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Show his fub When an abfolute monarch commande in his own difcre je@s that which feemeth goo 2. Republication; generally with fome revifal or correcting tion,. hath not his ¢d:& the force of alaw? Hosker The great King of kings Hath in the table of his law commande That thou fhalt do no murder; will you the Spurn at his edié?, and fulfil a man's Shakefp. Rich. 111 But to our thoughts what ediéZ can give law? Dryd The minifters are always preaching, and the goyernours putting out edi¢?s, againft gaming and fin Addifon cloaths Evirici''rron. # [i [edificatio, Lat. 1. The a& of building up manin the faith improvement in holinefs dergo an emendation edition Whe 2. Improvement inftruction Out of thefe magazine I fhall fupply the tow with what may tend to their edification Addifon's Guardian love was lik to fee him Upon their heads and on his own he pull'd. Milton As Tufcan pillars owe their original to this country, the architets always give them a place in edifrces raifed in Tufcanys Addifon on Italy He muft be an idiot that cannot difcern mor firokes of workmanthip in the ftru&ure of an animal than in the moft elegant edifice Bentley Epiri'er. # /. [from edify. improves or inftruéts another .Fo EDIFY'. @, a. [edifico, Lat. 1. To build On tha There was a holy chapel edify'd Wherein the hermit wont to fa His holy things each morn and eventide. Spenfer Men have edify A lofty temple, and perfum'd an altar to thy name Chapr 2. To inftru&; to improve He who fpeaketh no more than edifieth, is undefervedly reprehended for much fpeaking Hooker Men are edified, when either their underftandin is taught fomewhat whereof, in fuch a&ions, i behoveth all men to confider, or when their heart are moved with any affection fuitable thereunto Hooker Life is no life, without the blefling of a fiiendl and an edifying converfation L' Eftrange He gave, he taught; -and edify'd the more Becaufe he thew'd, by proof, 'twas eafy to be poor Dryden 3. To teach; to perfuade. This is no either obfolete or ludicrous You fhall hardly edify me might not, by the law of ngture by any nation that had onl virtue [@dilis that thdfe nation have been fubdue policy and mora Bacon's Holy War Latin. in old Rome The titl whofe of fice feems 1n fome particulars to have refembled that of our juftices of peace The edile, ho EDI'TION let him be apprehended.-Shake/p n. /. [editio, Latin. I. Publication of any thing, particularl of a book . This Englith edition is not fo properly a tranfla ton, as a new compofition upon the fame ground Voi, I edito th in an author does very well in taking notice of it. Addif. Spetz This nonfenfe got into all the editions by a mif take of the ftage editors 7 E'DUCATE breed v. a. [duco to bring up Shake/p Pope's Notes Latin. T to inftruét youth a fair houfe built on anothe The edijice, where all were me of a magiftrat us a differen Education is worfe, in proportion to the grandeur of the parents: if the whole world were unde God buil So fpacious, and his line ftretch'd out fo far That man may know he dwells not in his own Milton An edifice too large for him to fill 7 eleganc ne reading give fa man's ground; fo that I have loft my edifice b miftaking the place where I ereéted it Shakefp. Merry Wives of Windfor E'pive o .a differen Their young fucceffion all their cares employ They breed, they brood, inftruct and educate And malke provifion for the future ftate. Dryd. Virg E'virice. # [ [odificium, Lat. brick; a building; a ftructure M fenfe Taylor fhall be reckoned for a fin and to come forth in a fecon Baker Publifher E'piror. n [ [editor, Latin. he that revifes or prepaies any work fo publication QOur blefled Saviour told us, that we muft account for every idle word, not meaning thatever word not defigned for edification, or lefs prudent Burnet one monarch th heir of tha monarch woul b the worlt educated mortal fince the creation Sawift on Modern Education Epvca'rion. z. /. [from educate. Forma tion of manners in youth; the manner o breeding youth Educatio an nurture inftruGio ar th means th tural faculty of reafon both the better and th fooner to judge rightly between truth and error good and evil Hooker All nations have agreed in the neceffity of a ftric which confifte in the obfervance of mo ral duties Swift Zo EDUCE. w. a. [educo, Latin. bring out; to extratt; to produc a ftate of occultation ‘T fro That the world was educed out of the power o {pace, give that as a reafon of its original in this language, to grow rich, were to educe money out of the power of the pocket Glanville, "This matter muft have lain eternally confined t its beds of earth, were there not this agent to educ it thence Woodw Th' eternal art educes good from ill Grafts on this paffion our beft principle Pope Epvu'cTioN. 