156 I N T 
INTAN'GLEMENT, / See Entanglement. 
INTAN'GLING, / The aft of embarrafling ; of con¬ 
fining in a net. 
IMTA'STABLE, adj. Not raifing any fenfations in the 
organs of tafte. A word not elegant, nor uj'td. —Something 
which is invifible, intajlable, and intangible, as exifting 
only in the fancy, .may produce a pleafure fuperior to that 
of fenfe. Grew. 
INTAWA', a town of Hindooftan, in Eundelcund : 
fifteen miles eaft of Pannah. 
IN'TC'HEN-OUET, a town of Chinefe Tartary : 230 
miles eaft-north-eaft of Pekin. Lat. 4.1. 23. N. Ion. 127. 
si. E. 
IN'TEGER, J. [Latin.] The whole of any thing.— As 
not only fignified a piece of money, but any integer ; from 
whence is derived the word ace, or unit. Air but knot, 
INTEGRAL, adj. [integral, Fr. integer, Lat.] Whole: 
applied to a thing considered as comprifing. all its confti- 
iuent parts.—A local motion keepeth bodies integral, and 
their parts together. Bacon. —Uninjured ; complete ; not 
defeftive.—No wonder if one remain fpeechlefs, though 
of integral principles, who, from an infant, fliould be bred 
up among!! mutes, and have no teaching. Holder.— Not 
fraftional; not broken into fraftions. 
IN'TEGRAL, f The whole made up of parts.—A 
mathematical whole is better called integral, when the fe- 
veral parts, which make up the whole are diftinft, and 
each may fubflft apart. Watts. 
Integral Calculus, in the new analyfis, is the re¬ 
verie of the differential calcidus, and is the finding the 
integral from a given differential; being fimilar to the in- 
•ver'fe method of fluxions, or the finding the fluent to a 
given fluxion. See the article Algebra, vol. i. p. 314. 
and Fluxions, vol, vii. 
INTEGRANT, adj. Necdfary for making up an inte¬ 
ger. — A true natural ariftocraey is not a feparate intereft 
in the ftate, or feparable from it. It is an elfential inte¬ 
grant part of any large people rightly conftituted. Burke. 
—A term applied to parts of bodies which are of a fimi¬ 
lar nature with the whole : thus filings of iron have the 
fame nature and properties as bars of iron.—Bodies may 
be reduced into their integrant parts by triture or grind¬ 
ing, limatioii or filing, folution, amalgamation, &c. Ency. 
Brit. 
To INTEGRATE, v. a. [from integer.] To make 
whole ; to rellore to its former Hate. 
INTEGRATION, /. The aft of making whole; a re- 
iloration. 4 
INTEGRITY, f. [integrity, Fr. integritas, from integer, 
Lat.] Honefty ; uncorrupt rnind ; purity of manners; 
uncorrupfednefs.—The libertine, inftead of attempting to 
,corrupt our integrity, will conceal and dilguife his own 
vices. .Rogers. 
Your dilhonour 
Mangles true judgment, and bereaves the ftate 
■Of that integrity which fliould become it. Skakefpeare. 
Purity; genuine unadulterate ftate.—Language continued 
long in its purity and integrity. Hale. —Intirenefs; un¬ 
broken ; whole.—Take away this transformation, and 
there is no chafm, nor can it affeft the integrity of the 
aftion. Broome. 
INTEG'UMENT, / [ integumentum, from hit ego, Lat. ] 
Any thing that covers or invelops another.—He could no 
more live without his frize coat than without his fkin : it 
is not indeed fo properly his coat, as what the anatomifts 
call one of the integuments of the body. Addifon. 
INTELLECT, f. [Fr. from intellcEius, Lat ] The in¬ 
telligent mind ; the power of underftanding.—All thofe 
arts, rarities, and inventions, which vulgar minds gaze at, 
and the ingenious purfue, are but the reiiques of an intel- 
icEl defaced with fin and time. South. 
All heart they live, all head, all eye, all ear. 
