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Show CO CO To CONCI'LIATE. w. a. [corcilio, Lat. To gain ; to procure good will ; to reconcile It was accounted a philtre, or plants that conciTiate affetion Brown's Vulgar Errours Concrvia'rion. n. £ [from conciliate. . The a& of gaining or reconciling. Di& Concrria'ror. . /i [from conciliate. One that makes peace between others Conci'riaTory. adj. [from conciliate. Relating to reconciliation Dis Concr'snity. # /o [from concinnitas Lat.] Decency; fitnefs CONCI'NNOUS. adj. [concinnus, Latin Becoming ; pleafant; agreeable Co'~cioNaToORY adj [ concionatorius concio, Latin.] Ufed at preachings o publick affemblies Their comelinefs unbeguiled the vulgar of th old opinion the loyalifts had formerly infufed int them by their concionatory inveétives Hovel CONCI'SE adj [concifus cut Latin. Brief; fhort; broken into fhort periods The concife ftile, which exprefieth not enough but leaves fomewhat to be underfteod Ben Fonfon's Difcoveries Where the author is cbfcure, enlighten him where he is too brief and concife, amplify a little and fet his notions in a fairer view Watts on the Mind Conci'sELy. adv, [from concife.] Briefly fhortly ; in few words ; in fhort fentenCes Ulyfles here fpeaks very concifely, and he ma feem to break abruptly into the fubject Broome on the Ody[Jéy Conci'senEss ty ; fhortnefs Givin mor . /. [from concife.] Brevi fcop to Mezentiu an Laufus that verfion, which has more of the majefty o Virgil, has lefs of his concifenefs Dryden Concr'sion. #. /. [concifum, Latin, Cut ting off; excifion; deftruion Concrma'rion. n /i [concitatio, Latin. The aét of ftirring up, or putting in motion The revelations of heaven are conceived by immediate illumination of the foul whereas the de ceiving fpirit, by concitation of humours, produce conceited phantafmes Brown Concrama'rion . [ [conclamatio, Lat. An outcry or fhout of many together Dia Co'NcLAvVE n. f [conclave, Latin. 2. The room in which the cardinals meet or, the affembly of the cardinals Ithank the holy conclave for their loves " They've fent me fuch a man I would have with' for Shakefpeare It was {aid ofa cardinal, by reafon of his apparent likelihood to ftep into St. Peter's chair, tha in two conclaves he went in pope, and came ou again cardinal South's Sermoins 3. A clofe‘aflembly Forthwith a conclave of the godhead meets Where Juno in the fhining fenate fits ¢t/ude God's love or hatred to any perfon, by an thing that befals him 4. To decide ; to determine Jhut or clofe the difpute T illotfon that is, t Youth, ere it fees the world, here ftudies reft And age, returning thence, concludes it beft. Dryd But no frail man however great or high Can be concluded bleft before he die. Addifs Ovid 5. To end ; to finifh Is it concluded he fhall be protector It is determin'd, not concluded yet But {o it muft be, if the king mifcarry Shakefpeare's Richard III I will conclude this part with the fpeech of counfellor of ftate Bacor Thefe are my theme, and how the war began And how concluded by the godlike man Dryden's Ancid 6. To oblige, as by the final determination Th kin woul neve endur that the baf multitude fhould fruftrate the authority of th parliament, wherein their votes and confents wer concluded Bacon's Henry V11 If therefore they will appeal to revelation fo their creation, they muft be conc/uded by it Hale's Origin of Mankind He never refufed to be concluded by the authority of one legally fummoned Alterbury 7o ConcLu'DE. @. 2 1. To perform the laft a& of ratiocination to collet the confequence determine t For why fhould we the bufy foul believe ‘When boldly fhe concludes of that and this ‘When of herfelf fhe can no judgment give Nor how, nor whence, nor where, norwhat fhe is Dawies The blind man's relations import no neceflity o concluding, that though black was the rougheft o colours, therefore white fhould be the fmootheft Boyle on Colours There is fomething infamous in~ the very at tempt: the world will conclude T had a guilty conArbutbnot®s Hiftory of Fobn Bull {cience 2. To fettle opinion Can we conclude upon Luther's inftability as ou author has done, becaufe, in a fingle notion n way fundamental, an enemy writes that he ha Atterbury fome doubtings I queftion not but your tranflation will do honour to our country; for I conclude of it alread from thofe performances Addifen to Pope 3. Finally to determine They humbly. fue unto your excellence To have a goodly peace concluded o Between the realms of England and of France Shake[peare 4. To end And all around wore nuptial bonds, the tie 1. A private apartment CO Garth 79 CONCLUDE.v. a. [concludo, Latin. 