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Show A D AD For what he did before Corioli, call him ‘With all th' applaufe and clamour of the hoft Bear th' additien noCaius Marcius Coriolanus Shakefpeare's Coriolanus bly ever There arofe new difputes upon the perfon named by the king, or rather againft the addition and appellations of title, which were made to thei Clarendon names Itfelf to motion, like as it would fpeak Shake[p h nu Tu Th Addrefs'd himfelf on foot to fingle fight 2. To get ready immediate ufe "The upon th take th Duk Apvi'tionar. adj. [from addition.] Tha which is added on by omittin ages for man variation leap-year; i. e. the additional day, at the end o Holder on Time every 134 years The greateft wits, that ever wer one age, lived together in fo good a ing, and celebrated one another wit nerofity, that each of them receive produced i underftandfo much gean additiana Addifon luftre from his cotemporaries includ The that very kind of evi the i To fuch I would addrefs with this moft affec fome Dryden 'Tha A'ppiTory. adj. [from add which has the power or quality of addto a great ma give Arbuthnot ad;. [from abel, a difeafe, Sax per according to Sinner and Funius hap fro idle ybel barren, unfruit ful.] Originally applied to eggs, an {ignifying fuch as produce nothing, bu grow rotten under the hen; thenc transferred to brains that produce nothing There's one with truncheon, like a ladle That carries eggs too frefh or addle And ftill at random, as he goes Hudibras Among the rabble rout beftows After much folitarinefs, fafting, or long ficknefs, their brains wer addle, an thei 5. Sometimes with 7 felf no vulgar poet, he bega charaer, which is fublimity larger fhare of reputation than belongs to him, t enable him to ferve fome good end or purpofe A'DDLE Are not your orders to addrefs the fenate Addifon Addreffing to Pollio, his great patron ing additory fitio Decay of Piety tionate petition Among the crowd, but far above the rcft Young Turnus to the beauteous maid addre/ May be fome little additional, may further th Bacon incorporation Th bellics a empty of meat as their heads of wit Burton on Melancholy "Thus far the poet; but his brains grow addle And all the reft is purely from this noddle Dryden 6. Sometime do alfo thofe that are termed hypaneniice, or wind Brown's Vulgar Errours 79 A'ppirE. v. 7. To grow ; 1o increafe Obfolete Poor flaves in. metre, dull and addle-pated Who rhyme below even David's pfalms tranflated Dryden " 9, ADDRE'SS Span deregar w. a. [addreffer, Fr. fro fro dirige His fuit was common as, b altion addreffe himfelf ta the It has to before the thing wuork With him the Palmer eke, in habit fad Himafelf addref} to that adventure bard Fair Queen but, above the reft To both the brother-princes thus addreft Dryden 8. To addrefs [in law] is to apply to th king in form The reprefentatives of the nation in parliament, and the privy-council, addre/s'd the king t Sawift bave it recalled ApprE'ss. u /. [addreffe, Fr. 1. Verbal application to any one, by wa of perfuafion; petition Henry, in knots involving Emma's name Had half confefs'd and half conceal'd his flam Upon this tree ; and as the tender mar Grew with the year, and widen'd with the bark Venus had heard the virgin's {oft addrefs That, as the wound, the paffion mightincreafe Prior Moft of the perfons, to whom thefe addreffe are made, are not wife and fkilful judges, but ar influenced by their own finful appetites and pafWarts's Improvement of the Mind fions z. Courtfhip They often have reveal'd their paffion to me But, tell me, whofe addrefs thou favour'ft moft I long to know, and yet I dread to hear it Addifon A gentleman, whom, I am fure, you yourfel would have approved, made his addrejfés to me Addifon 3. Manner of addrefling another; as, w {ay, a man of an happy or a pleafing ad drefs 5 a man of an awhkward addrefs direfum Lat. 1. To prepare one's {elf to enter upon an pro The young hero had addreffed his prayers t Dryden him for his aflifftance The prince himfelf, with awful dread potlefs'd Dryden His wowws to great Apollo thus addref addle Havin the reciproca 7. Sometimes with the accufative of th matter of the addrefs, which may b the nominative to the paflive Where ivy embraceth-the tree very fore Kill ivy, elfe tree