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Show S B S %, To make afettlement of any inheritance on which the whole weight of the matter turns And if each fyftem in gradation roll The leatt confufion but in one, not al Pope That fyftem only, but the whole muftfall prin Important in the higheft ' degree The prince of Cumberland. Judgment's more ¢/fential to a general Denbham's Sophy Than courage fubtilely elabo rated; extrated fo as to contain all th virtues of its elemental parts contrate into a natrow compafs The juice of the feed is an effential oil or balm defigned by nature to preferve the feed from corrupArbuthnot tion 7. 1. Exiftence being Th of fi etabliffement tha hi He had not the a& penned by way of recognition is in an whic 4 Hath not ¢/fentially, but by circumftance Shakefpeare's tenry V1 The name of valour Body and fpirit are efféntially divided, though no Glanville locally diftant All fin effentially is, and muft be mortal Knowledg is tha which nex Addifor's Guardian EssoiNE. #. f. [of the French ¢fonie, o . exonnid. 1, He that has his prefenc forbor From every work he challenged ¢/forx For contemplation fake; yet otherwif Fairy Queen His life he led in lawlefs riotife Zc ESTA'BLISH. «. a. [etablir, French, 1. To fettle firmly; to fix unalterably He may c¢ffabli/b thee to-day for a people unt Deut himfelf 1 will ¢ffablifb my covenant with him for an everGen. xvil. 19 lafting covenant Numibers ‘4. 'To fix or fettle in an opinion So were the churches ¢ffablifbed in the faith AeTs, X14 7. 'To form or model He appointed in what manner his family fhould b t_'/}:‘lfi/l.‘/,&d Clarendon 6. To found; to-build firmly; to fix im- moveably. A fenfe not in ufe For he hath founded it upon the feas, and ¢/fab difped it upon the fioods Pfe x3ive 1 lives, ye b woul we fe up ou can fee Wh Without g/ffeem for virtuous poverty Seyere Fabritius, or can ceafe Cadmir The ploughman conful in his coarfe attire 2 Dryden Both thofe pocts lived in much ¢/feem with goo and holy men in orders. Dryden's Fables, Preface I am not uneafy that many, whomI never ha any ¢ffeem for, are likely to enjoy this world afte hopes and e¢ffadl hment Pope Cn ¢feem. [fro n / that highly values Thanks to giddy chance She caft us headlong from our high ¢/ffate. Dryden. one that fets an hig Trut and certainty ar no Is not fo g/ftimable or profitabl As flefh ot muttons, beefs, or goats A lady faid of her two companions by all fecure a A pound of man's ficth, taken from a maun poffeflion poffeffions in land accufe Sh You loft one who gave hopes of being every thing that wag ¢ffinable and good generally meant o E'stimaBLeNess or realities us to the king as though we wen Sidney about to overthrow him in his own effate Go, mifer! go; for lucre fell thy foul Truck wares for wares, and trudge from pole to pole 5. Rank | 7o ESTIMATE quality Sidney A petfon of high rank 6 This {enfe is difufed Latimer She is a dutche ohs)s, a great effare @.a in time Temple effimable. regard [«ffimo, Latin. 1. To rate; to adjuft the value of; to judg Dryd. Perf, Who hath not heard of the greatnefs of your effate? Who feeth not that your effate is much excelled with that fveet uniting of all beauties [fro 7 / The quality of defervin That men may fay, when thou art dead and gone See what a vaft ¢ffaze he left his fon that one wa more amiable, the other more cffimable innate principles; but men are in the fame uncertain, floating e/fate with as without them. Lac(‘e. 4. Fortune Shake[peare 2, Worthy of efteem ; worthy of fome degre of honour and refpect circumftances in general 3. Condition 3. To make firm; to ratify may make it void 'To confider as to value with of Many would little ¢ffeer of their ow 2. Condition of life, with regard to profpe- rity or adverfity 2. To fettle in any privilege or pofieflion to confirm Every vow, and every binding oath to affli¢t th foul, her hutband may ¢ffabliji it, or her hufban xiv. 5 Rom Many times the things adduced to judgment ma rate upon any thing be meum & tuun, when the reafon and confequences This might inftru@ the proudeft effecmer of hi thereof may reach to point of effaze: 1 call matters own parts, how ufeful it is to talk and confult wit of ¢/fate notonly the parts of fovereignty, but whatfoLocke others ever introduceth any great alteration, or dangerou ch. [Fre LE aj IMA E'S precedent, or concerneth manifeftly any great portio Bacon's EfJays. | 