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Show AN A 2. By way of contempt, we fay of a ftupi man, that he is a ffupid animal A'NIiMAL. adj. [animalis, Lat. 1. That which belongs or relate mals to ani in our ideas are very dark and confufed ; fuch a their union with animal nature, the way of thei adting on material beings, and their converfe wit Watts's Logick fun&ions 2. Anima diftinguifhe fro " natural and @ital, are the lower power of the mind, as the will, memory, an imagination 3. Animal life is oppofed fice on on to intelleual, and, on the other to we getable 4. Animal is ufed in oppofition o fpiritua or rational ; as, the animalnature Ax1MA'LCULE. n. /. [animalculum, Lat. A fmall animal ; particularly thofe whic are in their firft and fmalleft ftate We are to know, that they all come of the fee of animalcules of their own kind, thatwer laid there Axima'Lity befor Ray # /. [from aximal. Th {ftate of animal exiftence The word animal firft only fignifies human animality In the minor propofition the wor ani mal, for the fame reafon, fignifies the animality o a goofe: thereby it becomes an ambiguous term and unfit to build the conclufion upon Watts T A'NIMATE. @. a. [animo, Lat. 1. To quicken; to make alive; to giv ~ life to as the foul animates the body man muft have been awimated by higher power 2. To give powers to; to heighten th - powers or effet of any thing But none, ah ! none can animate the lyre And the mute firings with vocal fouls infpire ‘Whether the learn'd Minerva be her theme Or chafte Diana bathing in the ftream None can record their heav'nly praife fo wel As Helen, in whofe eyes ten thoufand Cupids dwell Dryden 3. To encourage ; to incite The more to animate the people, he ftood o high, from whence he might be beft heard, an cried unto them ‘with a loud voice Krnolles e was animated to expe&t the papacy, by th prediion of a foothfayer, that one fhould fuc.ceed Pope Leo, whofe name fhould be Adrian Bacon - A'N1MATE. ad). [from Toanimate.] Alive -+ poflefling animal life All bodies have fpirits§ and pneumatical part clean.sh data import.tsv out README within them; but the mai differences betwee animate and inanimate, are two: the firft is, tha the fpirits of things animate are all contained withi themfelves, and are branched in veins and fecre canals, as blood is ; and in livin creatures th fpirits have not only branches, but.certain cells o {eats, where the principal fpirits do refide, an .- whereunto the reft do refort: but the fpirits i things inanimate are fhut in, and cut off by th --angible parts, and are not pervious on thery as air is in fnow "Nobler birt to anoBacon Of creatures animate with gradual life Of growth; fenfe, reafon, all fumm'd up in man HMilton. There are feveral topicks ufed againft atheif . and idolatry; fuch as the vifible marks of divine wifdom and goodnefs in the works of the creation the vital union of fouls with matter, and the admirable ftruéture of animate bodies. "Bantley [from ani A'NIMATED. participial adj mate.] Lively ; vigorous -.VOL I AN Warriouts fhe fires with animated {ounds Pours balm into the bleeding lover's wounds. Pepe A'NIMATENESS. #n. /. [from animate. The ftate of being animated Dicz AwimMA'TION. 7. /. [from animate. 1. The a& of animating or enlivening There are things in the world of fpirits, where clean.sh data import.tsv out README each other Plants or vegetables are the principal part of th third day's work They are the firft producat which is the word of animation Bacon dow given underneath, as the knee of annals Their own annalift has given the fame ¢title t that of Syrmium Atterbuyy A'NNALS. z. f-ewithout fingular number. [annales, Lat.] Hiftories digefted i the exa if not fettered by their gravity, conform themfelve to fituations, wherein they beft unite to their azimator Brown ANim0'sE adj [animofus of fpirit; hot vehement Lat. Ful Dis AN1MO'SENESS. . /. [from animofe.] Spirit; heat ; vehemence of temper. Diér AnximolsiTy. n. /. [animofitas, Lat.] Ve hemence of hatred ; paflionate malignity. It implies rather a difpofition t break out into outrages, than the outrage itfelf The The day weuld fooner than the tale be done Drydes We are affured, by many glorious examples in th annals of our religion, that every one, in the lik circumftance A'Ni1sE. 7. f. [anifum, Lat.] A {pecies o apium or parfley, with large fweet-{cented feeds, 'This plant is not worth propagatin in Englan fo ufe