*i$ i A P P 
APPF.LLE'R,/. One who is appealed againft, and ac - 
ctlfed. 
To APPE'ND, v.a. [ appendo , Lat. to hang to any thing.] 
To hang any tiling upon another ; as, The infcription Was 
appended, to the column : the feal is appended to the record. 
To add to fomething, as an acceflory, not a principal part. 
APPEN'DAGE, J. [French.] S.Ohiethibg added to 
Another thing, without being neceffary to its ellenee, as A 
portico to the houfe.—Modefty is the appendage of fdbrifety, 
and is to chaftity, to temperance* and to humility, as tlie 
fringes aVe ro a garment. Taylor. 
APPEN'D ANT, adj. [French.] Hanging to fomething 
'elfe. Belonging to ; annexed ; concomitant.—Riches mul¬ 
tiplied beyond the proportion of our cl lu rafter, and the 
w ants appenda.nl to it, naturally difpofe men to forget God. 
Rogers. 
Append ant, f. That Which belongs to another thing-, 
as an accidental or adventitious part.;—A word, a look, a 
tread, will (trike, as they are appendants to external fym- 
inetry, or indications of the beauty of the mind. Greet). 
Appendant, [from apptndcns , Lat.] inlaw, is a thing 
of inheritance belonging to another that is more worthy. 
As an advowfon may be appendant to a manor, land ap¬ 
pendant to an office, a feat in a church appendant to an 
Iioiife. i Injl. in. So there is common appendant; 
which differs from common appurtenant. Common ap¬ 
pendant is a right belonging to the owners or occupiers 
of arable land, to put commonable beads upon the lord’s 
wade, and upon the lands of other perfons within the 
fame manor. Common appurtenant arifes from no con¬ 
nexion of tenure, but may be annexed to lands in other 
lordffiips, or extended to other beads befides inch as are 
f merally commonable, as to hogs, goats, and the like. 2 
'ackjl. 33. If a thing appendant to another be granted 
by itfelf, without the thing to which it is appendant, the 
appendancy is dedroyed, and that which was appendant is 
become in grofs : as if an advowfon appendant be granted 
without the manor to which it is appendant ; or the ma¬ 
nor be granted, faving the advowfon. 
To APPEN'DICATE, v. a. [from appendo , Lat.] To 
add to another thing.—In a palace there is the cafe or fa¬ 
bric of the firufture, and there are certain additaments ; 
as, various furniture, and curious motions of divers things 
appe.ndicalcd to it. Hale. 
APPENDICA'TION, yi Adjunct; appendage; an¬ 
nexion.—There are confiderable parts and integrals, and 
appcndications, unto the munaus afpectabilis, impodible to 
be eternal. Hale. 
APPENDI'TIA, in law, the appendages or pertinen¬ 
cies of an edate. Hence lhe word pentkoufe, for the ap¬ 
pendage of an houfe. 
APPEN'DIX, f. [appendices , plur. Lat.] Something 
appended or added to another thing.—Normandy became 
an appendix to England, the nobler dominion, and received 
,a greater conformity of their laws to the Englidi, than they 
gave to it. Hale. An adjunct or concomitant.—All con¬ 
current appendices of the aftion ought to be Jurveyed, in 
order to pronounce with truth concerning it. Watts. 
To APPERTA'IN, v. n. [appartenir , Fr.] To belong 
to as of right: with to. —The honour of deviling this doc¬ 
trine, that religion ought to be inforced by the fword, 
would be found appertaining to Mahomed the falfe pro¬ 
phet. Raleigh. 
The Father, /’ whom in heav’n fupreme 
Kingdom, and power, and glory, appertains , 
Hath honour’d me, according to his will. Milton. 
To belong to by nature or appointment.—If the foul of man 
did ferve only to give him being in this life, then things 
appertaining to this life would content him, as we fee'they 
«o other creatures. Hooker. 
APPERTAIN'MENTjA That which belongs to any 
rank or dignity. 
