Ainstvorth. ble in the same country part. of exchange, distinguished from a foreign IN'NOCENCE, ( "• „ [Fr. from L. innocentia; Tlie silent, slow, consuming fires on a in and noceo, to hurt.] bill, which is drawn in one country Which on my inmost vitals prey. ..Addison IN'NOCENCY, \ in another. 1. Properly, freedom from any that I into inmost court. the Gnlliver living quality person got can injure innoxiousness harmlessness ; IN'LAND, n. The interior part of a coun- INN, n. [Sax. inn, probably from the Heh. as the innocence of a medicine which can Shak. Miltnn. and Ch. nOPI to dwell or to pitch a tent, try. do no harm. In this sense, the noun ie whence Ch. nun an inn. Class Gn. No. IN'LANDER, n. One who lives in the innot obsolete, though less used than the terior of a country, or at a distance from 19.] Brown. 1. the sea. house for the lodging and entertainadjective. in2. In a moral sense, freedom from crime, ment of travelers. In America, it is often INLAND'ISH, a, Denoting something sin or guilt untainted purity of heart and land native. a tavern, where liquors are furnished for life unimpaired integrity. INLAP'IDATE, v. t. [in and lapido, lapis, travelers and others. There was no room for tliem in the inn a stone.] Enjoyment left nothing to ask innocence left nothing to fear. Johnson. ii. to Luke substance into a To convert petstony Bacon. '2. In England, a college of municipal or i. Freedom from guilt or evil intentions rify. [Little used.] common law professors and students simplicity of heart ; as the innocence of a INLA'Y, t;. t. pret. and pp. inlaid, [in and lay.] To veneer to diversify cabinet or other formerly, tlie town-house of a nobleman, child. bishop or other distinguished personage, 4. Freedom from the guilt of a particular work by laying in and fastening with glue, sin or crime. This is the sense in which in which he resided when he attended the thin slices or leaves of fine wood, on a the word is most generally used, for percourt. is used This wood. common of ground fect innocence cannot be predicated of Inns of court, colleges in which students of in making compartments. Encyr. man. A man charged with theft or murlaw reside and are instructed. The prin IN'L.W, n. Matter or pieces of wood inlaid, der may prove his innocence. the Inner the Middle are Tem|)le, cipal Miltonor prepared for inlaying. Temple, Lincoln's Inn, and Gray's Inn. vt. The state of being lawfully conveyed to a INLA'YER, n. The person who inlays or Inns of chancery, colleges in which young belligerent, or of not being contraband ;as whose occupation it is to inlay. the innocence of a cargo, or of any merstudents formerly began their low studies. chandize. Kent. INLA'YING, ppr. Tlie operation of diver- These are now occupied chiefly by attorwork witli thin Encyc. IN'NOCENT, a. [Fr. from L. innoeens.] neys, solicitors, &c. sifying or ornamenting ?i. A per- 1. Properly, not noxious not producing in[inn und hold.] pieces of wood, set in a ground of other INN'llOLUER, son who keeps an inn or house for the wood. jury free from qualities that can injure harmless; innoxious; as an innocent INLAW', 1'. t. To clear of outlawry or at- entertainment of travelers; also, a tavmedicine or remedy. Bacon. erner. tainder. Spenser. '2. Free from guilt not having done wrong IN'LET, )!. [in and let.] A passage or open- 2. An inhabitant. Ohs. or violated any law not tainted with sin ; n. [inn and keep.] An inning by which an inclosed place may be INN'KEEPER. holder. In America, the innkeeper is often entered place of ingress entrance. Thus, pure upright. In this general sense, no human being that is a moral agent, can be a tavern keeper or taverner, as well as an a window is an inlet for light into a house It is followed by of. innocent. the senses are the inlets of ideas or perinnkeeper, the inn for furnishing lodgings! and provisions being usually united with 3. Free from the guilt of a particular crime ceptions into the mind. or evil action as, a man is innocent of the the tavern for the sale of liquors. 2. bay or recess in the shore of the sea crime charged in the indictment. or of a lake or large river, or between INN, V. i. To take up lodging to lodge. Donne. 4. Lawful permitted as an innocent trade. isles. 2.
A
I
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
A
;
;
—
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
N N
I 5.
Not contraband
;
N O
I
not subject to
An
ure as innocent goods carried to a belligKent. erent nation. INNOCENT, n. One free from guilt or Shak. barm. Hooker. idiot. an 2. A natural; [Unusual.] ;
;
Mercury
— owns
it
N O
I
contagious matter
oblique hint a remote intimation or reference to a person or thing not named.
forfeit- 1.
in
his skin or flesh.
This practice is limited chiefly to the communication of the small pox, and of the cow
a marriage by in7iuendo. Dry den.
pox, which is intended as a substitute for it. [See Vaccination.] n. A per.son who inoculates one who propagates plants or disa. [L. innuens.] Significant. IN'NOCENTLY, adv. Without harm; with- IN'NUENT, eases bv inoculation. Burton. out incurring guilt. State of being INO'DIATE, V. t. [L. in and odium.] To INNUMERABIL'ITY, \ "' 2. With simplicity without evil design. South. INNU'MERABLENESS, \ innumerable. make hateful. [Ao( in use.] 3. Without incurring a forfeiture or penalSherwood. Fotherby. INO'DORATE, o. [L. in and odoratus.] ty ; as goods innocently imported. a. no scent or odor. Bacon. INNU'MERABLE, [L. innumerabilis. Having in and a. innocuus ; INNOCUOUS, [L. See J^umber.] INO'DOROUS, a. [L. inodorus; in and noceo, to hurt.] 1. Not to be counted; that cannot be enuodor,] Wanting scent ; having no smell. Harmless safe producing no ill effect in merated or numbered for multitude. The wtiite of au egg is an inodorous liquor. nocent. Certain poisons used as niedi 2. Ill a loose sense, very numerous. Jlrbuthnot. cines in smalt quantities, prove not only number. Without adv. INNU'MERABLY, INOFFENS'IVE, a. [in and offensive.] innocuous, but beneficial. It applied only INNU'MEROUS, a. [L. innumerus ; in and 1. Giving no offense or provocation ; as an to things ; not to persons. numerus, number.] an inoffensive answer. inoffensive man INNO€'UOUSLY, adv. Without harm; Too many to be counted or numbered in- 2. Giving no uneasiness or disturbance as without injurious effects. Milton. Pope an inoffensive appearance or sight. INNOC'UOUSNESS, n. Harmlessness the numerable. n. [in and nutrition.' 3. Harmless; doing no injury or mischief. quality of being destitute of mischievous INNUTRI"TION, Want of nutrition; failure of nourishment. Dighy. Thy inoffensive satires never bite. Dryden. qualities or effects. Darivin 4. Not INNOM'INABLE, a. Not to be named. obstructing presenting no hindera. [in and nutritious.] Chaucer. INNUTRI"TIOUS, aiice. Not nutritious; not supplying nourishFrom hence a passage broad. INNOM'INATE, a. Having no name Darwin. not nourishing. down to hell. ment; Smooth, easy, inoffensive, R"y anonymous. Milton. [Unusual.^ IN'NOVATE, V. t. [Fr. innover; L. innovo ; INOBE'DIENCE, n. Disobedience; negadv. Without giving lect of obedience. in and novo, to make new, novus, new.] Bp. Bedell. INOFFENS'IVELY, offense without harm in a manner not 1. To change or alter by introducing some- INOBE'DIENT, a. Not yielding obedience to oftend. thing new. neglecting to obey. From his attempts upon the civil power, he INOBSERV'ABLE, a. [in and observahlc] INOFFENS'IVENESS, n. Harmlessness ; the quality of being not offensive either to South proceeds to innovate God's worship. That cannot be seen, perceived or observthe senses or to the mind. Bacon. 2. To bring in something new. ed. INOFFI"CIAL, a. [in and official.] Not IN'NOVATE, II. i. To introduce novelties INOBSERVANCE, n. Want of observ- official not proceeding from the proper ance neglect of observing disobedience. to make changes in any thing established not clothed with the usual forms officer; Bacon. with on. It is often dangerous to injio authority, or not done in an official INOBSERVANT, a. [in and observant.] of vale on the customs of a nation. character as an inofficial communication ; Beddoes. notice. Not taking IN'NOVATED, pp. Changed by the introINOBSERVA'TION, n. Neglect or want inofficial intelligence. duction of sometliing new. Pinclmey and Marshall would not make inof observation. Shuckfm-d. IN'NOVATING, ppr. Introducing novel- INOCULATE, V. t. [L. inoculo ; in and ocofficial visits to discuss official business. ties. Pickering. xilus, the eye.] INNOVA'TION,n. [from innovate.] Change 1. To bud to insert the bud of a tree or INOFFI"CIALLY, adv. Without the usual forms, or not in the official character. made by the introduction of something; in another tree or plant, for the pura. [in and officious.] INOFFl"CIOUS, new change in established laws, customs,! plant of pose growth on the new stock. All 1. Innovation is e.xpedieiit,l Unkind; regardless of natural obligation ; rites or practices. sorts of stone fruit, apples, pears, &c. when it remedies an evil, and safe, wlienl contrary to natural duty. may be inoculated. VVe inoculate the men are prepared to receive it. hinova-' stock Suggesting that the parent had lost the use with a foreign bud. of his reason, when he made the inofficious tesHon is often used in an ill sense, for a 2. To communicate a disease to a person Blackstone. tament. change that disturbs settled opinions and by inserting infectious matter in his skin Let not a father hope to excuse an inofficious practices without an equivalent advanor flesh as, to inoculate a person with the disposition of his fortune, by alledging that evtage. Whei of small or cow matter pox. pox ery man may do what he will witli his own. IN'NOVATOR, n. An introducer of chan- the latter disease is communicated, it is Paley. ges. called vaccination. 2. Unfit for an oflice. 2.
In
laio,
a word used
to point out the pre-
INOCULATOR,
cise person.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
—
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
—
;
Time
is
the greatest innovator.
One who
2.
Bacon
introduces novelties, or
who
makes changes by introducing something new.
INNOX'IOUS,
a.
[L. innoxius; norius, 7ioceo, to hurt.]
South. in and
V. i. To propagate by bud Thou drown'st thyself in inofficious sleep. B. Jonson. to practice inoculation. The time B. Jonson. to inoculate is when the buds are formed 3. Not civil or attentive. at the extremities of the same year's shoot, INOPERA'TION, n. Agency ; influence ; production of effects. [J^ol used.] indicating that the spring growth for that
INOCULATE, ding
;
season
Free from mischievous qualities; inno harmless as an innoxious drug. Not producing evil harmless in effects.
is
Bp. Hall.
complete.
pp. Budded ; as an inoculated stock. 2. ; 2. Inserted in another stock, as a bud. Innoxious flames are often seen on the hair 3. Infected by inoculation with a particular of men's heads, and on horses' manes. disease. Digby 3. Free from crime ; pure ; innocent. ppr. Budding ; propagating by inserting a bud on another stock. Pope. 2. Infecting by inoculation. adv. INNOX'IOUSLY, Harmlessly 1.
cent
;
INOCULATED,
;
INOCULATING,
;
with-]
out mischief. 2.
Without harm
suffered.
Brown
n. Harmlessness. Tooke of the small pox.
INNOX'IOUSNESS, The innoxiousness
INNUEND'O, in
and
nuo.]
n.
[L. from
I'luiuo, to
nod
INO€ULA'TION,
n.
The
[L. inocidatio.] act or practice of inserting buds of one plant under the bark of uuother for propagation. 2. The act or practice of communicating a disease to a person in health, by inserting
INOP'ERATIVE,
a.
and
[in
operative.]
having no operation producing no effect; as laws rendered inoperative by neglect inopera-
Not operative
not active
;
;
;
;
tive
remedies.
INOPPORTU'NE,
a.
[L. inopportnnus.
See
Opportune.]
Not opportune inconvenient ;
;
unseasonable
in time.
INOPPORTU'NELY, at
adv.
Unseasonably
;
an inconvenient time.
INOPPRESS'IVE, Not oppressive
;
a.
[in
and
oppressive.]
not burdensome. O. Wokott.
N a
I
opulent
a.
[in
to contaminate. [Lit
INQUISr-TION,
INOR'DINACY,
[from inordinate.] De-
n.
viation from order or rule prescribed ; irexcess, or want of regularity ; disorder moderation as the inordinacy of desire
INQUI'RABLE, a. [from inquire.] That may be inquired into subject to inquisi-
;
INOR'DINATE,
[L. inordinatus
a.
wand INQUIRE,
;
rir
ordo, order.] 1.
;
,
n. Deviation from order; excess; want of moderation; inordinacy intemperance in desire or other
INORDINA'TION, from rule or
n.
Irregularity
;
See
Jlcquire.]
will call the
has
knowledge or information, it is fol lowed l(y into. The coroner by jury in quires into the cause of a sudden death
When
a place or person
something hid or
is
missing,_/()r
or
sought, is
ly
Without organs. Not having organic
used.
;
from
oscular, to kiss.] In anatomy, to unite by apposition or contact to unite, as two vessels at their ex;
quired about him they inquired concerning his welfare. To seek for truth by argument or the disINOS'CULATE, v. t. To unite, as two ves- cussion of questions, or by investigation To inquire into, to make examination to sels in an animal body. INOS'CULATING, ;»;)r. Uniting, as the ex- seek for particular information. Inquire into the time, manner and place. Inquire tremities of two vessels. INOSCULA'TION, n. The union of two into all the circumstances of the case. vessels of an animal body at their ex- INQUI'RE, V. t. To ask about; to seek by asking as, he inquired the way but the tremities, by means of which a communication is maintained, and the circulation phrase is elliptical, for inquire for the of fluids is carried on anastomosy. Ray. way. as,
;
one vein or artery inoscu;
;
2.
We
age. tive
inqniro
;
;
inquiry ; official ex inquest of office, is an inquiry made by the king's officer, his sheror esclientor, concerning any iff, coroner, matter that entitles the king to the possession of lands or tenements, goods or It is made by a jury of no dechattels. In(iuisition
amination.
;
juiliiial
;
An
.3.
;
search. V.
t.
To
disturb
;
to
disposition to obtain information by questioning others, or by researches into facts, causes or principles ; curiosity to learn what is not known. The worksof nature furnish ample matter for the inquisitiveness of the
human mind.
INQUISITOR, n. [L. See Inquire.] One who inquires particularly, one whose offi;
cial 2.
n.
Disturbance.
to inquire.] I.
n.
[Fr.
from L.
The men who were sent from Cornelius, h;ic] made inquiry for Simon's house, and stood be-
inquieiu-l
;
and Gr.
u.
«.
xo«-ou,
[h. inquino,
from
xoicoj,
Acts x.
Search for truth, information or knowledge research examination into facts or principles by proposing and discussing questions, by solving problems, by experiments or other modes as physical inquiries ; inquiries about philosophical knowl;
;
;
in
fore the gate.
[JVo*
do; in and quies, rest.] Disturbed state; want of quiet restlessness; uneasiness, either of body or mind disquietude. Pope.
IN'QUINATE,
The act of inquiring; a seeking for information by asking questions; interrogation.
I
INQUI'ETUDE,
to defile;
common.]
duty
it is
to inquire
and examine.
Dryden. of the court of inquisition in
A member
Catholic countries.
Eticyc.
INQUISITORIAL,
a. Pertaining to inquias inquisitorial power. Pertaining to the catholic court of inquisition as inquisitorial tragedy. Encyc.
sition 2.
;
;
Buchanan.
Inquisitorial robes. a.
strict in-
;
'2.
used.]
The
;
1
INQUIETA'TION,
n.
:
;
;
South, trouble
[j\"ot iised.]
curiosity to
with scrutinv.
INQUISITO'RIOUS, Making edge or information. Milton. quiry. INQUI'RING, ppr. Seeking for information INRA'IL, V. I. To rail in to [in and rail.] by asking questions asking questioning inclose with rails. Hooker. Gay. interrogating examining. INQUIRY, n. [Norm, enquerre, fromquerer, INRA'ILED, pp. Inclosed with rails.
A
jury. Inquii-y
INQUI'ET,
Temple.
With
adv. ;
;
Blackstone determinate nund)er. In the United States, a similar inquiry, made by the proper officer, under the authority of a state. 2.
in research.
obtain information
;
INQUI'RENT, a. Making inquiry. INQUI'RER, n. One who asks a question one w ho interrogates one who searches or e.xamines one who seeks for knowl-
A person who is inquisi-
n.
one curious
INQUIS'ITIVENESS,
;
n. [Fr. enqueie ; L. inquisilio, in and qu(tro, to seek.]
IN'QUEST,
;
INQUISITIVELY,
;
;
usually inquisitive. Inclined to seek knowledge by discussion, investigation or observation ; given to reHe possesses an inquisitive mind search. live in an inquisitive or disposition.
INQUISITIVE,
2.
;
Sterne.
Apt to ask quesinquiry; inclined to r.
addicted to seek information by questions followed by about or after. He was very inquisitive about or after news. Children are
a vein inosculates with
an arterv.
Making inquiry;
as
a. s
tions;
Inquire fur
he was directed.
a.
in inquirv.
INQUISITIVE,
He was inquinng
adv.
structure void of organs; as earths, metals and other minerals. INOS'€ULATE, V. i. [L in and osculatus,
with another
Encyc.
busy
cofnmon-
mm ?aul of Tarsus. for the house to which Inquire for the cloke that is lost. Inquire for the right road. Sometimes it is followed by after. In quire after the right way. When some general information is sought, this verb is followed by about ; sometimes by concerning. His friends i
as minerals.
;
princes and people to extirpate heretics.
ular
;
Bacon. Examination discussion. In sfjiiie catholic countries, a court or tribunal established for the examination and punishment of heretics. This court was established in tlie tw elfth century by father Dominic, who was charged by pope Innocent III. with orders to excite catholic
INQUISI "TIONAL,
When
and organic] DeI "• [in void of organs; not ^ formed with the organs or instruments of life as the inorganic matter that forms Kirwan. the earth's surface. Inorganic bodies, are such as have no organs,
tremities
3. 4.
sent Hatloram, his son, to king David to inquire of his well'aie. 1 Chron. xviii. h'or lliou dost not inquire wisely concernijig tills, Eccl. vii. search is to be made for partic-
INORGAN'l€, INORGAN'IeAL,
INORGAN'ICALLY, INOR'GANIZED, a.
;
choree, to seek.
He
Halt.
deviaSouth.
;
right.
inquiro
to
;
quiry.
;
Bp.
Sp. inquiin and qucero, to seek
[Fr. enquerir
damsel and inquire at her Gen. xxiv. En o/" before the person asked. or quire of ihein, of \um. It has of, concerning, or after, before the subject of inIt
INOR'DINATENESS, passion.
i.
mouth.
Skelton.
immoderately.
;
V.
To afk a question; to seek for truth or information bj asking questions. We
;
cessively
L.
;
Malayan,
;
;
The justices in eyre had it formerly in charge make inquisition concerning them by a jury of the county. Blackstone.
Bacon.
tion or inquest.
Bp. Taylor.
Irregular disorderly excessive ; immoderate not liiiiited to rules prescribed, or to usual bounds as an inordinate love of the world inordinate desire of fame. INORDINATELY, adv. Irregularly: ex-
1.
I,.
quest.
;
;
or other passion.
lates
from
s as r.
n.
[Fr. Broun. See Inquire.] used.] inquisitio, inquiro. n. The act of defiling, or 1. Inquiry ; examination ; a searching or state of being defiled; pollution; corrup search. Ps. ix. lion. Bacon. 2. Judicial inquiry; official examination ; in[Little used.] ;
INQLINA'TION,
rich.
tion
to pollute
;
tie
;
;
defile
INS
N a
I
To
and opulent.] Not not aftluent or not wealthy
INOP'ULENT,
|
;
Locke.
edge.
The
first
be, wlio
made will
;
?
INRA'ILING, ;)/)r. INREG'ISTER, v.
Inclosing with t.
Register.] To register ; to record
rails.
[Fr. enregistrer. ;
See
to enter in a register. JValsh.
n. [in and road.] The entrance of an enemy into a country with purposes of hostility a sudden or desultory incursion or invasion. The confines of England and Scotland were formerly harassed with frequent inroads. The English made inroads into Scotland, and the Scots into England, and the country was sometimes
IN'ROAD,
;
desolated. inquiry of a rational being should 2. Attack encroachment. ; ? the second, why was I
made mc
who
is
my
Creator,
and what
is
his
INSA'FETY,
n.
Want
of safety.
[Rl] A'aunton.
INS
INS INtJALU'BRIOUS,
a.
by a short address,
and salubnous.]
[in
dedication
Not salubrious; not healthful ; unfavorable to health ; unwholesome ; as an insalubrious air «r climate. and
INSALU'BRITY, n. Want of salubrity;
[in
INSAL'UTARY,
and
book
salutary
;
[in
words; name.
salubrity.]
INSAN'ABLE,
to safety; productive of evil. a. [L. insanabilis ; in and
Incurable
sano, to heal.] healed.
INSA'NE,
a.
sound.]
Unsound
1.
ranced
INS€RI'BING,
mind or intellect mad demind delirious distracted.
ving
See
;
;
:
;
1.
it is
making mad,
Uttle
Used by or appropriated to insane per sons as an insane hospital.
An
insane person
as a hos-
;
engraved
;
Madly;
arfv.
with
foolishly;
out reason.
Montgomery. INSA'NENESS, ) " The state of being undesound in mind INSAN'ITY, I rangement of intellect madness. Insanword is applicaity is ch'ieHy used, and the ble to any degree of mental derangement from slight delirium or wandering, to dis. It is however rarely used to extraction.
marking
;
;
press slight, temporary delirium, occasioned by fever or accident. ;
[L. in and sapor, taste.] flavor. [JVot used.]
a.
An
o. insa'shable.
in
;
and
[Fr.
from
address or consignment of a book to a person, as a mark of respect, or an inviIt is less formal than tation of i)atrouage. a dedication.
Shak.
INSCRUTABILITY, INSeRU'TABLENESS,
insa'shableness.
Greediness of appetite that cannot be satKing Charles. appeased.
isfied or
INSA'TIABLY,
adv.
With
insn'shabhj.
greediness not to be satisfied.
INSA'TIATE, Not to be
South.
[L. insatiatus. insatiable ; as insatiate
a. insa'shate.
satisfied
;
thirst.
Philips.
INSA'TIATELY,
adv.
So greedily
as not
to be satisfied.
INSATI'ETY,
Insatiableness.
INSATISF ACTION,
inscrutable.
Want
n.
Granger.
of satisfac-
Bacon
INSAT'URABLE,
a. [L. insaturabilis satur, full.] to be saturated, filled or glutted.
;
ir;
and
Not
rance
;
n.
[in
and
science.]
Igno-
want of knowledge. Ch. Relig. Appeal.
[L. inscribe ; in and scribo, to write, Eng. to scrape. See Scribe.] 1. To write on to engrave on for perpetuity or duration ; as, to inscribe a line or
INS€RI'BE,
V.
t.
;
verse on a
monument, on
a
column or
To
as, to inscribe
imprint on; on the mind or memoi-y. 3. To assign or address to
;
to
anything
commend
to
a.
and L.
[insect
;
voro,
to eat.]
Feeding or subsisting on insects. winged animals are insectivorous.
Many
Diet. JVat. Hist.
INSECTOL'OgER, n.
2.
teries are inscrutable.
adv. In a manner or degree not to be found out or understood. The moral government of an infinite being must often be inscrutably dark and myste-
INSCRU'TABLY,
[insect insects.
studies
and Gr.
xayoi.]
[JVot in
use.
[L.insculpo; in and sculpo, to carve. [lAtto engrave.] To engrave tle itsed.] Shak.
INSCULP',
D.
safety
?i. An engraving; sculp[See Sculpture, which is generally Shak. used.]
INSeULP'TURE, ture.
INSE'AM,
V.
t.
mark with V.
t.
inserch'.
To make search.
[JVot used.]
INSECABLE,
n.
a.
[L. insecabilis;
Elyot. in and
seen, to cut.]
n. [L. insecta, plu., from inseco, in and seco, to cut. This name ; to have been originally given to certain small animals whose bodies appear cut in, or almost divided. So in Greek fptofia.]
Chesterfield.
security.]
Want
Want of safety danger hazard exposure to destruction or loss applied to tilings ; as the insecurity of a building exposed to fire the insecurity of a debt. ;
;
;
;
;
n.
INSEM'IN.\TE, sow.
Pursuit.
[L. insecutio.]
V.
Chapinati. To [L. insemino.]
t.
[Little used.]
INSEMINA'TION,
n.
The
act of sowing.
[Little ttsed.]
INSENSATE,
;
to cut in
and
With what insecurity of Uncertainty. we ascribe efl^ects to unseen causes.
sensibiiit)'.
[Fr.insense; L.
a.
That cannot be divided by a cutting instrusensus, sense.] ment indivisible. Encyc. Destitute of sense
IN'SECT,
[in
truth 3.
and seam.] To impress INSECU'TION, seam or cicatri.x. [PoetPope.
Without security or
adv.
without certainty.
[in
a
ical.]
INSEARCH,
;
their insecurity. 2.
[Little
Tourneur.
;
of safety, or want of confidence in safety. Seamen in a tempest must be conscious of
;
Inscription.
Not
safe not effectually guarded or protected; imsafe; exposed to danger or loss. Goods on the ocean are insecure. Hay and grain unhoused are insecure. Debts are often insecure.
INSECU'RELY,
f.
)!.
:
;
INSECU'RITY,
rious.
seems
pillar.
2.
That cannot be penetrated, discovered or understood by human reason. The ways of Providence are often inscrutable. Mys-
or
Johnson
INSCI'ENCE,
2.
incisure
;
incision.
INSECTIVOROUS,
One who
used.]
tion.
INSEC'TION,
in
;
INSCULP'TION, n.
being inscru-
[Ab< used.]
cutting in
a. [Fr. from L. inso-utaSee Entomologist.] and scrutor, to search.] INSECU'RE, a. [in and secure.] Not seUnsearchable; that cannot be searched not safe cure not confident of safety into and understood by inquiry or study. used of persons. No man can be quieti The designs of the enqjcror appear to be when he feels insecure. bilis
:
n.
S
The quality of
insect.
A
n.
;
insatiable thirst.
INSA'TIABLENESS,
""
An
n.
fVotton.
table.
L
;
;
}
Bacon.
INSECT'ILE,
INSCRU'TABLE,
satio, to satisfy.]
Incapable of being satisfied or appeased very greedy as an insatiable appetite or desire
Having
sects.
title.
INSCRIPTIVE, a. Bearing inscription. INS€ROLL, V. t. To write on a .scroll.
1.
Herbert insatiabilis
thing small or contemptible.
Any
INSECT'ILE,
A
3.
wanting
INSA'TIABLE,
Encyc. 2.
biscribe.]
Thomson. Something written or engraved to communicate knowledge to after ages; any IN'SECT, a. Small; mean; contemptible. character, word, line or sentence written INSECTA'TOR, n. A persecutor. [L.] or engraved on a solid substance for du[lAttle used.] as inscriptions on monuments, ration a. Having the nature of an We do INSECT'ED, called epitaphs, on pillars, &c. insect. Howell. not call by this name, writings on paper or a. the nature of in-
3.
;
Tasteless
improperly, to other small invertebral animals of the Linnean class Vermes.
ppr. Writing on; engraaddressing. Ji. [Fr. from L. insciiptio.
;
INSAP'ORY,
forming two distinct classes. Linne. Cuvier. The term i7isect has been applied, but
parchment.
pital for the insane.
INSA'NELY,
;
One who inscribes.
;
;
21.
Written on
pp.
INS€RIP'TION,
[In the sense of used.]
INSA'NE,
antennfe. Most insects pass through three states or metamorphoses, the larva, the chrysalis, and the perfect insect. The class of insects, in the Linnean system, is divided into seven orders, the last of which (Aplera) includes the Crustacea, which breathe by gill.s, and the Arachnides, which have no antennee, now
addressed. n.
In zoology, a small invertebral animai, breathing by lateral spiracles, and furnished with articulated extremities and
movable
Pownalt.
and sanu^,
in
;
in
in
;
that cannot be
;
Johnson insanus
[L.
marked
INS€RI'BER,
Shak.
2.
as,
INSeRI'BED,
Not tending
an ode or a
characters or to inscribe a stone with a letters,
To draw a figure within another, so that the angles of the figure inscribed touch the angles, sides or planes of the other Johnson. Encyc. figure.
not favorable to health or sound-
ness. 2.
1.
all
Not
salutary.]
as, to inscribe
;
a prince. with
To mark
unhealthfulness; unwholesomeness; as the insalubrity of air, water or climate. a.
to
INS formal than a
less
;
!;i
and
stupid; foolish wanting Milton. Hammond. ;
INSENSIBIL'ITY, n. I. Want of sensibility, or ing or perceiving.
[from insensible.] the power of feelfrozen limb is in a
A
state of insensibility, as after death.
is
an animal body
I 2.
N
INS
S
Want of the power to be moved or affected want of tenderness or susceptibility of emotion and passion. Not to be moved at the distresses of otliers denotes an insensi-
2.
Broome.
thing inserted.
INSERV'IENT, To V.
Conducive.
a.
3.
infix or implant.
t.
INSHA'DED,
Imperceptible;
felt
hypocritically.
different
INSINCERITY,
A
plant grows, and tlie body decays by insensible degrees. The humors of the body are evacuated by in to the eye.
ible
Browne.
INSHELL', V. t. To hide in a shell. INSIIEL'TER, V. i. To shelter.
or per-
\sinsens
INSHIP',
V.
Shak. Shak. Shak.
To
ship; to embark. [See Enshrine.]
t.
INSIIRINE. IN'SIDE, n.
and
[in
interior
The dense and bright light of the circle will obscure the rare and weak light of these dark colors round about it, and render them almost of the power of feehng or perwanting corporeal sensibility. ceiving injury to tlie spine often renders the inferior parts of the body insensible. 3. Not susceptible of emotion or passion void of feelijip; wanting tenderness. To be insensible to tlie sufferings of our fellow
strengthen
2. Destitute
To
vor.
in
ambush.
INSID'IOUS,
:
;
men ger
inhuman. To be I'nSEnsit/t of dannot always evidence of courage.
is
is
4.
Dull
5.
Void of sense or meaning
stupid
;
torpid.
;
words.
Hale.
INSENS'IBLENESS, ceive
;
1.
To
introduce gently, or into a narrow pasto wind in. Water insinuates itsell'
;
a.
wait
in
To
entrap;
INSID'IOUSLY,
adv.
