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Excerpt from Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language in Miniature: To Which Are Added, an Alphabetical Account of the Heathen Deities, and a Copious Chronological Table of Remarkable Events, Discoveries and Inventions in Europe Act, e. N. To do, to o. A. To imitate apartinaplay Ac'tion, s. Opposite to rest; gesture in speak ing; adeed; abattle; alawsuit which is punishable by kw Ac'tionary, s. A holder of public stock Act'ive, e. Nimble, agile, quick, busy Act'ively, ed. Nimbly, bnakly, quickly Act'iveness, Activ'ity, s. Nimbleneu Act'or, s. One that performs a stage-player Act'ress, s. A female stage-phyer ml; certain notspeculatis. Act'ually, ad. In act, in effect, really Act'ualnesa, s. The quality of beingactnal Act'uary, s. A register, or clerk of a court Act' uate, o. A. To put into action; to non Act'uate, a. Act'uated, part. Put into acti Ac'uate, o. A. To make sharp to point Acu'leate, is. Having a sting or sharp point Acu'men, s. A sharp point; quichuas or sharpness of intellect Acu'minated, part. Ending in a sharp point Acu'te. A. Sharp, been, subtle, ingenious Acu'te, s. An accent marked thus to shew when the voice ought to be raised Acu'tely, ad. Sharply, keenly, ingeniously Acu'teness, s. Sharpness, subtleness Adac'ted, part. A. Driven by force Ad'age, s. A maxim; acommon saying Ada'gio, s. In music, a term for slow time Ad'amant, s. A diamond a loadstone Adamante'an, a. Very hard, impenetrable Adainaii'tino, a. Made of adamant hard Ada'pt, o. A. To fit, to suit, to proportion Adapta'tion, Adap'tion, s. The set of fittiig Add, e. A. To join to, inciense, number up Adde'cimate, 10. A. To take or value tithes Adde'em, r. A. To esteem account, reckon Ad'der, s. A poisonous serpent; a viper Adder's - grass, s. The name of a plant Adder's-toiigue, s. The name of an herb Ad'dible, a. That which may be added Ad' dice, Adse, s. A cooper's tool an axe Addi'ct, v. E. To devote, to dedicate Addict'ed, part. A. Des eted to, fond of Add'itament, s. The thing added, addition Addi'tion, s. An adding to; a rule for adding sums together in law, the residence, oo cupation, or rank of any person Addi'tional, a. That which i. Added Ail'dle, a. Barren, empty usually applied to such eggs as are dry lees Ad'dle-pated, a. Empty headed weak Addre'ss, e. A. To speak or apply to to di rect to to prepare one's self for any action Addre'ss, s. A petition direction skill dexterity mode of behaviour Addu'ce, -o. O. Tobr'mg m', three Mg. About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.com This book is a reproduction of an important historical work. Forgotten Books uses state-of-the-art technology to digitally reconstruct the work, preserving the original format whilst repairing imperfections present in the aged copy. In rare cases, an imperfection in the original, such as a blemish or missing page, may be replicated in our edition. We do, however, repair the vast majority of imperfections successfully; any imperfections that remain are intentionally left to preserve the state of such historical works.