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Show VB L L of the ar joint or curvatur XUur o to b Strait\will he come put it home zcar thy good rapier Quick, quick; fear nothing, 1'1l be at thy elbow hai Swans and elbowcwehairs an in the opera of Dioclef have dance fuccefs ftag Englit th upo goo Gay wit [z ftretc perfect freedom from confinement to provide elbowroom Shake/p at doors but that there ma and for the advenBacon into a ftate of libert for conftienc to have its ful South play in 7o F/LBOW. 2. a. [from the noun. 2. To pufh with the elbow On e¢/bows him It thrufts and ftretches out And e/boaws all the kingdoms round about, Diyden If fortune takes not off this boy betimes He'll make mad work and e/bow out his neighbours Dryden 'To jut out in angles ELD. 7. /. [ealb, Saxon 1. Old age; decrepitude e/d, Scottifh. in her weaker e/d Spenfer Thy blazed yout Becomes affuaged, and doth beg the alm Of palficd e/d. Shakefpeare's Meafure for Meafure He thought it touch'd his deity full near If likewife he fome fair one wedded not Thereby to wipe away th' infamous blo Of long uncoupled bed and childlefs e/d 2 Ol people perfon wor DMilton ou wit years "They count him of thegreen-hair'd eld Chapnian. E'Lper. adf. The comparative of ¢/d, no corrupted to o/d. [eald, ealoon, Saxon. Surpafling another in yeuars; furvivor having the privileges of primogeniture Oppofc to younger "T'hey bring the comparifon of younger daughter conforming themfeives in attire to their e/der fifters Hocker Let ftill the woman tak An eldér than herfelf; fo wear fhe to him So fways the leyel in her hufband's heart. Shake/p How I firmly am refoly'd, you know That is, not to beftow my youngeft daughter Before I have a hufband "for the e/der. ~Shakefpeare Among the Lacedemonians, the chief magittrates as they were, fo were they called, e/der men Raleigh's Hiftory The e/der of his children comes to acquire a degre of authority among the younger, by the fame mean the father did among them Fame's high temple ftands Stupendous pile not rear'd by mortal hands its irame excell'd E'vpers, # f. [from-elder. becom it very wel fay Amen 4 Hooker Ruler Jews. th [Amon th o people 5. [In the New Teftament.] Ecclefiafticks 6. [Among prefbyterians. ] Laymen introduced into the kirk-polity in feflions and affemblies an affembly brew' Of clerks and e/ders ana; like the rud Chaos of prefbytry, where laymen rid With the tame woolpack clergy by their fide Cleaveland E'Lper Saxon; fambucus. [ellaya = / "The name of a tree The branches are full of pith, having but littl wood: the flowers are monopetalous, divided int feveral fegments, and expand in form of a rofe bel the mof fo thefe are are fucceede an having thre colle@ed into a part by foft fucculen um berries Miller feeds in each Amongft the nettles at the e/der tree Which overfhades the mouth of that fame pit Shakefp E'LpERLY. adj. [from elder. 1. Seniority; primogeniture The world, while it had fcarcity of people, un derwent no other dominion than paternit and e/ der/bip Raleigh That all fhould Alibech adore, 'tis true But fome refpet is to my birthright due My claim to her by e/der/bip 1 prove Dryden's Ind. Emp Nor were the e/der/bi Of Artaxerxes worth our leaft of fears If Memnon's intereft did not prop hiscanfe 2. Prefbytery feffion ecclefiaftica fenate Rowe kirk That controverfy fprang up between Beza an Eraftus, about the matter 'of excommunications whether there ought to be in all churches an e/derJhip, having power to excommunicate, and a par of that elderflip to be of neceflity certain chofen ou _from amongit the laity Hooker, Preface E'voest adj 'Th now changed t ealoyce, Saxon. fuperlativ o/d [ealo Pope h wa chofen eleéied a hun'dréd}' Sfl:)t}; i 2. [In % theology. To fele® asan obje& of eternal mercy Evs'cT. adj. [from the verb. 1. Chofen; taken by preference from amo others You have here, lady And of your choice, thefe reverend father clean.sh data import.tsv out README Yea, the e/eéz of the land, who are af em'bl' To plead your caufe Shakefp, Hem_'y VIII 2. Chofen to an office, not yet in .pofi'ef- fion Th bifhop eleét takes the oaths of fupremacy canonical obedience, and againft fimony; and th the dean of the arches reads and fubferibes the fe tences Aliffe's Parergon 3. [In theology.] ~ Chofen as an obje&go eternal mercy A vicious liVer, believing that Chrift died for non but the e/ec?, fhall have attempts made upon hi to reform and amend his life Some I have chofen of peculiar grace Elect above