With
To
intention to in
snare; deceitfully; treacherously; with Bacon malicious artifice or stratagem. Ponceau. ;INSI1)'10USNESS, n. A watching for an to opportunity to insnare ; deceitfulness
as insensible
Du
n. Inability
iier-
want of sensibility. [See which is generally used.]
Insensi-
H'otton.
[Fr. insimicr ; L. insinus, the bosom, a bay,
sage ; [h.'insidio.nis, frominsideo, into the crevices of rocks. and scdeo, to sit.] ; 1. Properly, lying in wait ; hence, watching 2. push or work one's self into favor; to introduce by slow, gentle or artful means. an opportunity to insnare or entrap ; de He in.
j
and
in
;
inlet or recess.]
Barrow.
I
;
An
;
[Little used.] v.t.
sinuo
To
Shak. [Fr.'from L. ?nsi7(im»is.] having the power to gain faa.
INSIN'UATE,
lie in
:
;
t. [in and sinetc] to give vigor to.
v. ;
Insinuating
;
INSID'IATE, V. t. [L. insidior.] ambush for. INSID'IATOR, n. One who lies
jVewtmi
sincerity
;
;
INSIN'UANT,
;
insensible.
Without
n.
;
2.
part of a thing; internal part opposed to the inoutside ; as the inside of a church side of a letter.
sensible perspiration.
adv.
Dissimulation; want of sincerity or of being in reality what one appears to be hypocrisy used ofpersons. Deceitfulness hollowness used of things ; as the insincerity of professions.
INSIN'EW,
The
side.]
Not sound.
Chaucer. shades.
cannot be
tliat
The motion of the earth
ceived.
;
;
|INSINCE'RELY,
Marked with
a.
S
false ; tised of Deceitful hypocritical things ; as insincere declarations or pro-
fessions.
;
sensus, sense, scntio, to feel.] 1.
The
INSET',
extremely unnatural. Dullness; stupidity torpor. IN-SENS'IBLE, a. [Fr. Sp. from L. in and bilily
,
3.
2.
body.
;
N
1
tendons, &c. in other parts of the
sels,
Do 4.
To
artfully.
;
All tlie art of rhetoric, besides order and clearare for nothing else hut to insinuate
Barrow
treachery.
n. in'silc. [in and sight] Sight or view of the interior of any thing deep thorinspection or view ; introspection ough knowledge or skill.
by remote allusion. all the liclions bards pursue. but insinuate what's true. Swift. instill ; to infuse gently ; to introducihint; to suggest
And
ness,
IN'SIGHT,
ideas, move the passions and thereby Locke. mislead the judgment. v. i. To creep in; to wind in ; to flow in ; to enter gently, slowly or senses. A garden gives us a great insight into the Mdison. The hills rise insensibly. imperceptibly, as into crevices. contrivance aud wisdom of Providence. 2. To gain on the affections by gentle or artMen often 2. By slow degrees ; gradually. Spectator. ful means, or by imperceptible degrees; slide insensibly into vicious habits. INSIG'NIA, n. [L. phi.] Badges or distinas insinuating flattery. INSENT'IENT, a. [in and sentient.] Not guishing marks of office or honor. To wind Milton. .3. bilittj,
INSE'NSTBLY, manner not
adv.
Imperceptibly
to be felt or perceived
;
in a
by the
;
having perception or the power of perception.
bilis
;
in
and
Burke.
Reid. 2. Marks, signs or visible impressions, by which any thing is known or distinseparabilis, separo, to sepaBeattie. guished.
INSEP' ARABLE,
a.
[Fr.
INSIGNIF'I€ANCE,
rate.]
}
and
[in
(,
;
separation
with indissoluble Bacon. Temple.
;
Not
a.
separate.
ing 2.
[.Vol
;
separated.
adv.
[JVot used.]
So as not to be Cranmer
1i.
as insigyjificant words.
Unimportant ; answering no purpose having no weight or effect; as itisignifi cant
INSEP' ARATELY,
along.
INSIN'UATED,
pp. Introduced or conveyed gently, imperce|)libly or by winding into crevices
in; flowing in
;
2.
V. t. fellow. [Fr. inserer; L. iiwero, inscrlum ; in and sero, to thrust.] n. An insignificant, triTaller. hence, to set in or Literally, to thrust in fling or worthless thing. adv. Without mean among as, to insert a cion in a stock ; to insert a letter, word or passage in a coming, as words. position ; to ijisert an advertisement or 2. Without importance oreflfect; to no pur1
INSER'TION, 1.
71.
[Fr.
from L.
I
insertio.]
The act of setting or placing in or among as the insertion of cions in other things stocks the insertion of words or passages in writings the insertion of notices or essays in a public paper the insertion of vcs;
I
I
;
Vol. I.
I
The
n.
hint-
from L. insinua-
[Fr.
act of insinuating
a creeping or
;
The
which made him acceptable 4.
pany. hint
A
in the
best
com-
Clarendon.
a suggestion or intimation by dis-
;
tant allusion. Slander bv insinuations.
INSIN'UATIVE
be conveyed
may
Stealing on the affec-
Bacon.
tions.
One who
INSIN UATOR, n
ins'uiuates
;
;
sincenis, sincere.]
Not sincere
vapid
not being in truth what one appears to be dissembling hypocritical false used of persons ; as an insincere ;
;
I
;
;
insensibly
;
one that hints. INSIP'ID, a. [Fr. insipide ; L. insipidus ; pose. INSIGNIF'I€ATIVE, a. Not expressing in and sapidus, sapio, to taste.] 1. Tasteless; destitute of taste by external signs. wanting the INSINCE'RE, a. [L. insincerus ; in and qualities which affect the organs of taste ;
.1.
;
to
in ; a flowing into crevices. act of gaining on favor or affections, by gentle or artful means. 3. The art or power of pleasing and stealing on the affections. He had a natural in.'iinuation and address,
INSIGNIFICANTLY,
;
Tending
winding
2.
INSIGNIFICANT,
other writing in a paper. INSERT'ED, pp. Set in or among. INSERT'ING, p;)r. Setting in or among.
winding
gaining on gently
tio.] 1.
INSERT',
;
ppr. Creeping or
enter gently winning favor and confidence. a.
INSINUA'TION,
;
;
hinted.
;
ing.
rites.
Without weight of character mean con as an iirsignificant being or
temptible
;
INSIN'UATING,
signiji-
"' or disjoined ; not INSIGNIF'I€ANCY, S cance.] There is an inseparable con \. Want of to be parted. significance or meaning; as the nection between vice and suffering or puninsignificance of words or phrases. ishment. 2. Unimportance; want of force or effect INSEP'ARABLENESS, ? "• Tire quality as the insignificance of human art or of of being inceremonies. Mdison. JNSEPARABIL'JTY, separable, or incapable of disjunction. .3. Want of weicht meanness. Locke. INS1GNIF'I€ANT, a. [in and significaiH.] [The tatter ivord is rarely used.] INSEP' ARABLY, adv. In a manner that 1. Void of signification; destitute of mean-
prevents union.
INSIN'UATE,
from L. insepam-
That cannot be separated
INSEP' ARATE,
wrong
;
;
;
;
2.
;
Wanting
Ill
wantspirit, life or animation power of exciting emoas an insipid dull heavy an insipid composition. ;
ing ])athos, or the tions
;
address
heart.
as insipid liquor.
flat ;
;
;
;
N
I
INS
S
to gratify desire
Wanting power
3.
IN'SOLATING,
as in-
;
tion of
sipid pleasures.
Want
1.
of
'^-
L*^
or the power of exciting tongue.
tlie
AVant of life or
spirit. Dryilen's lines shine strongly
through the inPope. taste ; without
sipidity o( Tate's. spirit
or
life
;
without enjoyment.
INSIP'lENCE, sapio, to
Want
Without
adv.
INSIP'IDLY,
n.
[L. insipientia
Locke. in and
;
be wise.]
of wisdom
folly
;
foolishness
;
of understanding. INSIST', V. i. [Fi: insister and sisto, to stand.]
sun-beams.
;
want
temptuous and overbearing treatment of others petulant contempt impudence. ;
;
Johnson.
L.insisto;in
;
Blown with
Literally, to stand or rest on.
1.
insolence and wine.
IN'SOLENCE,
[Rarely
contempt.
Ray.
used.]
V.
To
t.
haughty K. Charles.
contempt of others neering in power
;
overbearing
2.
topic. on, to press
or urge for any insist thing with immovable firmness; to perdemands as, to insist on oppressive terms in a treaty to insist on immediate payment of a debt. INSIST'ENT, a. Standing or resting on as an insistent « all. [LAttle vsed.] Wotlon. INSIST'URE, n. dwelling or standing Shak. on fixedness. 04s.
Proceeding from insolence haughty and contemptuous; as insolent words or be the
Unaccustomed;
IN'SOLENTLY, pride
primary
sense.
;
rudely
)!.
[in
and
Want
solidity.]
1.
ingraft-
[in
We
snare.] To catch to take by artificial
and ;
in
means. 2.
2.
To
;
To
;
;
its
parts will not separate
1.
Not
tainty
perplexities.
a.
from L. in
[Fr.
;
2.
INSOLVENCY, ;
of sobriety
n.
[in sn^i sobriety.]
intemperance
INSO'CIABLE,
a.
Want
Decay of Piety. [Fr.fromh. insociabilis ;
in and sociabilis, socio, to unite.] 1. Not inclined to unite in social
not given to conversation
converse unsociable
;
;
taciturn.
That cannot be joined or connected. Lime and wood
IN'SOLATE,
V.
are insociable.
t.
[L. insolo
;
[./Vof
in
and
;
;
To superintend. INSPECT', n. Close examination.
4.
INSPECT'ED,
taining the quality or condition. n. [Fr. from L. inspectio.] or into ]>rying examination ; close or careful survey ; as the divine inspection into the afiairs of the world.
INSPECTION, 1. A looking on
as
;
2.
Watch at
3.
or the state of person to pay wanting property sufficient for such payment as a merchant's insolvency. to all debts of the discharge Insufliciency owner as the insolvency of an estate.
4.
;
Bentley,
guardianship as a youth placed school under the inspection of a friend. ;
;
Superintendence ; oversight. The fortifications are to be executed under the inof an officer of the army.
spection Official
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
i7i use.] IVntlon.
sol. tlie
sun]
the sun's rays; to expose to the dry heat nf the sun to ripen or prepare by exp'isiu'c to the sun. IN'SOLATEl), pp. Exposed to the sun dried or matured in the sun's rays. in
;
;
[JVot ;
view a careful viewing and examining of commodities or manufactures, to ascertain their quahty as the inspection of flour. J}ct of insolvency. [Sec '\ntra, Insolvent lat INSOLVENT, a. [L. in and solvens, solvo', 5. Official examination, as of arms, to see that they are in good order for service. to solve, to li-ee, to pay.] 1. Not having money, goods or estate suffi- INSPECTOR, n. One who inspects, views as an insolvent or oversees as an inspector of morals an cient to j)ay all debts debtor. inspector of the press. 2. Not suflieient to pay aU the debts of the 2. A superintendent one to whose care the owner as an insolvent estate. execution of any work is counnilted, for 3. Respecting insolvent debtors the purpose of seeing it faithfully performrelieving an insolvent debtor from imprisonment ed. fiir debt, or from liability to arrest and im 3. .An officer whose duty is to examine the ])risonmcnt for debts previously contractquality of goods or connnodities offered ed as an iiisolvent law. fur sale. Daggett. Sergeant 4. An officer of the customs. Insolvent law, or act of insolvency, a law 5. A military officer whose duty is to inspect which liberates a debtor from imprisonthe troojjs and examine their arms. 2.
drunkenness.
;
;
;
Inability of a
:
;
in
for the
To look into to view and examine, for the i)urpose of ascertaining the quality or condition of a thing as, to inspect potash to inspect flour to inspect arms. To view and examine for the purpose of discovering and correcting errors as, to inspect the press, or the proof-sheets of a book. ;
3.
Pope.
INSOBRI'ETY,
To
;
That cannot be paid or discharged. n. [infra.] all his debts
cidties.
2.
2.
M'atts.
;
snare entrapping; seducing; involving in diffi
view or oversee
;
;
ities.
INSNA'RER, n. One that insnares. INSNA'RING, ppr. Catching in a
to
purpose of examination. It is the duty of parents to inspect the conduct or manners of their children.
loosen or dissolve.]
not admitting solution or exjjlication an insolvable problem or difliculty.
[This word is often written ensiiare, but insnare is the trueorthngrapliy.] INSNA'RED, pp. Caught in a snare entrapped; inveigled; involved in perplex-
;
Thomson. pp. Viewed with care examined bv the eye or officially. INSPECT'ING, ;);3r. Looking on or into; and viewing with care examining for ascer-
be cleared of difliculty or uncernot to be solved or explained
to
look on
[J^'ot
tnuch used.]
to involve in difliculties or
To
used.]
;
not to be
as a doubt or difliculty.
INSOLV'ABLE, solvo, to
entangle
when
water,
and mix with that fluid. Not to be solved or explained resolved
to inveigle ; to seduce by artifice take by wiles, stratagem or deceit. The flattering tongue is apt to insnare the artless youth.
3.
a. [Fr. from L. insolubilis ; in and solvo, to dissolve.] That cannot be dissolved, particularly by a liquid. say a substance is insoluble
;
and
saucily.
;
of solidity; weakness. More. 7i. [from insoluble.] The quality of not being soluble or dissolvable, particidarly in a fluid.
Ray.
t.
to entrap
least in classical composition.] V. t. [L. inspicio, inspectum specio, to view.]
INSPECT',
INSOLUBIL'ITY,
sero, to plant.]
V.
;
;
V
[J^ot
INSIT'lENCY, n. [L. in and sitio, to thirst.] Grew. Freedom from thirst. INSP'TION, )!. [L. insitio, {torn insitus, in- INSOL'UBLE,
;
Troubled with
word or combination of words is not deemed elegant, and is obsolescent, at
With contemptuous
adv.
haughtily
;
INSOLID'ITY,
A
ment.
Sergeant. or ;
insomniosus
[L.
restless in sleep. adv. [in, so, and much.] So to that degree. Simonides was an excellent poet, insomuch that he niade his fortune by it. Estrange.
that
Dry den.
;
in a snare
dreams
1.
;
TNSNA'RE,
debtor unable to pay
INSOMUCH',
wserf.]
;
;
A a.
in and somnus, sleep.]
;
havior. 3.
;
insertion of a cion in a stock
n.
his debts.
Atterbury. [This
a particular
The
in a limited sense, as the words generally used, an insolvent law-
INSOM'NIOUS,
domi-
;
now
INSOLVENT,
as an insolent master.
;
;
sist in
are
extends only to protect the person of the debtor from imiH-isonment on account of debts previously contracted. Stat, of Conn. Ifheaton^s Rep.
Proud and haughty, with
a.
But
ors.
Milton.
treat with
[jVo< ttsed.]
IN'SOLENT,
In geometry, an angle is said to insist upon the arc of the circle intercepted between the two lines which contain tlie angle. 3. To dwell on in discourse as, to insist on 2.
To
ment, or exempts him froin liability to airest and imprisonment on account of any debt previously contracted. These terms may be considered as generic, comprehending also bankrupt laws, which protect a man's future acquisitions from his credit-
ac-
n. The act of exposing to the rays of the sun for drying or maturing, as fruits, drugs, &c. or for rendering acid, as vinegar, or for promoting some chimical action of one substance on another. 2. A stroke of the sun ; the action of extreme heat on the brain. Battie. IN'SOLENCE, n. [Fr. from L. insolentia ; in and soleo, to be accustomed. J Pride or haughtiness manifested in con-
'"*'/'"'"f-J
i;
taste,
sensation in 2.
to the
INSOLA'TION,
"•
INSIP'IDNESS,
INS
Exposing
ppr.
;
;
;
INSPECT'ORATE, INSPECTORSHIP, INSPERS'ED,
a.
of an
The courage
inspector. fVashington. [JVot Sprinkled on.
INSPIR'ITED,
I
The
""
INS
INS
INS office
of
Agamemnon
ij
inspirited
the love of empire and aml>ition.
S
Enhvened
pp.
;
by
Pope animated
IN'STANCE, n. 1.
;
n.
[L. inspersio, inspergo; The act of to scatter.]
I.
2.
;
»i.
;
parts,
emplification.
INSPIIE'RE, in
V.
t.
[in
and
sphere.]
INSPIS'SATED,
To
place Milton.
an orb or sphere.
INSPI'RABLE, a. [from inspire.] may be inspired. 2. Tliut may be drawn into the lungs
INSPISSA'TION,
in
of rendering a
;
n.
fluid
The
li-
and opposed
The The
;
Urgency
;
portunity
;
and
;
from
;
a stand-
a pressing
;
solicitation
The
application.
;
re(juest
im-
was
Suppose the earth should bo removed nearer and revolve, for in.itance, in the orof Mercuiy, the whole ocean would boil
to the sun,
with heat. Tlie usi- of instances, plain a dilhculty.
L. in
stabilis,
inslo, to press
Literally,
;
bit
substance thicker by
in
from L.
parte.
act or operation
n. [Fr. inslabiliii
slabilitas, ijistabitis sto, to stand.]
to expiration. act of breathing into any thing. infusion of ideas into the mind by the Holy Spirit ; the conveying into the minds of men, ideas, notices or monitions
tion, ;3.
li-
evaporation, &c.
INST.VBIL'ITY,
;
9.
Thickened, as a
ppr. Thickening, as a
[Fr.
to stand.]
Hence,
granted at the instance of the defendant's advocate. Example; a case occurring a case oflered. Howard furnished a remarkable inThe stance of disinterested benevolence. world may never witness a second instance of the success of daring enterprise and usurpation, equal to that of Buona-
quor. ;
as air or vapors. INSPIRA'TION, )i. [Fr. from L. inspiro.] 1. The act of drawing air into the lungs the inhaling of air a branch of respira-
halable
pp.
([uor.
That INSPIS'SATING,
sto,
ing on.
invigorated.
INSPIRITING, ppr. Infusing spirit giving new life to. in and spargo, INSPIS'S ATE, V. [L. in and spissus, thick.] Ainsworlk. on. To thicken, as fluids to bring to greater sprinkfing Me have INSPEX'IMUS, inspected [we consistence by evaporating the thinner An exfirst word of ancient charters, Sfc] &.C. used.]
TNSPER'SION,
and
171 ;
3.
is
Bentley. and ex-
to illustrate
Baker. occasion occurrence. These seem as if, in the time of Edward drawn into the form of u were up they
Time
;
;
I, Want of stability want of firmness in Hale. law, in the first instance. inconstancy ; fickleness mutaShak. of opinion or conduct. Iiislabiliti/'is 4. Motive influence. Obs. Obs. 5. Process of a suit. Ayliffe. the characteristic of weak minds. a branch of the court of Instance-court, by extraordinary or supernatural induence 2. Changeableness mutability as the in or the communication of the divine will admiralty, in England, distinct from the stabiliti/ of \a\vs, plans or iiieasiircs. to the understanding by suggestions or INSTA'iJLE, n. lirize-court. [I., instabilis.] Inconstant; IN'ST.\N(JE, I', i. To give or ofier an eximi)i-cssions on the muid, which leave no prone to change or recede from a purpose room to doubt the reality of their superample or case. mutable of persons. As to false citations I shall instance in two natural origin. 2. Not steady or fixed o/ changeable 1.
;
pin[)ose
;
;
;
liility
;
;
;
—
;
All Scripture
given by inspiration of
God
Tillotson.
or three.
IN'STANCE, V. t. To mention as an exam[Instable and unstable are synonymous, and He instanced the event of ple or case. The infusion of ideas or directions by the the latter is more commonly used.] Cesar's death. supposed deities of pagans. INSTA'BLENESS, ;i. Unstableness mu- IN'STANCED, pp. or a. Given in proof or The infusion or communication of ideas 2 Tim.
4.
is
;
;
things.
iii.
;
5.
tability instability. as an example. Bp. Halt. or poetic spirit, by a suiierior being or sup- INST.'VLL', I'. «. [Fr. installer ; Sp.instalar; a. [Fr. from L. inslans, inslo.] from stellen, IN'ST.VNT, It. installare ; from G. stall, posed presiding power as the inspiration 1. Pressing; urgent; importunate; earnest. of Homer or other poet. U. sldlen, to set, Gr. j'fXXu, to send.] in hope in tribulation ; palient Rejoicing INSPIRATORY, a. Pertaining to inspira- To set, ])lace or instate, in an oflice, rank or Rom. xii. contiiiidng instant in prayer. tion, or inhaling air into the lungs. order; to invest with any charge, office or 2. Immediate without intervening time ; .Med. Repos. rank, with the customary cereinnnies. To present. and in i. install a clergyman or minister of the gos spiro, INSPI'RE, V. [L. inspiro; Impending death is thine and iiistant doom. to breathe; Fr. i7ispirer.] pel, is to place one who has been previ Prior. To draw in breatli to inhale air into the ously ordained, over a particular church 3. Quick making no delay. to invest an ordain or to and expire. lungs opposed congregation, Instant he flew with hospitable haste. into. To breathe t. V. ed minister with a particular pastoral INSPI'RE, Pope. Ye nine, descend and sing. charge in England, to induct a dean 4. Present current. On the tenth of The breathing instruments inspire. Jidy Pope. prebendary or other ecclesiastical dignitainstant. 2. To infuse by breathing. church to whicl into of the possession ry He knew not hii Maker, and him that inIN'STANT, n. A point in duration ; a mohe belongs. IVisdiim. ment a part of duration in which we perKpired into him an active soul. n. The act of giving 3. To infuse into the mind;as, toins;)i>e with INSTALLATION, ceive no succession, or a part that occupossession of an oflice, rank or order, with new life. pies the time of a single thought. the customary ceremonies. 4. To infuse or suggest ideas or monitions 2. A particular time. Shak. On the election, the bishop gives a mandate ITY, n. Unpremeditated supernaturally ; to communicate divine infor his i;is(aWa
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
INSTANTANE
;
;
INSTALLMENT,
INSTANTANEOUSLY, ;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
INS
INS
INS
in
and
To
establish
to appoint ; to enact ; to ; ; form and prescribe ; as, to instittUe laws ; drop.] to institute rules and regulations. To infuse by drops. Milton. moment. 2. To infuse slowly, or by small quantities; 2. To found ; to originate and establish as, any to institute a new order of as, to instill good principles into the mind. nobility ; to inLightning often kills instantly. INSTILLA'TION, n. [L. instillatio.] The stitute a court. 2. With urgent importunity. To ground or establish in principles ; to act of infusing by drops or by small quanAnd when they came to Jesus, they besought educate ; to instruct ; as, to institute chiltities. him instantly, saying, that he was woithy for dren in the principles of a science. whom he should do this. Luke vii. 2. The act of infusing slowly into the mind. Acts 3. That which is instilled or infused. To begin ; to commence ; to set in opera 3. With diligence and earnestness. xxvi. tion ; as, to institute an inquiry ; to instiINSTILL'ED, pp. Infused by drops or by tute a suit. INST'AR, t'. t. [in and star.] To set or slow degrees. adorn with stars, or with brilliants. 5. To invest with the spiritual INSTILL'ER, Ji. He that instills. part of a ben A golden throne efice or the care of souls. INSTILL' ING, ppr. Infusing by drops or Blackstonr. J- Barlow Instarr'd with gems. slow degrees. Shale. IN'STITUTE, n. [L. institutum ; Fr. instiby or INSTA'TE, V. I. [in and state.] To set INSTILL'MENT, n. Any thing instilled. tut.] in a rank or con Shak 1. Established law ; settled order. place ; to establish, as dition ; as, to instate a person in greatness INSTIM'ULATE, v. t. To stimulate; toe.x- 2. Precept ; maxim ; principle. South. Atterbury. or in favor. citc. To make the Stoic institutes thy own. [JVot used.] Shak. Obs. a. To invest. lNSTIM'ULATING,;)jor. Not stimulating; Dryden INSTATED, pp. Set or placed. not exciting vital powers. Cheyne .3. A book of elements or principles ; particINSTA'TING, ppr. Setting or placing. and n. stimulaINSTIMULA'TION, [in ularly, a work containing the principles instau L. from n. INSTAURA'TION, [Fr. tion.] of the Roman law. ratio, instauro, to renew.] The act of stimidating, inciting or urging 4. In Scots laiv, when a number of Encyc. persons Renewal ; repair ; re-establishment ; the resforward. in succession hold an estate in tail, the first toration of a thing to its former state, afa. See the INSTINCT', [L. instinctus. is called tlie institute, the others substitutes. ter decay, lapse or dilapidation. Noun.]
The
party
was compelled
INSTILL',
to plead instan-
V.
[L. instiUo
t.
stillo, to 1.
ter.
IN'STANTLY,
adv. Immediately intervening time ; at the
without
;
1.
;
•
One who renews
Encyc. pp. Established appointed founded ; enacted invested with the Faber life. care of souls. stead, place foundof a noun, and is followed by of; instead IN'STINeT, )i. [Fr. \l.instinto,istinto; Sp. IN'STITUTING,p;)r. Establishing; Voit.instinto ; from L. instinctus, inwardly ing enacting investing with the care of manner as in the stead of] of, in the same souls. moved in and slinguo, Gr. j i?«, ;iyu. In the place or room of. See Distinguish, Extinguish. Tiie sense INSTITU'TION, n. [Fr. from L. institutio.] Let thistles grow instead of wheat. Job of the root is to thrust; hence the com- L The act of establishing. xxxi.
INSTAURA'TOR,
n.
or Moved; animated; e.xcited More.
restores to a former condition.
INSTEAD,
;
;
as
with Milton
tJisifncJ
Obs.
spirit.
of in and [a compound but stead retains its character
Betulla — instinct with
insted'.
IN'STITUTED,
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
Absalom made Amasa captain of the host in 2 Sam. xvii.
pound,
stead o/Joab.
This consideration is instead of a thou sand arguments. In this use, instead may be equivalent to equal to. When instead is used withont of followwords are ing, there is an ellipsis, or some understood.
INSTEE'P, soak
;
to
V.
[in andsteep.] To steep or to macerate in moisture. ;
t.
drench
A
2. «i!s
in, infixed.
certain
See
Instigate.]
power or
disi)Osition
of mind by
Establishment that which is appointed, prescribed or founded by authority, and ;
inteiuled
be
to
permanent.
Thus we
speak of the institutions of Moses or Lyapply the word institution to curgus. laws, rites, and ceremonies, which are enjoined by authority as permanent rules of coniluct or of government. whatever is necessary for the presei-va tion of the individual, or the continuation 3. A system, plan or society established, either by law or by the authority of individof the kind. Such, in the human species, which, independent of all instruction or experience, without deliberation and without having any end in view, animals are unerringly directed to do spontaneously
We
uals for promoting any object, pubhc or Shak. is the instinct of sucking exerted immedicall a college or an social. academy, ately after birth, and that of insects in dea literary institution ; a bible society, a beSteeped ; soaked ; positing their eggs in situations most fappr. nevolent or charitable institution; a bankvorable for hatching. drenched lying under water. Encyc. Instinct may be defined, the operation of the ing company and an insurance company INSTEE'PIN'G, ppr. Steeping ; soaking. are commercial institutions. IN'STEP, n. [in and step.] The instep of principle of organized life by the exercise of certain natural powers directed to the 4. A system of the elements or rules of any the human foot, is the fore part of the upart or science. with Encyc. present or future good of the individual. per side of the foot, near its junction /n5
To keep uniler INSTEE'PED,
2.
We
or in water.
;
provoke
;
;
used chiefy or wholly in an instigate
one
to
evil
;
to
ill
urge
;
sense
;
instigate
:
as, to
to a
INSTINCT'ED,
a.
mating power.
INSTIN€'TION,
Impressed
[Little used.] n. Instinct.
crime.
IN'STIGATED,
ppr.
as an ani-
Bentley. use.]
Elyot.
pp. Incited or
persuaded,
as to evil.
IN'STIGATING,
;
[Not in
Inciting
;
tempting
INSTIN€T'IVE,
a.
Prompted by
instinct
;
acting
;
to evil. n. Incitement, as to evil or wickedness; the act of encouraging to commit a crime or some evil act. 2. Temptation impulse to evil as the instigation of the devil. IN'STIGATOR, ?(. One who incites another to an evil act a tempter. 2. That which incites; that which moves persons to commit wickedness.
JNSTIGA'TION,
;
;
;
;
IN'STITUTE, statuo, to set.]
'v.
i.
[L.
instituo;
in
a.
Enjoined institutEtym. Vocabulary. Elemental con;
ed by authority.
INSTITUTIONARY,
a.
;
taining the first principles or doctrines.
Brown.
;
without reasoning, deliberation, instruction or experience determined by natural impulse or propenThe propensity of bees to form hexsity. agonal cells for holding their honey and their young, must be instinctive. INSTIN€T'IVELY, adv. By force of in stinct without reasoning, instruction or experience ; by natural impulse.
spontaneous
INSTITU'TIONAL,
and
IN'STITUTIST,
n.
A writer
of institutes or
elementary rules and instructions. Harvey. a. That establishes havBarrow. ing power to establish. 2. Established depending on institution. Milton.
IN'STITUTIVE,
;
;
IN'STITUTOR, establishes
;
71.
one
[L.]
who
The person who enacts laws, rites
and ceremonies, and enjoins the observance of them.
INS The person who founds
2.
N
I
INS
S A
caimon are instruments ot' deA telescope is an astronomical
kets and
an
scheme
pubhc or
Stratified
a.
Journ. of Science. INSTRUCT', V. t. [L. instruo, instruclum ; in and struo, to set or to put on, to furnish Fr. It. instruire ; Sp. instruir. The L. slruo is contracted from slmco or strugo. else.
something
ly
;
See
To
1.
cate
was
3.
Destroy.] to inform the ;
mind ; to eduimpart knowledge to one who The first duty of pa-
teacli ;
to
destitute of it. is to instruct
rents
tist in
adv. To a degree beas a blaze insufferably ; bright; a person insufferably proud.
INSUFFI"CIENCY,
3.
5.
To direct or command ; to furnisli with orders. The president instructed his envoy to insist on the restitution of the
An
;
incompetency
INSUFFU'CIENT,
sufficiency.]
;
as the insuffi-
and
[in
sufficient.]
Not sufficient; inadequate to any need, use or purpose. The provisions are insufficient in quantity and defective in qual-
2.
Wanting in strength, power, ability, or skill; incapable; unfit; as a person i/i«!{/^ Jicient to discharge the duties of an office.
ity.
veyed. A person who acts for another, or is employed by another for a special purpose, and if the purpo.se is dishonorable, the term implies degradation or meanness. ;
a.
