"FISA-gate, Russian Collusion, and the KGB Infiltration into America’s Political Ecosystem Allan M. Coleman February 8, 2018, ISRAEL RISING, at,
Mr. Coleman, you probably do not know these connections, very few if any Americans do, or as to often the case, the facts and evidence are under so many eligibility requirements man-serving-man, supreme to God and their fellow-country-persons who often do recognize abolishment of Truth, Trust, and Promise much better than any 'leader':
Putin is Russian Orthodox - a soldier for Papal Authority.
Thus, Papal Authority-UN-UDHR which even Israel, among all nations of the world, has fallen to #3of3 spirit of devil trinity top of the highest mountain & all kingdoms thereof..land, H2O, atoms of atmosphere life, living & inanimate objects, 06/1992 Rio de Janeiro Agenda 21; 'underlings' in groups by their physical and environmental characteristics, as well as, Arts. 29 in 19 Opinion is never certain, always doubt--, Matt. 12's "scatter", with Probability of Truth directly dependent upon whose 'tongue-is-wagging' in this case, zero, ---"without interference regardless frontier of all knowledge/ language and communication" & without need for Holy Spirit Truth, Trust, Promise:
2018 World Bank 5 groups lenders-of-other-illegal use of taxpayers money, untouchable-Fed. Reserve IMF included, 2018 SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS of "CO2 EMISSIONS ARE NOT THE CAUSE OF GLOBAL WARMING" *, - absolutely forbidden ORAL, COMMON LAW, OATH IN PLEDGE - TWO GREATEST COMMANDS OF ONE GOD IN THREE PERSONS, ANY THIRD PERSON WHO CHOOSES THE CHALLENGE OF HIS OWN ROLES OF LIFE TO LOVE OBEY AND FOLLOW THE FIRST PERSON IN SECOND PERSON IN FIRST PERSON, BOTH IN THIRD PERSON - TRINITY SACRED DOCUMENTS IRREFUTABLY CONNECTED BY ARTICLE VII CLAUSE 1-RATIFICATION, BUT MUCH MORE - IN GOD'S NAME - CLAUSE 2 ATTESTMENT, WITNESS, SUBSCRIBED --TWELFTH YEAR OF FULFILLMENT OF PROMISE IN DECLARATION OF A PERSON'S INDEPENDENCE, and to PREAMBLE TO BILL OF RIGHT/ TRUTH/ GOD.
Putin is 'displacement' for the Pope'S GROUP-THINK, of "If i could vote, I would vote for Hillary Clinton" & "government in exile-Never touch the legacy [of hate of underlings who choose him for Art. II] obama,and company; which of course, the current, Art. II plays mediate, arbitrate, & nearly always, judgement by hypocrisy, though he is learning why that isn't a good idea, & he does Know what an Oath contains--just not "ASSUME AMONG THE POWERS OF THE EARTH, i.e., Holy Spiit of Three Persons, the Separate and Equal Station to which...THE WHOLE OF LAWS OF NATURE AND OF NATURE'S GOD entitle each-one-person (actually from John Wycliffe whom Jefferson well knew) to his Certain, Unalienable Gifts from the Creator...
PAPAL AUTHORITY, must accomplish revenge and its power base, i.e., THE ETERNAL LIVING CHRIST Jesus walking on earth because His body's 5 senses-physiology was crucified in order to save men form their blasphemies and sins, He Had & Has been doing from the beginning, with Apocrypha, not 'hidden' Captivity, a.k.a, this very Era which started during WWI. IT WAS FORBIDDEN ANY PART IN THE FORMATION OF THE TRINITY SACRED DOCUMENTS, OF WHICH THE ONLY WHOLE, 1611 REFORMATION (Jan Haus, John Wycliffe, William Tyndale, Martin Luther's German into English, Geneva)THREE TESTAMENT HOLY BIBLE, THE ORIGINAL TEXT BIBLE TO THE TRINITY SACRED DOCUMENTS.
BTY - "A house divided..cannot stand.is Matt. 12 - Jesus on Beelzebub v. Beelzebub at,
https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/1611_Matthew-Chapter-12/ .
Pres. Lincoln did use that, but then, like everyone who 'reads the Bible', but, predetermined conclusions by absolute control-hierarchy of ecclesiastical-government-over-man, doesn't read the Bible', - never, among the North's judgement by hypocrisy pointedly against the South skin-color-slavery: -- "ANY ONE WHO SINS IS A SLAVE - Matt. 4 connected to John 8..."Abide by what I say and YOU really will be disciples of mine. YOU will UNDERSTAND "The TRUTH- THE ETERNAL LIVING CHRIST JESUS/ SECOND PERSON, THE WHOLE TRUTH-THE ETERNAL LIVING CREATOR/ FATHER/ FIRST PERSON, AND NO 'THING' BUT THE TRUTH" = THIRD PERSON accepting his very own accountability to ORAL, COMMON LAW/ OATH - HOLY SPIRIT, RELIGION AND MORALITY, FIRST AND SECOND TABLE GOVERNMENTS OF LAW AND NOT OF MAN (John Adams, "Man's Lust for Power"), Accepting the GREATEST, LIFELONG CHALLENGE, EVERY ROLE IN HIS LIFE, LIBERTY AND PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS/ BLESSEDNESS ON WORLD-DOWN-BELOW.
Proof: NOT ONE PERSON - ANY SIDE - EVER ADMITS TO EACH-ONE-PERSON'S COMPLETE FAILURE OF RELIGION AND MORALITY, is totally blind, NEVER INTENDS TO OBEY ARTs IV in VI GOD IS SUPREME LAW OF THE LAND -- BOUND BY ORAL, COMMON LAW (SEE, https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/1611_John-Chapter-17/) -- OATH IN PLEDGE = TWO GREATEST COMMONDS OF GOD UPON WHICH HANG THE WHOLE LAW & ALL, THE PROPHETS; ART. VII IN PREAMBLE TO BILL OF RIGHT/ GOD/ TRUTH -- MOST CAN READ THE WORDS, OFTEN DO NOT ATTEND THE CEREMONY OF CONVENIENCE SO THEY CAN SUSTAIN THEIR COLLECTIVE-GROUP-THINK-PARTY'S BIGGER, GOOSE-STEP NUMBER.
THAT IS THE WHOLE TRUTH OF WHAT is designed, by behind-closed-doors-stealing what belongs to another and without his consent, convey without notice, clandstendly -lie, to look LIKE,A HOUSE DIVIDED AGAINST ITSELF, BUT IN FACT IS NOT; RATHER, HOLY SPIRIT-TRUTH-TRINITY SACRED DOCUMENTS v. spirit of devil trinity- Papal Authority-UN-UDHR's 100% falsehood -- arbitrary rules of conduct-tyranny in betrayal by Article III of the 'exiled government-socialist, communist-atheist - no Holy Spirit-Truth - in its Art. 29, delusional, adversarial, ISOLATED constitution-demockracy by edict in decree - 06/2014 - once referred to as, supreme court among the WHOLE SYSTEM OF PROF. OF LAW TWIN SISTER TO PROF. OF DIVINITY.
Authorities, resources, Comments; GLOSSARY "AMERICAN DICTIONARY of the English Language"-1828/1844 UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED
[1] Papal Authority's Property of UN Agenda 21, GW, sustainable tenement hosuing, Climate Change, Paris Treaty, World Bank's 5 Groups, necessarily Federal Reserve/ IMF 2017 Sustaintaible Development Goalsland, water, atmosphere among the 194 nations, not counting the invsisble under the axsis regimes it supports:
A) Papal Authority's property-194 UN nation's General Assembly Resolution A/58/314 Participation of the Holy See in the work of the United Nations 16 July 2004 — Fifty-eighth session, every Committee, at, https://holyseemission.org/contents/mission/mission-55e37172a07413.52517830.phphttps://holyseemission.org/contents/mission/mission-55e37172a07413.52517830.phpintertwined to:
B) 12/01/2009 Lisbon Treaty EU/ Commission Holy See- since 2000;
C) "After 500 years of schism, will the rift of the Reformation finally be healed?"--counting only from 1517 -- ignoring the eixtence of man-serving-man's heretic 1320 John Wycliff -- cause he isn't of eligibility so Pope Francis doesn't have to worry about his TRUTH -- at, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/oct/29/reformation-luther-pope-francis-catholics
D) "Learning our Three Sacred Documents: the Inside/ Outside enemy-spirit of devil-trinity, v. Holy Spirit Truth Eternal Living Jesus"-- spirit of devil trinity #3 of 3's property in grandeur, highest mountain with 360 degree visual effect, and all 194 nations of Papal Authority's UN-UDHR, Agenda 21, GW, 2017 World Bank Group's, necessarily including Federal Reserve/ IMF, Sustainable Development Goals -- that is 2015-2017's abrogation of Alithia/ Truth/ Paul's Christian Discipline (I Tim. 1) non-word "BiPartisan"- Appropriation of Phronesis-WE THE PEOPLE-Constitutional-Person's Commerce - i.e. Enterprise of Ideas - no civil-state intertwined ecclesiastical-man-serving-man supreme to God that is Trinity of the Three Sacred Documents, at, http://pyrrhicchange.blogspot.com/2017/09/learning-our-three-sacred-documents_26.html
E) "Papal Rome and the European Union"; Richard Bennett and Michael de Semlyen at, https://www.the-highway.com/eu_Bennett.html
F) Holy See/ Papal Authoirty-UN - hypocrisy of pot calling kettle black - John 8's Abraham's Children who are blind to Truth and need to kill; Thursday, August 24, 2017, at, http://declarationandconstitutionspeak.blogspot.com/2017/08/holy-see-papal-authoirty-un-hypocrisy.html
from: "U.N. Issues Order To Trump As Officials Claim ‘Warning’ Signs, Urgent ActionPosted by Georgette Walrath | Aug 24, 2017 | Breaking News -----
https://conservativedailypost.com/u-n-issues-order-trump-officials-claim-warning-signs-urgent-action/?utm_source=Push&utm_medium=OneSignal&utm_campaign=24_August-2https://conservativedailypost.com/u-n-issues-order-trump-officials-claim-warning-signs-urgent-action/?utm_source=Push&utm_medium=OneSignal&utm_campaign=24_August-2
G) "Absent God in The Three Sacred Documents, "Speaker Ryan, a.k.a UN Papal Authority, tells Trump to lay off Mueller"---Thursday, July 27, 2017; at, http://declarationandconstitutionspeak.blogspot.com/2017/07/absent-god-in-three-sacred-documents.html
H) An Absolute Axiom of Proof - of spirit of devil trinity-"never obey any word that issues from the mouth of God, and as a Third Person of "And assume among the powers of the earth (because spirt of devil trinity is never forgiven, cannot be present in Holy Spirit-Truth-heaven) the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle One Person Composing the WHOLE of ONE PEOPLE: "Massive Outrage As Vatican Knighthood Awarded To Virulent Abortion Activist, “Powerful Signal” Posted by Stephanie Sheaks | Jan 19, 2018 | at, https://conservativedailypost.com/massive-outrage-as-vatican-knighthood-awarded-to-virulent-abortion-activist-powerful-signal/?utm_source=Push&utm_medium=OneSignal&utm_campaign=18_January-3 ---- Please observe the Photo of the Person-Pope, among his enterage - College of Cardinals-absolute rulers of condcut-force, absent conscience, 2,018 years, violation of first 5 commandments of God -- notably, the much attacked, by spirit of devil trinity's arbitrary human precept- man-serving-man of Paul's Church of God in Christ in his Third Person among those he knows and will never know, circumcised/ uncircumcised, male/ female, freeman/ slave from capture by government-over-man or by spirit of devil trinity: heritage, Luke 12, "Honor thy father and thy mother that YOUR days may be long upon the land which the LORD your God giveth YOU, " alone-Eternal Soul FROM CONCEPTION.
