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Show IN The fpea Sung fn#ocent, and fpent its force in air Pope NNOCENT. %, 1. One free from guilt or harm So pute an inzecent as that fame lamb Falry Q Thou haft kill'd the fweeteft innocent That e'er did lift up eye Shakefp. Othello It murth'ring inzocents be executing Why then thou art an executioner. Shake/p. H. VI 2. A natural; an ideot Dnnocents are excluded by natural defe@s. Hooker UNNOCENTLY 1. Without guilt adv [from innocent. The humble and contented man pleafes himfel innocently and eafily, while the ambitious man attempts to pleafe others finfully and difficultly. Souzh 2. Wit fimplicity ; wit fillinef or im rudence 3. Without hurt Balls at his feetlay inzocently dead Cowley INNO'CUOUS. adj. [innocuus, Lat.] Harmlefs in effeCis The moft dangerous poifons, fkilfully managed may be made not only izzocuus, but of all othe Grew medicines the moft effectual umocuous. Inno/cuousLy., adv. [ fro Without mifchievous effects Whether quails, from any peculiarity of conftitution, do iznocuonfly feed upon hellebore, or rathe Browan fometimes but medically ufe the fame Inno/cuousnEss Harmleflnefs u fo [fro iunocuous. The blow which fhakes a wall, or beats it down and kills men, hath a greater effe on the min than that which penetrates into a mud wall, an doth little harm; for that imaocuonfnefs of the eff makes, that, although in itfelf it be as great as th Digby on Bodies other, yet tis little obferved Jo INNOVATE. v.a. [innover, ¥r. innovo, Lat. 1. To bring in fomething not known be fore Men purfue fome few principles which they hav chanced upon, and care not to izzevate,which draw Bacon unknown inconveniencies Former thing Are fet afide like abdicated kings And every moment alters what is done And iznovates fome aét *till then unknown. Dry Every man cannot diftinguith betwixt pedantr and poetry; every man therefore is not fit to innovate Dryden 2. To change by introducing novelties From his attempts upon the civil power, he proSouth ceeds to innovate God's worfhip InvovaTioN. . f. [innovation, Fr.fro inmovate.] Change by the introdutio of novelty The love of things ancient doth argue ftayednefs but levity and want of experience maketh apt int Hooker innovations It were good that men in izzovations would follo the example of tim¢ itfelf, whic indeed innovatet greatly, but quietly ard by degrees. Bacon's E/ffays Great changes may be made in a government, ye the form continue3 but large intervals of time muf pafs between every fuch iznovation, enough to mak Swift it of a piece with the conftitution IxNova'tor [innovartenr #. Fr. fro annovate. that will no appl Shakefp. Coriolanus new remedics muft ex pec new evils; for time is the greatelt /nzovator and if time of courfe alter things to the worfe, an wifdom and council fhall not alter them to the bet ter, whatfhall be the end 2. One that makes change Bacon's EfJays by introducing novelties He counfels them to deteft and perfecute all inzo2ators of divine worfhip South IN \I/\‘O'XIOUS oL Innoxiows flames are often feen on the hair o men's heads and horfes' manes Digby We may fafely ufe purgatives; they being benign and of innoxions qualities, Brown's Vulgar Errours Sent by the better genius of the night Innoxious gleaming on the horfe's mane The meteor fits Thomfon's Autumn 2, Pure from crimes Stranger to civil'and religious rage The good man walk'd inznoxious through his age InnNo'xt0UsLY. adv. [from inmoxions. 1. Harmlefsly; without harm done Pope Animals, that can innexion/ly digeft thef fons, become antidotal to the poifon digefted poi Inwo'xrouswess, # /. [from inuoxious. Harmleflnefs INNUE/NDO, % f. [innuends, from innuo An oblique hint As if the commandments, that require obedienc and forbid murder, were to be indi¢ted for a libellou innuendo upon all the great men that come to be con cerned Merxcury ¢rrand L' Lfirange though employed on a quite contrar owns it a marriage by an inzuendo Purfue your trade of fcandal-picking numerabilis, Lat. multitude [innumerable, ¥r. in Not to be counted fo Hide me where I may never fee them more. Milton appea of an equa length, on may be longer than the other by inzumerable parts Locke INNu'MERABLY. adv. [from innumerable. Without number INNU'MEROUS. adj. [innumerns, Lat.] 