OCR Text |
Show i - CH C. 1Ay [from cancelli, Lat n. / CHA'NCEL G H- bridge he may be elected every thre To fecur {ands thy content, look upon thofe thounot, for any in thou would® with who lattices, with which the chancel was in years tereft, change thy fortune and condition Taylr's Rule of Living Holy dred and fourteen in circumference deliberations, and delivers their acts un fully, an Ga th c o u e c Or th t o o O r L p C A C e f 6 e T . e clo was i tha e ot ma t e al T 4 a i er or r it mi e e ot a p an ter in which the altar i blufh m fe no fhal Tho e f n m an th n li th officer who feals the commi Whether it be allowable or no arref thi fo enan coun m chang No e o H fhould fay fervice in the chancel r and aflembly o pt ch th o e da ma p Shake d daunt eafil no i te unfpo hear t w t The chancel of this church is vau i th o e if re th p ke s gh chearkn tal th thee upo broug i oeve What nh a a s e k i fingle ftone of four feet in t Addifon on Italy 7. f. [cancellarius, Lat CHA'NCELLOR chancellier fro Fr cancellare litera wel feriptum lined per medium ductd dam nare; and {eemeth of itfelf likewife t be derived a cancellis, which fignify al one with wiyxnides, a lattice; that 1s, thing made of wood or iron bars, lai crofiways one over another, fo that man may fee through them in and out It may be thought that judgment feat were compafled 1n with bars, to defen the judges and other officers from th prefs of the multitude, and yet not to hinder any man's view Quefitus regni tibi cancellarius Angli Primus folliciti mente petendus erit Hic ¢ff, qui regni leges cancellat iniquas £t mandata pii principis equa facit Chambers der the feal of the order Cua'ncELLORSHIP. 7 /. The office o chancellor The Sunday after More gave up his ehancllorfbi of England, he came himfelf to his wife's pew and ufed the ufual words of his gentleman-ufher Camden Madam, my lord is gone 1. The higheft judge of the law Cancellarius, at the firft, fignified the regifters o actuaries in court; grapharios, [cil, qui confcribendi & excipiendis judicum affis dant operam But thi name is greatly advanced, and, not only in othe kingdoms but in this, is given to him that is th chief judge in caufes of property; for the chan To ftretch your limbs? you'll ne'er be chancellor Dryden jun Ariftides was a perfon of the ftricteft juftice an bef acquainte wit th laws a wel a forms, of their governthent; fo that he was, in manner, chancellor of Athens Swift 2. CHANCELLOR 77 the Ecclefiaftical Court A bifhop's lawyer; a man trained up i the civi an canon law to direc th bifhops in matters of judgment, relatin as well to criminal as to civil affairs i the church Ayliffe's Parergon 3. CuanceLLoRr ofa Cathedral. A dignitary whofe office it is to fuperinten the regular exercife of devotion 4 CHANCELLOR of the Exchequer. A officer wh fits in that court, and in th exchequer chamber. He has power, wit others, to compound for forfeitures o penal ftatutes, bonds and recognizance entered into by the king. He has grea authority in managing the royal revenue, and in matters of firft fruits, Th court of equity is in the excheque chamber, and is held before the lor treafurer, chancellor, and barons, as tha of common law before the barons only Cowell. Chambers 5- CaanceLLor of an Univerfity. Th principa magiftrate wh at Oxfor holds his office during life, but at CamYeor..I I would fhe were in heaven, {o fhe coul Intreat fome pow'r to change this currith Jew Shakefpeare or a moidore, when a cuftomer comes for a crown' of the lord chancellor of England is th chief judge, or the lord keeper of th Cowell great feal "The contumacy and contempt of the party muf be fignified in the court of chancery, by the bi CHA'NCRE 7. /. [chancre, Fr. Anulce ufually arifing from venereal maladies It is pofiible he wa not well cured, an woul Wifeman have relapfed with a chancre Cua'~ncrous. adj. [from chancre.] Having the qualities of a chancre ; ulcerous You may think I am too firi€t in giving f many internals in the cure of fo fmall an ulcer a a chancre, or rather a chancrous calluse Wifeman CuaNDELIER. 