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Show LN Mote hideous, when thou fhew'ft thee in‘a child Shakefpeare's King Lear Than the fea monfter Ingratitud is abhorre bot by Go an man and vengeance attends thofe that repay evil for good L' Efirange " Nor was it with ingratitude return'd In equal fives the blifsful couple burn'd One joy poflefs'd 'emiboth, and in one grief the mourn'd Diryden INGRE'DIENT, . [, [ingredient, French ; ingrediens, Lat 1. Component part of a body, confiftin of different materials. It is commonl ufed of the fimples of a medizine The ointment is made of divers ingredicnts, where of the hardeft to come by is the mofs upon the fkul of S Ev' Tha Sun dead man unburied. Bacon's Natural Hiftory deep the pow'r of thefe ingredients piere'd to the inmoft feat of mental fight Adam, now enforc'd to fhut his eyes down, and all his fpirits became entranc'd Milton By this way of analyfis we may proceed from compounds to izgredients, and from motions to the force producing them ; and in general, from effes to thei caufes, and from particular caufes to more genera ones, till the argumentend in the more general Newton 1 have often wondered, that learning is not though a proper ingredient in the education of a woman o I3 iI li qualit or fortune Addifon's Guardian Parts, knowledge, and experience ingredients in a public charatter Water is the chief {ugredien fluids and folids i are excellen Ragers all th anima Arbuthnot on Aliments 2. It ds ufed by Temple with inta, propetly but not according to cuftom U'scrress. 7. [ [ingreffus, Latin.] Entrance power of entrance; intromiflion putréfattions come from' the ambient body by ingrefs of the fubftance of the ambien into the body putrefied; or elfe by excitatio body putrefied by the body ambient. = Bacozn Thofe air-bladders by a fudden fubfidence again by the zgrefs and egrefs of the air mee Arduth IxGrE'ssion. = /. [ingreffion, Frenchy ingreffio, Latin,] The a& of entering ; enThe fire would ftrain the pores of the glafs too fuddenly, and break it all in pieces to get ingre/fiorn Digby on Bodies ' INcuinaL Latin. ad). [7nguinal, ¥rench; iuguen Belonging to the groin ‘The plague feems to be a particular difeafe, charalterifed with eruptions in buboes, by the inflammation and fuppuration of the axillary, inguinal ~ and other glands Arbuthnot YolIncu'Lr. v. a. [in and gulf. ¥. To fwallow up in a vaft profundity A river larg Pafs'd underneath ingulph'd Caft out from God Milton he fall Into utter darknefs deep ingulph'd Milion The river flows redundant Then rowling back, in his capacious Ja Ingulfs their whole militia, quick immerft. Philips 2. 'To caft into a gulf If we adjoin to the lords, whether they prevail o not, we ingulf ourfelves into affured danger Hayw JoIncu'ReITATE. 2. 4. [ingurgito, Lat. To fwallow down Dz IN?}I_RGITA'TION, 7. f. [ from ingurgitate. The a& of fwallowing Incu'sTaprE. adj. [in and guflo, Latin. Not perceptible by the tafte . Asfor their tafte, if the cameleon's nutriment b 2iry peither.can the tongue be an infirument thereof for the body of the element is izgu/tadle, void of al fapidity th and without any ation of the tongue, is, b rough artery lungs o wizzen condue into th « Brown's Vulgar Errours hey do but inbere in their fubject which fup Inua'B1LE. adf. [inbabile, Frenchs inbabi- ks, Lat. Unfkilful unréady 'T Not all are partakers of that grace whereby Chrif Hooker inhabiteth whom he faveth They fhall build houfes and inbabit them. Ifaiah INHE'RENT. adj. [inberent, French ; inkerens, Latin. 1. Exifting in fomething elfe, fo as to b infeparable from it I will not do't Left I furceafe to honour mine own truth And, my body's aétion, teach my min A moft inberent bafenefs. Shakefpeare's Coriolanus To dwell ; to live Learn what creatures there izkabit They fay, wild beafts zhabit here But grief and wrong fecure my fear Milton 2., Naturally conjoined; innate; inborn I mean not the authority which is annexed t your office: I fpeak of that only which is inbor Dryden's Juvexal and izkerent to your perfon The power of drawing iron is one of the idea of a loadftone; and a power to be fo drawn is Waller Inua'BITABLE, adj. [from iubabit. 1. Capable of affording habitation Th Digby on Bodies Baruch She fhall be inbabited of devils ToInua'BiT. v. 2 ports them; their being is a dependence on a fubject unfit unqualified Zo INua'siT. . a. [habits, Latin. dwell in ; to hold as a dweller fixed ftars are all of them funs, with fyftem Locke of inbabitable planets moving about them part of the complex one of iron; which powers paf for inherent qualities Locke Incapable of in2. [[nbabitable, French. habitants; not habitable; uninhabitable Not in ufe Animal oil is variou herent in it Or any other ground izbabitable felves Shakefpeare INma'BrTANCE. 