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Show '--_- incidences of the rays there is no fuch feparation o Neawton the emerging rays What incidency thou do'ft guefs of harm: declare Is creeping towards me. Shakefpeare's Winter's Tale we watch'd you at an inch Shake[peare Zo INcH. @, a. [from the noun. 1. To drive by inches Valiant they fay, but very popular He gets too far inta the foldiers graces Dryden's Cleomenes And inches out my mafter INCIDENT 75 IncH. @, #». To advance or retire little at a time I'xcuEep. adj. [with a word of numbe before it.] Containing inches in lengt or breadth I'ncuoaTE -w. a. Tinchos, Lat. 7 begin which whofe propofition faved Julius Conftanc r 1 In cboations or middle alts towards crimes capital, no Bacon attually perpetrated fetting on foot‘fome of thofe arts in thof as the firft zchoatio -of them, which yet would be but-their reviving Hale's Origin of Mankind Y NcHOATYIVE. adj. [inchoative, French Hi poin N be o overcam which are tranfparent, have man whole propofitionis called the priand the additional propofition i propofition Watts a firmnef of friendfhi South by which the particles of other bodies are divide from one another: thus expetorating medicine LRuincy are faid to incide or cut the phlegm The menfes are promoted by all faponaceou {ubftances, which. incide the mucus in the firf Arbuthnot paffages IncipeENCE. \ 7 fo Tincido, to fall, Latin incidence, Yrench. IncipENCY 1. The direGiorn with which one bod firikes upon another, and the angle mad by that line, and the plane ftruck upon is called the angle of incidence. In th ".occurfions of two moving bodies, thei wncidence. 1s {aid to be perpendicular o oblique, as their direGtions or lines o motion makea ftraight line or-an obliqu angle at the point of contatt. clean.sh data import.tsv out README Quingy In mirrburs there is the like angle of incidence the object of the glafs, and from the glafs t 7. / Fr fro th Something happening befid wifdom will fall into it as an incident to th of lawfulnefs Bacon's Holy war perfon, no izcident in the play, but muf Dryden ufe to carry on the main defign By fome religiou duties fcarce appear to be re garded at all, and by others only as an incidenta bufinefs to be done when they have nothirg elf to do Rogers INCIDE'NTALLY. @dv. [from incidental. Befide the main defign; occafionally Thefe general rules are but occafionally and i7cidentally mentioned in Scripture, rather to manifeft unto us a former tha to la upo us.a ne obligation Senderfon I treat either purpofely or incidentally of colours Boyle I'scipeNTLY. adv. [from incident.] Occafionally; by the bye; by the way dt was incidently moved amongft the judges what fhould 'be done for the king himfelf, who was at tainted; but refolved tha defects T INCIUNERATE Lat. @ cineres Bacon Thefe dregs are foon incinerated and calcined int fuch falts which produce coughs. Harvey on Confump thing to afhes, An'unexpe&ed way of delufion, whereby he mor eafily led away the incircumjpeéiion of their belief Browyr Inci'sep. adj, [incifer, Fr. incifus, Lat. Cut; made by cutting: as, an incife wound I brought the incifed lips together Incrt'sion 1. A cut . Wifeman #. /. [incifion, ¥x. incifio, Lat. a wound. made with a thar inftrument Generally ufed for wound made by a chirurgeon Foa. Let us make incifion for your love To prove whofe blood is reddeft, his or mine, Shak Go help thee fhallo JSion in thee, thou art raw The receptio man Go mak inci Shak. As you like it of one is as different fro th admiffion of the other, as when the earth falls ope under the 7zcijfon of the plough, and when it gape to drink in the dew of heaven of a fhower or the refrefhment South A fmall incifior knife is more handy than a large for opening the bag Sharp's Surgery 2. Divifion of vifcofities by medicines -Abfterfion is a fcouring off, ‘or incifion of yifcou hitnours, and making ' them fluid, and cutting betwee the an the part which {coureth linen Inci'sive adj [incifif a in nitrou Fr water Bacon fro incifus Lat. Having the quality of cutting o dividing The colour of man corpufcles will cohere b being precipitated together, and be deftroyed by th effufion of very piercing and inciffve liquors. Bayle Inci'sor. #. fo [incifor, Latin. Cutter tooth in the forepart of the mouth Inci'sor. adj. [incifoire, Fr.] Having th quality of catting Inci'sure. n. fo [incifura, Lat. A cut an ,aperture In fom creature it is wide in fom narrow in fome with a deep izcifure up into the head, fo the better catching and holding of prey, and com minuting of hard food Derbant Incira'rioN . f citement incentive [incitatio, Lat. the a@ of inciting citing motive In impulfe the power of in Dr. Ridley defines magnetical attra&tion to be natural i#citation and difpofition conforming unt contiguity, an unio another of one magnetical body unt Brown's Vulgar Errours The multitude of objeéts do proportionably multiply both the poffibilities and .izcitations Government of the Tongue The mind gives not only licence, but incitatio %o the other paflions to aét with the utmoft impetuo ity Decay of Piety To INCI'TE. w. a. [incito, Lat. inciter, Fr. How many now in healt Shall drop their blood, in approbatio Of what your reverence thall izciteus to> Shakefp [in an brittle, and laftly broken and izcinerate u. [ IncircumsPE'cTION. 