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Show BEl E From Nimrod firlt the favage chace began' A mighty hunter, and his game was man 5. To take rife Pope to commence Judgment muit begin at the houfe of God 1 Peter "The fong Legun from Jove Dryden All began All ends, in love of God and love of man 6. To come into a& 1. To bind with a girdle z. To furround; to encircle pafs of Solyma, egin the fong Pope been awaked, by thefe aw ul fcenes to begin religio n; and, afterwards, their virtu has improved itfelf into more refined principles, b divine grace Watts 2. To trace from any thing, as the firf ground to block up majefty to work upon A leflon which requires o much time to learn had need be early begun with Gowerngient of the Tongue Brci'NNER. 7. [ [from begin. a corruption of begird; perhaps by th printer.] To begird. See Becirp E'GLERBEG.n. /. [ Turkifh.] The chie governour of a province among th Turks 70 Beana'w. @. a. [from be and graav. To bite His horfe is ftar begnaw 1 have taken a lift of feveral hundre Hooker words i a fermon of a new beginner, which not on could poffibly underftand heare Wherever ‘we place the beginning of motion whether from the head or the heart, the bod moves and acts by a confent of all its parts. Swifr beginning Go Youth, what man's age is like to bey doth thow We may our end by our beginning know. Denban 70 BEGRE ASE. w. a. [from Je and grease. To foil or dawb with un&uous or fa matter. 70 BEGRI'ME. @, a. [from be and grime Sce Grime and Grim.] To {oil wit dirt deep imprefled; to foil in fuch manner that the natura eafily be recovered Her name, "hat wa 5. The firft part of any thing The caufes and defigns of an ation, are th beginning5 the effe@s of thefe caufes, and th difficulties that are met with in the execution o thefe defigns, are the middle; and the unravellin and refolution of thefe difficuliies, are the end Braowie hu canno As my own face Shakefpeare 70 BEcui'LE. v. a. [from be and guise. 1. To impofe upon to delude This I fay, left any ma with enticing words fhoul to cheat bdeguile yo Colgffians The ferpent me beguil'd, and 1 did eat ! Milton ‘Whofoeve fece a man wh woul hav de guiled and impofed upon him by making hi believe a lye, he may truly fay, that is the ma who would have ruined me South 2, To deceive ; to evade 3 Is wretchednefs depriv'd that benefit To end itfelf by death ? *T'is yet fome comfort When mifery could beguile the tyrant's rage And fruftrate his proud will Shakefpeare ry times hatt brough fun toligh rive fro [This word Skinner ge baIJ", and 1qterprets gis So my half5 as, for my pare. It feems t me rather corrupted from beboof, profit the pronunciation degencrating eaf to bebafe 5 which, in 1mitation of oth words fo fouaded, was written, by thof who krew not the etymology, bebalf 1 Favour cauf favoared we fay "i behalf, but for the fake in confidence with thofe who defigne the deftruétion of Stratford; againft whom had contracted {ome prejudice, in the bebalf ofhi nation Clarendp Were but my heart as nake to thy Viewni Marcus would fee it 'bIced in his bebalf Addifin Never was any nation blefled wi%;ore frequen interpofitions of divine providenc M its bebalf L fitterbur] 2. Vindication ; fupport H might in hi prefence defy all Arcadia knights, in the bebalf of his miftre(s's beauty Sidney Lft the fiend Or in bebalf of man, or to invad Vacant pofieffion, fome new trouble raife. Milton Other mean believ that, by the two Fortunes, wer profperity or affliction; and produce, i their bebalf; an ancient monument. Addif. on Italy 7o BEua'VE. v. a. [from be and have. 1. To carry; to conduct: ufed almof always with the reciprocal pronoun We bebaved not ourfelves diforderly among you Thefl Manifeft figns came from heaven unto thof that bebawed themfelves manfully 2 Maccabes To their wilis wedded, to their errours flaves No man like them, they think, bimfelf bebaves Denbam ‘We {o live, and {o a&, as if we were fecure o the final iffue and evenc of things, however w may bchawe ourfelves Atterbury 2. 