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Show B E- A Bro'PEMENT. 2. [ [from elpe.] Departure from juft reftraint; rejeGtion o lawful power commonly ufed of awife An elopement is the voluntary departure of a wif fro he wit YOW who huthan to liv wit a adulterer an fhe lives in breach of the matrimonia Ayliffe's Parergon The negligent hutband, trufting to -the efficac of his principle, was undone by his wife's elopement from him Arbuthnot Evors. . f [Ded.] A fih; reckone howeverby M:lton among the ferpents Scorpion and afp, and amphifbena dire Ceratte horn'd hydrus and e/ops drear And dipfas Milton's Par. Loft E'vequence . f [eloguentia, Latin. 1. The power of {peaking with fluency an elegance oratory Attion is eloguence, and the eyes of the ignoran More lzarned than the ears Shakefp. Coriolanus Athens or free Rome where eloguenc Flourith'd, fince mute Milton His infant foftnefs pleads a milder doom And fpeaks with all the eloguence of tears. Heigh 2. Elegant language uttered with fluency Say fhe be mute,, and wilk not fpeak a word Then I'll commend: her volubility Shakefp And fay the uttered piercing eloguence Fit words attended on his weighty fenfe Ard mild pesfuafion flow'd in eloguence. Pope's Od E'LoQUENT adj. [eloguens, Latin. Hav ing the power of oratory; havin power of fluent and elegant fpeech th The Lord of hofts dath take away the captain.o fifty, an the honourabl man and the counfellur, and the cunning artificer,, and the e/oguent orator O deathi Ifaiaby iii. 3 all e/oguent, you only prov ‘What duft we dote on, when 'tis man we love, Pope Bise prowoun [eller Saxon. Other one befides: it is applied both to per fons and things To ftand ftained with,travel, and fweating wit defire tofee him; thinking of nothing e//e,, puttin 2ll affairs e//e in oblivion as if ther wer nothin e/fé to be done but to fee him Shakefp. Henry IV Should he or any e/fe fearch, he will find evidenc wof the Divine Wildom Hale's Origin of Markind He fays, 'twas then with him, as now with you He did it when he had nothing ¢/ to do, Dedban Erse adv "Touch oughtof min befide by lot my due, Thefe hoftile fields thall fatten with. thy blood. clean.sh data import.tsv out README Dryden What ways. are there whereby we fhould be affured, but either by an internal impreffio upo our minds o of th e//e by fuc external and vifible effe@s as our.reafon tells usmuf Lillotfon be attributed to fome- caufe 2, Befide;, except that mentioned Pleafures which no where e/fz.were to be found And all Elyfiur in a fpot of ground Dryden 3. It has fometimes ar before it fuperfluoufly Be more abftemiqus Or elfe, good' night your vow Shakefp E'isewHERE. adv. [elfe and where. 1. In any other place are here divers trees found elfewbere which are not to b Abbot's Deferip. of the World. hon, Nilus; fo wher to, find them e/fzwher knew not h Raleigh's Hifs For, if we chance tofixour thoughts e/feavbere Though our eyes open be, we cannot fee Henceforth oracles are ceas'd Dguies And thou no moere with.pomp and facrific Shalt be enquir'd at Delphos, or elfewbere. Milton Although feafoned bodies may and do live near a ?udz‘cmio 0QLs appointeth him what to wear,. think the gravet prelates no competent judges where it is- fit for th Hoaker minifter to ftand Let us no more contend nor blam Beftow, bafe man as F{[:'w/)rr:" Brown's Vulya 7o Evv're. @. a.[elwo, Latin e/fewhbere new or ftrange thing. yet new-comer an Graunt's Bills of Mortality I Tfi"(vfi{fi"g;; The more oily any fpirit is, the Mmote perpic becaufe it is harder to be e/uzed by the blood 1oUs thy idle threats elfewwbere what he fay ambufcade retreats, and elufory tergil?,aerrtf};;?:nq‘gh" My mother's daughter knows not how to*fear. Dyyd If it contradi fraus wlen It may be feared they are by Milton Each other, blam'd enough e/fewhere Arbuthnot on it is n 70.EL U'TRIAxTE._ v. a. [elutrip, L t.]lm'¥‘; Litlorfon decant; or ftrain out To ELU/CIDATE. @. a. [elucids, Latin. To explain; to clear; to make plain Th preffure of the air Ex Tefs thaxI: it has been compu}t)(e):rl1 ;};e }:;:Es ‘:uim"{ it is fomething, and the alteration o on tenth fl its forc We thall, in orderto the e/ucidation of this matter Boyle {ubjoin the following experiment Evv's1aN. adj. [elyfius, Latin.] Pertainifié Fo elugidate a little the matter, let us confider it Boyle. Ervcipa'rion. #. f. [frome/ucidate. planation; expofition upon the lungs muft produce fom dif ence in e/utriating the blood as it pafies throu h f{ lun§s Arbuthnot o /}1, to Elyfiur_n Erucipa'tor. # /. [from clucidate.] Kxlainer; expofitor; commentator pleafant ; delicibuflys {of and foothing; exceedingly delightfu] The river of life, ‘through midft of heaye Obfeurity is brought over them by the courfe o ignorance and age, and yet more by their pedantical elucidators Abbot Ro}ls o'er elyfian flowers her amber ftream fl}i[t ELY'SIUM. #. /. [Latin,]. The place affigne by the heathens to happy foulss any place exquifitely pleafant 70 ELU'DE. @. a. [eluds, Latin. 