OCR Text |
Show AR Ariora'rion, or HarioLA'rion, #, / [ hariolus, Lat. a foothfayer.] Soothfaying ; vaticination The priefts of elder time deluded their apprehenfions with ariolation, foothfaying, and fuc oblique idolatries Breawn ARIOD'80. #. [ [Ital. in mufick.] Th movement of a common air, fong, o tune Di& o ARY'SE. @. n. pret. arof, particip arifen. [from 2 and rife. t. To mount upward as the fun He rofe, and, looking up, beheld the fkie With purple bluthing, and the day arife Dryden 2. To get up as from fleep, or from reft So Eidras argfe up, and faid unto them, ye hav tranfgrefled the law 1 Efd. ix. 7 How long wilt thou fleep, O fluggard; whe wilt thou arife out of thy fleep " Prow, vi. 9 3. To come into view, as from obfcurity There fhail arife falfe Chrifts and faife prophets Matt. xxiv 4+ To revive from death § Thy dead men fhall live, together with m body fhall they arife: awake and fing, ye tha dwell in duft Taiab, xxvi. 19 T proceed The whic or have its original wer fcattere abroa upo th perfecution that argfe about Stephen, travelled a far as Phanice Aétsy xio 19 I know not what mifchief may arife hereafte from the example of fuch an innovation. Dryden €. To enter upon a new ftation, to fuccee to power or office Another Mary. then arofe And did rig'rous laws impofe 7+ To commence hoftility An fee Rise ARI'THMETICK ber an #. /. [4g9u®- peTeéw t The ariffocracy of Venice hath admitted f many abufes through the degeneracy of the nobles that the period of its duration feems to approach Savift ARISTOCRA'TICAL. } adj. [from arifioAristocra'rick §cracy.] Relating t ariftocracy ; including a form of government by the nobles that the papacy, or cc clefiaftical monarchy, may be changed in an extraordinary manner, for fome time, into an ariffo _cratical form of government meafure. On fair ground T coul But now 'tis odds beyon The chriftian religion tles arithmetick, hath bu beat forty of them arithmetick. Shak. Coriol according to the apofthefe three parts of it fobriety, juftice, religion Taylor ARk, z. /. [arca, Lat. a cheft. 1. A veflel to fwim upon the water, afuall applied to that in which Noah was preferved from the univerfal deluge Malke thee an ark of gopher wood ; rooms fhal thou malke in the ark, and fhalt pitch it within an without Genefys The one juft man alive, by his command Shall build a wond'rous ark, as thou beheld'ft T'o fave himfelf and houfehold, from amidf A world devote to univerfal wreck Milton 2. The repofitory of the covenant of Go with the Jews This coffer was of fhittim wood, covered wit plates or leaves of gold, being two cubits and half in length, a cubit and 3 Half wide and a cu bit and a half high It-had two rings of gold o each fide, through which the ftaves were put fo carrying it. Upon the top of it was a kind of gol crown all around it, and two cherubim were faftened to the cover It contained the two tables o ftone, written by the hand of God Calmet ARrM. n. /. [eapm, eopm, Sax. Ayliffe when I faw my help in the gate, then let min arm fall from my fhoulder-blade, and mine ar be broken from the bone Fob Like helplefs friends, who view from fhor The lab'ring thip, and hearthe tempeft roar So'ftood they with their aris acrofs Dryden 2. The bough of a tree The trees fpread out their, arms to thade her face But fhe on elbow lean'd Sidney Where the tall oak his fpreading arms entwines And with the beech a mutual fhade combines. Gay 3. An inlet of water from the fea Full in the centre of the facred wood An arm arifeth of the Stygian flood. Dryd. Zun We have yet feen but an arm of this fea o beauty Norris 4. Power ; might In this fenfe is ufe the fecular arm, &c Curfe be th ma that trufteth in man Ari'TEMANCY And not to us, but to thy arm alone 7. / [from agidpuos, num ber, and pavrelw, divination.] A foretelling future events by numbers. Di47 ARITHMETICAL. adj. [from arithmetich. According to the rules or method o arithmetick ‘The principles of bodies may be infinitely fmall riotonly beyond all naked or affited fenfe, but be yondallarithmeticaloperationor conception. Gregu The fquares of the diameters of thefe rings made by any prifmatick colour, were in arithmeticalprogreflion, as in the fifth obfervation. Nezvton ARITHME'TI CALLY. adv. [from arithmezical.] In an arithmetical manner ; according to the principles of arithmetick Though the fifth part of a xeftes being a fimpl fraction, and arithmetically regular, it isyetno pro Arbuthnot on Coins an fleth his arm, and whofe heart departet ARISTOCRATICALNESS. 