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Show BE BE Feteh the leathern bucket that bangs in the be/Sy that is curioufly painted before, and wil Gay make a figure BeLcAa'rD. ./ [belle egard, Fr.] A fof glance; a kind regard: an old word now wholly difufed Upon her eyelids many graces fat Under the thadow of her even brows Working belgards, and amorous retreats, Fairy £ = 9o Ber1E. @, a. [from e and Jie. 1. To counterfeit ; to feign ; to mimick Which durft, with horfes hoofs that beat th ground And martial brafs, belie the thunder's found. Dryd The fhape of man, and imitated beaft The walk, the words, the gefture could fupply Dryden The habit mimick, and the mien belie BE 6. Creed; a form containing the article 2, It is fometimes ufed in afenfe of irony as it may be fuppofed of faith Beri'EvarLe. adj. [from believe.] Credible; that which may be credited o believed 70 BELI'EVE. 2. a. [gelyran, Saxon. 1. To credit upon the authority of ano We think, belike, that he will accept what th meaneft of them would difdain Hooker God appointed the fea to one of them, an the land to the other, becaufe they were o great that the fea could not hold themn both; or elfe ther, or from fome other reafon than our belike, if the fea had been large enough, we migh have gone afifhing for elephants. Brercav. on Lang BEL1'VE. adv, [bilive, Sax. probabl from brand Iiye, in the fenfe of vivacity, {peed, quicknefs.] Speedily ; quick ly: "a word out of ufe perfonal knowledge Adherence to a propofition which they are perfuaded, but do not know, to be true, is not feeing ‘but belicving Locke Ten thoufand things there are, which we e- By that fame way the direful dames to.driv licwe merely upon the authority or credit of thof Their mournful chariot, ll'd with rufty blood who have fpoken or written of them. #atts's Log. | - And down toPlute's houfe are come belive. Fairy Q 2. To put confidence in ‘the veracity of '\BELL. n. /. [bel, Saxon ; fuppofed, b 2. To give the lie to; to charge wit any one Skinner, to come from pelvis, Lat. a bafalfehood ‘The people may hear when I fpeak with thee fin. See Barvi. Sure there is none but fears a future ftate and believe thee for ever Exodus 1 vef o el ho bo lo o caf menot d the fwea at obdu mof And when th 70 BEL1EVE. . # tal, formed to make a noife. by the a _ Their trembling hearts defie their boaftful tongues 1 T hav fir perfuafio o an thing o cl « Dryden pp r ha me o {f m ot e They. may believe that the Lord God of thei Paint, patches, jewels laid afide . inftrument ftriking againft it. Bells ar fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Ifaac At night aftronomers agree i th to er o an th Go ch o ‘Jacob hat rc appeare unt es thee t cal th The evening has the day bely'd Genefis congregation together And Phillis is fome forty-three Prior 2 T exerci th theolo ica virtu o Yo flo k, aflembled by the e/ 3. To calumniate ; to raife falfe report Encircled you to hear with reverence. . Shakefp f i h of any man Get thee gone, and dig my grave thyfelf N Thou doft belie him, Piercy, thou delieft him He never did encounter with Glendower 4. To give a falfe reprefensatio thing Shafefp of an Uncle, for heav'n's fake, comfortable words.e o w=Should I do fo, I thould be/ie my thoughts. Shak Tufcan Valerus by-force o'ercame And not bely'd his mighty father's name 1 the difpute whate'er I faid Dryden's Zneid My heart was by my tongue bely'd And in my looks you might have rea How much I argued on your fide 5. To fill with lies meaning here Prior This feems to be its Rides on the pofting winds, and doth &eli AN corners of the world Shakefpeare's Cymbcline BrvLiEF. 2. [ [from believe. to fomething, which w Lknow not of ourfelves, on account of th authority by which it is delivered Thofe comforts that fhall never ceafe Future in hope, but prefent in belief Wotton Faith is a firm bc'/i(fof the whole word of God of his gofpel, commands, threats, and promifes Wake 2. The theological virtue of faith, or fir confidence of the truths of religion No man can attain belief by the bare contemplation of heaven and earth 5 for that they necithe are fufficient to give us as much as the leaft fpar of light concerning the very principal myfterie of our faith Hooker 3- Religion ; the body of tenets held b the profeflors of faith In the heat of general perfecution, whereunt chriftian &elicf was fubjeét upon the firft promu gation it muc confirme