OCR Text |
Show IEN has put an end to their parents ufe of it; and thi we call inberitance land Inhofpitable l?OCkS, and barren fands Locke Yor the inberitance of their loves, and fafeguar Of what that want might ruin. Shake/p. Coriolanus Of guefts he makes them flave Inhofpitably 5 and Kills their infant males INHE'RITOR. 7 /. [from inberit.] An heir one who receives any thing by fucceflion Are pleas'd to breed out your inberitors. Shaksfpeare The very conveyances of his lands will hardly li in this box ; and muft the izkeritor himfelf have n more Shakefpeare Marriage without confent of parents they do no but they mulé it in the inberitors the children of fuch marriage 7. [0 [from inberitor. t A heirefs ; a woman that inherits clean.sh data import.tsv out README He hath given artificially fome hopes to Mar i Anne, inkeritrefs to the duchy of Bretagne. Bacon Of the moft bloody nurfer of his hars INuE'ston. ‘-z /. [inbefio Shakefp Latin. Holdingof the breath doth help fomewhat to ceaf an vinega pu want of jultice with izbumanity and impudence King Charles "Each focial feeling fell And joylefs inbumanity pervades Thomfon's Spring "And petrifies the heart INsu'MANLY to the wnoftrils, o @dv. [from inbuman. Sa ~vagely; cruelly; barbaroully O whatare thef "Death's 'minifters, not men : who thus deal deat Inbumanly to men; and multipl 2. To prohibit ; to forbid - Beutley All men were izbibited by proclamation, at th diffolution, fo much asto mention a parliament Clarendon clean.sh data import.tsv out README Burial may not be inbibited or denied to any one Apliffe Inn1B1'rr0%. 7, /., [inhibition, French' in hibitio; Latin. 1. Prohibition ;- embargo He might be judged: to have impofed an enviou inbibition on ity becaufe himfelf has not ftock enoug to maintain the.trade Government of the Tongue 2, [Invlaw. Ten thoufand fold the fin of him who fle ""Hi$ brother' Milton "I, who have eftablithed the whole fyftem of al true politenefs and rcfinemcnt in converfation thin myfelf .moft inbumanly treated by my countrymen Inbibition is-a writ to inhibit or forbid a judg from farther-proceeding in the caufe depending befor him. ; Inbibition: is moft commonly a writ iffuin out of.a" higher court Chriftian to a lower and inferior; upon an appeal; and prohibition out of th king's-court to.a court Chriftian, or to an inferio » temporal court Cowell To Iwno'Lp. w. a. [in and hod. .ihherent; to contain in itfelf To hav It is difputed, whether this light firft created b he fame which the fun inboldeth and cafteth forth or whether it.had continuance any longer than til the fun's creation Raleigh Ixno'sp1TABLE. adj. [iz and hofpitable. Affording no kindnefs or entertainmen to ftrangers All places elf Tnbaofpitable appear, and defolat Nor knowing us, nor known. Milton ToInje'cT w. a [injeétus, Lat. 1. To throw in; to dart in Angels injeé thoughts into our minds, and kno our cogitations Glanville 2. 'To throw up; to caft up The town with walls Inye'cTrON Ivi'mrTasLY. -adj. [from inimitable.] " I a manner not to be imitated; to a de gree‘of excellence above imitation A man could not haye been always blind who thu inimitablytopies nature Pope's E(fay on Homer Thus terebly adorn'd the figures fhine Inimitably wrought with fkill divine Charmsfuch as thine, inimitably great Pope Broome Injo'tiN. . @ [enjoindre, Fr, infungo JLat. 1. T command to enforce by authority "8ee Exjorn ‘Laws do not only teach what is good, but the ‘#mjoinsit; they have in them a certain conftrainin "foree Do This garden tend, our pleafant tafk injoin'd Milton 7 f [injection Fr. injeétio This falt powdered was, by the repeated injectio of well-kindle charcoal made to flat 2. Any medicine mad like melte Boyle to be injetted by fyringe, or any other inftrument, into an part of the body RLuincy 3. The at of filling the veflels with wax or any other proper matter, to thew thei ramifications ofte anatomifts don b %u'//gv InimiTaBi'LITY 7. / [fro Incapacity to be imitated inimitable Truths muft have an eternal exiftence in fome underftanding; or rather they are the fame with tha underftanding itfelf, confidered as variouily reprefen tative, according to the various mode Jity or participation INi'MITABLE. aab' mitable, ¥r. be copied The Ottomite Steering with due courfe towards the ifle of Rhodes Have there i7j0i7'd them with a fleet. Sbake_f eare Int'Quitous. adj. [inigue, Fr,from iniguity. Unjuft; wicked IN}%'(JLU ITY. . [f. [iniguitas, Lat, iniguite Ir 1. Injuftice; unrighteoufnefs There is greater or lefs probability