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Show pi EN Z2EN EN By fly enticement gives his baneful cup . With many murmurs mixt ENTHUSIA'SM, 72, /. [#3¢cia0mos. Milton 1. A vain belief of private revelation; a 2. 'The means by which one is allured t ~ vain confidence of divine favour or comEnthufiafin is founded neithet on reafon nor divin revelation, but rifes from the conceits of a warme Locke " or overweening brain 2. Heat of imagination; violence of paffion confidence o opinion. 3. Elevation of fancy Imagin exaltation of ideas is, in itfelf, the very height an behold thofe things which the poet paints Dryden ENTHU'S1AST. 7. /i [#3sciaw. 1. One who vainly imagines a private re velation one who has a_vai confidenc of his intercourfe with God Let an enthufiaft be principled that he or hi teache is infpired an ate b a immediat communication of the Divine Spirit, and you i vain bring the evidence of clear reafons againft hi doétrine Locke 1. One of a hot imagination, or violen paffions Chapman feems'to have been of an arrogant turn and an enthufiaft in poetry Pope's Pref. to the I 2, One of elevated fancy, or exalted ideas At laft divine Cecilia came Inventrefs of the vocal frame The {weet enthufiaf?, from her facred ftore Dryden [ @0 [#osmasiec = 1. Perfuaded of fome communication wit the deity He pretended not to any feraphick enthufiaflica _ raptures, or inimitable unaccountable tranfports o devotion Calamy 2. Vehemently hot in any caufe 3. Elevated in fancy; exalted in ideas An enthyfiaftick or prophetick ftyle, by reafon o the eagernefs of the fancy, doth not always follo the even thread of difcourfe Burnet At laft fublim' ‘To rapture and enthufiaffick heat ‘We feel the prefent Deity Thomfon E'NTHYMEME, 7z [ [#3Jwnuwe.] An argument confifting only of an anteceden and confequential propofition; a fyllogifm where the major propofition is {upprefled, and only the minor and confequence produced in words Playing much upon the fimple or luftrative argumentation, to induce their enthymemes unto th people they take up popular conceits Brown « What is an enthymeme, quoth Cornelius? Why an enthymeme, replied Crambe, is when the majo is indeed married to the minor, but the marriag . kept fecret Arbuthnot and Pope Z0 ENTI'CE. «. a. [of uncertain etymology.] 'To allure; to attrat; to dra by blandithments or hopes to fomethin finful or deftruétive The readieft way to entangle the mind with falf SloGrine, is firft to entice the will to wanton living Afeham's Schoolmafter If a ma entice a maid that is not betrothed, h {hall furely endow her to be his wife Ex. xxii. 16 So fang the fyrens, with enchanting found Enticing all to liften, and be drown'd Granville Exticement. 2 /. [from entice. 1. The a& or ira&ice of alluring to ill Suppof w that the facred word of God can a their hands receive due honour, by whofe enticemen the holy ordinances of the church endure ever awhere open cohtempt Mocker And here to every thirfty wanderer In an arch, each fingle ftone, which, if fevere from the reft, would be perhaps defencelefs, is fuffi ciently fecured by the folidity and entirenefs of th Boyle whole fabrick, of which it is a part 2. Honefty Enxti/CEr. 2. [ [from entice.] One that 1 allures to ill Enti/cineLy. adv. [from entice.] Charm- 2 ingly; in a winning manner She ftrikes a lute well, and fings moft enticingly E'NTI8RTY, 7. f. [entieriz, French. whole; not barely a part Addifon 'Th ' Sometime the attorney thrufteth into the wri the uttermoft quantity; or, elfe fetteth down an en tierty where but a moiety was to be pafled Bacon EN'TIRE. adj. [entier, French; integer, Latin. 1. Whole; undivided It is not fafe to divide, but to extol the entire fill in general. Bacon's Colleétion of Good and Evil 2. Unbroken; complete in its parts An antique model of the famous Laocoon is eztire in thofe parts where the ftatue is maimed Addifon on Italy Water and eatth, compofed of old worn particle and fragments of particles, would not be of the {fam nature and texture now with water and earth com pofed of entire particles in the beginning. Newton in itfelf And added length to folemn founds _ With nature's mother-wit, and arts unknown before Extuusialstick Tayloy and enticements from deceit or violence 3. Full; complete; comprifing all requifite Enlarg'd the former narrow bounds ExTtHUsIA/sTICAL In all thefe inftances we muft feparate intreat life o poetry, which, by a kind of enthufiafm, or extraor-dinary emotion of foul, makes it feem to us that w 1. Totality; completenefs; fulnefs allurement ill; blandifhment munication B s W-i. The church of Rome hath rightly confidered tha publick prayer is a duty entire in itfelf, a dut requifite to be performed much oftener than fermon Hooker can be made An altion is entire when it is complete in