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Show e AiC countable to; refponfible for ufe Not in His offence is o, as it appear Accountant to the law upon that pain Shakefp. Meaf. for Meaf I love her too Not out of abfolute luft (though, peradventure 1 ftand accountant for as great a fin But partly led to diet my revenge Shakefpeare's Otbello Acco'untanT. 7 /. [See AccompT, ANT.] A computer ; a man fkilled o employed in accounts The different compute of divers ftates ; the fl'{Or and irreconcileable years of fome; the exceedin in the natura errou fram of others th an falfe dedu&ions of ordinary accountants in moft Brown's Vulgar Errours 7. /i A book contain AccounT-BooK R CH ing accounts 1 would endeavour to comfort myfelf upon th Yofs of friends, as I do upon the lofs of money aét of growing to another, {0 4s to in creafe it Plants do nourifhj inanimate bodies do not they have an accretion, but no alimentation pufcles more denfe, and fomething augmented b the aceretion of the oily and carthy parts of tha Neavion's Optics moifture Infants fupport abftinence worft, from the quan tity of aliment confumed in accrétioin Arbutbnot on Aliments o Acco'UPLE. w. a. [accoupler, Fr.] T We now uf join, to link together couple changed the manner of that perfonal fubfiftence no alteration thereby accruing to the nature of God Zo Acco'uraGE. w. a. [Obfolete Courace.] To animate Se That forward pair fhe ever would affuage When they would ftrive due reafon to exceed But that fame froward twain would accourage And of her plenty add unto her need Fairy Queen, b. iis c. 2 To Acco'urT. w. a. [See 7o COURT. To entertain with courtfhip, or courtefy a word now not in ufe Wh all this while were at their wanton reft Mccourting each her friend with lavifh feaft Fairy Queen To ACCO'UTRE «. a [accoditrer Fr. -'To drefs, to equip #An For this, in rags accoutred are they feen 4ind made the May-game of the public.fpleen Dryden Acco'vTREMENT. 2. /. [ccoiitrement, Fr. Drefs equipage furnitur relatin the perfon ; trappings, ornaments t 1 profels requital to a hair's breadth; not onl in the fimple office of love, but in all the accourrewient, complement, and ceremony of it Shakefpeare's Merry Wiwves of Windfor Chriftianity is loft among them in the trapping and accoutrements of it3 with which, inftead o adorning religion, they have frangely difguifed it and quite ftifled it in the crowd of external rite and ceremonies Tillotfon, Sermon xxviii I have feen the pope officiate at St. Peter's where, for two hours together, he was bufied i putting on or off his different accoutrements, according to the different parts he was to a& in them Addifon, Speator, No 201 How gay with all th' accoutvements of war The Britons come, with gold well-fraught the come ACCRETION Phil . /. [accretio, Lat,] Th is ufed either literally, as, to accum money ; or figuratively, as, to So of God b ai incarnation If thou doft flander her, and torture me Never pray more; abandon all remorfe On horrors head horrors accumulate For nothing canft thou to damnation add hat 2. To be added, as an advantage or improvement, in a fenf€ inclining to goo rather than ill; in which meaniag it i more frequently ufed by later authors From which compact there arifing an obligatio upon every one, o to convey his meaning, ther accrues alfo a right to every one, by the fame figns to judge of the fenfe or meaning of the perfon f obliged to exprefs himfelf South's Sermons Let the evidence of fuch a particular miracle b never {o bright and clear, yet it is fill but particular 5 and muft therefore want that kind of force that degree of influence, which accrues to a ftanding general proof, from its having been tried o approved, and confented to, by men of all rank and capacities, of all tempers and interefts, of al ages and nations Atterbury's Sermons as, an il confequence ; this fenfe feems to be lef culars, {o likewife inthis, didjuftly oppofe him, an became one of the authors ; choofing a certain benefit, before the hazard that might accrue fro the difrefpects of ignorant perfons Shakefp Otba weight Crufht by imaginary treafon ‘Which too much merit did accumulate Sir Fobn Denba Accumura'rioN late.) 1. Th # f [from accumy a& of accumulating One of my place in Syriz, his licutenant For quick accumulation of renown ‘Which he atchiev'd by th® minute, loft his favour Shakeffeare's Antony and Clespatra Some, perhaps, might otherwife wonder at fuc an