All intelleEl, all fenfe. Milton. 
INTELLECTION, f. [Fr. from in telle Bio, Lat.] The 
I N T 
aft of underftanding.—Simple apprehenfion denotes the 
foul’s naked intelleElion of an objeft, without either com. 
pofition or deduftion. Glanville. 
INTELLECTIVE, adj. [intelleElif, Fr. from intelleEl. ] 
Having power to underftand.—If a man as intellcEiive be 
created, then either he means the whole man, or only that 
by which he is intellcEiive. Glanville. 
INTELLECTUAL, adj. [ intellcEluel, Fr. from intellect 
lualis, low Lat.] Relating to the underftanding ; belong¬ 
ing to the mind ; tranfafted by the underftanding.—Re¬ 
ligion teaches us to prefent to God our bodies as well as 
our fouls; if the body ferves'the foul in actions natural 
and civil, and intelleElual, it mull not be eafed in the only 
offices of religion. Taylor. —Mental ; comprifing the fa¬ 
culty of underftanding ; belonging to the mind.—Logic 
is to teach us the right ufe of our reafon, or intelleElual 
powers. Waits. —Ideal; perceived by the intellect, not the 
fenfes: 
A train of phantoms in wild order rofe. 
And, join’d, this intelleElual feene compofe. Pope. 
Having the power of underftanding.—Anaxagoras and 
Plato term the Maker of the world an intelleElual worker. 
Hooker. 
Who would lofe, 
Though full of pain, this intelleElual being ? Milton. 
Propofed as the objeft not of the fenfes. but intelleft: as, 
Cudwortk names his book The intelleElual fyftetn of the uni- 
verfe. 
INTELLECTUAL,/ Intelleft; underftanding; men¬ 
tal powers or faculties. Little in ufe.— The fancies of moft, 
like ihe index of a clock, are moved but by tbe inward 
fprings of the corporeal machine, which, even on the moft 
fubiiined intelleElual, is dangeroufly influential. Glanville. 
Her hufband not nigh, 
Whofe higher intelleElual more I fhun. Milton. 
INTELLEC'TUALIST,/ One q uick of apprehenfion. 
INTELLIGENCE, or Intel'ligency, _/ [Fr. intelli- 
gentia, L at.] Commerce of information; notice; mutual 
communication ; account of things diftant or fecret.—It 
was perceived tli’ere had not been in the catholics fo much 
forefight as to provide that true intelligence might pafs be¬ 
tween them of what was done. Hooker. 
A mankind witch! hence with her, out of door! 
A moft intelligcncy bawd! Skakefpeare. 
Commerce of acquaintance ; terms on which men live one 
with another.—Faftious followers are worfe to be liked, 
which follow not upon affeftion to him with whom they 
range themfelves ; whereupon commonly enf’ueth that ill 
intelligence that we fee between great perfonages. Bacon.— 
He lived rather in a fair intelligence, than any friendfhip 
with the favourites. Clarendon. —Spirit; unbodied mind.— 
There are divers ranks of created beings intermediate be¬ 
tween the glorious God and man, as the glorious angels 
and created intelligences. Hale. 
How fully haft thou fatisfied me, pure 
Intelligence of heav’n, angel! Milton. 
Underftanding ; fkill; 
Heaps of huge words, up hoarded, hideoufly, 
They think to be chief praife of poetry; 
And thereby, wanting due intelligence, 
Have marr’d the face of goodly poefie. Spenfer. 
INTELLIGENCER, Jj. One who fends or conveys 
news; one who gives notice of private or diftant tranf- 
aftions; one who carries meflages between parties.—His 
eyes, being his diligent intelligencers, could carry unto him 
no other news but difcomfortable. Sidney. 
How deep you were within the books of heav’n! 
To us, th’ imagin’d voice of heav’n itlelf; 
The very opener and intelligencer 
Between the grace and fanftities of heav’n 
And our dull working. Skakefpeare. 
INTEL'LIGENCING. 