1.
j
I
INSUFFI "CIENTLY,
as an incontrib-
adv. With want of sufficiency; with want of proper ability or skill ; inadequately. INSUFFLA'TION, n. [L. in and suffio, to
I
uting aid ; serving to promote or effect an object helpful. The press has been instrumental in enlarging the bounds of
;
and
machine or body constructed ciency of a niiin for an olfice. for yielding harmonious sounds ; as an or- 3. Want of tlie requisite strength, value or force ; defect. gan, a harpsicliord, a violin, or flute, &c., which are called musical instruments, or The insufficiency of the light of nature \% instruments of music. Hooker. supplied by the li^ht of Scripture.
strument or means to some end
To inform to advise or give notice to. On tliis question the coiu't is not instruct-
[in
;
incapacity
ligion. artificial
INSTRUMENT'AL,fl. Conducive
property. 4.
n.
Inade(]uateness want of sufficiency ; deficiency ; as an insuffciency of provisions to sup[)ly the garrison. re- 2. Inadeciuacy of power or skill; inability; 1.
;
a charger. Matt. xiv.
llie
yond endurance
In law, a writing containing the terms of a contract, as a deed of conveyance, a in gengrant, a patent, an indenture, &;c. eral, a writing by which some fact is recorded for evidence, or some right con-
their children in the
principles of religion and raorahty. B. To direct; to enjoin; to persuade or ad-
monish. She being before instructed by her mother, said, give me here tlie head of John the Bap-
extensive reformation in morals and
—
INSUF'FERABLY,
or things. Bad men are often instruments of ruin to others. The distribution of the Scriptures may be the instrument of a vast-
Dryden. within
daily pester
slufl"
I}rydcn.
;
INSTRA'TIFIED,
who
world with their insufferable
struction. for the promotion of a instrument. social object. 3. An instructor ; one who educates ; as an 2. That which is sub.servient to the execution of a plan or purpose, or to the proIVaUcer. institutor of youth. duction of any effect ; means used or conINSTOP', V. t. [in and stop.] To stop ; to close ; to make fast. tributing to an effect applicable to persons [Liille used.] ciety or
multitude of scribblers
blow.] Tlie act of breathing on. The act of blowing a substance into a cavCoze. ity of the body. made by inused.] Ayliffe. 2. Pertaining to instruments INSU'ITABLE, a. Unsuitable. [Little used.] INSTltUCT'ED, pp. Taught; informed; struments as instrumental music, distinBurnet. trained up: educated. is from which made vocal music, guished IN'SULAR, a. [L. insularis, from insula, an lNSTUUeT'IBLE,a, Able to instruct. [Ill] by the human voice.
5.
To model
;
form
to
to prepare.
;
1.
;
ed.
[Ab<
2.
knowledge.
;
;
INSTRUCT'ING, ing the
mind
;
ppr. Teaching
;
Bacon. inform-
n.
[Fr.
from L. instruc-
tio.]
The
act of teaching or informing the understanding ill tlial of which it was before
ignorant information. Precepts conveying knowledge. Receive my instruction and not silver. Prov. ;
2.
au.xiiiary means to
directing.
INSTRUCTION, 1.
isle.]
INSTRUMENTAL'ITY, n.
command mandate. order Direction The minister received instructions from ;
second causes.
demand a
;
2.
INSTRUMENT' ALNESS, as of
means
/.
I'.
denominate.
INSUAV'ITY,
strultivo
;
Fr.
an end
to
;
n.
[Sp. instructivo
;
It.
in
to instructor inform. Affliction furnishes vei^ instructive lessons. IVELY, adv. So as to afford
style.] [in [JVot used.] )i.
to
;
instruction.
to
To
call
;
3.
to 4.
Defect of submission
j
INSUBORDINATE,
a.
Not submitting
tol
authority.
|
;
Marshall. J. M. Mason. INSUBSTAN'TIAL, a. Unsubstantial; not, Shak. real. ful authority.
INSUCCA'TION, n. iTt
;
profession.
INSTRUCT'RESS, ;
A
n.
female
who
;
Coie.l
in
1.
2.
;
;
a.
and
[in
3.
sufferable.]\
Intolerable that cannot be borne or endured as insufferable heat, cold or pain. That cannot be permitted or tolerated. Our wrongs are insufferable. Detestable contemptible disgusting be;
;
;
A
jects. 2.
;
INSUF'FERABLE,
;
yond endurance.
In electrical eiperiments, to place on a nonconducting substance, or in a situation to prevent communication with the earth. To make an isle. [Little used.]
pp. or a. Standing by itself; not being contiguous to other bodies as an insulated house or column. 2. In electrical experiments, placed on an electric or non-conducting substance not cominunicatiiig with the earth. IN'SULATLNG, ;>;>r. Setting in a detached In electrical experiments, preposition. venting communication by the intei-position of an electric body. INSULA'TION, 71. The act of insulating; the state of being detached from other ob-
;
act of soaking or moistening macera-[ solution in the juice of herbs. tion
i
IN'STRUMENT, 1.
[L. insucco, to moisten
si;ca(«, juice.]
The
;
a preceptress a tutoress. jj. [Pr. from L. instru that mentum, from instruo, to prepare which is prepared.] tool that by which work is performed or any thing is effected as a knife, a bam mer, a saw, a plow, &c. Sv/ords, raus structs
and
have no communication with surround-
;
;
;
To
isle.]
;
;
INSTRUCT'OR, n. A teacher; a person INSUBORDINATION, n. Want of sub-l who imparts knowledge to another by ordination disorder disobedience to lawprecept or information. 1 Cor. iv. 2. Tiie preceptor of a school or seminary of learning any president, professor or tutor, whose business is to teach languages literature or the sciences any professional man wlio teacher the principles of his
an
IN'SULATED,
disobedience.
Pope.
[L. insula,
ing objects. 2. In architecture, to set a column alone or Usefulness, not contiguous to a wall.
government.
INSUBMIS'SION, 71.
t.
j
Burton. State of disobedience
»i.
V.
place in a detached situation, or in a state
j
Crashaw. [L. insuavitas.] Unpleas-
antness.
Conveying knowledge serving
INSTRUCT'
iIN'SULATE,
instrumentality.
and
INSUBJE€'TION,
iitstructif.]
of an
instruSouth.
Hammond.
INSTVLE,
categorical an
swer.
INSTRUeTTVE, a.
Byway
in
;
Berkeley.
I
arfu.
the nature of an ment as means to an end. Witli instruments of music.
instrument
;
;
his sovereign to
;
;
INSTRUMENT' ALL Y,
viii.
3.
Subordinate or Belonging to an isle surrounded by water; as an insular situation. agency agency of any thing as an end; as the instrumentality of IN'SULAR, n. One who dwells in an isle.
;
In electrical experiments, that state in which the communication of electrical fluid is prevented by the interposition of au electric
body.
In electrical experiments, 7i. the substance or body that insulates, or interrupts the communication of electricity
IN'SULATTOR, to
surrounding objects; a non-conductor
or electric.
INSULSE,a. sipid.
,
Ed. Enn/c^
insuh'. [L. insulsvs.] Dull
[JVot used.]
;
in-
.Milton.
1
2.
INSURABLE,
Ciom
J!.
a.
[from insure.] That inayj
A
|
remained in the insured
the time of the sub-| Walsh.t
at
scription thereof. n.
The act of; [from insure.] insuring or assuring against loss or dam-j age or a contract by which one engages: for a stipulated consideration or premium
INSU'RANCE,
ruthless sneer that insult adds to grief.
Savage. INSULT', D. t. [Fr. insuller ; It. insuttare ; Sp. insullar ; L. insulto. See the Noun.] To treat with gross abuse, insolence or con tempt, by words or actions; as, to call a man a coward or a liar, or to sneer at him,
extensive rising
from
]ier cent, to
may
make up a
loss
Insurance
sustain.
is
ernment,
which another usually
on goods or property exposed mon hazard, or on lives.
the
to
It
Rowe
assure or insure.] sure or secure to contract or covenant for a consideration to secure a per.son against loss; or to engage to indem nify another for the loss of any sjjecified ))roperty, at a certain stipulated rate per The property cent., called a premium. usually insured is such as is exposed to extraordinary hazard. Thus the merchant insures his ship or its cargo, or both, houses against the dangers of the sea arc insured against fire sometimes haz ardous debts are insured, and sometinjes
To make
insolence
or contempt.
INSULT'INGLY, tempt
;
adv.
With
insolent con-
with contemptuous
trium))!!.
Drydtn
INSU'ME,
!).
[ATot used.]
in. [L. insumo.] To take Evelyn. n. [from insuperable.' of being insuperable. [Lillle (.
INSUPERABIL'ITY, The
(|uality
and
superahilis,
a.
[h. insuperabilis ; in to overcome
rising in [Ijittle used.]
mass
surrection
oppose an enemy.
to
INSURRECTIONAL,
Pertaining to in-
a.
consisting in insurrection.
;
Jtmer. Review.
INSURRECTIONARY, suitable to
Pertaining or Burke.
a.
insurrectiou.
INSUSCEPTIBILITY,
n.
[from insuscep-
tible.]
Want of
susceptibility, or capacity
to feel
Med. Repos. and susceptible.] Not susce|)tible not capable of being moor as a limb inaffected ved, impressed a heart insusceptible of susceptible of pain or perceive.
INSUSCEPT'IBLE, 1.
a.
[in
;
;
lives.
That cannot be overcome or surmounted INSU'RE, V. i. To underwrite as insitperable difficulinsurmountable making insurance. This company tnsures at 3 per cent., or at a low premium. ties, objections or obstacles. That cannot be passed over. INSU'REO, pp. Made sure; assured; secured against loss. And mill die natures, how they long to join. the perYet never pass th' insuperable line. Pope. INSU'RER, 11. One who insures son who contracts to pay the losses of anThis is unusual. latter The application other for a premium an underwriter. word is rarely or never used in reference a. [L. insurgens ; in and in the sense of invincible or INSURli'ENT, an 1.
;
;
to practice 2.
;
2.
;
;
enemy,
and sedition have been made therein.
iv.
A
;
or surpass.]
to
Ezra 2.
;
from supero,
whereas
found that this city of old time hath insurrection against kings, and that re-
bellion
;
;
INSU'PERABLE,
;
is
made
;
INSULT'ER, n. One who insults. INSULT'ING, ppr. Treating with
or political government
civil
is an open opposition to law in the army or navy. Insmrection is however used with such latitude as to comprehend either sedition or rebellion.
a mutiny
him.
insult
insult over,
an attempt
|)lace the comitry under another jurisdiction. It differs from mutiny, as it respects
made
uncom-
to
of citizens. It differs for the latter expresses a to overthrow the govto establish a different one or to
rebellion,
revolt, or
;
i. The premium paid for insuring property or life. triumph over with inso Insurance company, a company or corpolence and contempt. ration whose business is to insure against INSULT', V. i. To behave with insolent triB. Jonson. loss or damage. umph. INSULTA'TION, n. The act of insulting INSU'RANCER, n. An underwriter. [JVot in use.] Ftltham. abusive treatment. INSULT'ED, pp. Abused or treated with INSU'RE, V. t. inshu're. [in and sure. The French use assurer ; we use indifferently insolence and contempt.
is to
n. [L. insurgo ; in and surgo, to rise.] rising against civil or political authorthe and active opposition of a ity ; open number of persons to the execution of law in a city or state. It is equivalent to sedition, except that sedition expresses a less
;
;
To
INSURRE€'TION,
be insured against loss or damage proper! to be insured. The French law annuls the latter policies S0| far as they e.vceed the insurable interest which
Dryden. Any gross abuse offered to another, either by words or actions act or speech of insolence or contempt.
The
INT
INS
INS [Fr.insulte; h. irisullus, insilio, to leap on; in and saiio,to leap.] The act of leaping on. [Liltle used.]
IN'SULT,
pity.
Not capable of receiving or admitting.
n. [L. insusurro.] The act of whispering into something. INTACT'ABLE, a. [L. intactum; in and Not perceptible factum, tango, to touch.] to the touch. Diet. INTAGLIATED, a. intaVyaled. [See Intaglio.] Engraverl or stamped on.
INSUSURRA'TION,
IVarton.^
We
surgo, to rise.] do not say that troops INTAGLIO, n. intal'yo. [It. from intagliin opposition to lawful civil or politin and tagliare, to cut, Fr. or enemies are ijiSw^ernWf ; but the word Rising ure, to carve as insurgent chiefs. ical authority is applied chiefly to difliculties, objections, tailler.] Stephens. obstacles or im|icdiments. Literally, a cutting or engraving ; hence, n. person who rises in INSU'PERABLENESS, n. The quality of INSURG'ENT, any thing engraved, or a precious stone o))position to civil or political authority with a head or an inscription engraved being insuperable or insurmountable. who openly and actively resists the on it. Mdison. INSU'PERABLY, adv. In a manner or de- one of laws. execution [See Insurrection.] INTANG'IBLE, a. gree not to be overcome insurmountably. [in and tangible.] That An insurgent differs from a rebel. The in- cannot or Grew. may not be touched. Jf'ilkins. the execution of a paropposes stirgenl the touch. 2. Not to percepliljle INSUPPORTABLE, a. [Fr. in and support- ticular law or laws the rebel attempts to A corporation is an artificial, invisible, intanable.] overthrow or change the government, or AlarshaU. as 1. That cannot be supported or borne gible being. he revolts and attempts to place his coimthe or
unconquerable.
;
;
A
;
;
;
;
2.
burden is insupportable. weight That cannot be borne or endured insufWe say of heat or ferable intolerable.
try
;
cold, insult, indignity or disgrace,
it is
in
n.
all
rebels
insurgents are not ;
The
quality insufferableness
of being insupportable the state of being beyond endurance. ;
AH
jurisdiction.
rebels.
INSU'RING,/>/)r. Making secure assuring against loss; engaging to indemnify for
supportable.
INSUPPORTABLENESS,
under another
are insurgents, but
;
;
Sidney. adv. In a manner or degree that cannot be supported or endured. Dryden. INSUPPRESS'IBLE, a. Not to be suppressed or concealed. Young. INSUPPRESS'IVE, a. Not to be suppressed. Shak.
losses.
INTAN'gIBLENESS,
?
INTANGIBIL'ITY,
^
"•
The
quality of intangi-
being
ble.
INTASTABLE, That cannot be
a.
and
[in
tasted the organs of taste.
;
tastahle, taste.]
that cannot affect
Grew.
)(. [L. See Entire.] The whole a. [Fr. insurnionta- IN'TEGER, of anything; particularly, in arithmetic, See Surmount.] a whole niunher, in contradistinction to a Insuperable that cannot be surmounted Thus in the number 54. 7, in fraction. or overcome; as an insurmountable diffi decimal arithmetic, 54 is an integer, and 7 culty, obstacle or impediment. a fraction, or seven tenths of a unit. Not to be surmounted not to be passed" by ascending as an insurmountable wa IN'TEGRAL,a. [Fr. froin integer.] Whole; Bacon. entire. or rampart.
INSURMOUNT'ABLE, ble. 1.
INSUPPORTABLY,
3.
;
;
;
INSURMOUNT'ABLY,
adv. In a
or degree not to be overcome.
manner
A
local
motion keepeth bodies integral.
Bacon.
INT
INT
N T
I
Harris. the understanding. 2. Making port of a whole, or necessary to 2. Produced by 3. To be perceived by the understanding, not make a whole. Milton. by the senses. 3. Not fractional. 4.
Uninjured
complete
;
INTELLECT'UAL,
not defective.
;
Holder. whole; an entire thing. Entireness. n. [JVo(
A IN'TEGRAL, INTEGRAL'ITY, ji.
I.
IN'TEGRALLY,
adv.
;
fVhitaker.
whole
;
a.
Making
3.
mentari/ particles.
IN'TEGllATE, v. new to restore ;
I.
[L. integro.] to to perfect ;
;
To
from
ritas,
re-
a South.
L.
;
tn«eg--
fpiallty
;
INTELLIGIBLE,
derstanding.
[Little used.] n. One
INTELLECT'UALIST,
Milton. over-
who
INTELLECT'UALLY,
state of
understood clearly or speak intelligibly. ;
gentia,
verb
l$y
INTEM ERATE, undefilerl.
means ofj
[.\~ot
;
unpolluted.
n. [Fr. from L. inlelHA inteUigo, to understand. This composed of in. inter, or
is
from
.\
and lego, to collect. The primary sense of understand Is g(;nerally
we
hold, as
say, to
1.
Spenser. Understanding; skill. Notice information communicated; an account of things distant or before unbe transmitted known. Intelligence may ;
by messengers, by }.
letters,
the pomp dor of conciuest arc odious as well as perislialile. Btickminsler.
by signals or b\
free
;
ji.
[L.
cover.] That part of physiology,
iritego,
n.
tego.
;
struct.
naturally invests or covers another thing hut appropriately and chiefly, in anatomy, a covering which invests the that body, ns the skin, or a memlnaiie The skin of invests a part.
structed.
v.
To
t.
pp.
Inform;
[Little used.]
n.
An
conveying notice
INTEL'LIgENT, sens.]
;
;
communicates with peispicnity. n. [Fr. from L. tio, from intclligo.]
INTELLECTION,
act of understanding; simple apprehension of ideas. Bentley. fr.
[Fr. inlellectif.] HaClamille.
ving power to understand.
"Endowed with nig or reason
2.
i>i/cHec
The
INTELLECT'lVE,
1.
Knowing eil
;
itect
;
a.
the ficidty of understand Man is an intelligent be-
;
understanding well Inform as an intelligent oflicer an ;
young man an ;
intelligent ari-h-
sometimes followed by of; as
gent of seasons. Giving " Information. er.]
from a distance. [Fr. from L. intelli-
;
;
skilled
intelligent
to
intelli-
Milton [JVot used nor prop-
Shak
would oveiwhelm
a.
it.
Beecher.
[L. inlemperatus ; in tempera, to moderate
or restrain.]
[
[
Not moderate or restrained within due limits; Indulging to excess any appetite or passion, either habitually or In a particimmoderate in enjoyment ular instance or exertion. A man may b(' intemperate ;
in i)asslon, intemperate in labor, intemperHence by customary ate in study orzeal. a|iplication, intemperate denotes indulging to excess in the use of food or drink, but
;
which comprehends the ideas conununicatcd to it by the senses or by the facother means jicrccption, or by otiiervvise called the unulty of tliiiikiMi and derstanding. A clear intellect receives entertains the same Ideas which another
Habitual indulgence in drinking spirituous Ihpiors, with or without Intoxication. Should a foreign army land on our shores, to le\'y such a ta\ upon us as intemperance levno mortal power could resist the sivelling ies
and temperatus, from 1.
;
rtK'clves or
and temperaas the intem-
/..
Informed; in Bacon
INTELLIGENCE-OFFICE,
;
temperantia.] In a general sense, want of model atlon or due restraint ; excess In any kind of action or indulgence ; any exertion of body or mind, or any indulgence of aj)petites or passions which Is Injurlons to the person or contrary to morahty; as intemperance in study or In labor, in eating or drinking, or In any other gratification. Hence, ap-
INTEM'PERATE,
to in-
ofhce or jilace where information may he ol talned, particularly respecting servants to be hired. ])artlcular INTEL'LIgENCER, n. One who sends or seeds and the shells of crustaceous animals noconveys intelHg<'nce one who gives are denominated integuments. Encyc. tice of private or distant transactions; a IN'TELLECT, n. [Fr.'from L. intettectus, messenger. Bacon. Addison. from intcUigo, to understand. See Intel 2. A public paper; a ne\*.spa[)er. ligenre.] INTEL'LItiENCING, ppr. or a. Giving or That faculty of tlie human soul or niind,
That whidi
[in
ment.] had state or constitution
tide of Indignation that
[Little used.]
INTEL'LIuENCEU,
See Deck.]
;
—
A spiritual being as a created intelliIt is believed that the universe is peopled with innumerable superior intelli-
INTELLIGENCE,
jn[L. integumentum,
cover; in and
from discord.
gences.
[.Vol used.] n.
Pure
Slate of being Do7ine,
proprlatelv and em|)hatically, 2.
persons, understanding between they have the same views, or are
gence.
treats of the
Encyc.
INTEGUMENT,
4.
to
which integuments of animals and plants.
;
when
unim-
genuine, unadulterated, of language. paired state; as Oie integriti/
terms of Commerce of acquaintance Good intelligence between intercourse. men is harmony. So we say, there Is a
good
in use.] «.
to be write
as, to
;
Harvey. ptrament of an ulcerated part. n. [Fr. from L. jk-
ideas or meaning.] 1.
2.
manner
INTEM'PERANCE,
lake one's
telegraphs.
of independent integrity .-ul)liinest lliinc; in nature, before which of eastern magnificence and the splen-
The moral grandeur
INTEGUMA'TION,
intelligi-
a. [L. intemeralus.]
INTEM'PERAMENT,
probably
to take or
i)l
;
intem'p;kateness,
intus, within,
cies for others.
tego, to
ndv.
INTEL'LlcENCE,
;
3. Purity
fiom L.
adv. In a
INTEL'LIiilBLY,
Bacon.
rates the understanding.
moral sound
partkulurly of the mind ness or piuity uprightincorruptness ness Integrity comprehends honesty. the whole moral character, hut has a spe cial reference to uprightness In mutual and agen dealings, transfers of property, ;
[Fr.
;
The contracting parties guarantories. tied the intcgrilij of tlic empire. The entire, uniiiipaiied stale of any thing, ;
a.
bilis.]
the understanding.
integer.]
entireness ; unbroken state. ; constitution of tlie U. States guaran ties to each state the integrity of Its terri
Wholeness
is tlio
? „ [frrm intellil"' gihlc] The or state of being inteHigible the Iiossibility of being understood. Tooke. Locke.
INTEL'LIGIBLENESS,
;
The
2.
INTELL16IBIL'ITY,
Hallyu-ell.
integriti
.Milton.
understanding. Milton.
intellectual being.
»i.
n. [Fr.
pure
require.
exercising
;
Relating to the understanding; treating That may be understood or comprehended as intellectual philosophy, of the mind as an intelligible aci-ount. The rules of now sometimes called mental |ilillosophy. human duty arc intelligible to minds of the INTELLECTUAL, n. The Intellect or un- smallest
entire.
1.
Intellectual
4.
INTELLECTUAL ITY, n. The IN'TEGRATED, pp. Made entire. Intellectual power. The act of making [.Vo< used.] INTEGRA'TION, INTEG'RITY,
suhManccs
Inlelligenlial 2.
alike those
caiiaclty.
make
thing entire.
;
Ideal; perceived by the intellect; existing in the understanding ; as an intellectuat scene. Pope. Having the power of understanding; as
an
Burke.
thing. are those into Integrant particles of bodies, which bodies arc reduced by solution or mechanical division, as distinct from ele-
Food
intellectvel.] ;
Consisting of un-
a.
bodied mind.
;
Wholly completely.
part of a necessary to constitute an entire
IN'TEGRANT,
[Fr.
Relating to the intellect or understanding belonging to the n)ind perforitied by tlie as intellectual mental understanding powers or operations. ;
iridlaker.
used.]
a.
INTELLIgEN'TIAL,
particularly in the use of spirituous liquors.
Hence, Addicted to an excessive or habitual use of spirituous liquors. 3. 4.
Shak. ungovernable. Excessive exceeding the convenient as an intemperate clior degree The weather may be rendered inPa.sslonate
;
;
mean
:
mate.
temperate by violent wind.", rain or snow, or by excessive cold or heat.
INTEM'PERATE,
r.
(.
To
disorder.
[M>t
liTiitaker.
in use.]
INTEM'PERATELY,
adv.
With excessive
indulgence of appetite or passion with undue exertion; immoderately; exces;
sively.
INT
N T
I
INTEM PERATENESS,
Want of mod- INTEN ERATING,
«.
INTENERA'TION,
eration ; excessive degree of indulgence ; as the intemperaleness of appetite or passion. 2.
Immoderate degree of any weather, as in cold, heat or storms. n. Excess of some
1.
quality.
Untimelv.
[L. intempesfivus.]
INTEMPEST'lVELY,
adv. Unseasonably.
That
3.
Very severe or keen
that is not as an intenahk opinion ; an Warburton. intenable fortress. [Untenable, though not more proper, is more generally used.] INTEND', V. t. [L. intendo ; in and tendo, to stretch or strain, from teneo, Gv. tiwo,
4.
Vehement
INTEN'ABLE,
a.
ment and
[in
tenable.]
cannot be held or maintained
;
5.
to strain
;
to
;
extend
to design
;
the
;
2.
to purpose, that is, in mind. [This is
usual sense.]
For they intended
evil
Ps. 2.
against thee.
xxi.
To
3.
regard
tend
;
mind on
to fix the
;
care
to take
Having no
children,
3.
she did with singular
and tenderness intend the education «f Bacon. Philip. [This use of the word is now obsolete. now use tend and superintend or re
enforce
;
to
make
n. [Fr. from L. intendo.' One who has the charge, oversight, di rection or management of some public bu siness as an intendant of marine an in tendant of finance a word much used in France, and sometimes in England ;
;
and America, but we generally use lieu
pp.
Designed
was intended. made intense. INTEND'ER, pp. One who as,
2.
INTEND'IMENT, standing
;
purposed
;
;
[Little used.
purposing. Stretching
ppr.
n.
Attention Obs.
Meaning
;
;
The
intens'ness.
state
;
n. [L. intensio.]
A
intention to proceed to Paris.
or aim
;
the object to be accom-
4.
The
state of being strained.
[See Inten-
sion.]
INTENTIONAL,
a.
Intended
;
designed.;
done with design or purpose. The act was intentional, not accidental. adv.
INTEN'TIONALLY, purpose
;
;
INTEN'TIONED,
;
The
mind closely applied. Bacon. [This word is nearly superseded by atten-
opposed
to remission. n.
[Fr. intensity.]
state
intenseof being strained or stretched ncss, as of a musical chord. The state of being raised to a great degree extreme violence ; as the intensity of heat. Extreme closeness; as tVtensii!/ of appli;
3.
cation. 4.
Excess
;
extreme degree
as the intensity
;
Burke. guilt. Stretched, or admitting of extension. Intent unremitted assiduous as intens-
of
INTENS'IVE, a. ive
;
;
;
frotton.
circumspection.
Serving to give force or emphasis ; as an intensive particle or preposition. INTENS'IVELY, adv. By increase of degree ; in a manner to give force.
;
tive.]
INTENT'lVELY,
adv. Closely
;
with close
Bp. Hall.
application.
INTENT'IVENESS,
n. Closeness of attention or application of mind. TV.
Mountague.
adv. With close attention or with eagerness or earnestapplication ness as the mind intently directed to an object the eyes intently fixed the man is intently employed in the study of geology. INTENT'NESS, n. The state of being intent close application ; constant employment of the mind. Swift. IN'TER, a Latin preposition, signifying among or bctu-een ; used as a prefix. INTER', V. t. [Fr. enterrer en and terre, L. terra, the earth Sp. enterrar ; It. inter-
INTENT'LY, ;
;
;
;
;
3. ;
my
straining,
;
2.
2.
under
designing
End
;
By design of not casually. in "composition as wellintentioned, having good designs, honest stretching or bending; the state of being in purpose ill-intentioned, having ill deas the intension of a musical strained Milner. Ch. Obs. signs. string. Increase of power or energy of any qual INTENT'IVE, a. Attentive; having the ;
ity
intends.
consideration.
INTEND'ING, 2.
in
the insult
Stretched;
Spenser.
earnestly.
Locke. ;
plished. In chronical distempers, the principal intention is to restore the tone of the solid parts. Arbuthnot.
of being strained or stretched ; intensity as the intense7iess of a. cord. The state of being raised or concentrated extreme violence as to a great degree the intensencss of heat or cold Extreme closeness as the inlenseness of study or thought.
INTENS'ITY,
of it supeiintendent.
In Charleston, S. Carolina, the mayor or chief municipal officer of the city.
INTEND'ED,
Primarily, a stretching or bending of the mind towards an object ; hence, uncommon exertion of the intellectual faculties ; closeness of a])plication fixedness of attention ; earnestness.
It is •3.
;
n.
intentio.
Intend.]
;
:
2.
;
and purposes.
from L.
;
2.
Broicn.
intense.
INTEND'ANT, 1.
;
;
Attentively
[Fr.
purpose the fi.xed direction of the mind to a particular object, or a determination to act in a particular manner.
E. Dwight
Kept on the stretch anxiously attentive Milton. opposed to remiss. To an exadv. intens'ly. treme degree vehemently as a furnace weather intensely co intensely heated
INTEN'SION,
We
gard.]
To
S.
;
to at-
;
of.
care
4.
degree.
INTENSENESS,
forward
n.
Intention is when the mind, with great earnestness and of choice, fixes its view on any idea, considers it on every side, and will not be called ofl' by the ordinary solicitation of other "
;
now uncommon.]
sense is
literal
to stretch or set
now
in
whatever may
;
as intense cold. as intense phrases in
;
Hale.
[This
1.
INTENSELY,
this the lunes ^ are intended or remitted.
To mean
Extreme
;
to all intents
L'Estrans,e.
See
;
;
whelming.
to dis-
;
ardent
in all senses
all intents,
INTEN'TION,
as intense heat.
;
deliver
Acts s.
?
The doctrine of the atonement supposes that ideas. the sins of men were so laid on Christ, that his 2. Design suffeiings were inconceivably intense and over6.
To stretch tend.
;
is to
Hooker. ye have sent
me
be designed. He was miserable
language.
;
to stretch.]
2.
To
Raised to a high degree; violent; vehe-
2.
By
for
little
a. intens'. [L. intensus, from intendo, to stretch.] Literally, strained, stretched ; hence, very close, strict, as when the mind is fi.\-
UnthneUness.
n.
LYot used.]
1.
making
are
thought.
[jVoi used.]
INTEMPESTIV'ITY,
defensible
act of
derivatives
its
ed or bent on a particular subject; as, intense study or application ; intense
Burton.
[JVot used.]
The
n.
Bacon.
and
INTENSE,
INTEM'PERATURE,
a.
INT The principal intent of Scripture the laws of duties supernatural. I ask therefore, for what intent
tender.
Making
soft or tender.
