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Show FE FE What a glorious entertainment and pleafure woul fill and felicitate his fpirit, if he could grafp all i Watts a fingle furvey 2. To congratulate They might proceed unto forms of fpeeches Selicitating the good, or depreciating the evil t Brown follow Fevicrra'rion. 7 /o [French, from fe/iDié citate.] Congratulation Happy Di& [from felicitons. adv Frvrt'citousLy Latin. [ felix adj FELICITOUS Happily Dis Fevt'ciry. n [ [ felicitas, Latin; felicité ¥r. Hapginefs ; profperity ; blifsful nefs; bleffednefs The joyous day, dear Lord, with joy begin And grant that we, for whom thou dideft die Being with thy dear blood clean wafh'd from fin May live for ever in felicity Spenfer's Sonnets Others in virtue plac'd felicity But virtue join'd with riches and long life In corporal pleafure he, and carelefs eafe. Milton The felicities of her wonderful reign may be complete Atterbury How great, how glorious a fe/icizy, how adcquat t the defires ofa reafcnable nature our hopes in the gofpel is revealed t Fe'vine. adj. [ felinus, Latin,] cat; pertaining to a cat Eve a i the beaver; from whic Rogers Like he differ principally in his teeth, which are canine, and i hi tail, which is feline, or along taper FELL Grew adj. [pelle, Saxon. It feemed fury, difcord, madnefs fe// Flew from his lap when he unfolds the fame Fairfax So fellef? foes Whofe paffions and whofe plots have broke their fleep To take the one the other, by fom chance clean.sh data import.tsv out README Some trick not worth an egg, fhall grow dear friends Shakefpeare 2. Savage ravenous; bloody wild as the raging main More fe// than tygers on the Lybian plain Pope Scorning all the taming arts of man The keen hyena, fe/lef? of the fe/l Thonfor Ferr. # /. [pelle, Saxon. hide. ~Not ufed Wip 'The fkin; th thine eye The goujers fhall devour them . Ere they fhall make us weep flefh and fe// Shakefpeare The time has been my fenfes would have cool' To hear a night-fhrieks and my fe/ of hai Would at a difmal treatife rouze' and ftir. Shake/p Yo ¥eLvr. v. a. [fellen German. 1. To knock down; to bring to the ground Villain, ftand, or I'll fe// thee down. Shake/p Up and down he traverfes his ground Now wards a felling blow, now ftrikes again Daniel Taking the fmall end of his mufket in his hand h ftruc JSelled him hi o the hea wit And fhot a dreadful gleam With fire and fword the fort maintain Like lightning flam'd their faulchions to and fro th ftock an Raleigh His fall, for the prefent, ftruck an earthquak into all minds; nor could the vulgar be induced t Bélieve he was_felled Howel On their whole hoftI fle Unarm'd, and with a trivial weapon fe//' Their choiceft youth: they only liv'd who fled fo ftrong they ftruck There feem'd lefs force requir'd to fe// an oak Ferr Eac Dryden The preterite of T fall None on their feet might ftand Theugh ftanding elfe as rocks ; but down they fel By thoufands, angel on archangel roll'd Fe'Lrer, 2 down [from f£2/, Milton To hew down to cut down Thof as foolit [from fe/l. For very fellnefs loud he 'gan to weep n. / [ felge, Danifh. cir molten ». / al Kings [guafi t follow Mix Jbeaw; from pe, faith, and lag, bouad Saxon, Junius; fallsw, Scottifh, I. A companion ; one with whom we con{ort In youth I had twelve fellows like unto myfelf but not one of them came to a good end. Afcham To be your fellow You may deny me : but I'll be your fervant this Mr. Wood affair aflociate ; on unite in the fam The provoft commanded his men to hang hi up on the neareft tree: then the fe//ozv cried out tha A fhepherd had one favouritedog: he fed him wit his own hand, and took more care of him than o L'Eftrange So you are to be hereafter fe//owws, and no longe fervants Sidney Chieftain of the ref I chofe him here : the earth fhall him allow 5. On pair Fairfax thing fuited to another; one of When virtue is lodged in a body, that feems t hav been prepared for the reception of vice foul and"th Dryden Then would he feem a farmer that would fe Bargains of woods, which he did lately fe//, Hyubb. man Hayward 10. A member of a college that fhares it revenues, or of any incorporated fociety There {hould be a miffion of three of the fe/lszv or brethren of Solomon's houfe, to give us knowledge of the affairs and ftate of thofe countries t Dryden's Virgil His fellows late, fhall be his fubje&s now Pope 9. Sometimes it implies a mixture of pit with contempt he was not the miller, but the miller' Let partial {pirits ftill aloud complain Think themfelves injur'd that they cannot reign And own no liberty, but where they ma Without controul