释义 |
▪ I. † eˈssentiate, ppl. a. Obs. [as if ad. L. *essentiāt-us; see next.] = essentiated. In quot. n.
1630G. Widdowes Schysmat. Puritan A iij b, The scriptures deduceable sence in Essentials, Essentiates, Efficients, Finals, Subiects, Effects, and their Modalities,..confounds this Professor. ▪ II. † eˈssentiate, v. Obs. pa. pple. in 6 essentiate. [f. as if on L. *essentiāt- ppl. stem of *essentiāre, f. essentia: see essence.] 1. trans. To make into an essence or being; to form or constitute the essence or being of.
1561T. Norton Calvin's Inst. i. 39 For whosoeuer sayth that the Sonn was essentiate or made to be of his Father, denieth that he is of himself. 1647J. Saltmarsh Sparkl. Glory (1847) 66 That which forms, essentiates, or constitutes the true Christian, is the Spirit of Jesus Christ. 1680Baxter Answ. Stillingfl. 8 A Church as well as a Kingdom, is essentiated by a pars regens, and pars subdita. 1687Death's Vis. Pref. 4 Those turns of Fancy and Wit, that almost Essentiate a Poem. b. to essentiate together: to unite in essence; to make into one essence or being.
1593Nashe Christ's T. 9 b, What is a man, if the parts of his body be disparted, and not incorporated and essentiate together? 2. intr. To become essence; to be assimilated or converted into a being or body.
1599B. Jonson Ev. Man out of Hum. v. iv, What comes nearest the nature of that it feeds, converts quicker to nourishment, and doth sooner essentiate. 3. trans. To refine into an ‘essence’ or subtle extract. (See essentiated ppl. a.) Hence eˈssentiated ppl. a. eˈssentiating vbl. n. and ppl. a. eˈssentiator, he that ‘essentiates’.
1656H. More Antid. Ath. (1662) 14 A rabble of Self-essentiated and divided Deities. 1675Evelyn Terra (1778) 170 Essentiated Spirits..are as pernicious to them [plants] as brandy and hot waters to men. 1736Bailey, Essentiated, made or brought into essences, or essential spirits. 1635Montague in Hammond's Wks. (1684) II. 701 If it were simply necessary to the essentiating of a church. 1681Baxter Acc. Sherlocke v. 204 A Constitutive Cause in the common sense of Logicians, signifieth the Essentiating Cause. 1689in 6th Coll. Papers Pres. Affairs 15 One Corporation made up of three Constituent Essentiating Parts, King, Lords and Commons. 1561T. Norton Calvin's Inst. i. 38 That he [the Father] is the onely essentiator or maker of the essence. 1677Gale Crt. Gentiles II. iv. 249 He who is the first independent Essence and Essentiator of althings can be but one. |