'To many to be counted 'Twould be fome folace yet, fome little chearing In this clofe dungeon of innumerous boughs. Milton I take the wood And in thick thelter of izzm' rous boughs Enjoy the comfort gentle fleep allows. Pspe's Ody/f Zo INo'cULATE. w. 7. [inoculo, in and oculus Lat. To propagate any plant by inferting its bud into another ftock; to practife inoculation. See INocuULAFION Nor are the ways alike in al May's Virgil How to ingraff, how to izoculate Now is the feafon for the budding of the orangetree: inoculate therefore at the commencement o this month Ewelyn But various are the ways to change the ftate Virtue canno frock but w Shakefpeare's Hamlet Thy ftock is too much out of date For tender plants tinoculate Cleaveland adj, [innoxius, Lat. Cleaveland. [inoculatio, Lat. fro inoculate. 1. Juoculation is pra@ifed upo fton mines fruit an upo orange all forts o an jaf Chufe a fmooth part of the ftock then with your knife make an horizonta cut crofs the rind of the ftock, and fro the middie of that cut make a {lit downwards about two inches in.length in th form of aT whether the eye of the bud be left to i or not; for all thefe buds which lofe thei are good for nothing thruf the bud therein, placing it fmooth between the rind and the wood of the ftock and fo having exatly fitted the bud t the ftock, tie them clofely round, takin care not to bind round the eye of th bud Miller In the ftem of Elaiana they all met, and came t be ingrafted all upon one ftock, moft of them b inoculation Howel 2. The pradtice of tranfplantin the fmali pox, by infufion of the matter from ripen Arbuthnet the difeafe INnocura'Tor 1. On trees 2. On #. [. [from insculuze. inoculatio o who propagates the fmall-po b tha th prattife inoculation Had John a Gaddefden been now living, h would have been at the head of the izoculators Freind's Hift. of Phyfick INo'DORATE adj Having no fcent an [i Lat odoratus Whites are more /zz0dorate than flowers of the fam Bacon's Natural Hiflory kind coloured Wantin Ino'DoRrOUS. adj. [inodorus, Lat. {cent; not affe¢ting the nofe The white of an egg is a vifcous, unalive, inf Arbuthnot on Aliments pid, #zodorous liquor INorFE'NSIVE. adj. [in and offenfize. 1. Giving no fcandal; giving no provocation Fleetwood A ftranger, ingffenfive, unprovoking However inoffenfive we may be in other parts o our condu&, if we are found wanting in this trial o our love, we fhall be difowned by God as traitors Rogers 2. Giving no uneafinefs caofing no tetror Should "infants have taken offence at any thing mixing pleafant and agreeable appearances with it muft be ufed, 'till it be grown fzgffenfive to them Locte For drink the grap fo zzoculate our ol . f your knife pull off that part of the woo which was taken with the bud, obfervin To yield a bud to 3. Harmlefs ; hurtlefs ; innocent thall relifh of it InocuLra/rroN 'This done, wit to it part of the woo Dyryden To plant, to bud, to graft, to izocu/ate 70 Ino'cuLATE. w.a another ftock and with your knife {lit off the bud, wit Swift with innumerable bough In lines, whic eye th belo Quincy Itis evident, by inoc#/ation, that the fmalleft quantity of the matter, mixed with the blood, producet You have fent innumerable fubftanc To furnifh Rome, and to prepare the way You have for dignities. Shake/peare's Henry VIII Cover me, ye pines Ye cedars half an inc abou cu Dryyden That Stella loves to talk with fellows adj ing the footftalk remaining, make a crof ed puftules into the veins of the uninfected, in hopes of procuring a milder for than what frequently comes by infetion Your hints that Stella is no chicken Your innuendoes, when you tell us INNU'MERABLE having cut off the leaf from the bud, leav then raifing the bark of the ftock Brown's Vulgar Ervours Latin. too deep, left you wound the frock ¢ the eyes in ftrippin 2. Without harm fuffered Inoculate carnation I attach thee as a traiterous izzovator H t. Free from milchievous effets Where lilies, in a lovely brown 1. An introduétor of novelties A foe to th' publick weal IN but be careful not to cu inoffenfive moft M:lior Thy ingffen/ive fatires never bite Hark, how the cannon, ingfferfive now Dryden Gives figns of gratulation Phillips She crufhes With whate'er gall thou fet'ft thyfel to write 4. Unembarrafled ftru&ion withou fto A Latin mode of {peech, From hence a paffage broad Smooth, caly, ingffenfive, down to hell INOFFE'NSIVELY Withou harm or adv appearanc [fro of harm ob Milton ingfenfive. withou IxorrE'NSIVENESS. 2. /. [from inoffenfrve: Harmleflnefs ; freedom from appearanc of harm. INorri‘crovs. adj. [in and gfficionss] No 6 avil |