OCR Text |
Show F A Ab Yoz terra dialeCto inferi und qu fit & péz Macedonu & 'z'v]:ego; Scoto-Saxonibu dicuntu ter's Gloflary 1. A kind of fabled beings fuppofed to apt in a diminutiv danc i huma the meadows Now minutely revolts upbraid his faithbreach form an an rewar cleanlinefs in houfes; an elf; a fay Fa'traen. adj. [from faith. cere Then let them all encircle him about And fairy like too pinch the unclean knight An afk him why, that hour of fair revel Warburton 2. Enchantrefs To this great fairy I'll commend thy a&s Make her thanks blefs thee. Shake/. Ant.and Cleop Faliry. adj 1. Given by fairies will bebutleavesand duft when it comes toufe. LZocke 2. Belonging-to fairies To the faints whic JSaithful in Chrift Jefus Fa'irysTONE. 2. [ [fairy and flove. ftone found in gravel-pits ¥AITH. n. f. [ fou, ¥rench; fede, Italian Jides, Latin. 1. Belief of the revealed truths of religion name of faith bein Then faith {hal fail, and holy hope.fhall die One loft in certainty, and one in joy 2. Th Prior fyftem of revealed :truths *held b the Chriftian church the power an entire dependence upon the truth the juftice and th mercy of God which dependence will .certainly incline us to obe him in all things Sawift 4- Tenet held to duty and alShake/p For his own part he di¢ faithfully promife to b {till in the king's power Bacon's Henry VII trick, or am They fuppofe the nature of things to be truly an Saithfully fignified by their names, and thereupo believe as they hear, and practife as they believe South's Sermons In Shakefpeare according to Mr War burton, fervently ; perhaps ratherconfidently; fteadily 1f his occafions were not virtuous 1 thould not urge it half fo faithfully. Shakef. Timon Whic to believe of her Muft be a faith Fa'ITHFULNESS thatreafon, without miracle Should never plant in me. ‘Shakefpeare's King Lear 1. Honefty # [from faithful. 6. Fidelity; unfhaken adherence compadts, is truth and faithfulnefs Her failing while her fzit) to me remains 1 fhould-conceal 7. Hemnour Milton's Paradife Loft focial confidence 8. Sincerity honefty veracity .who are a very froward generation 1s no faith Dryden childre i Deut. xxxii. 2.0 :9. Promife given I have been forfworn In breaking faith with Julia whomd'lov'd. Shakefp FalvrupreacH. z L [ faith and breack, Breach of fidelity; difloyalty; perfidy The fam fupport al South zeal and faithfulnefs continues in you which animate on of your noble anceftor to facrifice his life in the quarrel of his fovereign "8ir, in'good faith, in meer verity.Shakef. K. Lear The together an 2. Adherence to duty; loyalty blood For you alon T'broke my fzith with.injur'd Palamon that knit Dryden Fa'ituvess, adj. [from faith, 1. Without belief in the revealed truth of religion umconverted Whatfoever our hearts be to God and to his truth believe we, or be we as yet faithlefs, for our conve fion or confirmation, the force of natural reafon i great Hooker Never dare misfortune crofs her foot Unlefs fhe doth it under this excufe That fhe is iffue to a faithlefs Jew Harris and the dark falcated FavrcarioN. z f. [ fales, Latin.] Crook-ednefs; form like that of a reaper's hook locufts have antennz, or long horns before withalong falcation orforcipated tail behind. Browne Fa'vcuioN fanchon. # [ [enfis faleatus; in French A fhort crooked fword; a cy meter 1've {een the day, with my good biting falchion 1 would have made them fkip: I am ol Old falchions-are new temper'd in th The founding trumpetevery foul infpires What fighs and tear Hath Eugene caufed! how many widow His cleaving falchion FA'LCON now. Shak fires Dryd. it curf Philips fal = /. [ faulcon, French Credo, conne, Italian; faleo, Latin. roftro_falcato five adunco, from the falcate or crooked bill. 1. A hawk trained for{port As Venus' bird, the white, {wift, loyely dove O! happy dove that art compar'd to her Doth on her wings her utmoft {fwiftnefs prove Sidney Finding the gripe of falcon fierce not far Air ftops not the high foaring of my noble falcor Walton Apulian farms, for the rich foil admir'd Say, will the fa/con, ftooping from above veracity §. Truft in the honefty or veracity of another ban And thydarge fields where fakeons may betir'd. Dryd For there is no faitbfulnefs in your mouth; you inward part is very wickednefs Pfal, lix Th which is w.hl-l a new again, the enlightened part appears gibbous Th breaft thou drop a tear without fraud form .of a fickle, or reaping hook or from the new meon to the full; but from full t mifes 7 The enlightened part of the moon appears in th fhe is moving from the