[Inlenerate used.] quality in the
INTEMPEST'lVE,
ppr.
distending. [Little used.] Bramhall. n. [Fr. entendement, with INTENT', a. [L. intenlus, from intendo. a sense somewhat difterent.] rare.] See Intend.] in laiv, the true meanthe Intention design 1. To bury; to deposit and cover in Literally, having the mind strained or bent earth as, to inter a dead animal body. ing of a person or of a law, or of any leon an object lience, fixed closely sedIn the construction of 2. To cover with earth. gal instrument. of an in pursuit eager ulously applied statutes or of contracts, the intendment of But it is used almost exclusively to deobject anxiously diligent formerly with the same is, if possible, to be ascertained, note the depositing and covering of dead as intent on busito, but now with on ; that is, the true meaning or intention of animal bodies. ness or pleasure intent on the acquisition the legislator or contracting party. IN'TERACT, n. [inter and act.] Intermeof science. a short jiiece diate employment or time INTEN'ERATE, v. t. [L. in and tener, Be intent and solicitous to take up the meanTo to soften. make tender others. between JVatts. tender.] Chesterfield. ing of the speaker Autumn vigor gives, INTENT', n. Literally, the stretching of INTERAM'NIAN, a. [L. inter and amnis, Situated between rivers. Bryant. Eq\sd.\, intenerating, milky giain. Philips the mind towards an object hence, a de river.] v. t. To animate muINTERAN'IMATE, a intention or Made tender ; meaning INTEN'ERATED, pp. sign purpose Dotme. drift ; aim soft. tually. [Little used.] applied to persons or things. ;
;
INTEND'MENT, ;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
—
;
;
;
;
;
;
INT INTERBASTA'TION,
[JVot in
Patch-work.
baste. 1
The
%ise.]
intercalairc "' [Fr.
?
tntercalariua
I
;
;
L-
We
month.
IN'TERCALATE,
v. t. [L. intercalo; inter calo, to call.] insert an extraordinary day or other portion of time.
[L.
2.
INTERCE'DE, cedo 1.
To
v.
[L. intercedo
i.
literally, to
;
move
inter
;
He
cession
supposes that a vast period interceded that origination and the a^e in which
between
chain
Hale ;
2.
Containing inter-
[inter
and
chain.]
To
Hhak. pp. Chaiiu-d together. Chaining or fast-
to link together.
;
pleailing for.
n. One who intercedes or interposes between parties, to effect a an interces reconciliation a mediator
INTERCE'DER,
ppr. Feeding at the same table, or using a common pasture enjoying a common field with oth;
;
;
ers.
as, to inlcrchayige placps to interchange cares or duties. I shall interchange for Henry's waned state My regal crown. Shak.
;
2.
To
Blackstone.
INTERCOM'MONING,
v. t. [inter and change.] put each in the place of the other; to to exchange give and take mutually
To
to reciprocate
To graze cattle in a common pasture; to use a eonuuon with others, or to possess or enjoy the right of feeding in common. Coiiimoii because of vicinage, is where the inhabitants of two townships contiguous to each other, have usually intercommoned with one another.
ening together. 1.
;
Calamy. usually followed by ivilh. plead in favor of one. INTERCE'DENT, a. Passing between; ;
t.
INTERCHANGE,
To
mediating
v.
INTERCHA'INED,
To mediate to interpose to make intercession ; to act between parties with a to reconcile those who differ or contend
a.
interceding.
INTERCHA'IN,
view 3.
:
in
INTERCHAINING, ppr.
lie lived.
2.
view
them; one who pleads
INTERCES'SORY,
and
or pass between.]
pass between.
[L. inter
11.
to recon- In architecture, the space between two columns. By the rules of the art, thisshould behalf of another. be in ])roporlioii to the higlith and bulk of Milton. A bishop who, during a vacancy of the till' columns. Encyc. see, administers the bishopric till a suc- INTER€t).'M'MON, v. i. [inter and common.] cessor is elected. Bacon. Encyc. 1. To feed at the same table.
parties at variance, with a
cil(!
intercalatio.]
The insertion of an odd or extraordinary day in the calendar, as the 29th of February in leap year.
inter
;
INTERCES'SOR, n. [L. See Intercede.] INTER€OLI;MMA'TION, 1. A mediator; one who and coliimna, a column.] interposes between
and
To
1N'TER€ALATED, pp. Inserted. IN'TER€ALATING, ppr. Inserting.
;
cludo, to shut.]
To
;
;
n.
\.
;
inter
Inserted an epithet given to the odd day inserted in leap year. The twenty ninth of February in leap year is called the inread in Livy of an intercalary day.
INTERCALATION,
and
[L. interdudo
r.t.
jlNTERCLU'DE,
;
shut from a place or course by sometion to one party in favor of another, Holder. thing intervening to intercej)!. 2. To out off; to interrupt. sometimes against another. Mitjord. INTERCLL Your interce.'i.'iion now is needless grown DED, pp. Intercepted interRetire and let mc speak with her alone. rupted. Zhyden. INTERCLU'DING, ppr. Interrupting. He bore the sin of many, and made interces- INTERCLU SION, ?i. *as:. Interception; sion for the transgressors. Is. liii. a slopping.
aiid cnlo, to call or proclaim.]
tercalary
act of interceding; mediation
interposition between parties at variance, with a view to reconciliation ; prayer or solicita-
Smith.
INTER'CALAR, INTER'€ALARY,
INT
N T
1 [Sp. baslear, to
n.
;
;
succeed alternately.
IN'TERCHANGE,
INTERCOMMUNICATE, mutually communication.
[inter
to hold
;
INTERCOMMUNICATION,
Sidney.
Mutual change, each
n.
r. i.
and
communicate]
To comnumicate ca!
giving and receiving; exchange; permutation of commodities; barter; as the t'n-
n.
mutual
Recijiro-
communication.
INTERCOMMU'NION,
n.
[inter
and com-
mvnion.]
as an intercommunion terchange of commodities between New Mutual communion York and of deities. Faher. INTERCE'DING, ppr. Mediating plead 2. AlternateLiverpool. succession ; as the interchange n. [inter and coming. of light and darkness. munity.] INTERCEPT', V. t. [Fr. iniercepter ; L. inSweet interchange A mutual conmiunication or community; and caierceptus, intcrcipio, to stop ; inter Of hill and valley, rivers, woods and plains. mutual freedom or exercise of religion as J^Iilton. pio, to take.] the intercommunity of pagan theology. to stop 1. To take or seize on by the way 3. .\ mutual giving and receiving; reciproPaley. on its passage as, to intercept a letter, as an interchange of civilities or cation INTERCOST'AL, a. [Fr. from L. inter, Tlic prince was intercepted at Rome. The kind offices. between, and casta, a ;
;
;
sor.
;
INTERCOMMUNITY,
;
;
;
;
convoy was intercepted by a detachment of the enemy.
rib.]
INTERCHANtiEABLE,
That may be Placed or lying between the
a.
interchanged ; that may be given and tato stop in progress ; as, to ken mutually. Bacon. to intercept the curintercept rays of light 2. Following each other in alternate sucof or course a of a rent river, |)roeeedings, cession ; as the four interchangeable sea3. To stop, as a course or pa.^sing; as, to 2.
To
obstruct
INTERCOST'AL,
;
Dryden
To
interrupt communication with, or progress towards. While storms vindictive intercept the shore.
Pope 5.
To
take, include or comprehend between. Right ascension is an arch of the equator, reckoning towards the east, intcj'cepted between the beginning of Aries, and the point of the equator which rises at the same time with the sun or star in a right sphere. Bailey.
INTERCEPT'ED, pp. seized in progress
INTERCEPT
ER,
Taken on
the
way
One who
:
Seizing on its passhindering from proceeding compre-
INTERCEP'TION,
;
n.
The
act of seizing ;
from
Vol.
I.
intercedo.
See
Intercede.]
pp.
1.
adv. Alternately;
manner by which Hooker.
Mutually exchan-
reciprocated.
:
INTERCHANgEMENT, nuitual transfer.
Exchange
;
ppr.
reciprocating. a.
or coming between.
INTERCIP'IEXT,
«.
[L. intereido.] Falling 2. Boyle. See [L. intercipiens.
luterceptiug stopping.
Intercept.]
way INTERCIP'IENT, tercepts or stops
He
n.
;
seizing by the
inter tie
and
cccrfo,
s as
z.
;
to
Milton.
smiles. V.
i.
come
To in[L. intercurro.] in the mean time. Shelton.
INTERCUR RENCE, n. A passing intercurro.] tween.
[L. intereido:'
Brown.'
112
This sweet intercourse
Of looks and
IINTERCUR', I
to cut.] InteiTuption. [Lit-]
vsed.]
Hence, Communication; commerce; connection
or that which in-
on the passage. n.
Encyc.
between Derhnm.
n.
by reciprocal dealings between persons or nations, either in common affairs and civilities, in trade, or correspondence by letters. We have an intercourse witli neighhors and friends in mutual visits and in social concerns nations and individuals have intercourse whh foreign nations or individuals by an interchange of commodities, by purchase and sale, by treaties, contracts, &c. Silent communication or exchange.
terveiie
tf'isemati.
INTERCIS'ION,
as an in-
;
Shak.
Mutually giving taking each other's place
and receiving; ;
n.
[Little used.]
INTERCH.\NgI\G,
;
a stopping .something on its passage obstruction of a course or proceeding ff'olton. hinderance. INTERCES'SION, n. [Fr. from L. inkr cessio,
ged
INTERCI'DENT, intercepts
INTERCEPT'ING, ppr. age hending between.
INTERCHANGED,
successively
stopped.
;
n.
;
;
part lying
inter and ; a running or passing betvxeen.
of being interchaneeahle. in a by reciprocation each cives and receives.
A
[L. intercursus, intercurro, to run.] Literally,
curro
INTERCH aNgEABLENESS, n. The state INTERCHANGEABLY,
n.
the ribs.
INTERCOURSE,
Holder.
sons.
intercept a course. 4.
ribs
muscle, artervor vein.
tercostal
;
INTERCUR'RENT, 1.
a.
[L. intercurrens,
or running beBoyle. [L. intercurrens.]
Running between or among.
Boyle.
N T
I Occuniiig
3.
the skin.]
the
3.
sliin.
Mutual
IN'TERDEAL,
n. [inter anil deal] traffick.
dealing;
Spenser.
V. I. [L. interdico, interdic- 4. inter a)id dico, to speak.] act of conforbid ; to prohibit.
INTERDICT', tum
'i.
;
To
1.
An
from gress interdicted the sailing of vessels our ports. Our intercourse with foreign nations was interdicted. the cut olV from to To forbid communion
5.
and interdict his suffragans, but his vicar-general •^yW^may do the same. IN'TERDICT, )!. [L. interdictum.] Prohia prohibiting order or decree. bition 9. papal ])rohihition by which the clergy are restrained from performing divine serA ice a species of ecclesiastical censure ;
;
kingdom under an
laid
;
;
;
'Tis interest calls off all
IN'TERIM,
train.
Pope. Premium paid for the use of money the from money lent, profit jjer cent, derived or property used by another person, or from debts remaining unpaid. Commercial states have a legal rate of interest. Debts on book bear an interest after the expiration of the credit. Courts allow interest in many cases where it is not stipu;
INTE'RIOR,
Any You
on
;
;
;
kingdom.
INTERJA'CENCY,
surplus advantage. With all speed. sliall have your desires with
interest.
1.
inter-
;
to
Having power
;
;
Serving to prohibit.
a.
INTEREQUINOC'TIAL, eguino-t.]
a.
[inter
the vernal and autunmal
efjuinoxes. Spring and autumn
INTERFE'RE,
Balfour. Asiat. Res INTERESS, for interest, is obsolete. IN'TEREST, v.t. [Fi: interesscr ; It. inter
Sp. interesnr
;
L. inter
and
1.
[L. inter and/cro, to
prudence not to interfere but from necessity.
It is
in
"2.
To
clash
to
;
opjiosition.
.
come
The
in collision
;
claims of two nations
We
;
We
;
but
free 4.
we
are
all
interested in the happiness of a
government.
To engage
;
as,
to
interest
one
in
our
favor.
To
interest one's self, is to
concern
take a share or
in.
IN'TEREST,
n.
Concern
;
advantage
public good.
Influence over others. lost their interest at court.
n.
Interference.
Bp. Butler.
INTER'FLUENT, INTER'FLUOUS,
?
^
interfuo „ "• [L.
inter
;
aiul /!(o, to flow.]
Flowing between.
Boijh.
;
good ; as private interest ; public interest Divisions hinder the common interest and 3.
ojiposite lee.
INTERFE'RING,
Temjile.
They had now
INTERFOLIA'CEOUS,
a.
folium, a leaf]
[L. inter
and
Being between opposite leaves, but placed as interfoliaceous alternately with them flowers or peduncles. Martyn ;
sertiiiir
Throwing
ppr.
or in-
between.
INTERJECTION,
The
n.
act of throwing
between. 2.
to be in
A narration of may interfere. against a person or thing. 3. A iiorse is said to interfere, when one hoofj suffering interests us in favor of tlie sufferor shoe strikes against the fetlock of the are interested in the story or in er. skin or injures are interested opposite leg, and breaks the the fate of the sufferer. Far. Diet. the flesh. to know the result, issue or event of an an Interposition It is followed by in or for. INTERFE'RENCE, n. enterprise. Burke. are interested in the narration, but for intermeddling; mediation. 9. A clashing or collision. the sufferer. To give a share in. Christ, by his atone- 3. A striking of one foot against the other. 'i. ment, has interested believers in the bless- INTERFE'RING, ppr. Interposing; medings of the covenant of grace. dling. 3. To have a share. 2. Clashing coming in collisiiui. of the V,'e are not all interested in the public funds 3. Striking one foot against the fetlock
We
ed between.
INTERJECT'ING,
par
ty disputes,
;
;
v. i.
bear, ovferio, to strike.] To interpose ; to intermeddle ; to enter into or take a part in the concerns of others.
esse.]
to excite emotion to affect or passion, usually in favor, but sometimes
To concern
INTERJECTED, pp. Thrown in or insert-
teresting story.
have denominated equi I have
I
Summer and winter noctial periods. cuiled intereqvinoctial intervals.
;
—
;
and
,
Coming between
essare
;
;
;
prohibit.
INTERDICTORY,
1.
;
;
act of interdicting prohibition; pro Shak. Jilillun. hibiting decree ; curse. a.
inter
;
a being between inas the interjacency of the tervention Tweed between England and Scotland. Hale. That which lies between. [Little used.] Broivn.
;
dictio.]
INTERDICT'lVE,
n. [L.interjacens
;
;
from L.
[Fr.
and jacens, lying.] A lying between ;
;
;
of some privilege.
The
time
;
Tatter.
formed from
a.
;
Shak.
from the cnjoynjeni
n.
time
pp. Made a sharer; as the funds. moved having the passions 2. 2. Affected excited as one interested by a story. concerned in a INTERJA'CENT, a. [L. intetjacens, supra.] 3. a. Having an interest cause or in consequences liable to be afLying or being between intervening as fected as an interested witness. Raleigh, interjacent isles. INTERESTING, ppr. Giving a share or INTERJECT', ii. <. [h. interjicio ; in
;
cutting
The mean
1.
interest.
lege.
;
Milton.
this florid earth.
[L.]
[L. comp. nter or intra, in or within.]
INTERDICTED, pp. Forbid prohibited. IN'TERESTED, INTERDICTING, ppr. Forbidding; pro one interested in hibiting
n.
intervening.
;
interest
prohibition by which persons are 6. restrained from attending divine service, or prevented from enjoying some privi-
INTERDICTION,
;
;
a whole
interdict.
A papal
oft'
Johnson.
[L. interfusus
and fundo, to pour.] Poured or spread between. The ambient air, wide interfused, Embracing round
her sneaking
s as z.
a.
inter
to private profit.
Regard
Shining between.
shining.]
INTERFU'SED,
;
A
The pope has sometimes
participation in part portion lie has parted with his interest in value. the stocks. He has an interest in a manufactory of cotton goods.
Share
[L. inter and fulgens,
INTERFULG'ENT, a.
Rambler.
Internal ; being within any limits, inclosure or substance inner; opposed to exas the interior apartterior or superficial ments of a house the interior ornaments ; the interior surface of a hollow ball the interior parts of the earth. A higher rate of interest than that lated. Inland; remote from the limits, frontier which the law allows, is called usury. or shore as the in(emr parts of a country, state or kingdom. Simple interest is that which arises from the principal sum only. INTE'RIOR, n. The internal part of a Compound interest is that which arises thing the inside. from the principal with the interest added 2. The inland part of a country, state or
;
enjoyment of communion with a church. An archbishop may not only exconiiuunicate
'.'•.
his interest sufficient to procure the
otficc.
u. [L. inter and Being within or under
INTERCUTA'NEOUS, cutis,
INT
N T
I
He knew
Barrow.
intervening.
;
A word in speaking or writing, thrown in between words connected in construction, to express some emotion or passion. " These were delightful days, but, alas, [See Exclamation.] they are no more."
INTERJECT'IONAL,
Thrown
a.
tween other vvordsor phrases
;
jectional remark.
INTERJOIN', mutually
;
!'.<.
[litter
in beas an interObserver.
To join
and join.]
to intermarry.
[Little used.]
Shak.
INTERKNOWL'EDCjE, knowledge.]
n.
[inter
Mutual knowledge.
used.]
INTERLA'CE,
and
[Little
Bacon. v.
[Fr. entrelacer
t.
;
It.
in-
See Lace.] ; S\). entrelazar. intermix; to put or insert one thing with another.
tralciare
To
They interlaced some errors. The epic way is every where
Hayward. interlaced with
Dryden.
dialogue.
INTERLA'CED, between other
pp. Intermixed; inserted
things.
INTERLA'CING,
ppr.
Intermixing;
in-
serting between.
INTERLAPSE, lapse.]
n.
interlaps'.
[inter
and
INT The
Harvey.
events.
INTERL^ARD,
[Fr. entrelarder ; entre,
v. t.
among, and
larder, to lard.] 1. Primarily, to mi.x t'nt with lean; interpose ; to insert between.
To mix
2.
a.
INTERLARDED, ed between
hence, to Carew. Hale.
by mixture.
to diversity
;
Interposed; insert-
jip.
INT
N T
I
between two lapse or flow of time
inter
and mep,
between.
[jVol in
[L.
use.]
INTERMED'DLE, v. i. [inter and meddle.] To meddle in the affairs of others, in which one has no concern to meddle officious;
to interpose or interfere imjiroperly. practice of Spain has been, by war and by conditions of treatj', to intermedille wiU
ly
;
The
[
BUtckslone.
mixed.
;
INTERMEA'TION, n. A flowing to flow.]
In law, intermediate ; not final or definiAn order, sentence, decree or judgtive. ment, given in an intermediate stage of a cause, or on some intermediate ipiestion belbre tlie final decision, is called interlocutory; as a decree in chancery referring a| or a judg-! question of fact to a court of law, inent on default in a court of law.
Bacon.
stales.
foreijjn V. i. [inter and D. loopen,' INTERMED'DLER, n. One that interpoG. /(/»/(»!, to run, Eng. to /ea;). See Lea/;.] one who meddles, or inses officiously To run between parties and intercept the trudes into business to which he has no advantage that one should gain from the riirht. Sipijl. lia to trafiick without other proper of[INT ERMED'DLING, ppr. Interpo.sing cense to forestall to prevent right.
INTERL'ARDING,ip;)r. Inserting between INTERLO'I'E, ;
intermi.xing.
[See iea/.] A loaf in serted between other leaves; a blank leafj
IN'TERLEAF,
;
n.
inserted.
Cheslerficld.
INTERLE'AVE,
v.
t.
[inter
and
leaf.]
;
To
Johnson.
INTERLO'PER,
leaves.
One who
n.
Inserted between leaves, orhavinff blank leaves inserted between other leaves. INTERLE'AVING, ppr. Inserting blank leaves bc-tween other leaves.
INTERLI'NE,
v.
who
pp.
t.
[inter
and
line.]
interferes wrongfully
ters a coiuitry or place license.
INTERLO'PING,
;
to
one
write in alternate lines; as, to interline Lock Latin and Eiif;lish. To write between lines already written or printed, for the purpose of addhig to or
KLying between
To
/.
i'.
let
in
lit
li;
;
intervening
and medius, intervenient.
;
Evelyn
"iNTERME'DIARY,
-'-nf.y
To INTERLU'CATE,
Hamilton. [L. itUer
a.
middle.]
,
wron"
fully.
n. Officious interpo-
silioii.
INTERMEDIAL,
en-
trade without
intruding.
;
INTERMED'DLING,
one
;
who
Interfering
ppr.
ficiously
i
runs into
business to which he has no right
JNTERLE'AVED,
9.
;
;
insert a leaf; to insert a blank leaf or blank leaves in a book, between other
by
I.
Interposition;
[AW
2.
miic/i.
Derliam.
used.]
,
cutting away branches of trees. INTERLIJC'V TION, n. The act of thinniuffa wood to let in light. Evelyn.
.
n. [from internicdidte.]
intervention.
Something interposed.
INTERME DIATE,
a. [Fr.
intermedial; L.
and medins, middle.] Lying or being in the midille place or degree Sicijl. between two extremes intervening inand /»cfo, to shine.] Shining between INTERLIN'EAR, ( " [inter and linear.] Did.' as an intermediate sjiace beterposed Written between INTERLIN'EARY, ^ tween hills or rivers intermediate colors. inter and bidus,' INTERLUDE, [\j. lines before written or printed. Man has an intermediate nature and rank play.] inn. A book INTERLIN'EARY, having between angels and brutes. An entertainment exhibited on the stage be sertions between the leaves. tween the a<-ts ttC a play, or between the INTER.ME DIATE, n. In chimistry, a subINTERLINEA'TION, n. [inter and lineastance which is the intermedium or means the specplay and the afterpiece, to amuse tion.] of chimical affinity, as an alkali, which tators, while the actors take breath and shift 1. The act of inserting words or lines berenders nil combinable with water. their dress, or tlic scenes and decorations or written lines before tween jirinted. In ancient tragedy, the cho- INTERME DI.\TELY, adv. IJy way of inare changed. 2. The words, passage or line inserted betervention. In modern times, rus sung the interludes. tween lines before written or |)nnted. n. of activi Intervention; feats INTERMEDIATION, of interludes consist songs, INTERLINED, /);). Written between lines; common means. of music, &.c. Cheyne, ty, dances, concerts as an interlined word. n. Intermediate space. INTERMEDIUM, Encyc. 2. Containing a lin(^ or lines written between ^ IN'TERLUDER, n. One that performs in L '^" lines; as an I'li/eH/HCf^nannscript. intervening agent. B Jonson ^Cowper. an intc^rhide. INTERLI'NING, Writing between correcting what
INTERLU'CENT,
written.
is
[L. interluce.ns
a.
;
inter
inter^
;
;
;
;
.
ppr.
INTERLU'ENCY,
lines alrcadv written or jirintcd.
Correction or alteration by writing between the lines.
INTERLI'NING,
I
A
to
{.
rial
interposition.
INTERLOeU'TION, inter
and
[L. interlocutio
n.
;
locutio, loquor, to speak.]
INTERMAR
RIED,
interchange of
ed by marriage.
Hooker.\ speech. 2. In taiD, an intermediate act or decree before final decision. Ayliffe.
INTERMARRY,
p;>.
;
and mico, or among.
ter
/.
Tomention among
to include.
INTERMICA'TION,
n.
to shine.]
INTERMIGRA'TION,
Marriage between two families, where each takes one and gives another. Johnson.
sepulture.
other thinsrs
riage.]
joining.
:
INTERMEN'TION, f.
INTERLINKING, ;
Fisher.
n. [from in/er.] The act of depositing a dead body in the earth ; bu-
l
;
ting links
Marston.
[M- INTER'MENT,
inter and lnna,\ "' [L. INTERLINK', v. i. [inter and link.] INTERLU'NARY, \ the moon.] Belongconnect by uniting links ; to join on(^ chain ing to the time when the moon, at or near to another. Dnjden. its conjunction with the sun, is invisible INTERLINK'ED, pp. Connected by union Brown. Milton. of links joined. n. [inter and marppr. Connecting by uni- INTERMAR'RIAgE,
INTERLOCA'TION, n. A placing between;
.
\
Hale.]
nsed.]
To INTERLII'NAR,
,
INTERMELL', v.t. or [Fr. f7!/r£me7er.] To intermix or intermeddle. [.Win use.]
interlucns, inter-
;
tle
Burnet.]
[I
flow between.] flowins between water interposed. liio.
)!.
)i.
[.Wot used.] [L. intermieo ; in-
A shining ji.
[L.
between
ijiter
and
migro, to migrate.]
Mdison. Reciprocal tomigration another
removal from one
;
by men or tribes which country Hale. take the place each of the other.
Mutually connect
INTER.Al INABLE,
a. [L. in and terminus, end; /frmi'no, to end.] [inter give another in niar-, Boundless; endless; admitting no limit; as interminable space or duration interminariage, as two families. n. Jlilton uses this word as hie sufferings. [L. interloquor, 2. To marry some of each order, family,,, tribe or nation with the other. an appellation of the Godhead. supra.] a dialogist. 1. One who speaks in dialogue About the inidcUe ol" the fourth century from] INTERM'INATE, o. [L. interminatus, intennino. the builclins; of Rome, it was declared lawful for Boyle. nobles and plebeians to intermarrif. Swift. Unbounded unlimited endless as inter2. In Scofs/aip, an interlocutory judgment or sentence. Enqjc. INTERMAR'RYING, ppr. iMutually giv-, mj«a(f sleep. Chapman.
1.
Dialogue
;
conference
;
I.
i.
i'.
To marry one and
and marry.]\
;
]
[
INTERLOCUTOR,
\
I
;
;
INTERLOCUTORY,
a. [Fr. interlocutoire,
supra.] 1.
Consisting of dialogue. Tliere are several interlocutory discourses in Fiddes. the Iioly Scriptures.
nig and receiving
in
marriage; mutually connecting by marriage.
IN'TERMEAN, act
;
[M>t
n.
[inter aih\ inean.] Interin the mean
something done used.]
time.ij
Todd:\
;
INTER JMNATE, menace.
[L. interminor.] To Bp. Hall. [.\'ot used.] n. [L. interminor, to v.t.
INTERMINA'TION, menace or [ATot used.]
forbid.]
A
menace or
threat.
Hail.
INT
N T
I
INTERMIN'GLE,
v.
t.
[inter
and mingle.]
mingle or mix together; to put some Hooker. with others. v. i. To be mixed or in-
To
thijigs
INTERMINGLE,
INTERMINGLED, trees
murus, a wall.]
and intermingled temples
ing together. n. [Fr. from L. inlerIntermit.] 1. Cessation for a time ; pause ; intermediate stop ; as, to labor without intermission ; service or business will begin after an in-
INT'ER'MIS'SION, See
INTERN',
[Little used.]
INTERMIT',
V.
;
B. Jonson. fits or afnot continual.
[L. inlermitto
t.
;
HowcU. inter and
mitlo, to send.] cause to cease for
To
a time ; to interrupt to suspend. Pray to the gods, to intermit the plague That needs must
light
on
go off at intervals fever
intermits
;
2.
;
4.
daj'.
pulse sometimes intermits for a second of time. pp. Caused to cease for a time suspended. a.
Ceasing
at inter-
as an intermittent fever. n. fever which entirely subsides or ceases at certain interThe ague and fever is called an i?tvals. vals
Spiritually.
time 2.
;
Ceasing
for
With
INTERMIX',
V.
i.
INTERNE'CINE,
a.
INTERMIX'ED, pp. Mingled together. INTERMIX'ING, ppr. Intermingling. A mass formed INTERMIX'TURE,
ji. by mixture; a mass of ingredients mixed. Admixture something additional mingled in a mass. In this height of impiety there wanted not an internti.vture of levity and folly. Bacon INTERMONT'ANE, a. [L. inter and montonus, mons, a mountain.] Between mountains; as %ntermontane soil. Mease.
2.
Connection.
n.
[Use
INTERMUND'ANE,
a.
[L. infer
and mim-
danus, mundus, the world.] Being between worlds or between orb and orb as inlermundane spaces. Locke. ;
A
and nuncius, a messenger.] senger between two parties. ter
INTEROS'SEAL, INTEROS'SEOUS, tween bones
;
INTERPE'AL,
)
inter "' [L.
INTERPEL',
V.
thrust.]
mes os, a
bone.] Situated beas an interosseous ligament v.
t.
t.
[L. interpello.]
into a
set forth.
inter
n.
and
A summons
[L.
pello,
To
in-
[jVot used.]
;
[JVot in use.] Ch. Relig. Jlppeal.
I
INTERPO'SAL, 1.
The
n. s as act of interposing
terlerence 2.
;
:. ;
[from interpose.] interposition; in-
agency between two persons.
Intervention
;
South. a coming or being between. Glanville.
INTERPO'SE,
place between as, to interpose a body between the sun and the earth. Tu place between or among to thrust in to intrude, as an obstruction, inter;
;
;
ruption or inconvenience. What watchful cares do interpose themselves Betwixt your eyes and night. Shak.
Himian
among 3.
Tai/lor.
sasz. [Fr. interposer ; inter and po;
no, to place.]
L To 2.
More. intercession.
v.t.
L. interpono, interpositum
a citation.
Bp. law, to
Swijl,
t.
Mason.
r. i. [inter and phad.] In discuss a point incidentally hap-
INTERPLE'AD,
One who foists
To polish between. INTERPOL'ISH, v. v.t. [L. inter and pono.] To jINTERPO'NE, set or insert between.
^yliffe.
;
[L.]
;
genuine writings.
I
interpellatio, to drive or
2.
Interruption. 3. An earnest address
»i.
book or manuscript, spurious words one wlio adds something to
or passages
More
To
B. Jonson. ;
Cromwell to Pope. In mathematics, that branch of analysis, treats of the methods by which, when a series of quantities
IN'TERPOLATOR,
(,
INTERPELLATION, interpello
a
A spurious word or passage inserted i:i the genuine writings of an author. I have changed the situation of some of the Latin verses, and made some interpolations.
Johnson.
and
[jYot used.]
terruiJt.
Foisting in
succeeding each other, and formed all according to some determinate law, are given, others to the same law be subject may interposed between them. Ed. Encyc.
;
Hale.
;
ppr.
or book. 2.
internecinus, in-
[L.
jy.
be mixed together;
Pope. pp. Inserted or added
n. The act of foisting a word or passage into a manuscript
inter and neco.] Deadly Hudibras. [Little used.] n. [L. internecio.] Mu-
;
destructive.
IN'TERNODE,
To
;
INTERPOLATION,
3.
inter-
to be intermingled.
[Fr. interpoler; L.
t.
polio, to polish.]
spurious word or passage.
