OCR Text |
Show AP L O ol A'pros1TELY. adv. [from appefire.] Pro A sP 2z, Opiniony fentiments; conceffion perly; fitly ; fuitably It we ai at right underftandin years, upon condition that the artificer its true na or tradefman ture, we muft examine what apprebenfisn mankin make of it Digby We may appofitely compare this difeafe, of proper and improper confumption, to a decayin To be falfe Harwey houfe ‘When we come into a government, and fee thi place of honour allotted to a murderer, anothe endeavou myitery and to be thought falfe, is all on in refpeét of men who a& not according to truth Judgment is either concerning things to b known, or of things done, of their congruity, fitnefs, rightnefs, appofitencfs Hale's Origin of Mankind Arrost'TION. u. /. [appofitio, Lat. not by a vain furmife, but a true apprebenfion o fomewhat which no man may think himfelf abl a black fand ;" wherever this fand fticks, it grow ftill bigger, by the appofition of new matter Arbuthnot on Diet 1 n appreb Reie nfion ;e b2 tha R i ' fubftance, feel Milton The dpprebenfion of what was to come from a unknown, at leaft unacknowledged fucceflonr t the crown; clouded much of that profperity Clarendon to withftand a microfcope, will difcove 2. In grammar, the putting of two noun in the fame cafe; as, Liber Sufanne ma Arpra'ISER. 7. /. [from appraife.] A perfon appointed to fet a price upon thing to be fold. %o APPREHE'ND, . a. [apprehends, Lat - to take hold of. 1. To lay hold on T'll note you in my book of memory And fcourge you for this apprehenfion he mean o hands 7.- 'Th Clarendon their prey M':/M" An T cious To think on with terrour; to fear From my grandfather's death I had reafon t apprebend the frone; and, from my father's life encouragemen ;zppz-ebczfiwz to thof certainly we fhoul truf wh 2. Fearful Temple 7. /. [from apprebend. Lombardy the feat of war Addifen They are not at all apprehenfive of evils at diftance, nor tormented with the fearful profpe& of what may befal them hereafter Tillotfon 3. Perceptive feeling Thoughts, my tormentors, arm'd with deadl ftings Mangle my apprebenfive tendereft parts. - Milton Brown's Vulg. Errours APPREHE'NSIVELY. adwv. [from apprehenfive.] I an apprehenfive manner APPREHE'NSIVENESS. 7 /. [from apprehenfive.] The quality of being appre- henfive concerning them So we think of horfe, high, fwift, animal, time, matter Whereas the vowels are much more difficult t be taught, you will find, by falling upon them latt great help by the apprebenfivenss already gained i Holder learning the confonants The north and fouthern poles arg incomntuni _ prebenfible in the other whereof theone isnot ap ArrrEHE'NSION. 7. f. [apprebenfio, Lat. 1. The mere contemplation of things without affirming or denying any thin mind death &¢ Watts. Sim;le zzpj;rz'b,eqfion denotes no mor than" th APPRI:: NTICE Vov. Glanville = /. [app:em‘z, Fr. On that is bound by covenant to {ervc 2ng foul's naked intelletion of an obje@, without ei¢her compofition or deduétion the ma of tradc for a certai term o inform; to give the Watts It is fit he be apprized of a few things, that ma prevent his miftaking But if appriz'd of the fevere attack Cheyne The country be thut up, lur'd by the fcent On church yard drear (inhuman to relate The difappointed prowlers fall Thomort To APPROACH w.n [approcher, Pr. 1. Todraw near locally. *Ti tim to loo about the power kingdom approach apace W i The inhabitants of this country, when I paffe through it, were extremely apprebenfive of feein T [apprendre ; part vice; he is well apprized, that the reprefentatio of fome of thefe things may convince the underfranding, and fome may terrify the confcience teac South a He confiders the tendency of fuch a virtue o fuppof pheme T and rely upon th reports of it ArPPREBE'NSIBLE. adj. [from apprebend. That which may be apprehended, o conceived give Fr. \w knowledge of any thing If confcience benaturally apprebenfive and faga- | 2 Grofs apprebenders may not think it any mor firange, than that a bullet thould be moved by th rarified fire Glanwille f Brown's Pulgar Errours APPREHE'NSIVE. adj. [from apprehend. 