of the body into fimilar, and diffimila 
' different form from the common leaves of a grown pl 
& 
DI® 
* Has edes Deo J. O, facr: 
Eeetus Varfovienfis in Augutt. Confefs, ex 
enfu Staniflai Augufti Regis et Reipublice 
ep Struere Coepit, a 24, 1977.7 
eP 
DISSIMILA R, in Anatomy. oo divide the parts 
Diffimilar ae by fome called allo compound, and or- 
e fuch as may be divided into various parts, 
of different. ‘tru! ptm &e. Thus the hand is divifible into 
i es, bones, &c, whefe fabanitons are neither of 
the fame nature nor denominatio 
MILAR Leaves, “ae note ithe two fir leaves ae 
“any plant at its firft fhooting out of th 
e groun 
They are thus called, becaufe they ufually are of a 
piant. 
Thefe Dr. Grew obferves to be nothing but the very Icbes 
of the feed thus exparded, and thus advanced. 
Their ufe is for the protetion of the plume; which be« 
ing young and tender, is ‘an cmuntdl ofeach: a = 
has alfo fome rain dMA de ” gr radially conveyed @ 
in Geometry, €'c. She ‘Sime 
Dis | Diffimili, in Rhetoric, &e. a 
di agreement rep ings in quality, nd furnifhes an argumen os 
where om Giffimilar, or unlike things, other difimilars 
are de te 
Thus: Cicero, ‘¢ Si barbarorum eft in diemi-vivetes ; noftra 
confilia ae tempus oe debent.”’ 
icero (in Pifon. c. 14, &c ws the preference of his 
own exile to Pifo’s government of Macedoaia, by the dif. 
ference between their condud, the peoplé’s efteem of 
them. Catullus furnithes a ey Go aiauesnt from 
d:fiimilitude , 
66 ‘Boles occidere & redire poffunt, 
is cum femel occidit brevis lim 
Nox eft perpetua una dormienda.” 
END OF VOL. XL 
