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Show E B More holy and profound than mine own life Adam, effrang'd in look, and alter'd ftyle Speech intermitted, thus to Everenew'd, Milton I came to grieve a father's heart effrang'd But little thought to find a miftrefs chang'd. Dryden My dear wife's ¢ffimate, her womb's increafe The treafure of my loins. Shakefpeare's Coriolanus 3. Valuation ; aflignmen value of proportiona 1 do not know comparative judgment The only way to come to a true ¢ffimate upon th odds betwixt a publick and a private life, is to tr L' E flrange both Outward a&ions can never give a juft effimate o us, fince there are many perfections of a man whic Addifon are not capable of appearing in a@ions Estima'rion. # /. [from ¢fimare. 1. The a& of adjufting proportional value E TH to this hour, what it is that ha eftranged him from me Pope 4. 'To withdraw or withhold W muf effrange our belief from every thin which is not clearly and diftinétly evidenced Glanville's Scepfis ESTRANGEMENT 7 [ [fro eftrange. Alienation; diftance; removal voluntar abftration If a man fhould fan&ify unto the Lord fome par of a field, the effimation fhall be according to th Leviticus feed Defires, by a long ¢ffraugement from better things come at length periettly to loath, and fly off fro them South 1n our own effimation we account fuch particu ESTRAPA'DE. ». /. [French. 'The defence of a horfe that will not obey, who to get rid of his rider, rifes mightil 2. Calculation; computation -3. Opinion; judgement worthy than thofe that are already trie lars mor before Bacon and known 4. Efteem; regard; honour Crimes there were laid to his charge many, th lealt whereof being juft, had bereaved him of effimaHooker tion and credit with men Of your brace of unprizable effimations, the on Shakefpeare is but frail, and the other cafual I know the gentlema "To be of worth and worthy effimation have effimation amon the multitude legs Estre'ATE E'stiMATIVE. adj. [from eftimate. W faculty facult Th faculty belon find in animals an efimative or judicia an appetition or averfation, and Joco-motiv Hale anfwering the will error is not in the eye, but in the effimativ which miftakingly concludes that colour t to the wall, which indeed belongs to the ob ject Estima'tor dow tler of rates; a computift Elstivar, [adj. effivas, Latin. 1. Pertaining to the fummer 2. Continuing for the fummer Estiva'rion. #. [«ffivatio The a& of pafling the fummer in the rolls of a court, to be leCowel EsTre/PEMENT. 7. /. [of the French wor ¢ftrepier.] Spoil ‘made by the tenant fo term of life upon any lands or woods Cowel ElstricH. . /. [commonly written offrich Sruthiocamelys. 'The largeft of birds To be furious Is to be frighted out of fear; and, in that mood The dove will peck the effridge Shakefpeare The peacock, notat thy command, affume His glorious train; nor e/frich her rare plumes Sandys A wor E/'stuaNce. z /. Heat; warmth Averroe and made n hilarity hi more therecf than Seneca commendet Bacon and was al lowable in Cato; that is, a fober incalefcence, an Brown regulated effuance from wine Latin. E'srvary. # [ [@ffuarium, Lat. A arm of the fea; the mouth of a Iake o river in which the tide reciprocates; frith Esto'pEL. 2 /. [law term.] Such an a as bars any legal procefs Esto'vers. z /. [law term. Neceflarie allowed by law Estra'DE. 2z f. [French; fratum, Latin. Dii An even or level fpace To EsTUATE. @. o [#ffw, Latin.] T {well and fall reciprocally; to boil; to b 70 ESTRANGE. w. a. [¢ftranger, French. 1. To keep at a diftance; to withdraw The ftate of boiling; reciprocation of rif Had we not only cut off their corruptiens, bu alfo ¢ffranged ourfelves from them in things indifferent, who feeth not how greatly prejudicial this migh Hooker have been to fo good a caufe They know 1t is our cuftom of fimple reading, no for converfion of infidels ¢/franged from the houfe o God, but for inftruftion of men baptized, bred and brought up in the bofom of the church Hooger Sce, fhe weeps Thinks me unkind, or falfe, and knows not wh 1 thus ¢ffrange my perfon from her bed 2. To alienate to divert fro ufe or poffeffor The Dryden its origina have ¢ffranged this place, and have burn incenfe in it to other gods 3. To alienate from affe@ion Fer. xix. 4 to turn fro kkindnefs to malevolence or indifference How comes it now, my hufband, oh, how