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Show AB Wherefore it came to pafs, when the time wa me about, after Hannah had conceived, that fh are a fon 1 Sams is 20 One evening it befel, that looking out e wind they long had wifh'd was come about cll pleas'd they went to reft; and if the gal ‘T'ill morn continu'd, both refolv'd to fail but this pri vilege has been abridged them fince by fevera {tatutes Ayliffe's Parergon Furis Canonici ABRI'DGED OF. part. Deprived of, de barred from, cut fhort ABRI'DGER. 7. / Dryd. Fables z. A writer of compendiums or abridg Did not Mofes give you the law, and yet non ABRI'DGMENT. n./. [abregement, French. of you keepeth the law me Why go ye about to kil Fobn, vil. 19 In common language, they fay, t come abour a man, to circumvent him Some of thefe phrafes feem to deriv their original from the French & dous venir a bout d'une chofe 5 wenir & bour d quelgn'un A. Bp. for Archbifhop ; which fee ABRACADA'BRA. Afuperftitious char againft agues ABRA'DE ru «. a off; to wea [abrads Lat. T away from the othe parts; to wafte by degrees By this means there may be a continued fup"ply of what is fucceflively abraded from them b decurfion of waters Hale ABranam' herb Barm The nam of a Azra‘ston. 7 /0 [See Azraps. 1. The aé& of abrading, or rubbing off 2. [In medicine,] The wearing away o th charged from pontage and murage law, dif 1. He that abridges ; a fhortener 9. 70 go about 5 to prepare to do it 9 They were formetly, by the commo natura membranes mucus whic particularl ftomach and guts cover thof th of th by corrofive or thar medicines, or humours Quincy 3. The matter worn off by the attrition o bodies ABRE AST. adv, [SeeBreasT. Side b fide; in fuch a pofition that the breafi may bear againft the fame line My coufin Suffolk My foul fhall thine keep company to heav'n Tarry, fweet foul, for mine, then fly abreaft Hookery b.'ii. § Tdolatry is certainly the firfi-born of folly, th great and leading paradox; may, the very abrid ment and fum total of all abfurdities South's Sermons 2. A diminution in general All trying, by a love of littlenefs To make abridgments, and to draw to lefs Exen that nothing, which at firft we were. Donne 3. Contra&ion ; redution The conftant defire of happinefs, and the con rable, but when his confcienc fhall tell him tha it was his fin and his folly which brought hi under that abridgment South ABRO'ACH. adv 1. In a poftur [See T3 Broacn. to run out liquor contained ; properl veflels or yiel fpoke th o The jarrs of gen'rous wine He fet abroach, and for the feaft prepar'd Dryd. Virgil The Templer fpruce, while ev'ry fpout's abroach Stays till *tis fair, yet feems to call a coach of fuc of 2 an Intermit no watc He wh fojourns in a foreign country, refer what he fees and hear things at home abroad t the ftate o Atterh. Serm 4. In all dire@ions, this way and that with wide expanfion Full in the mid#t of this infernal road An elm difplays her dufky arms abroad Dryd. Virge Zn. vi 5. Without not within Bodies politic, being fubjet tural to diffolution as muc by divers means as na ther ar undoubtedly more ftates overthrown through difcafes bred within themfelves, than through violence from abroad Hooker, Dedication 70 A BROGATE. v. . [abrogo, Lat.] T take away from a law its force ; to r peal ; to‘annul Laws have been made upon fpecial occafions which occafions ceafing, laws of that kind do abrogate themfelves Hookery be iv. § 14 The negative precepts of men may ceale b many inftruments, by contrary cuftoms, by pub lic difrelith, by long omiffion: but the negativ precepts of God never can ceafe, but when the are exprefsly abrogated by the fame authority Taylor's Rule of living koly law exercife of the Roman religion Clarendon, b viii To ABRO'OK. v. a. [from 7o brook, wit a fuperabundant, a word not in ufe. To brook, to bear, to endure Sweet Nell, ill can thy noble mind abroo The dbject people gazing on thy fac With envious looks, ftill laughing at thy fhamc._ ABRUPT Shakefpeare's Henry V1.p. it adj. [abruptus Lat off. 1. Broken, craggy broke Refiftlefs, roaring, dreadful, down it come From the rude mountain, and the mofiy }&':i'd Tumbling through rocks abrupt Thorm/. /"/{;:rfr 2. Divided, without any thing intervening Or fpread his airy flight Upborn with indefatigable wings Over the valt abrupt, erc he arriv The happy ifle Milton's Paradife Loff, b. ii. I, 400 3. Sudden, without the cuftomary or proper preparatives My lady crave To know the caufe of your abrupt departure Shake[peare The abrupt an unkind breaking off the tw of Buckingham Again, the lonely fox roams far abroad On fecret rapine bent, and midnight fraud Inftant invifible to mortal eye Then firft he recogniz'd th® ethereal g eft Milton's Paradife Loft, b.ii. 1. 