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Show OP OHPL O P not to continue clofed Skakefpeare Here is better than the gpen air And when at latt in pity, you will die T'll watch your birth of immortality Then, turtle-like, I'll to my mate repair And teach you your firft flight in open air. Dryden 1. Unclofed; not fhut The gates are gpe; mow prove good feconds >Tis for the followers fortune widens them Shakefpeare's Coriolanus Not for the fliers Moft fagrilegivus murder hath broke cp The lord's anointed temple, and ftole thenc fervant, with an gpe Nehewiaby Vie 5 True gpener of mine eyes Much better feems this vifion, and moze hop Of peaceful days portends, than thofe two paft To us, th'imagin'd voice of heav'n itfelf The very opener and intelligence Between the grace, the fan&ities of heav'n And our dull workings Shakefpeare's Henry 1V 3. That whic The apparent crucif evident to themfelve [open and gre. Vigi His time doth take OrENHA'NDED. adj. [open and hand. Generous ; liberal ; munificent Drayton Th'.under-work, tranfpatent, thews too plain Where open alks accufe, th' excufe is vain. Deorid Good heav'n, who renders mercy back for mercy With openhanded bounty fhall repay you. clean.sh data import.tsv out README Rozve 3. Not wearin difguife; clear; artlefs fincere Cordes Tith in tim o the hotter he was againf the i'l;wg war ha th mor credi i megotiation of peace; and befides was held a ma open-and of good faith Bacon The French are always open, familiar, and talkasive;- the Italians fiff, ceremonious, and refe to fom With dry eyes, and with'an gpen look Dryden's Boccace She met his glance midway Then thall thy Cragg On the caft ore another Pollio fhine With afpeCt open fhall ereft his head I‘.']"L' 5. Not hidden; expofed to view In that little fpot of gr yund that lie thofe two great ocean ercife our th ontss tlre divine betwee of ternity, we are to exand lay .open the treafures o ind goodnefs hid in this part o rire, reafoning an Burnet difcourf #o difcover the certainty of their truths they li nature an Moral principle heart. I know him well; he's free and openbearted. Dryd Of an gpenbearted generous minifter you are no to fay that he was in an intrigue to betray hi country j but in an intrigue with alady. Arburbnot OrenNHEA'RTEDNESS 7. /o [open an heart.] Liberality; franknefs; fincerity 5 munificence ; generofity O PENING. #. /i [from open. 1 Apertare; ‘breach 2. Difcovery a ledge; dawn « His generous, open, undefigning heart Has begg'd his rival to follicit for him Addifen 4. Not clouded ; clear [open an The fire thus up, makes its way through th cracks and gpenings of the earth Woodward This referved myiterious way of ain pofts expe p erfons, > who in righ Bk of theirLS open treatment, was impute adj Generous; candid ; not meanly fubtle He wds fo fecret therein, as not daring to b #pen, that to no creature he ever fpake of i Lor ) Shakefpeare's Tempeft afreth, and put him to an open thame Hebrewws He irefully enrag'd would needs to ¢pen arms OPENHEA'RTED O'PENwESS. #. [ [from open. 1. Plainnefs; clearnefs; freedom fro obfcurity or ambiguity 2 a diftance faint know God has been pleafed to diffipate this confufio and chaos, and to give s fome openings, fom dawnings of liberty and fettlement, Sazth's Scrmons The opening of your glory was like that of light you fhone to us from aiar, and difclofed your. #irf beams on diftant nations Dryden O'pENLY. adw. [from open. 1. Publickl, ; not fecretly; ‘in fight; n obfcurely Their adtions always fpoke of with great ho nour, are now called openly into queftion Prayers are faulty, not whenfoeve Hooker they b openly made, but when hypocrify is the caufe o open praying Hogker Why fhould you have put me to den This claim which now you wear fo cpenly # Shakefp Deliver with more ggennefs your anfiver To my demands Shakefpeare's Cynbelug Plainnefs ; freedom fiom difguife are exprefied in lively colours. Felton oy the Claffcks _Thefe letters all written in the gpennefs of friend thip, will prove what were my seal fentiments. n. / Pope's Lettg [Italian. An gpera is a poetical tale or fiction, reprefente by vocal and inftrumental mufick, adorned wit fcenes, machines, and dancing Dryden You will hear what plays were acted that wesk is the fineft fong in the spera adj [fro operor, Latin To be done; pra&icable Bein uncapabl Lo Notin ufe of operable circumftances, o rightly to judge the prudentiality of affuirs, the the vifible