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Show D If thou haft loft thy land, do not alfo lofe th 14. To conclude; to fettle Prior They did their work and din'd all is dome Whe ca there is no ma ferv his own intereft better than by ferving God Tillotfo T put 5. s T Warwick Why death The lord Aubrey Ver Shakefpeare's Henry V1 courf to take ho to employ which way to get rid of Men are many times brought to that extremity that if it were not for God, they would not kno avbat to do with themfelves, or how to enjoy themT illotfon felves for one hour 'To Do. v. 1. To a& or behave in any manner well o ill Unto this day they do after the former manners they fear not the Lord, neither do they after th daw and commandment which the Lord command 2 Kings ed the children of Jacob Asevery prince fhould govern as he would defir to be governed, fo every fubjet ought to obey a he would defire to be .obeyed, according to the maxim of doing as we would be done by. - Temple 2. To mak Thi an end ; to conclude is only in the compound preterite Spectator 3. To ceafe to be concerned with; to ceaf to car about ; to defift from notice o praltice: only in the compound prete rite No men would make ufe of difunited parties t deftroy one body, unlefs they were fure to mafte them when they had done qwith them. Stillirg fleet 1 have dese 2with Chaucer, when I have anfwere Dryden fome objections We have not yet done wvith affenting to propofitions at firft hearing, and underftanding thei Locke terms Having done with fuch amufements, we give u Pope what we cannot difown 4. To fare ; to be with regard to ficknef or health Good woman, how dgf? thou ~~---The better that it pleafes your goo worfhi Shakefpeare to afk Th Turk 5. To fucceed; to fulfil a purpofe Come, "tis no matter; we fhall do without him Addifon I do lowve, or I Jove' or I lowed do acknowledg in the Trinity, though they deny the reft 6. To deal with think himfelf fafe, unlefs you be his good angel and guide him Bacon 7. To Do is ufed for any verb, to fave th repetition-of the word: as, I /ball come but ifI do not, go away ; thatis com 7 #of Thus painters Cupids paint, thus poets d ‘A naked god, blind, young, with arrows two Sidney If any thing in the world deferve our feriou ~ ftudy and confideration, thofe principles of religio do Tillotfon Take all things which relax the veins ; for wha . does {o, prevents too vigorous a motion through th arteries Arbuthnot 8. Do is a word of vehement command or earneft requelt: as, belp me, do ; mak - hafte; do. Vo 1 Ther o me are docks for their gallies an war, as well as work-houfes for all land and nava Addifon preparations Zo Dock. @. a. [from dock, a tail. 1. 'To cut offa tail 2. To cut any thing fhort One or two ftood conftant centry, who dsc/ed al fayours handed down; and fpread a huge invifibl net between the prince and fubjeét, through whic Swift's Exanitnzr nothing of value could pafs bate him, but will not wrong him Perdition catch my fou ButI do love thee; and when I love thee not Shakefpeare's Otlello Chaos is come again DO'CTOR. #. [. [dotor, Latin. 1. One that has taken the higheft degr This juft reproach their virtue does excite Dryden's A neid Pope Expletives their feeble aid db join emphatically ; as 10. Sometime [ d 11. Sometimes by way of oppofition: as I did lowe him, but feorn him now See 70 DorE w.n ZoDoaT DO'CIBLE adj Lat. [docilis ii eafy to be taught ble; docile The afinine feaft of fow-thiftles and bramble is commontly fet before them, as all the food an entertainment of their tendereft and moft docibl Mi'ton age #. f [ fro docible. Teachablenefs ; docility ; readinef t learn I might enlarge in commendation of the nobl hound, as alfo of the dociblencfs of dogs in general Waltor's Angler DO'CILE. adj. [daci/z';, Latin. 