A Dictionary of the English Language: In which the Words are Deduced from Their Originals, and Illustrated in Their Different Significations, by Examples from the Best Writers, to which are Prefixed a History of the Language, and an English Grammar, Volum 2Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme, 1805 |
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... keep alone ? Of sorriest fancies your companion making , Using those thoughts which should indeed have died With them they think on . Shaksp . Macbeth . If any sovereignty , on account of his pro- perty , had been vested in Adam , which ...
... keep alone ? Of sorriest fancies your companion making , Using those thoughts which should indeed have died With them they think on . Shaksp . Macbeth . If any sovereignty , on account of his pro- perty , had been vested in Adam , which ...
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... keep alone ? Of sorriest fancies your companion making , Using those thoughts which should indeed have died With them they think on . Shaksp . Macbeth . If any sovereignty , on account of his pro- perty , had been vested in Adam , which ...
... keep alone ? Of sorriest fancies your companion making , Using those thoughts which should indeed have died With them they think on . Shaksp . Macbeth . If any sovereignty , on account of his pro- perty , had been vested in Adam , which ...
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... keep in order . They look to us , as we should judge of an army of well disciplined soldiers at a distance . Derham's Astro - Theology . 3. To punish ; to correct ; to chastise . 4. To advance by instruction . 3 . The law appear'd ...
... keep in order . They look to us , as we should judge of an army of well disciplined soldiers at a distance . Derham's Astro - Theology . 3. To punish ; to correct ; to chastise . 4. To advance by instruction . 3 . The law appear'd ...
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... ? Numbers . 3. It is irregularly used by Temple with to before the following word . You may keep your beauty and your health , D The soul Reason receives , and reason is her being DIS The goodly prospect of some foreign land, ...
... ? Numbers . 3. It is irregularly used by Temple with to before the following word . You may keep your beauty and your health , D The soul Reason receives , and reason is her being DIS The goodly prospect of some foreign land, ...
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... keep several orders in mutual dependence on each other . Rogers 2. Dissimilitude ; unlikeness . To DISPARK . v . a . [ dis and park . ] 1. To throw open a park . Tis no disparagement to philosophy , that it can not deify us . Reason is ...
... keep several orders in mutual dependence on each other . Rogers 2. Dissimilitude ; unlikeness . To DISPARK . v . a . [ dis and park . ] 1. To throw open a park . Tis no disparagement to philosophy , that it can not deify us . Reason is ...
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A Dictionary of the English Language, Volum 2,Del 1 Samuel Johnson,Robert Gordon Latham Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1870 |
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Addison on Italy Addison's Spectator Æneid Arbuthnot Atterbury Bacon Bacon's Nat beasts Ben Jonson blood body Boyle Brown Brown's Vulgar cause Clarendon colour Coriolanus Cymbeline death Decay of Piety Denham Dict divine doth draw Dryd Dryden Dryden's Eneid Dutch earth Errours eyes fair Fairy Queen fall favour fear fire flowers force fore foul fruit give ground hath heart heav'n Henry VI honour Hooker Hudibras Juvenal kind King Lear L'Estrange Latin live Locke lord low Latin Macbeth Milton mind motion n. s. French nature ness never noun Opticks Othello Paradise Lost passion Pope pow'r Prior publick Raleigh Saxon sense Shaks Shaksp Shakspeare Shakspeare's Henry shew Sidney soul South Spenser spirits Swift Temple thee thing thou thought Tillotson tion tongue unto verb virtue Waller wind Woodward word