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Show "Clo CO Corene. £ [ Anlrifh term, as it feems. bitz Thomas of Definond began that extortio of coigne and livery, and pay; that is, he and hi at pleafure. COIGNE. n. /. [French. X. A corner "The care of the coinage was committed to the inferior magiftrates; and I don't find that they ha a publick trial, as we folemnly practife in this counArbuthnot try Dawies on Ireland z. Coin; money ; ftamped and legitimate metal Buttrice, nor coigne of vantage, but this bir This is conceive Hath made his pendant bed Shakefp. Macheth See you yond' cin o th' capitol, yond' corne ftone | Shakefpeare into a narrow compafs; as, to coil a rope, to wind it in a ring Boyle Corr. n. f. [kolleren, Germ. 1. Tumult ; turmoil ; buftle; ftir; hurry confufion Who was fo firm, {o conftanty that this cci Skakefp. Tempefi miftrefs, all this co/ is'long of you Shak Unneceflary coinage, as well as unneceffary reviva 2. A rope wound into a ring Corn. ./. [coigre, French.] A corner any thing ftanding out angularly ; {quare brick cut diagonally : called ofte quoin, quine COIN. ./. [by fome imagined to com from cuneus, a wedge, becaufe metal i ftamped with a legal impref - fion He gave Dametas a good fum of gold in read Sidney #oin, which Menalcas had bequeathed You have mad Your holy hat be ftamp'd on the king's coirt Shakefpeare's Henry VIIL T cannot tell how the poets will fucceed in the explication of coins, to which they are generally ver Addifon great ftrangers She now contraéts her vaft defign Pope And all her triumphs fhrink into a coin 2. Payment of any kind ‘The lofs of prefent advantage to flefh and blood Hammond's Fundamentals is repaid in-a nobler coin as coined money is Peacham of Antiguities Tenants cannot coin rent juft at quarter-day, bu Locke muft gather it by degrees Can we be fure that this medal was really coine by an artificer, or is but a produé of the foil fro : whence it was taken Bentley 2. 'To make or invent My lung Coin words till their decay, againft thofe meafle Which we difdain fhould tetter us Shakefpeare's Coriolanus 3, "To make or forge any thing, in an il {enfe Never coin a formal lye on't "T'omake the knight o'ercome the giant Hudibras Thofe motives induced Virgil to coin his fable Dryden Some tale, fome new pretence, he daily ¢oin'd, To footh his fifter, and delude her mind Dryden's Virgil eafy nc convey th mak t coine A term i Attbrbury a fault t 5. Forgery; invention This is the very coinage of your brain This bodilefs creation ecftac Is very cunning in Shakefpeare's Hamlet 7o COINCI'DE. @. 2. [coincido, Latin, 1. To fall upon the fame point in the fame point If th equato an 2. To concur 1. Th ecliptick had coincided i to be confiftent with Watts's Logick #. /. [from coincide. ftate of feveral bodies, or lines Concurrence; confiftency; tendency o many things to the fame end ; occurrence of many things at the fame time The very concurrence and coincidence of fo man evidences that contribute to the proof, carries great weight Hale 3. It is followed by awith The coincidence of the planes of this rotatio awith one another, and with the plane of the ecliptick, is very near the truth Chéyne's Philofophical Principles corrupted from Zeffrel, a mean or dege nerate hawk Cort. #. /. [#ote, a die, Dutch.] A thin thrown at a certain mark. See Quorr The time they wear out at coits, kayles, or th like idle exercifes Cor'rion 1 Carew's Survey of Cornzyall . [coitio, Latin. Copulation ; the aét of generation I cannot but admire that philofophers fhoul imagine frogs to fall from the clouds, confiderin how openly they ack their coition, produce fpawn tadpoles, and frogs Ray on the Creation coition with a female Grew's Cofnologia 2. The a& by which two bodies come to gether By Gilbertus this motion is termed coition, no made by any faculty attrative of one, buta fyndrome and concourfe of each, Brown's Vulg, Ert CoxE. #. /. [Perhaps from coguo, Skinner. Fewel made by burning pit-coal unde an earth and as I went from them, they came nearer and neare together, and at length became coincident WNeawton's Opticks equivalent Chriftianity teaches nothing but what is per charcoal is made with wood. It is fre quently ufed in drying malt