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Show AM AM quality of being amiable; lovelinefs Amata's breaft the fury thus invades As foon as the natural gaiety and amiablencfs o 3. Amongft the young man wears off, they have nothing lef to commend them, but lie by among the lumbe adv. [from amiable.] In a ‘MIABLY amiable manner; in fuch a manne a ¢¢ The hand that made us is divine. o A'MICABLE. adj. [ amicabilis, Lat. fay fhews any thing Divine oblivio of low-thoughted care Frefh blooming hope; gay daughter of the fky - Prior it is pretende Example tha whic by, while my fervants threw down what was amifs Ny Saift 6. Reproachful; irreverent day w,y an language whic it cannot' always be adverbially render ed ; becaufe it always follows the f{ubftantive to which it relates, contrary to the nature of adjettives in Englith and though we fay the aion was anifs we never {ay an asifs attion fratue-of ‘the great duke, amidft the four: flaves 9. Amifi is ufed by Shakefpeare as a nou ¢ {ubftantive <hained to his pedeftal, are very noble fights Addifon To my fick foul, as fin's true nature'is in th "Each toy fzems prologle to'fome great amifs Hamlet Amid my flock with woe my voice I tear Lofs Lat. [amifffo / Awm1'sston And, but bewitch'd, who to his flock would tnoan lofe T Lat] [amitto wv Ami'r T Sidney So hills amid the aix encounter'd hills a word little:in ufe Ice is water congealed by th Huil'd to and fro with jaculation dire. « = Alilton ‘What have I done, to' name ‘that ‘wealthy fwain fgcwi‘{fi nation 8. Amifs is marked as an adverb, thoag "Of'each tree in the garden we may eat But of the fruit of this fair tree amidf The garden, God hath-faid, ye fhall not eat Milton The two ports, the bagnio, and Donatelli' o people 7. Impaired in health; as, I was fomewhat amifs yefterday, but am well to Of the frui ambit of another thing., = Ever fpeak any thing amifs againft the God of Shadrach, Mefhach, and Abednego, fhall be cut i pieces; and their houfes thall be made a dunghill becaufe there is no other God that can delive after this fort Daniel, iiis 29 Ami‘p prep. [from o and mid; o L AMrpsT. midf. U7t 5. In the midft; equally diftant fro either extremity Tillotfon Your kindred is not much amifs, *tis true Yet I am fomewhat better born than you. Dryd I built a wall, and when the mafons plaid th knaves, nothing delighted me fo much as.to ftan Pope 2. Mingled with ; furrounded by to keep, but of counfel air, whereby it acyuirethino new: form, but rathe a confiftence or determination of its difiluency, The boar amidff my cryftal fireamss I bring Ant fouthern winds to blat my flow'ry fpring Dryden frigidity of? the and amitieth not its eflfence, but condition of flui dity ‘Brown's Vulgar Errours o an in their facrifices Sawvary. Trevoux is a volatile falt of two kinds, an modern Th ancien fort defcribed by Pliny and Diofcorides, was a native falt, generated in thofe large inns' where the crowds of pil tion of the thing, whatever it be Milion cien 5. 'Wrong; not according to the perfec 'Came forth with pilgrira feps in amice grey ough for incenfe Sar Ammonita not generally the force of laws fome confcience On fome a prieft, fuccinét in amice white all me cient Fairfax all principles, yet it might not be amifs to hav ~_Thus pafsd the night {o foul, till morning fai Attends hav nam and of a'very fharp tafte and fmell, fomewhat lik garlick This gum is faid to have ferved the an them, whofe cafe is the like Hooker Methinks, though' a-man' had all fcience, an The firft or undermoft part of a prieft' habit, over which he wears the alb Th ought to be in dfy drops, white within, yellowif without, eafily fufible, refinous, fomewhat bitter Addifon ClEeg #. / Gum AMmonrtac is brought from the Eaft Ina dies, and is fuppofed to ooze from an umbellifer ous plant Diofcorides fays, it is the juice of kind of ferula growing in Barbary, and the plant iscalled agafyllis Pliny calls: the tree metopion which, he fays, grows near the Temple of Jupite Ammon, whence the gum takes its name I only and perfuafions, not amifs to be followed b - minis defignat : tegif enim cor, ne vanirates cogitet 5 [Rringit autem collum, ne ind ad lingaam tranfeat mendacium.' Bruno. Shakefp. King Fobn 4. Wrong; improper; unfit wiin Cange dmiftus quo collum fringitur pedtus tegitur, caffitaten interioris ho- AMMO'NIAC drug She figh'd withal, they conftru'd all amifs And thought fhe wifh'd to'kill who long™d to kifs byteriis communibus funt, ami&us, alba cingulumy flolay manipulus, & planeta. D of S 3. Inan ill fenfe Primum ex fex indumentis epifcopo S pre/ Purfue this race, this fervice dedicat 1£ T have done amifs, impute it not © the variety of fecs.live fo amicably