antimony-blende 
antimony-blende (an'ti-mo-ni-blend"), . 
Same as tcermesik: 
247 
able contradiction into which reason falls when 
antimony-bloom (an'ti-mo-ni-blom'),. Same i^P^^S^r't^ 
as etuettnntte. 
antimony-glance (an'ti-mo-ni-glans"), Same 
as stilinili: 
antimoralist (au-ti-mor'al-ist), 
(') tirthe'existenee . .f atoms or the infinite' divisibility of 
matter, (:() to freedom, and (4) to the cosmological argu- 
antipathy 
Turn now to the reverse of the medal, and there we shall 
Bp. Warburton, Sermons, ii. 
an'ti-pask), n. [< anti- + fascli.] 
egories: see category, 1), which are valid only 
within the limits of possible experience. There 
ment for a <lod. 
Destruc- Antiochian (an-ti-6'ki-an), a. [< L. Annochwi, 
^ [<anti- + 
moralist.] ~Aii enemy to or opponent of moral- 
ity. Bp. Warburton. 
antimycotic (au-ti-mi-kot'ik), a. [< Gr. 
against, -r- [ti'KiK, a fungus, + -ot-ic.] 
tive to microscopic vegetable organisms, or pre- 
venting their development, as carbolic acid. 
antinatural (aii-ti-nat'ur-al), a. [< anti- 
natural.'] Opposed to nature or to common 
sense; non-natural. 
This happy ami ** ^ ^i^^rOle^ v . 301 aTa,' wd named after his father Antiochus. 
anti-Nebraska (an'ti-ue-bras'ka), , In ('. ,V. The name !""' <">" ' -osiata.r.t, holding 
hist., opposed to the act of 1854 for the or- out against,' \ 
ganization of Kansas and Nebraska as terri- icvrt, against, 
tories, because of its abrogation of the law Pertaining to 
the Sunday after Easter day. 
(an"ti-pa-tha'se-a), n. pi. [NL., 
. -acea.] A suborder of Actiiiinrin, 
of the families Antipathida; and Ge- 
rariiitdfe, having the polyps connected by a 
cosnenchyma secreting a solid sclerobase or 
horny skeletal axis, and their tentacles simple. 
L. Aiitiiichiii, ;ilso Aittiocliea, the name of ^sev- 
eral ci ' 
called 
r, OTW! named vu^w* * - 
means ' resistant, holding 
corallum external and not calcareous. 
iharia. 
about 
os 
of 18-20 (the Missouri compromise) prohibiting 68 B. c.), the founder of a sect of ec ectic pin- 
- uht to unite the hilosoh of 
slavery in new territories formed m that re- 
gion. Anti-Nebraska men, the members of the coali- 
tion of Whigs, Democrats, and Freesoilers opposed to the 
above-mentioned bill: afterward merged in the Repub- 
lican party. 
antinephritic (an"ti-nef-rit'ik), a. [< anti- - 
nephritic.] In meil.. counteracting inflamma- 
tion of the kidneys. 
antinial (an-tin'i-al), a. [< Gr. livri, against, 
losophers. who sought to unite the philosophy of 
Plato with many of the doctrines of Aristotle 
and the Stoics. 2. Of or pertaining to the city 
of Antioch Antiochian epoch, the name given to 
two chronological eras employed in Syria : (a) The Ciesa- 
rean era of Antioch, commemorating the victory of Phar- 
salia fixed by the Greeks in the autumn of 49 B. c., and 
by the Syrians in the autumn of 48 B. c. (b) The mundane 
era of Antioch, September, 5493 B.C. , empl< wed by the Syrian 
I 'hristians as the date of the creation of the world. 
ing to or having the characters of the Antipa- 
[NL., < Gr. avri- 
properties: see 
i, typical of the 
see). The species 
sea-whips. A. columnaris is an 
.Utipathetic (au"ti-pa-thet'ik), a. [< antipa- 
thy, on type of pathetic, q. v.] Having a nat- 
ural antipathy, contrariety, or constitutional 
aversion: with to. 
Hence I think its [Greek speculation's] influence on the 
whole was dogmatic, and antipathetic to Skepticism. 