7. /. [from ariftécratical.] An ariftocratical ftate. Dicz Yor. Th fcience of numbers ; the art of computation maket per part of that meafure num If T have lift up my hand againft the fatherlefs government which places the fuprem ‘power in the nobles, without a king and exclufively of the people diftinguithes A man had need be a good arithmetician, to underftand this author's works. His defcription run on like a multiplication table Addifon fenfes of this word I caught hi ARISTO'CRACY. n. /. [&eir@-, greateft and xgdléw, to govern.] That form o Ockha tick.] A mafler of the art of numbers 1 Sam. xvii. 3s by his beard, and fmote him the variou AriTMmETI CIAN, 7. /i [from arithme 1. The limb which reaches from the han to the fhoulder when he argfe againft me Fo Cowley AR Fers xvils 5 from the Lord O God, thy arm was here Shakefp. Heno V. Afcribe we all Arm' EnD 2. f. A phrafe taken fro boxing, in which the weake overcome the &ronger him from clofing man ma if he can kee Such a one as can keep him at arm's end, nee never with for a better companion Sidney's Arcad For my fake be comfortable, hold death awhil Shakefpeare at the arm's end In the fame fenfe is ufed arm's length 7o ARM. . a. [armo, Lat. 1. To furnifh with armour of defence, o weapons of offence An when Abram heard that his brother wa taken captive, he armed his trained fervants, bor in his own houfe, three hundred and eighteen, an purfued them wnto Dan Genefi *T'cut eonfcious honour is to feel rio fin He's arm'd without that's innocent within Pop 2, To plate with any thing that may ad ftrength T heir wounded fteed Yerk out their armed heels at their dead mafiers Shakefpeare 3. T furnifh to fitup as to ar loadftone, is tocafe it with iron You muft arm your hook with the line in th infide of it Walton's Angler Having wafted the callus, I left off' chofe tents and dreiled it with others armed with digeftives 4. To provide againft Wifeman's Surgery His fervant, arm'd againft fuch coverture Renorted unto all, that he was fur A noble gentleman of high regard Spenfer To ARM @. ». To take arms; to be fitte with arms Think we king Harry frong And, princes, look you ftrongly 27» to meet him Shakefpeare ARMA'DA. n. f. [Span. a fleet of war. An armament for fea; a fleet of war. I is often erroneoufly fpelt armads In all the mid-earth 1eas was left no roa ‘Wherein the pagan his bold head untwines Spread was the huge armado wide and broad From Venice, Genes, and towns which them confines Fairfax So by a roaring tempeft o A whole armado of collefte Is fcatter'd and disjoin'd fro At length, refolv'd > affer the flood {ii fellowthip Shake/ the wat'ry ball He in himfelf did whole armados bring Him a;~d feamen might their mafter call And chole for general, were he not their king Dryden ARMADI'LLO. n. /. [Spanith. A four footed animal of Brafil, as big as a cat with a fnout like a hog, a tail like a liH zard, and feet like a hedge-hog is armed all over with hard fcales lik an armour, whence he takes his name retires under them like the tortoife. H lives in holes or in the water of the amphibious kind. bein His fcales ar ofa bony or cartilaginous {ubftance, bu the ar eafily pierced Thi anima hides himfelf a third part of the yea under" ground. He feeds upon roots fugar-canes, fruits, and poultry. Whe he is caught, he draws up his feet an head to hi belly an rolls himfelf u in a ball, which the ftrongeft hand cannot open ; and he muft be brought nea the fire before he will fhew his nofe His flefh is white, fat, tender, and mor delicate than that of a fucking pig. T revoux A'RMAMENT. 7. /. [armamentum, Lat. A force equipped for war; generall ufed of a naval force ArRMAME'NTARY. 7. /. [afmamentarium Lat.] An armoury ; a miagazine or arDiét fenal of warlike implements A'rmax. z /. A confetion for reftorin Dig appetite in horfes A'RMATURE. 7. [, [armatura, Lat. 1. Armour ; fomething tq defend the bod from hurt Others thould be armed with hard fhells ; other with prickles; the reft, that have no fuch armature, fhould be endued with great fwiftnels ;.m Ray on the Creation pernicity 2. Offenfive weapons; lefs properly |