7. [ [chandelier, Fr. branch for candles or a perfon who fells them Is this an hou 5. To mend the difpofition or mind rating the rigour of other courts, tha are tied to the letter of the law ; where cellor hath power to moderate and temper th written law, and fubjeteth himfelf only to thelaw | CHA'NDLER. 7. /. [cbzmdelz‘er, Er.]i s A of nature and confcience Coavell artifan whofe trade it is to make candles Turn out, you rogue! how like a beaft you lie Go, buckle to the law Ecclus low eftate For the elements were changed in themfelves by a kind of harmony; like as in a pfaltery note change the name of ‘the tune, and yet are alway W ifdom founds 6. To difcount a larger piece of mone into feveral {maller Ayliffe's Parergon Richard I. thou art changed to Cua'NCERY. n. /o [from chancellor5 probably chancellery, then fhortened.] 'Th court of equity and confcience, mode thop's letters under the feal epifcopal Verfes of Nigel de Wetekre to th bifhop of Ely, chancellor t be patient whe Th fack that tho haft drunke me woul have bought me lights as good cheap at the dearef chandlers in Europe Shakefpeare But whether black or lighter dyes are worn The chandler's bafket, on his fhoulder born With tallow fpots thy coat Gay CHA'NFRIN. n. /. [old French. Th forepart of the head of a horfe, whic extends from under the ears, along th interval between the eyebrows, dow his nofe 7o CHANGE Lat. 1. To put on other t Farrier's Dif w. a. [changer, Fr, cambia thing in the place of an He that canndt look into his own eftate, ha need choofe well whom he employeth, and chang them often ; for new are more timorous, and lef fubtile Bacon's EfJays 2. To quit any thing for the fake of another : with for before the thing take or received Perfons grown up in the belief of any religion cannot change that for another, without applyin their underftanding duly to confider and compar both Scuth The French and we flill change; but here's th curfe They ¢hange for better, and we change for worle Dryden 3. To give and take reciprocally: wit the particle awizh before the perfon t whom we give, and from whom we take A fhopkeeper might be able to change a guinea Savif worth of goods 7. Lo change a horfe, or to change band, is t turn or bear the horfe's head from on hand to the other, from the left to th right, or from the right to the left Farrier's Dif 7o CHANGE. @. 2 1. To undergo change to fuffer altera tion: as, his fortune may foon change though he is now {o fecure One Julia; that his changing cthought forgot Shake[pearz Would better fit his chamber 2. To change, as the moon new monthly revolution I a wear change CaaNGE of this moon to begin woul 7 /. [from the verb. he woul Shakefpeare I. An alteration of the ftate of any thing SinceI faw you laft There is a change upon you Shake[peare z. A fucceilion of one thing in the place o another O wond'rous changes of a fatal fcene Still varying to®he laft Nothing can cur change and variety o above us Empires by variou ‘While thy abandon' Dryden this part of ill-breeding, bu company, and that of perfons Locke turns fhall rife and fet tribes fhall only kno A diff 'rent mafter, and a change of time Prior Hear how Timotheus' various lays furprize ~ And bid alternate paflions fall and rife While, at each change, the fon of Libyan Jov Now burns with glory, and then melts with love Pope . The time of the moon in whic it be gins a new monthly revelution Take feeds or roots, and fet fome of them imme diately after the change, and others of the fum kind immediately after the full Bacon's Natural Hiffory 4. Novelty; a ftate different from the former The heart Of all his people fhall revolt from him And kifs the lips of unacquainted change. Shakefp Our fathers did, for change, to France repair And they, for change, will try our Englith air Diyden 5. [In ringing.] An alteration of the order in which a fet of bells is founded Four bells admit twenty-four changes in ringing and five bells one hundred and twenty Holder's Elements of Speech Eaf it ma be t contriv ne poftures ring other changes upon the fame bells an Norris 6. That which makes a variety ; that whic may be ufed for another of the fame kind ¥S I wil |