together, it i notorious how a turbulent party, joining with th thog; . Arminians; did attempt to deftroy-the republick Saift's Church of England Man WA MIcE: 7 S [ami&us, Lat. amiét, Fr [ x i And ye, oh Tyrians, with immortal hat " Theheart of man, and weigh his inmoft thoughts They fe . Through the dun mift, in blooming beauty frefh Two lovely youths, that amicably walk @'er.verdant meads, and pleas'd, perhaps, revoly' Anna's late conquefts Philips wher Of godlike amity 5 which appears moft {trongl 11 bearing thus the abfence of your lord. Shatcp O'ye powers that fearc with goodwill and concord itfelf You have a noble and a true concei We hope therefore to reform ourfelves, if a any time we have done amifs, is not to fever ourfelves from the church we were of before. Hooker in a friendly way that the ver To my deplored athes ; let there b "Twixt us and them no league nor amity. Denbam 2. Faultily ; criminally The guality of being amicable ; friend. linels 5 goodwiil 1 A'MECABLY. adv: [from amicable.] In a In Hollan like the Greek wapd TIs'yet amz;/%, when it is truly done did think and amity with all the world Sir Fobn Dawies on Ireland .- For that which thou haft fiworn to do amifs Pope Davi The monarchy of Great Britain was in leagu 1. Faulty; criminal o A MICABLENESS. # [ [from amicable. 1 found my fubje€s amicably joi To leflen their defedts, by citing mine _4ddifon Or out of order. And faitli, our early immortality prophe meeting of men together, and their accompanyin one another to the houfe of God, fhould malk the bond of their love infoluble, and tie the in a league of inviolable amity Hooker to be wrong, as, to mifcount, to coun erroncoully ; to mifde, to commit crime i amifs therefore fignifies zot right O grace ferene ! oh virtue heav'nly fair amicable manner Th to, and 715, the Englifh particle, whic . an amicable attion, or an amicable man though it be fo ufed in this paffage Enter'each mild, each emicable guelt Receive and wrap me in eternal reft nations, oppofed to wwar; or among th people, oppofed to difcord; or betwee private perfons AMm1'ss. adv. [from a, which, in this for of compofition, often fignifies accordin Friendly; kind. Tt is commonly ufe of more than one ; as, they live in a we feldo conjoined with For ever finging, as they fhine to excite love amicable. manner ; bu Dryden ‘What tho' no real voice nor foun Amid their radiant orbs be found In reafon®s ear they all rejoice And utter forth a glorious voice Addifon | A'MITY. #. [ [amitié, Fr. amicitia, Lat. Friendfhip, whether publick betwee And fires with rage aimid the fylvan fhades power of raifing love -+ and refufe of the fpecies AM grims, coming from the temple of Jupiter Ammon ufed to lodge; who travelling-upon camels, an thofe creatures in Cyrene, where that celebrated temple ftood, urining in the ftables, or i th parched fands, out of this urine, which is remark ably ftrong, arofe a kind of falt, denominated fometimes from the temple,| dmmoniac, and fometimesfrom the country, Cyreniac No more of thisfal is produced there; and, from this deficiency, fom fufpe&t there never was any fuch thing: but thi fufpicion is removed, by the large quantities of falt, neatly of the fame nature, thrown out b mount A tna The modern fal ammoniac is made in Egypt where long-necked glafs bottles, filled with {oot a little fea falt, and the urine of cattle, and having their mouths luted with a piece of wet cotton are placed over an oven or furnace, in a thick bed of affres nothin bu the neck appearing an kept there two days and a night, with'a continual ftrong fire. The fteam fwells up the cotton and forms a pafte at the vent-hole, hindering th falts from evaporating; which fick to the top o the bottle, and'are ‘taken out in thofe large cakes which they fend to England Only foot exhale from dung, is the proper ingtedient in this pre paration an th dun of camel afford th firongeft Our chymiftsimitate the Egyptian [al ammoniac by adding one part of common falt to five o urine; with which fome mix that quantity o foot, and putting the whole in a vefiel, they raif from it, by {ublimation, a white, friable, farina ceous fubftance, which they call jz/ ammoniac Chambers AmMoNI'acAL. adj. [from' ammomiac. Having the properties of ammoniac falt Human blood calcined, yields no fixed falt nor is it a fal ammoniack ; for that remains im mutable ‘after repeated diftillations; and diftillation deftroys the ammoniacal quality of anima falts; and tutns: them atkaline: fo that iris falt' neither quite fixed; nor quite wvolatile, no quite acid, nor quite atkaline, nor- quite ammeni acal; but {oft and benign, approaching neareft t the nature of fal ammoniac Arbuthnot AM v |