intermixtion 
intermixtionti " L<- intermix + -//.] Same 
;is nili-riiii.rliiri'. 
Tho whole congregaclon of tnio christen people In this 
world, which, without intertnixcinn of obstinate heresies, 
protease tho ryghtu cathollkc faith. 
Sir T. Murr, Works, p. 202. 
intermixture (in-U'r-miks'tur), . [< intenni.r 
+ -tare, after mixture.] l". The act of inter- 
mixing or intermingling. 
Hut for intermixture "f rivers, and continuity of situa- 
tion, the inlands of Montgomery, Kadnor, and Brecknock 
are partly infolded. 
Selden, Illustrations of Drayton'a Polyolblon, rt 
2. A mass formed by mixture ; a mass of in- 
gredients mixed. 3. Admixture; something 
additional mingled in a mass. 
In this height of impiety there wanted not an intermix- 
ture of levity and folly. Bacon, Hist. Hen. VIL 
intermobility (in'ter-mo-bil'i-ti), n. [< inter- 
+ mobility.] Capability of moving amongst 
each other, as the particles of fluids. Brande. 
intermodillion (iu'ter-mo-dil'ygn), n. [< in- 
ter- + mecMMoM.] In arch., the space between 
two modillions. 
intermolecular (in'ter-mo-lek'u-liir), a. [< 
inter- + miileeiile + -ar' 3 .] between molecules; 
among the smallest particles of a substance: 
as, "intermolecular action," A. Daniell. 
intermontane (iu-ter-mon'tau), a. [< L. inter, 
between, + mon(t-)s, a mountain: see moun- 
tain.] Lying between mountains: as, inter- 
montane soil. Mease. 
intermundane (in-ter-mun'dan), a. [< L. in- 
ter, between, + mundus, world: see mundane.] 
Lying between worlds, or between orb and orb. 
The vast distances between these great bodies [sun, 
planets, and nxed stars] are called intermundane spaces. 
Locke, Elem. of Nat. Phil., ii. 
intermundian (in-ter-mun'di-an), a. [< L. in- 
tenintndia, netit. pi., spaces between the worlds 
(in which, according to Epicurus, the gods re- 
side), < inter, between, + mundus, world. Cf. 
iiiti-rmiii/tliiiK'.] Intermundane. Coleridge. 
intermural (iu-ter-mu'ral), a. [= Pg. intermu- 
i-d/, < L. interinuralis, between walls, < inter, 
between, + murus, a wall: see mural.] Lying 
between walls. 
intermuret (iu-ter-mur'), v. t. [< L. inter, be- 
tween, + murus, a wall. Cf. immure.] To sur- 
round with walls; wall in. 
A bulwark interinur'd with walls of brass, 
A like can never be, nor ever was. 
Ford, Fame's Memorial. 
intermuscular (in-ter-mus'ku-lar), a. [< L. 
inter, between, 4- museulus, muscle: see muscu- 
lar.] Situated between muscles or muscular 
fibers intermuscular fascia. See fascia. Inter- 
muscular ligaments, in lower vertebrates, tendinous 
bands separating myocommata. Intermuscular sep- 
tum, (a) An interspace between muscles, or between 
myotomcs. 
The interspaces between them appearing as intennta- 
cular septa. Huxley, Anat. Vert., p. 44. 
(b) A fascia of white fibrous connective tissue separating 
two muscles or muscular fibers. 
intermusculary (in-ter-mus'ku-la-ri), n. Same 
as intcrmuxcular. Beverley. 
intermutation (in'ter-mu-ta'shon), K. [< LL. 
as if *inti'rmiitatio(n-), < intermutare, inter- 
change, < L. inter, between, + mittare, change : 
see mute*, mutation.] Interchange ; mutualor 
reciprocal change. 
Mutation is the replacement or substitution of elements, 
and when the change occurs between vowels we may term 
it inteniiutation. S. S. Haldeman, Etymology, p. 17. 
intermutualt (iu-ter-inu'tu-al). <i. [< inter- + 
mutual.] Mutual. 
