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Instance   /ˈɪnstəns/   Listen
noun
Instance  n.  
1.
The act or quality of being instant or pressing; urgency; solicitation; application; suggestion; motion. "Undertook at her instance to restore them."
2.
That which is instant or urgent; motive. (Obs.) "The instances that second marriage move Are base respects of thrift, but none of love."
3.
Occasion; order of occurrence. "These seem as if, in the time of Edward I., they were drawn up into the form of a law, in the first instance."
4.
That which offers itself or is offered as an illustrative case; something cited in proof or exemplification; a case occurring; an example; as, we could find no instance of poisoning in the town within the past year. "Most remarkable instances of suffering."
5.
A token; a sign; a symptom or indication.
Causes of instance, those which proceed at the solicitation of some party.
Court of first instance, the court by which a case is first tried.
For instance, by way of example or illustration; for example.
Instance Court (Law), the Court of Admiralty acting within its ordinary jurisdiction, as distinguished from its action as a prize court.
Synonyms: Example; case. See Example.



verb
Instance  v. t.  (past & past part. instanced; pres. part. instancing)  To mention as a case or example; to refer to; to cite; as, to instance a fact. "I shall not instance an abstruse author."



Instance  v. i.  To give an example. (Obs.) "This story doth not only instance in kingdoms, but in families too."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Instance" Quotes from Famous Books



... For instance, suppose we adopt the relational theory of space. Then the space in which apparent nature is set is the expression of certain relations between the apparent objects. It is a set of apparent relations between apparent relata. Apparent nature is the dream, and the apparent relations of space ...
— The Concept of Nature - The Tarner Lectures Delivered in Trinity College, November 1919 • Alfred North Whitehead

... staring up at the sky. The sun beat down upon him, full in his face, causing him to close his eyes until he could just see through the lashes,—-a trick he had learned in many games played in the woodlands. In the present instance it served him well, for the three men who were paddling the canoe swiftly toward the mainland believed that he had not yet recovered fully from the punishing they had given him; so, after their first glance, they paid little ...
— The Boy Scouts on Picket Duty • Robert Shaler

... 25th of September, 1841, a magnetic storm was observed in Toronto, and at the same time there was one felt at the Cape of Good Hope. There is no great mystery in this. If we suppose the axis of the central vortex, for instance, to have passed Toronto in latitude 43d 33' north, in ordinary positions of the moon, in her orbit, the southern portion of the axis would be in 33d or 34d south latitude, and consequently would have passed near the Cape of Good Hope ...
— Outlines of a Mechanical Theory of Storms - Containing the True Law of Lunar Influence • T. Bassnett

... auxiliaries in their struggles for territory and power. The history of this country is filled with details of Indian assaults on forts and settlements, ambushes, massacres, torturings, and acts of duplicity and ferocity innumerable. Yet every instance of Indian hostility has ended in the triumph of the whites, the advance of the army of colonization a step further, and the gradual subjugation of American savagery, animate and inanimate, to the beneficent ...
— Historic Tales, Vol. 1 (of 15) - The Romance of Reality • Charles Morris

... exuded from every pore of his skin. When he held up his finger Mamie crawled to him. She believed, probably, that she was escaping from a drunken father, and she knew that Tom could and would supply many things for which she had yearned—a parlour, for instance, possibly a piano, and a silk dress. She would have taken Dennis without these amenities, but Dennis had fled to the back of Nowhere without ...
— Bunch Grass - A Chronicle of Life on a Cattle Ranch • Horace Annesley Vachell


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