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Show BE BE And he changed his bebawiour before them, an 3. Perhaps to call ; to name : bight bein often put, in old authors, for zamed, o 1 Samuel feigned himfelf mad in their handss BE ‘4. Elegance of manners; gracefulnefs awa named The beautiful prove accomplifhed, but not o ‘Ber1'nD prep {hinban Saxon. he ra t pa mo th fo great fpirit; and ftudy to the altars of ‘the Graces Acomates hafted with harquebufiers, which h had caufed his horfemen to take bebind them upo their horfes knowledg though Knalles Wotton z. On the back part ; not before She tame in the prefs babind, and touched him life To him, who hath a profpeé of the ftate tha Mark imperfect without bebawiour 5. Conduét; general pradice; courfe o changed. ~ 6. To be upon one's bebaviour. A familia phrafe, noting fuch a ftate as require great caution; a ftate in which a failur in behaviour will have bad confequences Tyrants themfelve to a fuperiour power are upo 5. Remaining after the departure of fomething elfe He left bebind him myfelf and a fifter, both bor in one hour Shaks[peare Piety and virtue are not only. delightful for th 9o BEse'ap. v, 4. [from e and head. To deprive of the head ; to kill by cutHi prefent bebeading he underwent wit quee all chriftia Clarendon of Scots, was bebeade reign of queen Elizabeth the leav peac an contentmen T illotfon 6. Remaining after the death of thofe t belonged i who magnanimity On each fide they fly By chains connext, and, with deftruétive fweep Philips Bebead whole troops at once Mary bu bebind them ting off the head Behold! T am with thee, and will keep thee. Gen Samuel their bebaviou L'Eftrange What he gave me to publifh, was but a fmal part of what he left bebind him Pope 7. At a diftance from fomething going be fore in th Such is the fwiftnefs of your mind Addifon That, like the eacth's, it leaves our fenfe bebind Dryden BeHE'LD. participle paffive from bebold 8. Inferiour to anather ; having the poftewhich fee riour place with regard to excellence All hail ! ye virgin daughters of the main Ye ftreams, beyond my hopes bebeld again Be'HEMOTH Pope After the overthrow of this fitft houfe of God a fecond was erected; but with fo great odds, tha n f. Bebemoth, in Hebrew they wept, which beheld how muc came bebind it égnifies beafts in general, particularl the larger kind, fit for fervice. But Jo fpeak of an animal bebemoth an 9. On the other fide of fomething de this latte Hooker From light retir'd bebind his daughter's bed He, for approaching fleep, compos'd his head. Dryd When out of hope, behaold her ! not far off Such as I faw her in my dream, adorn' ‘With what all earth ot heaven could beftow Milton adj [gehouden To make her amiable BeHO'LDEN Dutch particip thatis heid in obligation I is very corruptly written bebolding. Obliged ; bound in gratitude : with th particle zo Horns, which fuch asyou are fain to be bebo/de to your wives for Shakefpeare " Little are we bebolden to your love clean.sh data import.tsv out README And little look'd for at your helping hands. Shak I found you next, in refpeét of bond both o near alliance, and particularly of communication i ftudies: wherein I muft acknowledge myfelf e Bacon holden to you I think myfelf mightily bebolden to you for -th reprehenfion you then gave us Addifon We, who fee men under the awe of juftice, cannot conceive what favage creatures they would b without it 5 and how much debolden we are to tha Atterbury wife contrivance Beuo'vpEr. n f [from behsld.] . Spectator ; he that looks upon any thing Beui'~p. adv 1. Out of fight; not yet produced to view remaining That, like the fun, did make bebo/ders wink ? Shak nerality of interpreters, that it is th Calmet elephant We cannot be fure that we have all the particulars before us; and that there js no evidenc bebindy and yet unfeen, which may caft the probability on the other fide Locke Who fees thee Milxne Things of wonder give no lefs deligh To the wife Maker's than beholder's fight. Denban. The juftling chiefs in rude encounters join But we agree with the ge Behold now bebemoth, which I made with thee he eateth grafs as an ox 1 Fob Behold ! in plaited mai Behemoth rears his head Thomfon 2. Moft of the former fenfes may becom adwerbial, by fupprefling the accu/ativ cafe ; as, Ileft my money behind, o Be'HEn. U7 /. Valerian roots. Alfo behind me } fruit refembling the tamaritk, Beu1'NpHAND. adv. [from éehind an Bew from which perfumers extractanoil. Dicz band. Beugst. 