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Show CO 1D ~Co'RPORATENESS. 7. /i [from corporate. He looks as man was made, with face erelt Th That fcorns his brittle corps, and feems atham' a con - The ftate of a body corporate; a comDiét munity CoRPORA'TION. 7. /. [from corpus, Lat. A corporation is a body politick, authorized b the king's charter to have a common feal, on head officer or more, and members, able, by their common confent, to grant or receive, in law, an thing within the compafs of their charter: eve as one man may do by law all things, that by la he is not forbidden; and bindeth the fucceflors ‘as afingle man binds his executor or heir. Cozvell Of angels we are not to confider only what the are, and do, in regard of their own being ; but tha alfo which concerneth them, as they are linke into a kind of corporation amongft themfelves, an Hooker of fociety with men Of this we find fome foot-fteps in our law Which doth her root from God and nature take Ten thoufand men fhe doth together draw And of them all one corporation make ‘Co'RPORATURE. 7. /i [from corpus, Lat. The ftate of being embodied Dia CorRPO'REAL. adj. [corporens, Latin. 1. Having a body; not immaterial ; no {piritual. See CorPORAL }1 MQ Hehfii i Dawies H ; %' The fwiftnefs of thofe circles attribute Though numberlefs, to his omnipotence ‘That to corporeal fubftances could ad Milton's Paradife Loft Speed almoft fpiritual Having furveyed the image of God in the foul we are not to omit thofe characters that Go imprinted upon the body, as much as a fpiritua {ubftance could be pictured upon a corporeal South's Sermons God being fuppofed to be a pure fpirit, canno be the objett of any corporeal fenfe Tillotfon The courfe is finifh'd which thy fates decreed And thou from thy corporeal prifon freed Dryden's Fables _Fix thy corporeal and internal eye | On the young gnat, or new engender'd fly Prior 2, It is ufed by Swwif# inaccurately for corporal I am not in a condition to mak even o Aimfbur a true fte Downs; and 1 declare that corporeal falfe ftep is worfe than a political one Saift [ CorPorRE1TY. #. /. [from corporeus, Latin.] Materiality; the quality of bein h embodied ; the ftate of having a body bodilinefs Since philofophy affirmeth, that we are middl fubftance Jibesl o G betwee th foul an the body the muft admit of fome corporeity, which fuppofet weight or gravity Brown It is the faying of divine Plato, that man i nature's horizon, dividing betwixt the upper hemifphere of immaterial intelle&s, and this lowe of corporeity Glanwille's Scepfis The one attributed corporeit other fhape and figure CORPORIFICA TION to God and th Stilling fleet 7./- [from corpori J7-] The a&t of giving body or palpability 75 CorPO''RIFY. . a. [from corpus, Lat. - To embody; to infpiffate into body Not ufed A certain fpirituous fubftance, extracted out o it, is miftaken for the fpirit of the world corporified Co S CoRgs B; }"-/ [forj'!_, Fr. corpus, Latin. That lewd ribaul Laid firft his filthy hands on virgin cleene To {poil her dainty: corfe, fo fair and fheene 2. A body, in contempt m bones fhall b Shakefpeare And violent death in thoufand fhapes difplay'd Drydon's Fables See where the corps of thy dead fon approaches Addifon The corpfe was laid out upon the floor by th emperor's command : he then bid every one ligh his flambeau, and ftand about the dead body Cold numbnefs ftreight bereave Her corps of fenfe, and th' air her foul receives Denbam Spenfer "Though plenteous; all too little feem To fuff this many this vaft unhide-bound corps Hilton Ilfl.tir‘- 1. T'o punifh; to chattife ; to difcipline Sad accidents, and a ftate of affiétion is a fchoo of virtue 5 it corref?s levity . and interrupts th Taylor confidence of finning After he has once been correffed for a lye, yo muft be fure never after to pardon it in him Locke on Education flefhinef(s; fulnef 2. Spiflitude ; groflnefs of matter T'he mufculous fleth ferves for the vibration o the tail'; the heavinefs and corpulency of the wate requiring a great force to divide it Ray on the Creation Co'rReULENT. adj. [corpulentus, Latin. Flethy ; bulky ; having great bodil bulk This is a defect in the firft make of fome men' minds, which can fcarce ever be corrected after wards, either by learning or age I writ, becaufe it amufed me caufe it was as pleafant to m write fubdued Rogers 3. To obviate the qualities of one ingredient by another, or by any method o preparation prefume Ben Fonfon's Difcoveries that neither boldnefs can mak as long as we