GLOSSARY. 341 
compasse; a circle, a round; also, a paire of compasses.’ Cotgrave, 
Fr. Dict. 
Compass, adj. Circuitous: p. 232, 1. 17. 
Compatible, adj. Sympathetic: p. 132, 1.19. ‘Compatible: com. Com- 
patible, concurrable; which can abide or agree together; or indure, or 
beare with, one another.’ Cotgrave, Fr. Dict. 
Complexion, sb. The constitution both of mind and body; p. 12, 1. 27; 
p. 162, 1. 30. Hence it denotes a natural tendency or inclination, 
Comp, Shakespeare, Meas. for Meas. iii, 1. 24: 
‘Thou art not certain; 
For thy complexion shifts to strange effects, 
After the moon.’ 
Compounded, p. p. Compound: p. 134, 1. 19. 
Conceit, sb. Conception: p. 20, 1.17; p. 102, 1. 29; p. 174, 1. 9. 
‘Hear me without thine ears, and sohicd reply 
Without a tongue, using conceit alone.’ 
Shakespeare, K. John, iii. 3. 50. 
Conclude, v. ¢. To lay down as a conclusion: p. 206, 1. 17. 
Concordance, sb. Agreement, harmony: p. 89, 1. 16; p. 130, 1. 16. 
Concupiscence, sb. Eager desire, lust: p. 133, 1. 14. See Rom. vii. 8, 
Concurrent, sb. A rival: p. 235, 1.4. ‘Concurrent; m. A concurrent, 
corriuall, competitor.’ Cotgrave, Fr. Dict. 
Confectionary, sb. One who makes confections or conserves: p. 206, 
1, 22. See 1 Sam. viii. 13. 
‘But myself, 
Who had the world as my confectionary.’ 
Shakespeare, Timon of Athens, iv. 3. 260. 
Confer, v.i. To consult: p. 66,1. 24. See Gal. i. 16. To contribute: 
p- 102, 1. 6 
Confidences, sb, Unusual in the plural: p. 227, 1. 13. See Jer. ii. 37. 
Congregate, adj. Collected: p. 130, 1. 3. 
Conjugate, adj. United: p. 130, 1. 4. 
Conjugates, sb. Things related to, and so resembling each other: p. 161, 
1. 33. Johnson defines a conjugate as ‘Agreeing in derivation with 
another word, and therefore generally resembling in signification.’ Bacon 
uses it in a wider sense, 
Conjugation, sb. Relation, connexion, combinstion} p- 89,1. 12; p. 164, 
1. 19; p. 198, 1. 10. 
Conscient, adj. Conscious; p. 227, I. 30. 
Consecrate, ~.~. Consecrated: p, 95, 1. ro. 
‘The imperial seat, to virtue consecrate,’ 
Shakespeare, Tit. And, i. 1. 14. 
Compare accommodate, accumulate, alienate, copulate, corroborate, dedic- 
ate, excommunicate, degenerate, demonstrate, devote, dilute, enumerate, 
illuminate, illustrate, incorporate, palliate, premeditate, &c. 
Consequent, sb. ‘By consequent’ =in consequence, consequently; p. 134, 
1. 33. ; 
Conserve, v.t. To preserve: p. 195, |. 4. 
‘Thou art too noble to conserve a life 
In base appliances,’ Shakespeare, Meas, for Meas. iii. 1, 88. 