I) .12/21/2017: ".. Closed Door Deal Exposed, Senate GOP Announces Next “Compromise” As [Socialists UN-UDHR]Leftists Rejoice" by James Bishop -- the PHOTO of Ex, Taxpayer Pensioned, Papal Authority Lieutenant Boehner with Speaker Ryan the current obedient slave to Papal Authority [1] = Closed door that includes, Pres. Trump's DEAL at,
https://conservativedailypost.com/closed-door-deal-exposed-senate-gop-announces-next-compromise-as-leftists-rejoice/ ; connected to my Tweet, who loves to disbar, the bias of predetermined conclusions that are Red -Flags of Falsehood by the surveyors (including RNC-DNC's deceit) "About the Tweet of blame by UDHR's Articles 19 in 29"person-ality" for gov. shutdown: "None of the above" is not asked, thus DACA's illegal immigrants-Papal Authority Property, UN-UDHR not recognized, though Papal-Lieu. Ex Speaker Boehner is very active behind closed doors .... daca is totally Papal Authority UN UDHR redistribution of collective people for borderless nations, Borderless jurisprudence by the betralay of Article III summer 2014 - also, " "Illegal": Word Rendered Significant by Oral Common Law/ Oath in Pledge of each-one-Person - Trinity Sacred Documents v. spirit of devil trinity, man-serving-man's UN-UDHR delusional democracy...," at,
GLOSSARY:
A-BUSE', n. 1. Ill use; improper treatment or employment; application to a wrong purpose; as, an abuse of our natural powers an abuse of civil rights, or of religious privileges; abuse of advantages, &c. Liberty may be endangered by the abuses of liberty, as well as by the abuses of power. – Federalist, Madison.
2. A corrupt practice or custom; as, the abuses of government.
3. Rude speech; reproachful language addressed to a person; contumely; reviling words. –John Milton (9 December 1608 – 8 November 1674) was an English poet, polemicist, man of letters, and a civil servant for the Commonwealth of England under Oliver Cromwell. He wrote at a time of religious flux and political upheaval, and is best known for his epic poem Paradise Lost (1667), written in blank verse. Milton's poetry and prose reflect deep personal convictions, a passion for freedom and self-determination, and the urgent issues and political turbulence of his day. Writing in English, Latin, Greek, and Italian, he achieved international renown within his lifetime, and his celebrated Areopagitica (1644)—written in condemnation of pre-publication censorship—is among history's most influential and impassioned defences of free speech and freedom of the press. Words: Due, Break, Violate, Consequence, Conscience, Proof, Office, Warrant, Valor, Redress, Soul, Understand, Understanding, Matter, Grace, Trust, Strive, All, Truth, Religion, Shake, Confound, Distinct, Due, Impose, Gospel, Tempt, Spirit, Abuse, Stea, Ground, Meet, Travel, Perturbation, Abuse
A-BUSE', v.t. [s as z; Fr. abuser; Sp.abusar; It. abusare; L. abator,abusus, of ab and utor, to use; Ir. idh; W. gweth, use; Gr. εθω; to accustom. See Use.] 1. To use ill; to maltreat; to misuse; to use with bad motives or to wrong purposes; as, to abuse rights or privileges. They that use this world as not abusing it. – 1 Cor. vii.
2. To violate; to defile by improper sexual intercourse. –Edmund Spenser (/'sp?ns?r/; 1552/1553 – 13 January 1599) was an English poet best known for The Faerie Queene, an epic poem and fantastical allegory celebrating the Tudor dynasty and Elizabeth I. He is recognised as one of the premier craftsmen of Modern English verse in its infancy, and is often considered one of the greatest poets in the English language. Words: Steal, Establishment, Conscience, Pride, Read, Reason, Shrill, Bless, Entail, Attaint, Skill, Apostate Government, Militant, Intelligence, Sop, Abuse
3. To deceive; to impose on. Nor be with all these tempting words abused. –Alexander Pope (21 May 1688 – 30 May 1744) was an 18th-century English poet. He is best known for his satirical verse, as well as for his translation of Homer. Famous for his use of the heroic couplet, he is the third-most frequently quoted writer in The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations, after Shakespeare and Tennyson.[* see “THE TATTLER”, below] WORDS: Break, Will, Conceit, Pride, High, Self, Servile, Family, Grace, Test, Virtue, Nature, Whole, Spear, Dead, Entail, Envy, Reconcile, Impose, Bulls, Assume, Bound, Race, Void, Folly, Excursion, Sop, Positive, Vain, Thought, Abuse, Meet.
4. To treat rudely, or with reproachful language; to revile. He mocked and abused them shamefully. – Mac.
5. To pervert the meaning of; to misapply; as, to abuse words.
2. A corrupt practice or custom; as, the abuses of government.
3. Rude speech; reproachful language addressed to a person; contumely; reviling words. –John Milton (9 December 1608 – 8 November 1674) was an English poet, polemicist, man of letters, and a civil servant for the Commonwealth of England under Oliver Cromwell. He wrote at a time of religious flux and political upheaval, and is best known for his epic poem Paradise Lost (1667), written in blank verse. Milton's poetry and prose reflect deep personal convictions, a passion for freedom and self-determination, and the urgent issues and political turbulence of his day. Writing in English, Latin, Greek, and Italian, he achieved international renown within his lifetime, and his celebrated Areopagitica (1644)—written in condemnation of pre-publication censorship—is among history's most influential and impassioned defences of free speech and freedom of the press. Words: Due, Break, Violate, Consequence, Conscience, Proof, Office, Warrant, Valor, Redress, Soul, Understand, Understanding, Matter, Grace, Trust, Strive, All, Truth, Religion, Shake, Confound, Distinct, Due, Impose, Gospel, Tempt, Spirit, Abuse, Stea, Ground, Meet, Travel, Perturbation, Abuse
4. Seduction. After the abuse he forsook me. –Sir Philip Sidney (30 November 1554 – 17 October 1586) was an English poet, courtier, Scholar, and soldier, who is remembered as one of the most prominent figures of the Elizabethan age. His works include Astrophel and Stella, The Defence of Poesy (also known as The Defence of Poetry or An Apology for Poetry), and The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia. Words: Conceit, Thing, Pierce, Estate, Knowledge, Clear, Thought, Abuse, Steal, Matter
5. Perversion of meaning; improper use or application; as, an abuse of words.A-BUSE', v.t. [s as z; Fr. abuser; Sp.abusar; It. abusare; L. abator,abusus, of ab and utor, to use; Ir. idh; W. gweth, use; Gr. εθω; to accustom. See Use.] 1. To use ill; to maltreat; to misuse; to use with bad motives or to wrong purposes; as, to abuse rights or privileges. They that use this world as not abusing it. – 1 Cor. vii.
2. To violate; to defile by improper sexual intercourse. –Edmund Spenser (/'sp?ns?r/; 1552/1553 – 13 January 1599) was an English poet best known for The Faerie Queene, an epic poem and fantastical allegory celebrating the Tudor dynasty and Elizabeth I. He is recognised as one of the premier craftsmen of Modern English verse in its infancy, and is often considered one of the greatest poets in the English language. Words: Steal, Establishment, Conscience, Pride, Read, Reason, Shrill, Bless, Entail, Attaint, Skill, Apostate Government, Militant, Intelligence, Sop, Abuse
3. To deceive; to impose on. Nor be with all these tempting words abused. –Alexander Pope (21 May 1688 – 30 May 1744) was an 18th-century English poet. He is best known for his satirical verse, as well as for his translation of Homer. Famous for his use of the heroic couplet, he is the third-most frequently quoted writer in The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations, after Shakespeare and Tennyson.[* see “THE TATTLER”, below] WORDS: Break, Will, Conceit, Pride, High, Self, Servile, Family, Grace, Test, Virtue, Nature, Whole, Spear, Dead, Entail, Envy, Reconcile, Impose, Bulls, Assume, Bound, Race, Void, Folly, Excursion, Sop, Positive, Vain, Thought, Abuse, Meet.
4. To treat rudely, or with reproachful language; to revile. He mocked and abused them shamefully. – Mac.
5. To pervert the meaning of; to misapply; as, to abuse words.
AT-TEST', v.t. [Fr. attester; L. attestor; of ad and testor, to affirm or bear witness, from testis. See Testify.] 1. To bear witness to; to certify; to affirm to be true or genuine; to make a solemn declaration in words or writing, to support a fact; appropriately used for the affirmation of persons in their official capacity; as, to attest the truth of a writing; to attest a copy of record. Persons also attest writings by subscribing their names.
2. To bear witness, or support the truth of a fact, by other evidence than words; as, the ruins of Palmyra attest its ancient magnificence.
3. To call to witness; to invoke as conscious. The sacred streams which heaven's imperial state Attests in oaths, and fears to violate. –John Dryden (19 August 1631 – 12 May 1700) was an English poet, literary critic, translator, and playwright who was made Poet Laureate in 1668. He is seen as dominating the literary life of Restoration England to such a point that the period came to be known in literary circles as the Age of Dryden. Walter Scott called him "Glorious John." WORDS: Hypocrite, Right ,Violate, Vain, Dissension, Party, Will, Person, Pride, Error, Conscience, Property, Thing, Self, Soul, Justly, Offense, Grace, Scatter, Fight Forgiveness, Contend, Test, For, Dominion, Nature, Resource, Court, Captivity, Shake, Lie, Quality, Envy, Replacement, Impose, Estate, Odium, Society, Skill, Tung/ Tongue, Matter, Divine, Principle, Race, Friend, Tempt, Traduce, Thought, Sincere, False, Perverse, Image, Similitude, Vest, Attest .
AU-THOR'I-TY, n. [L. auctoritas.] 1. Legal power, or a right to command or to act; as, the authority of a prince over subjects, and of parents over children. Power; rule; sway.
2. The power derived from opinion, respect or esteem; influence of character or office; credit; as, the authority of age or example, which is submitted to or respected, in some measure, as a law, or rule of action. That which is claimed in justification or support of opinions and measures.
3. Testimony; witness; or the person who testifies; as, the Gospels or the evangelists are our authorities for the miracles of Christ. [or, a Constitutional-Person's "The judgement of the consistency of an official act with the constitution is called 'Constitutional Review.' When this duty is performed by a judge, it is called Judicial Review. It is not a power of government but the exercise of a duty of citizenship."
4. Weight of testimony; credibility; as, an historian of no authority.
5. Weight of character; respectability, dignity; as, a magistrate of great authority in the city.
6. Warrant; order; permission. By what authority doest thou these things? – Matth. xxi. Acts ix.
7. Precedents, decisions of a court, official declarations, respectable opinions and sayings, also the books that contain them, are called authorities, as they influence the opinions of others; and in law, the decisions of supreme courts have a binding force upon inferior courts, and are called authorities.
