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Show AN AN This ferum, being accompanied by the thinne parts o the blood grow re an angry and wanting its (us regrefs into the mafs, firft gather into a hard fwelling, and, in a few days, ripen Into matter and fo difchargeth Wifeman A'~GuisH. . [. [angoiffe, Fr. angor, Lat. 7 ixceflive pain either of mind or body applied to the mind, it means the pai of forroaw, and is feldom ufed to fignif other paflions Not all {o cheerful feemed fhe of fight As was her fifter; whether dread did dwell Or anguifb, in her heart, is hard to tell Fairy Queen Virtue 's but anguifb, when tis feveral By occafion wak'd, and circumftantia "L'rue virtue's foul 's always in all deeds all. Donne They had perfecutors, whofe invention was a great as their cruelty. Wit and malice confpire to find out fuch deaths, and thofe of fuch incredible anguifp, that only the manner of dying was th South punithment, death itfelf the deliverance Perpetual angui/b fills his anxious breaft Not ftopt by bufinefs, nor compos'd by reft No mufick cheers him, nor no feaft can pleafe Dryden A'xcuisHED. adj. [from anguifb.] Seize with anguifh ; tortured ; exceflivel pained : not in ufe A'NGULAR. adj. [from angle. 1. Having angles or corners; cornered As for the figure of cryftal, it is for the mof or fix cornered being built upo 2 confufed matter, from whence, as it were fro a root, arngular figures arife, even as in the ameBrown's Vulgar Errours thyft and bafaltes 2. Confifting of an angle The diftance of the edges of the knives from on another, at the diftance of four inches from th angular point, where the edges of the knives meet was the eighth part of aninch Newton's Opticks ‘AnxcurLa'rRITY. 7z /. [from angular.] Th quality of being angular, or havin corners A'NGULARLY. adv. [from angular.] Wit angles or corners Another part of the fame folution afforded u Boyle an ice angularly figured A'NGULARNESS. 7. /. [from angular.] Th quality of ‘being angular A'NGULATED. adj. [from angle.] Forme with angles or corners Topazes, amethyfts, or emeralds, which grow i the fiffures, are ordinarily cryftallized, or thotint angulated figures ; whereas, in the ftrata, they ar found in rude lumps, like yellow, purple, and gree Woodward pebbles ANGULO'SITY. 7. /. [from angulous.] Angularity ; cornered form Dié& A'ncuLous. adj. [from angle.] Hooked _angular Nor can it be a difference, that the parts o {olid bodies are held together by hooks, and angulous involutions; fince the coherence of the part of thefe will be of as difficult a conception Glanwille Axcu'sT, adj. [anguftus, Lat.] Narrow ftrait ANGusTA'T ION. 7. /- [from anguftus. The act of making narrow ; firaitening the ftate of being narrowed The caufe may be referred either to the grumoufnef of the blood yein fomewher i T t L o e n [ / ANBELA'TIO o i b o a f t act of of breath o O t L u e n [ j a i b o i u b l breath ; panti Dic out of breath u F . F r t a n [ j a ANIE' trated; brought to nothing t g # a a f r [ v a AN1GHT In the night time s h i a i r c i m c f m y b T S lad or to obftruétion of th its paffage, b zpon it by part of the tumour fome anguflatio Wileman Shakefpeare A'~itL. 7. /. The fhrub from whofe leave and ftalks indigo is prepared AN1'LENESS. ) 7. /. [anilitas ANILITY ftat o Lat. bein a Th ol _woman; the old age of women A'N1mABLE. @dj. [from amimare.] Tha which may be put into life, or receiv Di& animation ANIMADVE RSION #. / Animals are fuch beings, which the power of growing, and prod their like, as plants and vegetablbye areendowed alfo with fenfation and f taneous motion Mr. R {chemes of tables of them ("Sanguineous, that is, fuch as have blo breathe either by | S | eithe Whu Vivaparous Aquatick and thf as the whale kind. = { Terveftrial, as quadmpedsl.nd Oviparous, as birds i But one ventricle in the heart 5 A ffogs,.t'ofq L toifes, and ferpents Gills, as all fanguineous fithes > éxcept th whale kind Exfanguincous, or without blood, wh L " divided int Ch-mayb (" Greater, and thofe eithe | € Naked [anzmad-ver:/z‘o Terreftrial, as naked fnails Lat. 1. Reproof wie (Lungs, having eithe (Two ventricles in their he gives g Anrimals are eithe m -eat exceptions at your ill hours