pantellerite 
pantellerite (pan-teiv-nt), . |< 
, see del.) + -i'fc2.] The name Riven liy r'ii 
nrr (o a rock occurring on the islmid of 1'iin- 
telleria, between Sicily am! Tunis. It i8 in- 
termediate in composition between ilucitc and 
liparite, mid more or less trachytic in char- 
acter. H/111-lllllll.Tll. 
panter 1 (pan'ter), ii. [< piinti + -rrl.] One 
wlio pants. Ciiiii/ri-rc. 
panter'-'t ( pan'ter), n. [Also )i<iinl< r; < ME. ji'in- 
/<i-, iiiiiitirr, /iiiiinlrr, < OK. iMiiitit-iT, jHiiitlin-n . 
F. piiiitii-i-i , a draw-net, = It. )i>iti-ru, < L. JHIH- 
tln-r, a hunting-net, < Or. iravOr/pa, a huntin(r- 
net, < n-of (irav-), all, + Ih/pav, hunt, < llf/p, ani- 
mal.] A net; snare; trap. 
The tmialc foules, of the seson fayn, 
Ttmt of the panter and the nette ben scaped. 
Chaucer, (lood Women, 1. 181. 
panter't (pan'ter), . [ME. also pa>nl<r, iiniii- 
li r : < OF. panetier = Sp. panrtcro = It. panal- 
liir<;< Ml/. />itnc,tariut<,panitarius,one in charge 
of the pantry, < paneta, one who makes bread, 
a baker, < L. panis, broad : see pain'*. Of. jinn l- 
li r. jxintry, pannier*.] A keeper of the pant ry . 
If thou l>e admitted In any offyce, as Butler or Fattier 
In sonic places they are lx>th one. 
Habmi Coot (E. E. T. 8.X p. 66. 
panter't, An obsolete variant of panther. 
Compare painter^. 
panterert (pan't6r-er), . [ME., < pnntcr 3 + 
-cc 1 .] Same as /mn/i !''. 
"Panterer yclio the prey," quod the kyns. 
Chron. VUoduu.. p. 15. (llaUiuxU.) 
pantesst (pan'tes), . See pantos. 
pantheism (pan'the-izm), n. [= F. panthcisnie 
= Sp. /Hiiili'i.tmo = Pg. pantheismn = It. pinitr- 
iniHii, < NL. "pantheimnus, < Or. viif (irav-), all, 
-I- ft o{-, God: see theism.'] If. The worship of 
all the gods. 2. The metaphysical doctrine 
that God is the only substance, of which the 
material universe and man are only manifes- 
tations. It is accompanied with a denial of God's per- 
sonality. Pantheism is essentially unchristian ; and the 
<n 'I implies rather the reprobation of the speaker than 
any very definite opinion. 
pantheist (pan'the-ist), n. [= F. pantheists = 
Sp. /iiin/fi-stn = Pg. panthcista = It. panteixta, 
< NL. 'panthcista, < Gr. rrof (irav-), all, + Prof, 
God: see thcist.] One who holds the doctrine 
of pantheism ; one who believes that God and 
the universe are identical. 
He [John Toland] printed a Latin Tract, Infilled "Pan- 
theistlcon : sive Formula celehrandac Sodalitatis Socrati- 
ceo." . . . That Formula ... is written by way of Dia- 
logue between the President of a Philosophical Society 
and the Members of it. ... These Philosophers ... are 
Pantheists, and consequently acknowledge no other God 
than the Universe. 
Hff oj Toland (1722), prefixed to his Mlso. Works 
[(J. Whiston, London, 1747). 
pantheistic (pan-the-is'tik), a. [= F. panthc- 
istique ; as pantheist + -'c.] 1. Of or pertaining 
to pantheism ; identifying or having a tendency 
to identify God with the universe. 2. Relat- 
ing to all the gods.- Pantheistic statues or figures, 
in sculp., statues which hear the united symbols of several 
deities. 
pantheistical (pan-the-is'ti-kal), o. [(panthe- 
ist ! /r + -n L] Same as pantheistic. 
pantheistically (pan-the-is'ti-kal-i), adv. In 
the manner of thinking, or from the point of 
view, of a pantheist. 
pantheologist (pan-the-ol'o-jist), n. |X pan- 
tlienloi/-;/ + -int.'] One who is versed in pan- 
theology. 
pantheology (pan-the-ol'o-ji), n. [= Sp. pan- 
teoloffla = Pg. panthcologia = It. panteologia, < 
Gr. ffof (irav-), all, + deatoyia, theology: see 
llii'tiliH/i/.] A system of theology comprehend- 
ing all religions and a knowledge of all dei- 
ties. 
pantheon (pan'the-on), n. [= F. pantlimn = 
Sp. panteon = Pg.' pantheon = It. panteoa, < L. 