8. Government; the persons or the body exercising power or command; as, the local authorities of the states. – Marshall. 1 Pet. iii. In Connecticut, the justices of the peace are denominated the civil authority.
Expanded #6 definition: "¶ 23.And when he was come into the temple, the chiefe Priests and the Elders of the people came vnto him as he was teaching, and said, By what authoritie doest thou these things? and who gaue thee this authoritie?
24 And Iesus answered, and said vnto them, I also will aske you one thing, which if ye tell me, I in like wise will tell you by what authoritie I doe these things.
25 The baptisme of Iohn, whence was it? from heauen, or of men? and they reasoned with themselues saying, If we shall say, From heauen, hee will say vnto vs, Why did ye not then beleeue him?
26 But if we shall say, Of men, we feare the people, for all hold Iohn as a Prophet.
27 And they answered Iesus, and said, We cannot tell. And he said vnto them, Neither tell I you by what authoritie I doe these things."-Matt.21 which also has the"withered fig tree"-Faith in Promise.
2. The power derived from opinion, respect or esteem; influence of character or office; credit; as, the authority of age or example, which is submitted to or respected, in some measure, as a law, or rule of action. That which is claimed in justification or support of opinions and measures.
3. Testimony; witness; or the person who testifies; as, the Gospels or the evangelists are our authorities for the miracles of Christ. [or, a Constitutional-Person's "The judgement of the consistency of an official act with the constitution is called 'Constitutional Review.' When this duty is performed by a judge, it is called Judicial Review. It is not a power of government but the exercise of a duty of citizenship."
4. Weight of testimony; credibility; as, an historian of no authority.
5. Weight of character; respectability, dignity; as, a magistrate of great authority in the city.
6. Warrant; order; permission. By what authority doest thou these things? – Matth. xxi. Acts ix.
7. Precedents, decisions of a court, official declarations, respectable opinions and sayings, also the books that contain them, are called authorities, as they influence the opinions of others; and in law, the decisions of supreme courts have a binding force upon inferior courts, and are called authorities.
8. Government; the persons or the body exercising power or command; as, the local authorities of the states. – Marshall. 1 Pet. iii. In Connecticut, the justices of the peace are denominated the civil authority.
Expanded #6 definition: "¶ 23.And when he was come into the temple, the chiefe Priests and the Elders of the people came vnto him as he was teaching, and said, By what authoritie doest thou these things? and who gaue thee this authoritie?
24 And Iesus answered, and said vnto them, I also will aske you one thing, which if ye tell me, I in like wise will tell you by what authoritie I doe these things.
25 The baptisme of Iohn, whence was it? from heauen, or of men? and they reasoned with themselues saying, If we shall say, From heauen, hee will say vnto vs, Why did ye not then beleeue him?
26 But if we shall say, Of men, we feare the people, for all hold Iohn as a Prophet.
27 And they answered Iesus, and said, We cannot tell. And he said vnto them, Neither tell I you by what authoritie I doe these things."-Matt.21 which also has the"withered fig tree"-Faith in Promise.
BOUND, n. [Norm. bonne, boune, a bound; bond, limited; bundes, limits; from bind, bond, that which binds; or from French bondir, to spring, and denoting the utmost extent.] 1. A limit; the line which comprehends the whole of any given object or space. It differs from boundary. See the latter. Bound is applied to kingdoms, states, cities, towns, tracts of land, and to territorial jurisdiction.
2. A limit by which any excursion is restrained; the limit of indulgence or desire; as, the love of money knows no bounds.
3. A leap; a spring; a jump; a rebound; [Fr. bondir, to spring.]
4. In dancing, a spring from one foot to the other.
BOUND, pp. [and pret. of Bind.] 1. As a participle, made fast by a band, or by chains or fetters; obliged by moral ties; confined; restrained.
2. As a participle, or perhaps more properly as adjective, destined; tending; going, or intending to go; with to or for; as, a ship is bound to Cadiz, or for Cadiz. The application of this word, in this use, is taken from the orders given for the government of the voyage, implying obligation, or from tending, stretching. So destined implies being bound. Bound is used in composition, as in ice-bound, wind-bound, when a ship is confined or prevented from sailing by ice or by contrary winds.
BOUND, v.i. [Fr. bondir; Arm. boundiçza.] 1. To leap; to jump; to spring; to move forward by leaps. Before his lord the ready spaniel bounds. – Pope.
2. To rebound - but the sense is the same.
BOUND, v.t. 1. To limit; to terminate; to fix the furthest point of extension, whether of natural or moral objects, as of land, or empire, or of passion, desire, indulgence. Hence, to restrain or confine; as, to bound our wishes. To bound in is hardly legitimate.
To make to bound. – Shak.
2. A limit by which any excursion is restrained; the limit of indulgence or desire; as, the love of money knows no bounds.
3. A leap; a spring; a jump; a rebound; [Fr. bondir, to spring.]
4. In dancing, a spring from one foot to the other.
BOUND, pp. [and pret. of Bind.] 1. As a participle, made fast by a band, or by chains or fetters; obliged by moral ties; confined; restrained.
2. As a participle, or perhaps more properly as adjective, destined; tending; going, or intending to go; with to or for; as, a ship is bound to Cadiz, or for Cadiz. The application of this word, in this use, is taken from the orders given for the government of the voyage, implying obligation, or from tending, stretching. So destined implies being bound. Bound is used in composition, as in ice-bound, wind-bound, when a ship is confined or prevented from sailing by ice or by contrary winds.
BOUND, v.i. [Fr. bondir; Arm. boundiçza.] 1. To leap; to jump; to spring; to move forward by leaps. Before his lord the ready spaniel bounds. – Pope.
2. To rebound - but the sense is the same.
BOUND, v.t. 1. To limit; to terminate; to fix the furthest point of extension, whether of natural or moral objects, as of land, or empire, or of passion, desire, indulgence. Hence, to restrain or confine; as, to bound our wishes. To bound in is hardly legitimate.
To make to bound. – Shak.
CON-NECTION, n. [L. connexio; It. connessione. See Connect.] 1. The act of joining or state of being joined; a state of being knit or fastened together; union by junction, by an intervening substance or medium, by dependence or relation, or by order in a series; a word of very general import. There is a connection of links in a chain; a connection between all parts of the human body; a connection between virtue and happiness, and between this life and the future; a connection between parent and child, master and servant, husband and wife; between motives and actions, and between actions and their consequences. In short, the word is applicable to almost every 'thing' that has a dependence on or relation to another 'thing'.
EV'I-DENCE, n. [Fr. from L. evidentia, from video, to see. Class Bd.] 1. That which elucidates and enables the mind to see truth; proof arising from our own perceptions by the senses, or from the testimony of others, or from inductions of reason. Our senses furnish evidence of the existence of matter, of solidity, of color, of heat and cold, of a difference in the qualities of bodies, of figure, &c. The declarations of a witness furnish evidence of facts to a court and jury; and reasoning, or the deductions of the mind from facts or arguments, furnish evidence of truth or falsehood.
2. Any instrument or writing which contains proof. I delivered the evidence of the purchase to Baruch. Jer. xxxii. I subscribed the evidence and sealed it. Jer. xxxii.
3. A witness; one who testifies to a fact. This sense is improper and inelegant, though common, and found even in Johnson's writings.
EV'I-DENCE, v.t. To elucidate; to prove; to make clear to the mind; to show in such a manner that the mind can apprehend the truth, or in a manner to convince it. The testimony of two witnesses is usually sufficient to evidence the guilt of an offender [also, in Matt. 18]. The works of creation clearly evidence the existence of an Infinite First Cause [upper case added].
2. Any instrument or writing which contains proof. I delivered the evidence of the purchase to Baruch. Jer. xxxii. I subscribed the evidence and sealed it. Jer. xxxii.
3. A witness; one who testifies to a fact. This sense is improper and inelegant, though common, and found even in Johnson's writings.
EV'I-DENCE, v.t. To elucidate; to prove; to make clear to the mind; to show in such a manner that the mind can apprehend the truth, or in a manner to convince it. The testimony of two witnesses is usually sufficient to evidence the guilt of an offender [also, in Matt. 18]. The works of creation clearly evidence the existence of an Infinite First Cause [upper case added].
E'VIL, a. [e'vl; Sax. efel, yfel, or hyfel; D. euvel; G. übel; Arm. fall, goall. Qu. W. gwael, vile; Ir. feal. The Irish word is connected with feallaim, to fail, which may be allied to fall. Perhaps this is from a different root. Qu. Heb. Ch. and Syr. עול, to be unjust or injurious, to defraud, Ar. عَالَ to decline, and غَالَ to fall on or invade suddenly.] 1. Having bad qualities of a natural kind; mischievous; having qualities which tend to injury, or to produce mischief. Some evil beast hath devoured him. Gen. xxxvii.
2. Having bad qualities of a moral kind; wicked; corrupt; perverse; wrong; as, evil thoughts; evil deeds; evil speaking; an evil generation. Scripture.
3. Unfortunate; unhappy; producing sorrow, distress, injury or calamity; as, evil tidings; evil arrows; evil days. Scripture.
E'VIL, adv. [generally contracted to ill.] 1. Not well; not with justice or propriety; unsuitably. Evil it beseems thee. Shak.
2. Not virtuously; not innocently.
3. Not happily; unfortunately. It went evil with his house. Deut.
4. Injuriously; not kindly. The Egyptians evil entreated us, and afflicted us. Deut. In composition, evil, denoting something bad or wrong, is often contracted to ill.
E'VIL, n. 1. Evil is natural or moral. Natural evil is any thing which produces pain, distress, loss or calamity, or which in any way disturbs the peace, impairs the happiness, or destroys the perfection of natural beings. Moral evil is any deviation of a moral agent from the rules of conduct prescribed to him by God, or by legitimate human authority; or it is any violation of the plain principles of justice and rectitude. There are also evils called civil, which affect injuriously the peace or prosperity of a city or state; and political evils, which injure a nation in its public capacity. All wickedness, all crimes, all violations of law and right are moral evils. Diseases are natural evils, but they often proceed from moral evils.
2. Misfortune; mischief; injury. There shall no evil befall thee. Ps. xci. A prudent man foreseeth the evil, and hideth himself. Prov. xxii.
3. Depravity; corruption of heart, or disposition to commit wickedness; malignity. The heart of the sons of men is full of evil. Eccles. ix.
4. Malady; as, the king's evil or scrofula.
2. Having bad qualities of a moral kind; wicked; corrupt; perverse; wrong; as, evil thoughts; evil deeds; evil speaking; an evil generation. Scripture.
3. Unfortunate; unhappy; producing sorrow, distress, injury or calamity; as, evil tidings; evil arrows; evil days. Scripture.
E'VIL, adv. [generally contracted to ill.] 1. Not well; not with justice or propriety; unsuitably. Evil it beseems thee. Shak.
2. Not virtuously; not innocently.
3. Not happily; unfortunately. It went evil with his house. Deut.
4. Injuriously; not kindly. The Egyptians evil entreated us, and afflicted us. Deut. In composition, evil, denoting something bad or wrong, is often contracted to ill.
