GL OSSARY. 34] 



compasse; a circle, a round; also, a paire of compasses. Coterave 

 Fr. Diet. 



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. Diet. 



Complexion, sb. The constitution both of mind and body ; p. i a, I. 37 ; 

 p. 162, I. 30. Hence it denotes a natural tendency or inclination 

 Comp. Shakespeare, Meas. for Meas. iii. i. 24: 



4 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. g. 

 4 Hear me without thine ears, and make reply 

 Without a tongue, using conceit alone. 



Shakespeare, K. John, iii. 3. 50. 



Conclude, v. t. 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: in. A concurrent, 



corriuall, competitor. Cotgrave, Fr. Diet. 



Confectionary, sb. One who makes confections or conserves: p. 206, 

 1. 22. See i Sam. viii. 13. 



4 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, I. 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, 



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, combination : p. 89, 1. 12 ; p. 164, 



1. 19; p. 198, 1. 10. 



Conscient, adj. Conscious: p. 227, 1. 30. 

 Consecrate, p.p. Consecrated: p. 95, 1. 10. 



The imperial seat, to virtue consecrate. 



Shakespeare, Tit. And. i. I. 14. 



Compare accommodate, accumulate, alienate, copulate, corroborate, dedic 

 ate, excommunicate, degenerate, demonstrate, devote, dilute, enumerate, 

 illuminate, illustrate, incorporate, palliate, premeditate, &c. 

 Consequent, sb. By comeq nent = in consequence, consequently: p. 134, 



1-33- 

 Conserve, v.t. To preserve: p. 195, 1. 4. 



Thou art too noble to conserve a life 

 In base appliances. Shakespeare, Meas. for Meas. iii. i 



