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Show CO "CO h i h t a e n a r t e e «'T ;fn cream : and codlin- gs rev'"lining with delight King's Cookery o u f l w e a g i e n w al Ble let it li Mo;:timer's Hufbandry 4 codling hedge A codling, ere it went hislipin Swift i p p e l g m c b h i r f Woul [co . J Cor'rricacy and eficacia thing The power of fevera Lat. c f e a u o p t e t g adting t o t o c c f e t f i r n g i o n c W -y particular in medications Brown's Vaulgar Errours o c f ¢ a o [ / 7 Co Latin.] Cooperation ; the ftate of aftin together to fome fingle end T'he'managing and carrying on of this work; b th fpirits inftrumenta coefficiency tha require diffi they be kept together, without diftinction Glanwille's Scepfs pation eficiens COEFFICIENT. 2. fo [con an Latin] 1. That which unites its aftion with th aftion of another z. [In algebra.] Such numbers, or give letters that are put befor quantities or unknown quantities, into which letters they are fuppofed to be multiplied and fo do make a retangle or produc letters with th as, 2 cax bx flomac men and bowels awa come whereb ali th little altere fro what it was when eaten, or changed lik Quincy corrupted ftinking flefh 'Th CoE'MPTION. 7 /. [coemptio, Liat. at of buying up the whole quantity o any thing ‘Monopolie and cosmption of wares for refale where they are not reftrained, are great means t Bacow's Effays enrich Coz'Quar adj. [from con and equalis Equal; being of the fame ran Lat. or dignity with another Henry the Fifth did fometime prophefy He'll make his cap coegual with the crown Shakefpeare's Henry V1 CoEQuA'LITY. 7. [ [from coequal.] Th . ftate of being equal 90 COE'RC 'T w. a. [coercen, Latin. reftrain 5 to keep in order by force Punithments‘are manifold, that they may coerc Ayliffe's Parergon this profligate fort Cor'reIBLE. adj. [from coerce. 1. That may be reftrained 2. That ought to be reftrained.- Coe'rcion z. /. [from cocrce. reftraint ; check The coercion or execution of the fentence in ec ' counfel dence activ clefiaftical courts; is only by excommunication o the perfon contumacious Hale's Common Law Government has coercion and animadverfion upo fuch as negleét their duty ; without which coertiv power, all government is toothlefs and precarious 4 OE'RCIVE, a4j. [from ¢oerce. South Locke 2. Followed by avith t o e i t v h w a t n i 1t is {uffi . n w s c a a p a a i o r p l g length of any r t w o t r d t p a n m o i we c coercive power fortitude d t i e c v n c a a p a o o t which the m Locke awful cornmand, and the exercife of magnanimity Dryden as well as juftice CorssE'NTIAL. adj [con and ¢ffentia, La tin.] Participating of the {fame effence The Lord our God is butone God, in which in divifible unity we adore the Father, as being altogether of himfelf; we glorify that confubftantia tha blefs and magnif which is the Son; w Word Spiri cog/féntia eternail proceedin f i e c r [ / 7 CoEX t w m t m f t a n t i e n v H 1 another : with 7o Locke, who in the preceding lines ha coexifted with, has here coexiftence fo The meafuring of any duration, by fome mo fro tion Hioker both, which is the Holy Ghoft CorssSENTIA'LITY . 7./. [from coeffential. Participation of the {ame effence CoeTa 'NEOUS. adj. {con and @tas,Latin. Of the fame age with another : with zo Eve was old as Adam, and Cain their {on coetaBrown's Vulgar Errours neous unto both Every fauit hath penal eftets, coetaneoys to t Gar act "Through the body every member fuftains an ideas, an ‘The eternity of the Son's generation, and hi coeternity and confubftantiality with the Father when he came down from heaven, and was incarnate Hammond's Fundamentals COEVAL adj. [cozvus, Latin Even his teeth and.white, like a young flock Coewal, and new-fhorn, from the clear broo Prior Recent 2. Of the fame age with another : followed by wirh This religion cannot pretend to be cocal wit The monthl Hale revolutions of the moon or the diurnal of the earth upon its own axis, by the ver Bentley hypothefis, are coeval with the former Silence, cocval with eternity Thou wert, ere nature firft began to be >T'was one vaft nothing all, and ali {lept faft i Pope Paithee 3. Sometimes by zo Although we had no monuments of religion