E'VIL, n. 1. Evil is natural or moral. Natural evil is any thing which produces pain, distress, loss or calamity, or which in any way disturbs the peace, impairs the happiness, or destroys the perfection of natural beings. Moral evil is any deviation of a moral agent from the rules of conduct prescribed to him by God, or by legitimate human authority; or it is any violation of the plain principles of justice and rectitude. There are also evils called civil, which affect injuriously the peace or prosperity of a city or state; and political evils, which injure a nation in its public capacity. All wickedness, all crimes, all violations of law and right are moral evils. Diseases are natural evils, but they often proceed from moral evils.
2. Misfortune; mischief; injury. There shall no evil befall thee. Ps. xci. A prudent man foreseeth the evil, and hideth himself. Prov. xxii.
3. Depravity; corruption of heart, or disposition to commit wickedness; malignity. The heart of the sons of men is full of evil. Eccles. ix.
4. Malady; as, the king's evil or scrofula.
FACT, n. [L. factum, from facio, to make or do; Fr. fait; It. fatto; Sp. hecho.] Any thing done, or that comes to pass; an act; a deed; an effect produced or achieved; an event. Witnesses are introduced into court to prove a fact. Facts are stubborn things. To deny a fact knowingly is to lie.
2. Reality; truth; as, in fact. So we say, indeed.
IN-DEED', adv. [comp. of in and deed.] In reality; in truth; in fact. The carnal mind is enmity against God; for it is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be. Rom. viii. Indeed is usually emphatical, but in some cases more so than in others; as, this is true; it is indeed. I were a beast indeed to do you wrong. Dryden. Some sons indeed, some very few we see, / Who keep themselves from this infection free. Dryden. There is indeed no greater pleasure in visiting these magazines of war. Addison. It is used to note concession or admission; as, ships not so large indeed, but better manned. Indeed is used as an expression of surprise, or for the purpose of obtaining confirmation of a fact stated. Indeed! is it possible? is it so in fact?
UN-RE-GEN'ER-ATE, a. Not regenerated; not renewed in heart; remaining at enmity with God. Stephens.
RE-GEN'ER-ATE, a. [L. regeneratus.] 1. Reproduced. – Shak.
2. Born anew; renovated in heart; changed from a natural to a spiritual state. – Milton. Wake.
RE-GEN'ER-ATE, v.t. [L. regenero; re and genero. See Generate.] 1. To generate or produce anew; to reproduce. Through all the soil a genial ferment spreads, / Regenerates the plants and new adorns the meads. –Sir Richard Blackmore (22 January 1654 – 9 October 1729), English poet and physician, is remembered primarily as the object of satire and as an example of a dull poet. He was, however, a respected physician and religious writer. Words: Vain, Nuncupative, Will, Regenerate.
2. In theology, to renew the heart by a change of affections, to change the heart and affections from natural enmity to the love of God; to implant holy affections in the heart. – Scott. Addison [see Settle].
FALSE'HOOD, n. [fols'hood; false and hood.] 1. Contrariety or inconformity to fact or truth; as, the falsehood of a report.
2. Want of truth or veracity; a lie; an untrue assertion.
3. Want of honesty; treachery; deceitfulness; perfidy. Milton. But falsehood is properly applied to things only. [See Falseness.]
4. Counterfeit; false appearance; imposture. Milton.
[5. Intrinsically, perdition against HOLY SPIRIT-ONE GOD IN ALL THREE PERSONS/ Two Greatest Commands of God, falsehood, falseness, by just One Person, alone, or in 'community'- any location on God's Planet of His Land ]
2. Want of truth or veracity; a lie; an untrue assertion.
3. Want of honesty; treachery; deceitfulness; perfidy. Milton. But falsehood is properly applied to things only. [See Falseness.]
4. Counterfeit; false appearance; imposture. Milton.
[5. Intrinsically, perdition against HOLY SPIRIT-ONE GOD IN ALL THREE PERSONS/ Two Greatest Commands of God, falsehood, falseness, by just One Person, alone, or in 'community'- any location on God's Planet of His Land ]
FALSE'NESS, n. [fols'ness.] 1. Want of integrity and veracity, either in principle or in act; as, the falseness of a man's heart, or his falseness to his word.
2. Duplicity; deceit; double-dealing. Hammond.
3. Unfaithfulness; treachery; perfidy; traitorousness. The prince is in no danger of being betrayed by the falseness, or cheated by the avarice of such a servant. Rogers.
3. Unfaithfulness; treachery; perfidy; traitorousness. The prince is in no danger of being betrayed by the falseness, or cheated by the avarice of such a servant. Rogers.
[ for 'integrity' and 'veracity', go to, https://1828.mshaffer.com/d/word/falseness -- and either type the words, or use this link, but substituting falseness for veracity -and if you are the WHOLE definition of 'Teacher' among the least of these, in any profession, but especially any form law, divinity, medicine -- get the application AND USE IT even when you think you know the definition -- because of 'Abuse" , as in the Declaration of a Person composing his own Nation of One People, -- there is a 99.9% chance that you have been lied to in obtaining the "characters" after you name. BTW, do your heart/ mind/ conscience for will - Your Third Person a great and beautiful favor, take one, or any of these words and look them up in any dictionary or encyclopedia of your choice -- the more -- the better, starting with Merriam - who knows how to spell Webster, but that is all the philology they can mange -for it will shock the heck out of you, precisely how much lie, steal and kill --you alone=first Greatest Command, then among those you know and will never know --- the posterity of any sovereign nation=Second Greatest Command]
LIE, n.1 Water impregnated with alkaline salt, is written lye, to distinguish it from lie, a falsehood.
LIE, n.2 [Sax. lig or lyge; Sw. lögn; Dan. lögn; D. leugen; G. lug, lüge; Russ. loj. The verb is probably the primary word.] 1. A criminal falsehood; a falsehood uttered for the purpose of deception; an intentional violation of truth. Fiction, or a false statement or representation, not intended to deceive, mislead or injure, as in fables, parables and the like, is not a lie. It is willful deceit that makes a lie. A man may act a lie, as by pointing his finger in a wrong direction, when a traveler inquires of him his road. – Paley.
2. A fiction; in a ludicrous sense. – Dryden.
3. False doctrine. 1 John ii.
4. An idolatrous picture of God, or a false god. Rom. i.
5. That which deceives and disappoints confidence. Micah i. To give the lie, to charge with falsehood. A man's actions may give the lie to his words.
LIE, v.i.1 [Sax. ligan, leogan; Dan. lyver; Sw. liuga; G. lügen; D. leugenen; Russ. lgu.]
1. To utter falsehood with an intention to deceive, or with an immoral design. Thou hast not lied to men, but to God. Acts v.
2. To exhibit a false representation; to say or do that which deceives another, when he has a right to know the truth, or when morality requires a just representation.
LIE, v.i.2 [pret. lay; pp. lain, lien, obs. Sax. ligan or licgan; Goth. ligan; Sw. liggia; Dan. ligger; D. liegen; Russ. leju; Gr. λεγομαι. The Gr. word usually signifies to speak, which is to utter or throw out sounds. Hence to lie down is to throw one's self down, and probably lie and lay are of one family, as are jacio and jaceo, in Latin.] 1. To be in a horizontal position, or nearly so, and to rest on any thing lengthwise, and not on the end. Thus a person lies on a bed, and a fallen tree on the ground. A cask stands on its end, but lies on its side.
2. To rest in an inclining posture; to lean; as, to lie on or against a column.
3. To rest; to press on.
4. To be reposited in the grave. All the kings of the earth, even all of them, lie in glory. – Isa. xiv.
5. To rest on a bed or couch; to be prostrate; as, to lie sick. My little daughter lieth at the point of death. – Mark v.
6. To be situated. New Haven lies in the forty-second degree of north latitude. Ireland lies west of England. Envy lies between beings equal in nature, though unequal in circumstances. – Collier. [The Papal Authority is situated on top of the highest mountain and all the human bodies composing the 'member in abject slave-hood' nations composing the UN- EU/ European Commission's "every word that issues from the mouth of spirit of devil trinity's humanist-physiology of "community's Universal Declaration of Arbitrary Human Precept's Rule of Conduct-force required lie in abuse, misconstructed word - 'rights' ]
To be; to rest; to abide; to remain; often followed by some word denoting a particular condition; as, to lie waste; to lie fallow; to lie open; to lie hid; to lie pining or grieving; to lie under one's displeasure; to lie at the mercy of a creditor, or at the mercy of the waves.
To consist. He that thinks that diversion may not lie in hard labor, forgets the early rising of the huntsman. – Locke.
7. To be sustainable in law; to be capable of being maintained. An action lies against the tenant for waste. An appeal lies in this case. – Ch. J. Parsons. To lie at, to tease or importune. [Little used.] To lie at the heart, to be fixed as an object of affection or anxious desire. The Spainards have but one temptation to quarrel with us, the recovering of Jamaica, for that has ever lain at their hearts. – Temple. To lie by, to be reposited, or remaining with. He has the manuscript lying by him. #2. To rest; to intermit labor. We lay by during the heat of the day. To lie in the way, to be an obstacle or impediment. Remove the objections that lie in the way of an amicable adjustment. To lie hard or heavy, to press; to oppress; to burden. To lie on hand, to be or remain in possession; to remain unsold or undisposed of. Great quantities of wine lie on hand, or have lain long on hand. To lie on the hands, to remain unoccupied or unemployed; to be tedious. Men are sometimes at a loss to know how to employ the time that lies on their hands. To lie on the head, to be imputed. What he gets more of her than sharp words, let it lie on my head. Shak. To lie in wait, to wait for in concealment; to lie in ambush; to watch for an opportunity to attack or seize. To lie in one, to be in the power of; to belong to. As much as lieth in you, live peaceably with all men. Rom. xii. To lie down, to lay the body on the ground or other level place; also, to go to rest. To lie in, to be in childbed; to bring forth young. To lie under, to be subject to; to suffer; to be oppressed by. To lie on or upon, to be a matter of obligation or duty. It lies on the plaintif to maintain his action. To lie with, To lodge or sleep with; also, to have carnal knowledge of. #2. To belong to. It lies with you to make amends. To lie over, to remain unpaid, after the time when payment is due; as a note in bank. To lie to, to be stationary, as a ship.
LIE, n.2 [Sax. lig or lyge; Sw. lögn; Dan. lögn; D. leugen; G. lug, lüge; Russ. loj. The verb is probably the primary word.] 1. A criminal falsehood; a falsehood uttered for the purpose of deception; an intentional violation of truth. Fiction, or a false statement or representation, not intended to deceive, mislead or injure, as in fables, parables and the like, is not a lie. It is willful deceit that makes a lie. A man may act a lie, as by pointing his finger in a wrong direction, when a traveler inquires of him his road. – Paley.
2. A fiction; in a ludicrous sense. – Dryden.
3. False doctrine. 1 John ii.
4. An idolatrous picture of God, or a false god. Rom. i.
5. That which deceives and disappoints confidence. Micah i. To give the lie, to charge with falsehood. A man's actions may give the lie to his words.
LIE, v.i.1 [Sax. ligan, leogan; Dan. lyver; Sw. liuga; G. lügen; D. leugenen; Russ. lgu.]
1. To utter falsehood with an intention to deceive, or with an immoral design. Thou hast not lied to men, but to God. Acts v.
2. To exhibit a false representation; to say or do that which deceives another, when he has a right to know the truth, or when morality requires a just representation.
