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Show IMI IM Whete the morning fun firft warmly frast Milton Imbrown'd the noontide bow'rs The foot grows black that was with dirt /brown'd Gay And in thy pocket gingling halfpence found Another age fhall fee the golden ea Imbrown the {lope, and nod on the parterre. Pope - Imbrown'd with nativebronze, lo ! Henly ftands Pope gy ImBRU'E. w. 2. [from iz and drue. 1. T o 'This feems indifferently writte long 1 have fuftained bot with 7z or em modes of writing Thou mad't many hearts to bleed Of mighty vi€ors with wide wounds embru'd Spenfer And by thy cruel darts to thee fubdwd "Chere itreams a fpring.of blood fo faf From thofe deep wounds, as all emébru'd the fac Daniel's Civil War Of that accurfed caitiff The mercilel embrued wit Turks tian blood, were weary of flaughter greedily to feek after the fpoil At me Chrif th and bega Knolles his bow he drew as at a matk Whofe arrows in my blood their wings imébiue Sandys Lucius pities the offenders Add [ Lo! thefe hands in murder are imbru'd Thofe trembling feet by juftice are purfu'd. clean.sh data import.tsv out README Prior There, where two ways in equal parts divide The direful monfter from afar defery' Two bleeding babes depending at her fide Whofe panting vitals warm with life, {he draws Pope And in their hearts embrues her cruel claws His virgin fword Agyfthus' veins intbru'd Thne murd'rer fell, and blood aton'd for blood A good man chufes rather to pafs by a verbal i 2+ T pour his h_ands in. blood Clariffa to emit moifture Obfolete and did oft embru Some bathed kiffes The fugar'd liquor through his melting lips brute. To ImBrRU'TE., v. a. [fro degrade to brutality F. Q 'T I, who erft contende With gods to fit the higheft, am now conftrain' Into a beaft; and mix with beftial {lime This effence to incarnate and imbrute Milton ToImerU'TE @w. 2. To fink down to bru tality The divine property of her firft being @. @ [imbuo rational man, howeve Milton Latin Thi little verfe in {cholaftic learning; among whom I expe it will have !:axrer paffage, than among thofe that are deepl imbued with other principles Digby _Clothes which have once been thoroughly imbue with- black, cannot well afterward be dyed int lighter colour Boyle Where the mineral matter is great, foas to takethe eye, the body appears imbued-and tinttured wit € colour o IMBU/RSE @. a. To flock with money . As alts of parliamen by mof Judging the infinite effence by our narrow felves mzzml:/a; writers, I account the relation of them improper for hiftory Hayward we afcribe intelle€tions, volitions Wha The characters of men placed in lower ftation of life, are'more ufeful, as being imitable by greate numbers Alterbury French. 1. To copy ‘. a manifeft ; not plain Taf Taffe An nd tha that fuftain' fuftain'd an imitated d fhield thield. Dryden Dryden' ZFn Gay warlike Latin; imita Myfelf immartial Dryden 1. Incorporeal of matter T diftin& fro matter i voi Angels are {pirits immaterial and intelleGtual meftick for foreign th glorious inhabitants of thofe facred palaces, wher n there is nothing .but light and immortality In the way of imitation, the tranflator not onl fhadow of matter for tears,. difcontentments, griefs, but al and uncomfortable paflions to work upon joy, tranquillity, and peace,.even for ever and ever but forfakes the as he fees occafion; and, taking only fome genera hints from the original, runs divifion on the groundDryden work do dwell Hogker As then the foul a fubftance hath alone I'mitaTive. adj. [imitativus, Latin. 1. Inclined'to copy; as, Man is an smitativ Befides the body, in which fhe is confined So hath fhe not a body of her own But is a fpirit, and immateria/ mind being Davies Thofe immaterial felicities we expect, fuggeit th neceflity of preparing our appetites, without whic heaven can be no heaven to us Decay of Piety No man that owns the exiftenee of an infinit fpirit can doubt of the poffibility of a finite {pirit 2. Aiming at refemblance; as, Painting i with equal grace Diyden imitatenr mafk. and materia, Latin. raphrafe, inwhich modern examples and illuftrations are ufed for ancient, or do 7. f. [Latin Imma'sk. @, a. [iz an cover; to difguife IMMATERIAL, adj. [immateriel, French 3. A method of tranflating loofer than pa ImiTa'Tor Chapman's Ody(fey I have cafes of buckram for the nonce, to immaf our noted outward garments. Shake/peare's Henry 1V produce a much greater; for bot not only true imitations of nature Was imitative of the firft in Thrace My pow'rs are unfit Since a true knowledge of nature gives us pleafi ure, a livel livel imitation of f it, eithe in poetr