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Show AN AN _‘wranter, his heirs, or fuccefforss but o But frove with anodynes £ affuage the fmare And mildly thus her med'cine did impart " arent, the fame actions lie as do of land " execution upon a ftatute merchant, ftatute ftaple, or elegit, as a rent may Coawell 2. A yearly allowance 1. To‘ make void gate; to abolifh gt to nullify it; an whoeve deftroy "authority, does, in effect, amnu/ the law. clean.sh data import.tsv out README And all her various obje&s of deligh Anyull'd, which might in part my grief have eas'd 3. To confecrate by unétion A'NNULAR, ad). [from annylus, Lat. _ the form of a ring I That they might not,-in bending the arm o {eg, rife up, he has tied them to the bones by annular 1igaments Cheyne A'NNULARY adj. [fro " In the form of rings annulus A'NNULET. . /. [from annulus, Lat. 1. A little ring % {In heraldry. A difference or mar of diftin&ion, which the fifth brother o any family ought to bear in his coat o 3. Annulets are alfo a péft':o‘f the cbatarmour of feveral families; they wer repute a mark of nobilit L Anvuncia‘TiON DAY. 7 /i [from aznunciate.] The day celebrated by th "church, in memory of the angel's falutation of the bleffed Virgin ; folemnize with us,on the twenty-fifth of March Upon the. day of the gnnunciation, o day, meditate on the incarnation of ou Saviour: and fo upon all the feftival "year Ladyblefie of th Taylor A'Nopy NE, adj. [from 2 and $8¢v,.] Tha - which has the power of mitigating pain Yet durft the not too deeply probe the wound «#&s hoping fill the nobler parts were found th commo Thefe animalcules ferve alfo for food to another anonymous infet of the waters Ray " They would forthwith publith flanders unpunithed, the authors being amonymous, the imme diate publifhers thereof fculking Notes on the Duugiad | AN0'NYM USLY. adv. [from anonymous. Without a name rule o Broww's Vulgar Errours being acquainted with fome charaers o Holder lead, an tin iron : to which we may join that gnomalous body quickfilver or mercury E OB odke ANO'MALOUSLY. adv. [from anomalous. Irregularly; in a manner contrary t rule Ev wa no folemnl begotten bu fuddenl framed, and anomaloufly proceeded from Adam Brows's Pulgar Brrours ANO'MALY. #. /. [anomalie, Fr. anonalia, Lat. gropenr®- Irregularity; deviation from the common rule If we fhouldchance to find a mother debauching her daughter; as fuch monfters have bee feen, we muift charge this upon a peculiar azomal South pfeudographies i and bafenefs of nature I do not purfue th man ufe how meft of .thefe ano malie former number but inten t in writin upplied A'Nomyx.n. f fhe migh be avoided an bette Holder [« priv.and wou®-] Breach of law If fin be good, an juft and lawful i is n more evil, it is no fin, no anomy Bramhall againft Hobbes Axo'x. adv. [ Junius imagines it to be a elliptical form of fpeaking for in oze that is, i one minute 5 Skinner fro a and zegn, or near 3 Minflews from on on. A fourth Pe-- --- What will the line ‘ftretch out to th crack o doom derftand anomalous pronunciation Metals are gold, filver, copper pafles the column round Chambers 7o ANNU'MERATE. wv. a. [annumero ~ motin popular ufe fro every fpeech, you may at pleafure make him un it encom {omething that has fallen out: a wor | irregularity; deviation from th - deviatin H 5., Annulet is alfo ufed for a narrow fla ~moulding common to other parts of th Lat,]" Addition to a former number 7o ANNU'NCIATE. ‘w. a. [annuncio Lat.] . To bring tidings ; to relat Ano There will arife anomalsus difturbances not onl in civil and artificial, but alf in military officers _the quarter -round, are called annulets "Lat.] To add to a former number ; t . unite to fomething before mentioned ANNUMERA'TION #../. [annumeratio Axo'maLism. n. /. [from anomaly. nets prelates to receive their inveftiture pe baculym & annulum 4. [In architeGture.] . The {mall {quar ‘members, in the Dorick capital, unde becauf Th , 1infleion ; and, in aftronomy, to th feemingly irregular motions of the pla- and jurifdicion, it being the cuftom of column ; fo called Ano'NYMoUs. adj. [« priv. and digpa. Wanting a name common rule Dis, I would know, whether the edition is to com Anomavri'sTicaL. adj. [from anomaly.] i out anomymoufly, -among complaints of fpuriou editions Irregular ; applied in aftronamy to th Swift year, ‘taken for the time in which the A'NOREXY. 