A Dictionary of the English Language: In which the Words are Deduced from Their Originals, Explained in Their Different Meanings, and Authorized by the Names of the Writers in Whose Works They are FoundW. Strahan; J. and F. Rivington; J. Hinton; T. Davies; Hawes, Clarke, and Collins; R. Horsefield; W. Johnston; W. Owen; T. Lowndes; T. Caslon; S. Crowder; T. Longman; B. Law; Beckett, and De Hondt; E. and C. Dilly; J. Dodsley; W. Nicoll; W. Griffin; G. Robinson; T. Cadell; J. Knox; Almon; W. Goldsmith; J. and J. Ridley, 1773 |
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... person that abides or dwells in a place . ABI'DING . f . [ from abide . ] Continuance : A'BJECT . a . [ abje & us , Lat . ] 1. Mean , or worthless . 2. Contemptible , or of no value . 3. Without hope or regard . 4. Deftitute , mean and ...
... person that abides or dwells in a place . ABI'DING . f . [ from abide . ] Continuance : A'BJECT . a . [ abje & us , Lat . ] 1. Mean , or worthless . 2. Contemptible , or of no value . 3. Without hope or regard . 4. Deftitute , mean and ...
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... person . Fairfax . Hammond . 2. Conformity to fomething . ACCO'RDANT . a . [ accordant , Fr. ] Will- ing ; in a good humour . Shakespeares ACCO'RDING . p . [ from accord . ] 1. In a manner fuitable to , agreeably to . 2. In proportion ...
... person . Fairfax . Hammond . 2. Conformity to fomething . ACCO'RDANT . a . [ accordant , Fr. ] Will- ing ; in a good humour . Shakespeares ACCO'RDING . p . [ from accord . ] 1. In a manner fuitable to , agreeably to . 2. In proportion ...
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... person in a particular character . Davies . Pfalms . Milton . 2. To confefs ; as , a fault . 3. To own ; as , a benefit . ACKNOWLEDGING , a . [ from acknow- ledge . ] Grateful . Dryden . ACKNOWLEDGMENT.S . [ from acknow- ledge . ] 1 ...
... person in a particular character . Davies . Pfalms . Milton . 2. To confefs ; as , a fault . 3. To own ; as , a benefit . ACKNOWLEDGING , a . [ from acknow- ledge . ] Grateful . Dryden . ACKNOWLEDGMENT.S . [ from acknow- ledge . ] 1 ...
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... person that hath it . Corvel . 7. In France , the fame as frocks in Eng- land . A'CTIONABLE . a . [ from action . ] That which admits an action in law ; punishable . Hoevel . A'CTION - TAKING . a . Litigious . Sbak . A'CTIVE . a ...
... person that hath it . Corvel . 7. In France , the fame as frocks in Eng- land . A'CTIONABLE . a . [ from action . ] That which admits an action in law ; punishable . Hoevel . A'CTION - TAKING . a . Litigious . Sbak . A'CTIVE . a ...
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... person . Genefis 2. Contrary ; oppofite , in general . Dryden . 3. In contradiction to any opinion . Swift . 4. With contrary motion or tendency : uted of material action . Shakespeare . Dryden . Dryden . Davies . 5. Contrary to rule ...
... person . Genefis 2. Contrary ; oppofite , in general . Dryden . 3. In contradiction to any opinion . Swift . 4. With contrary motion or tendency : uted of material action . Shakespeare . Dryden . Dryden . Davies . 5. Contrary to rule ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Addifon adjective Arbuthnot Atterbury Ayliffe Bacon Bentley Blackmore body Boyle Brown Burnet caft Camden Carew caufe Clarendon clofe colour Confifting corrupted Corvel Davies Decay of Piety defire Denbam Deuteronomy Donne drefs Dryden Dutch Fairfax fame fenfe feparate fhip fide fignifies fmall fome fomething fometimes fore fpecies French ftate ftone ftrike fuch fupport fyllable Glanville ground Hale Hammond Hayward Hooker horfe houfe houſe Hudibras inftrument Jobnfon kind King Charles Knolles L'Eftrange Latin lefs Locke low Latin manner meaſure Milton Mortimer nefs Newton noife noun obfcure oppofition paffion participle Peacham perfon plant Pope prefent preter preterite Prior publick purpoſe Quincy raiſe Raleigh Refembling Rofcommon Rogers Savift Saxon Shakefp Shakespeare Sidney ſmall South Spenfer ſtate Stilling fleet Swift Tatler Taylor Temple thing Tillotson tion ufed uſed veffel verb Waller Watts whofe Wiseman Woodward word Wotton
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 18 - Excise. A hateful tax levied upon commodities, and adjudged not by the common judges of property, but wretches hired by those to whom excise is paid.
Seite 12 - ... its motion ; and yet, with its own peculiar motion, carries the body of the planet fastened to it round about its proper centre.
Seite 164 - In arithmetic^, the increasing .of any one number by another, so often as there are units in that number, by which the one is increased. MULTIPLICATOR,(mul-te-ple-ka'-tnr)n.!. The number by which" another number is multiplied.
Seite 152 - The application of a word to an use to which, in its original import, it cannot be put: as, he bridles his anger; he deadens the sound; the spring awakes the flowers.
Seite 78 - In mathematics or the parabolic spiral, is a curve which rises from the supposition of the axis of the common Apollonian parabola's being bent round into the periphery of a circle, and is a line then passing through the extremities of the ordinates. which now converge toward the centre of the said circle.
Seite 12 - A curve generated by the revolution of the periphery of a circle along the convex or concave part of another circle.
Seite 96 - In architecture, that part of a pillar in vaults and arches, on which the weight of the building...