th weake that to belicving foul comfort in defpair. Shak man believeth unto rightmouth confeflion is mad Romans Four bells admit twenty-four changes in ringing, and five be/ls onc hundred and twenty 5. With the particle iz, to hold as an object of faith He has no one neceffary attention to any thin but the be/, which calls to prayers twice a-day Beliewe in the Lord your Gad fo fhall you b eftablithed 4. Wit 2 Chron th particl zpon to truft t place full confidence in; to reft upo with faith . To them gave he power to become the fons o God, even to them that believe on his namie. Fobn 5. I beliewe, 1s fometimes ufed as a way o >Tis flander, whofe breat 1. Credit give w God be prais'd Gives light in darknefs For with the hear eoufnefs, and with th unto falvation minds when relation was made how God had been glorified through the fufferings of martyrs Hooker 4 Perfuafion ; opinion He can, I know, but doubt to think he wil Yet hope yould fain fubfcribe, and tempts belief Milton All treaties are grounded upon the delief; tha ftates will be found in their honour and obfervanc of treaties Temple s.lThe thing believed; the objec of beTe Superftitious prophecies are not only the belie . of fools, but the talk fometimes of wife men, Bacor And bid the merry e/ls ring to thy ear That thou a*® crowned, not that I am dead. Shak Holder's Elements of Speeche Addifon, Speciator z. It is ufed for any thing in the form o a bell, as the cups of flowers Where the bee fiicks, there fuck I In a cowllip's be/l 1 lie Shake[peare's Tempef The humming bees, that hunt the golden dew In fummer's heat on tops of lilies feed And creep within their be/fs to fuek the balmy feed ,D)ydc‘fl flightly noting fome want of certaint or exactnefs 3. A fmall hollow globeof metal perforat Though they are, I belicve, as high as mof fteeples in England, yet a perfon, in his drink which, when it is fhak en, by boundin ing of an arm As the ox hath his. yoke, the horfe his curb and the faulcon his be//s, fo hath man his defires Shake[peare's As you like it fell down, without any other hurt than the break Addifon on Italy BELI'EVER. 7. /. [from belicve. 1. He that believes, or gives credit . Difcipline began to enter into confliét wit churches, which, in extremity, had been delicwer of it Hooker 2. A profeflor of Chriftianity Infidels themfelve di difcern in matter o life, when beliewers did well, when otherwife. Hooker If he which writeth do that which is forcible how fhould he which readeth be thought to do that which, in itfelf, is'of no force to work belicf, an to fave belicvers Hooker Myfteries held by us have no power, pomp or wealth, but have been maintained by the univerfal body of true belicwers, from the days of th apoftles, and will be to the refurretion; neithe will the gates of hell prevail againft them. Swif Berr'evinGLy. adw. [from 70 belivve. After a believing manner Bevi'xB. adw. [from like, as by likelibood. 1. Probably ; likely ; perhaps There came out of the fame woods foul bear, which fearing, 4e/ike, while th prefent, came furioufly towards the plac was horribl lion wa where Sidney _ Lord Angelo, &elike, thinking me remifs in m office, awakens me with this unwonted putting on Shake[peare Jofephus affirmeth, that one of them remaine in his time5 mganing, éc/ike, fome ruin or foun dation thereof Raleigh ed an containin againft the fides 4o To bear the bell give a found 'To be the firlt; fro the wether, that carries a e// among th fheep, or the firft horfe of a drove tha has bells on his collar The Italians have carried away the ¢/ fro all other nations, as may appear both by thei books and works Hakeqill 5. Zo fbake the bells. A phrafe in ShakeJpeare, taken from the be//s of a hawk Neither the king, nor he that loves him beft The proudeft he that holds up Lancafter Dares ftir a wing, if Warwick fbakes bis bells. Shak 70.BELL. v. 7 [from the noun.] To gro in buds or flowers, in the form of a bell Hops, in the beginning of Auguft, be//, and ar fometimes ripe Mortimey Berr-rasuionNED Jafbion.] Havin campaniform adj. {from &el/ an the form of a hell The thorn-apple rifes with a ftrong round ftalk having large bell-fafbioned flowers at the joints Mortimer BeLvre. n. lady [beau, belle, Fr. A youn ‘What motive could compe A well-bred lord t* affault 2 gentle 4/l O fay, what firanger caufe, yet unexplor'd Could make a gentle belle reje@ alord Z in itja folid ball Pope BELLE |