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Show U REPTTIS fchoels, where they were not feffered fo'ftay thre When as night hath us of light forlorn with that day would fhortly reafcend months Spenfer What is become of great Acrates' fon Is all his force forlorn, and all his glory.done in a ludicrous fenfe A lon Creature in whom excell' Whatever can to fight or thought be form'd Holy, divine, ‘good, amiable; or fweet. 2. / end in effe@ fwa al th bufinefs but in th other form, there is more ufe of the counfellors opiBacon's Effays. nions that fit lower That the parliaments of Ireland might want n 1. A loft, folitary, forfaken man Henr Shake/p decent or honourable o172 ufed in England, he caufe a particular aét to pafs, that the lords of Irelan fent firft: to the attack, and are therefor fhould appear in parliament robes Davies Their general ufed, in all difpatches made by -him ar The foldiers wh doomed to perith felf, to obferve all decency in their forms Who lolling on our foremoft benches fit And ftill charge firft, the true forlorn of wit. Dryd Yorro'rNNEss. g /o [from forlorn. - tution; mifery; folitude He who affirmeth fpeec Men difpleafed God, and confequently forfeited al language; even fo the neceflity of polity and regimen in all churches may be held, without holdin any one certain form to be neceflary in them all T and did divid "Her dainty paps, which, like young fruit in May Now little >gan to fwell ; and being ty'd Through her thin weed, their places only fignify'dc. Fa . / FORM Nor feck "tokno - Their procefs, or the forms of law below ,\l( 9. A long feat [ forma, Latin ; forme, ¥r. 1. 'The external appearance of any ‘thing reprefentation; fhape Nay, women are frail too --Ay, as the glaffes where they view themfelves Which are as eafy broke as they make forms. Shak It frood fill; but I could not difcern the for Fob thereof Gold will endure a vehement fire, without an change, and after it has been divided by corrofiv Yiguors into invifible parts; yet may prefently b precipitated, . fo as to appear again in its form Grew's Cofmol. Sac Matter, :as wife logicians fay an thof have given fo great a reputation to th Dryden 12. For method ; order 13. A forma effence They inferred They were young heirs fent only for forms fro caufe tha whic Hogker give if the world were a living crea ture, it had a foul and fpirit, by which they did no intend God, for they did admit of a deity befides but only the foul or effential form of the univerfe Bacon's Natural Hiftory To ForM. w. a. [ formo, Latin. L. T'o make out of materials the effen Dryden is the effential, {pecifical, ordif- unto that form did adjoin itfelf Shakefpeare's Hamlet Then thofe whom form of law Condemn'd to die, when traitors judg'd their caufe Prior true effential for, and elements as the matter where Ifa, liii. 2 He dies too foon And fate, if pofiible; muft be delay'd The thought that Yabours in my forming brain Yet crude and immature demands more time . Rowe 7. 'To model by education or inftitution Let him to this with eafy pains be brought And feem to labour when he labours not Thus_form'd for fpeed, he challenges the wind And leaves the Scythian arrow far behind. . Dryd FO'RMAL. adj French; firm{z/i.r [ formel Latin. 1. Ceremonious ; folemn to afleGation precife God formed man of the duft of the ground Gen. ii, 7 The liquid ore he drain'd Into fit molds prepar'd 5 from which he form' Firft his own tools : then,what mightelfe be wrough Fufil, or grav'n in metal Milton Determin'd to advance into our roo A creature form'd of earth Milton 5 And fo he plays his part exal Shakefp. Asyou like i clean.sh data import.tsv out README Formal in apparel In gait and countenance furely like a father Shakefpeare Ceremonies be not to be omitted to ftrangers an formal natures; but the exalting them above th mea is not onl tedious but doth diminifh th Bacon credit of him that fpeaks no extempomneous There is not any pofitive law of men, whethe it be general or particular, received by formal expref in cuftoms it cometh to pafs, but may be taken away In definitions, whether they be framed larger t augment, or ftricter to abridge the number of facraments, we find grace exprefly mentioned as thei "theugh it lack'd form a little 6. External appearance withou tial qualities; empty fhow The defeat of .the defign is the routing of opinion Jormed foi promoting it Decay of Piety confent, as in councils; or by fecret approbation, a ‘tinguifhing modification of the matter o which any thing is compofed, {o as thereby to give it fuch a peculiar manner o exiftence Harris 4. Beauty; elegance of appearance methods; not irregular; not fudden Sidney Afraid to keep or 'le herv form Dyyd to coin 2. Done according to eftablifhed rules an with mirrour clear Of .horns.and hounds, clap back her ear death's half-brother He hath no fform nor comelinefs the ambitious lark Have you obferv'd a fitting hare Lift'ning, and fearful of the ftor He