7. /. [dsognfic.] Inappetency or loathing of food Quincy earth paffeth through its orbit, diftinc ANO'THER. adj. [from an and other. from the tropical year Ano'MALOUS. adj. [« priv. and Spare-] 1. Not the fame He that will not lay a foundation for perpetua Irregular; out of rule ; deviating fro diforder, muft of necefiity find ansther rife of gothe general method or analogy of things vernment than that Locke ! It is applied, in grammar, to word z. One more; a" new addition! to: th Lat. " wind-pipe is made with. annulary cartilages, tha the fides of it may not flag and fall together. Ray ancientl Somctimes, anon in thady vale, each night Or harbour'd in one cave, is not reveal'd. Milron ANOINTER: z. /. [from anvint. perfon that anoints maly Becaufe continual refpiration is neceffary, th arms Full forty days he pafs'd, whether on hil I would not fee thy fifte In his ancinted fleth ftick boarifh fangs. Shakefp Milton Waller at othe times In this fenfe is ufed ¢ver an anon, for now and then And fragrant oils the ftiffen'd limbs azoint e el 3 Dryden Light, the pure work of God, to me 's extin& And fpreading fo, would fame gnoz 2., Sometimes; now and then Warm waters then, in brazen'caldrons borne Are pour'd to wafh his body, joint.by joint 2. To reduce to nothing ; to obliterate As if they had been made of fire 2. To {fmear; to be rubbed upon Rogers With fuch a purple light they fhone Thou fhalt have olive tree$ throughout all th coafts, but thou fhalt ‘not ancint thigfelf with th oil = for thine olive fhall caft his fruit Deyt. xxviii. 40 thi Shakefpeare Still as T did the leaves infpire Anointed let me be with deadly venom. Shakefp abro Anon becomes a mountain Will they come abroad azon Freely our part Milton He was not without defign at that prefent, a fhall be made out anor; meaning by that devic to withdraw himfelf Clarendant a matter A little fnow, tumbled about Shall we fee young Oberon Bey Fopfon However, witnefs, Heay'n Heav'n; witnefs thou ann! while we difcharg [oindre, envindre oil, or unguents That which gives force to the law, is the autho that enall «w. a rub over with un€tuou 1. T Clarendon t | part. oint, enoint, Fr. pence, beyond what his ammuity from his fathe Yo ANnu'L. v. a. [from nullus. Dryd kind, are fuch things as relax the tenfion of th affeéted neryous fibres, as deco&ions of emollient fubftances5 thofe things which deftroy th particular acrimony which occafions the pain or what deadens the fenfation of the brain, b procuring {leep Arbuthnot 7o ANO'INT He was generally known to be the fon of on earl, and brother to another, who fupplied his ex 1. Quickly; foon; in a fhort time Anodynes, or abaters of pain of the alimentar "The third difference is, that an annuit is never taken for aflets, becaufe it 1 1o freehold in law5 nor fhall be put i would bear AN Another yet P-a feventh | T'll fee no more Shakefpeare any one elfe 3. "Any other If one man fin againft another, the judge hal judge him 1 Samuel, ii. 2.5 Why not of her? preferr'd above the ref B him with knightly deeds fefs'd and .ope love pro So had gnother been, where he his vows addrefsid Diryden 4. Not one's felf A man thall have diffufed his life, his felf and his whole concernments fo far, that he ca weep his forrows with another's ‘eyes; when'h has another heart befides his own, both to fhare and to {fuppart his grief South 5. Widely different; much altered, ' Whe the fou is beate from its ftation, an the mounds of virtue are broken' down, it becomes quite another thing from what it was beSouth fore adj. [See ANOTHER ANO'THERGAINES cukss.] Of another kind. This wor I have found only in Sidxey If my father had not plaid the hafty fooly might have had ansthergaines hutband than: Da meétas Sidne e Axo'THERGUESS. adj. [ This word, whic though rarely ufed in writing, is {omewhat frequent in colloquial language, - conceive to be corrupted from apotbe guife; that is, ‘of a different guije, o manner, or form. Ofa dlfferent'kmfi OhHocus ! where art thou? It ufe anotherguc/s manner in thy time EEN "to go'i ¥ Arbuthnat A'NSATED |