OCR Text |
Show R AN< AN This houfe is famous in hiftory, for the re treat of an antipope, who called himfelf Felix V. Addifon ANTIPTOSIS. lz‘_/: [a'cwiw'rwmg.] A figur in grammar, by which one cafe is pu for another A'NTiQuUAaRrY. n. [ [antiquarius, Lat. A man ftudious of antiquity ; a colleGo of ancient things All arts, rarities, and inventions, are but th reli€ts of an intelle&t defaced with fin. We admir it now onl a antiguarie d A'nTrquary. adj. [Thi proper.] Old; antique wor [antiquo Addifon A'NTIQUATEDNESS. 7. /. [from antiquated.] The ftate of being antiquated, wor antiquus Lat. It was formerly pronounced according to the Englifh analogy, wit the accent on the firft {fyllable ; but no after the French, with the accent on th laft, at leaft in profe ; the poets ufe i varioufly. old ; not modern That old and antigue fong we heard laft night Shakefpeare Such truth in love as th' antijue world did know . Infucha ftyle as courtsmightboatt of now. Waller 2. Of genuine antiquity The feals which we have remaining of Juliu Ceefar, which we know to be antigue, have the fta of Venus over them Dryden copper lamps, at any rate Yet wifely melted down my plate ©On modern models to be wrought And trifles I alike purfue . Becaufe they're old, becaufe they're new Prior Forth came that ancient lord and aged queen "Array'd/in antigue robes down to the ground And fad habiliments right well befeen. Fairy Queen Muft he no more divert the tedious day Nor fparkling thoughts in antigue words convey Smith to the Memory of Philips 4 Odd wild We may difcover fomething venerable in the antiguenefs of the work ; but we would fee the defig AxtrQuiTY Strong without rage; without o'erflowing',_fuu Addifon S enlarged Though gentle, yet not dul] 7 /. [antiguitas, Lat. 1 fec a chief, who.leads my chofen fons érbon All arm'd with points, antitbefes, and puns, 1. Old times ; time paft long ago A'NTITYPE. 7. /. [évrirvw@z.]That W]de I mention Ariftotle, Polybius, and Cnc.ero,_th greateft philofopher, the moft impartial hiftorian and the moft confummate ftatefman, of all anti is refemble ./.fda'gfon quity antick prefentation 2. The people of old times ; the ancients 3 th It is a term of theoly G See T'yPE The works or remains of old times 4. Old age: a ludicrous fenfe He brought forth bread and wine, and yas 'th prieft of the mof 5. Ancientnefs; as, this ring is valuabl for its antiquity ANTI' SCII, n. /. It has no fingular. [fro ayrt and owie.| In geography, the peopl who inhabit on different fides of th equator, who confequently at noon hav their fhadows projected oppofite ways Thus the people of the north are Axtifcii to thofe of the fouth; the one projeting their fhadows at moon towar the north pole, and the other toward th Chambers fouth pole AnTiscorBU TICAL. adj. [from i againft, and feorbutum, the fcurvy.] Goo againit the fcurvy The war againtt, and fcorbutum Good againft the fcurvy th What fathion'd hats, or ruffs, or fuits, next yea Donne ANTUQUE. 7. /. [from antique, adj.] A antiquity; a remain of ancient times an ancient rarity I leave to Edward, now earl of Oxford, my fea branches Grown old, they grow lefs branched, and fir lofe their brow axtlers, or loweft furcations nextt the head _ Brow A' well-grown ftag, whofe antlers rif High o'er his front, his beams invade the fkies ijdfl Bright Dian Brought hunted wild goats heads, and branchin antler Of ftags, the fruit and honour of her toil, Pri ANTO'ECI. . f. It has no fingular. [Lat, Arbutbnot [fro T A'NTLER. n. [. [andouillier, Fr.} Properl the firft branches of a ftag's horns ; but popularly and generally, any of hi will occafion ftinking breath, and corrupt the blood adj imitatin‘g the g If the lues be joined with it, you will fearce cyr your patient without exhibiting antivenereal reme Wilenan dies antifcorbutical plants, in quantities AxTiscorBu'rick God AxTiTY PICAL. adj [from antitype That which relates to an antitype; t which explains the type ANTIVENE'REAL. adj. [from 2} and 4 nereal.] Good againft the venereal dif eafe ! Shakefpeare hig titype, or the fubftance, Chrift himfelf Is not your voice broken? your wind fhort your chin double ? your wit fingle ? and every par about you blafted with antiguity # and will you ye