;
V. less.] Mountague. mix.] [inter «. [L. internodium ; inte some things with others; and nodus, knot.] In botany, the space between two joints of a In yonder spring of roses, intermix'd With myrtle, find what to redress 'till noon. plant. Marti/n Miltmi. INTERNUN'CIO, n. [L. internuncius ; 'in-
INTERMIX',
v.
and
IN'TERPOLATED,
a. [inter and nation Existing and regulating the naitua intercourse between different nations; as international law. /. Q. Mams. Baring.
To mix
togetlier; to put to intermingle.
inter
which
INTERNE€'TION, and
;
to the original.
tual slaughter or destruction. [Little used.'
adv.
t.
to distin-
To renew; to begin again; to carry on with intermission as a succession of inObs. Hale. terpolated motions. To foist in to insert, as a spurious word or passage in a manuscript or book to add a sjjurious word or passage to the
that purpose.
every
INTER NE'CION,
missions; at intervals.
give
Davenant. ;
The Athenians were put in possession of Salamis by another law which was cited by Solon, or as some think, interpolated by him for
Hamilton Inwardly; witliin
adv.
point
;
al.]
a
To
t.
original.
INTERNA'TIONAL,
to cease.
INTERMIT'TINGLY,
2.
intellectually.
terneco, to kill
ppr.
pausing.
Causing
;
To
interplej'.
;
beneath the surface.
;
3.
A
t.
INTERPOLATING,
Mentally
termittent.
INTERMITTING,
interpolo
\.
as the internal rectitudt
;
INTERN'ALLY, body
v.
IN'TERPOLATE,
not to a country domestic as the internal trade of a state or kingtiom; internal troubles or dissensions; internal war. Internal taxes are taxes on the lands and other property within a state or kingdom opposed to external tax
the
v.
guish by stops or marks.
;
2.
;
INTERMIT'TENT,
;
es.
;
INTERMIT'TENT,
is
Blackstone.
INTERPOINT',
in-
;
The
INTERMIT'TED,
;
o( interplead-
and take as a mutual pledge.
Palei/
real
;
of actions. Confined foreign
;
otlier
[L. internus.]
Inward
Pertaining to the heart. With our Savior, internal purity
thing. 3. Intrinsic
cease for a time to A tertian as a fever.
every
a.
A biW
payment.
INTERPLEDgE,
niitcfe wserf.]
;
this ingratitude.
To
r. i.
[JVo<
We
Sliak.
INTERMIT',
a. Internal.
terior; being within any limit or surface not external. speak of the internal parts of a body, of a bone, of the earth &c. Internal excellence is opposed to external. The internal peace of man, is peace of mind or conscience. The internal evidence of the divine origin of the Scriptures, is the evidence wliich arises from the excellence of its precepts and their adaptation to the condition of man, or from other peculiarities.
Coming by
a.
temporary cessations
[inter
n.
chancery, is where a person owes a debt or rent to one of the parties in suit, but, till the determination of it, he knows not to which, and he desires that they may interplead or settle their claims between themselves, that he may be safe in the er, in
Beverly
;
INTERN'AL,
termission of one hour. Skak. Intervenient time. 3. The temporary cessation or subsidence ofj a fever ; tlie space of time between the paroxysms of a disease. Intermission is an entire cessation, as distinguished from remission or abatement of fever. 4. The state of being neglected ; disuse ; as
INTERMIS'SI VE,
INTERPLE'ADER,
?nuscle.'
and muta-
Howell.
2.
ter
and
[inter
n.
mutual or reciprocal change. Thomson. INTERMU'TUAL, for mutual, is an illegitimate word.
Pope. Interchange
of words.
a.
tion .]
rise.
Mingling or mix-
ppr.
pening, before the principal cause can be tried. Jameson.
Jlinsworth.
INTERMUS€'ULAR, INTERMUTA'TION,
pp. Intermixed.
INTERJIIN'GLING, missio.
[L. inter
a.
Between the muscles.
corporated.
There
INT
and muralis Lying between walls.
INTERMU'RAL,
frailty will too often interpose itself persons of the holiest function. Swift.
To offer, as aid or services, for relief or the adjustment of diflfercnces. The emperor interposed his aid or services to reconcile the contending parties.
INT The common
I
N
INT
r
The
A
sense given by an interpreter exWe sometimes find various ininterposed his hand position. Woodward. man terpretations of the same passage of Scripture and other ancient writings. INTERl'O'SE, 1). i. To step in between parTiie prince 4. Tlie to mediate. ties at variance Bacon power of explaining. interposed and made peace. INTERPRETATIVE, a. Collected or 2. To put in by way of interruption. known mankind seasonably and rescued miserable
Fatlier of
—
3.
;
sioners.
;
this
But, interposes Eleutbcrius, objection against ahnost any hypotliesis.
An
may be made
INTERPO'SE,
n.
Interposal.
Spenser.
INTERPO'SED,
pp.
thrust
in.
INTERPO'SER,
n.
among
;
One
that interposes or a mediator or
comes between others agent between parties.
;
INTERROG'ATORY,
by interpretation.
question
interpretative siding with heretics.
1.
pounded. n.
One
tiiat
expressing
INTERRUPT',
Barrow.
adv. As may be collected by interpretation. Ray. INTER'l'RETED, pp. E.vplained ; ex
INTER'PRETATIVELY,
INTERPRETER,
;
a.
Containing
explains or
expounds; an expositor as an interpreter of the Scriptures. A translator; one who renders the words of one language in words of correspond-
a
question as an Johnson.
11
;
interrogator)/ sentence.
Hatntnond
Boyle 2. Containing explanation.
[.Vot used.]
Placed between or
question or inquiry. In law, a particular question to a witness, who is to answer it under the solemnities of an oath. This may be in open court or before commis-
i-. [h interrumpo, interniptus ; ititer and rumpo, to break ^ To stoporliinder by breaking in upon the course or progress of any thing; to break the current or motion of; a.s, a fall of rain There was not interrupted our journey. a tree nor a bush to inteirnpt the charge of
t.
the enemy. The sj)eakfr was interrupted by shouts of acclamation. apply the ppr. Placing between; 2. word both to the agent and to his procoming between offering aid or services. gress. say, an alarm interrupted the INTERPOS'IT, n. place of deposit being signification in another. speaker, or his argument or discourse. tween one commercial city or country and INTER'PRETING. ppr. Explaining; ex- 2. To divide to separate to break continanother. Mitford. The road was uity or a continueil series. INTERPOSI'TION, n. [Fr. from L. inler- pounding translating.n. INTERPUNC'TION, on a plain, not interrupted by a single hill, [L. interpunctio positio.] or interrupted here and there by a liill. interpungo ; inter and pungo, to point.] 1. being, placing or coming between in- The of points between sentences or making a. Broken INTERRUPT', as the interpositimi of the tervention containing a But punctuation h parts of a sentence. chasm. Milton. Baltic sea between Germany and Sweden. generally iiserococ(ling. cartli and the sun occasions a solar eclipse. INTERREG'NUM, rule or reign.] num, 2. Intervenient agency as the interposition adi: With breaks or The time in whicli a throne is vacant, beof the magistrate in quieting sedition. interruptions. tween the death or abdication of a Boyle. many evidences bave we of divine and the accession of his successor. king ER, n. One that interrupts. An favor of men \n good interposition ppr. Hindering by in strictness, can happen oninterregnum, between Mediation 8. parties. By agency breaking in upon. ly in governments where the king is electthe interposition of a common friend, the n. [Fr. from L. interive for in hereditary kingdoms, the reign parties liavebeen reconciled. of the successor commences at the moruptio.] Milton. 4. Any thing interposed. ment of his predecessor's death or demise. h Theact of interrupting, or breaking in upn. in INTERPO'SURE, [JVo< Interposal. on progre.ssion. The word however is used with more latGlanviUe. use.] 2. Breach of itude. any thing extended ; interposiINTER'PRET, v. t. [Fr. interpreter ; L. in- INTERREIGN, ?i. interra'ne. tion as an isle separated from the conti[A translaTlie word is intcrpres. terpreter, from nent by the interruption of the sea. tion of interregnum, Fr. interregne.] An inbut inlain words by other 5. To define 3. A note that marks a question ; as, does To cut oft'. Dirt words in the same language. INTERSCRI'BE, v. t. \_L. inter am\ scribo.] INTER'PRETABLE, a. That may be in- Job serve God for luuight? a. [Fr. interrogatif.] To write between. Collier. Diet. terpreted or explained. a in the Denoting question expressed ji. INTERSE'CANT, a. [L. intersecans, inter[Fr. from L. inform of a question ; as an interrogative seco ; in/er and aeco, to cut.] Dividing inteipretatio.] or sentence. to parts phrase of Diet. 1. The act of interpreting crossing. explanation INTERROG'ATIVE, n. A word used INTERSECT', v. t. [L. interseco; inter, beunintelligible worils in language that is asking questions; as who? what? which? tween, and seco, to cut.] intelligible. Interpretation is the design of To cut or cross inmually to divide into li'hy? translation. adv. In the form Thus two lines or two |)lanes may parts. 2. The act of expounding or unfolding what of a question. intersect each other. The as the is not understood or not obvious ecliptic intersects n. One who asks the equator. of dreams and ;
INTERPO'SING,
;
A
We
We ;
;
;
A
;
;
;
INTERRUPTEDLY, INTERRUPT INTERRUPTING,
;
How
!
;
INTERRUPTION,
;
;
j
'
;
;
;
INTERROGATE,
;
—
;
;
INTERROGATE,
;
;
;
INTERSCAPULAR,
INTERROGA ;
A
;
;
INTERROGATIVE,
INTERPRETATION,
;
;
m
;
;
INTERROGATIVELY,
;
prophecy. inleiprctation Look Iiow we can, or sad or merrily, Interpretation will misquote our look".
Shak.
INTERROGATOR, toire.]
v. i. To meet and cross each other; as. the point where two hnes inter[This is elliptical.]
INTERSECT',
questions.
INTERROG'ATORY,
n.
[Fr.
intcrroga-
sect.
parts
Cut or divided
pp.
into]
INTERTWIST'ED,
pp. Twisted one with
as lines. n. [L. hiierstclio.'] The act or state of intersecting. The point or line in which two lines or
IN'TERVAL,
two planes cut each
1.
other.
INTERSEM'INATE, tus
v.
luni
[L. intersemina-
t.
To sow hetween
INTERS ERT', tween, and set or put
or amonff.
v.
t.
[Lillle tised.] [L. intcrsero : inter, be-
to throw.]
sr.ro,
To
between other
in
things.
Brerewood.
INTERSER'TION,
An
n.
v.
[inter
and
spersus
;
t.
and spargo,
The space of
To
scatter or set here and there among otli as an able argument interer tilings with flowers of rhetoric. Inter ;
spersed
trees.
among
INTERSPERS'ED,
Scattered or situother things. INTERSPERS'ING, ppr. Scattering here and there among other things. pp.
ated here and there
among
INTERSPER'SION,
The
n.
act of scatter-
ing or setting here and there
among
other
things.
INTERSTEL'LAR,
[L. inter
a.
and
Baco ji. [Fr. from h.interslitium and sto, to stand.] A space between things but cliiefly, a narrow or small space between things closely set, or the ])arts which compose a body We speak of the interstices between the teeth, or between the parts of wood or ;
INTERVE'NE, and 1.
venio, to
To come or
;
stone. act
and another;
terval,
[jVo(
a.
Pertaining to or con-
taining interstices.
Enajc.
INTERSTRA'TlFiED, a. Stratified among or between other bodies.
INTERTALK, conversation.
Encyc.
[JSTot v.
used.]
INTERTAN'GLE,
t.
To
intertwist
and
;
to
Beaum.
entangle.
INTEliTEX'TURE, n.
[L. interle.rtus
;
inter
texo, to
weave.] or the state of More. things interwoven. IN'TERTIE, I Inca?7)cn/r^,asmalltimIN'TERDUCE, \ "'ber between summers. act of interweaving,
INTERTROP'l€AL,
a. [inter
and
Situated between the tropics.
INTERTWI'NE,
v.
I.
[inter
v.
i.
[L.
intervenio
and
tropical.] J.
Morse.
twine.]
To
;
between. Thus the
4.
v.
t.
[inter
twist one with another.;
and
twist.]
To
;
INTERVOLVE, volvo
To
j'?i(er
;
v.
and
intervolv'.
t.
[L. inter-
volvo, to roll.]
involve one within another.
Milton.
INTERVOLV ED, pp.
Involved one within another; wrapped together. INTERVOLV'ING, ppr. Involving one within another.
INTERWE'AVE, 1.
«. <. pret. interwove; pp. interwoven, [inter and weave.] To weave together; to intermix or unite in texture or construction as threads of silk and cotton interwoven. ;
inter 2. ;
x\tlantic
between Eurojje and America; between En
'?.
To intermix; to set among or together; as a covert of interwoven trees. To
intermingle; to insert together; as, with falsehood.
to interweave truth
INTERWE'AVING,
To come between points of time or events as the period that intervened between the treaty of Ryswick and the treaty of
INTERWEAVING,
ppr.
Weaving
togeth-
er.
To happen in a way to disturb, cross or Events may intervene to frusinterrupt. trate our purposes or wishes.
To interpose or undertake voluntarily for another. A third party may intervene and accept a bill of exchange for another. between.
n.
Intertexture. Milton.
[inter and wish.] To each other. [Little used.] Donne. INTERWORK'ING, n. The act of working
INTERWISH',
wish mutually
iKt.
to
together.
INTERWRE'ATHED,
<{.
Woven
into
a
wreath.
INTEST'ABLE,
[.Vo/
testabilis
Wotton.
vsed.]
;
a.
testis,
[L. intestabilis
a witness
;
;
testor,
in
and
to tes-
tifv.]
INTERVE'NIENT,
or bein^ Not capable of making a will legally uninterposed. [Lit qualified or disr(ualified to make a testatie used.] Bacon ment as, a person unqualified for want of discretion, or disqualified by loss of reaINTERVE'NING,ppr. or a. Coming or be son, is intestable. Ayliffe. ing between persons or things, or between The points of time as intervening space or INTEST'ACY, n. [from intestate.] time intervening events or misfortunes state of dying without makiiig a will or Blackstone. intervening peace. disposing of one's efTects.
between
;
a.
intercedent
Coming
;
;
;
;
;
INTERVEN'TION,
;
n.
[Fr.
from L.
inter-
INTEST'ATE,
Let us (ieciJe our quarrels at home without! the intervention of a foreign power. Templet
n. [Fr. intestat ; L. intesta; in and tcstalus, testor, to make a will.] Dying without having made a will. When a man dies intestate, his estate is committed for settlement to administrators. Not devised; not disposed of by will as
tus
ventio.]
unite by twining or twisting one with an- 1. A state of coming or being between ; in other. Milton. terposition. Light is not interrupted by INTERTWI'NED, pp. Twined or twisted the intervention of a transparent body. one with another. 2. Agency of persons between persons; mINTERTWI'NING, ppr. Twining one with terposition ; mediation ; any interference that may affect the interests of others.
INTERTWIST',
mutual sight or view a meeting; usually a formal meeting for some conference on an important subject hence the word im])lies a conference or mutual communicaThe envoy had an intion of thoughts. terview with the king or with the secretary of foreign afKiirs. The |)arties had an interview and adjusted their differences.
the Mediterranean inieruoies rope and Africa.
To exchange re. A coming Carew. INTERVE'NE,
v.t. intertauk'.
In
Utrecht.
Wallis. 3.
INTERSTI"TIAL,
The
2.
in-
Distinguishing,
tiscd.]
a.
vein.]
come.] be between persons or things
to be situated in
•^ytifi'
INTERSTINCT'IVE,
and
anA view; Fr. en-
[inter
;
Milton
inter
Time between one
A
distance between two given sound in music, or the difference in point of Encyc gravity or acuteness. A tract of low or plain ground between hills, or along the banks of rivers, usually alluvial land enriched by the overflowings of rivers, or by fertilizing deposits of earth Hutchinson. from the adjacent hills. [Dr. Belknap writes this intervale ; 1 think improperly.] [inter
IVotton. »i.
Irevue.]
Fair champaign with less uvetsinterveined.
IN'TERSTICE,
2.
Little used.]
IN'TERVIEW,
The
a.
fValsh,
n. [Fr. intervenu.] InterBlount. [jYotusedl] INTERVERT', v.t. [L. interverto ; interand verlo, to turn.] To turn to another^course or to another use.
tersected as with veins.
a star.] Situated beyond the solar system.
1.
French Commercial Code. position.
time between two parox
INTERVEINED,
stdla,
a voluntary undertaking of one party for another. A bill of exchange may be accepted by the intervention of a third person in behalf of the drawer or of one of ;
the indorsers.
sion ; reason. 4.
Interposition in favor of another
INTERVEN'UE,
disease, pain or delirium ; remisas an interval of ease, of peace, of
to
scatter.]
sperse shrubs
;
ysms of
[L. inter-
interspers'.
between,
inter,
A space between things a void space intervening between any two objects; as an interval between two columns, between two pickets or palisades, between two houses or walls, or between two mountains or hills. Space of time between any two points or events as the interval between the death of Charles I. of England and the accesthe interval between sion of Charles II. two wars. Hence we say, an interval of peace.
as intolerable pain intolerable heat or cold an intolerable burden. Insutft'rable; as i»/o/fraWe laziness.
;
;
;
;
nus, Internal
intus, witliin.]
inward opposed to external ; to the liuman or otlier animal as an intestine disease. 2. Internal with regard to a state or counas intestine try domestic, not foreign 1.
3.
;
;
enemies.
feuds; intestine war; intestine
We
intestine broils, trouble, disorders,
ppr. Hinting; suggesting. ;i. [Fr. from intimate.] Hint; an obscure or indirect suggestion
a declaration or remark communicating imperfect information. Our friend left us without giving atiy previous intimation of his design.
calami
We
ties, war, &o. say, internal jieace, welfare, ])rospcrity, or internal broils, war, This restricted use of into/ine trade, &c.
»i. The quality of being not tolerable or sullerable. adv. To a degree beyond (ijchirance; as jH/o/tra6/^ cold intolerably abusive.
INTOLERABLY,
;
INTOL'ERANCE,
IN'TIME,
«.
[from
inloln-anl.]
Want of toleration the not enduring at all or not sufl'ering to exist without persecution as the intolerance of a prince or a church towards a religious sect. Burke. ;
IN'TIMATJNG, INTIMA'TION, or notice
j
INTOL'ERABLENESS,
ject.
;
It is to be remarked that this wont is usunever ally or always applied to evils. say, intestine lia|)piness or prosperity ; intestine trade, manufactures or bills; but
alliance as two friends intimately united two families intimately connected. Familiarly; particularly; as, to be intimately aaniahtlcil with lucts or with a sub-
2.
;
;
;
applied
body
N T
1
[from intestine.] Per- IN TIMATED, pp. Iliuted slightly mentioned or signified. taining to the intestines of an animal body as the intestinal tube or canal. IN'TIMATELY, orfy. Closely; with close intcrmixUne and union of parts as two Arhulhnol. fiuids intimately mixed. INTEST'INE, a. [Fr. intestin; L.inlesti- 2. Closely; with nearness of friendship or from
INTEST'INAL,
;
INTOL'ERANT.a. ero, to
;
Not enduring
1.
from h.in and
[Fr.
tol-
endure.] not able to endure.
;
The powers ol the human body being limited and in^u/fran* of excesses. .irbutlmut.
Not enduring difTercnce of opinion or worship; refusing to tolerate others in the enjoyment of their opinions, rights and L. timidiis, fearfid INTEST'INE, n. usually in the plural, viworship. tellines. The bowels thi^ canal or tube To make tearful; to inspire with fear; to INTOL ERANT, n. One who does not favor tol(>ration. that extends, with convolutions, from the Lowtk. dishearten to abash. right orifice of the stomach to the anus. Now guilt once harbor'd in the conscious INTOL'ER.\TED,a. Not endured not tolerated. INTIIIRST, V. t. inthursV. [in and thirst.'] breast. Cheslerfuld.
seems
be entirely arbitrary.
to
nal.
a.
[j\'ot
Inward;
[L. intimus.]
used.]
inter-
2.
J^gl'!/
INTIMIDATE,?'./.
;
[Vr. intimider ; jn and timeo, to I'car.]
;
;
;
To make
thirsty.
INTIIRALL',
V.
i.
Bp. Hall. Sax. threat,
[Xot used.]
and
[in
thrall
;
a servant Ir. trailL] To enslave to reduce to bondage or servitude to shackle. The Creeks have been ;
Intimidates
INTIM'IDATED,p;). Made
by the Turks. inthrall
mind.
INTIMIDATION,
Prior.
fcarl'ul; the state
my
Enslaved; reduced
;;.;).
Making
ppr.
abashing.
She soothes, but never can
INTHRALL'ED,
INTIMIDATING,
to
INTINCTIV'ITY,
in
[1..
Intolerance
;
refusal
to tolerate others in their opinions or worship. Chesterfield. INToMB, r. t. intoom'. [in and tomb.] To deposit in a tomb; to bury. fearful: Dryden. INT6MBEI), pp. intoom'ed. Deposited in a
n. The act of making of being abashed. ?;.
INTOLERA'TION, n.
fearful; abash-
ed.
;
;
inthralled
brave, degrades the great. Irene
tlie
and
tinctus, dip-
servitude.
ped, stained.] The want of the quality of coloring or tingINTHRALL'ING, /);))•. Enslaving. ing other bodies. Fuller's earth is distinINTIIRALL'MENT, n. Servitude ; slavery Milton. guished from colorific earths by its intlncbondage.
tomb; buried.
INToHnUNG, in a
tomb
ppr.
intoom'ing. Depositing
interring. r. i. [L. intono, intonatus
;
INTONATE, and
/o)io,
;
in
sound or thunder.] to sound the notes of the nni-
to
L To sound
;
;
INTURO'NE, on a throne
I'.
;
(. [in nml throne.] To seat to raise to royalty or su-
[See Enthrone, which is the more common orthography.] INTHRONIZA'TION, n. 'J'he act of en-
its
v.
To
t.
enthrone.
>i.
prep, [in and to.] Noting entrance or a passing from the outside of a thing to its interior parts. Lt follows verbs express niotitui. Come into the house go ing into the ihurch; one stream falls or runs into another. Water enters into the fine
[from intimate.] Close fanearness in friend-
miliarity or fellowship ship.
IN'TiMATE,
a.
;
Rogers. [h.intimus,super\.oi'intua,
Inmost; inward;
2.
as iniimaU
internal;
close.
was honored
an intimate and immeSouth.
4.
Close in friendship or acquaintatice familiar as an intimate friend intii.iate ac quaintance. IN'TL^IATE, n. A familiar friend or asso ciate one to whom the thoughts of an other are entrusted witliout reserve. IN'TIMATE, i: i. To share together. [JVot
5.
willi
diate admission.
3.
;
;
;
ft.
;
in
It.
f.
[Fr. iyitimer
t.
intimare
;
Low
;
Sp.
;
fits,
;
intimates eternity to man.
Mdison.
in expression.
INTO'NE,
!.
t;.
[L. intono, supra.]
to
and we are
error and
all liable
Ass intones
to ass.
INTOR'SION,
\
bilis
Not
;
in to
and
n. [L. intorqueo,
V.
t.
[L. inlortus,
from L.
;
that cauuot be
twist
;
to
wreath
INTORT'ED,
to
;
wind
Twisted
pp.
INTORT'ING,
ppr.
INTOX'l€.ATE,
v.
Winding t.
[in
which, Pliny informs us, S|)ccies of tree, in Greek,
to
wring. Pope.
;
Pope.
twisting.
and L. tozicum, is from tara, a 5m>,a|. Lib. xvi.
10.] 1.
To
inebriate
:
to
make drunk
;
as with
spirituous liipior.
As
:
;
made winding.
;
Arbuthnot.
intolera- 2.
endured
Martyn. from intorqueo,
to twist.)
witli
new wine
They swim a. [Fr.
intorsum, to
twist.]
INTORT',
be seduced in
tolerabilis, tolero, to bear.]
be borne
utter
Pope,
winding, bending or twisting. In botany, the bending or twining of any part of a plant towards one si.le or the other, or in any direction liom the vertical.
To
folly.
INTOL'ERABLE, I.
to
To
a sound, or a deep protracted sound.
We
L. intimo, to inti-
mate, to register, to love entirely, to njakc one intimate, to enter, from intimus.] To hint to suggest obscurely, indirectly or not very plainly to give slight notice of He intimated his intention of resigning his
And
other words. Noting the passing of a thing from one form or state to another. Conipoimd substances may be resolved into otiiers whicl are more simple ice is convertible into water, and water into vajior. Men are more easily drawn than forced into comreduce many distinct subpliance. stances into one mass. are led by evidence into belief of truth. Men are often enticed into the commission of crimes. Children are sometimes frightened into
We
inti-
office. 'Tis heaven itself that points out an hereafter,
Noting penetration beyond the outside or Look iTitoa letter surface, or access to it. or hook look into an apartment. Noting insertion. Infuse ujore spirit or animation into the composition. Noting mixture. Put other ingredients into the compound. Put these ideas ijito Noting inclusion.
JE»ici/c.
The manner of soimding or tuning tlie notes of a musica^scale. In speaking, the modulation of the voice
;
Spenser.
tfse.]
IN'TIMATE, mar ;
3.
:
.Vilton. i.
impulse.
He
times. 2.
vessels of plants.
or interus, within.]
Near;
n. In ynusic, the action of sounding the notes of the .scale with the voice, or any other given order of musical
;
IN'TIMACV,
1.
To thunder. INTONA'TION,
2.
[See Entitle.]
INTO,
[jVot
in use.]
2.
INTIRELY.
derivatives.]
INTITLE.
[jYot in use.]
throning.
INTHRO'NIZE,
Kirwan. [See Entire and
tivlt)/.
INTlllE,
dominion.
]>renie
sical scale.
intoxicated both. in mirth Milton.
—
To excite the spirits to a kind of delirium ; to elate to enthusiast)), frenzy or madness. Success sonictiines intoxicate a man
may
INT
INT
INT
king was charged with intrenching on the rights of the nobles, and the nobles were accused of intrenching on the prerogaMore. INTOX'ICATB, a. Inebriated. *INTOX'I€ATED, pp. Inebriated; made tives of the crown. rlrunk excited to tVenzv. INTRENCH'ANT, a. Not to be divided or of sobriety. An enthusiast cated with zeal.
may be intoxi-
;
woimded
INTOX'ICATING,
ppr. "inebriating ; elating to excess or frenzy. 2. a. Having qii.ilities that produce inebriaas intoricating liquors. tion INTOXICA'TION, n. Inebriation ; ebriety ; drunkenness the act of making drunk. South. INTRACT'ABLE, a. [L. intradaMtis ; in
Shak.
and
;
;
;
indocile.
;
INTRACT'ABLENESS, INTRACTABIL'ITY, ernable
The quahty of
}
^"- being ungov obstinacy; perverseness.
;
ppr. Fortifying with a trench and parapet. n. Properly, a trench but as the eartli thrown or ditch only out of a trench tbrms a part, and often the most necessary and useful part of a fortification, hence intrenchment is generally understood to signify a ditch and parapet and sometimes it signifies fascines covered with earth, gabions, bags filled with earth, or other materials collected to cover
INTRENOH'MENT,
and trarjabitis, tracto, to handle, manage, govern Fr. intraitable ; It. intraltabile.] Not to be governed or managed violent stubborn obstinate refractory ; as an in;
para))et.
INTRENCH'ING,
;
tractable temper. 2. Not to be taught
[Abf used.]
Fortified with a ditch
INTRENCH'ED,;);).
;
1.
indivisible.
;
Porteus.
;
men from an enemy's
INTRACT'ABLY,
adv. In a perverse, stub-
born manner.
INTRAFOLIA'CEOUS,
a.
intra
[L.
and
folium, a leaf.] In botany, growing on the inside of a leaf Lee. Martyn as intrafoliaceous stipules.
[L. intrepidus ; in and trepidus, trepido, to tremble.] Literally, not trembling or shaking with fear ;
INTREP'ID,
a.
hence, ft^arless; bold
;
brave
;
undaunted;
as an intrepid soldier. INTREPID'ITY, n. [Fr. inlrepidite.] Fearlessness fearless bravery in danger unINTRANCE. [See Entrance.] daunted courage or boldness. The troops INTRANQUIL'LITY, n. [in and tranquil-
•3.
Intricacy
engaged with
lity.]
Unquietness; inquietude; want of rest.
INTRAN'SIENT,
a.
passing suddeidy away.
INTRANS'ITIVE,
Kitlingbeck
[L. intransitivus ; ii and transeo, to pass over.] In grammar, an intransitive verb is one which an action or state that is limited a.
expresses
to the agent, or in other words, an action that does not pass over to, or o|)erate upon as, I ivalk
;
I
run
I sleep.
;
intrepidity.
INTREP'IDLY,
Temple. Not transient; not
Hale.
iiiffly;
fearlessly
;
INTRIGUE, render
Pope.
resolutely.
IN TRICABLE,
a.
IN'TRICACY,
[from intricate.] of being entangled perplexity in complication ; as the intricacy of a knot, and figuratively, the intricacy of accounts, the intricacy of a cause in controversy, the ni(n'caci/ of a plot. Addison state
INTRIGUINGLY, intrigue
INTRANSMUTABIL'ITY, of not being transmutable.
INTRANSMU'TABLE,
The
n.
a. [in
quality
Ray. andtransmu-
table.]
That cannot be transmuted or changed another substance.
IN'TRANT,
into
Ray.
a. [L. intrans.]
Entering
;
peti-
etrating.
INTREASURE,
v.
t.
intrezh'ur.
[in
and
treasure.]
To
lay
in a treasiu'y.
up as
INTRE'ATFUL, INTRENCH', V.
a. t.
[Little used.]
Shak. Full of entreaty. [in and Fr. trancher, to
See Trench.] To dig or cut a trench around a place, as in fortification; to fortify with a ditch The army intrenched their anil parapet. camp, or they were intrenched.
cut. 1.
2.
To furrow Deep
;
to
make hollows
scars of thunder
jyrdton.
To
intrench on, literally, to cut into to invade ; to encroach ; to enter
;
hence,
on and
take possession of that which belongs to another. In the contest for power, the
involved
perplexed ; complicated obsciu'e. passed through intrifound the account; cate windings. intricate. The case on trial is intricate Tlie plot of a tragedy may be too intricate ;
lead or bring in to conduct or usher into a place as, to introduce a person into a drawing room. ;
To conduct and make known
to bring as, to introduce a stranto introduce a foreign minister to a prince. To bring something new into notice or practice as, to introduce a new fashion, or a new remedy lor a disease; to introduce an improved mode of tillage. To bring in; to import; as, lo introduce ;
;
;
;
4.
to
foreign goods.
