Apanteles 
+ rf /.or, end, completion, < Tf'Aeiv, complete : see 
teleology.] A genus of parasitic Hymenoptera, 
family Braconidcp, separated by Forster from 
Apnnteles alette, much enlarged. 
, male fly ; A, head of larva ; <-, jaw of larva ; ct, cocoon ; 
of antenna. 
255 
The determination of social morality is apart from the. 
assignment of motives for individual morality, and leaves 
untouched the cultivation of individual perfection. 
!'. l-Mm-lc, Introd. to \V. K. clilford's Lectures. 
(d) Absolutely : as, jesting apart, what do you 
think of it? 2. In pieces, or to pieces; asun- 
der: as, to take a watch apart. 
As if a strong hand rent apart 
The veils of sense from soul and heart. 
\\'li inter. The Preacher. 
apart 1 * (a-parf), *. *. [< apart*, adv.] 1. To 
put apart; set aside. 2. To depart from; 
quit. 
apart 2 t (a-part/), prep. phr. as adv. [Early 
mod. E. a parte, ME. in fuller form aparty, 
apartie ; < a s + part or party. Cf. apart*.] 
In part ; partly. 
That causeth me a parte to be hevy in my herte. 
Caxtmi, Reynard (Arber), p. 25. (..V. E. D.) 
a parte ante (a par'te an'te). [ML. : L. a for 
ab, from; parte, abl. of par(t-)s, part; ante, 
before: see ante-.] Literally, from the part 
before : used with reference to that part of (all) 
time which, at a given instant, has elapsed. 
Apatornis 
or does not exhibit feeling; specifically, an ad- 
herent of the moral philosophy of the Stoics. 
See stoicism. [Kare.] 
Mcthinks it becomes not a dull Apatliint to object that 
we should be disquieted with perpetual feares if any par- 
cel of our happiness should not be lock'd up within our 
own liruasts. Bp. Parker, Platonick Philos., p. in. 
apathistical (ap-a-this'ti-kal), . [< apiilltiitl + 
-ic-al.] Like an apathist ; apathetic. [Rare.] 
Fpntenelle was of a good-humored and apatliistical dis- 
position. W. Seward, Anecdotes, V. 262. 
apathy (ap'a-thi), . [< L. apathia, < Gr. aira.- 
Heia, insensibility, < djra(%, insensible, impas- 
sive, < a- priv. + Trdtfof, suffering, sensation, < 
TtaSelv, suffer, feel.] Want of feeling ; absence 
or suppression of passion, emotion, or excite- 
ment; insensibility; indifference. 
As the passions are the springs of most of our actions, 
a state of apathy has come to signify a sort of moral iner- 
tia the absence of all activity or energy. Fleming. 
Blessed, thrice and nine times blessed be the good St. 
Nicholas, if I have indeed escaped that apathy which 
chills the sympathies of age and paralyzes every glow of 
enthusiasm. Irving, Knickerbocker, p. 294. 
a parte pOSt (a par'te post). [ML. : L. a for = Syn. Indifference, Insensibility Impassibility, 'A 
a. 110,1 ue pui, \u pai e post;, \_iau. : Jj. a lor = Syn. Indifference, Insensibility Impasnbility, Apathy, 
Microgaster (Latreille). Its species infest various ""> trom; parte, abl. of par(t-)s, part; post, af- Stoicism, Unconcern, Phlegm, Calmness, torpor, coldness, 
lepidopterous larvie, and form egg-like cocoons, either 
singly or in masses, attached to the bodies of their vic- 
tims. A. aletife (Riley) preys on the cotton-worm. 
apanthropy (a-pan'thro-pi), n. [< Gr. imav- 
Hpuiria, < OTrdwpuTrof, unsocial, < air6, from, + 
avffpairoc, man: see anthropic.] An aversion to 
the company of men ; a love of solitude ; in 
ter : see post-.] Literally, from the part after : 
used with reference to that part of (all) time 
which follows a given instant. 
aparthrodial (ap-iir-thro'di-al), a. [< apar- 
throsis. Cf. arthrodial.] Of or pertaining to 
aparthrosis. 
apartkroset 
ed by a dislike of society. 