upon their fe/lows prey. Waller 4. Equal ; peer could have got his Majeity's broa The reft is all but leather and prunella At length the fatal fabrick mounts the walls his felloaos Shake[p Or, cobler-like, the parfon will be drunk Worth makes the man, and want of it the fe/lozv Each on his_feZow for affiftance calls 3. One of the fame kind feal Swifr You'll find, if once the monarch a&s the monk Shake/peare's Tempef? One foul fhould both infpire, and neither prov His fe//ow's hindrance in purfuit of love? Dyyden 2. A Sidney Quoted, and fign'd to do a deed of thame This murder had not come into my mind Shake/p The Moors' abus'd by fome moftvillainous knave Some bafe notorious knave, fome feurvy fe/loww Shakefpeare The fel/low had taken more fith than he coul fpend while they were fweet L' Eftrange As next of kin, Achilles" arms I claim This fe/low would ingraft a foreign nam Upon our ftock, and the Sifyphian fee By fraud and theft aflerts his father's breeds Drydern. You will wonder how fuch-an ordinary fe/lozoy.a Shakefpeare wer th How oft the fight of means, to doill deeds Makes deeds ill done? for had'ft thou not been b A fellow by the hand of nature mark'd Out, out, thou ftrumpet Fortune! all you gods In general fynod, take away her power Break all the fpokes and fe//ies from her wheel And bowl the round nave down the hill of heay'n and fpoke birds fallen into their net, it pleafe Had ftill keptloyal to poffeffion And left me in reputelefs banifhment F. Q Th them By Rodorigo, and fellows that are *fcap'd Shakc/ I have great comfort from this fel/ow : methink he hath no drowning mark about him; his complexion is perfe@ gallows Shakefpeare's Tempeft Opinion, that did help me to the crown It is often written fz/ly or felly naves, filloe great fellows fcornfully receivin Caffio hath here been fet on in the dar cumference of a wheel ; the outward part Axle-trees Prior A fellow of no mark or likelihood When his brother faw the red blood trai Adown fo faft, and all his armour fteep Fe'LLok men hands Cruelty favagenefs; fury; rage tell us eternal Juftice to make them fuffer death by thei Ferii'srrvous, adj. [fel and fuo, Latin. Flowing with gall Dig Fe'LLmoNGER. 2./ [from feil.] A deale in hides . f yo 8. A word of contempt: the foolif mortal ; the mean wretch; the forr rafcal Since thou art laid down, no fe/er is come u _againft us If.xiv. 8 Fe'vLNess was a Hercules Yet out they march'd like commo One that hew body do not feem to be fellozvs th Addifor's Spectator ‘6 On lik o equa t another as thi Milton. |knav hat no hi fe//owv 2. It feems improperly joined with dewz o 7 familia appellatio ufe fometime along with fondnefs;- fometimes with efteem Whom with {uch forcehe ftruck he fe//'dhim dowws but generally with fome degree of conAnd cleft the circle of his golden crown Dryden 1 felld along a man of bearded face His limbs all cover'd with a thining cafe Full fifteen thoufand lufty fel/ow Have we not plighted each our holy oath That one fhould be the common good of both Shakefpeare's Twelfth Night I know thee, love In mortal battle, doubling blow on blow fant fellots faid, that he had been cruthed, bu that he faved himfelf upon his horns Bacon Whether you will or no That inftant was I turn'd into a hart And my defires, like fe// and cruel hounds E'erfince purfue me Proud Arcite and fierce Palamon FE'LLOW inhuman i, Cruel ; barbarous BR tcm'p‘t This is Othello's ancient, as I take it -The {ame indeed; a very valiant fe/low. Shake/ An officer was in danger to have loft his place bug his wile made his peace ;-whereupon a plea 7 which they were defigned Bacor Fr'iLow «. a. To fuit with; t pair with; to match Felbw is ofte ufed in compofition to mark communiryof nature, ftation, or employment Imagination With what's unreal, thou co-a&ive art And fellow'/? nothing Shakefpeare Ferrow-co'MMoONER 7 / 1. One who has the fame right of common H cannot appropriate out th mankind he cannot inclofe, with confent of all his fellow-commoncrs al Locke 2. A commonerat Cambridge of the highe order wh dines with the fellows FELLOW-CREATURE the fame creator # / On that ha Reafon is the glory of human nature, and one o the chief eminencies whereby we are raifed above ou Jellow-creatures the brutes, in this lower world Watts's Logick, Intredu&tion Fe'LLow-mEIR. 2. /£ Coheir; partne the fame inheritance The Gentiles thould be felloww-beirs Ferrow-mE'LPER wh 2. / o Eph. iii. 6 Coadjutor ; on concurs in the fame bufinefs We ought to receive fuch, that we might be fe low-helpers to the truth 3 Fobn, & Ferrow-1a'BourkR, # /i One who labour in the fame defign M |