463 Now haunts the cliff, now traverfes the lawn And flies the hated neighbourhoed of man. Prier Dryd. Span. Friar Againft a wakeful fo¢, while 1 abroad Throe all the'coafts of dark deftru@ion fec Deliverance Locke. The homely vices of their native land It is. not barely a man's abridgrent in his external accommodations which makes him mife 1. Without confinement; widely; at large li What learn our youth abroad, but to refin The commiffioners from the confederate Roman catholics, demanded the abrogation and repea of all thofe laws, which were in force againft th 4- Reftraint from any thing pleafing contration of any thing enjoyed ABrO'AD. adv. [compounde broad. . See Broanp. The determination of the will, upo enquiry is following the diretion of that guide and he that has a power to a@ or not to ak accordin as fuch determination direéts, is free Such de Sir F. Denbam ABroOcA'TION. 7. [ [abrigatio, Lat. The a&t of abrogating; the repeal of In fhadow of fuch greatnefs Shakefpeare's Henry IV, pu ii 2. To contra&, to diminifh, to cut fhort no other inftead of it brought hom ftraint it puts upon us, no body, I think, accounts an abridgment of libérty, or at leal a abridgment of liberty to be complained of Locke Alack ! what mifchiefs might be fet abroach 2 Macc. iis 2.3 I Surely this commandment containeth the la and the prophets; and, in this one word, is t abridgment of all volumes of feripture And ripens in the funthine of his favour Would he abufe the count'nance of the king keepin 3- To depriveof ; to cut off from TN d pend ;- a fummary compafs ; a com That man, that fits within a monarch's heart All thefe fayings, being declared by Jafo o Cyrene in five books, we will effay to abrid i on berty confifts a {mal con beginning as promifes a progrefs wvio, Lat. abridges not that power wherei tracted int of a larger wor diffufed or extended, in a flat A'sricoT See Aprricor Z0 ABRI'DGE. . a. [abregery Fr. abbre terminatio epitom 2. In a figurative fenfe; in a ftate to b For honour travels in a ftreight fo narrow Where one byt goes abreaft Shakefp. Troilus and Creffida The riders rode abreaft, and one his fhield His lance of cornel wood another held Dryden's Fables volume 1. Th Swift's Mifcel Shakefp. Henry V. 1. To make fhorter in words {tll the fame fubftance ments loft his own language abroad, an 2. Out of the houfe Welcome, Sir This cell's my court ; here have I few attendants idea of revolution, or gyration Shakefpeare's Merchant of Penice 8. 7o come about5 to come to fome certai ftate or point. It has commonly th From fuch a noble rate yoked at home, than for ever abroad, an difcredited Hooker, Pref Whofoever offers at verbal tranflation fhal have the misfortune of that young traveller, wh i Speiator They thought it better to be fomewhat har l S his head, I very much queftion 3. In another country it ‘Whether this will be brought about, by breakin T have difabled mine eftate By fhewing fomething a more fwellin port Than my faint means would grant continu nce Nor do I now make moan to be abridg' Lady ~- walked a whole hou abroad, without dying after it Pope's Letters firft parliaments, was wholly imputed to tl;.e duk gmz'sng;u Abrapt, with eagle-freed fhe cut the fky P, 3 =, To bring about; to bring to the poin or ftate defired ; as, /e bas brought abou bis purpofes Shakef5 s eare's Tempe t pef w' 4. Unconneéted The abrupt flile, whic hat man and doth not fcem to gnd but fall l‘) i breaches Len ;70;1 fon's xD'Ih'.?"_'z'rj' fld'\ Shakefp. Coriolanus And fubje@snone abroad ABRU'PTED Half an hour fince brought my report which fenfe it is followed by the particl Jrom, or of, preceding the thing take away "‘* "Three or four miles about; elfe had T, Sir AB |