ta Aquatick, as the poulp, cuttle-fifh, & fevere cenfure Covered with a tegyment, eithe § Cruftaceous, as lobfters and crab-fifh o Teftaceous, eithe Univalve, as limpets blame He difmified their commiffioners with fevere an tharp animadwerfions Feel no touc Of confcience, but of fame, and b Anguifb'd, not that *twas fin, but that *twas the Donne part hexagonal AN Clarendon 2. Punithment. When the objet of aximaduverfion is mentioned, it has the particle oz or upon before it When a bill is debating in parliament, it is ufua to have the controverfy handled by pamphlets o both fides 3 without the leaft animadverfion upon th Savift authors 3. In law An ecclefiaftical cenfure, and an ecclefiaftica animadwerfiony are different things; for a cenfur has a relation te a fpiritual punithment, but a animadwerfion has only a refpect to a temporal one as, degradation, and the delivering the perfon ove Ayliffe's Parergon to the fecular court 4. Perception ; power of notice : not in ufe The foul is the fole percipient which hath azimadwverfion and fenfe, properly fo called, Glanwville ANIMADVE'RSIVE. adj. [from animadwert.] That has the power of perceiving; percipient : not in ufe The reprefentation of objeéts to the foul, th only animadwerfive principle, is conveyed by motions made on the immediate organs of fenfe Glanwille ANIMADVE RSIVENESS. 7. /. [from animadverfive. ] The power of animadverting or making judgment Diéz 70 ANIMADVE'RT. w. . [animadverto Lat. 1. To pafs cenfures upon I thould not animadwert on him, who was a pain ful obferver of the decorum of the ftage, if h had not ufed extreme feverity in his judgment o the incomparable Shakefpeare Dryden 2. To infli& punithments with the particle #pon In both fenfe If the Author of the univerfe animadwverts upo men here below, how much more will it becom him to do it upon their entrance into a higher ftat of being Grewv ANIMADVE'RTER.7./. [from animadvert. He that paffes cenfures, or inflits punifhments Bivalve, as oyfters, mufCcles, cockles Turbinate, as periwinlkles, fnails, & [ Lefier, as infe&s of all forts Viviparous hairy animals, or quadrupeds, arecithe (Hoofed, which are eithe ! ¢ Whole-footed or hoofed, as the horfe and afs Cloven-footed, having the hoof divided int Two principal parts, called bifulca, eithe Such as chew not the cud, as fiine {Ruminant, or fuch as chew the cud;¢ vided int Such as have perpetual and hollow horns Beef-kind 1 < Vg { Sheep-kind Goat-kind Such as have folid, branched, and deciduou horns, as the deer-kind [ Four parts, or quadrifulca, as the rhinogsro and hippopotamus Clawed or digitate, having the foot dividedint Two parts or toes, having two nails, asthg camel-kind Many toes or claws; eithe Undivided, as the elephant Divided, which have eithe (P ie Broad nails, and an human fhape, as apes Narrower, and more pointed nails which, in refpeét of their teeth, are divided intofuch as hav Many foreteeth, or cutters, in each jaw The greater, which hav V A fhorter fnout and rounder head; as i cat-kind; A longer fnout and head, as the dog-kin e The leffer, the vermin or weazel-kind Only two large and remarkable foreteeth, d which are phytivorous, and are called the har b Rq kind Vegetables are proper enough to repair f‘?""'fk as being near of the fane fpecifick gravity Wi the animal juices, and as coniifting of the fflfll, parts with animal fubftances, fpirit, watet fl oil, carth ; all®which are contained in the 1 they derive from the earth. Arbuthnot on Almin werter upon, fuch as prefume to partake of thof myfteries, without fuch a preparation South Some of the animated fub('can;es }(;a;e::r}:: a V tted L0 for S al or inftrumentalg paits organi . ricty of motions from place to place es of life within themfelves, as beafts, birds and infe&s; thefe are called animalse Ot_h"l::; A'NIMAL. #. /. [animal, Lat. 1. A living creature corporeal, diftinét, o within themfelves the principles of »a.""th?-; of life and growth, and of yarious product i?fl? God is a ftrict obferver of, and a fevere animad the one fide, from pure fpirit; on th other, from mere matter mated fubftances are called vegetables, whlé leaves and fruit, fuch as we fee in Pl‘m‘tfi and trees 44 i'c* Wairs's8 b |