OCR Text |
Show -_-- CO C O And all combix'd, fave what thou muft combin I fpake unto the crown as having fenfe ‘4. To join words or ideas together: op. pofed to analyfe Shake[peare's Henry IV The colour of the king doth come and go @. # Zo CoMBI'NE 1. To coalefce ; to unite each with other Between his purpofe and his confcience Shakefpeare's King Fobn Ufed both of things and perfons m In peace what each of them by th' other lofes Combine together "gainft the enemy For thefe domeftick and particular broil You with your foes combine And feem your own deftruion to defign Dryden's Aurengzcbe Co'MBLESS. adj. [from comb.] Wanting comb or creft ‘What, is your creft a coxcomb ? m- A comblefs cock, fo Kate will be my hen. Shak COMBU'ST. adj. [from comburo, combu/tum, Lat. ‘When a planet is not above eight degrees and half diftant fro the fun, either before or afte him, it is faid to be combuft, or in combuffion Harris CoMBU STIBLE. adj. [comburo, combuftum Lat.] Having the quality of catchin fire ; fufceptible of fire Charcoals, made out of the wood of oxycedar are white, becaufe their vapours ate rather fulphu reous than of any other combuftible fubftance Brown's Vulgar Errours Sin is to the foul like fire to combuffible matter it aflimilates before it deftroys it South They are but firewed over with a little peniten tial afhes and will as foo as they meet wit Decay of Piety combuflible matter, flame out The flame fhall fill remai Nor, till the fuel perifh, can decay By nature form'd on things combuftible to prey Dryden CoMBU'STIBLENESS. 7. /. [from combu/tible.] Aptnefs to take fire Comru'sTion. 7 /. [French. 1. Conflagration ; burning ; confumptio k by fire The future combuftion of the earthis to be ufher‘ed in and accompanied with violent impreffion upon nature 2 Tumult hurly burly Burnet hurry hubbub buftle Mutual combufions, bloodfheds, and waftes ma enforce them, through very faintnefs, after the experience of fo endlefs miferies Hooker Prophefying, with accents terrible Of dire combuffion, and confus'd events New-hatch'd to th' woeful time Shakefp. Macb Thofe cruel wars between the houfes of Yor and Lancafter, brought all England into an horribl combuftion Raleigh How much more of pow'r Army againft army, numbetlefs to raif Dreadful combuftion warring, and difturb Though not deftroy, their happy native feat ! Milr But fay, from whence this new combuffion fprings Dryden The comet moves in an inconceivable fury, an combuftion, and at the fame time with an exaét regularity Addifo's Guardian Zo COME. . 7. pret. came, particip. come [coman German. Saxon Zomen, Dut 1. To remove from a diftan hommen to a neare Pplace 5 to arrive : oppofed to go And troubled blood through his pale face was fee To come and go, with tidings from the heart Vor. T Fairy Queens The Chriftians having ftood almoft all the day i He being come to the eftate, keeps a bufy family expe@ing when he fhould come forth to give the battle, returned at night unto their camp You were told your mafter had gone fo a tavern Locke 7. To attain any condition or charalter A ferpent, ere he comes to be a dragon Ben fonfor's Cataline Does eat a bat He wonder'd how fhe came to kno What he had done, and meant to do, ~ Hudibras Rowe's Royal Conwer 2 To draw near So came T a widow And never fhall have length of life enoug To rain upon remembrance with mine eyes Shakefpeare's Henry IVWhen he returns from hunting If you come flack of former fervices How came the publican juftified, but by a fhor Duppa's Rules for Devotion and humble prayer 9. To arrive at fom pofition Bid them cover the table, ferve in the meat, an we will come in to dinner act or habit, or dif They would quickly come to have a natural ab horrence for that which they found made them Shakefpeare's Merchant of Venice Locke flighted came abroad, th 10. To change from one ftate into anothe the firf defired 2, Chronicles comes, when th the butte a parts begin to feparate in the churn Knowledge is a thing of their own invention, o which they come to by fair reafoning Burnet's Theory It is ‘impoflible to cone near your Lordfhip, a It is reported nels of grape that if you lay good ftore of ker abou the root of a vine, it wil make the vine come earlier, and profper better Bacon's Natural Hiffory Then butter does refufe to come And love proves crofs and humourfome. Hudibrats In the coming or fprouting of malt, as it muf not come too little, fo it muft not comze too much Mortimer any time, without