are kept under with th in the mercy of God through Chrift Jefus, fear b able to tyrannize over us Hovkers As, in habitual gout or ftone The only thing that can be done Is to correc? your drink and diet and growing in breadth rathe Bacon Lat. if thof 4. To remark faults corpufcles can be difcovered with microfcopes Neavton's Opticks CorrEe‘cT.adj. [correftus, Latin.] Revife or finithed with exaltnels; free fro Who knows what are the figures of the littl corpufeles that compofe and diftinguifh different ho faults Watts's Logick Corru'scuLar adj. [from corpu/CorruscurLa'RIAN. § culum, Lat.] Relating to bodies; comprifing bodies It is the diftinguithing epithet of tha philofophy, which attempts the rationa What verfe can do; he has perform'd in this Which he prefumes the moft correé? of his Dryden's Aur. Prol Always ufe the moft corre? editions: variou readings will be only troublefome where the fenf is complete Felton CorRE‘CTION folution of all phyfical appearances b . /. [from corres. 1. Punifhment ; difcipline; chaftifement penalty the ation of one bedy upon another As to natural philofophy, I do not expeét to fe any principles propofed, more comprehenfive an intelligible than the corpufcularian or mechanical Wilt thon, pupil like Take thy correétion mildly, kifs the rod Shakefpeare's Richard 11 Boyle This may be faid, that the modern corpufcula An oftenfive wife That hath enrag'd him on to offer ftrolkes As he is firiking, holds his infant up And hangs refolv'd correction in the ar more intelligibly tha Eentley The mechanical or corpufcular philofophy, thoug peradventure the eldeft, as well as the beft in th world, had lain dead for many ages in contemp Co'rracLE That was uprear' Bentley See CorrricLE in virtue Shak. Hepry IV Watts One fault was too great lenity to her fervants, t rub off ; to wear away by frequent rubbing; to {crape together CorrADIA‘TION. 7. /. [con and radius pomt to execution We are all but children here under the grea mafter of the family ; and he is pleafed, by hope and fears, by mercies and coryetions, to infirué u 7o CorRRA'DE. w. a. [corrade, Liatin.] T Latin. And keep the inward fce in quiet Priop In cafes of acidity, water is the proper drink its quality of relaxing may be correffed by boilin it with fome animal fubftances; as ivory or hartfhorn Arbuthnot on Aliments A fmall body; a particle of matter an atom ; a little fragment the peripateticks u fenfe of our own wretchednefs ; nor, while we truf Excefs of nourifhment is hurtful; for it maket rians talk, in moft things I correcfed, beto corref? as t Pope's Preface The mind may cool, and be at leifure to atten to its domeftick concern : to confider what habi wants to be correfed, and what inclination to b other's excefs periphrafis, and circuit of words; and when, wit more than enough, it grows fat and corpulent dies faults -i O happy mixture ! wherein things contrary d fo qualify and correé? the one the danger of th We fay it is a flethy ftile, when there is muc to our fatisfa&ion awa individuals, to what fhe ought to be, and what fh was created Dryden It is but one fpecies of corpulency; for there ma be bulk without fat, from the great quantity o mufcular fleth, the cafe of robuft people Arbatbnot on Aliments muc to tak Burnet's Theory, Preface Correéiing Nature, from what actually fhe is i To what a cumberfome unwieldinefs And burdenous corpulence, my love had grown Donne ad amend writings, life, or things n. [. [corpulentia, Lat JLeor #. /. [corpufeulum Bacon's Natural Hiftory 7o CORRE'CT. w. a. [corrigo, correitum 2. T 5. A body of forces It wil whereo only in vicious things, a look or nod only ough to correct them when they do amifs Locke on Education 4. The body, in oppofition to the foul CO'RPUSCLE lines Children being to be reftrained by the parent Addifor's Guardian the child corpulent than in height righ junétion of beams There was the murder'd corps in covert laid 1. Bulkinefs of body of flefh o Not a frien Greet my poor corps, wher thrown Co'RPULENCE Co'RPULENCY beams of direé not but b the bafis is in the objet, and the vertical poin in the eye; fo as there is a corradiation, and con 3. A carcafe ; a dead body; a corfe impreflion of colour worket Diryden's Don Sebaftian and oblivion 1. A body Of chaftity and honour virginal He's not all fpirit CO whom fh reftion gave goo counfel but too gentle corArbuthrot 2. Alteration to a better ftate ; the a& o taking away faults ; amendment A conjuaction of rays in on Another post, in anether age, may take the fam libert |