apar,apara(ap'ar, ap'a-ra), n, [S.Amer.] The 
coolness, unfeelingness, lethargy, immobility. (See list 
under indifference.) Indifference denotes absence of feel- 
ing, passion, or desire toward a particular object : as, in- 
difference to pain or ridicule. Apathy commonly implies 
a general want of feeling, a complete indifference in regard 
to anything, due to want of interest or attention, as in the 
case of a repressed or sluggish intellect, or of extreme ill- 
ness or affliction. Insensibility and impassibility suggest 
the lack of capacity for feeling, or an absence of suscepti- 
bility, being qualities rather than states of mind. Indif- 
ffrmce arising from impassibility relates more particu- 
larly to internal, that arising from insensibility to external, 
apffpov, a joint.] 1. In surg.,' Ais- 
mataco-; the tolyVeutine or three-banded arma- art ^ation-2 In anat diarthrosis. impVessionsVTnVfoTml^VoTeVve^-n^TeTr^uVd aS 
apartment (a-part'ment), . [< F. apparte- radical than the latter. Indifference may be an entirely 
ment, < It. appartamento, a room, an apart- P r per state under the circumstances ; insensibility and 
ment, < appartare, also spelled aiiartare, sopa- l"^"**''"' 1 ''.'' ill 'V;, hvilys llt u '" st to ' pitied; unconcern 
rate, Wuraw Oj-rtKg- see <*W M^B^JSSS^SS^BS 
A room in a building ; a division in a house or the concealment especially of painful feeling by force 
separated from others by partitions. 2. pi. A ' wi "' Unconcern is absence of solicitude. (See care.) 
suite or set of rooms; specifically, a suite of fXtit'utTon'al'dSm 9 * 1 f f'T-''? 1 tem P eramcnt :.''. is 
rooms assigned to the use of a particular per- of being aroused by uiythlng! "c^mSisa tranquillit 
son, party, or family. 3. A flat (which see), resulting from the mastery of the will over passions and 
4f. A compartment. feelings that perhaps are strong and keen, and hence is 
apartmental (a-part-men'tal), a. Of or per- "^commendable. 
^^^^r ni - o ^ oa ^ m ^ ts - ^^^"S^f^s^^ss^ 
apartment-house (a-parf ment- hous), . A he had for years encountered the half-hidden sneers of 
building divided into separate suites of rooms, m a- Bret Harte, Argonauts, p. 128. 
intended for residence, but commonly without 
facilities for cooking, and in this respect dif- 
ferent from a flat, though the two words are. 
often used interchangeably (see flaft): also 
distinguished from tenement-house (which see). 
apartness (a-part'iies), . The state of being 
apart ; aloofness. 
apartyt (a-par'ti), prep. phr. as adv. Same as 
aparfi. 
Apar, or three-banded Armadillo ( Tolypetttes tricincius}. 
Unbelief might result from the insensibility engendered 
by a profligate life. 
tritinctug), a small species capable of rolling it- 
self up into a complete ball. It is also notable for 
walking on the tips of the fore claws, the two outer toes 
being much reduced, while the third is greatly developed. 
. There are other species of Tolypeutes (which see). 
aparejo (a-pa-ra'ho), n. [Sp., a pack-saddle; a 
particular use of aparejo, preparation, harness, apasst, v. i. [ME. apassen, < OF. apasser, < a- 
gear, tackle, pi. aparejos, apparatus: see ap- (< L. ad, to) + passer, pass.] To pass on; pass 
parel.] A kind of Mexican saddle formed of by ; pass away. Chaucer. 
leather cushions stuffed with hay, used in the apastron (ap-as'tron), n. ; pi. apastra (-tra) 
western United States. [NL., < Gr. OTTO", from, + aarpov, star: see 'as- 
apanthmesis (ap-ar-ith-me'sis), n. [NL., < Gr. ter*.] In astron., that part in the orbit of a 
terapfBfaimt, < aTrapidfieiv, count off, count over, double star where it is furthest from its pri- 
< 07T6, off, + apidpelv, count, < api6ft6f, number : mary. 
see arithmetic.] 1. In rhet., enumeration of Apatela (ap-a-te'la), n. [NL., < Gr. aitarr/Mc,, 
parts or particulars. 2. In logic, division by guileful, wily','< airart/, guile, deceit.] A genus 
pjirts. ' 
apart 1 (a-parf), ado. or a. [< ME. apart, < OF. 
a part, mod. F. A part = Pr. a part = Sp. Pg. 
aparte = It. a parte, < L. ad partem : ad, to, at ; 
about If inches, and has gray fore wings dotted with 
blackish, and white hind wings with small dark spots 
The caterpillar is about 1J inches long, black, marked 
with red and yellow ; it feeds on the leaves of the apple 
peach, raspberry, strawberry, grape, willow, and other 
vegetation. 