receiving fome favour. Congreve None may come in view, but {uch as are pertiLocke nent No perception of bodies, at a diftance, may b accounted for by the motion of particles comin Lotke from them, and ftriking on our organs They take the colour of what is laid befor them, and as foon lofe and refign it to the nex Locke that happens to come in their way God has made the intelle€tual world harmonious and beautiful without us; but it will neve come into our heads all at once Locke 11. To becom future no 'longe prefent, an A time will come, when my maturer muf In Cefar's wars a nobler theme fhall chufe Dryden's Virgil 12. T'o become prefent, and no longer abfent to iflue Behold, my fon, which came forth of my bowels That's my jo Not to have feen before; for nature no Comes all at once, confounding my delight 2 Sam. xvie 11 5. To advance from one ftage or condition to another Dryder's King Arthur Mean while the gods the dome of Vulcan throng Apollo comes, and Neptune came along Pope's Odyffey Truft me; I am exceeding wear s it come to that ? I had thought wearinef durft not have attacked one of fo high blood Shakefpeare's Henry IV Though he would after have turned his teet upon Spain, yet he was taken order with before i came to that Bacon Seditious tumults, and feditious fames, differ n more but as brother and fifterj if it come to that that the beft actions of a ftate are taken in an il fenfe and traduced Bacon Come then, my friend, my genius, fc(‘:ze alon}g -Tho mafter of the poet and the fong Pope 13. To happen ; to fall out The duke of Cornwal, and Rega will be here with him this night. -How comes that his duchefs Shakefpeare's King Lear 14. To befal, as an event His foldiers had fkirmithes with the Numidians fo that once the fkirmifh was like to come to a juf battle Krnolles When it came to that once, they that had mof Let me alone that I may fpeak, and let come o Fob, xiiie 13 me what will 15. To follow as a confequence Thofe that are kin to the king, never pric their finger but they fay, there is fome of th king's blood fpilt. How cames that? fays he, tha L Effrange flefh wifhed they had had lefs Every new {prung paflion is a part of the aftion except we conceive nothing action till the player come to blows Dryden takes upon-him not to conceive : the anfwer is, am the king's poor ‘coufin, Sir Shakefpeare's Henry IV The force whereby bodies cohere is very muc greater when they come to immediate contaét, tha when they are at ever fo fmall a finite diftance Cheyne's Philgfopbical Principles 16. To ceafe very lately from fome aé o ftate ; to have jult done or fuffered an thing 6. To be brought to fome condition eithe for better or worfe, implying fome degree of cafualty: with zo Shakefpeare's King Lear You fhall do well The galloping of horfe : who was 't came by Shakefpeare's Macbeth feeketh my life fay I am fick I will not fpeak with him 1 did hea 4. To proceed informf:d 8. To become 3. To move in any manner towards another ; implying the idea of being received by another, or of tending towards another. The word always refpects the place to which the motio tends, not that place which it leaves yet this meaning is fometimes almof evanefcent and imperceptible fruits thu comes to be o authentick, and fo much to be relie Soutb upon By the pricking of my thumbs Something wicked this way comes. Shak. Macheth children of Ifrael brought in abundanc of confcience teftimon Th to advance towards As foon as the commandmen Sawift clean.sh data import.tsv out README and come to fome mifchance Knolles's Hifpory of the Turks . *Tis true that fince the fenate's fuccour cane They grow more bold. Dryden's Tyrannick Love This Chriftian woman Ah! there the mifchief comes That they combine not thete ? Shakefp. Coriolanus 2. To unite in friendfhip or defign Shakefp. King Lear 0b order of battle, in the fight of the enemy, vainl Honour and policy, like unfever'd friend T' th' war, do grow together s grant that, and tell Are not the queftion here men fhould rather give to the poor than to philofophers. He anfwered, becaufe they think themfelves may fooner come to be poor than to be phiBacon's Apophthegms lefophers His fons come to honour, and he knoweth itf;oz Coming to look on you, thinking you dead Shakefp. Romeo and Fuliet By holy marriage One fald to Ariftippus, *tis a ftrange thing wh Cufar will come forth\to-da'/._ Shak. Fulius Ceef Dayvi i faid unto Uriah thy journey Y camef thou not fro 2 Sam.xis 0 17. 9 |