conjunétion to the oppofition 5. With earneft profeffions; with ftrong pro Felix heard Paul concerning the fzith. Aés, xxiv This is the catholick fajth ~ Commion Prayer Faith .i | Fa'vearep. ady. [ falcatus, Latin.] Hooked; bent like a reaping hook or fcythe Dryden's Dar Sebaftian Think for whofe fake my breaft that wound did bear And faithfully my laft defires fulfil As 1 perform my cruel father's will. Dryden's Ovid 6. Honeftly biguity which ben Farrier's Diét veracious 4. Without failure of performance; honeftly ; exaétly the credenda 3. Truft in God or promife; tru His noble grace would have fome pit Szith in this life, or that jfaith here is turned int Hammond vifion- there, as hope into enjoying A horfe is faid to make falcades when he throw himfelf upon his haunches two or three times, a in very quick curvets; therefore a falcade is tha very low, when you make a ftop and half a ftop Numbers FalitaruLLy. adv. [from faithful, 1. With firm belief in religion 2. With full confidence in God If on my wounde Fairy E'{ueeu. a&ion of the haunches and of the legs Well I know him Of cafy temper, naturally good Hooker Fuaith, if it have not works, is-dead. Fam. i, 17 Vifion in the next life is the perfeéting of tha My fervant Mofes is faithfu/ in all mine houfe unto fome ut tered word, as the object of beljef Shakefp Upon my.wretched women, that fo lon Have follow'd both my fortunes faithfully An old word now obfolete Fake. # /. [Among feamen.] A coil o rope Harris Farca'pe. n. f. [from falx, falcis, Latin, upright; without fraud legiance pokroon By this falfe faitour So fpake the feraph Abdiel, faithful found Among the faithlefs, faithful only he Milton And faithful to his word a rafcal Into new woes unweeting I was caft And by that name muft die; yet, heav'n bear witnefs And, if I have a confcience, letit fink me 4. Obfervant of compa fellow a mea fcoundrel To Philemon, falfe faitonr, Philemon I caft to pay, that L fo deatly bought. Fairy Queert I have this day recetv'd a traitor's judgment 3. Honeft Milton's Paradife Lofty Fa'itaressness. # /[ [from faithlefs, 1. Treachery; perfidy 2. Unbelief as to revealed religion Fa'ttour. u, f [faitard, ¥rench.] 2. Of true fidelity; loyal; true to theallegiance or duty profefled properly and ftrictl it muft needs have referenc Among the faithlefs and th Eph. i. 1 Ev'n as the axe falls, ifI be not faithful Fell by ourfervants, by thofe men we loy'd moft A moft unnatural and faithlefs fervice Shakefp Abdiel, faithful found Be thou faithful unto death, and I will give the a crown of life Rev. ii. 1 Shakefp taken are at Ephefus 3. With ftri¢t adherenc "This is the fairy land: oh, {pight of {pights "We talk -with goblings, owls, and elvifh fprights Fa'truvrur. adj. [ faith and full. 1. Firm in adherence to the truth of religion Be fecret and difcrete; thefe fa/ry favour Are loft when not conceal'd. Dryd. Spanifb Fryar Th A word not in ufe to his contraét; fincere Such borrowed wealth, like fairy meney, thoug it were gold in the hand from which he.received it Honeft; fin Of any truft, virtue, or worth in thee ~Make thy words fairh'd? Shakefpeare's King Lear In their fo facred paths he dares to trea In {hape prophane. Shake. Merry Wives of Windfor By the idea any one has of fairies, or centaurs he cannot know that things, anfwering thofe ideas Locke exift Fays, fairies, genii, elves, and demons hear. Pope BBot Thou baftard! would the repofa Nan Page, my daughter, and my little fon And three or four more of their growth, we'll dref Like urchins, ouphes, and fairies, green and white Shake[peare 2. Perfidious; difloyal; not true to duty profeflion, promife, or allegiance Thofe he commands, move only in command Nothing in love Shakefpeare's Macbeth Romani Jertes, n/of'trath; vulgo corruptius fairies ety Savios Quipores, five dii manes. Baxpea FA FA Shake/p Smit with her varying plumage, {pare.the dove? Pope 2. A {ort of cannon, whofe diameter at th bore is five inches and a quarter, weigh feven hundred and fifty pounds, lengt feven foot, load two pounds anda quarter thot two inches and a ‘half diameter an hawks on Harric two pounds and a half weight Fa'LcoNer. n [ [ fanlconnier, French. On wh who breed and train follows the fport of fowling wit hawks Hift! Romeo, hift! O for a falc'ner's voice To lure this tarfel gentle back again Shake/peare The univerfal remedy was {wallowing of pebble fones, in imitatation of fa/coners curing hawks Temple. never to feed up I : have learned of a falcone . Dryd, Don Sebali hawk when I would have him fly Dr A fale'ne |