1. To efcape by ftratagem;. to. avoid. an mifchief or danger by artifice To have thee with thy lips. to ftop my mout So fhould'ft thou either turn my-flying foul, grdl f}}:oul'd kl"rea:it}}e i}; fo ir};t‘(l) thy body Several pernicious vices, notorious among us, efcape or e/ude the punifiment of any law yet innd then it liv'd in fweet ums Shak vented Sawift He who looks no higher for the motives of his 'Em. A contra&ion of lbje);firr For he could coin and counterfei condu&t than the refentments of human. juftice whenever.he can prefume himfelf cunning enough to | « New words with little or no wit; And when with hafty noife he fpoke em elude, rich enough to bribe, or firong enough to re fift it, will be under no reftraint 2. To mock by an unexpetted efcape Rogers . Me gentle Delia beckons from the plain ‘Then, hid in fhades, e/ides her eager fwainj But feigns a laugh to fee me fearch around And by that laugh the willing fair is found Evu/piBLE adj. [from elude.] to be defeated The plural of ¢/f Poflibl lean tell whether this emaciation ox #, [ Emacvira'tion [emacub, Latin The act of freeing any thing from fpots Lts or foulnefs. E'MANANT. adj. [emanans, Lat.] Ifluing from fomething elfe i | The firft a& of the divine nature, relating to the world,. and his adminiftration thereof, is an emanant a& th moft wif mighty Go counfel and purpofe of Al terminate in thofe two great tranfient or emanant aQs or works, the work of creation and Hale's Origin of Mankind, providence Shake/p Drayton Weak ened in the loins e 1) ELv'stox. z.[ [elufio, Latin. Anefeap from. enquiry. or examination;: a fraud an artifice o detects the impoftures. and elufions of thof #oodward's Nat. Hif Praifing Fond hopes to all, and all with hopes deceives, Pope ftate of one grow leannefs were from a phthifis, or from a heick fe-ver Graunts Pope it had been written more properly e/fg/5. Relating to elves, or wandering {pirits Elufive of the bridal day, fhe give To lofe fleth;, to Brown. Searchers canno E'tvisu. adj, [from elves, the plural of e/f Evvisive. adj, [from elude. elufion; ufing arts to efcape Bacon 1. The a& of making lean. Brown's Pulgar Errours who have pretended to it Emacialtron. u. /. [emaciatus, Latin / Erom the like might proceed. the fears of pollin elvelocksy or complicated hairs of the head metals Latin,} after long emaciating diets wax plump, fat, 2. Th An. appendix,, relating to.the tranfmutatio [emacia drcwned therein E'vverock. #. f. [from elves and Jock. Knots in the hair {fuperftitioufly {fuppofe to be tangled by the fairies Which lie from others reading; Hudibrar He emactated and pined away in. the too anyious enquiry of the fea's reciprocation, although mot Milto No mufe hath been fo bold, Or of the latteror the old Thofe e/viftr fecrets ta unfold, To wafte; to deprive of fleth To Ema'c1aTE. w.z2 pine; to grow lean Fairy elves Whofe midnightrevels by fome foreft fide, Or fountain,. fome belated peafant fees ‘Thou e/vi/b markt,.abortive, rioting hog! «. 4 All dying of the confumption, die emaciated ad lean Graunt's Bills of Mortality, Pope See ELF The flave of nature, and the fonof hellt EMA/CIATE Hex, ¥ and almoft new than the happinefs of trials by juries; yet if thi bleffed part of our law be e/udible by power and artifice, we fhall have little reafon to boaft Swwif Evrves 7 The ignorant for current took ‘e Me There is not any common place more infifted o ELu'MBATED. adj. [elumbis, Lat. As he proved that Pifon was not Ganges, or Ge fong in Londo when the magittrat offered to the meaneft minifter Tending t elude; teudin to dece deceitful; falla%ious. which e/fewhere complain, that injury Fays, fairies, genii, e/ves and demons hear But {tand aloof, and think profane to view "This faulchion, . e//¢, not hitherto withftood ‘T'her The Eui'sgkv. at{é'._ (from elyde 2, Tn othet places; in fome other place Ye fylphs and fylphids to your chief give ear Dare not, on thy life EM Or dreams he fees 1. Otherwife notion of 2 Go To E'MANATE. . 2. [emano, Latin.] To iffue or flow from fomething elfe. EmaNa'TION, 2. f. [emanatio, Lat.m-;] 1. The a& of iffuing or proceeding from A5 e Tio any other fubftance Ariftotle faid, that it-{ftreamed by connatural¢+fult an th emanation. from. God infinit and eternal Mind, as the light iffues from the fi‘lpf.so"?b'- 2. 'That whigh~iffues from another. fub ftance; an efflux; efftuvium. The experience of thofe profitable and excellent emanations from God, may be, and commonly )‘Z‘ dgyior of our love the firlt motiv 2 b ver del i io ra at o wa r th An nuou emgnation or,continue ef@luvnum:.w, ‘§; after fome diftance, retradteth unto itfelf ;. as 10 1 rups,, oils, and vifcofiies, which fyqa,‘a"efl retixe into their formes dimenfions ‘3%";' |