in *Grammar*, a verb to which the nominative of any certain person cannot be prefixed; or, as others define it, a verb deponent of the two first and primary persons, as *debet*, *oparet*, &c. The impersonal verbs of the active voice end in *i*, and those of the passive in *tur*; they are conjugated through the third person singular of almost all the tenes and moods: they want the imperative, instead of which we use the present of the subjunctive; as *pensent*, *pugnetur*, &c.; nor, but a few excepted, are they to be met with in the supines, participles, or gerunds.
**IMPEVIOUS**, a thing not to be pervaded or passed through, either by reason of the closeness of its pores, or the particular configuration of its parts.
**IMPETIGO**, in *Medicine*, an extreme roughness and foulness of the skin, attended with an itching and plentiful scurf.
The impetigo is a species of dry pruriginous itch, wherein scales or scurf succeed apace; arising from saline corrosive humours thrown out upon the exterior parts of the body, by which means the internal parts are usually relieved.