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Show Pi1 D1& that moft of them never met again, but wer iwaliowed up Sidney The diffivering of fleets hath been the overthrow of many aions Raleigh All downright rains diffever the violence of outragzeous winds, and level the mountainous billows Raleigh Diffewer your united frengths And part your mingled colours once again Shak. ‘The meeting points the facred hair difeve From the fair head, for ever and for ever Pope Dr'ssipENcE. u. fo [diffideo, Latin.] Difcord ; difagreement Dif Dissi'vience. . /. [difilio, Latin.] Th - at of ftarting afunder Disst'LienrT. adj. [diffiliens, Lat.] Starting afunder ; burfling in two Dissivi'rron. #. /. [4ifflio, Latin.] Th ac of burfling in two ; the act of flart ing difterent ways The air having much room to receive metion the diffilition of that air was great Boyle's Spring of the Air Disst'mivLar. adj. [dis and fmilar.] Un- like ; heterogeneous Simple oil is reduced into diffimilar parts, an yields a fweet oil, very differing from fallet oil Boyle The light, whofe rays are all alike refrangible T call fimple, komogeneal, and fimilar; and that whofe rays are fome more refrangible than others T call compound, heterogeneal, and diffinilar Neawton If the fluid be fuppofed to confift of heterogeneous particles, we cannot conceive how thof difimilar parts can have a like fituation Bentley Dissimirna'riTy 2 /. [from difimilar. Unlikenefs ; difimilitude If the principle of reunion has not its energy in this life, whenever the attrations of fenf ceafe, the acquired principles of difimilarity muf vepel thefe beings from their centre: fo that th principle of reunion, being fet free by death, muft drive thefe beings towards God their centre ; an the principle of diffimilarity, forcing him to repe - them with infinite violence from him, muft mak them infinitely miferable Cheyne DissiM1'L1TUDE. 2. /. [difimilitudo, Latin.] Unlikenefs ; want of refemblance. Thereupon grew marvellous diffimilitudes, an by reafon thereof jealoufies, Leartburnings, jars and difcords Hooker. We doubt whether the Lord, in different circumftances, did frame his people unto any utte diffimilitude, either with Egyptians nation or an othe Hooker The diffimilitude between the Divinity and ima ges, thews that images are not a fuitable mean whereby to worfhip God Stilling flect As humane fociety is founded in the fimilitud of fome things, fo it is promoted by fome certai diffimilitudes Greav Women are curious obfervers of the likenefs o children to parents, that they may, upon findin diffimilitude, have the pleafure of hinting unchaftity Pope's Odyffey, Notes DisstmuLa'rionN. n [, [diffimulatio, Latin.] The a¢ of diffembling ; hypocrify5 fallacious appearance; falfe pretenfions Diffimulation is but a faint kind of policy ; fo it afketh a firong wit, and a ftrong heart, to kno when to tell truth, and to do it Bacon He added not; and Satan, bowing lo His grey diffimulation, difappear' Milton Into thin air diffus'd Diffimulation. may be taken for a bare concealment of one's mind ; in which fenfe we commonl fay, that it is prudence to diffemble injuries. South D1'ss1pABLE. adj. [from diffipate.] Eafil fcattered; liable to difperfion ‘The heat of thofe plants is very diffipable, whic hLeld inj but under the earth is contained an when it cometh to the air it exhaleth Bacon's Natural Hiffory The parts of plants are very tender, as confifting of cotpufcles which are extremely fmall an light, and therefore the more eafily diffipable Woodward's Natural Hiflory 7% DI'SSIPATE. . a. [difipatus, Lat. 1. To fcatter every way; to difperfe The heat at length grows fo great, that it agai diffipates an i off thofe corpufcles whic bear Woodwward. brought 1t is covered with fkin and hair, to quench an diffipat th forc retar an of any firoke th Ray edge of any weapon The circling mountains eddy in From the bare wild, the difipated ftorm. Thomfon 2. To {catter the attention This {lavery to his paffions produced a life jrSawage's Life regular and diffipated 3. To fpend a fortune The wherry that contain Of diffipated wealth the poor remains Dissipa'rion London ». /. [diffipatio, Latin. worketh upon a body without lofs or diffipation o Bacon was contemporary with Paleg, i the famous diffipation of mankind and diftinétion of languages, happened Hale's Origin of Mankind 2. The ftate of being difperfed that heat which is continually fteaming out of th its diffipation prevented an the cold kept off by fome building, this