J. Owen, Evenings with Skeptics, I. 282. 
loop or ventral segment, and half-way between two adja- ^"V', ^" c " u ^ s " betwee i i"tlte'rigorousiy"literarand"the"ai- tipathy ; opposite ; unlike ; adverse. 2. 
cent nodes. See node. __ ,, legorical interpretation of the Scriptures. ing antipathy. [Rare.] 
[< Gr. fort, oppo- Every one seems to have his antipathic animal. 
.tooth.] Having Kingdey, Life, p. 41. 
,,. r dentition in which the folds Antipathida (an-ti-path'i-de), n.pl. [NL., < 
ing the obhgatormess ot the moral law, as it of ridgeg of the molar crowns are opposite: op- ^JrtfeoflCw + -ida-.] A family of sclerobasic 
emancipated from it by the gospel. .4. <J ed to ama ,t,o(l nt. cora l s . the black corals, corresponding to the 
antiOpelmOUS (au"ti-o-pel'mus,, a. [< Gr. old g(mu8 Antip athes. They have a branched fibrous 
dw/of, set against, + iretya, the sole.] In ax j s and a soft friable eosnenchyma, which peels off after 
ornith., having an arrangement of the flexor death, leaving the axial coenosarc looking like a dry sti 
pertaining to the antinomians. 
II. n. In theol., one who maintains that Chris- 
tians are freed from the moral law as set 
forth in the Old Testament by the new dispen- tendon ' s of th % toeg by w hich the flexor per- antipathise, v. See antipathize. 
sation of grace as set forth in the gospel; an forang au ppii es the third toe only, while the antipathist (an-tip'a-thist), n. [< antipathy + 
opponent of legalism in morals. Antinomianism fl exor hallucis splits into three tendons, pass- -ist.] A person or thing having an antipathy 
has existed in three forms : iu the early church as a species , , f ., t t another, or being the direct opposite of an- 
ing to the first, second, and fourth toes. 
The synpelmous, the heteropelmous, and the antiopel- 
i, ,.. ,: O the present 
Hist., IV. 369. 
mons arrangements are entirely peculiar to the present 
Stand. Sat. 
order [Picarw}. 
of Gnosticism, in the doctrine that sin is an incident of the 
body, and that a regenerate soul cannot sin ; later, m the 
Reformation, as a reaction against the doctrine of good 
works in the Roman Catholic Church, in the antagonistic 
doctrine that man is saved by faith alone, regardless of his A 
obedience to or disobedience of the moral law as a rule of antl-OrgastlC (an * tl-or-gas tlk), a. \_<, arm- 
life ; finally, as a phase of extreme Calvinism, in English + orqastic.] Tending to allay excitement or 
Puritan theology, in the doctrine that the sins of the elect , p _p a] dp^,.,, 
are so transferred to Christ that they become his trans- IT^i/Tr, ti T>5'non f< nnti 
gressions and cease to be the transgressions of the actual antlpapal (an-tl-pa pal;, a. \\ at 
sinner. The chief exponent of the second form of anti- Opposed to the pope or to popery. 
papal.] 
antinomianism (an-ti-no'mi-an-izm), n. [< an- antipapistical (an*ti-pa-pis'ti-kal), a. [< anti- 
tinomian + -ism.] The tenets of the antino- + papistical.] Antipapal. Joriin. 
mians. See antinomian, n. antiparabema (an-ti-par-a-be'ma), .; pi. anti- 
to another, or being the direct opposite of an- 
other. [Rare.] 
Sole positive of night ! 
Antipathist of light. 
Coleridge, Sibylline Leaves, II. 281. 
i-thiz), i'.; pret. and pp. 
To feel antipathy or aver- 
sion; entertain or show a feeling, disposition, 
or opinion characterized by opposition or con- 
trariety: the opposite of sympathize. [Rare.] 
I must say I sympathise with Milverton and antipa- 
thise . . . with Lord Lytton. 
A, Helps, Casimir Maremma, p. 39. 
trans. To affect with antipathy or hostil- 
antinomical (an-ti-nom'i-kal), a. 
tinomic. 
