334 GLOSSARY. 
Accumulate, f.f. Accumulated; the old form of participles derived from 
the Latin: p. 18, 1. 6; p. 65,1. 20. Comp. Accommodate. 
Accurate, adj. Worked out with care: p. 213, 1. 1. 
Accustom, v.i. To use, be accustomed: p. 58, 1.9; p. 77, 1. 7. 
Acquaint, v.t. To accustom, familiarize: p. 67, 1. 21. Compare Shake- 
speare, Tempest, ii. 2. 41: ‘ Misery acguaints a man with strange bed- 
fellows.’ 
Addition, sb. Title: p. 95,1. 20. According to Cowel (Law Dict. s. v.) 
it signifies “a title given to a man besides his Christian and surname, 
shewing his estate, degree, mystery, trade, place of dwelling, &c.” Com- 
pare Shakespeare, Coriolanus, i. 9. 66: 
* Caius Marcius Coriolanus! Bear 
The addition nobly ever!’ 
And Macbeth, i. 3. 106: 
* He bade me, from him, call thee thane of Cawdor: 
In which addition, hail, most worthy thane !’ 
See also Lear, ii. 2, 26. 
Adeption, sb. An obtaining, acquisition: p. 93, 1. 27. 
Adjacence, sb. Contiguity: p. 120, 1. 15. 
Adoptive, adj. Adopted: p. 57,1,2. ‘Adoptive brethren’= brothers by 
adoption, 
Advante, v.¢. To promote: p. 231, I. 5. 
Adventive, adj. Coming from without, adventitious: p. 113, 1. 29; 
p- 144, 1. 6. 
Advertised, p. ~. Informed: p. 68, 1. 4; p. 80, 1. 27. 
Advertisement, sb. Information: p. 100, 1. 16. Notice: p. 219, 1. 31. 
Advise, v.i. To consider: p. 67,1. 31; p. 161, 1. 21. 
Advised, p.~. Deliberate, well considered: p. 100, 1.22. Compare Shake- 
speare, Merchant of Venice, i, I. 142: 
‘I shot his fellow of the selfsame flight 
The selfsame way with more advised watch.’ 
Affect, sb. Affection, disposition: p. 131, 1. 24. Compare Shakespeare, 
Love’s Labour ’s Lost, i. I. 152: 
‘For every man with his affects is born,’ 
Affectionate, adj. Zealous, devoted, attached; p. 29, 1. 14. Eagerly 
desirous, studious: p. 112, 1. 10, Compare Bacon, Hist, of Hen. VII, 
p. 17 (ed, 1622): ‘So he being truly informed, that the Northerne parts 
were not onely affectionate to the House of Yorke, but particularly had 
been deuoted to King Richard the third.’ 
After, adv. Afterwards: p. 18, 1.9; p. 67,1. 7. 
Afterward, adv. Afterwards: p. 27, 1.2; p. 127, 1. 33. 
Agreed, p.p. Agreed to, admitted: p. 158, |. 27. 
All, used where now we should use ‘any’: p. 14, ll. 2, 7: p. 56, 1. 27. 
Comp. ‘ without al/ contradiction’ (Heb. vii. 7). 
Allege, v.¢. To quote: p. 88, 1. 30; p. 199, 1. 31. 
All one. The same: p. 30,1. 17; p. 158, 1. 1. 
Allow, v.t. To approve: p. 20, 1.18; p. 111.1. 11, Compare Luke xi. 
48: ‘Truly ye bear witness that ye allow the deeds of your fathers.’ 
Allowance, sb. Approval: p. 24,1. 6. So Shakespeare, Hen, VIII. iii. 2. 
322: ‘ Without the King’s will or the state’s allowance.’ 