1. To fhat The very perfon of Chrift, therefore, for eve and the felf-fame, was only, touching bodily fubftance, concluded within the grave Hooker 2. To include; to comprehend tw certain the one a fentence of judicial deci fion, given by authority thereto appointed withi ourfelves ; the other, the like kind of fentence give Hooker by a more univerfal authority 2. The collettion from propofitions pre mifed ; the confequence The conclufion of experience, from the time paf to the time prefent, will not bé found and perfect Bacor's War with Spain An marrying divers principles and grounds Out of their match a true conclufionbrings, Davies Then doth the wi Build fond conc/ufions on thofe idle grounds Then doth it fly the good, and ill purfue. Dawigs 1 only deal by rules of art Such as are lawful, and judge b Conclufions of aftrology Hudibras a coneliIt is of the nature of principles, to yie fion different from themfelves Tillotfors He granted him both the major and the minor but denied him the conclufion. Addifon's Freeholder 3. The clofe ; the laft refult of argumentative deduétion Let us hear the conclufion of the whole matter Fear God, and keep his commandments; for thi Ecclef. xiio 1 is the whole duty of man I have been reafoning, and in conclufion hav thought it beft to return to what fortune hat Swg'f‘,fit made my home 4. Th even o ment experiments experi Her phyfician tells me She has purfued conclufions infinit Of eafy ways to die. ~Shak. Antony and Cleopatra We praétife likewife all conclufions of grafting an inoculating, as well of wild trees as fruit trees Bacon's New Atlantis 5. The end ; the laft part 1 can fpeak no longer; yet I will firain myfel to breathe out this one invocation, which fhall b Howel my conclufion 6. In Shakefpeare it feems to fignify filence confinement of the thoughts Your wife O&avia, with her modeft eye An fill conclufion, thall acquire no honour Démuring upon me Shak. Antony and Clespatra Concru'sivE. adj. [from conclude. 1. Decifive ; giving the laft determinatio to the opinion The laft dicate of the underftanding is no always abfolute in itfelf; nor conclufive to the will ConcrL DENCY. 7. fo [from concludent. Confequence ; regular proof; logica deducion of reafon Judgment concerning things to be known, o the neglect and conc/udency of them, ends in deciHale fion ConcLu DENT. adj. [from conclude.] Decifive; ending in juft and undeniabl confequences Though thefe kind of arguments may fee more obfcure, yet, upon a due confideration o them, they are highly confequential and conc/uden Hale's Origin of Mankind to my purpofe are promifcuoufly ad Ways of peaceable conclufion there are but thef Dryden's Fables ‘We'll tell when 'tis enough King Or if it wants the nice concluding bout Examine whether the opinion you meet with repugnant to what you were formerly embue miniftered in this world; 1o that ne man can ¢on Concru'sion. n /. [from conclude. 1. Determination ; final decifion The agreeing votes of both houfeds were not b re ufive to my yl judgment any law or or reafo concluf Igfing CowcrLu'pINGLY. adv. [from conclude. With uncontrovertible evidence The providences of Go *Tis as certainly conclufible from God's prefcience, that they will voluntarily do this, as tha Hammond they will do it at all Of love's affurance, and a train of lyes ‘That, made in luft, conc/ude in perjuries God hath concluded them all in unbelief, tha he might have mercy upon all Romans, xi. 32 3. To colle¢t by ratiocination ConcLu sIBLE. adj. [from concluds.] De terminable ; certain by regular proof with, be ¢encludingly demonttiated or note Digéy yet it prodaces no antecedent nor external necef Bramball's Anfaver to Hobbes fity They have fecret reafons for what they feem t do, which, whatever they are, they muft be equall Rogers conclufive for us as they were for then 2, Regularly confequential Thofe that are not men of art, not knowin the true forms of fyllogifm, cannot know whethe a mod ufiv conc an righ i they are mad figures Lock ConcLU'sIVELY. adv. [from conclufive. Decifively; with final determination This I fpeal only to defire Euiqlis not to fpez peremptorily, or conclufively, touching the point t th poffibility,J till they have heard me deduc means of the execution Bacon ConcrLu'sivenEss. z f. [from amda; Jfiwe.] Power of determining the OP nion 5 regular confequences gon |