Apatelse (ap-a-te'le), n. pi. [NL., pi. of Apa- 
tela.] A group of moths, named from the ge- 
nus Apatela. 
apatellte (a-pat'e-llt), n. [< Gr. dn-ar^df, il- 
lusive, deceitful (see Apatela), + -ite%.] A 
hydrous sulphate of iron, found in clay, in 
small friable yellow nodules, at Auteuil, Paris 
,, : ,*t ent amongst the Persians in their apathetic (ap-a-thet'ik), a. [< apathy, after 
rtT S rfT^idother^ them ' 8ometime pathetic.] Characterized by 
partem ; ace. of par(t-)s, part, side. Apart is 
thus ong. a prep. phr. like E. aside, ahead, etc., 
and may like these have a quasi-adj. construc- 
tion. Ct.aparft.] 1. To or at one side; aside; 
separately; by itself; in distinction (from) ; in- 
dependently (of) ; adjectively, separate, (a) In 
place, motion, or position. 
Lay thy bow of pearl apart, 
And thy crystal shining quiver. 
B. Jonson, Cynthia's Revels, v. 3. 
Artabasus . 
O. P. Fisher, Begin, of Christianity, p. 139. 
I threw myself on my bed, . . . resisting no longer, but 
awaiting my fate with the apathy of despair. 
B. Taylor, Lands of the Saracen, p. 146. 
The victors set fire to the wigwams and the fort. 
This last outrage overcame even the stoicism of the sav- 
aB 6 - Irving, Sketch-Book, p. 370. 
Still less respectable appears this extreme concern for 
those of our own blood which goes along with the uncon- 
cern for those of other blood, when we observe its meth- 
ods. H. Spencer, Sins of Legislators, ii. 
One likes in a companion a phlegm which it is a triumph 
to disturb. Emerson, Clubs. 
Sir, 'tis (It 
You make strong party, or defend yourself 
By calmness, or by absence ; all's in anger. 
Shaic.,Cor.,m. 2. 
apatite (ap'a-tlt), n. [< Gr. a-n-drri, illusion, 
deceit, + -ite*, apatite having been often mis- 
taken for other minerals.] Native calcium 
erally crystallized in hexagonal prisms, which 
are sometimes low or even tabular, some- 
times elongated, and occasionally of great size. 
It varies in color from white to green or Line, rarely to yel- 
low or reddish. Apatite occurs in metalliferous veins and 
in metamorphic and granitic rocks. In Canada and in 
Norway extensive deposits of it are mined for the sake of 
its phosphates, which are useful as fertilizers. 
Apatornis (ap-a-tor'nis), n. [NL., < Gr. cm&n/, 
deceit, + bpvtc,, bird.] A genus of extinct Cre- 
taceous birds found in western Kansas. As de- 
scribed by Marsh (1873), they are related to Ichthyornii to 
which they were first referred. A. celer, the typical spe- 
cies, was of about tlie size of a pigeon. 
_ , ., . fflulL, _, 
of noctuid moths, containing such species as the j 
North American A. oblinita. This moth expands P nos P n ate with calcium fluorid or chlorid, gen- 
J. Brende, tr. of Quintus Curtius, v. 
Death walks apart from Kear to-day ! 
Whittier, Summer by the Lakeside. 
I'hou livest still, 
Apart from every earthly fear and ill. 
William Mnrris, Karthly Paradise, I. 408. 
(6) In purpose, use, character, etc. : as, to set 
apart, or lay apart, for a special purpose. 
The Lord hath set apart him that is godly for himself 
iv. :). 
, having 
or exhibiting little or no emotion; devoid of 
strong feeling or passion; insensible. 
Better the narrow brain, the stony heart, 
The staring eye glazed o'er with sapless days, 
The long mechanic pacings to and fro, 
The set gray life, and apathetic end. 
Tennyson, Love and Duty. 
=Syn. Passionless, unmoved, unfeeling, indifferent. 
apathetical (ap-a-thet'i-kal), a. Same as //- 
thi'lic. 
apathetically (ap-a-thet'i-kal-i), adv. In an 
(c) In thought ; in mental analysis: as, to con- apathetic manner. 
siderone statement apart from others; apart apathist (ap'a-thist), n. (< apathy + -ist.] One 
:rom a slight error, the answer is right. affected with" apathy; one who is destitute of 
Kyed Emperor ( Apahtra lycaon, Fabricius). 
. larva, dorsal view : e. pupa, dorsal view ; e, male butterfly, w 
partial outline of female. { Natural size. ) [See page 256.] 