IHintheoii, < Gr. irdvOttov, a temple consecrated 
to all gods, neut. of irdi&iof, common to all 
gods, < iraf (irav-), all, + flt/of, divine, < 6e6f, a 
god.] 1. A temple or shrine dedicated to all 
the gods. The name is specifically applied to a mag- 
nlflccnt Imililing erected at Koine by Agrippa, about 25 
n. c.. in connection with public baths, and dedicated by 
himself as a temple of all the gods, because of its beauty. 
For nearly thirteen centuries it has served as a Christian 
church, having been dedicated about 607 by Boniface IV. 
to the Virgin Mary and all the martyrs. It is now known 
as Santa Maria delta Rotonda, from its circular plan. Its 
external diameter is 188 feet, and It is covered l>v a bcini 
spherical dome 142 feet ,6 inches in span, the entire 
height being about 141 feet. It is lighted by a circular 
oiiiicc. -jr> fret in diameter, at the summit <'f ttic dome. 
It has in front a noble octastyle portico of Corinthian col- 
minis 103 feet wide. See cut in next column, ;iml cut 
Mild 
/I 
pantler 
panther-WOOd (pHii'llier-wi'ul;. //. See ritrnu- 
ini-iil. 
Pantholops (pan'lho lops), ii. [XI.,.. irreg. < 
C,r.~ni (-in 1 -), all, -f- l.i Jr. "/c,,/,,^ theanteliipe: 
Bee antclnjie.J A genus of antelopes, of which 
a species, the chiru. /'. li<t<li/.-<nii, occurs in 
northern India. 
pantiblet, . Same as pan tnhli. 
pantile (pan'til), . and a. [Also penlilf ; < 
/>' (!) + till ".] I. n. 1. A tile with a curved 
surface, convex or concave with reference to 
its width, such tlle are laid, in covering a roof, tht 
the longitudinal junction of two rows of tiles placed with 
the concave face outward is covered by a row placed with 
the convex face up. 
The I'lay House at Dorset Stairs Is now pulling down, 
where there Is to be (old old Timber tit for liiiildini; <>r 
Repairs, Old Boards. Bricks, Ulaso'd I'nnlilrt and I hnii 
Tiles, also Kire Wood, at very reasonable rate*. 
Quoted In Athlon i Social Life In Kelgn of (juecn Anne.II. 4. 
2. A form of tile practically combining two of 
the original fonn, so shaped that its cross-sec- 
) 
I'l.tn >( the I'.intho.n <.f At'tipp.!. now the Church of Sta. Maria i*2lU 
Kotonda, Rome. (Adapted from Durand and Baumeister.) 
A, the rotunda : ft, the portico. (The light shaded parts represent 
existing foundations of other parts of the ancient baths.) 
2. All the. divinities, collectively, worshiped 
by a people : as, one of the divinities of the 
< i reek pantheon. 
One temple of pantheon that is to say, all goddca. 
J. Udall, On Rev. xvl. 
3. [cap.] A work treating of the whole body of 
divinities of a people: as, Tooke's "Pantheon." 
4. [cap.] A memorial structure in honor of 
the great men of a people, or tilling some such 
purpose : especially, such a building serving as 
a mausoleum, as the Pantheon (church of Ste. 
Genevieve) in Paris. Westminster Abbey is 
often called the Pantheon of the British. 
panther (pan'th6r), n. [< ME. panter, pantere, 
< OF. panterc, panthcrc, V.panthere = Sp. pan- 
tera = Pg. panthera = It. pantera, < L. pan- 
thera, panther, < Gr. iravOqp, a panther; ulterior 
origin unknown. The apparent formation in 
Gr. ; < Trof (irav-), all, -I- Or/p, beast, gave rise to 
various fancies about the animal.] 1. A leop- 
ard. See also cut under leopard. 
Black Panther (a variety of Felts 
The spotted Panther, and the tusked Bore, 
The Pardale swift. Speraer, F. Q., I. vi. 26. 
