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Show HO HO of ftate, it fometimes proceeds from principles Hale Numbers hol With the fair freckled king and beard of gold So vig'rous are his eyes, fuch rays they caft D}Jr'fi('n'r' So prominent his eagle's beak is plac'd Thofe old Gothick caftles mad hold tegether only of him Th Even outlaws and robbers Sidney if the houfe so/ds of the lady, ha Afeham The great barons had not only great numbers o ance of philofophy, could have be/d up pretty wel ftout and obftinate minds knights, but even petty barons /o/ding under them Tample Dryd My crown is abfolute, and Ae/ds of nong To derive right *Tis true, from force the nobleft title {prings 1 therefore Ao/d from that which firft made kings Dryden 9. To maintain an opinion Me clean.sh data import.tsv out README mined hofd .and profefs without ever having exaLocke 10. 7o HoLp forth. 'To harangue; to {pea ‘in publick; to fet forth publickly A petty conjurar, telling fortunes, beld forth i L' Eftrange ‘the market-place 1. To HoLp 7z 'To reftrain one's felf I am full of the fury of the Lord: I am wear Fer. Vi with bolding in 12. 7o HoLp /z 'To continue in luck A duke, playing at hazard, he/d ix a great man Sawift hands together 13. 70 Horp gf. 'To keep at a diftanc without clofing with offers Thefe ar interefts importan enough an ye we muft be wooed to confider them; nay, tha does not prevail neither, but with a perverfe coynef Decay of Piety. we hold off 24. 70 HoLp oz interrupted 'To-continue not to b The trade Ae/d on for many years after the bidhops became Proteftants; and fome ‘of their name are {till remembered with 1nfamy, on account o enriching their families by fuch facrilegious alienations Swift 15. 99 Howp oz 'To proceed He.beld on, however point of breaking 36 90 Hovrp ontz 'till he was upon the ver L Eftrange 'To laft; to endure Before thofe dews ‘that form manna come upo -trees in the valleys, they diffipate, and cannot Ao/dout Bacai As there are mountebanks for the natural body {o are there mountebanks for the palitick *body men that perhaps have been lucky in two or thre -experiments, but want the grounds of feience, an stherefore cannot bold out Bacon Truth, fidelity, and juftice, are a Ture way o thriving, and will Aold out, when all frandulent art and devices will fail Tillotfon By an extremely exaét regimen a confumptiv perfon may bo/d out for years, if the fymptoms ar not violent Arbuthnot 27 7o HoL be fubdued ont Not to yield; not t The great mdfter went with his company to place wher metes the Spaniards for charged b Achi had much ado to bold out. Knolles's Hiftory You think it ftrange a perfon, obfequious t thofe he loves, fhould 4o/d out fo long againftimportunity Boyle Nor could the hardeft ir'n ho/d ou Againft his blows Hudibras I would cry now my eyes grow womanifh But yet my heart bo/ds aut. Dyyden's Spani/b Fryar "The citadel of Milan has be/d out formerly, afte the ‘conqueft of the reft of the dutchy Addifon Pronounce your thoughts: are they ftill fix T'o hold it out, and fight it to the laft Or are your hearts fubdu'd at length, and wrought By time and ill fuccefs, to a fubmiffion Addifon which, without the affift Rura could no for wh yo he ho/d up Shakefp book at home can hawve any hold upo him, becaufe there i Swift Wave upon wavye another fea had wrought. Dryder 9. A lurking place as the hold of a wil beaft or deer 1o. A fortified place; a fort; afafe refidence The general {peaks to you-~ho/d, hold, for fhame an Now a fea into the Ao/d was got Gentle Have you forgot all fenfe of place and duty abroad 8. HoLp of @ Ship. All that part whic lies between the keelfon and the lowe deck Harris Horp has the appearance of an interjeckortion; but is the imperative mood bear; ftop; be ftill men recreation balance againtt his profit 'To adhere to; to co lieutenant- fir - Montano nothing left to give him a check, or to put in th There is none that Aoldeth with me in thefe thing Daniel but Michael Fold, ho Acts fafety to wrong you, and then it will be impoffibl Collier of Envy 23. o Howp «uvith operate with Hooker are the innocent pleafures of a man who is earl wife; and give fortune no more Ao/d of him ‘tha of neceffity he muft Dryden Fear is that paffion which hath the greateft powe over us, and by which God and his laws take th furett hold of us Tillotfon Let it confift with an unbeliever's intereft an When two ftart into the world together, the fuccefs of the firft feems to prefs upon the reputatio of the latter not de 7. Power; influence operating on the mind 'To continue the fam #p it wa King Richard, he is in the mighty 5o/ Of Bolingbroke « Shakefpeare Though nice and dark,the point appear ar. Hudibras Quoth Ralph, it may Ao/d up and cl 22. 