5‘3 I N H 
To INHER'SE, v. a. To inclofe in a funeral monu¬ 
ment : 
See where he lies, inherfed in the arms 
Of the inofl bloody nurfer of his harms, Shakejpeare. 
INHER’SING, f. The aft of putting into a herfe, 
INIIE'SION, f. [inktejio, Lat.] Inherence; the Hate of 
exiting in fomething elfe. 
To INHIBIT, v. a. [ inhibco , Lat.] To reftrain; to hin¬ 
der; to reprefs ; to check.—The ftars and planets, being 
whirled about with great velocity, would fuddenly, did 
nothing inhibit it, be fhattered in pieces. Roy. —To pro¬ 
hibit; to forbid.—Burial may net be inhibited or denied 
to any one. Ayliffe. 
' INHIBITING, f The aft of reftraining. 
INHIBITION, f. [from inhibitio, Lat.] Prohibition; 
embargo.-—He might be judged to have impofed an envi¬ 
ous inhibition on it, becaufe himfelf has not ltock enough 
to nufintain the trade. Government of the Tongue .— In law, 
a writ to inhibit or forbid a judge from farther proceed¬ 
ing in the caufe depending before him.— Inhibition is molt 
commonly a writ ilfuing out of a higher court cliriftian 
to a lower and inferior, upon an appeal; and prohibition 
out of the king’s court to a court cliriftian, or to an infe¬ 
rior temporal court. Cozvcl. See Prohibition. 
INHOC', or Inhok'e, f. [from in, within, and hokc, a 
corner or nook.] Any corner or part of a common field 
ploughed up and lowed with oats, &c. and fometimes 
fenced in with a dry hedge, in that year wherein the reft 
of the fame held lies fallow and common. It is called in 
the north of England an intock, and in Oxfordshire a hit- 
chin ; and no fuch inhoke js now made without the joint 
confent of all the commoners, who in moft places have 
their ftiare by lot in the benefit of it, except in fome ma¬ 
nors, where the lord has a fpecial privilege of fo doing. 
\Rennett's Pharoch. Antiq. 297. 
To INHO'LD, v. a. To have inherentto contain in it- 
felf.—It is difputed, whether this light firft created be 
the fame which the fun inholdeth and calieth forth, or whe¬ 
ther it Lad continuance any longer than till the fun’s 
creation. Raleigh. 
INHOLD'ER, f. Inhabitant : 
As if ye pleafe it into parts divide ; 
And every part’s inholders to convent. 
Shall to your eyes appeare incontinent. Spenfer. 
INHONESTA'TION, f. [from in, Lat. contrary to, 
and honejlus, honeft.j The aft of difgracing. Not ujed. 
Scott. 
To INHOO'P, v.^t. To confine in an enclofure.—His 
quails ever beat mine, inhooped, at odds. Shakefpearc. 
INHOSTITABLE, adj. Affording no kindnefs or en¬ 
tertainment to Arrangers.: 
All places elfe 
liihojpitable appear, and defolate; 
Nor knowing us, nor known. Milton. 
■ INHOS'PITABLENESS, f. _ [from inkofpitable .] The 
ftate or quality of being inhofpitable. 
rINHOS'PITABLY, adv. Unkindly to Arrangers: 
Of guefts he makes them flaves 
Jnhq/pitably ; and kills their infant males. Milton. 
I^HOSPITAL'ITY, /. Want of hofpitality; want of 
courtefy to Arrangers.—This noife againft the Jevv-bill 
proceeds from that narrow mob-fpirit of intoleration in 
religious, and in'hofpitality in civil, matters. Chejlerjield. 
INHU'MAN, adj. [ inhumain , Fr. inhumanus, Lat.] Bar¬ 
barous; favage ; cruel; uncompaffionate.—A juft war may 
be profecuted after a very unjuft manner; by perfidious 
breaches of our word, by inhuman cruelties, and by aflaf- 
flnations. Atterbury. 
Princes and peers, attend ! while we impart 
To you the thoughts of no inhuman heart. Pope. 
INHUMA'NE, adj. Void of tendernefs, unkind. 
jLNHUMAN'ITYj f. [ inhumanity , Fr. from inhuman.’] 
