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Show FA The king underftanding of their adventure, fud denly fu//s to take pride in making much of them Sidney Each of us fe//in praife of our country miftrefles Shakefpéare And the next multitude fe/7 aluiting, Numb. ii. 4 Ytis better to found a perfon afar off, thanto fa/ upon the point at firlt; cxcept you mean to furpriz Bacon him by fome fhort queftion When a horfe is hungry, and comes to a goo Hale pafture, he falls to his food immediately blows They fe// t Argo th tha infomuc nauts flew the moft part of the Delioncs. L' Efirange 29. To handle or treat direétly We muft immediately fa/ 'a'n into our fubjedt Addifon treat every part of it in alively manner 30. To come vindicively: as a punifhment 2 Chron There fe/ wrath for it.againft Ifrael 31. To come by any mifchance to any ne poflefior The ftout bifhop could not well brook that his proKnolles vince thould fz// into their hands 32. To drop or pafs by carelefsnefs or imprudence The people's parent, he protected all. Pope's Ody/fey Some expreflions fz// from him able to the people of Ireland not very favourSwift 33. To come forcibly and irrefiftibly 17 Aé'{':, Xix Fear fe// on them all A kind refrefhing fleep is_fa//ex upon him 1 faw him ftretcht at eafe, his fancy lof Addifon's Cato In pleafing dreams 34. 'To become the property of any one b inheritance, or otherwife All the lands, which will fa// to her majefty thereSpenfer abouts, are large enough to contain them If you do chance to hear of that blind traitor Preferment fuz//s on him that cuts him off. Shake/p Then 'tis moft lik fzl/ upo wil The fovereignt e Shake/p Macbeth. After l‘hegflo{;d, ai{s to %haldeafe/[ The father of the faithful there did dwell Who both their parent and inftructor was. Dexbam which yo You fhall {ee a great eftate fa// to you would have loft the relifh of, had you known yourAddifon felf born to it If to her thare fome female errours fi// 1.0 on her face Pope add you'll forget them all In their fpiritual and temporal courts the labou Jalls to their vicars-general, proctors, apparitors, an Swift fenefchals . To languith ; ‘to grow faint cauf Their hopes or'fears for the commo rof or fell with your lordfhip's interett. Addyfonon Italy 36. To be born; to be yeaned Lambs muft have care taken of them at their firf Salling elfe whil the are weak the crow an magpies will be apt to pick out their eyes. Mortiner 87 90 Fary awagy To grow lean Watery vegetables are proper, and fifh rather tha flefh : ina Lent diet people commonly fa// away Arbuthnot on Diet 38. 7o FarL away allegiance 'To revolt; to chang "The fugitives fe// away to the king of Babylon 2 Kings 89. o FaLL sway. 'To apoftatife into wickednefs Thefe for a while believe tation fu/! awway to fin hateth and in time of tempLuke, viii 13 for thou oughteft not to do the things that h 40. To Favv away Ecclef. xy To perifh to be loft Still propagate 3 for ftill they fa// awway >Tis prudence to prevent entire decay. Dryden's Virg. How can it enter into the thoughts of man, tha the foul, which is capable of fuch immenfe pefec- tions, and of receiving new improvement to all eter- nity, fhall fz// away into nothing, almoft as foon as it is created away by fuch julk degrees, and another rifes fo infeafibly, that we (ze the varisty, without bzing abl to ditkinguith the total vanifhing of the one fro Addifon the firlt appearance of the other 42. To Far or purpofe To fail of a promif back We have often fallen back from our refolutions Taylor 43. 7o FaLL back. Fo recede; to give way 44. 9o Favr down. [drwz is {fometime added to fz//, though it adds little to th To proftrate himfelf i fignification. adoration All kings thall fu// down before him; all nation B Ixxils JELthall {erve him Shall I fa/l down to the ftock ofa tree ? 7. xliy. 11 45+ To Farv down. To fink; not to ftand As (he was fpeaking, fhe f2// dotwn for faintnefs Efih. xv Deown fell thebeauteous youth; the yawning woun Gufh'd out a purple ftream, and ftain'd the ground Dryden They fhall fal/ dawn unto thee; they fhall mak fupplication unto thee 47 If. xlv. 14 To revolt To ¥avLL from from adherence to depar Clarenc Is very likely to full from him. Shakefp. Henry V1 The emperor being much folicited by the Scot not to be a help to ruin their kingdom, f// by degrees from the king of England Hayward 48. To FaLL iz To concur; to coincide Objettions fa/l in here, and are the cleareft an moft convincing arguments of the truth. #ovdward His reafonings in this chapter feem to fa// in wit eac other yet upo a clofer inyeftigation w thall find them propofed with great variety and diftinction Atterbury Any fingle paper that fa/ls in with the popula tafte and pleafes mor than ordinary, brings one i a great return of letters Addiforn When the war was begun, there foon fe// iz othe incidents at home it neceflary which mad 49. 