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Show ET B T er in any cafe, muit be alfo eternally and unchangeably fo, ‘with relation to that time and to that cafe Sout Sent from whofe fov'reign goodnefs 1 adore, Milton T'hrones and imperial pow'rs, offspring of Heav'n Miiton's Paradife Loft Ethereal virtues Such as thefe, being in good part freed trom th Bear me, fome god, to Baja's gentle feats Addifon Eternal Ers'RNe. adj. [eternus, Latin. perpetual; endlefs On Mars his armour, forg'd for proof eterne Shake/ Into eternity, and circular joy Dancing an endlefs round, again fhall rife. Cra/baw Thy immortal rhym Makes this one {hort point of time Cowley To fill up half the orb of round ezernizy By repeating the idea of any length of duratio which we have in our minds, with all the endlef addition of number, we come by the idea of efernity Locke 2. Duration without end Beyond is all abyfs Milton _ Eternity, whofe end no eye can reach Eternity, thou pleafing, dreadful thought Through what variety of untried being Through what new fcenes and changes muft we pafs Ad(/l on o ETe'rN1ZE. v. a. [wterno, Latin. 1. To make endlefs; to perpetuate by all mean Milton to immor feeking to ezernize him Sidney 1 might relate of thoufands, and their name Eternize here on earth; but thofe elec Seek not the praife of men. Milton's Paradife Lof The four great monarchies have been celebrate by the writings of many famous men, who hav eternized their fame, and thereby their own. Zemple Both of them are fet on fire by the great attion and both endeavour to efernize them Dryden's Dufrefnoy accente fyllable the firf Hence came its name, in that the grateful Jov « Hath eterniz'd the glory of his love. Creech's Mani E'THER. . /. [zther, Latin; &3ug. 1. An element more fine and fubtile tha air; air refined or fublimed If any one fhould fuppofe that ether, like our air may contain particles which endeavour to reced - from one another; for I do not know what thi ether is; and tha its particles are exceedingl fmaller than thofe of air, oreven than thofe of light the exceeding fmallnefs of its particles may contribute to the greatnefs of the force by which thof particles may recede from one another Th parts of other bodie the eternal preflur are hel of the ether Neawtor together b and can_hav n other conceivable caufe of their cohefion and union Locke 2. The matter of the higheft regions above There fields of light and liquid ezher flow Purg'd from the pond'rous dregs of earth below Dryden Etue'REAL. adj. [from ether. 1. Formed of ether Man feels me, when I prefs th? etbercal plains 2. Celeftial; heavenly Pope angel, mam human Forme Erue'rrous. adj. [from ether. heavenly Of this ethereous mould, whereon we ftand My f{ubject leads me not to difcour(e ethically, bu Chriftianly of the faults of the tongue Government of the Tongice E'rnick. adj [#3w®-. deliver Moral ing precepts of morality. Whence Pop entitled part of his works Eshick Epiftles without the' fingular E'traicks. #» f 'The dofrine of morality; [#9#n. fyftem of morality For of all moral virtues fhe was al That ethicks fpeak of virtues cardinal Dryden of ethicks If the atheifts would live up to the ethicks o Epicurus himfelf, they would make few or no proBentley felytes from the Chriftian religion Heathen E'ranick. adj. [¥3x®-. gan; not Jewith; not Chriftian cal Suc Dryden a contumel offer him th ezhic th wit agreemen whether Jewifh or ethnick, wit ings o carcerate venene bodies 7o EVA'CUATE Etnoro/cicar adi our receiver to clear Baj/e out as noxious or offenfive 3. To void by any of the excretory paffages Bosrhaave gives an inftance of a patient, who b a long ufe of whey and water, and garden fruits evacuated a great quantity of blac recovered his fenfes matter, an Arbuthnot to nullify to evacate 4. To make void to annul The defe&, though it would not evaczate a marriage, after cohabitation and actual confummation yet it was enough to make void a contract Bacon's Henry VIl If the prophecies recorded of the Mefliah are no Jefus o Nazareth it i impoffibl t know when a prophecy is fulfilled, and when not in any thing or perfon whatfoever, which would utSouth terly evacuate the ufe of them . To quit; to withdraw from out of a place As this neutrality was never obferved by the emperour fo he never effeCtually evacxate Catalonia Swift Eva'cuaNT. 