LIE, v.i.2 [pret. lay; pp. lain, lien, obs. Sax. ligan or licgan; Goth. ligan; Sw. liggia; Dan. ligger; D. liegen; Russ. leju; Gr. λεγομαι. The Gr. word usually signifies to speak, which is to utter or throw out sounds. Hence to lie down is to throw one's self down, and probably lie and lay are of one family, as are jacio and jaceo, in Latin.] 1. To be in a horizontal position, or nearly so, and to rest on any thing lengthwise, and not on the end. Thus a person lies on a bed, and a fallen tree on the ground. A cask stands on its end, but lies on its side.
2. To rest in an inclining posture; to lean; as, to lie on or against a column.
3. To rest; to press on.
4. To be reposited in the grave. All the kings of the earth, even all of them, lie in glory. – Isa. xiv.
5. To rest on a bed or couch; to be prostrate; as, to lie sick. My little daughter lieth at the point of death. – Mark v.
6. To be situated. New Haven lies in the forty-second degree of north latitude. Ireland lies west of England. Envy lies between beings equal in nature, though unequal in circumstances. – Collier. [The Papal Authority is situated on top of the highest mountain and all the human bodies composing the 'member in abject slave-hood' nations composing the UN- EU/ European Commission's "every word that issues from the mouth of spirit of devil trinity's humanist-physiology of "community's Universal Declaration of Arbitrary Human Precept's Rule of Conduct-force required lie in abuse, misconstructed word - 'rights' ]
To be; to rest; to abide; to remain; often followed by some word denoting a particular condition; as, to lie waste; to lie fallow; to lie open; to lie hid; to lie pining or grieving; to lie under one's displeasure; to lie at the mercy of a creditor, or at the mercy of the waves.
To consist. He that thinks that diversion may not lie in hard labor, forgets the early rising of the huntsman. – Locke.
7. To be sustainable in law; to be capable of being maintained. An action lies against the tenant for waste. An appeal lies in this case. – Ch. J. Parsons. To lie at, to tease or importune. [Little used.] To lie at the heart, to be fixed as an object of affection or anxious desire. The Spainards have but one temptation to quarrel with us, the recovering of Jamaica, for that has ever lain at their hearts. – Temple. To lie by, to be reposited, or remaining with. He has the manuscript lying by him. #2. To rest; to intermit labor. We lay by during the heat of the day. To lie in the way, to be an obstacle or impediment. Remove the objections that lie in the way of an amicable adjustment. To lie hard or heavy, to press; to oppress; to burden. To lie on hand, to be or remain in possession; to remain unsold or undisposed of. Great quantities of wine lie on hand, or have lain long on hand. To lie on the hands, to remain unoccupied or unemployed; to be tedious. Men are sometimes at a loss to know how to employ the time that lies on their hands. To lie on the head, to be imputed. What he gets more of her than sharp words, let it lie on my head. Shak. To lie in wait, to wait for in concealment; to lie in ambush; to watch for an opportunity to attack or seize. To lie in one, to be in the power of; to belong to. As much as lieth in you, live peaceably with all men. Rom. xii. To lie down, to lay the body on the ground or other level place; also, to go to rest. To lie in, to be in childbed; to bring forth young. To lie under, to be subject to; to suffer; to be oppressed by. To lie on or upon, to be a matter of obligation or duty. It lies on the plaintif to maintain his action. To lie with, To lodge or sleep with; also, to have carnal knowledge of. #2. To belong to. It lies with you to make amends. To lie over, to remain unpaid, after the time when payment is due; as a note in bank. To lie to, to be stationary, as a ship.
MISCONSTRUC'TION, n. Wrong interpretation of words or things; a mistaking of the true meaning; as a misconstruction of words or actions.
POW'ER, n. [Fr. pouvoir; Norm. povare; from the root of Sp. and Port. poder, It. podere; or rather the same word varied in orthography. The Latin has posse, possum, potes, potentia. The primary sense of the verb is to strain, or exert force.] 1. In a philosophical sense, the faculty of doing or performing any thing; the faculty of moving or of producing a change in something; ability or strength. A man raises his hand by his own power, or by power moves another body. The exertion of power proceeds from the will, and in strictness, no being destitute of will or intelligence, can exert power. Power in man is active or speculative. Active power is that which moves the body; speculative power is that by which we see, judge, remember, or in general, by which we think. Power may exist without exertion. We have power to speak when we are silent. – Locke. Reid. Power has been distinguished also into active and passive, the power of doing or moving, and the power of receiving impressions or of suffering. In strictness, passive power is an absurdity in terms. To say that gold has a power to be melted, is improper language, yet for want of a more appropriate word, power is often used in a passive sense, and is considered as two-fold; viz. as able to make or able to receive any change. – Cyc. John Locke FRS (29 August 1632 – 28 October 1704) English philosopher and physician regarded as one of the most influential of Enlightenment thinkers and known as the "Father of Classical Liberalism" - Words: Cunning, Person, Conscience, Will, Principle, Idea, Right, Understand, Understanding, Matter, Contradistinguish, For, Dominion, Phenix, Liberty, Learn, Reconcile, Tare, Dominion, Knowledge, Probability, Impudence synonym ‘Brass’, Positive, Spirit, Competent, Power ; Thomas Reid FRSE (/ri?d/; 26 April 1710 – 7 October 1796) was a religiously trained Scottish philosopher; founder of the Scottish School of Common Sense and played an integral role in the Scottish Enlightenment. Words: Conscience, Idea, Power
2. Force; animal strength; as, the power of the arm, exerted in lifting, throwing or holding.
3. Force; strength; energy; as, the power of the mind, of the imagination, of the fancy. He has not powers of genius adequate to the work.
4. Faculty of the mind, as manifested by a particular mode of operation; as, the power of thinking, comparing and judging; the reasoning powers.
5. Ability, natural or moral. We say, a man has the power of doing good; his property gives him the power of relieving the distressed; or, he has the power to persuade others to do good; or, it is not in his power to pay his debts. The moral power of man is also his power of judging or discerning in moral subjects.
6. In mechanics, that which produces motion or force, or which may be applied to produce it. Thus the inclined plane is called a mechanical power, as it produces motion, although this in reality depends on gravity. The wheel and axle, and the lever, are mechanical powers, as they may be applied to produce force. . These powers are also called forces, and they are of two kinds, moving power, and sustaining power.
7.Force. The great power of the screw is of extensive use in compression. The power of steam is immense.
8. That quality in any natural body which produces a change or makes an impression on another body; as, the power of medicine; the power of heat; the power of sound.
9. Force; strength; momentum; as, the power of the wind, which propels a ship or overturns a building.
10. Influence; that which may move the mind; as, the power of arguments or of persuasion.
11. Command; the right of governing, or actual government; dominion; rule; sway; authority. A large portion of Asia is under the power of the Russian emperor. The power of the British monarch is limited by law. The powers of government are legislative, executive, judicial, and ministerial. Power is no blessing in itself, but when it is employed to protect the innocent. – Swift. Under this sense may be comprehended civil, political, ecclesiastical, and military power.
12. A sovereign, whether emperor, king or governing prince or the legislature of a state; as, the powers of Europe; the great powers; the smaller powers, In this sense, the state or nation governed seems to be included in the word power. Great Britain is a great naval power.
13. One invested with authority; a ruler; a civil magistrate. – Rom. xiii.
14. Divinity; a celestial or invisible being or agent supposed to have dominion over some part of creation; as, celestial powers; the powers of darkness.
15. That which has physical power; an army; a navy; a host; a military force. Never such a power – / Was levied in the body of a land. – Shak.
16. Legal authority; warrant; as, a power of attorney; an agent invested with ample power. The envoy has full powers to negotiate a treaty.
17. In arithmetic and algebra, the product arising from the multiplication of a number or quantity into itself; as, a cube is the third power; the biquadrate is the fourth power.
18. In Scripture, right; privilege. – John i. 1 Cor. ix.
19. Angels, good or bad. – Col. 1. Eph. vi.
20. Violence; force; compulsion. – Ezek. iv.
21. Christ is called the power of God, as through him and his Gospel, God displays his power and authority in ransoming and saving sinners. – 1 Cor. i.
22. The powers of heaven may denote the celestial luminaries. – Matth. xxiv.
23. Satan is said to have the power of death, as he introduced sin, the cause of death, temporal and eternal, and torments men with the fear of death and future misery.
24. In vulgar language, a large quantity; a great number; as, a power of good things. [This is, I believe, obsolete, even among our common people.] Power of attorney, authority given to a person to act for another.
2. Force; animal strength; as, the power of the arm, exerted in lifting, throwing or holding.
3. Force; strength; energy; as, the power of the mind, of the imagination, of the fancy. He has not powers of genius adequate to the work.
4. Faculty of the mind, as manifested by a particular mode of operation; as, the power of thinking, comparing and judging; the reasoning powers.
5. Ability, natural or moral. We say, a man has the power of doing good; his property gives him the power of relieving the distressed; or, he has the power to persuade others to do good; or, it is not in his power to pay his debts. The moral power of man is also his power of judging or discerning in moral subjects.
6. In mechanics, that which produces motion or force, or which may be applied to produce it. Thus the inclined plane is called a mechanical power, as it produces motion, although this in reality depends on gravity. The wheel and axle, and the lever, are mechanical powers, as they may be applied to produce force. . These powers are also called forces, and they are of two kinds, moving power, and sustaining power.
7.Force. The great power of the screw is of extensive use in compression. The power of steam is immense.
8. That quality in any natural body which produces a change or makes an impression on another body; as, the power of medicine; the power of heat; the power of sound.
9. Force; strength; momentum; as, the power of the wind, which propels a ship or overturns a building.
10. Influence; that which may move the mind; as, the power of arguments or of persuasion.
11. Command; the right of governing, or actual government; dominion; rule; sway; authority. A large portion of Asia is under the power of the Russian emperor. The power of the British monarch is limited by law. The powers of government are legislative, executive, judicial, and ministerial. Power is no blessing in itself, but when it is employed to protect the innocent. – Swift. Under this sense may be comprehended civil, political, ecclesiastical, and military power.
12. A sovereign, whether emperor, king or governing prince or the legislature of a state; as, the powers of Europe; the great powers; the smaller powers, In this sense, the state or nation governed seems to be included in the word power. Great Britain is a great naval power.
13. One invested with authority; a ruler; a civil magistrate. – Rom. xiii.
14. Divinity; a celestial or invisible being or agent supposed to have dominion over some part of creation; as, celestial powers; the powers of darkness.
15. That which has physical power; an army; a navy; a host; a military force. Never such a power – / Was levied in the body of a land. – Shak.
16. Legal authority; warrant; as, a power of attorney; an agent invested with ample power. The envoy has full powers to negotiate a treaty.
17. In arithmetic and algebra, the product arising from the multiplication of a number or quantity into itself; as, a cube is the third power; the biquadrate is the fourth power.
18. In Scripture, right; privilege. – John i. 1 Cor. ix.
19. Angels, good or bad. – Col. 1. Eph. vi.
20. Violence; force; compulsion. – Ezek. iv.
21. Christ is called the power of God, as through him and his Gospel, God displays his power and authority in ransoming and saving sinners. – 1 Cor. i.
22. The powers of heaven may denote the celestial luminaries. – Matth. xxiv.
23. Satan is said to have the power of death, as he introduced sin, the cause of death, temporal and eternal, and torments men with the fear of death and future misery.