call yourfelf young Burner's T earth Bacon from &y7i, and oixéw, to inhabit.] In geo éuri t e t o n t b h i o graphy, t me meridian, an {curvy. who live under the f The warm antifcorbuticks, animal diet, and animal falts, are proper Arbuthnot at the fame diftanc from the equator the one toward the north, and the othe to the fouth, Hence they have the fam longitude, and their latitade is alf th fame, but of a different denominatio ANTTSPASIS. n. /. [from asri, againtt and ocwaw, to draw.] The revulfion o any humour into another part They are in the fame femicircleof th meridian, but oppofite parallels. The have precifely the fame hours of th day and night, but oppofite feafons cramp AnTispa'sTick. adj. [from &l an omasinoc.] Medicines which caufe a re and the night of the oneis alwa}'S_.‘e‘i"a ‘Chambers to the day of the other vulfion of the humours dman [fro / » SIA OMA NTO ANTISPLENE'TICK. adj. [from dyrl an ¢vopc name. for o .fpeech Jplenetick.] Efficacious in difeafes of the which fo prope name i pu {pleen dignity, office, profeflio Antifpleneticks open the obftruions of the fpleen Floyer Name not thefe living death-heads unto me For thefe not ancient but antigue be Donne And fooner may a gulling weather-fpy By drawing forth heav''n's {cheme, tell certainl Our giddy-headed antigue youth will wear or fhadowed out type ; that of which the type is the 1 ANTIspasMo'DICK adj. [ from o againft, and ocwacpoc, the cramp.] Tha which has the power of relieving th For being true antigue I bought 3. Of old fafhion traft ; as in thefe lines Now, good Cefario, but that piece of fong M ance of antiquity antiquities Almighty Latium, with her cities crown'd 1. Ancient tithefes. [avviSeais, placing in oppofitio fent ; s Oppofition of words or fentiment antique ; an appear quality of bein ura Lat. Chriftianity in this kingdo introduce new laws, and anfome old ones, that feemed lef Chriftian doétrines Hale's Common Lazv of England Milton's Paradife Loft is admirable But cannot I admire the height of his invention, and th ftrength of his expreflion, without defending -hi . antiguated words, and the perpetual harfhnefs o their found Dryden Fr ANTYQUENESS. #. /. [from antique.] Th #. /. in the p Shakefp The growth o might reafonabl ziguate or abrogat confiftent with th out of ufe, or obfolete ANTY'QUE. adj. [antique ANTI'THESIS the Mefiiah, the afcenfion of eur Saviour, and length, to his kingdom and dominion oyer 315,th To put out of ufe ; to make obfolete Shall like an antiguated fable found Savift and fet in gold As for the obfervation of Machiavel, traducin Gregory the Great, that he did what in him la to extinguifh all heathen antiguirics : 1 do not fin that thofe zeals laft long; as it appeared in th fucceflion of Sabinian, who did revive the forme Inftruted by the antiguary times a both very choice antigue be a young Hercules maticks, and purged him When once upon the wing, he foars to a pitch, from the type to the antitype, to the days o is im He muft, he is, he cannot but be wife as alfo another fcal,'fuppof'eJ t That fuch pillars were raifed by Seth, all anti. Raleigh quity has avowed Here's Neftor w of Julius Cefar a piece o old coin, for the ftamp it once bore South With fharpen'd fight pale antiguaries pore Th' infeription value, but the ruft adore Pope The rude Latin of the monks is ftill very-intelligible; had their records been delivered in th vulgar tongue, they could not now be underftood unlefs by antiquaries Saift Zo A''NTIQUATE AN T prefertbed him 2 difilled milly vidh ANT]'S‘TROPHE e [o'cv'nreo@n fi?)' avri, the contrary way, and seops, turn ing.] In an ode fuppofed to be fung i parts, the fecond ftanza of every three or {fometimes every fecond ftanza; { called becaufe the dance turns about ANTISTRUMA'TICK. adj. [from avsi, an Jtruma, a {crophulous fwelling.] Goo againft the king's evil name of fom {cience, or trade ; or when a prop name is put in the room of an appel tive. Thus a king is called his "\};‘ jetty 5 a nobleman, his lordfhip fay the philofopher inftead of Ariftol and the orator for Cicero : thns 3 ma is called by the name of his countl:'}‘: German, an Italian ; and a grave l,na is called a Cato lomon and a wile man a - Smith's R/"f";'f@ ANEE RE |