Chapter 5 of 9 · 208 words · ~1 min read

I.

_Idol_, 390. Ειδωλον, similitude.

_Illuded_, 69. Cozened, deceived.

_Impugnable_, 492. Not able to be imposed. This ——able form not in our dictionaries.

_Incestuous_, 124. In Latinate sense, full of pollution.

_Indifferent_ (freq.). Impartial.

_Infirnalles_, 426. Used as _s._

_Insensible_, 216. Without sense or meaning.

_Intend_, 430. Attend.

_Intermedled_, 490. Intermingled.

_Intricate_, Entangle.

_Inversed_, 316. Qy., inverted or turned upside down. But several of these terms I cannot explain.

_Irremissable_, 70. Not able to be sent away, remitted or forgiven.

J.

_Jamme_ (of a window), 91. The jamb, supporter, or side-post of, here, a window.

_Jetting, a_, 265. Jet, to fling, strut, etc., from the Fr. _jeter_, and though I have not found a similar phrase, it seems here used in the sense of having a fling, or a spree.

_John, Sir_, 265. Cf. note.

_Jollie_, 197, 273. We find its use in Scot, explaining, as it were, how the French _joli_, pretty, became our jolly, as in the phrase, “a pretty fellow”. Sometimes, as in the last phrase, it seems to have a somewhat lowering sense. In 273 he seems called jollie because he drank.

_Jumpe with_, 492. Equally or exactly with.

_Jurat_, 258. One sworn to administer justice, a magistrate or sheriff.

K.

_Knable_, 346. To nibble.