24. In vulgar language, a large quantity; a great number; as, a power of good things. [This is, I believe, obsolete, even among our common people.] Power of attorney, authority given to a person to act for another.
"PROPH'ET, n. [Gr. προφητης; L. propheta; Fr. prophète.] 1. One that foretells future events; a predicter; a foreteller.
2. In Scripture, a person illuminated, inspired or instructed by God to announce future events; as Moses, Elijah, David, Isaiah, &c;".[Eternal Souls in "separate and equal station" -Galileo Galilei (Italian: [ɡaliˈlɛːo ɡaliˈlɛi]; 15 February 1564 – 8 January 1642); Dr. Benjamin Rush; George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, The Honorable James Wilson, The Founders, ; William Shakespeare, Leonardo Da Vinci, Sir Winston Churchill; Walt Disney, with Frank Thomas, Ollie Johnston; Orville and Wilbur Wright, very underestimated -John Wayne, John Ford, to name a very, very, very few]
3. An interpreter; one that explains or communicates sentiments. – Exod. vii.
IN-TER'PRET-ER, n. 1. One that explains or expounds; an expositor; as, an interpreter of the Scriptures.
2. A translator; one who renders the words of one language in words of corresponding signification in another.
TRANS-LA 'TOR, n 1. One who translates; esp., one who renders into another language; one who expresses the sense of words in one language by equivalent words in another.
2. A repeating instrument.
SCAT'TER, v.t. [Sax. scateran, to pour out, to disperse; L. scateo; Gr. σκεδαω, to scatter, to discuss, L. discutio, This word may be formed on the root of discutio. The primary sense is to drive or throw.] 1. To disperse; to dissipate; to separate or remove things to a distance from each other. From thence did the Lord scatter them abroad upon the face of all the earth. Gen. xi. I will scatter you among the heathen. Lev. xxvi.
2. To throw loosely about; to sprinkle; as, to scatter seed in sowing. Teach the glad hours to scatter, as they fly, / soft quiet, gentle love and endless joy. –Matthew Prior (21 July 1664 – 18 September 1721) was an English poet and diplomat. He is also known as a contributor to The Examiner. ‘And fondly mournd the dear delusion gone. ‘ WORDS: Right, Neglect, Thing, Delusion, Grace, Scatter, Mediate, Image
3. To cause to separate in different directions; to reduce from a close or compact to a loose or broken order; to dissipate; to disperse. Scatter and disperse the giddy Goths. "Titus Andronicus, Act V, Scene 2" -William Shakespeare (26 April 1564 (baptised) – 23 April 1616) English poet, playwright, and actor, widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world's pre-eminent dramatist. He is often called England's national poet and the "Bard of Avon". Words: Right, Thing, Virtue, Will, Arrogance, Pride, Read, Warrant , Violence, Knowledge, Trust, Truth, Displace, Compulsion, Property, Vault, Valor, Ordain, Way(s), Self, Cringe, Interpretation, Idleness, Untruth, Wanton, Fight, Affirmation, For, Censure, Spear, Pierce, Shake, Law, Quality, Actual, Envy, Soul, Palpable, Attaint, Learn, Replenish, Tung/ Tongue, Bound, Medicine [1844 and 1913 Revised, Noah Porter], Debt, Race, Void, Transgression, Faithfully, Spirit, Holy, Imputation, Thought, Tempt, Murder, Perverse, Petrify, Infer, Scatter
4. Hence, to frustrate, disappoint, and overthrow; as, to scatter hopes, plans, or the like.
DIS'SI-PATE, v.i. To scatter; to disperse; to separate into parts and disappear; to waste away; to vanish. A fog or cloud gradually dissipates, before the rays or heat of the sun. The heat of a body dissipates; the fluids dissipate.
DIS'SI-PATE, v.t. [L. dissipatus, dissipo; dis and an obsolete verb, sipo, to throw. We perhaps see its derivatives in siphon, prosapiaand sept, and sepio, to inclose, may be primarily to repel, and thus to guard.] 1. To scatter; to disperse; to drive asunder. Wind dissipates fog; the heat of the sun dissipates vapor; mirth dissipates care and anxiety; the cares of life tend to dissipate serious reflections. Scatter, disperse and dissipate are in many cases synonymous; but dissipate is used appropriately to denote the dispersion of things that vanish, or are not afterward collected; as, to dissipate fog, vapor or clouds. We say, an army is scattered or dispersed, but not dissipated. Trees are scattered or dispersed over a field, but not dissipated.
2. To throw loosely about; to sprinkle; as, to scatter seed in sowing. Teach the glad hours to scatter, as they fly, / soft quiet, gentle love and endless joy. –Matthew Prior (21 July 1664 – 18 September 1721) was an English poet and diplomat. He is also known as a contributor to The Examiner. ‘And fondly mournd the dear delusion gone. ‘ WORDS: Right, Neglect, Thing, Delusion, Grace, Scatter, Mediate, Image
3. To cause to separate in different directions; to reduce from a close or compact to a loose or broken order; to dissipate; to disperse. Scatter and disperse the giddy Goths. "Titus Andronicus, Act V, Scene 2" -William Shakespeare (26 April 1564 (baptised) – 23 April 1616) English poet, playwright, and actor, widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world's pre-eminent dramatist. He is often called England's national poet and the "Bard of Avon". Words: Right, Thing, Virtue, Will, Arrogance, Pride, Read, Warrant , Violence, Knowledge, Trust, Truth, Displace, Compulsion, Property, Vault, Valor, Ordain, Way(s), Self, Cringe, Interpretation, Idleness, Untruth, Wanton, Fight, Affirmation, For, Censure, Spear, Pierce, Shake, Law, Quality, Actual, Envy, Soul, Palpable, Attaint, Learn, Replenish, Tung/ Tongue, Bound, Medicine [1844 and 1913 Revised, Noah Porter], Debt, Race, Void, Transgression, Faithfully, Spirit, Holy, Imputation, Thought, Tempt, Murder, Perverse, Petrify, Infer, Scatter
4. Hence, to frustrate, disappoint, and overthrow; as, to scatter hopes, plans, or the like.
DIS'SI-PATE, v.i. To scatter; to disperse; to separate into parts and disappear; to waste away; to vanish. A fog or cloud gradually dissipates, before the rays or heat of the sun. The heat of a body dissipates; the fluids dissipate.
DIS'SI-PATE, v.t. [L. dissipatus, dissipo; dis and an obsolete verb, sipo, to throw. We perhaps see its derivatives in siphon, prosapiaand sept, and sepio, to inclose, may be primarily to repel, and thus to guard.] 1. To scatter; to disperse; to drive asunder. Wind dissipates fog; the heat of the sun dissipates vapor; mirth dissipates care and anxiety; the cares of life tend to dissipate serious reflections. Scatter, disperse and dissipate are in many cases synonymous; but dissipate is used appropriately to denote the dispersion of things that vanish, or are not afterward collected; as, to dissipate fog, vapor or clouds. We say, an army is scattered or dispersed, but not dissipated. Trees are scattered or dispersed over a field, but not dissipated.
2. To expend; to squander; to scatter property in a wasteful extravagance; to waste; to consume; as, a man has dissipated his fortune in the pursuit of pleasure.
3. To scatter the attention. [to Displace]
SIN [Sax. singian, syngian.] 1. To depart voluntarily from the path of duty prescribed by God to man; to violate the divine law in any particular, by actual transgression or by the neglect or non-observance of its injunctions; to violate any known rule of duty. All have sinned and come short of the glory of God. – Rom. iii. It is followed by against. Against thee, thee only, have I sinned. – Ps. li.
2. To offend against right, against men or society; to trespass. I am a man / More sinn'd against than sinning. – Shak. And who but wishes to invert the laws / Of order, sins against th' eternal cause. – Pope [see Abuse].
SIN, n. [Sax. sin and syn; G. sünde; D. zonde; Sw. and Dan. synd; Lapponie, Finnish, sindia; allied perhaps to Ir. sainim, to alter, to vary, to sunder. The primary sense is probably to depart, to wander.]
2. To offend against right, against men or society; to trespass. I am a man / More sinn'd against than sinning. – Shak. And who but wishes to invert the laws / Of order, sins against th' eternal cause. – Pope [see Abuse].
SIN, n. [Sax. sin and syn; G. sünde; D. zonde; Sw. and Dan. synd; Lapponie, Finnish, sindia; allied perhaps to Ir. sainim, to alter, to vary, to sunder. The primary sense is probably to depart, to wander.]
1. The voluntary departure of a moral agent from a known rule of rectitude or duty, prescribed by God; any voluntary transgression of the divine law, or violation of a divine command; a wicked act; iniquity. Sin is either a positive act in which a known divine law is violated, or it is the voluntary neglect to obey a positive divine command, or a rule of duty clearly implied in such command. Sin comprehends not actions only, but neglect of known duty, all evil thoughts, purposes, words and desires, whatever is contrary to God's commands or law. – 1 John iii. Matth. xv. James iv. Sinners neither enjoy the pleasures of sin, nor the peace of piety. Rob. -The Rev. Robert Hall (2 May 1764 – 21 February 1831) was an English Baptist minister. ..Hall's first published compositions had a political origin. In 1791 he wrote Christianity consistent with the Love of Freedom, a defense of the political conduct of dissenters against the attacks of John Clayton, gave expression to his hopes of political and social improvements as destined to result from the subversion of old ideas and institutions in the French Revolution. In 1793 he expounded his political sentiments in a longer pamphlet, Apology for the Freedom of the Press. He was unhappy with the pamphlet, and refused to permit publication after the third edition. In a new edition of 1821 he omitted the attack on Bishop Samuel Horsley, and stated that his political opinions had undergone no substantial change. His other publications while at Cambridge were three sermons: On Modern Infidelity (1801), Reflections on War (1802) (sermon given at Cambridge on 1 June to celebrate the Treaty of Amiens),[1] and Sentiments proper to the present Crisis (1803). Words: Grace, Witness, Sin.
Among divines, sin is original or actual. Actual sin, above defined, is the act of a moral agent in violating a known rule of duty. Original sin, as generally understood, is native depravity of heart; that want of conformity of heart to the divine will, that corruption of nature or deterioration of the moral character of man, which is supposed to be the effect of Adam's apostasy; and which manifests itself in moral agents by positive acts of disobedience to the divine will, or by the voluntary neglect to comply with the express commands of God, which require that we should love God with all the heart and soul and strength and mind, and our neighbor as ourselves. This native depravity or alienation of affections from God and his law, is supposed to be what the apostle calls the carnal mind or mindedness, which is enmity against God, and is therefore denominated sin or sinfulness. Unpardonable sin, or blasphemy against the Holy Spirit, is supposed to be a malicious and obstinate rejection of Christ and the Gospel plan of salvation, or a contemptuous resistance made to the influences and convictions of the Holy Spirit. – Matth. xii.
2. A sin-offering; an offering made to atone for sin. He hath made him to be sin for us, who knew no sin. – 2 Cor. v.
3. A man enormously wicked. [Not in use.] – Shak. Sin differs from crime, not in nature, but in application. That which is a crime against society, is sin against God.