alone i ordinarily fufficient to raife up the nitre Woedward 3. Scattered attention I have begun two or three letters to you b {natches, and been prevented from finifhing the by a thoufand avocations and diffipations Savift 7o D1sso'c1aTE. v. a. {[diffocio, Latin. To feparate ; t6 difunite ; to part In the diffociating ation, even of the gentlef fire, upon a concrete, there perhaps vanifh fom aive and fugitive particles, whofe prefence wa requifite to contain the concrete under fuch a determinate form Boyle Disso'LvaBLE. adj. [from diffolve.] Capable of diffolution; liable to be melted Such things as are not diffolvable by the moif ture of the tongue, act not upon the tafte Neawton Di'ssoLvBLE. adj. [difolubilis, Latin. Capable of feparation ; having one par {feparable from another by heat cr moifture Nodules, repofed in cliffs amongft the earth -being hard and not fo diffoluble, are left behind Woodward's Natural Hiffory DissorLusr'vity z / [fro diffoluble. Liablenefs to fuffer a difunion of part by heat or moifture ; capacity of bein diffolved Bodies feem to have an intrinfick principle o alteration or corruption fro the diffolybility o their parts, and the coalition of feveral particle endued with contrary and deftruétive qualities eac to other 70 DISSO'LVE Hale's Origin of Mankind . a. [diffslvo, Latin. 1. To deftroy the form of any thing b difuniting the parts with heat or moifture ; to melt n that all thefe thing by - Jolved, what manner of perfons ought fhvey)) wged".' 3. To loofe thing 2 P te iii. u.‘ to break the tieg 0fan Down fell the duke, his joiats afu der, Blind with the light, and fijricxllcen fl : with wop. der F i f y Witnefs thefe ancient empires of ¢} 'f In height of all their flowingp wealth di&;::;};l M The commons live, by no divifions rent ltop But the great monarch's death d_i[g]w"'he go.vernment 4. To feparate perfons united; a5 JSolve a league. o fi Jo D '_')'dt'l T 10 dif fe D She and I, long fince contradted Are now {o fure that nothing can d_iflblw us, S ak, fr 5. To break up aflemblies B th king' parliaments authority alone ang by hi W are affembled; and by hi nll houfe may adjourn itfeif sbo Bacon to Villes, 6. To folve; to clear Di'ss Lo ba And I have heard of thee, that thou cs make interpretations and diffofve doubts fhall Danvi 16 7. To break an enchantment mfi o Highly it concerns his glory no h To fruftrate and diffolve the magick fpells, Millm No Foul diffipation follow'd, and forc'd rout Milion Where the earth contains nitre within it, it be preferved 2. To break; to difunite 1o any W Y Manner Seeing th alone they are prorogued and diffoluved, but each The effe@s of heat are moft advanced when i eart diffolved, at the deluge writs 1. The att of difperfion the matter Abraha whofe tim The whole erreftrial globe """}3 " pieces, an to liquefy Thave heard of anchovies diffolved in fauce Dyyden 8. To be relaxed by pleafure Angels diffolv'd in hallelujahs lie Tp Disso'LVE.w Diso 1, Th Dryden 7 e 1. To be melted ; to be liquefied 3, The All putrefation, if it diffolve not in rarefiction, will in the end iflue into plants or livin creatures bred of -putrefadtion Bacen 4 Th 100 la As wax diffolvesy as ice begins to ru And trickle into drops before the fun ntin So melts the youth, and languithes away Addifon's Ovid 1 D 2. To fink away ; to fall to nothing If there be more, more woeful, holdi tin For I am almoft ready to diffolwe Sbakefpeare's Kirg Lar Hearing of this tio Th 3. To melt away in pleafures Disso'LvENT. adj. [from diffolve. ] Haying the power of diffolvinorg melting In man' and viviparous quadrupeds, the food moiftened with the fpittle, is firft chewed, the fwallowed into the ftomach, where, being mingle it is concotted, macerated with diffolvent juices Ray and reduced into a chyle Disso'LvENT. 7. /. [from the adjedtive. n t n f d o w p t h i w a T the parts of any thing. Spittle is a great diffolvent, and there is a grea fomach quantity of it in th conftantly being fallowe Arbuthndts . v a f d r [ / n E L o Dis Tha n v o f d o w p t h whi h l a e t p e a f d l b f r m t a Fir the r t e n t b f o l i r p t by dividin Arbuthnot black Hot mineral waters are the beft "difilvers o phlegm Arlmt brot It i e k f d r [ j a Disso } d , b l a l f d t i w commonl i d b f r p t l a L properly. o t l fick conftl i t i t o u e e i a Man, t tution of his nature diffolvible; muft, by being 1 a r m i u i n c o t r d an etern di n M Hale's Origin o n t L j a DI'SSOLUTE i L ebauched ed in pl A gian It |