al its parts; or, as Ariftotle defcribe it, when it con fifts of a beginning, a middle, and an end. Spectazor 4. Sincere; hearty Love's not love When it is mingled with regards that ftan Shakefp. King Lear Aloof from th' exntire point H Arragon entire wit a courfe mor ru but more laboure the kin and officious wit th Bacon king of Catftile 5. Firm o fure; folid fixed Entire and f{ure the monarch's rule muft prove Who founds her greatnefs on her fubjects love. Prior unallayed 6. Unmingled Thenceforth, but in thy prefence joy exzive. Milton firmly adherent faithful No man had ever a heart more entire to the king the church, or his country; but he never ftudied th Clarendon eafieft ways to thofe ends They had many perfons, of whofe entire affeion Clarendon they were well aflured wit 8. In full ftrength with powe vigour unabated unbroken Then back to fight again, new breathed and enzire Spenfer ENTURELY @dv 1. In the whole [from entire. without divifion Euphrates, running, finketh partly into the lake of Chaldea, and falls not eztirely into the Perfian fea Raleigh 2. Completely fully Here finifh'd he, and all that he had mad View'd, and beheld ! all was extirely good, DMilton Chyle may be faid to bea vegetable juice in th ftomach and inteftines; as it pafleth into the lactedls it grows ftill more animal, and when it has circulated oftert with the blood, it is entirely fo Arbuthnot General confent entirely altered the whole fram of their government Sauift 3. With firm adherence; faithfully Which when his penfive lady faw from far Great woe and forrow did her foul affay As weening that the fad end of the war And "gan to higheft God entirely pray. Fairy .szem ENTI'RENESS 7 / @. a. [entituler, French. ENTI'TLE To grace or dignify with a title or honourable appellation To give a title or difcriminative appellation; as, to entitle a book Befides the Scripture, the books which they cal ecclefiaftical were thought not unworthy to be brough into publick audience, and with that name they ez titled the books which we term Apocryphal. oker Next favourable thou Who highly thus to ezzitle me vouchfaf'f Far other name deferving! Milton's Paradife Lgf? 3. 'To fuperfcribe, or prefix as a title How ready zeal for party is to entitle chriftianit to their defigns, and to charge atheifm on thofe wh will not fubmit Locke We hav bee entitled, and hav had our name prefixed at length to whole volumes of mean productions SWift 4. To give aclaim to any thing But we, defcended from your facred line Entitled to your heav'n, and rites divine Are banifh'd earth Dryden's Virgil. God difcovers the martyr and confeffor withou the trial of flames an entitle man tortures an wil hereafte to the rewards of actions which the had never the opportunity of performing Addifon He entit/ed himfelf to the continuance of th divine prote&ion and goodnefs, by humiliation an prayer Atterbury Hardly even is the penitent finner faved; thus dithcult is that duty, by which alone he can_ks reconcile to his Creator, and entit/ed to the mercies of th gofpel Rogers 5. To grant any thingas claimed by a title This is to entitle God's care how and to what w pleafe Locke E'NTITY. 2 f. [entitas, low Latin. 1. Something which really is; a real being zar hope, earth's dowry and heaven's debt The entity of things that are not yet Subt'left, but fureft being Crafbaw Fortune is no real ewzity, nor phyfical ‘effence but a mere relative fignification Bentley Here entity and quiddity Wrath fhall be no mor 7. Honeft integrity [from entire. The fouls of defunct bodies fly Hudibras 2. A particular fpecies of being All eruptions of air, though fmall and flight, giv an entity of found which we call crackling, puffing and fpitting; as in bay falt and bay leaves, caft into the fire God's decrees of falvatio Romifh and Refermed tity abfolutel an Bacon damnation, bot affix to men's particular e confidered demeanours withou an refpec t Hammond's Fundamentals 9o ExTo'1L. v, a. [from #il.] 'To enfnare to entangle; to bring into toils or nets He cutoff their land force from their fhips an entoiled both their navy and their camp with a great er power than theirs, both'by fea and land. 70 Ento'™MB. @. #. [from tomb. intoa tomb; to bury Proceffions wer firft begu Bacor 'To pu for the interring o holy martyrs, and' the vifiting of thofe places wher they were entombed Hooker The cry went once for thee, and yet it may again If thou wouldft not ezzomb thyfelf alive And cafe thy reputation in a tent Shakefpeare They within the beaft's vaft womb The choice and flow'r of all their troops exzemtb Denhant E'NTRAILS. 7. /. without a fingular. [en trailles, Fr. brega. 1. The inteftines th inwar parts th uts What, hath thy fiery beartfo parch'd thine extrails That nota teas can fall Shakefpeare's Hemry V1 Th |