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Show & P ArPr'npIX. o [ [appendices, plur. Lat. 1. Something appended, or added, to another thing The cherubim were never intended as an objeé of worfhip, becaufe they were only the appendices t another thing, Buta thingis then propofed as a object of worfhip, when it is fet up by itfelf, an not by way of addition or ornament to anothe Stilling flec thing Normandy became an appendix to England, th noblerdominion, and received a greater conformit of their laws to the Englifh, than they gave to i Hale's Civil Law of England 2. An adjuné& or concomitant All concurrent agpendices of the action ought t be furveyed, inorder to pronounce with truth con cerning it Watts 7o APPERTA'IN. @. . [appartenir, Fr. 1. To belong to as of right: with The honour of devifing this do&rine, that religion ought to be inforced by the fword, would b found appertainingo Mahomed the falie prophet Raleigh The Father, ¢ whom in heav'n fuprem Kingdom, and power, and glory appertains W Hath honour'd me, according to his will., Par. Lof 2. To belong to by nature or appointment If the foul of man did ferve only to give him beto this lif ing in this life, then things appertainin would content him, as we fee they do other creaHooker tures And they roafted the paffover with fire, as apper taineth ¢ as for the facrifices, they fod them in brai 1 Efdras pots Both of them feem not to generate any other ef fedt, but fuch as appertaineth to their proper objet and fenfes Is it expedted Bacon I fhould know no fecret That appertain to you APPERTAINMENT Shakefps Fulivs Cafar 7 / [fro apper tain.] 'That which belongs to any ran or dignity He fhent our meffengers, and we lay b Shakefp Our appertainments, vifiting of him Fr APPE'RTENANCE. 2 /. [appartenance "That which belongs or relates to anothe thing Can they which beheld the controverfy of divinity condemn our enquiries in the doubtful appertenancies of arts, and receptaries of philofophy Brown's Vlgar Errours APPE'RTINENT tain. adj [fro Belonging ; relating apper You know how apt our love was to accor To furnifh him with all appertinent Shakefp. Henry V Belonging to his honour A'PPETENCE. | 7. /. [appetentia, Lat. Carnal defire ; fenfua A'PPETENCY defire Bred only and completed to the taft Of luftful appetence5 to fing, to dance To drefs, to troule the tongue, and roll the eye Milron APPETIBILITY. 7 [ [from appetible. The quality of being defirable That elicitation which the fchools intend, is deducing of the power of the will into a&, merel from the appetibility of the obje&, as a man draw a child after him with the fight ofa green bough Bramball againft Hobbes A'PPRTIBLE. adj. [appetibilis, Lat.] Defirable'; thatwhich may be the objeét o appetite Power both to flight the moft appetible objes and to controul the moft unruly pafiions Bramball againft Hobbes A'PPETITE n. /. [appetitus, Lat. 1. The natural defire of good ; the inftiné by which we are led to feek pleafure The will properly and ftriétly taken, as it is o things which are referred upto the end that ma K defireth, differeth greatly from that inferlour naty See their wide fireaming wounds ; they néfthe rai defive, which we cali appetite The objeét o appetite is whatfoever lenfible good may be wifhe for j the obje€t of will is that good which reafo does lead us to feek cam For pride of empire, nor defire of fame Kings fight for kingdoms, madmen for applaufe Hooker 2. The defire of fenfual pleafure But love for lovealone, thatcrowns the lover s caufe Dryden's Fables A'PPLE. #./. [=ppel, Saxon. 1. The fruit of the apple-tree Why, fhe fliould hang on him As if increafe of appetite had grow By what it fed on Shakefp. Hamlet Tall thriving crees confefs'd che fruitful mold The redd'ning apple ripens here to gold. Pope's 0d Urge his hateful Juxury And beftial appetite in change of luft Shakefpeare's Richard I11 Each tre 2. The pupil of the eye Tempting, ftirr'd in me fudden appetit To pluck and eat Milton's Paradife Loft APPLE of Lowe He inftructed him his eye Loaden with faireft fruit, that hung to th' ey Apples of loveare of three forts; the moft com 3. Violent longing ; eagernefs after an thing mon having long trailing branches, with roug leaves and yellow joints, fucceeded by apples, a they arg called, at the joints, not round, bu bunched; of 2 pale orange fhining pulp, and feed within Mortimer's Hufbandry . No man could enjoy his life, his wife, or goods if a mightier man had an apypetite to take the fam from him Dawics Fipton had an extraordinary appetite to engag Waller in a battle