Kant holds that reason is in itself antinomical. 
Caird, Philos. Kant, p. 590. 
antinomist (an-tin'o-mist), n. [< antinomy + 
-ist.] An autinomian. 
Great offenders this way are the libertines and antino- 
mutu, who quite cancel the whole law of God under the 
pretence of Christian liberty. 
Bp. Sanderson, Sermons ad Pop. (1674), p. 2I)S. 
antinomy (an-tin'o-mi),w.; pi. antinomies (-miz). 
[< L. antinomia, a contradiction between laws, 
< Gr. avrivojiia., an ambiguity in the law, < *avri- 
vofjiof, against the law (cf . ML. antinomi : see 
antinomian), < avri, against, + wfy/oc, law: see 
nome.] 1. The opposition of one law, rule, or 
principle to another. 
It should be noticed that the Westminster Confession 
expressly teaches the freedom of will as well as foreordina- 
tion, and leaves the solution of the apparent antinomy to 
scientific theology. Schaff, Christ and Christianity, p. 162. 
2. Any law, rule, or principle opposed to an- 
other. 
If God once willed adultery should be sinful, all bis 
omnipotence will not allow him to will the allowance that 
amples, and corresponding to the parabemata Having a natural contrariety ; antipathetic, 
of the apsidal end. J. M. Neale. 
intiparallel (an-ti-par'a-lel), a. and n. 
anti- + parallel.] I. . Running parallel 
[< 
ibut 
anL, 
antir + parallel.] _. .. 
in a contrary direction. Hammond. 
II. n. In f/eom., one of two or more lines antipathy (an-tip'a-thi), n. ; pi. antipathies 
i_ _v !_ ,,! .,..,.],.,. urifl-i tir/- /-ifl-iav litinu .T \ r.._ "P .,,, I ':,.., 1 1, ',. / Ci\* ntmtrnftein f fill* 
Still she extends her hand, 
As if she saw something antipathmt* 
Unto her virtuous life. 
Fletcher (and another), Queen of Corinth, iii. >. 
which make equal angles with two other lines, 
but in contrary order. 
Thus, supposing AB and 
AC any two lines, and FC 
and FE two other lines 
to the angle AEF, and the 
angle ACB equal to the angle ADE ; then FC and FE are 
" ' ; with respect to AB and AC ; also these latter 
llels with respect to the two former. 
anti- + paralytic.] I. a. In mecl. : (a) Effective 
against paralysis. [Rare.] (ft) An epithet 
applied to the secretion of the submaxillary 
gland on one side when the chorda tympani on 
the other side has been cut so as to produce a 
paralytic secretion on that side. In this sense 
also called analytic. 
II. n. In nii'd., a remedy for paralysis. [Rare.] 
ie lusts 01 uie iiesu. pVj -, 
Jer. Taylor, Great Exemplar, i. 4. counterpart. [Kare.J 
(-thiz). [= F. antipathic, < Gr. avrmaStia, < av- 
Tiiraffqs, of opposite feeling, < avri, against, + 
irdBof, feeling, < nadeiv, suffer, feel.] 1. Natu- 
ral aversion; instinctive contrariety or oppo- 
cutting the first so as to sition in feeling ; an aversion felt at the pres- 
make the anglejVBC equal e nce or thought of a particular object ; distaste ; 
disgust; repagnance. 
No contraries hold more antipathy 
Than I and such a knave. Shak., Lear, U. 2. 
Their natural antipathy of temperament made resent 
ment an easy passage to hatred. 
George Eliot, Mill on the Floss, ii. 4. 
A rival is the bitterest enemy, as autiiathy is rather be- 
tween likes than unlikes. 
J. R. Seeley, Nat. Religion, p. 122. 
2f. A contrariety in the properties or affections 
of matter, as of oil and water. Bacon. 3. An 
object of natural aversion or settled dislike. 
Let him be to thee an antipathy, 
A thing thy nature sweats at and turns backward. 
Beau, and Fl., Thierry and Theodoret, i. 1. 
= Syn. Hatred, DiMke. Anliinithii. liimjuit, Aversion, !!- 
luctance, Repugnance. Hatred is the deepest and most 