2. /. [from be and hef5 hey, 1. In a ftate in which rent or profit, o Saxon.] Command ; precept ; mandate any advantage, is anticipated, fo tha Her tender youth had obediently lived under he lefs is to be received, or mere performw parents bebefis, without framing, out of her ow proportion juf o natura th tha ed will, the forechoofing of any thing Sidney Such joy he had their ftubbor Your trade would fuffer, if your being bebindband has made the natural ufe fo high, that you Locke tradefman cannot live upon his labour hearts to quell And fturdy courage tame with dreadful awe That his beheft they fear'd as a proud tyrant's law Spenfer I, meffenger from everlafting Jove 2 In his great name thus his beheff do tell. Fairfax To vifit oft thofe happy tribes On high behefts his angels to and fr Pafs'd frequent In heav'n God ever bleft, and his divin Bebefts obey, worthieft to be obey'd BEBI'GHT w. a. pret. behot, part. be Sir Guyon, mindful of his vow yplight Up rofe from drowfy couch, and him addref Unto the journey which he had'bebight. Fairy Q 2, To entruft ; to commit That moft §1oriou's houfe that glit'reth bright Wher_eof the keys arc to thy han behigh By wife Fidelia Vor, I Confider Fairy Rueep whethe it is not better to be half year bebindband with the fathionable part of th world, than to firain beyond his circumftances Milton Not upon equal terms, with regard t forwardnefs. In this fenfe, it is followe by avith Milton bight. [from hacan, to promife, Sax. 1, To promife: this word is obfolete bt or admiration noted {cribes its properties. Bochart has take much care to make it the hippopotanius or river horfe. Sanétius thinks it is a ox. The Fathers {fuppofe the devil to b meant by it With thund'ring tone, and dreadful tobepold. Dryd The Saviour comes, by ancient bards foretold Hear him ye deaf, and all ye blind bebold !~ Pope Her hufband went with her, weeping bebind her 4. Following another " Locke. clean.sh data import.tsv out README At this the former tale again he told Fudges The Benjamites looked bebind them of good and evil are bebawiour here, the meafure were deprefled, they were conceived by the fpectators to be one animal. . Brown's Pulgar Errours Man looks: aloft; and, with erefted eyes Dryden Beholds his own hereditary {kies | BEro'Lp. interjest. {from the verb.] See lo: a word by which attention is excited 3. Towards the back on their attends men after this life, dependin When Theflalians on horfeback were bebeld afa off, while their horfes watered, while their head 1. At the back of another "Bacon. éebawionr than virtue " He who advifeth the philofopher, altogethe d the Mufes, fometimes 'to offer facrific devotet 8on of man, bebold with thine eyes, and hea Ezckic with thine ears Spetator 3. Shakefpeare uies it as an adjective licentioufly, for backward; tardy And thefe thy offices So rarely kind, are as interpreter Of my bebindband flacknefs BEHO'LD bu Shakefpeare . a. pret. I beheld, I hav bebeld, or bebolden. [ behealdan, Saxen. T view t fee to loo upon t bebold is to fee, in gn emphatical or in tenfive fenie Was this the face ‘Thefe beafts among Beholders rude, and thallow to difcer Half what in thee is fair, one man except Each fair beholder trembling for hey knight Granwilie The charitable foundations, in the church o ‘Rome, exceed all the demands of charity; an raife envy, rather than compaffion; in the breaft Aterbury of bebalders Bego'Lpivc. ads. [corrupted from bebolden.] Obliged. See BruoLDEN Beno'Lprwc. n /. Obligation Love to virtue, and not to any particular beboldings, hath expreifed this my teftimony. Carewv Beuo'LpINGNESS. 7 /. [from beholding miftaken for bebolden.] The ftate o being obliged The king invited us to his court, fo as I muf acknowledge a beboldingnefs unte him Sidney In this my debt I feem'd loth to confefs In that I thunn'd beboldingnefs Donpe Beno'or. z /. [from behasve.] That whic behooves ; that which is advantageous profit; advantage He majefty may alter any thing of thofe laws for her own beboof, and for the good of the people Spenfer No mean recompence it bring To your beboof s if 1 that region loft All ufurpation thence expell'd, reduc To her original darknefs, and your fway. Mi/ta Wert thou fome ftar, which from the ruin'd roo Of fhak'd Olympus by mifchance didt fail Which careful Jove, in nature's true beboof Took up, and in fiv place did reinitate HMilfop Becaul |