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Show EQ EQ flancy of thei motion argu the ordaine b Wildom egwals in min Ray _The eguability of the temperature of the air rendered the Afiaticks lazy Ardutbhnot on*Air E'Q,U\BLE t adj. [eguabilis, Latin.] Equa itfelf5 even form motion unifor in refpe t or temperature He would have the vaft bod elegant and round as a fa&titious ‘globe reprefent it; to be every where fmooth and egwable, and a too {wif fro of their diftance th commo 1. Like another in bulk, excellence, or an If thou be among great men, make not thyfel Ecclef equal with them Egual lo Hale ow thei no numbers 3 Even H uniform At thei vai equator o 2. The fame degree of dignity northern and fou pafles througt ‘the horizon; and a t as much above the horizon fraternal ftate Sawift 3. Evennefs; uniformity; conftant tenour equability Dyyden's Fab. Dedication Impartial ; neutral Meafur Each to his proper fortune ftand or fal defin Egual and unconcern'd 1 lock on all out the lives'of men, an periodicall the alterations of their tempers, conceiv regularity in mutations, with an eguality in' confti Rutilians, Trojans, are the fame to me And both fhall draw the lots their fates decree Dryd. Zin tutions, and forget that variety which phyfician therein difcover ‘Brown's Vulgar .grrour.r ElouaLry. adv. [from epual. t. In the farmiz degree with another per 6. Indifferent They who'are not difpofed to receive them, ma let them alone, or rejeé them ; it is equal to me Cheyne's Phil, Prin fon or thing ; alike T reconcil men vice to thei fears is th alike to.bot aim of all the various fchgmes and proje@s of fin and is egually intended by atheifm and immorality He fubmitted himfelf, and fware to all eg#a/ conditions Mac Ragers "The coveteous are egually impatient of their%ondition, egually tempted with the wages of unrighte #. Equitable ; advantageou parties 8. Being upon the fame terms The mad th married and the aged alfo, equa orphans widows oufnefs, as if they were indeed poor ye If the motion of the fun were as unequal as of fhip, fometimes' flow ‘Elquavr. = /. [from the adje&ive. 1. One not inferior or fuperior to another motion of a comet does He would make them all egzals to the citizens o Rome 2 Mac. ix. 154 him, becaufe they now fee him their fuperior; an thpfe who were once his fuperiors, becaufe they loo upon hi as their equal Aa'dwn. To my dear egual in my native land My plighted vow T'gave: 1 his received i Each fwore with truth with pleafure each believ'd "The mutual contraét was to heav'n gonvey'd, Prior 2. One of the fame age and ‘at others fwift or, i being conftantly egually {wift, it yet was not circular, and produced "not the fame appearances, i would not help us to meafure time more than th He is epamoured on Hero : 1 pray you, diffuad Thofe who were once his equals, envy and defam Rogers 2. Evenly; equably; uniformly in'fpoils with themfelves Mac him from her; {he is no egual/ for his birth Shakefpeare's Much Ado plement of th Whenever the {un comes undeferv'd tual dependance It is not permitted me to make my commendatio the ear the heavens, is a grea are the poles of t the globe into t placed all mankind, with relation to himfelf, in al the "relations between man and man there is a mu 4. In jutt proportion Equa'rrow. [In aftronom ence between the ti "the fun's apparent ‘m that is meafure motion ; according 'to watches ought to be EQUA'TOR. 7. /. [= Over his brethren Milton's Paradife Lofs According to this egwality wherein God hat Dryden Think not of me : perhaps my egxz/ min May learn to bear the fate the god's allot me, Swith Locke 3. Impartially We fhall 'ufe' them As we fhall find' their' merits and our fafet May egually determine S/Jakcfi)mrf': King Lear ElQuaLwgss,. /. [from egual.] Equality Let me Jamen That our ftars unreconcileable fhould have divide Our egwalnefs to this Equan'curar gulus, Latin. i EQuawimiry fpend e Equi'Lity. 2. /. [fromequal. fi 1. Likenefs with regard to any quantitie