To produce to cause to e.xist ; as, to inLocke. troduce habits into children. To begin to open to notice. He introduced the subject with a long preface. 7. To bring before the ))ublic by writing or discourse ; as, to introduce one's self to notice or to the jiublic.
rptxoi, 5.
hair or a lock of hair, as we should say, In D. bedricgcn, G. betriegen, a plexus. D. driegen, to tack, to signify to cheat baste; G. triegen, to deceive; trvg, deThe primary sense seems to ceit, fraud. be to fold, lay over, or to draw together.]
its
introdurre.]
to be acquainted ger to a person
It. intrigo : ; to perplex, embroil, intricare, intrigare, to per
Low
adv. Internally; in
really ; truly. is a thing absolutely and intrinsiratly South.
;
;
2.
;
Entanglement.
;
;
within, and duco, to lead
intriguer, It.
,-
;
;
.4 lie
•3.
;
;
IVotton.
n. intree'g. [Fr. id.
verbs, Fr.
Entangled pen^lex[Fr. intrinseque ; Sp. infrinseco It. intrinintra and secus. It
inherent real essential not apparent or accidental ; as the intrinsic value of gold or silver; the intrinsic merit of an action the intrinsic worth or goodness of a person. Prior. Obs. Intimate closely familiar.
nature
complication perSidney
ised.]
INTRIGUE,
I
L. intrinsecus
INTRIN'SIeALLY,
JVotton
IN'TRI€ATENESS, involved
;
I °'
;
2.
make Camden
With
With
machina-
was formerly written intrinsecal.] Inward; internal; hence, true genuine ;
to
involution or with perplexity or intricacy.
IN'TRICATELY,
intree'gingly.
[A'ot in use.]
ed.
INTRODU'CE,
to please.
IN'TRICATE,
show
a.
artifice or secret
;
We We
;
intricor,
in.
His lace had intrenched.
with
;
tions.
;
;
periilex or
L. Addison.
ppr. inlree'ging. Forming secret plots or schemes. Addicted to intrigue ; given to secret macliinations.
;
P. Smith. Entangled
To
intree'g.
[JVot used.]
2. a.
;
;
volution
a plot or
One who inintree'ger. fijrms plots, or pursues
n.
INTRIN'SIe, The INTRIN'SI€AL,
n.
To form
trigues ; one who an object by secret artifices.
;
J.
t.
1'.
Shelto
use.]
INTRANS'lTIVELY,0(/it. Without an obfrom intrico, in the manner of an in- IN'TRI€ATE, a. [L.intricatus, ject following See It. intrecciare. to fold in and tricor Lowth. transitive verb. Trick.] INTRANSMIS'SIBLE, a. That cannot be transmitted.
intree'g.
INTRIGUING,
[JVot in
Entanghng.
i.
intricate.
INTRIGUER,
or dar-
;
V.
scheme, usually complicated, and intended to effect some i)urpose by secret artifices. The courtier intrigues with the minister, and the lover with his mistress.
Without trembling
adv.
shrinking from danger
[JVot in use.]
complication.
;
INTRIGUE,
;
;
;
;
IVashington.
2. Indocility.
an object
ed and prosecuted by an individual, and we often hear of the intrigues of a minister or a courtier, but often several projectors are concerned in an intrigue. The word is usually applied to affairs of love or of government. 2. The plot of a play or romance a complicated scheme of designs, actions and events, intended to awaken interest in an audience or reader, and make them wait with eager curiosity for the solution or development.
fire.
On our side we have thrown up intrenchments on Winter and Prospect hills.
A
plot or scheme of a comphcated nature, intended to eflect some purpose by secret artifices. An intrigue may be form-
1.
G.
;
;
INT INTRODU'CED, brought
Led
pp.
INT or conducted in
made acquainted
ill ;
;
INTROVER'SION,
;
;i
person; one who makes strangers known! to each other ; one wiio brings any thing
INTRU'DE,
into notice or practice.
1.
to thrust.
INTRODU'CING,
ppr. Conducting or bringing in ; making known, as one stranger to anotlier ; bringing any tiling into notice or practice.
INTRODUe'TION,
n.
[Fr.
from L.
To
V.
i.
t.
[L.
intro
[L. intr^ido
;
and
vert6.]
Cotvper. in and trudo,\
See Thrust.]
;
To who
first part of an oration or discourse, which the speaker gives some general account of his design and subject, and prepares the minds of his audience for a favorable reception of his remarks or argu-
ments.
ward
INTRODU€'TOR,
Serving to intro-
a.
serving as the something.
;
n.
means
An
to
1.
INTROGRES'felON,
n.
n.
;
Hammond.
mitting into or within. t.
[L. introspicio
:
intro
;
to
»i.
Were
was forced
to
not
my
make an
knowledge. Seeing clearly; as an
intuitive
\iew
;
in-
Hooker.
Having the power of discovering truth ;;s the intuitive powers
without reasoning of celestial beings.
INTU ITIVELY, ception
;
;
adv.
By immediate
without reasoning
;
tis,
per-
to perceive
truth intuitively.
INTUMESCE,
intumes'. [L. inlum.tsco ; in anil tumeo, to swell.] To swell ; to enlarge or expand with heat. V. i.
being
INTU'SE,
orders that
1
sliould
2.
.3.
Encroachment
view the inside. view of the in-
be private
A
[L. intvsus.]
bruise.
[Not
Spenser.
I', t.
and
[in
twine.]
or twist together; to wreath of flowers intunned.
;
To
twine
as a wreath
INTWI'NED, pp. Tvvistc.l together. INTWI'NING, ppr. Wreathing together. INTWIST', V. [in and tudst.] To twist together
?
;
to interweave.
Parkhurst.
INTWIST'ED, pp. Twisted together. INTWIST'ING, ppr. Twisting together.
entrance witiiout right on the property or possessions of another. IN'ULIN, Ji. A peculiar vegetable jirincijile extracted from the Inula helenium, or eleVoluntary entrance on an undertaking un ;
Wotton.
suitable for the person.
a. Thrusting in or entering without right or welcome apt to intrude.
INTRU'SIVE,
Thom.^on. To deliver
Ure.
campane.
INUM'BRATE,
v.
t.
[L. inumbro.]
To
shade.
;
INUN€'TION,
[L. inunctus, inungo ; in and u7igo, to anoint.] INTRUST', V. t. [in and trust.] in trust; to confide to the care of; to com- The action of anointing ; unction. Ray. mit to another with confidence in his! INUNeTUOS'ITY, n. [L in and «nrfi/«, or one's Eng. u)ic/uoi(5.] fidelity ; as, to intrust a servant unth to intrust or The want of or or destitution of money unctuosity; money goods, intrust an agent greasiness or oiliness which is perceptible goods to a servant. to the touch ; as the inunctuosity of porceor factor with commercial busines.s, or we n.
We
intrust commercial concerns to an agent. intntst our friends ivith secrets, or in-
INTRUSTED,
INUN'DANT,
them. pv.
a. [L.
inundans, infra.] Over-
flowinc Delivered in
introspection into
Shensione.
INUN'DATE,
trust:
hands or care of another, be faithful in
in confidence that he will discharging his duty.
to the
Kirwan,
lain clay.
We
committed
my
n.
in use.]
INTWI'NE,
t.
this intrusion ?
A
side or interior. I
strains whicfi have been jostby the intrusions of poetical fictions. Jlrown
tntst secrets to
specie, to look.]
To look into or within lNTROSPE€'TION,
mind on
;
A
in, or of entering without invitatrnn, right or welcome. The company may be disturbed by the intrusion of an unwel-
.idilison
send in ; to be the medium bv 2. To allow to enter which a thing enters. Glass in the window intromits light without cold into a room. INTROMIT', V. i. To intermeddle with the Stua7i. effects of another. INTRORECEP'TION, n. The act of adV.
;
state
Why
[L. introgressio.]
[L. intromitio, supra.] To Grcenhill to let in ; to admit.
and
intrudes one or enters where
in,
action of thrusting
led off
II. /.
INTROSPECT',
The
;
[L.intromissus,{ntromitto ; intro and milto, to send.] Peacham. 1. The action of sending in. 2. In ScoVs law, an intermeddling with the Johnson eflects of another.
INTROMIT',
in.
One who
71.
— Munyguest. excellent
intro-
[Not used.]
INTROMIS'SION,
pp. Thrust
thrusts himself
into a place or
i)refato
ry preliminary; as in
Entrance.
Greenhill.
in.
INTRUSION,
[JVot
;
exhibiting truth to the
tuitive vision. 4.
come
a. Serving duce something else; previous;
;
bare inspection as intuitive evidence. Received or obtained by intuition or simple inspection as intitilive judgment or
;
W5€fl. 1
INTRODUe'TORY,
Encyc. ; Fr.
In a higher heat it intumesces and melts into lias no right or is not welcome. a yellowish black mass. Kirwan. n. [supra.] The acTlicy were but intruders on the possession, Daviea. tion of swelling. during tfie minority of the heir. They were all strangers and intruders. 2. A swell ; a swelling with bubbles a rising Locke. and enlarging ; a tumid state. Jf'oodicard. INTRU'DING, ppr. Entering without invi- INTUR(iES'CENCE, n. [L. in and turgesco, or welcome. tation, right to swell.] n. s as z. [Fr. from L. inswelling ; the action of swelling or state trusio, from intntdo.] of swelled. Brown.
to bring forLoivth.
introducer.
less than
is
intuitivo
INTUMES'CENCE,
The
in
duce
a part
\t.
he
;
INTRODUe'TIVE,
force or cast
INTRUDED, INTRUDER,
course. 5.
3.
;
merchandise. The act of bringing something into noas the introduction tice, practice or use of new modes of dress or of tillage. The part of a book which precedes the main work a preface or preliminary dis-
and
[Sp.
;
We
;
;
4.
mony
sired.
action of conducting or ushering in- 2. To encroach to enter or force one's self used of persons. speak of in without permission as, to intrude on the introduction of one stranger to anoti the lands of another. er ; tlie introduction of a foreign minister 3. To enter uncalled or uninvited, or withto a i)rince or court, and the introduction out just right. Col. ii. of company to a levee. INTRU'DE, V. t. To thrust one's self in, or 2. The act of bringing into a country ; as to enter into some place without right or the introduction of gold or bullion, or of welcome.
a place
tliat
intuition, a.
Perceived by the mind immediately, without the intervention of argument or testi-
;
intro-
know by
intuitif.]
The
to
3.
V\'e
the whdle.
INTUITIVE,
thrust one's self in ; to come or go in 1. without invitation or welcome ; to enter, as into company, against the will of the (•omi)any or the host as, to intrude on families at unseasonable hours. Never 2. intrude where your company is not de-
ductio.} 1.
are presented, without the intervention of other ideas, or without reasoning and deduction.
act of turning Berkeley.
inwards.
imported.:
INTRODU'CER, n. One who introduces INTROVERT', v. To turn inwards. oue who conducts another to a place or.
N U
I
The
n.
I'. *. [L. inundo, inundctus ; and unda, a wave, or its root.] To overflow to deluge to spreiid over The low lands along the with a fluid. Mississippi are inumiated almost every
in 1.
;
;
Dryden INTRUST'ING, /i;jr. Delivering intrust; The falling of confiding to the care of. spring. INTROSUSCEP'TION, > one part of an INTUI' TifON, n. [Sp. intuicion ; L. intui- 2. To fill with an overflowing abundance or INTUSSUSCEP'TION, ^ intestine into another, or the passing of tus, intueor ; in and tueor.] superfluity as, the country was once inone part within another, causing a dupli- A looking on a sight or view ; but restrict-] i(»i(/a/frf with bills of credit. The presses inundate the country with papers. ed to mental view or perception. ParticuCore. Hooper. cature of the intestine. INTROVE'NIENT, a. [L. intro and veni- larly and appropriately, the act by which INUNDATED, p;j. Overflowed; spread over with a fluid copiously supplied. the mind perceives the agreement or dis ens, venio, to come.] agreement of two ideas, or the truth ofilNUN'DATING, ppr. Overflowing; deiuComing in or between entering. [Little
own
mind.
1
;
;
[
t
'
!
;
;
Broivn.
used.]
Vol.
I.
things, immediately, or the
113
moment
they p
ging; spreading over.
N V
I
INUNDA'TION,
n.
N V
I
An
3.
To
to infringe
N V
I
encroach on to violate. The king inrarferf the rights and privileges of the people, and the people invaded tlie prerogatives of the king. To go into a Latinism. [JVot used.] attack
to
INVA'RIABLENESS,
n. Constancy of or quality immutability ; unchangeableness. INVA'RIABLY, adv. Constantly ; uniform4. without alteration or ly change. are bound to pursue Spenser. invariably the path of to attack ; to seize ; as a dis5. To fall on duty. ease. 9. INVA'RIED, a. Unvaried not changing INVA'DED, pp. Entered by an army with or altering. flowing or superfluous abundance. Blackwall. INUNDERSTAND'ING, a. Void of under- a hostile design attacked ; assaulted ; in- IN VA'SION, n. s as z. [L. invasio, from violated. invado. See Invade.] fringed standing. [A bad word and not iiserf.] Pearson. INVA'DER, n. One who enters the territo- 1. A hostile entrance into the possessions of INURBAN'ITY, n. [inand urbanity.] In- ry of another with a view to war, con- another; particularly, the entrance of a Bacon. Swift. hostile army into a rude, unpolished manners or dequest or plunder. civility country tor the pur2. An assailant. of want of courteousness. or portment ; pose concjuest plunder, or the attack one who of a military force. The north of Bp. Hall. 3. An encroacher ; an intruder England and south of Scotland were for centuries INU'RE, V. t. [in and ure. Ure signifies infringes the rights of another. Hammond. use, practice, in old English, and in Norsubject to invasion, each from the other. man French. In Chaucer, it seems to INVA'DING, ppr. Entering on the posses- The invasion of England by William the sions of another with a view to war, conbear rather the signification of luck or Norman, was in 1066. fortune. In Scottish, it is used in both quest or plunder ; assaulting ; infringing 2. An attack on the rights of another; insenses. See Ure] attacking. fringement or violation. n. 3. 1. To habituate to accustom; to apply or INVALES'CENCE, Attack of a disease as the invasion of invalesco.] [L. Diet. the plague, in Egypt. Strength health. expose in use or practice till use gives Arbuthnol. little or no pain or inconvenience, or INVALETU'DINARY, a. Wanting health. INVA'SIVE, a. [from invade.] Entering on another's possessions with hostile demakes little impression. Thus a man in- INVAL'ID, a. [L. invalidus ; in and valiiires his body to labor and toil, till he susdus, strong, from valeo, to be strong, to signs; aggressive.
inundalio.]
[L.
overflow of water or other fluid a flootl a rising and spreading of water over low grounds. Holland has frequently suffered immensely by inundations of the sea. The Delta in "Egypt is annually enriched by the inundation of the Nile. An overspreading of any kind an over-
;
;
;
;
;;
state, condition
;
;
We
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
tains
that
would destroy a body So we imire our-
whicli
unaccustomed
to
it.
Warriors are
2.
avail.] 1.
Weak;
of no force, weight or cogency.
in-
;
;
vection tiva
;
;
A
INU'RED,
Accustomed; hardened by
pp.
2.
use.
INCREMENT, custom
n.
Use; practice; habit;
frequency.
;
Passing
INURN',
in
V.
use to the benefit
t.
[in
and
ter; to intomb.
urn.]
;
Wherein we saw thee
INVAL'IDATE, 1.
Shak
To put in an urn. INURN'ED, pp. Deposited in a tomb. INURN'ING, ppr. Interring; burying. INUSITA'TION, n. Want of use disuse.
2.
;
[Little used.]
INUS'TION,
[L. inustio, inuro
»!.
The
uro, to burn.] 2.
A
branding
the
;
;
Paley. in and
action of burning. action of marking by
itable
;
from L.
a. [Fr.
useless.
INUTILITY,
inutilis.]
n. [Fr. iyiutilitf
;
Unprof-
Bacon
[JVot in itse.]
v.
t.
[from invalid;
L. inutilitas
;
Inveigh.] railing speech or expression ; something uttered or written, intended to cast oppro-
brium, censure or reproach on another; a harsh or reproachful accusation. It differs from reproof, as the latter may come from a friend and be intended for the good of the person reproved but invective from an proceeds enemy, and is intended
2.
or lessen the force of; more generally, to destroy the strength or validity of; to render of no force or eftect; as, to invalidate an agreement or a contract To overthrow; to prove to be of no force as, to invalidate
an argument. pp. ^Rendered invalid or
INVAL'IDATED, of no force.
INVAL'IDATING, and
force
ness
the
Destroying
ppr.
effect of. n.
[Fr. invalidity.]
want of cogency
;
to give pain or to injure.
It is
ing-
To weaken
INVALID'ITY,
burning.
INU'TILE,
at
invalider.]
quietly inurned.
used.] [Fr. invective ; Sp. invecfrom L. inveho. See ;
71.
invetliva
Encyc. followed by against. He uttered severe invectives against the unfortunate general. Fr. INVE€'TIVE, a. Satirical; abusive; rail-
tion.
to in-
—The scpulcher
A
It.
;
;
Tlie hospitals for invalids
Chelsea and Greenwich, in England, are institutions honorable to the English na-
of.
To bury
person who is infirm, wounded, maimed, or otherwise disabled for active sera soldier or seaman worn out in vice ;
INU'RING, /?/*(. Habituating; accustoming. 2.
A
service.
Walton
Johnson.
;
is little
INVEe'TIVE,
;
;
Infringing another's rights. Invective, which see. [/n-
INVEC'TlON,n.
Milton. ured to blood, and seamen are inured to 2. In laiv, having no force, effect or efficacy void null as an invalid contract hardships and deprivations. or agreement. INU'RE, v.i. To pass in use to take or have effect to be applied to serve to the IN' VALID, J!. [Fr. invalide ; h. invalidus, use or benefit of; as, a gift of lands insupra.] ures to the heirs of the grantee, or it in- 1. person who is weak and infirm a person sickly or indisposed. ures to their benefit. selves to cold or heat.
;
force or efficacy ; as the agreement or of a will.
Weak
want of
legal
invalidity of
an
INVE€'TIVELY,
Dryden. abu-
adv.
Satirically
;
Shak.
sively.
INVEIGH,
V. i.
[L. invtho, to bear, or against ; in and veho,
inva'y.
throw or bring on to carry.]
To
exclaim or rail against; to utter censorious and bitter language against any one ; to reproach ; with against. The author inveighed sharply against the vices of the clergy in his age. Men inveigh against the follies of fashion.
INVeIGHER,
n.
inva'yer.
One who
rails
;
a railer.
INVEIGHING,
ppr. inva'yirig. Exclaiming railing at ; uttering bitter words. Uselessness; the quality of being unprofitaINVE'IGLE, v. t. [Norm, enveogler, to inble un])rofitableness ; as the inutility of INVAL'UABLE, a. [in and vahiable.] I'reFr. aveugler. The affinveigle, to blind vain speculations and visionary projects cious above estimation ; so valuable thai ities of tliis word are obscure.] a. That caimot be utter its worth cannot be estimated ; inestima To entice ; to seduce to wheedle ; to pered. Milton. The privileges of christians are inble. suade to something evil by deceptive arts INVA'DE, V. t. [L. invado ; in and vado, to rnluable. or flattery. in
and
See
ulilitas.
INVAL'IDNESS,
Invalidity; as the i« validness of reasoning.
Uliiiti/.]
n.
agair.st
;
;
;
INUT'TERABLE,
;
INVAL'UABLY, adv. Inestimably. To enter a country, as an army with hos'Bp. Hall. intentions to enter as an enemy, with INVA'RIABLE, a. [Fr.; in and vaiiable, a view to conquest or plunder to attack. from vary.] The French armies invaded Holland in Constant in the same state; immutable; unJ7'J5. They invaded Russia and alterable unchangeable that does not perished. to assail 2. To attack to assault. The character vary always uniform. There shall he seditions among men and inand the laws of the Supreme Being must one another. 2 Esdras. rading necessarily be invariable. 1.
tile
Yet have they many
To
baits
inveigle and invite th'
and
;
;
;
;
;
;
—
guileful spells
unwary sense
Milton.
;
INVEIGLED,
Enticed; pp. seduced from duty.
INVE'IGLEMENT,
n.
wheedled;
Seduction
to evil;
enticement.
South.
INVE'IGLER, n. One who entices or draws into
any design by
arts
and
flattery.
N V
I
Enticing; wheedling; persuading to any thing bad. INVEILED, a. Covered as with a veil. Browne.
INVENT', It.
IN'VENTORIED,p/).
venio, to come ; Uterally, to come to, to fall on, to meet, Eng. tofind.] to devise 1. To find out something new something not. before known to contrive
ed
a new instrument of a machine for spinning to invent gunpowder. [See Invention.] as, to invent
To
2.
to invent
;
forge
to fabricate
;
;
3.
In music, to change the order of the notes which form a chord, or the parts which
Inserted or register-
And
to contrive false-
n.
[S\). It.
inventario
;
IN'VENTORY,
forged
INVENT'ER, n. [See Inventor.] INVENT'ING, ppr. Finding out what was unknown sometliing new before
;
INVEN'TION,
2.
[Fr.
insert or register in n.
inventio.]
To
Encyc.
to turn into another channel ; Knolles. [J^ot in use.] a. Destitute of a verteEd. Encyc. bral colunm, as animals. to
divert
;
embezzle.
INVERT EBKAL,
INVERT EBRATED,
Destitute of a
a.
back bone or vertebral chain.
[See l^erGood.
tehrated.]
INVERTED, pp. rection order.
Turned
to a contrary diturned upside down ; changed in
;
INVERT'EDLY,
In a contrary or re-
adv.
Derham.
versed order.
A
medicine intended to invert the natural order of the successive Danvin. irritative motions in the system. Blackstone an accoimt of INVERT'ING, ppr. Turning in a contrary direction changing the order.
INVERSE,
invers'.
a.
A
[from invent.]
male that invents.
from L.
4.
.
INVERT'ENT,
n.
;
INVENT'RESS,
fabricating.
n.
To
goods.
devising or contriving
;
com))ose harmony.
Fr.
from invent] ; account, catalogue or schedule of all the goods and chattels of a deceased per-, son. In some of the United States, the of the inventory must include an account real as well as the personal estate of the deceased. A catalogue of movables. A catalogue or account of particular
An
9. ly ; as, to invent falsehoods. 3. 3. To feign ; to frame by the imagination things. [An indtfinitt use of the word.] as, to invent the machinery of a poem. To v. t. 4. To light on ; to meet with. [This is the [Fr. invcntorier.] make an inventory of ; to make a list, cataliteral sense, but not now used.] Spejiser. to inventory the INVENT'ED, pp. Found out; devised; logue or schedule of; as, fabricated. goods and estate of the deceased. contrived ; ;
winter storms invert the year.
Dryden
inventaire 1.
and produce something that did not before music
place in a contrary order or method; as, to invert the rules of justice ; to invert the order of words.
an inventory
IN'VENTORY,
;
;
exist;
in
To
2.
Shak
of an inventory.
L. invenio, inventum
;
N V
1
;
[Fr.inventer; Sp.inventar; ; in and
/.
t>.
inventare
N V
I
ces any thing not before existing a con-' The inventors of many of the most triver. usefid arts are not known. INVENTO'RIALLY, adv. In the manner
INVE'IGLING, ;);)r.
INVEST,
fe-
Dryden. See [L. inversus.
1.
V. t. [Fr. itivestir; L. investio in and veslio, to clothe. See I'esl.] To clothe to dress to ])ut garments on ;
;
;
;
to array; usually and most correctly folaction or operation of finding out Invert.] lowed by tvith, before the thing put on as, the contrivance of that Inverted Inverse proportion or reciprocal. In to ini'est one tvith a mantle or robe. which did not before exist as the invenratio, is when the effect or result of any this sense, it is used chiefly in poetry and tion of logarithms the invention of the art operation is less in pro[)ortion as the cause elevated prose, not in collor|uial discourse. the invention of the orrery. of i)rinting is greater, or is greater in proportion as the to 2. To clothe with office or authority Invention JiiDcii/JoK differs from discovery. cause is less. Thus the time in wliich a is applied to the contrivance and producplace in possession of an office, rank or be i)crforined, will (|uantity of work may tion of something that did not before exas, to invest a person with a civil dignity be less in proportion as the number of ist. office, or with an ecclesiastical dignity. Discovery brings to light that which workmen is greater, and greater in propor to grace; as, to invest with 3. To adorn; existed before, but which was not known. tion as the number of workmen is less. jfJ, Shak. are indebted to invention for the tlier ten men can perform a certain quantity of|! ,p""I^' are indebtbarometer. and mometer as, to be invested work in six days, then twentii men will per-jl'*- ^.", '"'"'("' '° ed to discovery for the knowledge of the form the same work in three
The
1.
something new;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
We
We
'
,
;
\
;
;
;
;
;
;
fleeting
Doric, Ionic and Corinthian orders are the said to be inventions of the Greeks Tuscan and Composite are inventions of the Latins. Fables are the inven fiction. 3. Forgery lions of ingenious men. 4. In painting, the finding or choice of the enter into the compowhich are to objects sition of the piece. Encyc 5. In poetry, it is applied to whatever the! poet adds to the history of the subject. and the In 6. rhetojic, selecting of finding arguments to prove and illustrate the point in view. 7. The power of inventing; that skill or ingenuity which is or may be employed in
]
contriving any thing new. 8.
Thus we
say,
a man of invention. Encyc. Discovery ; the finding of things hidden or before
unknown.
INVENTTVE, invent
;
a.
expedients
;
[Less proper.]
[Fr. iiiventif.]
contrivance
;
Ray. Able to ready at
as an inventive head or genius.
Dryden. n. One who finds out somenew; one who contrives and produ-
INVENT'OR, thing
to invest it in lands or goods. In this application, it is always followed by in. Clothed dressed ; adornINVESTED, pp. ed inclosed.
('hange of order, so that the last becomes and the first last a turning or change of the natural order of Jhings. first
;
It is Just
;
2.
•3.
money
;
funded or bank stock
Invert.] 1.
;
;
;
the inversion of an act of parlia
;
ment; your Lordship first signed it, and llien i( was passed among the lords and commons. Dryden. Change of places, so that each takes the place of the others A turning backwards; a contrary rule of
INVEST'IENT,
a.
Covering; clothing. Ifoodward.
INVEST'IGABLE,
a.
[from investigate.]
That may be investigated or searched out
;
discoverable by rational search or disquisition. The causes or reasons of things are sometimes investigabte.
Problems in geometry and operation. arithmetic arc often proved by inversion. as division by multi|)lication, and multipli-
INVEST IGATE,
r.
t.'[L. investigo
;
in
and
vestigo, to follow a track, to search ; i'mtigium, a track or foot.'itep.] 4. To search into to inquire and examine into with care and accuracy to find out by careful disquisition as, to investigate the powers and forces of nature to iiivestivices." the causes of natural phenomena to J ^ate 5. In music, the change of position either of investigate the principles of moral duty a subject or of a chord. to investigate the conduct of an agent or Busby. INVERT', V. t. [L. inverto ; in and verto, to the motives of a prince. turn.] INVESTIGATED,;);?. Searched into; exto turn 1. To turn into a contrary direction amined with care.
cation by division In grammar, a change of the natural order of words as, " of all vices, impurity is one of the most detestable," instead of " impurity is one of the most detestable of all
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
j
;
as, to invert a cone upside doHii a hollow vessel. ;
vert
;
to in-
INVESTIGATING,
ppr.
inquiring into with care.
Searching into
;
N V
I
INVESTIGA'TION,
N V
I
n. [Fr.
from L.
N V
I
[L. invidiosus, from inviInvideo deo, to envy ; hi a.n(\video, to see. signifies properly, to look against.]
INVIDIOUS,
iiivesti-
INVI'OLATED,
a.
Unprofaned unbroken ;
a.
;
miviolated. Drayton. IN'VIOUS, a. [L. invius; in and via, way.] action or process of searching minutely Hudibras. Impassable untrodden. for truth, facts or principles; a careful in- 1. Envious; tnalignant. Evelyn. what is unknown, either 2. Likely to incur ill will or hatred, or to IN'VIOUSNESS, n. State of being impassafind out to quiry ble. Ward. in the physical or moral world, and either provoke envy ; hateful. [This is the usual INVISC'ATE, V. t. [L. in and viscus, glue, sense.] by observation and experiment, or by arbirdlime.] Agamemnon found it an invidious affair to gument and discussion. Thus we speak 1. To lime; to daub with of the investigations of the philosopher and glue. give the preference to any one of the Grecian heroes. Broome 2. To catch with glue or birdlime ; to entanthe mathematician ; the investigations of the juda;e, the moralist and the divine. gle with glutinous matter. [Little used.] INVID'IOUSLY, adv. Enviously; malig£;atio.]
The
;
INVEST'IGATIVE,
a.
erate in researches.
INVESTIGATOR,
n.
Curious and delibPegge. One who searches
a subject.
diligently into
INVEST'ITURE,
n.
Invest.]
It was customary for princes to ture of ecclesiastical benefices.
make
investi-
to
its
Marshall
invigorire
mand INVIS'IBLE,
;
bilis
inveteratio.
;
See
The
a. [Fr. inviiuihle ; L. in and vinco, to conquer.] Not to he conquered or subdued ; that can;
unconquerable
INVIN'CIBLENESS,
insuperable
;
)
"•
See INVINCIBIL'ITY, querable
;
as,
;
The
an
a. [Fr. from h. inviolabilis ; in and violabilis, violo, to violate.] Not to be profaned that ought not to be injured, polluted or treated with irrever-
1.
;
;
;
The
crowned
quality of not being subject
long continuance.
INVET'ERATELY,
[Ob-
Bacon adv.
With obstinacy
A part
in-
TVheatley.
of the service in a psalm or anthem
a service-book, which conthe invitatories, responsories and col-
Encyc. v.t.
[L. invito; It.invitare; Fr.
This word
is
its
formed by in and root inbid. See ;
To ask to do some act or to go to some to request the company of a perplace son as, to invite one to dine or sup ; to invite friends to a wedding to invite company to an entertainment to invite one to an excursion into the country. ;
;
;
2.
To
to
3.
allure
;
to
draw
to
;
to
tempt
induce by pleasure or hope. Shady groves, that easy sleep
—
To
to
come
;
invite.
Dryden. present temptations or allurements to.'
The people should be
in a situation
vite hostilities.
not to in-
Federalist, Jay.