A-P PE-R'TENANCF,,/! [ appartenance Fr.] Thattvhich 
belongs or relates to another thing.—'Can they which be- 
i 
A P P 
hold the eontroverfy of divinity condemn our enquiries 
in the doubtful ap per tenancies of arts, and receptaries of 
phiiofophy. Brown. 
APPER' IINENT, adj. Belonging; relating. 
\ on know how apt our love was to accord 
To tnrnilh him with all appertinents 
Belonging to his honour. Shakefpeare. 
AP'PETENCE, or Ap'petency, f Xappelentia , Lat.l 
•Carnal defire ; fenfual appetite. 
Bred only and completed to the tafle 
Oi luftfui appet:nce ; to ling or dance, 
To drefs, to troule the tongue, and roll the eye. Milton. 
APPP. 1 ! BI'LIT y , f. The quality of being defirable. 
— t n-at elicitation which the fchools intend, isTi deducing 
of the power of die will into aft, merely from the appeti- 
bility o f the objeft, as a man draws a child after him with 
the fight of a green bough. Bramhall. 
AP'PETIBLE, adj. [appetibilis, Lat.] Defirable; that 
which may be the object of appetite.—Power botli to flight 
the molt appetible objefts, and to controul the molt un¬ 
ruly paffions. Bramhall. 
APPEN'SA, amulets, or things hanging about the 
necks of di leafed perfons, to free them from Tome diltem- 
per, as a dried toad to flop bleeding, &c. 
AP'PETITE, f. [appetitus , Lat.] The natural deflre 
of good; the inftinft by which we are led to feek plealure. 
—The will properly and (triftly taken, as it is of things 
which are referred unto the end that man delireth, differ - 
eth greatly from that inferior natural defire which we call 
appetite. The objeft of appetite is vvhatfoever fenfible good 
may be wifhed for : the objeft of will is that good Which 
reafon does lead us to leek. Hooker. The deflre of fenfual 
plealure: 
Why, ffie would hang on him, 
As if increafe of appetite had grown 
By what it fed on. Shakefpeare. 
Violent longing; eagernefs after any thing.—Hopton had 
an extraordinary appetite to engage Waller in a battle. Cla¬ 
rendon. The thing eagerly delired.—Power being the na¬ 
tural appetite of princes, a limited monarch cannot gratify it. 
Swift. Keenefsofftomach ; hunger; deflre of food.—There 
be four principal caufes of appetite ; the refrigeration of 
the ftomach, joined with fome drynefs : contraction ; vel- 
lication, and abiterlion ; befides hunger, which is an emp- 
tinefs. Bacon. It has fometimes of before the objeft of 
deflre.-—The new officer’s nature needed fome refiraint to 
his immoderate appetite of power. Clarendon. Sometimes 
to.— We have generally fuch an appetite to praife, that we 
greedily fuck it in. 
Appetites are paffions direfted to general objefts, in 
contradiftinction to paflions direfted to particular objeft', 
which retain their proper name. Thus we fay, an appe¬ 
tite for fame, for glory, for conqueft, for riches ; but we 
fay the pafficn of love, of gratitude, of envy, &c. Ap¬ 
petite may be alfo diftinguifhed from paffion, lince the 
latter has no exiftence till a proper objeft be prefented : 
whereas the former exilts firft, and then is direfted to an 
objeft. “ A good appetite needs no fauce.” Fr. A bon 
appetit il ne faut point de fauce. The Latins fay, Optimum 
cibi condimcntum fames. The Germans, Hunger ifl de vre¬ 
lief loch. [Hunger is the belt fauce or cook.) The mean¬ 
ing is, that a good appetite makes our food go down more 
favourily than the belt fauces without it, and, where the 
former is, the latter ought to be avoided, as very deltruc- 
tive to our conflitution. 
APPETPTION,/. [appetitio, Lat.] Deflre.—We find 
in animals an eftimative or judicial faculty, and appetitien 
or averfation. Hale. 
AP'PETITIVE, adj. [ from appetite. ] That which de¬ 
fires ; that which has the quality of defiring.—The will is 
not a bare dpbetitive power, as that of the fenfual appetite, 
hut rt a rational appetite. Hale. 
APTIA 