I N J 
Cruelty; favagenefs; barbarity.—The rudenefs of thole 
who rauft make up their want of juftice with inhumanity 
and imprudence. King Charles. 
Each focial feeling fell, 
And joylefs inhumanity pervades. 
And petrifies the heart. Thomfon . 
INHU'MANLY, adv. Savagely; cruelly; barbaroufly- 
—I, who have eftablifhed the whole fyftem of all true po- 
litenefs and refinement in converfation, think myfelf moft 
inhumanly treated by my countrymen. Swift. 
O what are thefe ? 
Death’s minifter, not men : who thus deal death 
Inhumanly to men ; and multiply 
Ten thoufand fold the fin of him who flew 
His brother ! Milton . 
INHU'MANNESS, f Inhumanity. Scott. 
To INHU'MATE, v. a. [from in, Lat. into, and humus , 
the ground.] To put into the ground ; to bury. 
INHUMA'TION, f. [from inhumate.] The aft of put¬ 
ting into the ground; an interment. In chemiftry, a me¬ 
thod of digelting fubftances, by burying the veffel in 
which they are contained in horledung or earth. 
To INHU'ME, v. a. [ inhumcr , Fr. inhuvio, Lat.] To bu¬ 
ry ; to inter: 
Weeping they bear the mangled heaps of fiain. 
Inhume the natives in their native plain. Pope, 
INHU'MING, f. The aft of putting into the ground. 
IN'IA, a river of Ruftia, which runs into the Oby 
fifty miles north-eaft of Kofivan. 
IN'IA, a river of Ruftia, which runs into the Lena in 
lat. 55. 20. N. Ion. 116.14-. E. 
INJAM'BI, or Tie'te, a river of Brafil, which runs 
into the Parana, 180 miles north-weft of St. Paul, on the 
borders of Paraguay. 
INIA'RA, a town of Ruftia, in the government of 
Penza : forty-eight miles weft of Penza. 
To INJECT', v. a. \_inje 6 lus, Lat.] To throw in; to 
dart in.—Angels injeSt thoughts into our minds, and 
know our cogitations. Glanville. —To throw up ; to call 
UP : 
Though bold in open field, they yet furround 
The town with walls, and mound injecl on mound. Pope. 
INJECT'ING, f. The aft of throwing in. 
INJEC'TION, f. \injeftion, Fr. injettio, Lat.] The aft 
of cafting in.—This lalt powdered was, by the repeated 
injc&ion of well-kindled charcoal, made to flafti like melted 
nitre. Boyle. —A medicine made to be injefted by a fy- 
ringe, or any other inftrument, into any part of the body. 
When injeftions are ufed for gleets or gonorrhoeas, Dr. 
Swediar advifes that the fyringe fhould have a ftiort but 
wide pipe, fo large that its orifice may enter the urethra, 
and the pillon be clofe to its fides. If the whole pipe of 
the fyringe be much fmaller than the orifice of the ure¬ 
thra, it may rvound the infide of the canal, and admit the 
poifon by abforption; or the liquid may run out fideways, 
inllead of paffmg into the urethra. If the pifton itfelf does 
not apply clofely to the fides of the fyringe, even if the 
pipe is fufficiently large, fo that it perfeftly doles the 
orifice of the urethra, the liquor will ftill regurgitate be¬ 
tween the pifton and the fyringe, and very little of the 
fluid will pafs. The fyringe, being properly made, fhould 
be applied clofely and exaftly to the orifice of the ure¬ 
thra ; fo that, by the conic form of its pipe, all paffage 
may be denied to the liquid betwixt it and the fides of 
the urethra. The liquid fhould always, in cafes of viru¬ 
lent gonorrhoea, be lukewarm ; but, in gleets, cold. In 
gonorrhoeas, if the liquid is too cold or too warm, it is 
fuppofed likely to hurt the patient, either by the retro- 
pullion of the matter, or increafing the inflammation. In 
all cafes, before an injeftion is applied, the patient fhould 
attempt to make water. There are a variety of injedlions 
made ufe of in this complaint, according to the character 
of the difeafe; but in moft cafes the application fliould 