that will look intormany parts of Afia an America, will find men reafon there perhaps a acutely as_himfelf, who yet never heard of a f{ylogifin, nor can reduce any one argument to thof Jorms Locke It lengthens out every a¢t of worfhip, and produces more lafting and permanent impreffions in th mind, than thofe which accompany any tranfien Jorm of words that are uttered in the ordinary method of rreligious worfhip Addifon examin They catch, while he, fool ! to himfelf makes love Saift 3. Particular model er modification Was not like madnefs neceflary to fee an Now for a clod like hare in form thy peer With anxious pleafures of a guilty mind he fpoke It will 'b 11. The feat or bed ofa hare Forms terrible to view, their fentry kee Wha a.rank of ftudents mafters of the firlk form fleep 5. Regularity the form, and taken following he Shakefp A clafs No Deep frauds before, and open force behind 6. 'Fo contrive With eyes fevere, and beard of formal cut Full of wife faws and modern inftances works whic "When noble benefits {hall prov Not well difpos'd, the mind grown.once corrupt "They turn to vicious forms, ten times more ugl Shakefpeare's H. V11 Than ever they were fair death into an intereft, and become the defi n not of fin l perfons, but of corporations and fuccetlions Decay of Piety for a fingle perfon without a back; and a form is feat for feveral perfons, without a back Watts I was feen with her in the manorhoufe, fittin 1o 2. Being, as modified by a particular thape toils an Our differences with the Romarifts are thus £.17 ¢ The juftice In fair round belly, with good caponlin'd Now bolt and cudgel fquirrels leap do move And formn, fay 1 as well as they Mutft fail, if matter brings no grift to combine in any part If a chair be defined a feat for a fingle perfon with a back belonging to it, then a-ftool is a fea with her upo into the park Cannot without a_form {ubfift Her Dryder Dryden cular manner: as, he formed his troops 5, To adjuft ; to fettle Hooker Nor are conftant forms of prayer more likely t flat and hinder the fpirit of prayer and devotion, tha unpremeditated and-confufed variety to diftract an lofe it King Charles to fcheme; to plan 4. To.arrange doth not thereby im port thatall men muft neceffarily fpeak one kind o Knit with a golden baldric, which for/a her fnowy breaft Phil. Diff. Moth Milton give him:piety or valour for his manners to be neceffary amongf all ‘men, throughout the woild right to happinefs; even whilft they compleated th Jvrloynnefs of their condition by the lethargy of no being fenfible of it Boyle Athwar Milton Lucretius taught him rot to form his heroe, t 8. Stated method-; eftablifhed practice; ri‘tual and prefcribed mode Defti o ForLy'E\ v, #. [from fore and Jye. lye before 3. To modify =Clarend How am I to interpret, fir, this vifit Is it a compliment of fora, or love Criticks in plume Let Eve, for 1 have drench'd her eyes Here fleep below, while thou to forefight wak'ft As once thou fleep'ft, while fhe to life was form'd or a feat abou and a'fquare table table the wallsy feem things of fors#, but are things o fubftance; for at a long table, a few at the uppe He was fo forlorn, that his dimenfions to an thick fight were invincible Shakefp. Henpyp 1V 2. Forvor~ Hope 2. 'To model to a particular fhape or ftate, Shall do a court'{ly to our wrath, which me May blame, but not controul. Shuke/p. King Lear Tairy Queen Ys.of a king become a banith'd man And forc'd to live in Scotland a forlorn She forvi'd the phantom of well-bediad air, ‘Pope Though well we may not pafs upon his life Without the form of juftice ; yet otr .pow' That hath fo many haughty conquefts won ForLorN Swift 7. Ceremonys external tites Or where hath he hung up his mortal blade 3. Small ; defpicable FO Fo RO Hooker if occafion ferve As there are formal and written leagues, refpectiv to-certain enemies fo ther is a natural and-taci confederation amongft all men againft the commo enemies of human fociety, fo as there needs noin_ timation or denunciation of the war; but all thef formalities the law of nature fupplies of pirates a in the caf Bacon 3. Regular ; methodical T'he formal ftars do travel fo As we their names and courfes know And he that on their changes looks Would think them govern'd by our books "Zuller 4. External ; having the appearance but no the effence Of formal duty, make no more thy boaft Thou difobey'ft where it concerns me moft Diyd 5. Depending upon eftablifhment or caftom Still in conftraint your fuffering fex remains Or bound in _forma or increal chains Pope 6. Having the power of making any thin what it is; conftituent.; effential Of letters the material part is breath and voice: the formal is conftituted by the motiops and figur of the organs of fpeech affe@ing breath with a peculiar found, by which each letter is difcriminated of Speech Holder's Element Bellarmine agrees in making the fama att o -adoration to be fubjectien to a fuperior; but Wi‘"{;‘ |