7 /i [from educe. 'The a of bringing any thing into view 70 EDULCORATE. w. a. [from dulcis Latin. 'To fweeten. A chymical term EpvLcora'rion,. n /[. [from edulcorate. The act of {weetening 70 Exx. w. a. [eacan, ecan, 1can, Sax. eqk Scott. eck, Erfe. ther piece 2. To {upply any deficiency See Exz Hence endlefs,penance for our fault I pay Thou biddeft m Eer. z. / [cel crime with vengeance new to ee Fairy Queen Saxon aa/, German.] ferpentine {limy fifh, that lurks in mud Is the adder better than the e/ Becaufe his painted fkin contents the eye? Shakef The Cockney put the ee/s 1' th' pafty alive S[rakff[)fm‘i E'en. adv Even Contrafte Says the fatyr hot and col ou done with you Err # / from ewer, = Se if you have a trick of blowin of th fame mouth I have e'e L' Eftrange Commonly written Er {mall lizard utterable Dia Charaéters on duft, the firft breath of wind q[rnfff It was ordefed, that his name fhould be ¢// e Addifon on lialy out of all publick regifters Time, 1faid, may happily effac Prior difgrace That cruel image of the king' Otway fail'd to polith or r And fluent Shakefpeare fcarce efac'd a line Pope 3. To deftroy; to. wear away Nor our admiffio fhall your realm difgrace Dryd. Nor length of time our gratitude efface ErrE'cT [effectus n. f Latin. 1. That which is produced by an operatin caufe in herfelf wife may fee by her example You and of others beloved, that neither folly is the cauf Sidney of vehement love, nor reproach the egfecz or fimple ide Effect is-the fubftancc produced introduced into any fubject, by the exerting of power Locke of luxury in the anWe fee the pernicious ¢ffeézs cient Romans themfelve immediately foun wh poor as foon as this vice got footing among them Addifon on Italy 2. Confequence event No man, in gfzé%, doth accompany with others he learneth voice fome gefture, o ere he is aware Bacon's Natural Hiffory or fafthion To fay of a celebrated piece that there are fault in it, is, in effec? to fay that the autho of it is man Addifont 3. Purpofe; meaning; general intent They fpake to her to that effecz 2 Chrorm Chrift is become of no effzé# unto you Gal. v. 4 H fhoul th whereo h 4. Confequence intended; fuccefs; advan tage depar fhoul onl no wit b title effec poffefled of, befor deferved it h Clarendon The inftitution has hitherto proved without effeéz and has neither extinguifhed crimes, nor leflene the numbers of criminals 5. Completion perfection Temple Not o worthily to be brought to heroical cffeé by fortune or neceflity, like Ulyiles and ZEneas, a by one's own choice and working Sicney Semblant art thall carve the fair ¢ffeéZ And full atchievement of thy great defigns 6. Reality; not mere appearance Prior In fbew, a marvellous indifferently compofe fe nate ecclefiaftical was to govern, but in ¢ffeéZ on only man fhould, as the {pirit and foul of the reidue, doall in all fooker State and wealth, the bufinefs and the crowd Seems at this diftance but a darkercloud And is to him, who rightly things efteems No other in'effeé? than what it feems 1. To make bigger by the addition of ano But that redouble Expref 7o Exra‘cr. v. a. [effacer, French. 1. To deftroy any thing painted, or carved 2. 'To make no more legible or vifible; t blot out; to ftrike out bu one by ufe," the other by precept, to make our na education E'FrABLY. ad)., [¢ffabilis, Latin. five Thefe are of the fecond edition Shakefp The bufinefs of our redemption is to rubover th defaced copy of the creation, to reprint God's imag upon the foul, and to fet forth nature in a fecon South and a fairer edition I cannot go fo far as he who publifhed the laf edition of him Dryden's Fables, Preface The Code, compofed haftily, was forced to un Severe decrees may keep our tongues in awe 74. \ \ EF EF B Denban 7. [In the plural.] ' Goods ; moveables What form of praye Can ferve my turn Forgive me my foul -murther "That cannot be, fince I am fill poflef Of thofe effeéds for which I did the murther My crown, mine own ambition, and my queen Shakelp The emperor knew that they could not cor ve away many of their effeéZs Addifon's Speét Zo EFFe'cT. v. a. [eficio, Latin, 1. To bring to pafs; to attempt with fuccefs; to atchieve agent to accomplif Being conful, I doubt not t' ef2&7 All that you wifh 2. To produce as a caufe 'a a Ber Fonfor The change made of that {yrup into a purple colour, was ¢ffected by the vinegar Boyle on Colours AlErre'cTiBLE, adj. [from ¢ffect.] Perform able; praticable; feafible Tha |