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 1T. Tegg, 1832 |
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Side 38
... Bacon's Natural History , No. 187 . 2. The slight and imperfect representa- tion of a thing ; a faint sketch . The observers view but the backside of the hangings ; the right one is on the other side the grave : and our knowledge is ...
... Bacon's Natural History , No. 187 . 2. The slight and imperfect representa- tion of a thing ; a faint sketch . The observers view but the backside of the hangings ; the right one is on the other side the grave : and our knowledge is ...
Side 45
... Bacon's New Atalantis . Should Nature's self invade the world again , And o'er the centre spread the liquid main ; Thy pow'r were safe . Waller . Go now , deluded man ! And seek again New toils , new dangers , on the dusty plain . Dryd ...
... Bacon's New Atalantis . Should Nature's self invade the world again , And o'er the centre spread the liquid main ; Thy pow'r were safe . Waller . Go now , deluded man ! And seek again New toils , new dangers , on the dusty plain . Dryd ...
Side 106
... Bacon's Nat . Hist . The place in which arms are reposited RMIGEROUS . adj . [ from armiger , Lat . an armour - bearer ] Bearing arms . ARMILLARY . adj . [ from armilla , Lat , a bracelet . ] Resembling a bracelet . The sword Of Michael ...
... Bacon's Nat . Hist . The place in which arms are reposited RMIGEROUS . adj . [ from armiger , Lat . an armour - bearer ] Bearing arms . ARMILLARY . adj . [ from armilla , Lat , a bracelet . ] Resembling a bracelet . The sword Of Michael ...
Side 117
... Bacon's Nat . Hist . Birds be commonly better meat than beasts , be- cause their flesh doth assimilate more finely , and secerneth more subtilely . Bacon's Natural History . To ASSIMILATE . v . a . word for an attendant . The pale ...
... Bacon's Nat . Hist . Birds be commonly better meat than beasts , be- cause their flesh doth assimilate more finely , and secerneth more subtilely . Bacon's Natural History . To ASSIMILATE . v . a . word for an attendant . The pale ...
Side 120
... Bacon . This virtue requireth an astriction ; but such an astriction , as is not grateful to the body : for a pleasing astriction doth rather bind in the nerves , than expel them ; and therefore such astriction is Bacon . found in ...
... Bacon . This virtue requireth an astriction ; but such an astriction , as is not grateful to the body : for a pleasing astriction doth rather bind in the nerves , than expel them ; and therefore such astriction is Bacon . found in ...
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A Dictionary of the English Language: In Which the Words Are Deduced from ... Samuel Johnson Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2018 |
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Addison Æneid Aliments ancient animal Arbuthnot arms Atterbury Bacon bear beat Ben Jonson blood body Boyle break breast breath Brown's Vulgar Errours called cause church Clarendon colour Coriolanus Cowell death Decay of Piety derived Dict doth Dryd Dryden earth eyes Fairy Queen fear fire French give grace ground hand hath head heart heav'n Henry VI honour Hooker horse Hudibras Julius Cæsar kind king King Lear L'Estrange language Locke lord manner Milton mind n. s. Lat nature ness noun Paradise Lost particle person Pope Pope's preter preterite prince Saxon Scepsis sense Shak Shakesp Shakespeare shew Sidney signifies sometimes soul sound South Spenser spirit sweet Swift syllable Tatler thee thing thou thought tion tongue tree unto verb virtue Vulg wind word