A solemn oath religiously they take, 
By inttrmutual vows protesting there 
This never to reveal, nor to forsake 
So good n cause for danger, hope, or fear. 
Daniel, Civil Wars, ill. 
intermutuallyt (in-ter-mu'Ju-al-i), adv. Mutu- 
ally. Daniel, Civil Wars, vii. 
intern (in-tern'), a. and n. [Also interne (as F.); 
< F. interne = Sp. Pg. It. inter-no, < L. internus, 
inward, internal, < inter, between, < in, in, with- 
in: see in 1 , /-, inter 2 , interior, etc. Cf. extern.] 
I. (i. Internal. [Rare.] 
Yuiir predicaments, substance and accident, 
Series extern and intern, with their causes. 
B. Jonson, Alchemist, iv. 1. 
II. M. An inmate, as of a school; especially, 
sin assistant resident physician or surgeon in a 
hospital, usually a student or recent graduate, 
acting in the absence of the attending physician 
or surgeon. [A recent use. from the French.] 
intem (in-tern'), <. t. [< F. iii turner = Sp. Pg. 
internal' = It. internare, send into the interior, 
3140 
confine in a certain locality, < I-. inti-ritiis, in- 
ternal: sec mil i-ii, a.] 1. To send into the in- 
terior of a country, as merchandise. 2. To 
confine within fixed or prescribed limits; spe- 
cifically, to cause to reside in an interior local- 
ity without permission to leave it. [Chiefly used 
in connection with French subjects, in either 
sense.] 
Calderon is a greater poet than Ooethe, but even in the 
most masterly translation he retains still a Spanish ac- 
cent, and is accordingly interned (if I may Anglicize a 
French word) in that provincialism which we call nation- 
ality. Lntcett, Wordsworth. 
internal (iu-ter'nal), a. [= OF. internet; as 
intern + -at.] 1. Situated or comprised with- 
in, or in an inner part or place; inclosed; on 
the finite side of a bounding surface or line; 
within the outer boundary of ; visceral. 
If all depended upon the frame of our bodies, there must 
be some internal organs within us as far above the organs 
of brutes as the operations of our minds are above theirs. 
StiUinyJIeet, Works, III. viL 
2. Pertaining to the subject itself, and inde- 
pendent, or relatively so, of other things. Thus, 
the internal affairs of a country are the affairs of its peo- 
ple with one another. (This is the most proper sense of 
the word, which no other expresses so well. ] 
Mine eyes he closed, but open left the cell 
Of fancy, my internal sight. Milton, P. L., viii. 401. 
His [Warren Hastings'sl internal administration, withall 
Its blemishes, gives him a title to be considered as one of 
the most remarkable men in our history. 
Miinmlitii, Warren Hastings. 
The question of internal improvement within the States 
by the federal government took a new and large develop- 
ment after tho war. T. II. Beaton, Thirty Years, I. 8. 
3. Inner; pertaining to the mind, or to the re- 
lations of the mind to itself. [In this sense the 
word interior is preferable.] 
With our Saviour internal purity is everything. Paley. 
Inasmuch as consciousness is the condition of all inter- 
nal experience whatsoever, we cannot deduce or explain 
the essential nature of consciousness from other forms of 
such experience. 6. T. Load, Physiol. Psychology, p. 644. 
4. In anat. and zotil., in general, inner or in- 
terior; not superficial; deep-set; away from 
the surface or next to the axis of the body or 
of a part: as, the internal carotid or iliac ar- 
tery; the internal head of the gastrocnemius. 
5. In entom.: (a) Nearest the axis of the 
body: as, the internal angles of the elytra; the 
internal surfaces of the tibi. (6) On that sur- 
face of the tegumentary parts or organs which 
is opposed to the external or visible surface: 
as, the internal plica? of the elytra in certain 
Coleoptera. [In all senses opposed to exter- 
nal] internal adjunct, an adjunct which belongs to 
its subject irrespective of other things. 
