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Show EN EN] Both of them high at once their hands enbanc'd And both at once their huge blows down did fway Spenfer i to heighte The defire of money is every where the fame: it vent varies very little, but as its greater fcarcity ez Locke bances its price, and increafes the feramble 3. To raife in efteem What is it but the experience of want that ezL' Effrange bances the value of plenty The remembrance of the difficulties we now undergo, will contribute to ezbance our pleafure Atterbury 5 4, 'To aggravate; to increafe from bad t worfe To believe or pretend that whatever our heart incite is the will of God within us, is the principl of villainy that hath aced in the children of difan enbance obedience improve circum wit ftances of greater impudence than the moft aboHammond minable heathens were guilty of The relation which thofe children bore to th priefthood, contributed to ezhance their guilt, an Atterbury increafe their punifhment ENHA'NCEMENT. 7 /. [from exbance. 1. Encreafe; augmentation of value increafe of ill Jocular flanders have, from the flightnefs of th temptation, an ezbancement of guilt Government of the Tongue ENIGMA [enigma 7. / Lat. zowypa. A riddle; an obfcure queftion; a pofitio exprefled in remote and ambiguous terms "The dark enigma will allo A meaning; which, if well I underftand From facrilege will free the god's command. Dryd A cuttom was amongft the ancients of propofin _ an enigma at feftivals, and adjudging a reward t Pope ~ him that folved it adi. [from enigma. Exiema'Ticavr 1 Obfcure anfwer o fir, is exigmatical Enigmatical deliverie darkl ex preffed You ambiguoufl comprehen Shakefp ufeful veri Whilft they affe enigmatical obfeurity, they puzBoyle zle the readers of their divulged procefles Athenzus gives inftances of the enigmatical proan of the forfeiture and rewards upon the folution or nonfolution Broome's Notes on the Ody[fey 2. Cloudy; obfcurely conceive hended or appre Exiema'TicaLry. adv. [from exigma.] I a fenfe different from that which th words in their familiar acceptation imply Homer fpeaks enigmatically, and intends tha thefe monfters are merely the creation of poetry Broome Ext'emarist. 7 f. [from ezigma,] On who deals in obfcure and ambiguous mat of riddles That I may deal more ingenuoufly with my reader than the abovementioned erxigmati/f has done, fhall prefent him with a key to my riddle. Addifon To ENJO'IN. @. a. [enjoindre, French. T dirett; to order; to preferibe. It is mor authoritative than dire?, an lefs impe rious than command To fatisfy the good old man I would bend under any heavy weigh That he'll ezjoin me to Enjo'inEr. 7. f. [from enjoin.] One wh Did gives injunctions Enjo'iNMENT. 7 [ [from ezjoin.] Di 6. To extend to more purpofes or ufesg'hj‘b It hath grown from no othe to .cnlm'gci th ment whereby determinatio yond debate 2. To obtain pofleflion or fruition of Edward the faint, in whom it pleafed God, righteous and juft, to let England fee what a blefling fi Hooker and iniquity would not fuffer it to enjoy. He, who, to enjo Plato's elyfium, leap'd into the fea glad wit t 'This fenf delight the reciproca rived from ezjouir pronoun 7o Enjo'y w. n all th Fearing to ftrengthen that impatience Which feem'd too much enkindled Shakef, Much Ado 1. Encreafe Clarendsy Th farther exten king afterwards enlarged the conftant obe dience of the city with en/argement both of libertic and of revenues Hayw The ocean, which fo tong our hepes confin'd Could give no limits to his vafter mind Qur bounds en/argement was his lateft toil Nor hath he left us pris'ners to our ifle, ~ Waller There neve were any iflands, or other confider able parcels of land, amafled or heaped up; noran enlargement or addition of earth, made to the con tinent by the mud. that is carried down into th fea by rivers Woodward The commons in Rome generally purfued the ezlargement of their power by more fetquarrels of one entire aflembly againft another Saift The Greek tongue received many enlargemert between the time of Home and that of Plutarch Swift Releafe from confinement or fervitude At our enlargement what are thy due fees Might yet enkindle you unto the crown Shakefp To ENLARGE. w. a. [enlargir, French. 1. To make greater in quantity or appearance The wall, in luftre and effet like glafs Which o'er each object cafting various dyes Enlarges fome, and others multiplies Efther, ive 1 2, 'To encreafe any thing in magnitude; t extend Where there is fomething both lafting and fcarce and o valyable to be hoarded up, there men wil not be apt to ex/arge their pofleffions of land., Locke 3» Toencreafe by reprefentation; to mag nify; to exaggerate 4. 