SPIR'IT, n. [Fr. esprit; It. spirito; Sp. espiritu; L. spiritus, from spiro, to breathe, to blow. The primary sense is to rush or drive.] 1. Primarily, wind; air in motion; hence, breath. All bodies have spirits and pneumatical parts within them. – Bacon. [This sense is now unusual.-----{NOTE: very interesting for Dr. Webster to say "unusual" -- because he is correct this word "rendered significant by usage, though in this case, by malice prepence - Insignificant by crime of omission! Throughout ecclesiastical and civil-state, magistrate, even among at-large men, women and children being taught, Matt.4, in 7, in 12, 22, Luke 12, and the Apocrypha - the connection between ]
2. Animal excitement, or the effect of it; life; ardor; fire; courage; elevation or vehemence of mind. The troops attacked the enemy with great spirit. The young man has the spirit of youth. He speaks or acts with spirit. Spirits, in the plural, is used in nearly a like sense. The troops began to recover their spirits. – Swift.
3. Vigor of intellect; genius. His wit, his beauty, and his spirit. – Butler. The noblest spirit or genius can not deserve enough of mankind to pretend to the esteem of heroic virtue. – Temple.
4. Temper; disposition of mind, habitual or temporary; as, a man of a generous spirit, or of a revengeful spirit; the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit. Let us go to the house of God in the spirit of prayer. – Bickersteth.
5. The soul of man; the intelligent, immaterial and immortal part of human beings. [See Soul.] The spirit shall return to nod that gave it. – Eccles. xii.
6. An immaterial intelligent substance. Spirit is a substance in which thinking, knowing, doubting, and a power of moving do subsist. – Locke. Hence,
7.An immaterial intelligent being. By which he went and preached to the spirits in prison. – 1 Pet. iii. God is a spirit. – John iv.
8. Turn of mind; temper; occasional state of the mind. A perfect judge will read each work of wit, / With the same spirit that its author writ. – Pope.
9. Powers of mind distinct from the body. In spirit perhaps he also saw / Rich Mexico, the seat of Montezume. – Milton.
10. Sentiment; perception. Your spirit is too true, your fears too certain. – Shak.
11. Eager desire; disposition of mind excited and directed to a particular object. God has made a spirit of building succeed a spirit of pulling down. – South.
12. A person of activity; a man of life, vigor or enterprise. The watery kingdom is no bar / 13. To stop the foreign spirits, but they came. – Shak.
14. Persons distinguished by qualities of the mind. Such spirits as he desired to please, such would I choose for my judges. – Dryden.
15. Excitement of mind; animation; cheerfulness; usually in the plural. We found our friend in very good spirits. He has a great flow of spirits. To sing thy praise, would heaven my breath prolong / Infusing spirits worthy such a song. – Dryden.
16. Life or strength of resemblance; essential qualities; as to set off the face in its true spirit. The copy has not the, spirit of the original. – Wotton.
17. Something eminently pure and refined. Nor doth the eye itself, / That most pure spirit of sense, behold itself. – Shak.
18. That which hath power or energy; the quality of any substance which manifests life, activity, or the power of strongly affecting other bodies; as, the spirit of wine or of any liquor.
19. A strong, pungent liquor, usually obtained by distillation, as rum, brandy, gin, whisky. In America, spirit, used without other words explanatory of its meaning, signifies the liquor distilled from cane juice, or rum. We say, new spirit, or old spirit, Jamaica spirit, &c.
12. An apparition; a ghost.
13. The renewed nature of man. – Matth. xxxi. Gal. v.
14. The influences of the Holy Spirit. – Matth. xxii. Holy Spirit, the third person in the Trinity. [Note continued from #1 def.: Understand? Every uses "third Person" but not one, connected to Matt. 12 in 22, John 17 in 14 among the WHOLE Gospel of the SECOND PERSON IN HIS FATHER, THE ETERNAL/ CREATOR - OF THE WHOLE LAW AND ALL PROPHETS -- TRUTH]
SPIR'IT, v.t. 1. To animate; to actuate; as a spirit. So talk'd the spirited sly snake. [Little used.] – Milton.
2. To animate with vigor; to excite; to encourage; as, civil dissensions spirit the ambition of private men. – Swift. It is sometimes followed by up; as, to spirit up. – Middleton.
3. To kidnap. Blackstone. To spirit away, to entice or seduce. [tempt, spirit of devil trinity]
Among divines, sin is original or actual. Actual sin, above defined, is the act of a moral agent in violating a known rule of duty. Original sin, as generally understood, is native depravity of heart; that want of conformity of heart to the divine will, that corruption of nature or deterioration of the moral character of man, which is supposed to be the effect of Adam's apostasy; and which manifests itself in moral agents by positive acts of disobedience to the divine will, or by the voluntary neglect to comply with the express commands of God, which require that we should love God with all the heart and soul and strength and mind, and our neighbor as ourselves. This native depravity or alienation of affections from God and his law, is supposed to be what the apostle calls the carnal mind or mindedness, which is enmity against God, and is therefore denominated sin or sinfulness. Unpardonable sin, or blasphemy against the Holy Spirit, is supposed to be a malicious and obstinate rejection of Christ and the Gospel plan of salvation, or a contemptuous resistance made to the influences and convictions of the Holy Spirit. – Matth. xii.
2. A sin-offering; an offering made to atone for sin. He hath made him to be sin for us, who knew no sin. – 2 Cor. v.
3. A man enormously wicked. [Not in use.] – Shak. Sin differs from crime, not in nature, but in application. That which is a crime against society, is sin against God.
SPIR'IT, n. [Fr. esprit; It. spirito; Sp. espiritu; L. spiritus, from spiro, to breathe, to blow. The primary sense is to rush or drive.] 1. Primarily, wind; air in motion; hence, breath. All bodies have spirits and pneumatical parts within them. – Bacon. [This sense is now unusual.-----{NOTE: very interesting for Dr. Webster to say "unusual" -- because he is correct this word "rendered significant by usage, though in this case, by malice prepence - Insignificant by crime of omission! Throughout ecclesiastical and civil-state, magistrate, even among at-large men, women and children being taught, Matt.4, in 7, in 12, 22, Luke 12, and the Apocrypha - the connection between ]
2. Animal excitement, or the effect of it; life; ardor; fire; courage; elevation or vehemence of mind. The troops attacked the enemy with great spirit. The young man has the spirit of youth. He speaks or acts with spirit. Spirits, in the plural, is used in nearly a like sense. The troops began to recover their spirits. – Swift.
3. Vigor of intellect; genius. His wit, his beauty, and his spirit. – Butler. The noblest spirit or genius can not deserve enough of mankind to pretend to the esteem of heroic virtue. – Temple.
4. Temper; disposition of mind, habitual or temporary; as, a man of a generous spirit, or of a revengeful spirit; the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit. Let us go to the house of God in the spirit of prayer. – Bickersteth.
5. The soul of man; the intelligent, immaterial and immortal part of human beings. [See Soul.] The spirit shall return to nod that gave it. – Eccles. xii.
6. An immaterial intelligent substance. Spirit is a substance in which thinking, knowing, doubting, and a power of moving do subsist. – Locke. Hence,
7.An immaterial intelligent being. By which he went and preached to the spirits in prison. – 1 Pet. iii. God is a spirit. – John iv.
8. Turn of mind; temper; occasional state of the mind. A perfect judge will read each work of wit, / With the same spirit that its author writ. – Pope.
9. Powers of mind distinct from the body. In spirit perhaps he also saw / Rich Mexico, the seat of Montezume. – Milton.
10. Sentiment; perception. Your spirit is too true, your fears too certain. – Shak.
11. Eager desire; disposition of mind excited and directed to a particular object. God has made a spirit of building succeed a spirit of pulling down. – South.
12. A person of activity; a man of life, vigor or enterprise. The watery kingdom is no bar / 13. To stop the foreign spirits, but they came. – Shak.
14. Persons distinguished by qualities of the mind. Such spirits as he desired to please, such would I choose for my judges. – Dryden.
15. Excitement of mind; animation; cheerfulness; usually in the plural. We found our friend in very good spirits. He has a great flow of spirits. To sing thy praise, would heaven my breath prolong / Infusing spirits worthy such a song. – Dryden.
16. Life or strength of resemblance; essential qualities; as to set off the face in its true spirit. The copy has not the, spirit of the original. – Wotton.
17. Something eminently pure and refined. Nor doth the eye itself, / That most pure spirit of sense, behold itself. – Shak.
18. That which hath power or energy; the quality of any substance which manifests life, activity, or the power of strongly affecting other bodies; as, the spirit of wine or of any liquor.
19. A strong, pungent liquor, usually obtained by distillation, as rum, brandy, gin, whisky. In America, spirit, used without other words explanatory of its meaning, signifies the liquor distilled from cane juice, or rum. We say, new spirit, or old spirit, Jamaica spirit, &c.
12. An apparition; a ghost.
13. The renewed nature of man. – Matth. xxxi. Gal. v.
14. The influences of the Holy Spirit. – Matth. xxii. Holy Spirit, the third person in the Trinity. [Note continued from #1 def.: Understand? Every uses "third Person" but not one, connected to Matt. 12 in 22, John 17 in 14 among the WHOLE Gospel of the SECOND PERSON IN HIS FATHER, THE ETERNAL/ CREATOR - OF THE WHOLE LAW AND ALL PROPHETS -- TRUTH]
SPIR'IT, v.t. 1. To animate; to actuate; as a spirit. So talk'd the spirited sly snake. [Little used.] – Milton.
2. To animate with vigor; to excite; to encourage; as, civil dissensions spirit the ambition of private men. – Swift. It is sometimes followed by up; as, to spirit up. – Middleton.
3. To kidnap. Blackstone. To spirit away, to entice or seduce. [tempt, spirit of devil trinity]
SUB-SCRIBE, v.i. 1. To promise to give a certain sum by setting one's name to a paper. The paper was offered and many subscribed.
2. To assent; as, I could not subscribe to his opinion.
SUB-SCRIBE, v.t. [L. subscribo; sub and scribo, to write; Fr. souscrire; It. soscrivere; Sp. subscribir. Literally, to write underneath. Hence,] 1. To sign with one's own hand; to give consent to something written, or to bind one's self by writing one's name beneath; as, parties subscribe a covenant or contract; man subscribes a bond or articles of agreement.
2. To attest by writing one's name beneath; as, officers subscribe their official acts; and secretaries and clerks subscribe copies of records.
3. To promise to give by writing one's name; as, each man subscribed ten dollars or ten shillings.
4. To submit. [Not in use.] – Shak
2. To assent; as, I could not subscribe to his opinion.
SUB-SCRIBE, v.t. [L. subscribo; sub and scribo, to write; Fr. souscrire; It. soscrivere; Sp. subscribir. Literally, to write underneath. Hence,] 1. To sign with one's own hand; to give consent to something written, or to bind one's self by writing one's name beneath; as, parties subscribe a covenant or contract; man subscribes a bond or articles of agreement.
2. To attest by writing one's name beneath; as, officers subscribe their official acts; and secretaries and clerks subscribe copies of records.