Adjuncts are divided Into internal and external. Ad- 
j a IK-IK internal are those which inhere in the subject. Ex- 
ternal, which are ordered and disposed externally about 
it A subject receives adjuncts internal into itself : as 
snow, whiteness; the soul, science or knowledge; exter- 
nal to itself : as the sight, colour ; soldiers, arms, etc. 
Buryersdicius, tr. by a Gentleman. 
Internal bisector, capsule, carotid, etc. See the nouns. 
Internal cause, a cause constituting a part of its ef- 
fect; the matter or form, according to the peripatetic 
philosophy. See internal proximate cause, below. Inter- 
nal cell, a cell behind the internal vein, distinguished in 
many Hymenoptera. It Is sometimes divided into two. 
Internal criticism, judgment concerning the authen- 
ticity of a writing based on the contents thereof. Inter- 
nal denomination!. See denomination. Internal epl- 
condyle. See epicundyle. Internal evidence, evidence 
in regard to a thing or a subject afforded by its intrinsic 
character or quality. 
There is strong internal evidence that he himself wrote 
the last part of the work. Ticknar, Span. Lit, I. 144. 
Internal forces. See force*. Internal friction. See 
friction, 2. Internal gage, gear, good etc. See the 
nouns. Internal intercostals. See intercostal. In- 
ternal multiplication, that kind of multiplication In 
which the order of the factors is indifferent See multipli- 
cation. Internal necessity, a necessity springing from 
the very nature of the subject Internal proximate 
cause, a cause which resides in the same subject in which 
the effect is produced, as the emanative and synectic or 
continent cause of Galen and the physicians. Internal 
quantity, in logic, the sum of the marks of a logical term ; 
logical depth or comprehension. Internal revenue. 
See revenue. Internal sense, or inner sense, the im- 
pressions produced on the mind by what is within the 
soul or organism ; immediate empirical consciousness ; 
self-consciousness; the apprehension of what passes in 
the world of thought ; reflex perception. 
The other fountain from which experience furnisheth 
the understanding with ideas is the perception of the 
operations of our own mind within us, as It is employed 
about the ideas It has got ; which operations, when the soul 
comes to reflect on and consider, do furnish the under- 
standing with another set of ideas, which could not be had 
from things without ; and such are perception, thinking, 
doubting, believing, reasoning, knowing, willing, and all 
the different actings of our own minds : which we being 
conscious of, and observing in ourselves, do from these re- 
ceive into our understandings as distinct ideas, as we do 
from bodies affecting our senses. This source of ideas 
every man has wholly in himself ; and though it be not 
international 
sense, as having nothing to do with external objects, yet 
It itt very like it, ami ntiuht properly enough be called in- 
tf-f/lllt x.'/ov. I',!!! a.S ! rail till- lltlpl M'!l-:l'!'Mi, M I ''all 
this reflection. Locke, Hmmui I nikTstanding, II. I. 4. 
Internal or spiritual sense of the Word, according 
to Bwedenlwrg, the symbolic or spiritual meaning of 
those parts of the liible which are written according to 
the correspondence of all natural things with spiritual 
principles or things in the spiritual world, and which 
alone, therefore, he regards as constituting the true Di- 
vine Word. These parts are the Pentateuch, Joshua. 
Judges, the books of Samuel and Kings, the Psalms ana 
the prophets, the Gospels, and the Apocalypse. Inter- 
nal triangle, a small triangular cell, adjoining the In- 
ner side of the larger or discoidal triangle, found In the 
wings of some dragon-flies. - Internal vein, a longltudi- 
nal vein, nearly parallel with and close to the tuner mar- 
gin, found in the wings of many Levidtrptera and Hyme- 
noptrra. Internal wheel, an annular cogged wheel,with 
presentation of the cogs on the interior periphery. In- 
ternal work. In physio. See wort. Policy Of Inter- 
nal improvements. See imprurement. = gyn. 1 and X 
Inward, Interior, etc. See inner. 
internality (iu-ter-nal'i-ti), . [< internal + 
-ity.] The quality of being internal ; the state 
of being interior ; inwardness. 