1. Valuable; worth a large price of people The Normans never obtained this kingdom b fuch a right of conqueft, as did or might alter th eftablifbed laws of the kingdom. Flale's Com. Law Soon after the rebellion broke out, the Prefbyterian (e& was ¢ffablifbed in all its gorms by a Sawift ordinance of the lords and commons ¢fleemeth every day alike is now commonly written fate or ex Cowel One man effecmeth one day above another; anothe Esta'te. . /. [¢tat, French 1. The general intereft; the bufinefs of the | me government; the publick. In this fenfe it Este'emer upon juft cauf of abfence 3. Excufe; exemption gine here, we do not ferioufly confider that God has proWake vided another and better place for us 2. Allegement of an excufe for him that i fummoned, or fought for, to appear an anfwer to an ation real, or to perfor a court-baron to ima 'EM valu Hig verb th [fro / EsT Allowance; income; falary reverential regard His excellency, who had the fole difpofal of the Whilf cufed upon any juft caufe; as ficknefs {uit t though he wer Dryden to.think 4. To hold in opinion rm v Est 7 e cip pri fundamenta 6. Scttled or final reft trul and' ¢/féntially raifes one man above another Foundation fettled law more love not b Who woul eftcermed lefs emperor's revenue, might gradually leffen your effab- Savift. lifbwment Sowzh to virtue reverence Spenfer. to regard wit 3. To prize; to rate high reformation, and in that ¢/fabdlifbment by which all men fhoul brin be contained in duty 5 He that loves himfelf Befides, thofe fingle forms the doth zffzem And in her balance doth their values try Davies The facred order to which you belong, and even en child an wive thei o remor fo bee the ¢ffablifbinent on which it {ubfifts, have ofte hhel crime heino tha fro ~_wi Atterbury ftruck at; butin vain Esse'NTiaLLy. adv. [effentialiter, Latin. By the conftitution of nature; really according to the true ftate of things of a| overnment or family Now come into that genera nature to eftimate by proportion 2. To compare 2. Confirmation of {fomething already done; ratification form; 3 mode Wifd. vii. 8 fixed ftate lation reg effeemed riches nothing in comparifon of her All happy peace, and goodly government Fairy Quecn Is fettled there in fure effablifbment South of great importance refp ‘French. 1. Settlement . Settle and eaten into his very e/fentials 3. The chief point ¢fablib of right; as, on theother fide, he avoided to have it by new law; but chofe rather a kind of middle way, Bacon's Henry V1 by way of effablifbment altere eve in the works of nature they honour A kno ghly profound wifdom; howbeit thi and e¢ffeer Hooker wildom fayeth not I preferred her before fceptres and thrones, an L. Dighy0 [fro # Esta/Brisument Milton's Paradife Lqft ha Spenfer faith firlt or conftituent principles plagu H 1 reverence the holy fathers as divine e/ia&/f//:wf"r o Will either quite confume us, or reduc 2. Nature The worth of all men by their end effeem And then due praife, or due reproach them yield eftablifhes wh His utmoft ire to the height enrag'd "To nothing this effential 1. To fet a value whether high or low upo any thing Shakef. Macbeth [from efablih. EsTA'BLISHER. 7. / cipal Esse/NTIAL Latin We will effadlifb our e ate upo Our cldeft Malcolm, whom we name hereafter Alike effential to th' amazing whole g. Pure; highly rettified To ESTE'EM. w. a. [¢ffimer, French; aftim fenfe not in ufe Swwift B & of any thing by its proportion to {omething elfe When a man fhall fan&ify his houfe to the Lord then the pricft fhall effimate it whether it be good o bad: as the prieft fhall ¢ffimate it, {o fhall it ftand Lew., zxvil, 14 | 2 o It is by the weight of filver, and not the nam the piece, that me change them To calculate / E'stiMaATE S ¢fimate commoditie and exLocke to compute [fro th verb ',l /. [ L Herod, on his birth-day, made afupper to his lords, § ElsTr 1 Computation calculation high captains, and chief ¢ffates of Galilee 7o EsTaTE. Mark a: [from the noun. vi. 21. To fettle as a fortune Why hath thy quee Summon'd me hither - contract of true love to celebrate And fome donation freelyto eftat On the bleft loyers Shakefpeare's Tempeft. Upon a moderate effinate and cal ion of th quantity of water now atually ‘c ed. in ‘th abyfs, 1 found that this alone was full enough t cover th Mofes whol globe to the, height aff 1 2. Value 1'd lov My country's good, with a refpeét more tender 47T Mor - |