3. To promise to give by writing one's name; as, each man subscribed ten dollars or ten shillings.
4. To submit. [Not in use.] – Shak
THING, n. [Sax. thing, a thing, a cause; for his thingon, for his cause or sake; also, thing and gething, a meeting, council or convention; thingan, thingian, to hold a meeting, to plead, to supplicate; thingere, an intercessor; thingung, intercession; G. ding, a thing, a court; dingen, to go to law, to hire or haggle; Dingstag, Tuesday, (thing's day;) beding, condition, clause; bedingen, to agree, to bargain or contract, to cheapen; D. ding, thing, business; dingen, to plead, to attempt, to cheapen; dingbank, the bar; dingdagen, session-days; dinger, dingster, a pleader; dingtaal, plea; Dingsdag, Tuesday; beding, condition, agreement; bedingen, to condition; Sw. ting, thing, cause, also a court, assizes; tinga, to hire, bargain or agree; Dan. ting, a thing, affair, business, case, a court of justice; tinger, to strike up a bargain, to haggle; tingbog, records of a court, (thing-book;) tingdag, the court day, the assizes; tinghold, jurisdiction; tingmænd, jurors, jury, (thing-men;) tingsag, a cause or suit at law, (thing-sake.) The primary sense of thing is that which comes, falls or happens, like event, from L. evenio. The primary sense of the root, which is tig or thig, is to press, urge, drive or strain, and hence its application to courts, or suits at law; a seeking of right. We observe that Dingsdag, Dingdag, in some of the dialects signifies Tuesday, and this from the circumstance that that day of the week was, as it still is in some states, the day of opening courts; that is, litigation day, or suitors' day, a day of striving for justice; or perhaps combat-day, the day of trial by battle. This leads to the unfolding of another fact. Among our ancestors, Tig or Tiig, was the name of the deity of combat and war, the Teutonic Mars; that is, strife, combat deified. This word was contracted into tiw or tu, and hence Tiwes-dæg or Tues-dæg, Tuesday, the day consecrated to Tiig, the god of war. But it seems this is merely the day of commencing court and trial; litigation day. This Tiig, the god of war, is strife, and this leads us to the root of thing, which is to drive, urge, strive. So res, in Latin, is connected with reus, accused. For words of like signification, see Sake and Cause.] 1. An event or action; that which happens or falls out, or that which is done, told, or proposed. This is the general signification of the word in the Scriptures; as, after these things, that is, events. And the thing was very grievous in Abraham's sight, because of his son. Gen. xxi. Then Laban and Bethuel answered and said, The thing proceedeth from the Lord. Gen. xxiv. And Jacob said, All these things are against me. Gen. xlii. I will tell you by what authority I do these things. Matth. xxi.. These things said Esaias when he saw his glory. John xii. In learning French, choose such books as will teach you things as well as language. Jay to Littlepage. "This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any THING in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding. ..
2. A relation by blood or marriage.
3. An association, or united body; as, the Methodist connection. - The Senators and Representatives before mentioned, and the Members of the several State Legislatures, and all executive and judicial Officers, both of the United States and of the several States, shall be bound by Oath or Affirmation
2.Any substance; that which is created; any particular article or commodity. He sent after this manner; ten asses laden with the good things of Egypt. Gen. xlii. They took the things which Micah had made. Judges xviii.
3.An animal; as, every living thing; every creeping thing. Gen. i. [This application of the word is improper, but common in popular and vulgar language.]
4. A portion or part; something. Wicked men who understand any thing of wisdom. Tillotson.
5. In contempt. I have a thing in prose. Swift.
6. Used of persons in contempt. See, sons, what things you are. Shak. The poor thing sigh'd. Addison. I'll be this abject thing no more. Granville.
7. Used in a sense of honor. I see thee here, / Thou noble thing! Shak.
3. An association, or united body; as, the Methodist connection. - The Senators and Representatives before mentioned, and the Members of the several State Legislatures, and all executive and judicial Officers, both of the United States and of the several States, shall be bound by Oath or Affirmation
2.Any substance; that which is created; any particular article or commodity. He sent after this manner; ten asses laden with the good things of Egypt. Gen. xlii. They took the things which Micah had made. Judges xviii.
3.An animal; as, every living thing; every creeping thing. Gen. i. [This application of the word is improper, but common in popular and vulgar language.]
4. A portion or part; something. Wicked men who understand any thing of wisdom. Tillotson.
5. In contempt. I have a thing in prose. Swift.
6. Used of persons in contempt. See, sons, what things you are. Shak. The poor thing sigh'd. Addison. I'll be this abject thing no more. Granville.
7. Used in a sense of honor. I see thee here, / Thou noble thing! Shak.
[The word 'value' is essential to spirit of the devil's 'every 'Thing' connected to "from loaves to stone - loaves equal to collective mass people servile, including each-one nation's so-'labeled-leaders' to the Papal Authority, a.k.a., UN-/ 01/20/2009 anti-Republic under God Regime - not even their sovereign nations, but also, in addition, each-one-person composing their own sovereign nation -- toUN-EU Empire's (though as of 12/01/2009-Lisbon Treaty, the EU no longer exists since the member nations of UN are the member nations of the EU --thus 193 Nations counting the abrogation of God in Three Persons, therefore our Three Sacred Documents, by silent-edict in servile subjugation of Articles I, II, III - totally absent their Oath/ Common Oral Law- of Office -- ]
"UN-DER-STAND', v.i. 1. To have the use of the intellectual faculties; to be an intelligent and conscious being. All my soul be / Imparadis'd in you, in whom alone / I understand, and grow, and see.-.John Donne (/'d?n/ dun) (22 January 1573 – 31 March 1631) was an English poet and a cleric in the Church of England. He is considered the pre-eminent representative of the metaphysical poets—with the exception of the Persian sufi/mystical poets of the 10th century onward. His works are noted for their strong, sensual style and include sonnets, love poems, religious poems, Latin translations, epigrams, elegies, songs, satires and sermons. Words: Understand
To be informed by another; to learn. I understood of the evil that Eliashib did. Neh. xiii.
UN-DER-STAND', v.t. [pret. and pp. understood. under and stand. The sense is to support or hold in mind.] 1. To have just and adequate ideas of; to comprehend; to know; as, to understand a problem in Euclid; to understand a proposition or a declaration.
2. To have the same ideas as the person who speaks, or the ideas which a person intends to communicate. I understood the preacher; the court perfectly understand the advocate or his argument.
3. To receive or have the ideas expressed or intended to be conveyed in a writing or book; to know the meaning. It is important that we should understand the sacred oracles.
4. To know the meaning of signs, or of any thing intended to convey ideas; as, to understand a nod, a wink or a motion.
5. To suppose to mean. The most learned interpreters understood the words of sin, and not of Abel. -John Locke FRS (29 August 1632 – 28 October 1704) English philosopher and physician regarded as one of the most influential of Enlightenment thinkers and known as the "Father of Classical Liberalism" - Words: Cunning, Person, Conscience, Will, Principle, Idea, Right, Understand, Understanding, Matter, Contradistinguish, For, Dominion, Phenix, Liberty, Learn, Reconcile, Tare, Dominion, Knowledge, Probability, Impudence synonym ‘Brass’, Positive, Spirit
6. To know by experience. Milton.
7. To know by instinct. Amorous intent, well understood. Milton.
8. To interpret, at least mentally. -.Edward Stillingfleet (17 April 1635 – 27 March 1699) was a British theologian and scholar. Considered an outstanding preacher as well as a strong polemical writer defending Anglicanism, Stillingfleet was known as "the beauty of holiness" for his good looks in the pulpit, and was called by John Hough "the ablest man of his time". Words: Understanding, Representation
9. To know another's meaning. Milton.
10. To hold in opinion with conviction. Milton.
[back then, the uncertain and always doubt of 'opinion' -- did not require the partner/ word 'probability' for the truth or falsehood of the 'thing' was measured by the whole of the definition of Understanding - God's First and Second Greatest Commands/ The Ten Commandments of The Eternal in His Eternal Son Spirit- holy ghost/ helper, comforter was "this day our daily bread.. and forgive us our Debts as we forgive our debtors ---"]
11. To mean without expressing. War then, war, Open or understood, must be resolv'd. -John Milton (9 December 1608 – 8 November 1674) was an English poet, polemicist, man of letters, and a civil servant for the Commonwealth of England under Oliver Cromwell. He wrote at a time of religious flux and political upheaval, and is best known for his epic poem Paradise Lost (1667), written in blank verse. Milton's poetry and prose reflect deep personal convictions, a passion for freedom and self-determination, and the urgent issues and political turbulence of his day. Writing in English, Latin, Greek, and Italian, he achieved international renown within his lifetime, and his celebrated Areopagitica (1644)—written in condemnation of pre-publication censorship—is among history's most influential and impassioned defences of free speech and freedom of the press. Words: Due, Break, Violate, Consequence, Conscience, Proof, Office, Warrant, Valor, Redress, Soul, Understand, Understanding, Matter, Grace, Trust, Strive, All, Truth, Religion, Shake, Confound, Distinct, Due, Impose, Gospel, Tempt, Spirit.
11. To know what is not expressed. I bring them to receive From thee their names, and pay thee fealty 12. With low subjection [; understand the same Of fish. Milton.
13. To learn; to be informed. I understand that congress have passed the bill.
UNDERSTANDING means HOLY SPIRIT ONE GOD IN THREE PERSONS - THE THREE SACRED DOCUMENTS, IS YOUR CONSTITUTIONAL, "PRO PERsona"/ PERSON'S OWN ETERNAL SOUL, because GOD IS..., then every-ONE PERSON, any location, at all times and under all circumstances, that person's Soul/ Truth =Liberty of most Good, or liberty of most 'spirit of the devil-trinity' practices in his mind/ heart/ will-conscience concerning all his roles of Reward/ Risk, Opportunities/ Threats, Strengths/ Weaknesses of Life, Liberty, or pursuit of Happiness.
2. That which furnishes evidence or proof. Laban said, this heap is a witness between me and thee this day. – Gen. xxxi.
3. A person who knows or sees any thing; one personally present; as, he was witness; he was an eye-witness. – 1 Pet. v. Upon my looking round, I was witness to appearances which filled me with melancholy and regret. – Rob. Hall, 2, 349.
4. One who sees the execution of an instrument, and subscribes it for the purpose of confirming its authenticity by his testimony.
5. One who gives testimony; as, the witnesses in court agreed in all essential facts. With a witness, effectually; to a great degree; with great force, so as to leave some mark as a testimony behind. He struck with a witness. [Not elegant.]
WIT'NESS, v.i. 1.To bear testimony. The men of Belial witnessed against him, even against Naboth. 1 Kings xxi.
2. To give evidence. The shew of their countenance doth witness against them. Isa. iii.
WITNESS, v.t. 1. To see or know by personal presence. I witnessed the ceremonies in New York, with which the ratification of the constitution was celebrated in 1788. – N. W. Every one has witnessed the effects of the voltaic fluid. – Good. Lect. x. Gen. Washington did not live to witness the restoration of peace. – Marshall. This is but a faint sketch of the incalculable calamities and horrors we must expect, should we ever witness the triumphs of modern infidelity. – Rob. Hall. We have witnessed all the varieties molded to such a perfect accommodation. – Bridg. Treatise. Angels that make thy church their care / Shall witness my devotion there. – Watts, Ps. 138. We have lived to witness that surprising paradox. – Hannah More.
2. To attest; to give testimony to; to testify to something. Behold, how many things they witness against thee. Mark xv.
3. To see the execution of an instrument, and subscribe it for the purpose of establishing its authenticity; as, to witness a bond or a deed. In the imperative mode, see, in evidence or proof; as, witness the habeas corpus, the independence of judges, &c. – Ames, 429.
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