poetry o lefs in form ~Bar IMMARCE'sSIBLE. adj. [in and marcejco Latin. Unfading Dif IMMA'RTIAL, adj. [in and martial.] No 2. That which is offered as a copy This temple Should reign among profeflors of one faith. Shake/p attempt to refemble varies from the words and fenfe Not in ufe It was both impious and unnatural That {uch immanity and bloody ftrif 3. To purfue the courfe of a compofition fo as to ufe parallel images and examples painting, muf thefe arts ar Ne barity; favagenef This hand appear'd a fhining fword to wield 1, The at of copying South ImmA'N1ITY, 2, f. [immanitas, Lat. Cowley 2. To counterfeit an A time not much unlike that which was befor time, immanifeft and unknown. Brown's Vulg. Err Bacon I would carefs fome ftableman of note Andnd imitate his his languag language an and 1his coat. Ma Man ofo [Zmitatio he wille Imma'N1FEST. adj. [in and manifyf. We imitate and pra&ife to make f{wifter motion Imrra'tion. 7. / tion, French. intends once new immanent act in God to endeavour to refemble Defpife wealth, and imitate a god he wills an intended from all eternity; it being grofsly contrar to the very firft notions we have of the infinite perfections of the Divine Nature to ftate or fuppofe an [imitor, Latin; imiter than any out of your mutkets and fuch like im manent actions, to that nature which hath nothin in common with us Glanville z. Poflible to be imitated; within reach o Tol'mrTATE Vaft I'mmanenT, adj. [immanent, French; i and maneo, Latin.| Intrinfick; inherent internal Raleigh are"not regarde [immanis, Latin, tha is,. fuc athing as is immaterial and does no Tillotforn contain any principle of corruption Fr. word, which feems wanting in our lan2 Unimport withou weight impern entha on another ‘One that copie guage, has been propofed by feveral writinent withou relation 'Thi {enf ha another refembl deavours t ters, but not yet adopted by the reft crept into the converfation and writing Imitators are but a fervile kind of cattle, fays th Imbu, French, the participial adj. is| poet Dryden of barbarians ; but ought to be utterl only ufed.] To tinfure deep; to imrejetted IMmma/cULATE. adj. [immacalatus, Latin bibe or foak with any liquor or die ' ImMaTERIA'LITY.. 2. [o [from immaterial. French. immacnl 1 would render this treatife intelligible to ever I[_ow could the moft bafe men, and feparate fro all imitable qualities, attain to honour but by an ob fervant flayith courfe adj prodigioufly great 3. Formed after fome original Imbodies and imbrutes, *till fhe quite lof 90 IMBu'E ‘an #mitative art The foul grows clotted by contagion but of the beft nature Pope jury than imbru For fthame ! what, imitate an ode That would exbrue their hands in Cato's Blood 1imitation muc to we to foak fteep ImMa'NE 1. Wortliy to be imitated; deferving to b copied > The open field, and where the unpierc'd {had IM Wovdward, [bourfe French. This fhould b emburfe, from emboutfer, Br IMI:I‘ABI/LITY #. f [imitabilis The quality of being imitable According to the multifarioufnef Latin. of this /#mita Norris :{"i%.fo are tl:{e pofiibilitizslof being ITABLE adj b, _Frqnch.] [imitabilis o Latin ; imita T kee thi Incorporeity;. diftinétnef undefiled 1. Spotlefs; pure commandmen immaculat an his oaths are graclcs Whe Thou clear, immaculate, and filver fountain From whence this ftream, lhl_‘oughinu}dd_y pa:{ages, Hat had his curren and défil'd himfelf 7y TMMa'NACLE. w. To fetter; to confine [fro Shakefp wmanacle. Thou ean'ft not touch the freedom of my rpm With all thy charms, although this corporal rin to A : c n m d ha Tho cogitatio is the prime attribut Watts TvmaTs'R1ALLY. adv.. [from immaterial] In a manner not depending upon matter Denbam's Saphy we kno immortality The king, whom catholicks count a faint-lik and immaculate prince, was taken away in the flowe Bacon of his age Were but my foul as pur From other guilts as that,. Heav'n dxyd not h'al 2.. Pore; limpid or of a {pirit, we infer its /mumarexiality, and thence it His love fincere, his thoughts immaculate. Skakefp "One more immaculate bod matter blamelefs, was to teach the gofpel of Chrift. Hucker His words are bonds fro The vifible fpecies of things firike not: our fenfe immaterially; butftreaming in corporal rays do carr with them the qualities of the obje€t from whenc they flow, and the medium through which they pafs Brown's Vulgar Evrours IMMATE'RIALIZED teria, Latin. adi. [from iz and ma Diftin& from matter in corporeal Though affiduity in the moft fixed cogitation be no trouble to 7mmaterialixed fpirits,.yet. is it more than our embodied fouls can bear without faffitude Glanv Scepfis Ivazre! |