Co'LaNDER. #. [ [colo, to ftrain, Lat. A fieve either of hair, twigs, or metal through which a mixture to be feparate is poured, and which retains the thicke parts ; a ftrainer Take a thick woven ofier colander Thro' which the prefied winf.s are ftrained cleat May All the vifcera of the body are but as fo man colanders to feparate feveral juices from the blood. Ray on the Creation The brains from nofe and mouth, and eitherea o Coinpica'rioN. 2 /. [from con an Many fymptoms betoindico, Latin. kening the fame caufe Co'INER. 2 /. [from coin. 1. A maker of money ; a minter ; a ftamper of coin My father was I know not wher When I was ftampt : fome coiner with his tool Shakefpeare's Cymbeline Made me a counterfeit It is eafy to find defigns that never entered int the thoughts of the fculptor or the coiner Addifon on Medals There are only two patents referred to, both lef advantageous to the coiner tlran this of Wood Savift Dyydet CoLa'T1oN. 7. /i [from cols Lat.] Th d art of filtering or ftraining Co'LATURE. # /. [from colo,.Lat.] 1. The a& of ftraining; filtration 2. The matter ftrained Co'rerTINE 7 /. A kind of lace worn SR by women Go, hang out an old frifoneer gorgety with feétly fuitable to and coincident avith the ruling principles of a virtuous and well inclined man. Souzh Thefe words of our apoftle are exactly coinciden with that controverted paffage in his difcourfe t Bentley the Athenians a the cinders quenchin The curdled milk circles I viewed througha prifm Concurrent ; - confiftent followed by avizh _Came iffuing forth, as through a colande Cor'NCIDENT. adj. [from coincide. 1. Falling upon the fame point z He is not made produétive of his kind, but b An univerfal equilibrium, arifing from the coincidence of infinite centres, can never be naturall acquired Bentley Thef Co'tsTrIL. 7. /. A coward; a runaway falling upon the fame point 2 may'ft cojoin with fomething, and tho And that beyond commiffion. Shak. Tuelf. Night The rules of right judgment, and of good ratiocination, often coincide with each other Co1'NCIDENCE &4 doft to mee would have rendered the annual revolution of th earth ufelefs Cheyne 7% Corn. @. 4. [from the noun. 1. To mint or ftamp metals for money They cannot touch me for coining: 1 am th Shakefpeare king ‘They never put in pralice a thing fo neceffar Tho Dryden's Fuwenaly Dedication cut in wedges to be coined. 1. Mone runs into affetation be avoided on either hand When we have thufled off this mortal coi/ Shakefpeare's Hamlet of words He's a coward and a coiflril, that will not drin to my niece Shakefpeare's Tavelfth Night 3 The charges of coining money 4. New produétion ; invention In tfiat fleep of death, what dreams may come Muft give us paufe 7o Coj0'in. . n. [conjungo, Lat.] To joi with another in the fame office, great crowds of people continually offering to reSwift turn his coinage upon him. felves, muft neceflarily plump out the fides of th admitted to do:the fame thing again Brown Moor was forced to leave off coining, by th The lurking particles of air, fo expanding them bladder, and o keep them turgid, until the preffure of the air, that at firft coiled them, be re Dionyfius, a Greek coiner of etymologies, i commended by Athenzus Camden's Remains to be a coinage of fame Jews trait 3. An inventor in derifion of Chriftians, who firft began that por 2. A wooden wedge ufed by printers 7o COIL. . a. [cztez'/lir, Fr_] To gathe You a maker of bafe money'.kmg 5%:1; 1. The art or practice of coining money No jutting frieze Would not infe@ his reafon 2. A counterfeiter of the kine's Co'twage. », f. [from coin army took horfe meat and man's meat, and money _ yellow co/bertine again ard o Congreve's Way of the World Diff 'renc rofe between sg Yo e ti be Co an e la o e qu th Mechlin Co'LcoTHAR. 7 /i A term in chymiftry Colcothar is the dry fubftance which remains affe tu mo cap th l mo co bu diftillatio %;nflg vitriol Colcothar, or vitriol burnt, tho:&h Auntge_rt]‘: nels InK ma wil falt ain fix th containi COLD. adj. [cold, Saxon ; alr, German- 1. No hot not warm; gelid; wantin warmth ; being without heat The diet in the ftate of manhood ought to b i u c b Id c wat folid ; and their chief dri fuch a ftate it has its own natural fpiri Arbutbnot mébmfrfl" B |