Clarendon APPLE-GRAFT. . /. [from apple an graft. A ‘twig of apple-tree grafte upon the flock of another tree 4. The thing eagerly defired Power being the natural appetite of princes, a limited monarch cannot gratify ic Savif We bave feen three and twenty forts of appl graft 5. Keennefs of ftomach; hunger ; defir of food contraction vellication an befides hunger, which is an emptinefs cloyed with any thing, but fatisfed withall Dryd 6. Ithas fometimes of before the objeét o defire The new officer's nature needed fome reftrain to his immoderate appetite of power Clarendon 7. Sometimes zo ‘We have generally fuch an appetite to praife, tha we greedily fuck it in ArreTi'TION fire Government of the Tongue 7. [, [appetitio, Lat. De th fam ol mof of the Boyle A tart made of apples What, up and down carv'd like an apple-tart Shakefpeare ArPLE-TREE 7 /. [from apple and tree. The fruit of this tree is for the moft part hol lowed about the foot ftalk; the cells inclofing th feed are feparated by cartilaginous partitions; th juic of th frui is fourith th tree larg an fpreading; the flowers confift of five leaves, expanding in form ofa rofe There is a great variety of thefe fruits. Thofe for the deffert are, th white juniting, Margaret apple, fummer pearmain fummer queening, embroidered apple, golden reinette, fummer white Colville, fummer red Colville filver pippin, aromatick pippin, the gray reinette la haute-bonté, royal ruffeting, Wheeler's ruffet Sharp's rufiet, fpice apple The aCtual appetition or faftening our affeCtion on him Hammond's Praétical Catechifm plant APPLE-TART. 7. /. [from apple and zart. abfterfion Bacon's Natural Hiftory There is continual abundance, which create fuch an appetite in your reader, that he is no upo adorned with fruit There be four principal caufes of appetite; th refrigeration of the ftomach, joined with fome dryneis he kept him as the apple o / Deut.xxx11s 10 reil, and 'api ling, fumme golden pippin, nonpa Thofe for the kitchen ufe are, cod marigold, fummer red pearmain We find in animals an eftimative or judicial faculty, an appetition or averfation Fudge Hale Holland pippin, Kentifh pippin, the hanging body Loan's pearmain, French reinette, French pippin The will is not a bare appetitive power, as that o Devonthire royal wilding, redftreaked apple, th whitfour, Herefordfhire underleaf, John apple, &c iller A'PPETITIVE. adj. [from appetite.] Tha which defires; that which has the quality of defiring the fenfual appetite, but is a rational appetite Hale's Origin of Mankind I find in myfelf an apperitive faculty always i exercife, in the very height of a&ivity and invigoNorris ration 70 APPLA'UD. w.a. [applaudo, Lat. 1. 'To praife by clapping the band royal ruffet, monftruous reinette, winter pearmain pomme violette, Spencer's pippin, ftone pippin oakenpin And thofe generally ufed for cyder are Ozks and beeches laft longer than apples an pears Baron Thus apple-trees, whofe trunks are firong to bea Their fpreading boughs, exert themfelves in air Dryden Shakefp. Macketh ArpLE-woMman. 7 f. [from apple an aoman. A woman that fells apples that keeps fruit on a ftall Nations unborn your mighty names fhall found Yonder are two apple-women feolding, and juf ready to uncoif one another. Arbuthnot and Pope I would applaud thee to the very echo That fhould applaud again z, To praife in general And worlds applazd that muft not yet be four}x;:l ope H ArpLa"UDER. 7 [ [from applaund. that praifes or commends 1 had the voice of m fingl reafo againf it drowned in the noife of a multitude of applauders Glanwille's Scepfis ApPLI'ABLE. adj. [from apply.] 'Tha which may be applied. .For this wor the moderns ufe applicable; which fee Limitations all fuch principles have, in regard o the varieties of the matter whereunto they are ap- pliabl Hooker All thatI have faid of the heathen idolatry is appliable to the idolatry of another fort of men in th world South ApArPLA"USE. 7. [ [applanfus, Lat probation loudly exprefled ; praife properly a clap ArrrLi'ancE. n [ [from apply.] The a This general applaufe, and chearful fhout o applyin th thin applied om and your love to Richard Argues your wif Shakefpeare Sylla wept And chid her barking waves into attention And fell Charybdis murmur'd foft applanfe. BMilton. Thofe that are fo fond of applauje, how little d they tafte it whea they have it South Difeafes defp'rate grow By defperate afpliance are relieved Sbakefpeare Are you chaf'd Afk God for temperance, 'tis the appliance onl Which your defire requires Shake[peare APPLICABI'LITY, #./. [from appl:'m%'}i. 1 e AP |