Tall dark pines, . . . from beneath 
Whose thick mysterious boughs In the dark morn 
The panther't roar came muffled. Tennyson, (Enone. 
2. The American cougar or puma, Felts concol- 
or. See cut under cougar. Also called painter. 
[U. 8.] 
pantheress (pan'ther-es), n. [< panther + 
-<.] A female leopard or panther. 
As a last resource, he may decline to lead the untamed 
pantherett to the altar. Saturday Rev., Jan. 18, 1868. 
pantherine (pan'ther-in), a. [= F. pantherin, 
< L. pantherinus, of a panther, < panthera, a 
panther: see panther.] Resembling a panther, 
as in coloration ; pan! i tie : as, the pantherine 
snake. 
panther-lily (pau'ther-lil'i), . See lily, 1. 
panther-moth (pan'ther-moth), n. A Euro- 
pean geometrid, Cidaria unangtilata: an Eng- 
lish collectors' name. 
tion is a double curve, and so laid that the part 
of every tile that is convex upward overlaps 
the part of the next tile that is concave up- 
ward. 
In this form of so-called nan-tile each tile has a double 
curve, forming a tegula and imbrex ttoth in one. 
Kneyc. Brit., XXIII. 388. 
II. . I < pantile, n. Dissenting chapels are 
said to have been often roofed with pantiles.] 
Dissenting. 
Mr. Ti. knp 's a good churchman, mark that ! He is 
none of your occasional cattle, none of your hellish pan- 
tile crew. Mrs. CenOinre, Ootham Election, I. 
pantile-lath (pan'til-lath), n. A form of lath 
used in London, 1J inch wide and 1 inch thick, 
sold in bundles of 12. 
The smaller ones |mckct-stlcks| are easily and best made 
of those laths called by bricklayers double laths, and the 
larger ones pantile laths. 
Workshop Receipts, 1st scr., p. 127. 
pantile-shop (pan 'til-shop), n. A meeting- 
house. Halliwell. [Prov. Eng.] 
pantiling (pan'ti-ling), n. [< pantile + -1113'.] 
Tiling, or a system of tiling, in which pantiles 
are used. 
Pantiling Is bat little more than half the weight of 
plain tiling. /:.//,-. lint.. IV. 463. 
pantingly (pan'ting-li), uilr. In a panting 
manner; with gasping or rapid breathing. 
Once or twice she heaved the name of " father " 
Pantingly forth, as if It press'd her heart. 
Shalt., Lear, Iv. a 28. 
pantisocracy (pan-ti-sok'ra-si), H. [< Gr. vaf 
(irav-), all, -r laof, equal, + Kpartiv, rule.] 1. A 
Utopian community in which all the members 
are equal in rank and social position. 2. The 
principle of such a scheme or community. This 
scheme was advocated by Southey, Coleridge, 
and Lovell about 1794. 
All are not moralists, like Southey, when 
He prated to the world of Pantunmvn/. 
Byron, Don Juan, ill. 93. 
It was all a poet's dream, hardly more substantial, 
though more exertions were used to realize It, than the 
dream entertained by Coleridge, Southey, and Lovell, of 
establishing pantisoeraey on the banks of the Susque- 
hanna. Quarterly Ker. 
pantisocrat (pan-ti'so-krat), n. [< Gr. iraf 
(iravr-), all, +l<TOf , equal, + upareiv, rule.] Same 
as pantixocratist. South'-;/. 
pantisocratic (pan-ti-Ro-krat'ik), a. 
socrat + -ic.] Of or pertaining to pantisoc- 
racy: as, a i>antisocratic scheme. 
pantisocratist (pan-ti-sok'ra-tist), 11. [< pan- 
tisnerat + -i.s/.] One who accepts or favors the 
principle of pantisocracy. Maeaulmj. 
pantler (pant'ler), . [<ME. pantlcre.pantelcre; 
an altered form of pantere, E. panter^, prob. 
in terminal simulation of butler: see panter.] 
An officer in a great family who has charge of 
the bread; in general, a servant who has care 
of the pantry. 
A good shallow young fellow : a' would have made a 
good vatMcr, a' would ha' chipped bread well. 
Shalt., 2 Hen. IV, II. 4. 258. 
Thomas Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, to bear the third 
Sword before the King ; and also to exercise the Office of 
Pantler. Batrr, Chronicles, p. 136. 