INVI'TED, pp. Solicited requested to come or go in person allured. Ward. INVI'TER, n. One who invites. Pope. to be INVI'TING, ppr. Soliciting the company
broken.
old.]
;
;
of; asking to attend.
adv. Without profanation without breach or failure as a sanctuary to keep a promise invioinviolably sacred
INVI'OLABLY,
;
;
tempting drawing to Alluring an inviting amusement or prospect.
2. «.
;
;
;
as
Nothing is so easy and inviting as the retort violently. of abuse and sarcasm. Irving. lably. Shak. INVET'ERATENESS, n. Obstinacy con- INVI'OLATE, a. [L. inviolatus.] Unhurt INVI'TING, jt. Invitation. firmed by time adv. In such a manner as INVI'TINGLY, inveteracy ; as the invetimuninjured unprofaned uiqiolluted eratcness of a mischief Locke invite or allure. to broken. n. The act of hardenINVETERA'TION, But let inviolate tnith be always dear INVI'TINGNESS, n. The quality of being To thee. ing or confirming by long continuance. Denham. Taylor. inviting. ;
;
;
;
;
;
;
.
;
;
ity
Using or containing
the Teutonic 6tW, or Bid.]
;
2.
a.
lects.
inviter.
;
grow
all
INVI'TE, in-
;
[L. invetero, to
invitatio.
n.
;
;
;
I,,
—Antiphonary,
in and vetero, from vetus, old.] Old; long established. 2. It is an inveterate and received opinion^ Obs. Bacon. promise. rooted established by long 3. Not to be injured or tarnished Deep firmly as inviocontinuance obstinate used of evils ; as lable or honor. an inveterate disease an inveterate abuse 4. Not chastity susceptible of hurt or wound ; as inan inveterate course of sin. violable saints. Milton. 3. Having fixed habits by long continuance INVI'OLABLENESS, ) [frominviolable.] used of persons ; as an inveterate sinner. INVIOLABIL'ITY, ^"-The quality or 4. Violent; deep rooted; obstinate; as instate of being inviolable as the inviolabilveteratc pnmity or malice. of heads. I
from
act of inviting; solicitation; the calling
tained
uncon-
Unconquerably;
[Fr.
vitations.
;
1.
Brown. n.
the catholic church sung in the morning.
quality of
being
^
adv.
vision.}
Invite.]
INVI'TATORY,
ence as, a sacred place and sacred things should be considered inviolable. Milton. Not to be broken as an inviolable league, covenant, agreement, contract, vow or
;
and
[in
place.
siqjerably.
1.
s as z.
n.
INVI'TATORY,
INVrOLABLE,
;
solete or little used. ]
invisi-
or requesting of a person's company to visit, to dine, or to accompany him to any
as an
insuperableness.
;
INVIN'CIBLY,
;
To fix and settle by
from L.
[Fr.
of vision, or the power of seeing.
INVITA'TION,
invincible obstacle, error, habit or objec-
:
t.
z.
[Little used.]
tion.
or the firmness or deep rooted obstinacy of any quality or state acquired by time as tlie inveteracy of custom and habit usually or always applied in a bad sense as the inveteracy of preju dice, of error, or of any evil habit. [L. 'inveteratus, invelero
Want
Giving fresh vigor
strengthening.
invincible army. Not to be overcome
Inveterate.]
v.
Ray. as
visibilis, visa, to see.]
Denham.
INVIS'ION,
not be overcome
Long continuance,
INVET'ERATE,
o. *
and
pp. Strengthened; ani-
Browne.
Before the investment could be made, a change of the market might render it ineligible. Hamilton
;
in
;
;
INVIN'CIBLE, I.
;
%
invisiUliti,
[Fr.
"•
;
n. The action of invigorating, or state of being invigorated. INVIL'LAtiED, a. Turned into a village.
The laying out of money in the purchase of some species of property literally, the clothing of money with something,
IN VET'ERATE, a.
[It.
INVIGORA'TION,
invest-
er of the fort, within six days after
ment.
[L.
to nour-
;
from in«m6/e.] of vigilance; INVIS'IBLENESS, \ The state of being invisible; imperceptible-
mated.
besieging by an armed force. The capitulation was signed by the command
n.
breed
Mountague. >
ness to the sight.
INVIG'ORATING, ppr.
Shak Clothes; dress; garment; habit [We now use vestment.] The act of surromiding, blocking up or
INVET'ERACY,
To
v. t.
loord.]
INVISIBIL'ITY,
;
INVIGORATED,
Clothing; encircling. n. The action of invest
mg.
4.
bad
;
Encyc.
He had refused to yield to the pope the investiture of bishoi)s. Raleigh
3.
[J}
vigor to to strengthen to animate That cannot be seen imperceptible by the to give life and energy to. Exercise in Millions of stars, invisible to the sight. cheerfulness invigo vigorates the body naked eye, may be seen by the telescope. rates the mind. He endured, as seeing him who is invisible. Christian graces and virtues they cannot be, Heb. xi. unless fed, invigorated and animated by univerINVIS'IBLY, adv. In a manner to escape sal charity. Atterbury the sight; imperceptibly to the eye.
or, office or benefice.
2.
ish.
quality of pro-
vigor.]
To give
The right of giving possession of any man
a.
«.
INVIS'CERATE,
provoke hatred.
The
Want
n.
INVIG'ORATE,r.
The grant of land or a feud was perfected by the ceremony of corporal investiture, or open Blackstone delivery of possession.
INVEST'MENT,
likely to n.
neglect of watching.
seizin.
INVEST'IVE,
manner
The INVIti'ILANCE,
action of giving possession, or livery of
2.
In a
INVID'IOUSNESS,
voking envy or hatred.
See
[Fr.
Brown.
nantly. 2.
N V
I
I
N V
W
N
I
[from involun- 10. In algebra, to raise a quantity from the {in root to iuiy assigned power as a quantifrom vitrify.] tary.] That cannot be vitrified or converted into 1. Not by choice ; not spontaneously ; against ty involved to the third or fourth jiower. Baxter. INV(JLV'KD, pp. Enveloped Kirwan. one's will. implied; inglass. wrapped entangled. IN'VOCATE, V. t. [L. invoco ; in and voco, 2. In a manner independent of the will. to call.] INVOL'UNTARINESS, n. Want of choice INVOLVING, ppr. Enveloping; implying; comprising entangling complicating. To invoke to call on in supplication to or will. Sp. Hall. ) 2. Independence on the will. INVIJLNEHABIL'ITV, implore to address in prayer. "• [trominvulIf Dagou be thy god. JNVOL'UNTARY, a. [Fr. involontaire ; L. mVUL'NERABLENESS, ^ nerable.] Milton. Go to his temple, invocate his aid The (piality or state of being invulnerable, in and volunlarius. See yoluntary.] invoke wounds or of this is secure from Walsh. or word, generally 1. Not having will or choice [Instead injury. unwilling. The mo- INVUL'NERABLE, a. [Fr. from L. invul2. Independent of will or choice. used.] IN'VOCATED, pp. Invoked; called on in tion of the heart and arteries is involunta- nerabilis. See Vulnerable.] That cannot be woimded ; incapable of rebut not against the will. prayer. ri), not done 3. Not proceeding from choice IN'VOCATING,;)/)r. Invoking. ceiving injury. Nor vainly hope A slave INVOeA'TION, n. [Fr. from L. invocatio.] willingly opposed to the will. To be inmilnerablc in those bright arms. 1. The act of addressing in prayer. and a conquered nation yield an involunMdton. Hooker.
INVIT'RIFIABLE,
and
a.
vitnjiahh,\
INVOL'UNTARILY,
adv.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
—
;
;
;
taj-i)
3.
suliniission to a master.
The form or act of calling for the assist- IN'VOI.UTE, n. [L. involutus.] A curve ance or presence of any being, particularly traced by the end of a string folded upon of some divinity ; as the invocation of the a figure, or miwound from it. muses. IN'VOLUTE, ) " [L. involutus, involvo. See Involve.] In botany, The wliole poem is a prayer to Fortune, and IN' VO LUTED, I divided between
two (lei Addison.
the
INWALL',
v.t.
fortify witli
IN'WARD,
[in
[>iax.
See
in and ward. 1.
auA
To inclose
wall.]
a wall.
o.
or
Spenser.
inweard
;
G. einwdrts
;
If'ard.]
Internal; interior ; ]>laced or being withas the inward structure of the body. ;
in
Involuted folii rolled spirally inwards. domestic ; familiar. 2. Intimate Spenser. tion or vernation, is when the leaves withShak. 3. Seated in the mind or soul. in the bud have their edges rolled spirally Toward the inside. Turn inwards on both sides towards the upper IN'WARD, I the attention inward. IN'WARDS, I surface. Martyn. 2. Towaid the center or interior ; as, to bend INVOLU'TION, )i. [Fr.; h. involutio. See a thing intcard. Involve.] Into the mind or thoughts. .3. 1. The action of involving or infolding. envois, plu. things sent.] Milton. relesti;il liglit shine inward. 1. In commerce, a written account of the par- 2. The state of being entangled or involved ; adv. lu the inner parts ; inticulars of merchandise, shipped or sent to complication. ternally. All things arc mixed and causes blended by a purchaser, consignee, factor, &c. with covered Let Kcnedict, like fire. Clanvillc. mutual involutions. the value or prices and charges annexed. Consume away in sighs, waste inwardly. 3. Ill grammar, the insertion of one or more written account of ratable estate. 3. Shak. the invocation
is
ties.
;
A
judicial call, demand or order ; as the invocation of papers or evidence into Ifheaton's Rep. court. IN'VOICE, n. [Fr. envoi, a sending or thin sent, from envoyer, to send, It. inviare ;
3.
.
IN'WARDLY,
A
Laws of JVew Hampshire.
IN'VOICE,
i>.
/.
To make
a written account
of goods or property with
their prices.
Goods, wares and merchandise imported from Norway, and invoiced in tlie current dollar of Madison's Proclamatiun. Norway It is usual to invoice goods in the currency of the country in which the seller resides.
—
pp. Inserted in a price or value annexed.
IN'VOICED,
Robinson,
list
with the
Mm. Reports.
ppr. Making an account in writing of goods, with their prices or values aime.\ed inserting in an invoice. INVO'KE, V. t. [L. invoco; in and voco, to call iio.r, a word.] 1. To address in prayer; to call on for assistance and protection as, to invoke the Supreme Being. Poets invoke the muses
IN'VOICING,
;
clauses or members of a sentence between 2. In the heart He privately secretly. the agent or subject and the verb; a third inwardly repines. It is not easy to treat intervening member within a second, &c with respect a person whom we inwardly as, habitual falsehood, if rve may judge despise. from ejc])erience, iiders absolute depravity. .3. Towards the center. 4. In algebra, the raising of a quantity from n. Intimacy; familiarity. Thus IN'WARDNESS, its root to any power assigned. Shak. used.] 2X2X2=8. licre 8, the third power of 2. [Mit Internal state. [Unusual.] 2, is found by involution, or multiplying IN'WARDS, n. plu. The inner parts of an the number into itself, and the product by animal the bowels the viscera. the same inimber. Milton. Ex. xxix. INVOLVE, V. t. involv'. [L. wiroZvo ; in and v.t. pret. inwove; pp. i/iwoVolvo, to roll, Eng. to ivalloiv.] To weave ven, inwove, [in and weave.] 1. To envelop; to cover with surrounding together to intermix or intertwine by malK^r; as, to involve one in smoke or ;
;
;
;
;
INWEAVE, ;
weaving.
dust.
;
2.
To all
envelop
sides
in
any thing which
as, to involve in
;
exists
on
darkness or ob-
Down they cast Their crowns inwove with amaranth and gold. MUton.
;
sciu'ity.
To
INWHEE'L,
To
V.
t.
be and not to comprise. cle. im|)ly to he at the same time, involves a contra- IN' WIT, 71. 2. order ; to call judicially ; as, to invoke [in diction. Obs. standing. depositions or evidence into a court. to to connect. join; fVlrf. 4. Toentwist; INWOQD', V. t. He knows bis end with mine involved. pp. Addressed in prayer for 3.
for assistance.
;
To
INVO'KED, aid
;
INVO'KING, aid
;
ppr. Addressing
in prayer for
,').
calling.
INVOL'UCEL.
;
[dim. of involucre.] A an involucret. Eaton.
INVOLU'CELLATE,o.
Barton.
[L. fromi/iDoiDo.] In hotany, a calyx redower, particularly in the umbel, but applicJ also to the whorl and otl>er kinds of inflorescence. Marlyn. ?
7.
To
take
in
to catch
;
To encir-
Beaum. Mind; under-
hide in woods.
INWORK'ING,
to conjoin.
;
a.
INVOLU'CRET,
71.
6.
Having an involucre,
as iHubels, whorls, &c.
A small
Martyn. or
partial in- 9.
Martyn.
INWOVE, INWOVEN,
•
;
;
;
S
the
ITTVOLU'CRED, volucrum.
0.
[supra.] Surround-
involiicels.
INVOLU'€RUM, INVOLU'CRE, mote from
wheel.]
wit.]
;
n.
partial involucre
ed with
To
and
Sidney. ppr. or a. [in and work.] Working or operating within. Tlie gatherino- number, as it moves along. INWORK'ING, n. Internal operation enInvolves a vast involuntaiy throng. Pope. ergy within. Macknighf. ? Woven in ; To entangle. Let not our enemy involve r PP- °f "'"•"''' intertwined inthe nation in war, nor our imprudence 5 by weaving. volve us in difiiculty. Extrava- INVVRAP, V. t. inrap'. [in and wrap.] To To plunge to overwhelm. involve to infold to cover by wrapping ; gance often involves men in debt and disas, to be inivrapped in smoke or in a cloud ; tress. To inwrap ; to infold to complicate or to inwrap in a cloke. 2. To involve in difficulty or perplexity to make intricate.
MUlon.
called.
[in
and
;
;
Some
involved their snaky folds.
Florid, witty, involved discourses.
To
blclid
;
to
Milton. perplex. Locke. 3. To ravisli or transport.
INWREATHE,
mingle confusedly. Milton.
wreathe.]
v.
t.
[III.
inre'fhe.
Bacon. See Rap.] [in and
I
P E
Resplendent locks inwreathed with beams. Milton. pp. or a. inraut'. [in and
INWROUGHT,
wrought, from work.] or
Wrought things
worked
n.
or
[See Iodine.]
other
among
A
Milton.
compound
consisting of oxygen, iodin and a base.
I'ODIC, a. Iodic acid din and oxygen.
A
R O
I
I
The I'RISHISM, n. A mode of speaking peculed, gray, brown, white, and yellow. iar to the Irish. gray, or genuine kind, is referred by Mutis to the Psychotria emetica, but more recent- IRK, V. t. urk. [Scot, irk, to weary irk, indolent. Lye suggests that this may be ly by Brotero to the Callicocca Ipecacuanfrom Sax. weorce, work, which signifies These in Brazil. a ha, plant growing or it also but seems more pain, anxiety plants have been considered by some as the same, or as species of the same genus. probably to be connected with Sax. earg', Parr. This root is used as an emetic. slothful, lazy, Gr. apyoj.] used To to give pain to imwrinkled root is a little weary only Ipecacuanha about the thickness of a moderate quill, personally as, it irketh me, it gives me unShak. much used as an emetic, and against di- easiness. It is nearly obsolete. tedious tirearrheas and dysenteries. Cyc. IRK'SOME, a. Wearisome some giving uneasiness used of someIRASCIBILITY, ? [from irascible.] ;
;
in
adorned with figures.
;
I'ODATE,
R
I
To surround or encompass as with a wreath, or with sometljing in the form of a wreath.
Gay Lussac. Henry. is a compound of io-
;
;
;
;
;
compound of
with
"'
;
;
thing troublesome by long continuance or as irksome hours irksome toil a metal or otlier substance. rej)etition being irascible, or easily inflamed by anAddison. Milton. or task. rODIN, } "' [Gr. iujSijs, resembling a vioger irritability of temper. Ill chimislry, a peculiar I ODINE, \ let.] IRAS'CIBLE, a. [Fr. from L. iroscor, from IRK'SOMELY, adv. In a wearisome or temanner. dious substance recently discovered by Courtois, See ira. Ire]
rODIDE,
n.
iodin
IRAS'CIBLENESS,
The
i
quality
of
;
;
;
a manufacturer of salt-peter in Paris. It Very susceptible of anger easily provoked is obtained from certain sea-weeds or mairritable or inflamed with resentment At the ordinary temperature rine plants. as an irascible man ; an irascible temper. of the atmosphere it is a solid, apparently IRE, n. [Fr. from L. ira, wrath ; W. hitherto unde at least a simple substance, See Eng. irad, pungency, passion, rage. in It is incombustible, but composed. Wrath.] keen resentment ; a word combining with several bodies, it exhibits Anger wrath the plienomena of combustion ; hence it in used poetry. chiefly has been considered a supporter of comThus will persist, relentless in liis ire. bustion. Like chlorin, it d''stroys vegetaDryden wroth Its color I'REFUL, a. [ire and/i
IRK'SOMENESS,
;
;
;
A metal, the hardest, most common and all the metals; of a livid whitish color inclined to gray, internally composed, to appearance, of small facets, and susceptible of a fine polish. It is so hard and elastic as to be capable of destroying the aggregation of any other meNext to tin, it is the lightest of all tal. metallic substances, and next to gold, the most tenacious. It may be hammered inIts ductility to plates, but not into leaves. It has the is more considerable. properit is attracted by the ty of magnetism and will its lodestone, acquire properties. It is found rarely in native masses ; but in ores, mineralized by different substances, it abounds in every part of the earth. Its medicinal qualities are valuable. most useful of
;
solving in muriatic acid. The native alloy with osmiuin,or native iridium, is of a steel gray color and shining metallic luster. It usually occurs in small irregular flat grains,
stone.]
mineral of a violet blue color, with a shade of purple or black, called also dichroit and It occurs in regular six-sided cordierite. and steinprisms. Its varieties are peliom of pronouncing regular principles the Greek iota anil the Shemitic jorf, this word
ought
ION'I€,
in alluvial soil, in S.
Cleaveland.
heilite.
[Note.
By
to
tlie
1.
The
/onic order, in 2.
[from Ionia.]
and Composite.
It
is
simple,
its liighth is 18 modules, but majestic and that of the entablature four and a half. Encyc. 2. The Ionic dialect of the Greek language, is the dialect used in [onia. was that of sect 3. The Ionic philosophers, founded by Thales of Miletus, in Ionia. Thoir distinguishing tenet was, that water is the principle of all natural things.
:
;
Webster's Manual. of iron. Dan. ii. [L. iris, iridis, the rain- 4. Irons, phi., fetters ; chafus ; manacles handcuffs. Ps. cv. Brown I'RON, a. Made of iron ; consisting of iron as an iron gate ; an iron bar ; iron dust. resembling the rainbow.
plu. irises.
)i.
bow, Gr. ipt?.] The rainbow.
An appearance
architecture, is that species of column named from Ionia, in Greece. It is more 3. The colored circle slender than the Doric and Tuscan, but pupil of the eye, by less slender and less ornamented than the is
Corintliian
3.
Fourcroy. Encyc. An instrument or utensil made of iron ; as a flat-?ro«, a smootbing-iVo?t. Canst thou fill his skin with barbed i'rojjs ? Job xli. Fifruralively, strength power as a. rod
Cleaveland.
I'RIS,
be pronounced yolite.]
a.
America.
n. i'ttrn,
easily ascertained.] 1.
;
riety
A
Tediousness; weari-
or i'rn. JSax. iren ; Scot. irne, yrn, or airii ; Isl. larn ; Sw. jam or iarn ; Dan. iern ; W. haiarn ; Ir. iarann ; Arm. hoarn. Qu. L. ferrum, for herrum. The radical elements of this word are not
IRON,
;
;
n.
someness.
;
4.
in
appear
;
.5.
C.
JVewton.
which surrounds the means of which that enlarged and diminished. opening The changeable colors which sometimes
A
nus of many species. I'RISATED, a. Exhibiting ;
3.
;
as an iron gray-
;
fast; not
Binding
to
be broken; as the
iron sleep of death. 5.
Hard of understanding witted
Firm I'RON,
Phillips. 2.
;
dull
;
Philips. as an iron
Shak.
fool.
;
robust
V.
t.
;
as an iron constitution.
To smooth
of iron. To shackle with irons
with an instrument ;
to fetter or
hand-
cuff.
4.
;
;
Pope. 4.
resembling the rainbow.
Encyc.
Denoting an airy kind of music. Tlie /o«ic I'RISED, a. Containing colors like those of the rainbow. or Ionian mode was, reckoning from grave Chaptal. to acute, the second of the five middle I'RISH, a. Pertaining to Ireland. modes. Busby. I'RISH, n. A native of Ireland. 1PE€A€UAN'HA, ?i. A root produced in 2. The language of the Irish the Hiberno Celtic. South America. Four sorts are mention-
color
Harsh ; rude ; severe miserable ; as the iron age of the world. Rowe. Iron years of wars and dangers. Jove crush'd the nations with an iron rod.
6.
the prismatic
in
color.
the glasses of telescopes, micro
scopes, &c. colored spectrum which a triangular when placed glass prism casts on a wall, at a due angle in the sun-beams. The flower-de-Iis, or flag-flower, a ge-
colors
Resembling iron
;
To furnish or arm with iron. I'RON-CLAY, n. A substance intermediate
3.
between
brown
basalt
color, vesicular.
and wacky, of a reddish and occurring massive or C^yc
R R
I
iron
pp.
1.
;
shiukled a n. Ferruginous quartz subspecies of quartz, opuke or translucent at the edges, with a fracture njore or less conchoidal, shining and nearly vitreous. It is sometimes in very minute and |)erfe(t six-sided prisms, terminated at both exIt occurs tremities by six-sided pyramids. Its also in masses, and in small grains. varieties are red, yellow, and greenish. ;
I'RONFLINT,
2.
;
3. 4.
feeling
Hardhearted
a.
I'RONMOLD,
A
n.
To To
v. i.
IRRA'DIATE,
a.
Franklin. as irrecovtraUe misery. TUlotson. The stuieof n. IRRE€OV'ERABLENESS,
4.
;
To
2.
pp. Illuminated; enlight;
IRRADIATION,
A dealer in iron wares
n.
2.
In seamen's language, a ship is said to be ironsick, when her bolts' and nails are so nmch corroded or eaten with rust that she has become leaky.
An
deco-
;
to recover.]
n.
The
n.
emitting
j\'ol
beaii.s of light. Illuiiiination brightness.
Encyc.
1.
rationatis,
from
ratio.]
a
;
;
A
general name of tlie parts or pieces of a building which con-, sist of iron any thing made of iron.
I'RONWCtRK,
Ji.
is
The works
phi.
is
or
es-'
wrought
in-
n. A genus of plants of several species.
I'RONVVORT, Sideritis,
IRON'l€AL,
a.
[Fr. iionique.
An
ironical expression
IRREeLA'lMABLE, 1. I
often ac- 2.
companied with a manner of utterance which indicates that the speaker intends to be understood in a sense directly contrary which the words convry.
to that
IRON'I€ALLY,
By way of
adv.
One who
11.
by
;
a. [from iron.] Made or consistpartaking of iron as irony ing of iron Hammond. chains; iron?/ particles. Rosombling iron; hard.
I'RONY,
A
n.
L. ironia
1.
a.
and
[in
2.
3.
ironie
fipur,
a dissembler in speech.]
;
;
A
a\owed
which the speaker intends to Nero was a very virtuous Pope Hildebrand was remarkable meekness and humility. When
trary to that
ity
convey
incompatibility.
prince fi)r
;
his
as,
uttered, the dissimulation is gen-' erally apparent iiom the manner of speaking, as l)y a smile or an arch look, or perhaps by an aflected gravity of coiinte-j nance. Irony in writing may also be
irony
is
detected by the manner of expression. a. [from {re.] Apt to be angry.i Obs. Chaucer.l
I'ROUS,
IRRA'DIANCE, IRRA'DIANCY,
?
"' S
[L. irradians, from i>radio. See Irradiate.]
1.
Emission of rays of
2.
Beams of light emitted
IRRA'DIATE, dio, to shine.
v.
t.
light ;
on an object. luster
[L. irradio
See Ray.]
;
of being irreconcilable
IRRECONCILABLY,
adv.
n. ;
incongruity In
a
1.
2.
a.
[in
and
Romeyn. Unregeneracy. J.
Shak.
.
;
to
common
as an irregular building or
fortification. 2.
Not according to established principles or customs; deviating from usage; as the proceedings of a legislative body. Not conformable to nature or the usual operation of natural laws as an irregular action of the heart and arteries. Not according to the rules of art ; immean irregular as irregular verse thodical jiveg-u/ar
3.
;
ciliation; disagreement.
IRRECONCILIA'TION,n. Wantofrecon-|
Not regular; not according form or rules
IRREeONCI'LEMENT.n. Want of reconPrideaux.
M. Mason
uliir.] 1.
j
;
n.
Bp. Hall. the possi-
Beyond
a. [Vt. irregulier; h. irregularis; in andregtdaris, regida. See Reg-
reconciled.]^
IRRElUV'ERABLE,a. [in and recoverable.]
ir-
IRREG'ULAR,
;
manner
Not reconciled. Not atoned for.
ciliation.
adv.
of refutation.
bility
Men may that precludes reconciliation. be irreconcilably opposed to each other. IRREC'ONCILE, v. t. To prevent Iiom beBp. Taylor.^ [III.] ing reconciled.
IRRECONCI'LED,
quality
^";of being
qual-
or repaired as an splendor. 1. Not to be recovered irrecoverable loss. Milton. Time past is in and ra- 2. That cannot be regained. irrecoverable Rogers.
;
IRREFU TABLY,
princi-
The
The
>
See Refute.] That cannot be refuted or disproved.
IRREuEN'ERACY,
ples.
in-
We
absurdities.
by uilh or to. irreconcilable to or with his
;
strength that cannot be overthrown ; with say, the certainty hejond refutation. point in debatt' was irrefrugably proved. IRREFU'TABLE, a. [Low L. irrefutabilis.
;
;
refragable,
root of frango, to
refragable or incapable of refutation. IRREFRA'GABLY, adv. With force or
as incompatible It is followed man's conduct may be
incongruous
[in
tli«
IRREFRA'GABLENESS, IRREFRAGABIL'ITY,
reconcila-
;
sistent
Boyle. quality of
contestable; undeniable; as an irre/rag'aargument; irrefragable reason or evidence. Atterbury. Sunjl.
to
irreconcilable
and
and
6/e
ad
to
be recalled to amity, or a state of friendship and kindness; retaining enmity as that cannot be appeased or subtlued an irreconcilable enemy or faction. That cannot be appeased or subdued as irreconcilable enmity or hatred. That cannot be made to agree or be con-
Not
mode of speech expressing a sense con- IRRE€ONCI'LABLENESS, ;
L. refragor; re break.]
mit of reltirniation.
Gr.
[Fr.
from
tipuiia,
So as not
adv.
The
7^
a.
That cannot be refuted or overthrown
That cannot be tamed.
IRRECONCT'LABLE,
;
;
IRREFRAGABLE,
;
I'RONY,
;
;
being irreducible.
Not to be reclaimed; that cannot be recalled from error or vice; that cannot be Jlddison brought to reform.
IRKECLA'IMABLY,
may
deals in irony.
Pope.
2.
[in
quality
"-of being not
ducible into water.
IRREDU CIBLENESS,
absurdly
ble.'^
irony
the use of irony. A commendation be ironieally severe.
I'RONIST,
;
and reclaima
ble.]
called,
See Irony.] is
a manner contrary to reason a.
J
;
\
Expressing one thing and meaning another.
Want
n.
The
)
and reducible.] Not IRREDlt'CIBLE, that cannot be brought to he reduced back to a former state. of reason or 2. That cannot be reduced or changed to a as corpuscles of air irredlftircnt state a. [in
Not rational; void of reason or under Brutes are irrational animals. standing. to the dictates of reason genus of trees called Sideroxylon,of seve- 2. Not according eral species so called from their liardcontrary to reason absurd. To pursue a course of life which destroys happiness, ness.
I'RONSTONE,
may be irrecoverably abandon-
lo vice.
Hale. Intellectual light. 2. Not Kuliject to be paid at the pleasure of 4. The act of emitting minute particles or government; as irredeemable debts; ineeffluvia from some substance. Encyc. deemable certificates or stock. IRRA'TIONAL, a. [L. irralionalis; in and Hamilton. Smollett.
o.
I'RONVVQQD,
profligate 1
IRRE€U'l'ERABLE,fl.
ppr. Illurainatiog made by IRRA'DLVTING, atiiig with beams of light. when wet. n. The act of
clolli
Uonnc. being irrecoverable. adv. Beyond recovery beyond the possibility of being reor remedied. Happiness gained, repaired may be irrecoverably lost. Beyond the possibility of being reclaimed.
A
ened made luminous or bright decorated with rays of light or with something ;
;
;
or-
Mason.
IRRADIATED,
un-
as a debt.
;
Not be remedied
IRRECOVERABLY,
Pope. emit rays; to shine.
Adorned with shining
cannot be obtained by demand or
'J'hat
suit
Soitik
;
naniciits.
or hardware.
I'RONHICK,
enlighten intellectually to illuminate Milton. the mind. Hale. animate by heat or light. decorate with shining ornaments.
spot on cloth
applying rusty iron to the
I'RONMONGER,
To
3.
shining.
cruel.
;
;
make splen-i "
illuminate; to brighten; to did; to adorn with luster.
IRRADIATE,
R R
I
To
as, to irradiate
Cleaveland.
I'RONHE^ARTED,
R R
I
Smoothed with an armed with iron.
T'RONED,
4.
;
;
discourse.
Not
in
conformity to laws,
human
or di-
deviating from the rules of moral rectitude; vicious; as irregular conduct vine
;
or propensities.