All ligaments [of bivalve shells) are external [In relation 
to the body of the animal], and their internality or exter- 
nality is In respect of the binge-line. 
Huxley, Anat. Invert, p. 406. 
internally (in-ter'nal-i), adv. 1. Interiorly; 
within or inside of external limits; in an in- 
ner part or situation; in or into the interior 
parts: as, to take or administer medicine in- 
ternally. 2. With regard to internal affairs. 
There never was seen so strong a government internally 
as that of the French municipalities. 
Burke, On French Affairs. 
3. Inwardly; spiritually. 
We are symbolically in the sacrament, and by faith and 
the Spirit of God internally united to Christ Jer. Taylor. 
internarial (in-ter-na'ri-al), a. [< L. inter, 
between, 4- wares, nostrils: see narial.] Situ- 
ated between or separating the nostrils ; inter- 
nasal. 
internasal (in-ter-na'zal), a. [< L. inter, be- 
tween, + nasus, nose: see nasal.] Situated be- 
tween nasal parts or passages, or dividing them 
right and left. 
A thin vertical lamella the internasal septum. 
Oegenbawr, Conip. Anat (trans. \ p. 648. 
internation (in-ter-na'shon). . [< Sp. interna- 
cion ; as intern + -ation.] " The act of interning ; 
internment. 
Importations and intimations which are made from the 
1st of April to the date on which this ordinance takes ef- 
fect, through the frontier custom-house of Paso del Norte, 
shall be subjected to the provisions in the tariff laws of 
November 8, 1880. U. S. Cons. Sep. , No. 53} (1886X p. 282. 
international (in-ter-nash'on-al), a. and n, [= 
F. international = Sp. Pg. in ternacional = It. in- 
ternariona/e(allafterE.); as inter- + national.] 
1. a. 1. Pertaining to or mutually affecting two 
or more nations ; concerning different nations 
in common: as, an international exhibition; in- 
ternational law; international relations. 
With regard to the political quality of the persons whose 
conduct is the object of the law. These may, on any given 
occasion, be considered either as members of the same 
state, or as members of different states : in the flrst case, 
the law may be referred to the head of Internal, in the 
second case, to that of international jurisprudence. . . . 
The word internatinnal, it must be acknowledged. Is a new 
one ; though, It is hoped, sufficiently analogous and intel- 
ligible. It is calculated to express, in a more significant 
way, the branch of law which goes commonly under the 
name of the law of nations : an appellation so uncharac- 
teristic that, were It not for the force of custom, it would 
seem rather to refer to internal jurisprudence. The chan- 
cellor D'Aguesseau has already made, I find, a similar re- 
mark : he says that what is commonly called druit des 
gens ought rather to be termed drolt entre les gens. 
Betitham, In trod, to Principles of Morals, xvli. 25, note. 
2. [cap.] Of or pertaining to the society called 
the International. 
The essence of the Internatinnal movement was a fed- 
eral association, a combination of movements In part al- 
ready begun, with the social end in view of raising the 
operatives up over against the employers and capitalists. 
Wooltey, Communism and Socialism, p. 138. 
International alphabet. See Morse alphabet, under al- 
phabet. International copyright. See copyright. in- 
ternational embargo. Seeemoargn, l. Internation- 
al law, the law of nations ; those maxims or rules which 
independent political societies or states observe, or ought 
to observe, In their conduct toward one another; "the 
system of rules which regulates the Intercourse and de- 
termines the rights and obligations of sovereign states " 
(Minor). More specifically. International law is the ag- 
gregate of the rules which Christian states acknowledge 
as obligatory In their relations to each other's subjects. 
The rules also which they unite to Impose on their sub- 
jects, respectively, for the treatment of one another, are 
included here, as being in the end rules of action for the 
states themselves. 
The classical expression for international law is Jus Fe- 
ciale, or the law of negotiation and diplomacy. 
Maine, Ancient Law, p. 53. 
International laic, as we have viewed it. is a system of 
rules adopted b> the free choice of certain nations for the 
