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Show SU rooany. adj. [from fugar. {tin of fugar Sweet;1Su'tne. m ' Chafte ladies ears to phantafies impure Spenfer 7, SUGGE'ST. v. a. [ Sfuggero, fuggeftum 8 'Lat./,‘lggerer L Fl_'ench. 1, Tohint; tointimate; to infinuate goo l t t i o Are you not afham'd Whaf fpiritfuggdix this imagination ? Sbfl'l‘f./}xsflrr es, b I could never have fuffered greater calamitig ]}‘, f c . c c n c i f j a t g f t i den King Charles to me Thefe Romith cafuifts fpeak peace to the con{ciences of men, by fuggefting fomething to the which fhall fatisfy their minds, notwithftanding Kknown, atual, avowed continuance of their fins Sauth. Some ideas make themfelves way, and are fug.d to the mind by all the ways of fenfation an Locke yeflexion Reflec upon the different ftate of the mind i thinking, which thofe inftances of attention, reveLocke ricand dreaming, naturaily enough fuggeff Search for fome thoughts thy own [uggdffing mind And others di€ated by heav'nly pow' Pope's Offgflfy Shall rife fpontaneous 2, Tofeduce; to draw to ill by infinuation clean.sh data import.tsv out README Qut of ufe "They dofuggg/i at firft with heav'nly thows. Shak Knowing that tender youth is foon fuggeffed I nightly lodge her in an upper tower. Shakefpeare "S 4, To inform fecretly Out of ufe We muft fuggeft the people, in what hatre He ftill hath held them, that to's power he woul Have made them raules Shakefpeare's Coriolanus SvccE'sTER. #. /. [from fuggef. On " that remindeth another SuGcE'stioN. n. [ [ fuggeftion, Fr. fro - 1, Private hint; intimation infinuation - fecret notification It allayeth all bafe and earthly cogitations ba nifheth and driveth away thofe evil fecret fuggeffion which our invifible enemy is always apt to minifter He was a ma Of an unbounded ftomach, ever rankin Hooker Shakefpeare's Henry VIII Native and untaught Juggeftions of inquifitiv ~ children Locke ~ Another way is letting the mind, upon the fugZefion of any new notion, run after fimilies. Locke 2. Secret incitement On your fuggeftion Shake[peare''s King Fobn ToSv'corvare.v. a. [ fugills, Lat.] T beat black and blue ; to make livid b a bruife The head'of the os humeri was bruifed, and re!,!:mned Juggilated long after Wifeman's Surgery Svtcipe, . /. [ fuicidium, Latin. 1, Self:-murder 5 the horrid crime of de firoying one's felf Thlld of defpair, and fuicide my name Sawage Uicide Clarifja 2 A felf-murderer Jf fate forbears us, fancy firikes the b ow sfi.fmflh mlsfortunes,juicides in woe . lf YWAGE. u. /. [ fouillage, Fr. o ,fi&ih Obfolete Young Drai i n they have chofen thee plopl t, and laii d ou i _g‘e;::‘mts of the work, fome Italians dig wells an the 24 other conveyances for the fuillage o € Joute Wotton Wars are fuits of appeal to the tribunal of God' juftice, where there are no fuperiors on earth to de SULT . / Involve not thyfelf in the fuits and par Taylor's Guide to Dewation great perfonages To Alibech alone refer your fuit Dryden And let his fentence finith your difpute [ /fuite, French. 1. A fet; a number of things correfponden fuit of la one to the other Draytou V\.‘Yc, ere the day, two fuits of armour fought Which borne before him on his fteed he brought Juit woul will do among foaming bottles and ale-wafh'd wits, is wonderful Him all reput For his device in handfoming a fuit Suit th 4. Out of Suirs. Having no correfpondence A metaphor, I fuppofe, fro cards Wear this for me j ene ot of fuits with fortune That would give more, but that her hand lack Shakefpeare She gallops o'er a courtier's nofe And then dreams he of (melling out a [uit. Shak Had I a fuit to Mr. Shallow, I would humou his men with the imputation of being near thei Shakefpeare mafter Fob, xi. 19 My mind, neither with pride's itch, nor yet hat bee Poifon'd with love to fee or to be feen I had no fuit there, nor new fuit to fhew Donne Yet went to court It will be as unreafonable to expet that Go thould attend and grant thofe fuits of ours, whic we do not at all confider ourfelves. Duty of Man 7. Courtthip Direé my fuit Shakefpeare's Romeo and Fuliet Their determinations are, to retutn to their hom and to trouble you with no more fuit, unlefs yo may be wo impofition by fome other fort than your father' y Sbakej/fmre 8. In Spenfer it feems to fignify purfuit profecution High amongft all knights haft hung thy fhield Thenceforth the fuit of earthly conqueft {hoone And wafh thy hands from guilt of bloody field Spenfer g. [In law.] Suit is fometimes put for th inftance of a caufe, and fometimes fo the caufe itfelf deduced in judgment Aylife wor t th Shak fp. Hamlet of their tales an o Dryden