70 HoL {peed in bold, becauf 6. Cuftody Not to be foul weather 21. To Horp up /Jay hi unto the next day Tillotforn of themfelves place of cuftody The prifoner to his Aold retir'd Dryden They /aid hands en them, and.putthem in Ao/ Locke. All the wife fayings which philofophers coul mufter up, have helped only to fupport fome fe Shakefp clared what was to be done with him. 'To {upport himfelf 20. 7o Houp #p Tl'xc law hath yet apother hs/d on you power of feizin[g The who break with all th or elfe they cannot. bold together rather, yea and will, have her fon cunning and bold 8 by rags and patches Dryden world befides, muft keep faith amongft themfelves though holdin men both of giant-like hugenefs and force mother as it were Afiiior 5. Prifon at feveral times 19. 7o Howrp rogether. To remain in union 7. To be dependent on The other two were great princes 'To be joined zogether 18. 9o Howr Dryden My hold of this new kingdom all depends 4. Catch Collier on Pride When Granada for your uncle bdd You was by us reftor'd, and heexpell'd On your vigour now [teration As to the holding out againft fo man hat things had their prodution always as aow_they Lave HOT Hold, hold! are all thy empty wifhes fuch' A good old woman would have faid as much. Dryd Horp. 7 /. [from the verb. 1. Thea® of feizing:; gripe; grafp; feizure At was his policy to leave no ho/d behind him ‘but make all plain and wafte Spenferi Thef hol feparated themfelves unto David to the wildernefs into th men cof might Chra He fhall deftroy the ftrong holds Feremiab Ho'LpEr. 7./ [from hold. 1. One that holds or gripes any thing in hi hand The makers and Ao/ders of plows are wedded t their own particular way Mortimer Tt is ufed with .great frequency, both literally and figuratively, both for manua The verbs wit and intelle¢tual agency which it is ofteneft united, are zake, lay and have z. A tenant another Thofe bards delivered ne certain truth of an thing; neither is there any certain o/d to be taker of any antiquity which is received by tradition Spenfer on Ireland HoLperFO'RTH. 7. /£ [hold and forth.] A haranguer; one who fpeaks in publick Th wit of th multitude are fuch that man Hooker things they cannot /ay ho/d on at onc Uzzah put forth his hand to the ark of ‘God, an took hold of it for the oxen thook it 2 Sam. vi. 6 "This is to give him liberty and power Rather thou fhould'ft Zay ho/d upon him, fend hi To deferv'd death, and a juft punithment. Bex For/ Let but the Milton Find courage to /ay hold on thisoccafion The devil himfelf when letloofe upon Job coul not tranfport that patient good man beyond his tem- per or make hi quit his bo/d L Effrange. He feiz'd the fhining bough with griping Ao/d And rent away with eafe theling'ring go/d. Dryden The hand is divided into four fingers bendin forwards, and one oppofite to them bending back wards, and of greater ftrength than any of the fingly, which we call the thumb, to join with the feverally or united, whereby it is fitted to Jay bol on that hold In times paft holdings wer bolder f fcarce, a wel land unde fo plentiful wa th could not get one to be his tenant an landlord, wh Carew Whence fome tub bo/dersforth have mad In powd'ring tubs the richeft trade Hudibras He was confirmed in this opinion upon feeing th holderforth _Addifon Ho'vorast # [ [hod and faf. thing which takes hold acatch An ahook The reveral teeth are furnithe - with Aoldfaft fuitable to the ftrefs thatthey are put to Ray Ho'Lpinc. z /i [from hold. 1. Tenure farm Holdings were fo plentiful, and holders fo fcarce , as well was the landlord who could not geta tenant Carew 2. It fometimes fignifie chorus of a fong the burthen o Hanmer The Jol/ding every man fhall beat as lou As his ftrong fides can velly Shakefpeare Hove. #. /. hd, Dutch of obje&s of any fize or quantity. Ray on the Creat. 1 Acav t narr an Yzt then, from all my grief, O Loxd hole, Saxon. long, either per Thy mercy fet me free Whilft in the confidence of pray'r My foul ook hold on thee W are ftrangely backwar pendicular or horizontal Addifon to /ay hold of thi fafe, this only method of cure Atterbury He kept his hd/d Nor loft 'till beauty was.decay'd and old And love was by pofleflion pall'd and cold, Granw 2. Something to be held; fupport If a man be upon an high place, without rails o good hold, he is ready to fall 3. Power of keeping Bacon The earth had not a Ao/e to hide this deed. Shak A loadftone is fo difpofed, that it fhall draw unt it on a reclined plane it afcend near to th a bullet of fteel, which loadftone ma a fall dow through {ome Ao/e, and fo return to the place whenc it began to move Wilkins's Daedolits There are the tops of the mountains, and unde their roots in Aeles and caverns the air is often detained Burnet 2. A perforation; a {mall interfticial vacuity Look upon linen that has fmall Aofesin it: thof holes appear black, men are often deceived in taki;x ole |