becauf the feeds can be had much better an cheaper from Italy Miller Ye pay the tythe of mint, and azife, and cummin, and have omitted the weightier matters of th law, judgment, mercy, and faith : thefe ought y to haye done, and not to leave the other undone Matt. xxiiie 23 A'NKER. n. /o [ancker, Dutch. A liqui meafure chiefly ufed at Amfterdam I is the fourth part ofthe awm, and contains two ftekans : .cach flekan confift of fixteen mengles; the iengle being equal to two of our wine quarts Chambers A'~NkLE. a. /. [ancleop, Sax ; anciel Dutch.] The joint which joins the foo to. the leg One of his ankles was much fwelled and unlceWifeman rated-en the infide, in feveral places My fimple fyftem fhall fuppofe That Alma enters at the toes That then the mounts by juft degree Up to the ankles, legs, and knees Prior A'NKLE-BONE. 7. /. [ from ankle and bone. The bone of the ankle The fhin-bone, fro the knee to the inftep, i of diftrefs, will no act an argu thus 5 but thus will every one be tempted to aét A'NNATS, . [ awithout fingular Lat. 1. Firft fruits ; becauf fruits pai Rogers [annates the rat of firl of fpiritual livings is afte one year's profit. Coavell 2. Mafles faid in the Romifh church fo the fpace of a year, or for any othe time either for the foul of a perfon de ceafed, or for the benefit of a perfo living Ayliffe's Parergon 7o ANNE AL, v. a. [lan, to heat, Saxon. 1. To heat glafs, that the colours laid o © it may be fixed But when thou doft anneal in glafs thy ftory s - then the light and glor were fure to bring paffion, animofity, an malice enough of their own, what evidence foeve they had from others Clarendon If there is not fome method found out for allaying thefe heats and awimofities among the fai fex, one does not know to what ontrages they ma proceed Addifor No religious et ever carried their averfions fo each other to greater heights than our ftate parties have done; who, the more to inflame thei paffions, have mixed religious and civil animofitie together; borrowing one of their appellations fro the church Savift narratives i Could you with patience hear, or I relate O nymph ! the tedious anmals of our fate Through fuch a train of woes if I fhould rusm A'NIMATIVE. adj. [from animate.] Tha which has the power of giving life, o animating Axima'tor, . /. [from animate.] Tha which gives life; or any thing analogous to life, as motion readily recieve the impreflions of their motor, and order of time which every event is recorded under it proper year Two general motions in all animation are it beginning and encreafe; and two more to ru through its ftate and declination Brown's Vulgar Ervours Thofe bodies being ofa congenérous nature, d Peacham A'NNaLIST, 7. /. [from annals.] A write 2. The ftate of being enlivened made by fhadowing one half of the leg with a fin gle fhadow; the ankle-bone will thew itfelf by a fha More rev'rend grows, and more doth win ‘Which elfe thews wat'rith, bleak, and thin Herbert When you purpofe toanncal, take a plate of iro made £t for the oven ; or take a blue ftone, whic being made fit for the oven, lay it upon the crof bars of iron Peacham Which her own inward fymmetry reveal'd And like a piéture thone, in glafs anneal'd. Dryd 2 To heat glafs after it is blown that i may not break 3. To heat any thing in {fuch a2 manner a to give it the true temper 7o ANNE'X. v. a. [anneito, annexum, Lat annexer, Fr.} 1. To unite to at the end ; as, he annexe a codicil to his will .z, To unite, as a fmaller thing to greater; as, he anmexed a province t his kingdom 3. To unite a pofferiori 5 annexion alway prefuppofing fomething: thu fay punithmen i anzexe we ma t guilt but not guilt to punifhment Concerning . fate or deftiny, the opinions o thofe learned men, that have written thereof may- be fafely received, had they not thereunt annexed and faftened an inevitable neceflity, an made it more general and univerfally powerfu than it is Raleigh Wations will.decline fo'lo From virtue, which is reafon, that no wrongs But juftice, and fome fatal curfe anxex'd Deprives them of their outward liberty Milon I mean not the authority, which is amnexed t your office; I fpeak of that only which is inbor Dryden and inherent to your perfon He cannot bu love virtpe whereve it is, an annex happinefs always te the exercife of it. Atterbury The temporal reward is amnfiexed to ‘the bar performance of the alion, but the eternalto th obedience <« =Rogers ANNE X |