INSULT (3)

Source: 567

In‐sult″, v. i. 1. 1. To leap or jump.
Give me thy knife, I will insult on him. Shak. Like the frogs in the apologue, insulting upon their wooden king. Jer. Taylor. 2. 2. To behave with insolence; to exult.
The lion being dead, even hares insult. Daniel. An unwillingness to insult over their helpless fatuity. Landor.