7. [f. [evacuans, Latin.] Medicine that procures evacuation by an paflage Evacua/rion. 7 /. [from evacuate. An ac# /[ [aivweroyin. Erio'Locy count of the caufes of any thing, gene charge Confider the vaft evacwations of men that England hath had by affiftances lent to foreign king rally ofa diftemper I have not particulars enough to enable me to enArbuthrot Erymovrolcicar. adj. [from etymology. Relating to etymology; relating to th derivation of words Excufe this conceit, this ezpmological obfervation Loacke Erymo'rocist. z A [from etymology. One who fearches out the original o one wh Harvey on the Plague 1. Such emiffions as leave a vacancy; dif Treating of morality words or to evacate them by evacuating it 2. To thro the Sacred WritGresu ter into the etio/sgy of this diftemper T We tried how far the air would manifeft it gravity in fo thin a medium, as we could make i profane [43@ and 2yG-. latin. There is no good way of prevention butby evaHooker cuating clean, and emptying the church fulfilled i This firfk Fupiter of the ethnicks was then th Raleigh's Hiffory fame Cain, the fon of Adam [vaco «. a. [evacus, Latin. 1. To make empty Pa E'runicks. # /. Heathens; not Jews; no Chriftians a Peacham Dry air opens the furface of the earth to difin Gov. of the Tongue begi v blue empty out; to throw out is the peculiar infolence of degenerate Chriftians fky-colour or heaven' To Eva'caTE durft no worl is oftentimes very dark. #atts's Log Blue hath its etymon from the High Dutch blaw from whence they call himmel-blue, that which w Donne amongft all the fects who have given rule generou yet the original derivati 2. 'The part of grammar which delivers th infleétions of nouns and verbs E/'rymoN. 7. /. [fsoper. Origing primitive word Milton E'THICAL. adj. [43#@-.] Moral; treatin on morality E'ruicavLry. edv. [from ethical.] According to the dottrines of morality I fhal contented with their fame in heav'n to hav Natures ethereal ethicks are but as a handmaid to divinity and reliBacon gion And well befeems all knights of noble name That covet in th' immortal book of fam To be eternized, that fame to haunt. Fairy Queen 3. Creech {feem on of word Perfius profefles the ftoick philofophy; the mof by fpeeches and writings of heroes pation of the etbereal happinefs and employment its derivation or sz_vmo/agy I will never fet politicks againft ezbicks; for tru felf, fo much the more as he is near his end, doth i Angels a kind of antici in the works of nature Behold the bright furfac . Still lives, which, when weak time fhall be pour'd ou Mankin Wifdo of ether In this ground his precious roo for ever famous employed ar Glanville Ere'RN1TY, 210 /. [@ternitas, Latin. 1. Duration without beginning or end 2. To mak talize body Vaft chain of being, which from God began The Cyclops hammers fal fair gift with happinefs fondly loft eternize woe an fenf o entanglement lous Collier's View of the Stage Pelvis is ufed by comick writers for a lookingglafs, by which means the etymolsgy of the word i vifible, and pelvidera will fignify a lady who look in her glafs Addifon's Spectator If the meaning ofa word could be learned b like the fpirits above, in contemplating the Divin And all the feafons lavifh all their pride I with tw Created him endow'd And immortality : tha This other ferv'd but t conftrue them by dictionary, is wretchedly ridicu Go, heav'nly gueft, ethereal meflenger 3. Perpetually; without intermiffion Or cover me in Umbria's gicen retreats Where weftern gales etersally refide E:Vi fhows the derivation o words from their original ETYMO'LOGY. #. [ [etymologia Lat 'z"w,wog and 5)\7@-'. 1. The defcent or derivation ofa word fro its original; the deduétion of formation from the radical word; the analyfis o compound words into primitives Confumption is generally taken for any univerfa diminution and colliquation of the body which acceptatien its etymolsg y implies Harvey on Confumptions When words are reftrained, by common ufage to a particular fenfe, to run up to etymolsg v, an doms 2 Hale' Abolition Origin of Mankind nullification Popery hath not been able to- re-eftablifh itfelf i any place evacuatio afger provifion made againtt it, by utte of _all Romifh ceremonies Hooker 3. 'The pratice of emptyin the body b phyfick The ufua in a manne bleeding praftic of phyfic wholly upo amon evacuation vomit, or fome purgation us, turn either b Temple 4. Difcharges of the body by any vent natu ral or artificial To EVA'DE. . a. [evads, Latin. 1. To elude to efcap by artifice or ftra tagem In this point charge him home, that he affect Tyranniek power: if he evade us there Inforce him with his envy to the people. Shakefpeare If thou covetdeath as utmoft en Of mifery, fo thinking to evad ‘The penalty pronounc'd, doubt not but Go Hath wifelier arm' T his vengefu be foreftall'd H ire, than f Milton' might evad th accomplithment o afflictions he now gradually endureth Paradife Lof? thef Yo T |