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Show { Having no children, The did with fingutar care an Bacon tendernef(s interd the education of Philip The king prayed them to have patience 'till a little fmoak, that was raifed in his country, was over flighting, as his manner was, that openly, whic ])'m"w.z neverthelels he 7urended ferioufly 4. T Thi or attention to pay regar while the kiug intended his pleafure Bacon's Henry VI whe h Whotton would 7zzend it Their beauty they, and we our loves fufpend Nought can our wifhes, fave thy health, iztend Waller to defign The opinion fhe had of his wifdo made her efteem great!y of his words word fuch wa a but that th founded fo, asfhe could not ima themfelve . Sidney gine what they intended The gods would not have delivered a foul into th body whic arms an hat legs, onl inftrument of doing, but that it were infended the mind fhoul Sidney employ them Thou art {wor As deeply to affe® what we intend As clofely to conceal what we impart According to this model Horac Shakefpeare writ his odes an epods; for his fatires and epiftles; being intende wholly for inftrution, required another ftyle. -Dryd Inte'spaNT. 2. /o [French.] An office of the higheft clafs, who overfees an particular allotment of the publick bufi INTE'NDIMENT. 2. [ [entendement, Ft. Attention ; patient hearing; accurate exa lov t you that worfhi by-end, fall mor this emblem fo fear I came hither to ac othe vigour gives Phillips Intenera'TION. 2 /0 [from intencrate. The att of foftening or making tender I know I love in vain Tha -»turfd to come .near ftrained ‘__‘bx:‘._)!imc or low, unbended or intenfe Ane found is ftill 2 comment to the fenfe N Boyle Rofeom 2. To all intents. In all fenfes, whateve be meant or defigned There is an incurabl folution not to fee ; and he who will not open li blind as he that cannot He was miferable 70 a/ Taylor obje@, and in the inzenfion of degree InTE'NTION Lat. INTENSIVE. adj. [from intenfe. 1. Stretched or increafed with refpe t itfelf; that which may admit encreafe o degree unremitted ac to a liberty of exercife, but not of fpecifiBramball againft Hobbes INTE'NT. adj. [intentus, lat. 1. Anxioufly diligent; fixed wit application: formerly with 70 blindnefs caufed by a re fo a// intents and purpofes eyes-is for the prefent a South, intents and purpofes L2 Effvanges 7. fo [intentiony ¥t intentio 1. Eagernef of defire tention deep thought clofenef of at< vehemence o ardour of mind Intention is when the mind with great earneftnefs, and of choice, fixes its view on any idea, confider it on every fide, and will not be called off by the or- dinary folicitation of other ideas Lockes Effe&ual prayer is joined with a vehement intention of the inferior powers of the foul, whicly canno without pain: it hath bee long: continu therei therefore though good by turns to interpofe ftill fomewhat for the higher'part of the mind and th . ' Hooker underitanding fo werk upon She did courfe o'er my exteriors with fuch a greed intention, that the appetite of her eye did feem to Sbakefp. fcorch me up'like a burning-glafs In perfons poffeffed with other notions of religion, the underftanding cannot quit thefe butb great examination; which cannot be done withou fom labou an iztention of the mind clof Diftra&ions in England made moft men Zntent t their own fafety King Charles 2. Commonly with oz we .ufe but thofe means which God hat an th thoughts dwelling a confiderable time upon the fur South vey and difcuffion of each particular 2. Defign; purpofe I wifth others th fucceffes Mof inzenticn fam an greate Temple part of chronical diftempers proceed fro laxity of the fibres; in whic cafe the principal in tention is to reftore the tone of the folid parts. Arbuthnot on Aliments laid before us, it is a'good fign that we are rathe intent upon God's glory than our own conveniency Taylor The general himfelf had been more internt upo 3. The ftate of being intenfe or ftrained This for diftin®ion is more generall and more conveniently written izzenfion Clarendon The operations of agents admit of izzention an Milton hufbande to this advantage o Locke Whilft they are intent oz one particular part o their theme, they bend all their thoughts to prov or difprove fome propofition that relates to that part «dj. ]Einicigfm, Lat. To obferve the effe@s of a diftillation, profecute with fo intenfe and unufual a degree of heat, w ven intent to make themfelves mafters of that ifland Grew OF darknefs yifible fo much be lent, As half to thew, half veil the deep intent. Dunciad. Sounds will be carried further with the wind tha againft the wind; and likewife to rife and fall wit Bacon the intenfion or remiffion of the wind. Faith differs from hope in the extenfion of it cies that might b their knowledge firive againft hope 1. Raifed to a high degree forced; not {flight; not Jax The Athenians fent their fleet to Sicily, upon pretence only to affift the Leontines; but with an concernment, there are none fo enflaved to the neceffities of life, who might not find many. vacan Yet in this captious and intenible fieve I till pour in the waters of my love S/)a,{'t_‘/];mrc INTE/NSE laxation Hooker, Thofe that accufe him in his intent towards our wives, are a yoke of his difcarded men. - Shakefp. - I'll urge his hatred more to Clarence; And, if I fail not in my deep. intent, Clarence hath not another day to-live: Shakefpeare This fury fit for her intent.fie chofe One who delights in warss Dryden's. Zns Lat.] 