fuccefs, and thereafie condemn or cry up the whole progreflion. Preon Openegy'd confpirac the Son of Go L'Efrange only gaze upo While you here do fnoring lie publick and moys) clamorous; yoci ravenous O'peraBLE lant; watchful Dryden Plain OreNeY'eD. adj Boyle Up comes a lion opemmouthed toward the afs whic There may be fuch openers of compound bodies becaufe there wanted not fome experiments in whic Dara Too openly does love and hatred th O'PERA feparates; difuniter it appcarc}d out difguife The noble gpenrefs and freedom of his reflexions, Milton 2, Explainer; interpreter when Alneas on the plain appears Meets him with open arms and falling tears. Dryd The bounce broke gpe the door Dryden The door was gpe, they blindly grope the way 2 O'PENER. 2. /. [from open. 1. One that opens; one that unlocks one that unclofes e hi With the fame key fet gpe the doo Wherewith you lock'd it faft before Cleawveland Thro' the gafe Wide opez and unguarded, Satan pafs'd Milton They meet the chiefs returning from the fight And each with open arms embrac'd her chofe knight Dryden He Feremiah give every one according to his ways The eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous and his cars are oper unto their crye Pfal. xxxiv Then fent Sanballa letter in his hand Thine eyes are open upon all the fons of men, t Shakefpeare's Macbeth "The life o' th' building Attentive e OFPE adj. [ Ope is {carcely ufed buat b O'pEN old authors, and by them i the primitive not figurative fenfe. 10 Gay's Rural Sports The woodcock flutters A take thy' certain aim e A Tlhie fervice that I truly did his life Shakefpeare Hath left me cpen to all injuries As hounds in fleep will spen for their prey. Dryden Atterbu 2. Plainly; apparentl ; evidently; Witg eedy ferous Expofed; without defence 9 on this day's folemnity OrswNMaoOUn'THErrD.n oyadj.T[ope G If I cry out thus upon no trail, never truft m when I oper again. Shak. Merry Wives of Windfor The night reftores our altions done by day e A term of hunting 8. Uncovered From each fhe nicely culls with curious toil And decks the goddels Pope's Rape of the Lock Hark ! the dog gpens winter portendeth a hot an Bacon's Natural Hiflory An open and war dry {fummer treafures ope at once 2. To bark worldly lufts Ti'lofj‘i We exprefs our thanks y cpenly ownin g our pa rentage, and paying o r common de votions G 7. Not cloudy; not gloomy The hundred door Ope of themfelves; a rufhing whirlwind roat Diyden's AEneid Within the cave Unnumber' not pre If Demetrius and the craftsmen have a matte againft any man, the law is cpen, and there ar deputies ; let them implead one another. Aés, xix not to remain fhut unclofe itfelf denied e 7o O'rPEN 6. Not reftrained ; no cluded % U I knew the tims Now full, that I no more But cpenly begin, as bef hould' Xi?:‘ :l:f t become The authority which deriv'd from heay' How grofly and cpe ly do many of us c; Milion ntradif the precepts of the gofp l, by our ungodl; nefs ar Locke 9o OrE. th Notes on Ody/ffey o et e e reader 1. T mind modefty; he continually grows upon th engrave charaGer OPErRANT adj having powe [operant, Fr. to produc Adtive any effeft though elegant not in ufe wor Earth, yield me roots feeks far better of thee, fauce his palat Wh With thy ‘moft operant poifon. Shakefpeare''s Titiih 1 muft leave thee, love, and ¢hortly too My operant powers their funétions leave todo Sbakr‘j}fgr [operor, Lati tohave agency «. 5 7o OPERATE To a operer, Fr. effe@s: with oz before th to produc fubjeét of operation o b operat perfon privat o The virtue e t a narrow i aftio o fphere few; thei Atsirbury influence is confined to i Rodic A---------------------------------------------- city an not open as natura Homer opens his poem with the utmoft fimpli produe ideas:i ys manifeftly by in pulfe, the only way which.we can conce jve bodie operare 1n it can o¢ perat Loacke th on' guts and ftomach, 3«? ackes thereby produce diftip&t ideas A y:;\in convincing reafon gperates ot the ":;:: both of a learned and ignorant hearerasiong ?S‘Zwft, live Where caufes, qperate freely, with 2 hbert}'é'f "vn difference to this or the contrary, the ef:: of i thz(l- knowl ce:ai th an ent contin b belongs only to God . /o [gperatio, Laul Orpera'TiON ration, Fr. 1. Agency produ&i ence Z ; ; ; C d l l t e n n i a e o There are in m l n f m f c t l fupernatural, fome p cal By all theoperations of the orbs } c t a c a i e From whom we d c c a r t p m a i l f d Here |