1. Quick to underftand Stilling flect cable and fixed points appris o fide longer than the other, butthis is not their leg but a part of apprebenfion whereby they feize upo imfe Zhe 7 om th APPRE NTICE. v. a. [f noun. To put out to a mafter as an apprentice To ArprizE A lobfter hath the chely or great claw of on Conceiver ; thinker catching ubl In every art, the fimpleft that is, there is an apprenticef/bip neceliary, before it can be expeéted on {fhould work Dighy Many ruthed into the miniftry, as being th only calling that they could profefs, without ferving any apprenticefbip South feizing no ApPrE‘NTICESHIP, 7. /. [from apprentice.] The years which an apprentice i to pafs under a mafter three villages, that they fhoul power "o vitade Muft I not ferve a long apprenticeboo To foreign paflages, and in the end Having my freedom, boaft of nothing elf But that I was a journeyman to grief? ~ Shakefp come into the enemie holding and can only be apprebended by our mmd‘s. ArPREHE'NDER o APPRE‘NTICEHOOD. 7 /. [from apprentice. Th year o appre tice' fer5 year of an apprentéce's fe See that he be convey'd unto the Tower And go we brothers to the man that took him To queftion of his apprebenfion Shake[peare is invifible and incorruptible the gout to tw h Him portion'd maids, apprestic'd orphans blett The young who labour, and the old who reft Pop he fent out orders 6. Seizure The good which is gotten by doing, caufeth no action; unlefs; apprebending it as good, we lik -and defire it Hooker Yet this I apprebend not, why to thof Among whomn God will deign to dwell on earth 4 1 fend proportions of corn into Bafinghoufe Clarendon The governor kept the city with a garrifon, defirous to apprebend me 2 Cor. xi. 32 It was the rabble, of which no body was named and, which is more ftrange, not one apprebended fuddenly to depart which he was fure woul ment Shakefp That he might take away the apprebenfion, tha 2. To feize in order for trial or punifh The Firft Bein 41 fhall no lef Coavell }‘.‘.m] m" }l‘)" OG'gP' d"Jf' t b fubje h‘m‘f fervilely, an be b sean apprentic s AT Dryden's Dufrefn iy 5. Sufpicion of fomething to happen, o be done at leaft we have two hands to apprebend it. Taylor So Inany'and fo'vari.ou§ la_ws are giv@ they need no comfort againft them Tillotfon After the death of his nephew Caligula, Claudius was in no fmall apprehenfion for his own life oo Addifon Yo APPRAISE. . a. [apprecier, Fr.] T fet a price upon any thing, in order t fale 3. To conceive by the mind mt woker §o As they have no apprebenfion of thefe things, f tris, the book of his mother Sufan ‘There is nothing but hath a double handle It behoveth that the world fhould be held in awe 1. The addition of new matter, fo as tha it ma tou the % firft maf i S Urine infpected wit enough how to fet up for bimfelf Wotton This rule fets the painter at liberty; it teache I nam'd them as they pafs'd, and underftoo Their nature, with fuch knowledge God induw' My fudden apprebenfion Milton. 4 Bear to inftruét him in his art o no, no bond flave, could ever be more ready tha that young princefs was Sidney He found him fuch an apprentice, as knew wel A'prosITENESS 7 [0 L [from appofite.] Fit- | 3. . The faculty by which we iconceive ne nefs; propriety; fuitablenefs ideas, or power of conceiving them in the mean time Love enjoined fuch diligence, that no apprentice but apprebenfion South The expreflions of feripture are commonly fuite in thofe matters to the vulgar apprebenfions an conceptions of the place and people where they wer delivered TLocke filled with an atheift or a blafphemer, may we no appofitely and properly afle, Whether there be an virtue, fobriety, or religion, amongft fuch a people South fhall dra Hark Ulyfle near Shakefpeare a;pr'adcbin of th towar Poly Bicon as time 1 hear the found of coaches The hour of attack approacbes Guy 3. To make a progrefs towards, in the figurative fenfe, as mentally He fhall approack unto me: for who is this tha engaged his heart to approach unto me Fer- XXXa 21 To have knowledge in all the objeéts of contemplation is what the mind can hardly attain unto the inftance meafure approacked towards it com 4. T are few of thofe wh near b refemblance ; as, th have in an Locke natural affinity o cat approaches t the tiger 7o Appro'AcH.@. a 1. To bring near to. - This fenfe is rathe . French than Englifh This they will nimbly perform, if objected t the extremes; but flowly, and not at all, if approacked unto their roots. Browwn's Vulgar Ervours By plunging paper thoroughly in weak {pirit o wine, and approaching it to a candle, the {piritudu parts,will b\{?n, without harming the paper. Boyle Approach'd, and looking underncath the l'u; H faw proud Arcite Drydess 2. T 15 |