7o FavLL iz the continuance o Swift To comply; to yield to Our fine young ladies readily fa// in with the diretion of the graver fort Speliator It is a double misfortune to a nation which is thu given to change, when they have a fovereign that i prone to fall in with all the turns and veerings o the people Addifon You will find it difficult to perfuade learned me to full in with your proje&s Addifon on Medals That prince applied himfelf firft to the church o England ; and, upon their refufal to fu// in wit his mecafures made the like advances to the diffen ters Saift 50. 7o Farw gff. To feparate; to be broken Love cools, friendthip fa/ls off, brothers divide in cities, mutinies; in countries, difcord 51. To ¥arvL g Shakefp To perith; to die away Languages need recruits to fupply the place o thofe words that are continually fa/ling off throug difufe Felron 52. 70 FaLr gf. To apoftatize; to revolt to forfake Addifon's Spectator 41. To FarL away. To decline gradually to fade; to languith Revolted Mortimer -He never did fa// off; my fovereign liege But by the chance of war Shakefp. Henry IV They accuftome to affor at other times eithe filence or fhort aflent to what he did purpofe, di then fa/l off and forfake him Hayward What cauf Mov'd our grand parents, in that happy ftate Favour'd of Heav'n fo highly, to fal/ of From their Creator, and tranfgrefs his will ? Mi/ton Thofe captive tribes fe// of From God to worfhip calves. Milton's Paradife Lof Were 1 always grave would fa// off from me 53- o Farvr oz any thing Some coarfe cold fallad is before thee fet Bread with the bran, perhaps, and broken méut Fall on, and try thy appetite to eat 54. To FALL on. T begin the attack one half of my Tteader Addifon's Spectator 'To begin eagerly to d Dryden's Perf make an affault ; 1 They fell on, I made good my place: at lengt the ftill Oh, Hamlet, what a falling off was there ! Shak Say not 'thou, ‘it is through the Lord that I fe/ away Tn a curlous brede of necdlework one colour fall 46. To Favrt down. To bend as a {uppliant Ulyfles let no partial favours fa/7 lot, chance F A FA came to the broom&aff with me; I defied 'e Shake[p. Henry V111 Fall ony fallon, and hear him not But fpare his perfon for his father's fake Dryd Draw all; and when I give the word, fal/ on Ocdipys He pretends, among the reft, to quarrel with me to have fallen foul on priefthood 55. 7o FaLL over To revolt Dryder to defer from one fide to the other And do'ft thou now fa// over to my foes Thou wear a lion's hide! doff it, for fhame And hang a calve's fkin on thofe reereant limbs Shakefp. K. Fohu 56 7 Farv out grow contentious To quarrel ; to jar; t Little needed thofe proofs to on wh fallen out with herfelf, rather than mak would hav any con jeCures to Zelmane's fpeeehes How fell yo Sidney out, fay that -No contraries hold more antipathy Than I and fuch a knave Shakefpeare's King Leat Meeting her of late behind the wood Seeking fweet favours for this hateful fool 1 did upbraid her, and fa// out with her Shakefp The cedar, by the inftigation of the loyalifts, fe/ out with the homebians, who had ele¢ted him to b their king A foul exafperated in ills, fa/ls ou Howwel With every thing, its friend, itfelf. Addifon's Cate It has been my misfortune to live among quarrel fom neighbours there is but one thing can mak us_fall ont, and that is the inheritance of lord Strut' Arbuthnot's Fobn Bull eftate §7. To FALL out Wh "To happen ; to befall think you is my Dorus fa//en out to be Sidney Now, for the moft part, it fo falleth out, touching things which generally are received, that al though in themfelves they be moft certain, yet, be caufe men prefume them granted of all we are hard lieft able to bring proof of their certainty 1t fo fe/l out, that certain player Hooker We o'er-rode on the way; of thofe we told him. Shak Yet {6 it may fa/l out, becaufe their en Is hate, not help to me Milton's Agoniftess - There jfe/l out a bloody quarrel betwixt the frog L' Efirange and the mice If it fo full out that you are miferable for ever thou haft no reafon to be furprifed, as if fome unex peéted thing had happened 58, o FaLw z Lillotfon To begin eagerly to eat The men were fathion'd in a larger mould The women fit for labour, big and bold Gigantick hinds, as foon as work was done To their huge pots of boiling pulfe would run Dryden, Fall to, with eager joy, on homely food 59. 7o FaLv s To apply himfelf to They would needs fa// o the praQice of thof Sidney virtues which they before learned. I know thee not, old man; fa// to thy prayers How ill white hairs become a fool and jefter | Shat Having been brought up an idle horfeboy, he will, never aftex fa/l to labour; but is only madefit for th Spenfer. halter They fell to raifing money under pretence of th Clarendon relief of Ireland My lady falls to play : fo bad her chance Popes He muft repair it 60. Yo ¥avLvy under To be fubjec to; become the fubje& of We know the effe@s of heat willbe fuch'as wil fearce fall under the conceit of man, if the force o it be altogether kept in. Bacon's Natural Hiffory.Thofe things which are wholly in the choice o another, fa/l under our deliberation Taylo The idea of the painter and the fculptor 1s undoubtedly that perfe&t and excellent example of th mind, by imitation of which imagined form, al things arg reprefented which, fi// under human fight Dryden's Dufre[noy 61, 4 |