to become Compute the gains of his ungovern'd zeal 111 fuits his cloth the praife of railing well. Drydes Her purple habit fits with fuch a grac On her fmooth fhoulders, and fo fuits her face Diryden If different fe&s fhould give us a lift of thof inpate pradtical principles, they would fet dow only fuch as fuited their diftin&t hypothefes. Locke Raife her notes to that fsblime degree Which fuits a fong of piety and thee Prior 3. To drefs 3 to clothe Such a Sebaftian was my brother too So went he fuited to his watry tomb If fpirits can aflume both form and fuit You come to fright us Skakefp. Tavelfth Night Be better fuited Thefe weeds are memories of thofe misfortunes I pry'thee put them off to worfer hours Skakefp I'11 difrobe m Of thefe Italian weeds, and fuir myfel As does a Briton peafant. Shakefpeare's Cymbeline Sum. o, # Lo agret; to .aceord Dryden ufes it both with 70 and wizh T'he one intenfe, the other ftill remifs Cannot well fuit wvith cither ; but foon prov Tedious alike Milten The place itfelf was fuitirg to his care Uncouth and favage as the cruel fair Pity does quith a noble nature fuit Dryden Dryden Conftraint does ill ewith love and beauty fuiz Dryden This he fays, becaufe it fuits with his hypothefis but proves it not Locke Give me not an offic That fuits 2ith me fo ill; thou know'ft m Addifon temper Sui'TABLE. adj. [from /uit.] Fitting; according with; agreeable to : with 7o Throug He that bath the fteerage of my courfe manne 2. To be fitted to company an addref th any other. Shakefpeare Plexirtus's ill-led life, and worfe-gotten honour thould have tumbled together to deftruion, ha there not come in Tydeus and Telenor, with fift Sidney in their fuite to his defence Your gates againft my force word tiors and humours, that each would be imyroper i Every five and thirty years the fame kind an Juite of weather comes about again; as great froft great wet, great droughts, warm winters, fummer with little beat ; and they call it the prime Bacor 6. [From Zo fue.] A petition of entreaty to th their telling, are fo fuited to their different educa Clarendon Retinue actio ‘The matter an 3. Confecution ; feries; regular order 5. [Suite, French. Obfolete Arbuthnot action, with this fpecial obfervance, that you o'er Juits of cloaths, with good proportions of fhoes an means be in quict poffeflion of lLi ftep not the modefty of nature befor tha an a year Zo Suir. w. a. [from the noun 1. To fit; toadapt to fomething elfe Shak. Hene V Of all the court to have the beft conccit Donne Three or four fuits one winter there docs wafte Onejuir does there three or four winters laft. Coavl _Hls majefty was fupplied with three thoufan and it is our fin bufinefs TQ Judge of lace, pink, pancs, print, cutand plait but the not laft abov that time he woul Dryden Juit of the camp if nothing elfe comes in t matter of our accounty when it is either upon a unjuftifiable ground, or carried on by finful maKettleavell nagements hn Bull was flattered by the lawsars tha Of fundry forts of feet, and fundry fuits of rhimes ‘What a beard of the general's cut, and a horri in itfelf unlawfu a thin no a fin thereof times 2. Cloaths made one part to anfwer another i ay be innocent W'h«.)l'c verfes they deduc'd from thofe firft golde Bacon's War with Spai termine the caufe hNotc the percolation or fuing of the verjuic through the wood ; for verjuice of itfelf would neve 2 h:n,‘e‘p‘xflcd through the wood Bacon Many fhall make fuit unto thee Arthur, they fay, is kill'd to-nigh Sufanna it is per Mine ears againft your fuits ave ftronger tha : Hfmfelf with princes; one that by fuggefio Tied a'll the'kingdom French All that had any fuits in law came unto them 1aps peculiar to Bacon.] The a& of foakIng through any thing ftockings When devils will their blackeft fins put on e oo [This word feems t6 com {rom/zwr, ‘to {weat fim‘;;gth the fggg‘;y {weet thereof allur U all thof miferies, in bot there ap peared a kind of noblenefs not fwitable to that afSidiiey fliction What he did purpofe, it was the pleafure o God that Solomon his fon fhould perform, i manner fwitable to their prefent and ancient ftate Hooker To folemn as of royalty and juftice, their fuitable ornaments are a beauty ; are they only in reli Hocker gion a ftain It is very [uitable to the principles of the Roma church ; fur why fhould not their fcienge as well a fervice be in an unknown tongue As the bleflings of God upon his honeft indu had been great, {o he was not without intentions o making fuitable retarns in adts of charity. Arerd Expreffion is the drefs of thought, and fil Appcars more decent, as more fuitable G A vil |