Jortin

Cited as Jortin. — 7 quotations

Compliable

The Jews . . . had made their religion compliable, and accommodated to their passions.

Descent

The United Provinces . . . ordered public prayer to God, when they feared that the French and English fleets would make a descent upon their coasts.

Incarnate

He represents the emperor and his wife as two devils incarnate, sent into the world for the destruction of mankind.

Inexcusably

Inexcusably obstinate and perverse.

Insight

He had an insight into almost all the secrets of state.

Irreversible

This rejection of the Jews, as it is not universal, so neither is it final and irreversible.

Lax

The word “æternus” itself is sometimes of a lax signification.