comes it "That thou art thus ¢ffranged from thyfelf Fhylelf [ call it, being frange to me Sbake/peare in a ftate of violent commotion Estua'ri n z [ an fall agitation 1 Latin wit fenfible commotion of the fpirits, and an effuation o the blood Norris E'sture. # [i [«fus Latin. Violence commotion The feas retai Not only their outrageous ¢/2ure there But fupernatural mifchief they expire Esu'RIENT. adj. [efuriens, Latin.] Hungry voracious E'suriNe Di& adj. [efurio, Latin.] Corroding catmg Over much pitreing is the air of Hampftead, i which fort of air there is always fomething efurin and acid Wifeman Erc contra@tio o th tw of print drawing witha proper needle upon a' per-plate, covered over with a gmlmdopf wax, Efi' c. and well blacked with he fm 1 of a link, in order to take off th figur: ‘: the rawing or print; which havin backfide tinctured with white Jeaq vg,;ll b}f runnin ove th ftrucke Ou;Iine with a fift, imprefs the exa figure o the black or red ground; wh ch 4 ure aftferwards with needles drawp %ee ; quit through the ground fhadows and hatching an th put in; and the a wax border being made all roypg th plate, there is poured ona fufficient quan tity of .well‘ tempered agua Jortis, whic infinuating into the ftrokes made by th needles, ufually eats, in about half a hour, into the figure of the print or draying on the copper-plate 2. To fketch; to draw; to delineate [unlef this word be miftaken by ZLocke for che. There are many empty terms to be found jn fom learned writers, to which they had recourfe to el out thei'r f)'fiems. Locke 3. [This word is evidently miftaken by Ra for edge.] "To move forwards towards on When we lie long awake in the night, we are no able to reft one quarter of an hour without fhiftin of fides, or at leaft'ztching this way and that way more or lefs i . Rayg ErcH. z /. A country word of which know not the meaning When the a pound or tw Where yo lay dung upo fow their ezch crops, they fprinkle of clover on an acre Martimer find dunging of land makes it rank the erch, and faw it with barley ETERNAL. adj. [«iernus, Latin. 1. Without beginning or end The eternal God is thy refuge. Deuter xxsiii 27 2. Without beginning It is a queftion quite different from our having a idea of eternity, to know whether there were an Lacke real being, whofe duration hasbeen eferna 3. Without end; endlefs; immortal Thou know'ft that Banquo and his Fleance lives -But in them nature's copy's not eterzal. Shakef 4. Perpetual; conftant; unintermitting ETs/RNAL 7. [eternel, French. On of the appellations of the Godhead "That law whereby the Erernal himfelfdoth work Hocker Hung out ofheay'n his golden feales Miltsn The Eternal ETE/RNALIST to prevent fuch horrid fray 7 /. [@turnus, Latin.] On that holds the paft exiftence of the wor infinite Chapman makin Hobbes believed the erernal truths which he opDryden pofed Rivers and lakes that want fermenting parts a the bottom, are not excited into effuations;. therefore fome feas flow higher than others Brow is accompanie i 5. Unchangeable commotion The motion of the wil uf? Burnt off'rings mornand ev'ning fhall be thine Dryden And fires ezernal in thy temple fhine Di& [from s/ 1. A wa Mortimer's Hyfbandry reftraine words e# cztera, whic fignifies. 1, and the refty and others of%l}ae /is;e ‘Zja,'/b o ToErcu w. a, [etzen, German. fide to the prejudice of him in the reverfion rarely found A grotto is a place of thade, oreffivation fo vied by the bailiff, or other officer, o every man for his offence. A law term Boyle z f. [from eftimate.] A fet of an original writing example, of amerciaments or penalties, fe Hav ing the power of comparing and adjuftin the preference 1s ye Farrier's Diét 7. [ [extradum, Latin.] Th true cop an Wifd. viii. 10 henour with the elders A plain reafon of the publick honouss due to th magiftrate is, that he may be in due effimation an Atterbury reverance his forehan in the air, yerks furioufly with his hin And not without defert fo well reputed. Shakefpeare I thal and whil ther i mar wha alif eter th af wou lty x‘wv th o defi t c exp cou the tha II ma wha O this i fou no world, that i there of eternity that is found in this Burnet "LI; nal ete o [f a @ ZE 70 ETE'RNAL iit make eternal ETer/NaLLY adv. [from etm:ql.] 1. Without beginning or eixd ly ria inv bl ge ha Un z M: an a Latin l ev o goo ll mor i That whic |