'The ac&t of forcing or ftrainin any thing; contrariety to remiffion or re Of ation eager, and intent on thought The chiefs your honourable danger fought. Dryden Were men as intent upon this as on things of lowe and inteneration of the parts Bacon INTE'NYBLE. adj. [in and tenible. cannot hold. ~ Not in ufe our world, how 7 fuppofe that. it wil Addifon his command They oz their mirth and danc Intent In living creatures the nobleft ufe of nourifhmen Is for the prolongation of life, reftoration of fom degree of youth place whereunto the people might bring offerings The water of fprings and rivers, that fuftains diminution from the heat above, being evaporate more or lefs, in proportien to the greater or lefler iz Woodward tenfenefs of heat [ 7ntenfion, ¥r. inten 10 InTE!'NSION., 2 ‘Whe to foften Equal, intenerating, milky grain purpofe, which was, that there fhould be but on Milton's Paradife Lof To InTe'N$ELY. adv. [from intenfe. great degree; not flightly; not remifsly cordin cation 70 INTE'NERATE. @. 4. [iz and tener, Lat. Autum but foon prov but not extenfively in the latitude of the -ovje@ Fr. profit, or fom this precept had reference unto-a fpecial intent and God and the good angels are more free than w are, that is, intenfively in the degree of freedo or lefs within the intendment o L' Eftrange T'o make tender the other ftill remifs INTE'NSIVELY, adv. By encreafe of degree quaint you withal; that either you might ftay hi from his intendment, or brook {uch difgrace well a he fhall run into Shakefpeare Al Whereas commandment was given to-deftroy al places where the Canaanites: had ferved: the 'gods, But in difparit Tired with that afliduousattendance and intenfiv circurnfpection, which . a' long fortune did require he was not unwilling to beftow upon another fom part of the pains Woatton. Be nought hereat difmay'd *Till well ye wot, by grave intendiment What woman, and wherefore doth we upbraid Spenfer of m tent of Scripture is to deliver/the laws of duties fu pernatural Hooker Ada{/'nn_ 3. Kept on the ftretch; anxionily attentive Tedious alike i abound with all forts of laws, yet the principal in intenf an phrafes 2. Intent mination. This word'is only to be foun in Spenfer [entendement arden perfection of an angel; and were it not infinitel greater than the perfe@ion of an angel,- it could no be infinitely greater than the perfeGtion of a man becaufe the intenfive diftance between the perfection of an angel and of a man is but finite. Hale Nearchus, who commanded Alexander's fleet, an Oneficrates, his intendant general of marine, hav both left relations of the Indies. . . Arbuthnot Ou in mor " As his perfe&ion is infinitely greater than the perfection of a man, fo it is infinitely greater than th nefs INTE'NDMENT. 7. Intention ; defign our thought InTe/NseNEss. 7z fo [from imsenfe.] 'Th ftate of being enforced in a high degree force; contrariety to laxity or remiffion Go therefore, mighty pow'ss! intend at home While here fhall be our home, what beft may eaf Milton's Paradife Loft The prefent mifery 5. To mean conve If an Englithman confider tenfely it is heated, he canno cool again fpeaker acute and foun The earl was a ver finite variety of matter in all kinds, althoug Hebraifms warm and animate our language, an Cannot well fuit with either They could not intend to the recovery of thi Spernfer country of the north Neither was there any who might fhare in the go Although the Scriptire of God be flored with jno 2. Vehement; ardent The one 7ntenfe {enfe is now little ufed vernment V IN without attentio ] other affect a to th confequences tha ma Watts. Be intent and folicitous to take up the meanin of the fpeaker Watts INTE/NT. 2. [ [from intend, t. A defign; a purpofe; a drift; a vie formed; meaning remiffion; but effence riation are not capable of fuch va Locke InTe'NTIONAL, 2d). [ intentionel inlmfiofl. Defigned don Fr. fro by defigfl The glory of God is the end which every mtcl.llgent being is bound to confult, by a direct and iz tentional {ervice Rogers InTe/NTIONALLY. adv. [from intentional. 1. By'defign; with fixed choice I find in myfelf that this inward principle do exert many of its aQions inzentionally and purp;if:lz i n i a i n i l 2. In wieve I am withing to wr,itpf to you, I fhal Whe you are inzentionally doing fo to-me rbury to Pope t A INTE/NTIVE ‘Dili m{j. ([from inte¢ nt. conclud gently applied; bu ly attentive Whar |