R
I
R R
I
11 irregular line or
as an
IRREME'DIABLY,
R R
I
manner
adv. In a
IRREPR6VABLE,
or a. [in and reprmiable.] That cannot be justly reproved blamedegree that precludes remedy, cure or correction. less as irregular motion. 7. Not uniform Bp. Taylor. upright. adv. So as not to be li8. In grammar, an irregular noun or verb is IRREMIS'SIBLE, a. [Fr. ; in andremissMe ; L. remilto. See Remit.] able to reproof or blame. one which deviates from the common Weever Not to be pardoned that cannot be forgiven IRRESIST'ANCE, n. « as %. [in and rerules in its inflections. or remitted. IVhiston. soldier not in regular IRREG'ULAR, n. sistance.] Kent. IRREMIS'SIBLENESS, n. The quality of Forbearance to resist ; non-resistance service. ; pasHammond. sive submission. IRREGULAR'ITY, n. [Fr. irregulariti.] being unpardonable. Palev } 1. Deviation from a straight line or from any IRREMIS'SIBLY,arfu. So as not to be par- IRRESISTIBILITY, ^ [fiomirresistiSherwood. IRRESISTIBLENESS, I "iZe.] common or establislied rule deviation doned. from method or order ; as the irregularity IRREMoVABIL'ITY, n. [See Irremovable.] The quality of being irresistible power or The quality or state of being irrremova force beyond resistance or opposition. of proceedings. ble, or not removable from office. 9. Deviation from law, human or divine, or Hammond. a. [in and removable.] IRRESIST'IBLE, a. from moral rectitude inordinate practice [Fr.; in and resistible. a 1. That cannot be moved or changed. See Resist.] It is a favorable symptom when vice.
Not
straight; course.
ti.
;
;
;
IRREPRoVABLY,
;
A
;
;
IRREMOVABLE,
;
man becomes ashamed
profligate
2.
Without rule, meth-
IRREGULARLY, adv. od or order.
IRREG'ULATE, V. IRREL'ATIVE, relative
;
To make irregular
t.
a.
and
[in
;
relative.]
music, have no
IRREL'ATIVELY,
IRREL'EVANCY,
That cannot be rewarded. a. Not renowned
ble.]
adv. Unconnectedly. Boyle. [from irrelevant.] In-
the quality of not being apapplicability plicable, or of not serving to aid and support as the irrelevancy of an argument or of testimony to a case in question. IRREL'EVANT, a. [in and Fr. relever, to raise, from elever, lever, L. elevo, levo, to raise.]
n.
;
seek happiness.
M. Mason.
J.
IRRESISTIBLY,
With
adv.
a
power
that
cannot be successfully resisted or opposed. Dryden.
[See Irreparable.] IRRES'OLUBLE, a. s as z. [L. in and requality or state of being irreparable, solvo.] or beyond repair or recovery. Sterne Not to be dissolved incapable of dissolution. a. from L.
The
;
IRREPARABLE,
[Fr.
irrepa-
See Repair.] That cannot be repaired or mended
rabitis. 1.
;
;
not
;
Spetiser.
IRREPARABIL'ITY,
n.
and remunera
celebrated.
common
sound.
constitutionally
a. [in
IRRENOWN'ED,
Not
unconnected.
Irrelative chords, in
That cannot be legally or removed from office.
IRREMU'NERABLE,
to
Broivn.
[jVo< in use.'\
disorder.
Shak. That cannot be successfully resisted or opposed superior to opposition. An irresistible law of our nature impels us to
of his
irregularities.
2.
;
as
an irreparable breach. That cannot be recovered or regained as an irreparable loss. Milton. Addwon. ;
IRREPARABLY,
adv. In a
manner
or de-
gree that precludes recovery or repair. IRREPEALABIL'ITY, n. [from irrepealaThe quahty of being irrepealable. ble.]
Bmile.
n. The quality of being indissoluble resistance to separation of parts by heat. Boyle.
IRRES'OLUBLENESS, ;
IRRES'OLUTE,
as
a. s
Not firm or constant cided
z.
in
not determined
;
IRRES'OLUTELY,
;
and
[in
purpose
resolute.] ;
wavering
men
to doubt. Irresolute not at all, cr resolve
not de;
given
either resolve re-resolve.
and adv. Without firmness
not applicable or pertinent ; IRREPE'ALABLE, a. [in and repealable.] of mind without decision. See Repeal.] not serving to support. We call evidence, That cannot be legally repealed or annulled. IRRES'OLUTENESS, n. Want of firm deand arguments irrelevant to a testimony termination or purpose ; vacillation of Stdlivan. or to it, cause, when they are inapphcable IRREPE'ALABLENESS, n. Irrepealabilitv. mind. do not serve to support it. IRREPE' ALABLY, adv. Beyond the power IRRESOLU'TION, n. [Fr. ; in and resolvto Without adv. IRREL'EVANTLY, being of repeal. tion.] the purpose. IRREPENT'ANCE, n. Want of repent- Want of resolution want of decision in purIRRELIE'VABLE, a. Not admitting relief ance impenitence. pose a fluctuation of mind, as in doubt, Mounlagu or between hope and fear. Addison. Hargrave. IRREPLEVIABLE, a. [in and repleviable.' IRRELIO'ION, n. [Fr. ; in and religion.] IRRESOLVEDLY, adv. s as z. [in and reThat cannot be replevied. Want of religion, or contempt of it; impi- IRREPLEVISABLE, a. [in and replevisasolved.] Without settled determination. [lAttle used.] etv. Dryden. That cannot be replevied. hie.]
Not relevant
;
;
;
;
;
IRR'ELIG'IONIST,
One who is
n.
of religious principles
destitute
a despiser of relig-
;
JVott.
ion.
IRRELIG'IOUS,
Desti-
a. [Fr. irreligieux.]
tute of religious principles ; contemning religion impious ; ungodly. Shame and reproach are generally tlie porSouth. tion of tlie impious and irreligious. ;
2.
Contrary to religion ; profane impious wicked as an irreligious speech irrelig;
;
;
;
ious conduct.
IRRELIGIOUSLY,
adv.
With impiety;
wickedly.
IRREPREHENS'IBLE,
a.
ungodliness. principles or practices [h.iiremeabilis ; in and remeo, to return ; re and meo, to pass.] Admitting no return ; as an irremeable way. ;
sured
;
IRREPREHENS'IBLENESS, n. The quality of beinff irreprehensible. adv. In a manner not to incur blame; without blame. Shenvood.
IRREPREHENS'IBLY,
IRREPRESENT'ABLE,
a.
a.i\A
[in
represented that cannot be ed or represented by any image. ;
IRREPRESS'IBLE,
a.
[in
and
repressible.
Not
;
;
;
irremediable.
IRRESPECT'IVELY,
a. {in
adv.
Without regard them into
to circu.'nstances, or not taking
Hammond.
consideration.
IRRES'PIRABLE,
a.
ities
;
[in
and
respirable.]
not having the qual-
which support animal
life
IRRESPONSIBILITY,
n.
;
Want
as irres-
of res-
]ionsibility.
IRRESPONSIBLE,
a. [in and responsible.] Not responsible not liable or able to answer for consequences not answerable. free from IRRETEN'TIVE, a. Not retentive or apt
That cannot be repressed.
IRREPROACHABLE,
respective.]
According to this doctrine, it must be resolved wholly into the absolute, irrespective will of God. Hogers.
pirable air.
Stillina- fleet.
and reproach
;
;
able.]
and remedi-
from reinedy.] to be remedied ed as an irremediuhle disease or evil. 2. Not to be corrected or redressed as ir remediable error or mischief IRREME'DIABLENESS, n. State of being ahle,
1.
figur-
Dryden. That cannot be justly reproached blame ; upright innocent. An irreproach able life is the highest honor of a rational that cannot be cur being.
[Fr.; in
a.
repre-
Boyle. a. [in and Not regarding circumstances.
IRRESPE€T'IVE,
Unfit for respiration
sent.] Not to be
;
IRREME'DIABLE,
repre-
not to be blamed or cenfree from fault. Vattel, Trans. ;
IRRELIG'IOUSNESS, n. Want of religious
IRRE'MEABLE, a.
and
[in
hensihle.]
Not reprehensible
;
IRREPROACHABLENESS,
n.
IRRETRIE'VABLE, from
The quah Not
of being not leproachable. adv. In a manner not to deserve reproach blamelessly as deportment irreproachably upright.
ty or state
IRREPROACHABLY,
;
to retain.
;
to
Skelion. a.
[in
and
retrievable,
retrieve.]
be recovered or repaired irrecovirreparable: as an irretrievable
erable
;
;
loss.
IRRETRIE'VABLENESS, being irretrievable.
n.
The state of
R R
I
IRRETRIEVABLY, recoverably gained.
;
;
be
to
IRRIS'ION,
ir-j
in re-|
IRRETURN'ABLE,
a.
n.
Not [L.
to be rcturned.| in-everentia ; hi
of reverence, or want of venerawant of a due regard to the authori-
Want
1.
tion
;
Supreme Being. ty and character of Irreverence toward God is aiudagous to tlie
2.
disrespect toward man. The state of being disregarded ; applied men. But this word is appropriately to the Supreme Being and to
applicable his
1.
laws and
2.
[Fr.
in
;
IRRITABLE,
table
Milton.
Without due
adv.
re-
Without due respect
IRREVERS'IBLE,
temper.
ternal body.
to the authority and character of the Supreme Being ; in an irreverent manner. to superiors.
a.
[in
and
IR'RITATORY,
a.
IRRORA'TION,
n.
Exciting
; stimulating. Hales. [L. irroralio; in and
ros.]
the state of being
act of bedewing; moistened with dew.
Spallanzani, Trans. n.
2.
A sudden invasion or incursion a sudden, violent inroad, or entrance of invaders into a place or country as the irruption of the northern nations into France ;
;
[
I
and
Holler.
reversible.]
IR'RITANT,
o. Irritating.
IRRITANT,
71.
Italv.
IRRUP TiVE,
a. Rushing in or upon. [Sax. i.9; G. is/ ; D.is: h. eat ; Sans, asti ; Pers. est or hist.] The third per.-^on singular of the substantivo verb, which is ompused of three or four
IS, v.i.
Gr.
it.
ifi
;
which appear in the words am, be, are, and is. Is and icas coincide with the Latin esse, and Goth, wesan. In distinct roots,
In general, there is nothing irritable in the animal body, but the muscular fibers.
gard a.
Dancin.
The
a.
In physiology, susceptible of contraction in consequence of the ujipidse of an ex-
respect to superiors.
IRREVERENTLY,
in-
as an irrita-
;
fever.
sea.
Haller. Eneyc. [from irritate.] Susceptible of excitement, or of heat and action, as animal bodies. Very susceptible of anger or passion; as an irrieasily inflamed or exasperated ;
reverent.] ;
in
Wanting
tive
endued with the greatest irritability.
and
reverence and veneration Wanting not entertaining or manifesting due regard to the Supreme Being. Proceeding from irreverence ; expressive ofawantof veneration; as a.n irreverent thought, word or phrase. in
3.
creased action or irritation
act of laugh-
sensible,
institutions. a.
The
Accompanied with or produced by
2.
IRRLI'TION, [Vr. from L. irniptio ; in and riaiipo, to break or burst.] Darwin. the 1. A bursting in; a brcakingor sudden, viofrom differs ; scnsibilily Irritability Holland has lent rushing into a place. most rmVaWf parts of the body not being at The heart is been often inundated by irruptions of the and vice versa. all
to
IRREVERENT,
rideo, to laugh.]
fVoodward. IRRITABIL'ITY, n. [^tom irritable.] Susof ceptibility of excitement; the (piality or exasperated ; as being easily irritated iVn'/aiiW]/ of temper. 2. In physiology, one of the four faculties of the scnsoriuin, by which fd>rnns contractions are caused in consequence of the irritations excited by external bodies.
See Reverence.]
reverentia.
and
;
E
S
I
irrideo [L. irrisio,
2.
ing at another.
IVoodward..
IRREVERENCE, and
adv. Irreparably
manner not
in a
R R
I
a as
Ji.
Encyc.
the indicative, present tense,
thus va-
it is
I am, thou art, be, she, or it, is ; we, ried In writing and ye or you, they, are. Rush. the vowel is often dropped; as, speaking, versible decree or sentence. IRRITATE, v. t. [L. irrlto : in and mi, he's gone there's none left. IRREVERS'IBLENESS, n. State of being wrath W. irud, pungency, passion, rage IS'ABEL, 71. [Fr. is«ie//e.] Isabel yelh w irreversible. or perhaps more properly from Sw. reta, with a shade of is a brownish IRREVERSIBLY, adv. In a manner which to provoke G. reitzen, to tickle, vellicate, brownish red. yellow, Kiman. precludes a reversal or repeal. irritate.] Iii> ISAGOti'IC, aciayuyixoi.] [Gr. IRREVOCABILITY, } State of being 1. To excite heat and redness in the skin or ISAG06'ICAL, S "• troductory. Grtgory. IRREVOCABLENESS, ^ "-irrevocable. flesh of living animal bodies, ashy friction ». and [Gr. icioj, equal, -/wna, an IRREVOCABLE, o. [Fr. from L. irrevoca- to inflame to fret as, to irritate a wound IS'AGON, A figure whose angles are equal. anjile.] re and bilis ; in and revocabilis, revuco ; ed part by a coarse bandage. 71. In the arctic fox or
that cannot be recalled, repealed or annulled ; as an irre-
That cannot be reversed
;
That which
;
excites orirri
tates.
;
;
;
:
;
To
voco, to call.] Not to be recalled
excite anger ; to jirovoke ; to tease Never irritate a child for to exasperate. The insolence of a tyrant trifling faults.
or revoked that cannot be reversed, repealed or annulled as an ;
;
irrevocable decree, sentence, edict or doom irrevocable fate ; an irrevocable promise.
IRREVOCABLY,
adv.
3.
Milton.
Dnjden.
Not
a.
Beyond
recall; in
to be recalled
[in
and revokaUe.]
4.
Res. has no revoluMilton. ^Isiaf.
IRREVOLUBLE, tion.
a.
That
[jXot used.] v.t. [L. irrigo; in
and
IRRIGATE,
rigo,
action or violence
;
pp.
Excited;
;
wet
to
;
to
moisten
ppr.
Exciting; angering;
;
;
moistening. In agriculture, the operation of causing water to flow over lands for nourishing plants.
IRRIG'UOUS,
a.
[L. irriguus.
gate.]
"Watered; watery; moist. The tlonery hp Of some irriguous
2.
Dewv Vol.
;
moist.
I.
valley spieails
ischias, ;
Gr.
i3;j;toi5taco$.]
Parr.
ISCIIURETTC,
cation exasperation ; anger. In physiology, an exertion or change of some extreme part of the sensorium resi ding in the muscles or organs of sense, in consequence of the appulses of external Danvin. bodies.
a.
and
Juhnson.
[Sen Ischury.]
Having
the qualitv of relieving ischury.
to
;
from
the hip
nniscles, or in the capsular ligament, it is then either rheumatic or gouty.
provoked;
caused to contract.
IRRITATING, ;
To water
;
1.
isx^ov,
to
provoking causing to contract. bedew. IRRITA'TION, n. The operation of exciRay. skin ting heat, action and redness in the to 2. To water, as land, by cau.sing a stream or flesh of living ahimals, by friction or ilovv upon it and spread over it. other means. IR'KIG.VTED, /;;*. Watered: moistened. in the animal of action The excitement 2. IR'RIGATING, ppr. Watering wetting system by the application of food, medimoistening. cines and the like. IRRIGATION, n. The act of watering or 3. Excitement of anger or passion provo 2.
the sciatica, from ischium,
in.
IRRITATED,
to water.]
1.
Encyc.
a. [L. ischiadicus,
highten Pertaining to the hip. The ischiadic |)assion or disease is ranked by Cullen with rheumatism. It is a rh( iiMiatic affection of the Air, if very cold, irritateth the flame. Bacon It is called ahi> sciatica. It is hip joint. sometimes seated in the tendinous expanTo cause fibrous contractions in an exsion which covers the muscles of the treme part of the seiisorium, as by the apDaruin. thigh, but its most conunon seat is in the pulse of an external body.
excitement
irrevocable.
;
To increase
zoology,
Canis lagopus.
ISCHI AD'IC,
irritates his subjects.
;
a itiauner precluding repeal.
IRREVO'KABLE,
IS'ATIS,
ISCIIURET'IC,
71.
A
medicine adapted to Core.
relieve ischurv.
IS'CHURY,
A
stop,
and
7!."
otpoi-,
[Gr.
i7;^oipio,
from
ISX", to
urine.]
stoppage or suppression of urine.
IS'ERIN, N,
IS'ERINE,
Coxe. Encyc. A mineral an iron black color, and
l„ [G.e [G.eisen,\ron.] ?„ ^
of
of a splendent metallic luster, occurring in small obtuse angular grains. It is harder than feldspar, and consists of the oxydsof iron and titanium, with a small portion of See Irriuranium. Ure. Ish, a termination of English words, is, in Irrilalion is the effect of a stimulus applied to Sax. isc, Dan. isk, G. i.sr/i ; and not iman irritable part. Coxe her store. probably, it is the termination esijue, in Milton. IR'RITATIVE, a. Serving to excite or irriFrench, as in grotesque. It. esco, in grotate. Philips. tesco, and the Latin termination of the in;
4.
114
ISO
I
ISOMORPH'OUS,
Annexed to ceptive verb, as in fervesco. diminuEnglish adjectives, ish denotes as tion, or a small degree of tlie quality ; from yeliow. lohitish, fromivhite; yellounsh, Ish annexed to names forms a possessive adjective ; as in Swedish, Danish, English.
its
primitive
IS'ONOMY,
s s a.
form
in a
ti. i. See the Noun.] [It. uscire. To pass or flow out ; to run out of any inclosed place to proceed, as from a source water issues from springs ; as, blood issues from wounds; sap or gum issues from trees; light issues from the sun. to rush out. 2. To go out Troops issued from the town and attacked the besiegers. To proceed, as progeny to spring. or thy sons that shall issue from thee 2 Kings XX. To proceed to be produced to arise ; to grow or accrue as rents and profits issuing from land, tenements, or a capital stock. In legal pleadings, to come to a point in fact or law, on which the parties join and rest the decision of the cause. Our lawyers say, a cause issues to the court or to the jury it issues in demurrer. to end. G. To close know not how the cause will issue.
IS'SUE,
law.]
1.
;
;
I
;
...
'
.
I
mon
use of this termination. ISOPERIM'ETRY, n. [Gr. isoj, equal 1 SleLE, a pendant shoot of ice. is more rtfpt, around, and fisrpor, measure.] [See Ice and In geometry, the science of figures having generally written icicle. Icicle.] equal perimeters or boundaries. I'SINGLASS, n. i'zinglass. [that is, ise or ISOS'CELES, a. [Gr. i.aosxf'Krn 1505, equal,
;
;
;
ice -glass.]
and axAof, leg.] substance consisting chiefly of gelatin, of Having two legs only that are equal as an a firm texture and whitish color, prepared isosceles triangle. from the sounds or air-bladders of certain n. A descendant of Israel or fiesh water fishes, particularly of the huso, IS'RAELITE, Jacob a Jew. a fish of the sturgeon kind, found in the ) an used as ISRAELIT'IC, It is Pertaining to Israel. rivers of Russia. aggluti"' J. P. Smith. Encyc. ISRAELI'TISH, nant, and in fining wines. ISINGLASS-STONE. [See Mica.] ISOTHERM'AL, a. [Gr. iso;, equal, proper, '
;
<,
IS'LAMISM,
11.
[from
Ar.
the
heat. ^X^ ISOTONTC,
heat.]
Warmed
liy
its
;
own
We
;
Ure a.
;
;
;
6£p;Uoi,
—
;
;
and
;
;
zine.
Equal law equal distribution of rights and Mitford. ])rivileges. Ish annexed to connnon nouns forms an ad of the ISOPERIMET'Rl€AL, a. [See Isoperimejeetive denoting a participation the noun; as fool f'-y-'i qualities expressed by as brufrom boundaries; tsopenmetncal ; Having equal rogue ish, fvomfool ; roguish, This is the more comfigures or bodies. tish, from brute.
A
A
delivegiving out from a repository as an issue of rations or provisions ry from a store, or of powder from a maga-
10.
compound. Ed. Rev. [Gr. cao;, equal, and vofiof,
n.
T
I
Capable of retaining
t. To send out; to put into circulation ; as, to issue money from a treasury, or notes from a bank. 2. To send out; to deliver from authority; as, to issue an order from the department of war to issue a writ or precept. 3. To deliver for use as, to issue provisions from a store. IS'SUEO, ;)7?. Descended; sent out. Shak. IS'SUELESS, a. Having uo issue or progeShak. ny ; wanting children.
IS'SUE,
[Gr. wo;, equal, and roioj,
V.
salama, to be free, safe or devoted tone.] true faith, according to the MokammcHaving equal tones. The isotonic system, dans Mohammedanism. Encyc. in music, consists of intervals, in which an is absurd com H. i'laad. ISLAND, [This each concord is alike tempered, and in pound oi isle and land, that is, land-in-wa which there are twelve equal semitones. There is no such terland, or ieland-land. legitimate word in English, audit is found IS'SUABLE, a. [from issue.] That may be In laiv, an issuable term, is one in issued. word books. The in genuine always only Blackslone. which issues are made up. used in discourse is our native word. Sax ealond, D. G. ciland.] ISSUE, n. ish'u. [Fr. issue; It uscio, a Flowing or passing out ; It may coin- IS'SUING, ppr. 1. A tract of land surrounded by water. door, and itscire, to go out. proceeding from sending' out. 2. A large mass of floating ice, is called an cide in origin with Heb. Ch. XS", Eth. IS'SUING, n. A flowing or passing out. island of ice. (DBA 2watsa.] Emission a sending out, as of bills or I'SLANDER, n. i'lander. An inhabitant of L The act of passing or flowing out a monotes. an ieland. out of any inclosed place; egress; isle or He, from It. isola. ving j(. ist'mus. ISLE, I [Fr. ISTHMUS, ., [L. from Gr. toS/ioj.] L. insula.] applied to water or other fluid, to smoke, A neck or narrow slip of land by which ILE, S to a body of men, &c. say, an issue two continents are connected, or by which 1. A tract of land surrounded by water, or a of water from a pipe, from a spring, or detached portion of land embosomed in a peninsula is imited to the main land. an issue of blood from a from a river the ocean, in a lake or river. Such is the Neck, so called, which connects The isles shall wait for his Uvr. Is. xlli wound, of air from a bellows; an issue of Boston with the main land at Roxbury. a door or house. from a church. 2. A passage in people But the word is applied to laud of consid[See Aisle.] 2- A sending out; as the iMue of an order ISLET, n. i'let. A little ieland. erable extent, between seas; as the isthfrom a commanding officer or from a court; ISOCHRONAL, ) mus of Darien, which connects North and [Gr. 1505, equal, and the issue of money from a treasury. Xfovo;, time.] ISOell'RONOUS, S South America, and the isthmus between end or ultimate reEvent .3. in time of time Uniform consequence the Euxine and Caspian seas. equal performed Our present condition will be best IT, sult. in equal times. pron. [Sax. hit ; D. het ; G. es ; L. id.] An isochronal line, is that in which a heavy for us in the issue. 1. A substitute or pronoun of the neuter genbody is supposed to descend without ac- 4. Passage out outlet. der, sometimes called demonstrative, and celeration. To God the Lord belong the issues from Bailey. standing for any thing except males and Ps. l.>iviii. death. Isochronal vibrations of a pendulum are females. " Keep thy heart with all dilisn(-h as are performed in the same space gence, for out of it are the issues of life." Progeny a child or children ; offspring of time. and we speak of Prov. iv. Here it is the substitute for Encyc. as, he had issue, a son an isle or J', t. IS'OLATE, A heart. ieland.] issue of the whole blood or half blood. [It. isola, To place in a detached situation to place It is much used as the nominative case or man dies without issue. Med. Repos. 6. Produce of the earth, or profits of land, as it word to verbs called impersonal by itself; to insulate. IS'OLATED, pp. or a. [Fr. isole ; It. isolato In this case, there is no rains it snows. tenements or other property. A convey from isola, an isle.] determinate thing to which it can be reed to 15 all liis right to a term for years, Standing detached from others of a like with all the issues, rents and profits. ferred. kind; placed by itself or alone. a little ulcer made In other cases, it may be referred to 7. In surgery, a fontanel Is it in some part of an animal body, to promailer, affair, or some other word. IS'OLATING,;*^/-. Placing by itself or de come to this? tiiL-hed like an isle. mote discharges. Encyc ISOMOUPII'ISM, n. [Gr. woj, like, and 8. Evacuation discharge a flux or run- 3. Very often, it is used to introduce a senLev. xii. Matt. ix. tence, preceding a verb as a nominative, iur)(,i))>j, forai.] ning. but referring to a clause or distinct memThe quality of a S(d3stance by which it is 9. In law, the close or result of pleadings ber of the sentence. " // is well ascertainthe point of matter depending in suit, on cap;d)le of replacing another in a comwhich the parties join, and put the case to ed, that the figure of the earth is an oblate jiound, without an alteration of its primiWhat is well ascertained ? tive form. trial by a jury. Coicel. spheroid." to God.]
The
;
;
;
:
;
;
"
We
;
:
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
1
1
i
T C
I
The answer
show
will
it [that] is earth is an oblate spheroid well ascertained. Here it represents the " the clause of the sentence, figure of the If the order of the sentence earth," &c. is inverted, the use of it is superseded The figure of the earth is an oblate spheroid that is well ascertained. a It, like that, is often a substitute for sentence or clause of a sentence. 4. It often begins a sentence, when a per sonal pronoun, or the name of a person, or a masculine noun follows. It is I be not afraid. It was Judas who betrayed Wlien a question is asked, it folChrist. lows the verb as, who was it that betray ;
;
:
;
ed Christ.'
cutaneous disease of the human race, IT'ERATIVE, a. Repeating. appearing in small watery pustules on the ITIN'PJRANT, a. [L.iter, a way or journey.] wanskin, accompanied with ati uneasiness or Passing or traveling about a country irritation that inclines the patient to use as an itinerant dering; not settled; li-iction. This disease is supposed by preacher. some authors to be occasioned by a small ITIN'ERANT, n. One who travels from insect, a species of A earns, as the microplace to place, particularly a preacher scope detects these insects in the vesicles, one who is unsettled. Others suppose the jiustules only form a L. nidus for the insects. This disease is ta ITINERARY, n. [Fr. itineraire ; Low itinf,rariu7it, from iter, a going.] ken only by contact or contagion. 2. The sensation in the skin occasioned by An account of travels or of the distances of the disease. places; as the i/incrnn/ of Antoninus. 3. A cor\stant teasing desire ; as an itch for ITIN'ERARY, n. Travehng passing from praise ; an itch for scribbling. Dryden. place to place, or done on a journey. Bacon. ITCH, V. i. [G. jucken, D. jeuken, to itch ;
;
;
;
ITIN'ERATE, Ch.
affair.
How
is it
with our general
Shak.
?
used afler intransitive verbs very
6. It is
definitely
rarely in
pn
Ar.
;
^2.;
Eth. rhTltl hakak,
Hence Ar. to be affected with Class Cg. No. 22.] a particular uneasiness in the skin, inclines the person to scratch the
to scratch.
the itch.
in-
and sometimes ludicrously, but an elevated style.
A
1.
used also for the state of a person or
5. It is
IVY
T E
I
the figure of the
:
To
1.
feel
which
]>art. If Abraham brought all with Iiini, it is not 2. To have a constant desire or teasing inprobable he meant to walk it back for his pleasclination ; as itching ears. 2 Tim. iv. ure. Haleigh. The Lacedemonians, at the straits of Ther- ITCH'ING, ppr. Having a sensation that
mopylae, when their arms out with nails and teeth.
failed
them, fought
it
Drydai
Whctlier the charmer sinner
it,
or saint
it.
conformable speak
v.
t.
render Italian, or customs.
To
play the Italian to Cotgravt. a. Relating to Italy or its characV. i.
;
Italian.
ITAL'IC, ters.
ITALICIZE, ic
V.
t.
To
write or print in Ital-
characters.
ITAL'I€S, ters
Ji.
plu.
characters
;
Italic letters or characfirst
used in
Italy,
and
which stand
inclining ; ttie letters in which clause is printed. They are used to distinguish words for emphasis, importance, antithesis, &c.
this
ITCH,
n.
[Sax. gictha
;
D. jeukte ; Ch. -yiyn
ss Ar. A5C£.;Eth. fhtlVl Verb.]
hakke.
a going
;
Low
for
without a settled habitation.
The neutral pron. [it and self.] reciprocal ])ronoun, or substitute applied The thing is good in itself; it
ITSELF',
to things.
stands by itself. Borrowing of foreigners, the kingdom rich or poor.
in itself,
makes not Locke.
The undecomposable
base of hut better written )/ttrium, unless yttria should he written ittiia. I'TEM, adv. [L. item, also.] Also a word I'VORY, JI. [Fr. ivoire ; It. avorio; L. eJur.] used when something is to be added. The tusk of an elephant, a hard, solid subI'TEM, n. An article a separate particu stance, of a fine white color. This tooth is lar in an account. The account consists sometimes six or seven feet in length, holof many items. low from the base to a certain l]ighth,and filled with a compact medullary substance, 2. A hint an innuendo. seeming to contain a great number of I'TEM, I', t. To make a note or memoranglands. Tlie ivory of Ceylon and Achein dum of. Addison! does not become yellow in wearing, and a. That be IT'ERABLE, may repeated. hence is preferred to that of Guinea. BroiDn\ [jVo< nsed.^ Enci/c. yttria
Ji.
;
;
To
to Italian
ITAL'IANIZE,
iter,
;
the Ital
ians.
ITAL'IANATE,
[L.
from place to place, particularly the purpose of ivreaching; to wander
travel
IT'TRIUM,
Having a constant desire. ITCH'Y, a. Infected with the itch.
2.
Pope.
ITAL'IAN, a. Pertaining to Italy. ITAL'IAN, n. A native of Italy. 2. The language used in Italy, or by
calls for scratching.
v. i.
L. itinero.]
To
;
;
IT'ERANT,
a.
[See
Iterate.]
Repeating;'
as an iterant echo.
IT'ERATE, iter,
To
V.
t.
Bacons
[L. itero, to repeat, from:
a going.]
repeat
;
Consisting of ivory n.
A
fine
;
as an ii'or^
kind of soft
blacking.
ITERATED, pp. ITERATING,
A parasit71. [Sax. ifg ; G. ephe^i.] plant of the genus Hedera, which creeps along the ground, or if it finds support, rises on trees or buildings, climbing to a
;
;
Repeated.
;>;)/•.
Repeating; uttering or
doing over again. recital or
a.
comb.
I'VORY-BLACK,
do a second time asI'VY, admonition to iterate ic
to utter or
to iterate advice or
a trespass.
Seethe ITERA'TION,
I'VORY,
n. [h. iteratio.]
great highth. Direct the clasping ivy where to climb.
Repetition
Jifilton
I'VYED, performance a second time. Bacon.
END OF VOL
I.
.
;
a.
Overgrown with
ivy.
fVarton.
DATE THIS BOOK IS DUE ON THE LAST
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OF 25 CENTS AN INITIAL FINEFAILURE TO RETURN
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