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, Band 2Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme, 1805 |
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... colour . ] To tinge ; to colour ; to stain . So much of death her thoughts Had entertain'd , as died her cheeks with pale . Milton . DIE . n . 5 . All white , a virgin saint she sought the skies ; For marriage , though it sullies not ...
... colour . ] To tinge ; to colour ; to stain . So much of death her thoughts Had entertain'd , as died her cheeks with pale . Milton . DIE . n . 5 . All white , a virgin saint she sought the skies ; For marriage , though it sullies not ...
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... colour , ought to be alike in all figures , any more than the hair ; because men are as different from each other , as the regions in which they are born are different . Dryden's Dufresnoy . Happiness consists in things which produce ...
... colour , ought to be alike in all figures , any more than the hair ; because men are as different from each other , as the regions in which they are born are different . Dryden's Dufresnoy . Happiness consists in things which produce ...
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... colour , ought to be alike in all figures , any more than the hair ; because men are as different from each other , as the regions in which they are born are different . Dryden's Dufresnoy . Happiness consists in things which produce ...
... colour , ought to be alike in all figures , any more than the hair ; because men are as different from each other , as the regions in which they are born are different . Dryden's Dufresnoy . Happiness consists in things which produce ...
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... colour will be altered into a dirty one , and the sweet taste into an oily one . 3. Mean ; base ; despicable . Locke . Such employments are the diseases of labour , and the rust of time , which it contracts not by lying still , but by ...
... colour will be altered into a dirty one , and the sweet taste into an oily one . 3. Mean ; base ; despicable . Locke . Such employments are the diseases of labour , and the rust of time , which it contracts not by lying still , but by ...
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... colour ; the act of staining . 1. To uncover ; to produce from a state • of latitancy to open view . In this deep quiet , from what source un- known , 2. Change of colour ; stain ; die . Those seeds of fire their fatal birth disclose ...
... colour ; the act of staining . 1. To uncover ; to produce from a state • of latitancy to open view . In this deep quiet , from what source un- known , 2. Change of colour ; stain ; die . Those seeds of fire their fatal birth disclose ...
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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