2 i [in and circumfpellion.] Want of caution; want o heed. a Bacon's Henry V11 then maketh fragile; laftly, it doth incinerate an calcinate Bacon Fire burneth weod, making it firt luminous, the an Boyle To ftir up; to puth forward in a pur By baking, without melting, the heat indurateth blac f 5 the crown takes away To burn to afhes Bacon the eye He enjoys ‘his hgppy ftate moft when he communicatesit 2 moreLSvigorous joy from JINcINERA'TION ! and receive the reflexipnthan frg the dire&t incidency of his from incinerate. wrodappinelfar 1o dant 20030 up . Norris equalincidences there is 2 confiderable -in [i}/(t'd'fnt The fatisfaltion you received from thofe incidental difcourfes which we have wandered into Milton in ‘Medicines are faid ‘to izcide which confift o pointed and fharp particles; as acids, and moft falts a Incrpe/NTaL. adj. Incident; 'cafual; happening by chance; not intended; not deliberate; not neceffary to the chief purpofe choativus, Lat.] Inceptive; noting inchoation or beginning Egin 95 Inci'DE. @, a. [from incido, to «cut Latin. was Czfar the main defign ; cafualty It difcerneth of four kinds of caufes; forces, frauds, crimes various of ‘ftellionate, and the ix fro who is pious, fhall b whofe furnam is fuc adjeCtive. ception; beginning upo anothe overlooks all thofe failures of kindnefs, that throug P affion, ' incident to human nature, a man may y b Raleigh's Hif? #. [ [inchoatus, Lat. be looke mak guilty of inchoate, ot in the way of perfeCtion parts woul whic as, every man It is neither:a fiibftance perfect, nor a fubftance | INCIDENT Th &c 2. Happening; apt to kappen to conmmence Ixcron'rion whom Pompey : bodies pores Here th mary or chief called an inciden Ainfaworth meal. From bogs, fens, flats, on:Profperofall, and make hi By inchmeal a difeafe Shakefpeare's Tempefs incidens occafions Wotton In a complex propofition the predicate or fubjet i fometimes made complex by the pronouns who Some of the infide of All th' infe@ions that the fun fucks u Yr anfwers, but likewife fmiles and frowns upon inciden Poor Tom, ptoud of heart to ride on a bay trottin horfe over four inched bridges. Shakefp. King Lear an (incident As the ordinary coutfe of comimon affairs is difpofed of by general laws, fo likewife men's rare incident neceflities and utilitiesfhould be with fpecia equity confidered Hooker I would note in children not only their articulat Ainfaworth deer Iwcumear. » [ [inc clean.sh data import.tsv out README ‘piece an inch long adj Lat. 1. Cafual; fortuitous occafional'; happening accidentally; iffuing in befide th main defign; happening befide expectation 2. To deal out by inches; to give fparingly INxcuHIPIN. 7 / ca hap Accident [lwcidens, Lat. fualty 2 [incineration Fr "The a& of burning an pofe to animate to fpur to urge on No blown ambition doth our arms incite But love, dear love, and our ag'd father's right Shakefp Aatiochus, when he ixncited Prufias to join in'war fet before him the greatnefs of the Romans, comparing it to a fire, that toak .and fpread from kingdom to kingdom Natur 3. A nice point of time in lik tha mon falt, and very differing from the cauftick liyi viate tatte of other falts made'by incineration The permanent whitenels argues Daonne Isit fo defirable a condition to confume by izches Collier and lofe one's blood by drops The commons we'e growing by degrees into powe and property, gaining ground upon the patrician Sawift inch by im'b. I think conftantly, or one and the fame ray is by refractio Newton's Optics difturbed depuration to be very white, a tafte not unlike gomy and commo Bacon reafon, ‘in all difficulties where prudence or courage are required, do rathe incite us to fly for affiftance to a fingle perfon tha Saift a multitude INciTz As in lafting, {o in length is man Contracted to an izch, who was a fpan the incident rays are refracted more and others lef 1 obferved in the fixt falt of urinc,,Byougm b ‘The plebeians have got your fellow tribune They'll give him death by inches. Shak. Coriolanus whether it be that fome o equality of refraCtions 2. A proverbial name for a {mall quantity Beldame IN I'N IN |