will add/e no moze Tuffer's Hufbandry A'DDLE -PATED. adj See ADDLE brains to affert his nativ Drydzn neral ren This is alfo evidenced in eggs, whereof th found ones fink, and fuch as are addled {wim ; a wit and him noun ; as, be addreffed himfelf to the ge o AppLE. @. a. [from addle, adj.] T make addle ; to corrupt; to make bar eggs fell dire€tly on the Englifh battle; whereearl of Warwick addreffed his men t Hayward flank Frederick hearing, how that every da 3. To apply to another by words, wit various forms of conftration . Sometimes without a prepofition Atterbury App1'rioNaL. z /o Additament thing added: Not in ufe to put in a ftate fo Shakefpeare dence, which is fuppofed to be powerful: and do . withal, afford us feveral other additional proofs, o *great force and clearnefs light Dryden t fo o we c wh er po ht mi Addrefs° In his own condué purpofely to tak it lik yo A re pe ke Sh e he th br Hi t gue yo b wil w u fl Ha i To-nigh To-morrow for the march we are addreft right, it may be kept fo, without any confiderabl Harnle Men of great worth reforted to this foreft and. fe reforme onc bein kalenda . Manner of direin Tt lifted upits head, and did addref From this time Qu AD 4 Skill, dexterity. I could produce innumerable inftances from m own obfervation, of events imputed to the pro found fkill and addrefs of a minifter, which, i reality, were either mere effefts of negligence weaknefs, humour, paflion, or pride, or at bef but the nateral courfe of things left to themfelves Swift : chiefly mercantile a letters a for { Hfigf ApDRE'SSER. #. /o [from addrefi] Tr perfon that addrefi'e[s or petitiouf;,lv Th App U cENT.adj. [adducens, Lat.] Awo applied to thofe mufcles that bri for ward, clofe, or draw together the pa of the body to which they are anney, ‘d 7o Appv'LCE. v. a. [addoucir, Fr, 4y Lat.] To {weeten : a word not no Thu did the French embafladors,w thew of their king's affeftion, and ma words, feek to addulce all matters between th kings Bacow's: Heny A'DELING. 7. /. [from =bel, Sax, illyf trions.] A word of honour among th Angles, properly appertaining to th king's children : king Edward the Cop. feffor, being without iffue, and intend ing to make Edgar his heir, called hi adeling Cowell ADEE\JO'GRAPHY. n. /. [from &dnoy an yedgw, Gr.] A treatife of the glands ApE'MPTION. 7. /. [adimo, ademptum,Lat Dig Taking away ; privation. Ape'pT. n. /. [from adeptus, Lat. thatis adeptus artem. that is completel H {killed in all the fecret of his art I is, in its original fignification, appropriated to the chymifts, but is now extended to other artifts The prefervatio adepts Ape'pr of chaftity is eafy to tn P adj. Skilful; throughly verfed If there be really fuch adept philofophers as w are told of, I am apt to think, that, among thei arcana, they are mafters of extremely potent menBuy ftruums A'DEQUATE. adj. [adequatus, Lat.] Bqu to ; proportionate ; correfpondent to, f as to bear an exaét refemblance or proportion. It is ufed generally in a figirative { ‘e, and often with the par« ticle zo Contingent « clean.sh feems to be the whole ade- guate obje& of populnr courage5 but a neceffar and unavoidable coffin firikes palenefs into th Harwey on Confumptiot ftouteft heart fufan adeguate proper wer argument Th Sout All our fimple ideas are adeguate; becauft being nothing but the' effeéts of certain powersi things, fitted and ordained by God to- produc ficient to compafs their refpeétive ends fuch fenfations in us, they canno but be cqu Locke pondent and adeguate to thofe powers Thofe are adeguate ideas, which perfectly repre Inadequate a fent their archetypes or objects bu a partial thofe archetype or incomplete to whic the reprefentatio are referreds Watts's Logich . f m z e / a A'DEQUATELY l n f j i. In an a of reprefentation ; with exaétnefs of pro portion Gratitude confifts adequately in thefe two things firft, that it is a debt; and, fecondly, _that fuch a debt as is left to every man's ingenult S whether he will pay or no | z. 1t is ufed with the particIe t0 Piety is the neceffary Chriftian virtuey ng(; tioned adequarely to the omnifcience and fpitt ality of that infinite Deity A'DEQUATENESS Hammord's F undament® 7 fo [from adequat The ftate of being adequate ; Jufig;ison. reprefentation ; ¢xactnefs of prop ApgspoTIC |