the reft: fo is my will Hammond Milon Eve'cTioN. m /. [eledtio, Lat. 1. The att of chufing; the aé of felettin one or more from a greater number fo any ufe or office; choice If the eleZion of the minifter thould be commit ted to every feveral patifh, doyou think that the would chufe the meeteft Him, not thy e/eion Whitgifl But natural neceflity, begot As charity is, nothing can more increaf tre and beauty than a prudent elecion o and a fit application of it to them 2. The power of choice Milton the lufobjects Sprait For what is man without a moving mind Which hath a judging wit, and chufing will Now if God's pow'r thould her election bind Her motions then would ceafe, and ftand all ftill Davies 3. Voluntary preference He calls upon the finners to turn themfelves an live; he tells us, that ke has fet before us life an death, and referred it to our own efe&ion which we _Ro_g‘;rs will chufe difcrimina 4. Difcernment; . diftin&ion tion "The difcovering of thefe colours cannot be don but out of a ver whic fo clearet univerfal knowledge of things mens judgmen an Baco it is the lefs apt to flide into error I elebtion, a difference an favour, to ufe men with muc ealoop s. [In thealogy.] The predeterminatio of God by which any were feleted fo geniture Bacon and the reft more officious eternal life fome enthufiaft Shakefp. Macbeth The mother's and her e/de/f daughter's grace Ft feems, had brib'd him to prolong their {pace Drydern parents fignifies either the oldeft me thankful The conceit about abfolute e/e&iox to eternal life We will eftablith our eftate upo Our eldeff Malcolm, whom we name hereafte Eldef 91! of e/d 1. The oldeft; that has the right of primo The prince of Cumberland ginger, to which th election isgood : for it malketh thofe preferred mor z. The perfon that has lived moft years Whate'er proud Rome, or artful Greece beheld Or c/der Babylon b Look for thy rewar Her heart with joy unwonted inly fwell'd As feeling wond'rous comfor receive eth children's innocency to pray, and their e/ders t Flea-bitten fynod one joftles in the fhole Dryden's Fuuvenal the whic cuftoms refbyteries, fynods z. To puth; to drive to a diftance; to encroach upon 75 E'vBow. @, » ol At the board, and in private Now my foul hath elbowroom Tt would not out at windows no The natives are not {o many be elbowroom enough for them tives alfo A politician muft put himfel o continual tradition from their parents, by recordin of their bards and chronicles, in theirfongs, and b Spenfer's Irel daily ufe and enfample of their elders on each fide out the elbow Pope nations are very fuperftitious and diligen obferver root lik out of the commoners "Thofe who are older than others Man E'LBowRrooM. 7. /. elbow and room.] Roo t confen N here works are cenfur'd, not as bad, but new While, if our e/ders break all reafon's laws A chair with arms to fupport the elbows Germans have a method of candyiMinglleyo, Henry his fon 1s chofen k.ilng thoueh v And ].J:Wiis of F;ance, eleied fi'rfi, begéuiyi?:n%' ,{hls prince, in gratitude to the people b v?h:f I lofe my patience, and I'own it too Thofe fools demand not pardon, but applaufe alfo ftarwort 1. To choof€ for any office or ufet t k in preference to others Says the goofe, If it will be no better, e¢'en carr your head as your e/ders have done before you L' Eftrange Lat and Cfd},w /it ,Gel'man fPiLée- Hilps Mazecr}tfal}fi'ig' ica BELEE ro Ve s [('/pfiu;' I-,at. 7 . Anceftors lo e' Otbe fpea " Shak e 7. fi [elboew and chair. EvsowcHA'tR. Shake/p. Fulius Cafar And from their feats the reverend e/ders rofe. Sandys 'Tobenear campar The blufhing youth their virtuous awe difclofe ~ t the Ensow Th in this holy chafe Shake off their fteril curfe Bacon touche The barren name enumerate thirty {pecies of th Bofanift is plant Rebuke not an elder, but intreat him as a father 1 Tim. V. 1 and the younger meh as brethren Our elders fay G‘u]}_')i\‘ plant credit and reverence v vines, f{et upon a wall betwee les of f{lone, ripen more than upo ErrEcCaAmMrPaAl!ne, u /, [leelke t ium 1. Petfons whofe age gives them a claim t an women that have had childfen, or thofe who hav longeft bad iffue Locke mif entertaining, hav in the practice of virtue.. been made e { Atterbury 6. The ceremony of a publick choice 1 was forry to hear with \v}xat.partxalxtyi fl: popular heat, eleéions were carried in E;fl)&g"*;cle: Since the late diffolution of the club, fli.af{g" Spec Addif fons put up for the next eleéion Eve'cTIvE, adji [from ekd. 1. Regulate |