'To dilate; to expand O ye Corinthians, our-mouth i§ open unto you our heart is en/arged 2 Gor, vis 11 . To fet free from limitation "Though fhe appear honeft to me, yet atother place 3. Magnifying reprefentation And all who told it, added fomething news; And all who heard it, made en/argeiments too. Pope 4. Expatiating fpeech; copious difcourfe He concluded with a.en/argement upon the yice got into the army and corruptions which wer ; Clarendon ENLARGER. 7. /. [from enlarge.] Amplione tha fier Pope Sha If thou holdeft thy peace at'the time, then {hal their enargement.and deliverance arife to the Jew from another place trufted home fl 7 /o [from enlarge, Lieutenant Shake/p Ra eigh augmentation {fion Do you not hope your children fhall be kings When thofe who gave the thane of Cawder to me Promis'd no lefs to them That themfelves ENLARGEMENT to fet the foul into Gave fign for me to leave you: fo I did caliphs obtained a mighty empire, whic out amon to putin Your han (Ubie was in a fair way to have exlarged, until the Tillotforn flame i T invidious infinuations tlf::; ?:;31?1:1}:3 Th Edmund, enkindle all the {parks of natur To quit this horrid at Shakef. King Lear 2. To roufe paflions | m 2. To be further extended His hopes and expeations are bigger than his ez to inflame duration a5 ,excolu(;:eéodif;?iff I}?a‘ indivifible unit, or ide 1',11 would make is mor la' duration, mflg enlarge on it; rather with the memory of it wer extinct chay'g"Pieg fruition 1. To fet on fire flame They appointed the chancellor of the Exch u to e;z/r;rg:e upon any of thofe particulars, Can flE'on This is a theme fo unpleafant, I delight not \ Milton 70 Exk1/NDLE. . a. [from kindle. ¢ m 1. To expatiate; to fpeak in many word iy ezlmf 7o ENLA/RGE. . 2 Enjo'vyER. 7 /. [from enjgp.] One tha Diz has fruition or pofleflion Exjo'yMENT. 7. /. [from enjoy.] Pleafure happinefs the mind, 4s in number o They enlarged themfelves 'To live in happinefs Then I {hall be no more And Adam, wedded to another Eve Shall live with her ezjoying, I extinét it ftudiecxic 9. To diffufe in eloquence Creatures are made to ezjoy themfelves, as well a More to ferve us When a man fhall, with a fober, fedate, diabolical rancour, look upon and ezjoy himfelf in the figh of his neighbour's fin and fhame, can he plead th South inftigation of any "appetite in nature wer fcience whic Enlarge the man committed yefterd y That rail'd againft our perfon, clean.sh data import.tsv out README §%a is ufua and is de fimgs e 8: To releafe from confinement Milton's Paradife Lofs Cleombrotus x_'tg'%}gy;[to aggrandife a part. of extenfion o ty, that would be th repetition of which i ideas of extenfion an Brown's Vulg. Err 1 could erjoy the pangs of death | Addifon's Cato And fmile in agony ml0 » her than .foundnefs of trut wil] be'ar a;%m Tr(;_a oul might be fettled be 7o ENJO'Y. @, a. [ jouir, enjouir, French. 1. To feel or perceive with pleafure; t have a pleafing fenfe of; to be delighte with which defire hath begotten a e r u far meg Critical trial fhould be made by publick exjoin roo neceflary ufe ofqoth? a:;:;zl ?defir us 1s tha command retion 3. 'To incite to any at or hope Faith here is the affent to thofe things which com to us by hearing, and are {o believed by adherence or dark ezigmatical knowledge, but hereafter ar Hammond {cen or known demonttratively ters; make enjoining that truth and fidelity be inviolably preTillotfon ferved Joyments ties; but being miftaken by liberal expofitors at firft they have been mifunderftood by moft fince Brown's Vulgar Ervaurs pofitions in ufe at Athens Bacon's Natural Hiftory nually ezjoin themfelves It endeavours to {ecure every man's intereft, b the enlargeth her mirth fo faj-, that there ;g i HC Sh18 fhrey con‘firu&ion made of her 3. To pleafe; to gladden; to exhilarate; t Their yearly rents. are not improved, the landJords making no lefs gain by fines than by enbanceLacon ment of rents 2. Aggravation Monks and philofophers, and fuch as do conti 2. To raife; to advance ice FiN encreafe or dilates an thing We fhall not contentioufly rejoin, but confer wha is in us unto his nam and honour, ready t fwallowed in any worthy enlarger Zo Exvi'cHT, 2. e [from lxglvt.] Toilent light wit fuppl luminate; t lighten paft age o fhon ha firf th Wit fro laft th war fhal an prefent th Enlight Pope {{gbt. [fro v 7o Exvi'enTEN 1. To illuminate; to fupply with lig Pj;l i 1 fother God will ex/ighten my darknefs As the fun fhineth to the whole vw‘;:' 2 ightnef is no faith but this one publithed, the "5 hereo |