compared Will arrogate dominio time terms, but of equal va Ye lofty beeches, tell this matchlefs dame That if together ye fed all one flame With fair eguality An egual temper in his mind he found ‘When fortune flatter'd him, and when fhe frown'd egqual to your merit iiiei Of proud ambition; who, not conten and their vainer tears triumphs of the fame quantit One fhall rife laughs at all the yulgar cares and fears and dail Equa'rron. [In algebra. Eguality of two domeftick powers Breeds fcrupulous fackion. Shakefp. Anth. and Clecp a Clarendon equal to fight with the Englifh time Of what her eyes have kindled in'my heatt. Waller triangle would contain three angles egual t Scots trufte that light is propagated i paffage from the fun t It could not egualife the hundredth par Milton May join us; egual joy, as egual love Although there were no man to take notice of it cafe fhall require By an argument taken fr times of the eclipfes of Jupiter's fatell That would make the moved body, remainin what it is, in regard of its bignefs, to egualifz an fit a thing bigger than it is Digby nor better Th the mean motion by addition 2. To be equal to: afenfe not ufed other quality that admits comparifon neither greater nor lefs; neither worf 2. Adequate to any purpofe tables of equation of natural days "To equalife accounts we will allow three hundre years, and fo long a time as we can manifeft fro the Scripture Bro E'QuavL. adj. [equalis, Latin. two right angles To'make'even 1 centripetal forces will be reciprocally as the fquare Cheyne of the diftances ever tions of the fun along the Ecliptick To E'QuaLise. w. a. [from egual thei centre and from and between them the middl Nor you great queen, thefe offices repent Which he will egzaly and perhaps augment, Dryd the fquares of their periodical times be as the cube Tag We are to find out the extrem Trumbull ta Pope Who anfwer'd all her cares, and egua/'d all her love Dryden If bodies move eguably in concentrick circles, an u £ [eqnare from the extremities of excef to be applied to' the whole She fought Sicheus through the thady grove, to itfelf M veltigation of a mean proportion 1 know no body fo like to egua/ him, even at th age he wrote moft of them, as yourfelf equall evenly in the {fame tenour ly Equa'rion ftate with anothe 4. To recompenfe fully ; to anfwer in ful proportion Uniform [[eeqquuaanniimmi: Even ; not deje@ted; not dfited: One whofe all not eguals Edward's moiety Shake[peare flow ; for too quick a motion produceth an alkaline Arbuthunot and too flow an acid acrimony E'QuaBLy. adj. [from eguable. prefled another 2. To rife to the fam perfon 3. To be equal to to no Gal. 1. 14 Bentley neithe motion of it eguabl a nation Equaq 'viMovus, . adi.2dj acrimony of the blood more tha Nothing abate ow 7o E'Quar, @. a. |from the noun. t. To make one thing or perfon equal t of a planet to be as plain as the elyfian fields Evennefs 6f mind, neitlier T proficed in the Jews religion above many m For the celeftial bodies, the egmability and con Shatkefpeare adj. [from equus and an Conlfifting of equal angles . f [agudnimitas, Lat. -makes equal daysand ni globe, becaufe he th {ets due weft, whic h ‘time of the year. By reafon of the convex of man, under the eguator ‘poles: neither wouldth difcover the fun in the eguato On the other fide th il remaining u ‘Rocksrich inge That on the hi Whence many a buifting EQUATORTAL. adj. Ef'; taining to the equator tor.: 7 A0 The planets have fpheroidical t quities of their eguatoria their EQuE/sTRIAN, adf 1. Being on horfeback An egueftrian lady appeare upon 2. Skilled in horfemant 3. Belonging to the fecon E'QuErrY. 7. /. [ecurie, D of the horfe Equicru'rar.\ad). [« EQUiCRU'RE 't'iin.] 1. Having legs of an equal I 2, Having the legs of an equ longer than the bafe; ifofceles An equicrure triangle goes upon a certai Dighy on tbe tion of length and breadth "We fucceffively draw lines from angle to angle d rib def b le tia ra cri equ til feve - EQuini'sTA 2 4 i |