2. /. [from jnhabit. fidence of dwellers So the ruins yet refting in the wild moors, teftif a former inbabitance. Carew's Survey of Cornwall INBA'BITANT 72 /. [from 7ubabiz.] Dweller one that lives or refides in a place tants, which were very fair and fat people. = Abbor 1f the fervour of the fun wer the fole caufe o blacknefs in any land of negroes, it were alfo reafon 7o Inue/rR1T. . @. [enberiter, French. 1.. 'To receive or poflefs by inheritance. Treafon is not inberited Brown Pring Harry is valiant ; for the cold blood he di For his {uppofed love a third Lays greedy hold upon 2 bitd Waller 1. Habitation ; place of dwelling Milton the earth containe its inbabitation than doubt it. Brown's Vulgar Err inbabit. On that inhabits ; a dweller Th fame nam is give unto the inlanders, o midland izhabiters, of this ifland Woe to the izhabiters of the earth They ought to underftand fom inhabiter i ruler 7o Inua'vs dra w im-~wit this divin Brozun Rew. viii. 13 that there is not onl houfe but alfo fom Derham a. [inbalo, Latin, air to infpire 'T oppofe to exhale or expire Martin was walking forth to zzhale the frefh breez - of the evening Arbuthnot and Pope But from the breezy deep the bleft izhal The fragrant murmurs of the weftern gale. . Pope There {its the fhepherd on the grafly turf lnpaling healthful the defcending fun Thomfon InmarMo'NIOUS adj. [irz and harmonious. Unmufical ; not fweet of {found Catullus, though hislines be rough, and his numbers inbharmonious, 1 could recommend for the foftnefs and delicacy, but mutt decline for the loofenefs of his thoughts Felton The identity of found may appear a little. izharmonious, and fhock the ear Broome To INHE'RE . 2. [inhereo, Latin. . exift in fomething elfe For, nor in nothing nor in thing 'T Extreme and {cattering bright, can loye inhere, Doznne father h hath, like lean th meek for they fhall inberit th Mare an therefore the fon cannot claim or iz which is founded wholly on hi Locke We muft know how the firft ruler, from who any one claims, came by his authority, before w can know who has a right to fucceed him in. it,. an inkerit it from him Locke Unwilling to Tell an eftate he had fome profpeé the better judg 3. Quantity of inhabitants [fro ar herit it by atitle own private good of the beginning of nations, and of the world's 77habitation Raleigh # Blefle earth of others 2. The a& of inhabiting or planting wit dwellings; ftate of being inhabited Inua'Brrer izberit of hi The fon can receive from his father good things without empire, that was vefted in him for the goo InmaBiTA'TION, 2./0 [from inhabit. We fhall rather admire ho naturall fteril land, manured with excellent good ftore of fertile {herris Shakefpeare What happier natures fhrink at with affright "The hard inbabitant contends is right Pope this place we fhal my lord. - Shakefpeare Why, all delights are vain ; but that moft vain, Which with pain purchas'd doth izberit pain. Shak. unto the fame vicinity of the fun, fhould alfo par Univerfal groan As if the whole inhabitation perifh'd Swift Bentley holinefs able that inhabitants of the fame latitude, fubjecte And ftands amaz'd to find his dea A wild inbabitant of th' air and talk much of their izherent right The ideas of fuch modes can no more be {ubfiftent, than the idea-of rednefs was-juft now foun to be inkerent in the blood, or that of whitenefs i Bentley the brain The obligations we are under of ditinguifhin ourfelves as much by an izberent and habitual, as w are already diftinguifhed by an external and relativ Re In this place they report that they faw inhabi according to principles /7 Arbuthuot on Aliments. will be fure to decide in favour of them The The frozen ridges of the Alps By knowin trance IN take of the fame hue Splecn is a bad ingredient into any other diftemper Temple Al eithe bod of th INI of inberiting 2 he formed delays Addifon To poflefs ; to obrain pofleflion of Shake/peare Not ufed. i He, that had wit, would. think that I had none To buy fo much gold unde a tree And never after to inberitit Shakefp. Titus And TINHE'R Pt S TABLE. adj. [fro snberit. Trani miflibl b inheritance obtainabl b {ucceffion A kind of inberitable eftate accrued unto them CL;TL'%L‘ By the ancient laws of the reaim, th inheritable to him by defcent Was the power the fame, and from the fame eri ginal in Mofes as it was in David > And was it inheritable in one and not in the other Lacke. INHE'RUe TANCE 2 / [fro inberit. q 1. Patrimony ; hereditary poffeffiion Whe the fon djes, let the 7 nheritanc Defcend unto the daughter. Shakefpeare's Henry V. Is there yetany portion orizderitance for us in ou father's houfe Claim our juft inberitance of old Gene XXXi. 14 Militon O dear, unhappy babe ! muft I bequeath the Only a {ad inberitance of woe Gods | «cruel gods ! can't all my pains atone Unlefs they reach my infant'sguiltlefs . Swith 2. 'The reception of poflefficn by liereditar right Men are notproprictors of what they have merel for themfelves it, whic come their children hav to be wholl a title to part o theirs when deat ha |