1. Teachable ; eafily inftrutted ; traltable Dogs foon grow accuftomed to whatever the are taught, and, being docile and tractable, are ver Ellis's Voyage ufeful 2. With #o before the thing taught Soon docile to the fecret acts of ill With fmiles I could betray, with temper kill. Prior Doci'nity. z. [ [docilité, Frsfrom decilitas, Lat.] Aptnefs to be taught; readinefs to learn All the perfe@ion they allowed his underftand ing was aptnefs and docility, and all that they attributed to his will was a pofiibility to be virtuous South ‘What is more admirable than the fitnefs of ever creature for ufe ? the docility of an elephant, an the infitiency of a camel for travelling in defarts Grew A plant The fpecies are feventeen, ten of which gro wild, feveral of them being ufed in medicine; an the true rhubarb is faid to b Miller Nothing teem But hateful docks, rough thiftles, keckfies, burs Shak. Henry V Lofing both beauty and utility My love for gentle Dermot fafter grow Than yon tall dock that rifes to thy nofe Cut down the dock, *twill fprout again ; but know Saift Love rooted out again will never grow DOCK: 7. / 1. Th ftum of the tail, which remain after docking 2. The folid part of the tail Th The dockis about half an inc thick, and two inches broad, lik fpatula an apothecary' Grew's Mufzum Dock. 7. /. [as fome imagine, of doxion. A place where wate in the faculties of divinity, law, or phyfick, In {ome univerfities they hav dottors of mufick. In its original import, it means a man fo well verfed i his faculty, as to be qualified to teach it No woma Wh had it, but a civil deéfor did refufe three thoufand ducats of me Shakefp. Merchant of Venice And begg'd the ring Then ftood there up one in the council, a Pharifee, named Gamaliel, a deéfor of laws. Aésy Ve 34 2. A man fkilled in any profeflion Then fubtle dofors {criptures made their pride Cafuifts, like cocks, ftruck out each other's eyes Denbant Each profelyte would vote his doffor beft Dryden With abfolute exclufion to the reft 3. A phyfician ; one who undertakes th cure of difeafes By med'cine life may be prolong'd, yet deat Shakefpeare's Cymbeline Will feize the defor too How does your patient -Not fo fick, my lord doffor 2 As thzis troubled with thick coming fancies Shake[peare's Macketh Children will not take thofe medicines from th dof?or's hand, which they will from a nurfe o Gowernment of the Tenguc mother T 'pothecarie let the learn'd prefcribe That men may die without a double bribe Let them, but under their fuveriors, kill When doétors firft have fign'd the bloody bill Dryden He that can cure by recreation, and malke pleafure the vehicle of health, is a doéZor at it in goo Collier earneft In truth, nine parts in ten of thofe who recovered owe their lives t th ftrengt o natuv Swift to be the doffor 4. Any able or learned man The fimple®t perfon, that can but apprehen and fpeak fenfe, is as much judge of it as th Digby of Bodies greateft doffor in the fchool 7o Do'cTor @w. a. [from the noun. phyfick; to cure cines T to treat with medi A low word Do'crorav. adj, [deforalis, Lat.] Relating to the degree ofa dottor Do'cToraLLY. adv, [from dofforal.] I manner of a doctor The phyficians reforted to him to touch hi pulfe, and confider of his difeafe dofZorally at thei tail of a great rhinoceros is not well de fcribed by Bontius Diék and a good conftitution, while fuch a one happena the fort called the oriental burdock No man, who hath to do with the king, wil The boatfwain and mariner may bring religio Hoavel to what dock they pleafe 3. To cut off a reckoning; to cut off a entail 4. 'To lay the fhip in a dock Do'cxer. # /. A direftion tied upo goods ; a fummary ofa larger wrij_tjing Bacon's Holy War n. Sax ca [bo / Doc You woul do well to prefer a bill againf al weed kings and parliaments fince the conqueft ; and, i that won't do, challenge the crown Collier on Duelling Father th Go creator of heaven and earth, being the firft Perfo Do'cisrLENESs You may ramble a whole day, and every moment difcover fomething new ; but when you hav done, you will have but a confufed notion of th place I did Jowe fometime verb befor is pu D Shakefpeare. |~ expletively: as _16. The phrafe, what to D0 with, fignifie how to beftow ; what ufe to make of ;wha conftancy; and if thou muft die a little fooner yet do not die impatiently Taylor's Rule of Living Holy -Loofe me.-I will free thee , h -Do, and : Ull be thy flave. Dryden's s King Ar who fhould do the duke to | 9- T Was done to death DO D is let in or out a pleafure, where fhips are built or laid up departure Hakeavifl Do'crorsuir. # / rank of a do&or [from dofor.] Th From a fcholar he became a fellow, and the the prefident of the college, after he had receive all the graces and degrees, the proétorfhip and th Clarendon doétorfbip 4 DecTr1'NAF, |