an cienter than idolatry, we have no reafon to conclude that idolatrous religion was cocval o mankind Cor'var. n. /. [from the adjeftive. contemporary ; but properly one no only living at the fame time, but of th fame time of life As it were not enough to have outdone all you coevals in wit, you will excel them in good-nature Pope { Cor'vous. adj. [co@vus, Lat. the fame age One of Then it thould not have been the firf, as fup pofing fome other thing coevous to0 it their coexiffence with him Grew' Cof another: with 7o To the meafuring the duration of an by time, it is not requifite that that thin be coexiflent to the motion we meafure by other periodical revolution thin thoul or an Locke 2. Sometimes awith Thi3 proves no antecedent neceflity, but coexiffen Bramball's Anfwer to Hobbes with the aét Time is taken for fo much of duration as i cocxiftent with the motions of the great bodies o Locke the univerfe All that one point is either future or paft, an no parts are coexiftent or contemporary with it Bentley T CoexTEe'ND w an [co a extendo Latin.] 'To extend to the fame fpace o duration with another Every motio is, in fom fott, coextended wit Grew's Cofmologia the body moved CoExTE NsION. 7. /. [from coextend.] Th a& or ftate of extending to the fame {pac or duration with another 1. Of the fame age coexiffence of tha 1. Having exiftence at the {fame time wit Hooker with another eternal being the rea COEXI'STENT. adj. [from coexif?. difhonoured his coeternally begotte CogrERNITY. 7. fo [from coeternal. Having exiftence from eternity equa o We can demonftrate the being of God's ctcrga other Son no 2. More commonly followed by wwith Or of the cternal coeternal beam Milton's Paradife Loft Arius ha depend thing ¢o that motion, or any other periods of fevoLocke lution other; and all are coetaneous, becaufe none can fubBentley's Sermons fiit alone Hale's Origin of Mankind Pena than of certain fi For minifters to feek that themfelves migh bave coercive power over the church, would hav Hooker, Preface been hardly conftrued ‘The virtues of a general, or a king, are pru man If once he came to be a cardinal i The thre f tions, are Of fub 2. That which has the authority of reftraining by punifhment RNALLY. adv. [from coeternal. CoET In a ftate of equal eternity with an Cor''rniack Pgffion. [romnie, the belly. I A diarrheea, or flux, that arifes from th otinon of food in th ia te ft .indigorep 1. T All things, on the furface fpread, are boun By their coercime vigour to the ground ! Blackmore The coefficient of any generating term (in fluxions) is the quantity arifing by the divifion of tha Chamibers _term, bysthe generated quantity 3. In fluxions 7% Coe Chambers b x, and ¢ of ¢ xx 1. That which has the power of layin COETE RNAL. adje [con and @teraus, Lat. Equally eternal with another ‘where 4 is the co-efficient of 44, 4 o CO South Though it be a fpirit, I find it is'no inconvenience to have fome analogy, at leaft of coextenfion Hale with: my body 'CO'FFEE. 7. / [Tt is originally Arabick pronounced cabex by the Turks, an cabuah by the Arabs.] The tree is {pecies of Arabick jeflamine It is found to fuccee as well in the Caribbe Felix, time will difcover Miller iflands as in its native place of growth: but whether the coffre produced in the Weft Indies wil prove as good as that from Mocha in Arabi CorrExr denotes a drink prepared from th betries, very familiar in Europe for thefe eight years, and among the Turks for one hundred an Thevenot, the traveller, was the firft wh fifty brought it info France; and a Greek fervant called Pafqua, brought into England by Mr. Danie Edwards, a Turky merchant, in 1652, to mak his coffce, firft fet up the profeflion of coffeeman Chambers and introduced the drink among us They have in Turky a drink called coffee, mad of a beiry o."the fame name, as black as foot, an of aftrong fcent, but not aromatical 3 which the take, beaten into powder, in water, as hot as the can drink it. This drink comforteth the brai and heart, and helpeth digeftion Bacon "To part her time *twixt reading and bohea Or o'er cold ¢gffee trifle with the {poon Pope Co FrEEHOUSE.: 7 /i [coffee and boufe.] "1 e cof r wh me ai er en o houf {old |