1t feems formerly to have had the fenf of, to govern ; to {ubdue; to difcipline but this is not now ufed But who his limbs with labours, and his q}md Bebawves with caces, cannot fo eafy mifs. FairyQ With fuch fober and unnoted paffio He did debawe his anger ere 'twas fpent As if he had but prov'd an argument 7o BEua've one' felf w n. T a& Itis take Sbakt_'/}l?flff to condud either ina qu or a bad fenfe ; as, he bebaved wellor il as fref As Dian's vifage, is now begrim'd, and blac Makes mighty things from fmall Zeginnings grow "Thus fifhes firft to thipping did impart Their tail the rudder, and their head the prow The underftanding is paflive; and whether o not it will have thefe beginnings, and materials o knowledge, is not in its own power Locke Remember that thou waft egot of them. Ecclus The firft he met, Antiphates the brave But bafe begotten on ‘a Theban flave Dryden art Dryden an Bacola The participle paffive of th Beco'rTen. § verb beget 4. The rudiments, or firft grounds or materials By viewing nature, nature's handmaid back Begone! the goddefs cries with ftern difdain Begone ! nor dare the hallow'd ftream to ftain She fled, for ever banifh'd from the train. Addifor created the heavens an Genefis 3. The flate in which any thing firft is in th hafte away 2. The entrance into a&, or being In th the earth the bots, wai the ftaggers Beco'~NE. interje?. [only a coalition o the words degone. Go away ; hence Swift Becr'nNiNG. # /. [from begin. 1. The firft original or caufe wit fpoiled wit thoulder-fhotten Shakefpeare The worm of confcience ftill begnaww thy foul . Shakefpeare's Richard 111 2. An unexperienced attempter; one i his rudiments; a young pratitioner Palladius, behaving himfelf nothing like a beginnery brought the honour to the Iberian fide Sidney They ave, to beginners, an eafy and familia introduction; a mighty augmentation of all virtue and knowledge in fuch as are entered before to eat away ; to corrode ; t nibble To lofs of love adjsining lofs of friend 1 meant to purge both with a third mifchief Socrates maketh fgnatius, the bithop of Antioch, the. firlt beginner thereof, even under th apoftles themielves Hooker i And, Lentulus, begirt you Pompey's houfe To feize his fons alive; for they are the Muft make our peace with him Ben Fonfom Thus heaping crime on crime, and grief on grief Spenfer Clarendon ZoBec1'rRT. w. a. [This is, I think, onl or origi And, in my woe's beginner, it to end the king's marc' relieye it that he woul in thef He wa into the weft, that the council humbly defired hi Locke 3. o tegin awith. To enter upon ; to fal Prior 3. To fhut in with a fiege; to beleaguer It was fo clofely begirt befor slatte Thofe myfteries, that fince the world begun Lay hid in darkne(s and eternal night. Sir. Dy Milton His very ftate acknowledging his fears The apoftle bdegins our knowledge in the creatures, which leads us to the knowledge of God nal, to any thing Whic At home furrounded by a fervile crowd Prompt to abufe, and in detraGtion lou Abroad begirt with men, and {words, and 1pea1's. 1. He that gives the firft caufe But thou brigh mornin ftar tho rifin etlio As fitting queen adorn'd on brauty's throne Defcend, with all her winning charms begirt, 'L' enamour MMilton Diyden The participle f"fi"‘,'?.fif 5@;',,,' Bera'n¥F. #. / Befeeching, or befieging Becu'n to encom " Begird th* Almighty throne Pape To Beg1i'n. v, a 1. To do the firft ad ¢ £ any thing ;5 t pus from pot doing to doing, by th fieft act 7o BEG1RD. w. a. 1 begirt, or begirded 5 have begirt. [from be and gird. Or thould fhe, confiden Now and then a figh he ftolc And tears began to flow Ye nymph They hav B:E 'To deceive pleafingly ; to amufe Sweet, leave me here awhile My fpirits grow dull, and fain I would deguil The tedious day with fleep Shake[peare With thele fometimes fhe doth her time begnile Thefe do by fits her phantafy potizfs, Sir FDawvies Bewaviour. 2. /i [from behave. 1. Manner of behaving one's felf, whetbe good or bad ; manners ; carriage, Wi refpect to propriety Mopfa, curious in any thing but her m.vn_go" bebaviour, followed Zelmane Sidny 2. External appearanc grace with refpec n He marked, in Dora's dancing good grace an handfome bebaviour ‘S"{'"j 3. Gefture ; manner of adion, adaPte to particula occafions Well witnefiing the moft fubmiffive [:ebix.'z;mhl that a thralled heart could exprefs 5"‘"'-?' When we make profefiion of our faith, we fia"d when we acknowledge ou for favour, we fall down conftancy becometh us bef the bebawiour of humility QGne man fees how muc fins, or feck unto Gfl becapfe the‘ gcfiureh( in the one, in the otL c 3 ‘?."f another man 1s 810 when he dedicates his bebawiour to love Sbaffl |