accumulaticn of benefits, like a kind of embroj Wilkins Watten 2. The ftate of being accumulated By the regular retu-ns of it in fome people, an their freedom from it after the morbid matter i Hookery b v. § 54 3. To append to, or arife from Jate merit or wickednefs dering, or lifting of one favour upon another His fcholar Ariflotle, as in many other parti mifs the pleafures of a glorious meal mulo, Lat.] To heap one thing uponap other; to pile up, to heap together particular refpet to good or ill proper Is it for this they ftudy ? to grow pale 77 ACCUMULATE, = 2, [ios a acer, formed from accroiire, Fr. ‘Th Arbuthnot o G firft Punic war and animals : and the {ly fhadow fteals away upo the dial; and the quickeft eye can difcover n Glanwille's Scepfis more but that it is gone 1. To accede to, to be added to; as, natural produétion or effect, without an The Roman recumbent, or, more properly, 4 cumbent pofture in eating, was introduced after th If the motion be very flow, we perceive it not we have no fenfe of the accretive motion of plant 79 ACCRO'ACH. w. a. [accrocker, Er. To draw to one as with a hook; to gripe [accumbens, Lat adj Leaning AccrE'T1VE. adj. [from accretion.] Growing; that which by growth is added This method faithfully obferved, muft keep man from breaking, or running behind-hand i his fpiritual eftate; which, without frequent accountings, he will hardly be able to prevent South's Sermon article in the nature of a requeit Bucon's Henry VII Accu'MBENT The changes feem to be effeted by tl}e e_xhalm of the mioifture, which may leave the tinging cor manner Bacor's Nat, Hiff. No 602 an i a w e g d b a a a d t by turning to my account-beok, and feeing whethe ther's Saift 1 have enough left for my fupport ch ro T ac r E [ H A O c A Th account. AccoUNTING. 2 /. [fro Di4 The a& of accroaching act of reckoning, or making up of aco ACCR®J'E. w. n. [from the participl counts He fent a folemn embaflage to treat a peac and league with the king; accoupling it with a lie at the table, according to the ancien exhaufted, it look mulation an as there were regular accy gatherings of it, as of other hu- mours in the body Accu'MULATIVE laze. 1 Arbuthnot on Digt adj [ from accumy That which accumulates S 2. That which 1s accumulated If the injury meet not with meeknefs, it the acquires another accumulative guilt, and fand anfwerable not only for its owr pofitive ill, bu for all the accidentaly ferer which it caufes in the fuf Government of the Tongu AccumuLa'TOR. 7. /. [from accumulate He that accumulates; a gatherer o heaper together Injuries may fall upon the paffive man, yet without revenge, there would be no broils an quarrels, the great accumulators and multipliers o injuries Decay of Picty A'ccuracy. n actnefs, nicety Thi [accuratio, Lat] Ex perfet artifice and accuracy might hav been omitted, and yet they have made fhiftt move Mor 4+ Ina commercial fenfe, to be produced or arife; as, profits Quicknefs of imagination is feen in the invention, fertility in the fancy, and the accuragy i ‘The yearly benefit that, out of thofe his works The man who hath the ftupid ignorance, o hardened effrontery ! to infult the revealed will God ;5 or the petulant conceit to turn it intor accrueth to her majefty, amounteth to one thoufan pounds Carewv's Surw "The great profits which have accrued to the duk of Florence from his free port, have fet feveral o the ftates of Italy on the fame projet 5. 'To follow Th Addifon on Italy as lofs ; a vitious ufe benefit or lofs of fuch a trade accruin t Accusa'riow. n /i [from accubo, to li down to, Lat.] The ancient pofture o leaning at meals It will appear, that accubation, or lying down a meals, was a_ gefture ufed by very many nations Brown's Vulgar Errours . a. [accumbo Lat.] T Dyyden dicule; or the arrogdnce to make his own perfections the meafure of the Divinity ; or, at beft tha ca collat a text o quot a authorit'y with an infipid accuracy 5 or demonftrate a plai propofition thc.government, until it comes to take root in th nation Temple's Mife 70 Accu'mMB the expreflion i thef all formality only men worth mentioning W now are th Delany confider the uniformity of the whole de fign, accuracy of the calculations, and fkill in 16 ftoring and comparing paffages of ancient au Arbuthnat on Cain thors A‘CCURATE adj. [accuratus, Lat. 1. Exa&, as oppoled to negligence or ignorance, applied to perfons 2. Bxa&, without defect or failure, plied to things N |