of an hap iffue to a tedious war, according to the righteoufnef? or iniquity of the caufe for which it was commenced Smalridge crime Want of the knowledge of God is the caufe o all iniguity amongit men Hoo e Till (%od o ;afi o Wearicdivithtthe iniguities withdra His prefence from among them Int'rrav Milton adj. [initial, ¥r, initiaks, fro initinm, Lat. 1. Placed at the beginning In the editions, which had no more than the / tial letters of names, he was made by keys to hur the inoffenfive Pope 2. Incipient; not complete Moderate Iabour of the body conduces to the pre fervation of health, and cures many initial difeafes but the toil of the mind deftroys health, and ge [inimitabilis Harvey The fchools have ufed a middle term to expref and mound i7/ef# on mound Pope Lat. 1. The a& of cafting in fhapes an Adpd?fo nerates maladics Though bold in open field, they yet furroun nitre | 2. Wickednefs Swift gargatifed, ..doth it alfo, for that it is aftringent and inhibiteth the.umotion of the fpirit :Bacon.: To I'NHUMATE. ) v. a. [z'rzbrmgfr, ¥r. buma The ftars and -plancts-being whirled about with' To : InrU'ME Lat. To bury; t great velocity, would fuddenly, did nothing izbibit it, inter clean.sh data import.tsv out README be fhattered in pieces Ray on the Creation Weeping they bear the mangled heaps of {lain Their motions alfoare-excited and inhibited, ar [Inbume the natives in their native plain. Pope's Od moderated -and.-managed, " by ‘the: obje@®s withou them fury in the temple o Cruelty ; favagenéfs ; barba- | 2. In Shalkefpeare, to join. = Not ufed Sidney L};vc which lovethurts is inbumanity The rudenefs of thofe who muft make up: thei Inhe French. -1, To reftrain 5 to' hinder; to reprefs ; t _check Pope "rity rence ;. the:ftat of exifting in fomethin elfe o Inuv'srr. . a. [inbibeo, Latin ; inkiber ¢ théshiccough inhuman. To:in See, where he lies, izberfed in the arm Innuma/NiTY. 2 [ [inbumanité, Fr. fro Shakefp o INHE'RSE v. @. [iz and berfe. clofe in a funeral monument in- French "To you the thoughts of no izbumanheatt No fem Should be inberitrix in Salike land (inhumain Princes and peers-attend! while we impar "INHE'RITRIX. 7, [, [from inkeritor. A heirefs 'This.is- now more commonl - ufed, though snberitrefi 'be a word mor analogically Englith Milton A juft war may be profecuted aftera very unJ.ufi manner; by perfidious breaches of our word, by iz "human cruelties, and by affaffinations .Arterbury The more thefe praifes were enlarged, the mor inkuman was the punifhment, and -the fufferer mor Swift. innocent Bacon's New Atlantis Ixue/R1TRESS Janus humanus, Lat.] Barbarous ; favage; cruel uncomspaflionate F inherit above a third part of their parents inheritance adj INHU'MAN fo are not admitte "table defeription of militar INHO'SPITABLENESS, | #./o [z and hofpitality 5 inhofpitaINHOSPITA'LITY lité, Fr.] Want of hofpitality; want o courtefly to ftrangers like a fetcher, out of whorifh loins By model, or by fhading pencil drawn Miltom What is moft excellent is moft inimitable Denb -And imitate the inimitable force Dryden "Virgil copied the ancient feulptors, in that izimi. Dryden'sVir Inuol'serTasLy. adv. [from inhofpitable.] Unkindly to ftrangers You will rather thow our general lowt How you can frown, than fpend a fawn upon them make void The pottal thone, inimitable on eard Since tofs'd from fhores to (hotes, from laads t 8. In Shakefpeare, pofleflion You L ) of jzinitadi Norris Lat. ini Above imitation; not t this affection an God have called it the initia/ fear o - Rogers To INVTIATE. @. a. [initier, Fr. initio, Lat.j) T enter; to inftru in the rudiment of an art; to place in a new flate; to pu into a new fociety Providence would enly 7zitfate mankind into th ufeful knowledge of her treafures, leaving the reft t employ our induftry. More's Ant. againft Atheifi To initiate his pupi i any part of learning, a ordinary fkill in the governouris enough Locke He was izitiated into half a dozen clubs befor he was one and twenty Spediator No fooner was a convert izitiated, but, by an eaf figure, he became a new man Addifor Zo INT'T1ATE. @, 7. To do the firft part to perform the firft rite The king himfelf izitiates to the pow'r Scatters with quiv'ring hand the facred flour And the ftream fprinkles Pope's Odyffey INYr1aTE. adj. [initié, Fr. initiatus, Lat. Unpra&ifed My firange and felf-abuf Is the initiate fear; that wants hard ufe We're yet but young Shake[peare's Macheth IntrialrroN initiate. 7. / [initiatzo 'The reception Lat fro admiffion, o entranc |