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Show dients to come by, are the mofs upon the fkull of dead man unburied, and the Jats of a boar and bear, killed in the aét of generation Bacon This membrane feparates an oily liquor calle fal.‘ when the fibres are lax, and the aliment to redundant, great part of it is converted into this oil Arbuthnot on Aliments liquor To mak 7o Fat. v. a. [from the noun. fat; to fatten ; to make plump and flefh with abundant food Oh how this villan Doth faz me with the very thoughts of it Shak Ere thi 1 thould have faszed all the region kite With this {lave's offal Shakefpeare's Hamlet They fat fuch enemies as they take in the wars that they may devour them Abbot The Caribbees were wont to geld their children on purpofe to fz¢ and eat them Locke Cattle farred by good pafture, after violent motion fometimes die fuddenly Arbuthnot on Diet 7o Fat flethed v, 2 To grow fat; to grow full Clarence, he is well repaid He is frank'd up to farting for his pains Shakefp The one labours in his duty with a good con fcience; the other, like a beaft but fartin up fo the flaughter L' Eftrange An old ox jfauts as well, and is as good, as a young Mortimer Far. #, f. [pez, Saxon; waite, Dutch - This is generally written war.] A vefle in which any thing is put to ferment o be foaked The fats fhall overflow with wine and oil Foel. ii. 24 A white ftone ufed for flagging floors, for cifterns and tanners jfats FA'TAL adj [ fatalis A Ba P oAL Woodward on Foffils Latin French. 1. Deadly; mortal ; deftru@ive deftruétion fatdl caufin O fata/ maid ! thy marriage is endow' With Phrygian, Latian, and Rutilian blood. Dryd 2., Decree of fate 1. He by who By a ftrange fatality men fuffer their diffentin to be drawn into the ftream of the prefent vogue King Charles All the father's precautions could not fecure th fon from the farality of dying by a lion. L' Eftrange 3. Tendency to danger; tendency to fom great or hazardous event Seven times feven, or forty-nine, nine times nne or eighty-one, and feven times nine, or the year fixty-three, is conceived to carry wit confiderable fatality it the mof Bro 1. Mortally ; deftruively, even to death The ftream is {o tranfparent, pure and clear That had the felf-enamoured youth gaz'd here So fatally deceiv'd he had not been 'T'is the proceffion of a funeral vow When fatally their virtue they approve Cheerful in flames, and martyrs of their love. Dryd 2. By the decree of fate; by inevitable an invincible determination To fay that the world was made cafually by th atom to affirm that th compofed the world mechannically and fatally ; onl Bentley Fa'TaLness, x /. [from fatal.] Invincibl neceffity . / [fa[flm, Latin. 1. Deftiny ; an eternal feries of fuccefliv caufes Neceffity or chanc Approach not me ; and what I will is fate. Milton There is a neceffity in far Why ftill the brave bold man is fortunate. Drydern You muft obey me foon or late Why will you vainly ftruggle with your fate! Dryd When empire in its childhood firft appears Dryden A watchful fare o'erfees its rifing years Random chance, or wilful fzze A. Philips Guides the (haft from Cupid's bow A palfy in the brain is moft dangerous; when it 2. Event predetermined feizeth the heart, ororgans of breathing, fazal Arbuthrot on Dier - 2. Proceeding by deftiny ceffary inevitable ; ne Others delude their trouble by agraver way of rea* foning, that thefe things are faza/ and neceffary,i ~ being in vain to be troubled at that which we can- not help Tillotfon 3. Appointed by deftiny It was fatal to the king to fight for his money and though he avoided to fight with enemies abroad yet he was.ftill enforced to fight for it with rebels a home Bacon's Henry V1 It wa Still fztal to frout Hudibras In all his feats of arms when leaf Dryden O race divine For beauty ftillis fuzal to the line Dryden iFalravist, n f [from fare.] ©One wh maintains that all things happen by inevitable neceffity Will the obftinate faza/iffs find fufficient apology [ fwralité, French . fatal. Watts fro predetermined order o feries of things and events preordinatio of inevitable caufes alting invincibly i perpetual fucceflion The froicks held a fazality, and a fixed unalterabl courfe of events; but the the held-allo, that the fell out by a neceflity emergent fré in the things themfelves not alte 3. Death ; deftruction Viewing a neighbouring hill, whofe top of lat A chapel crown'd, 'till in the common fat Denham Th? adjoining abbey fell Looking, he feeds alone his famifh'd eyes but looking not he dies Yet Rill he chofe the longett way to fare Dryden Wafting at once his life and his eftate Courage uncertain'dangers may abate But who can bear th' approach of certain faze! Dryd The whizzing arrow fings Pope And bears thy faze, Antinous, on its wings and injeren which God himfelf coul South And feather'd fates among the mules and fumpter fent Faltep Dryden adj. [from fare. $he fled her father's rage, and with a train Driy'n by the fouthern blafls, was fazed here to reign D}J'Ljfil 2. Determined in any manner by fate Her aukward love indeed was oddly fared Prior She and her Polly were too near related 3. Endued with any quality by fate. Th ftriCture ufed by Dryden is unufual Bright Vulcanian arms Fated from force of fteel by Stygian charms Dryden's &n 4. Invefled with the power of fatal deterPeculiar to Shakefpeare mination The fated fk Gives us free fcope FATHER #. [ word is foun language. [px8en thou haft breath and life {peaketh the word Bacon He f(hall forge Father and mother, and to his wife adhere. Milron . The firft anceftor Shakefpeare Saxon 'Thi likewife in th nofticating weather Epfom, a lawyer, faid in fcorn old ma anfwered you goeth to heaven When fuc Th a wicked lawyer a Camden 4. 'The title of any man reverend for age learning, and piety You fhall find one well accompanie With reverend fathers and well learned bifhops Shakefpeare's Richard 111 5. One who has given original to any thin good or bad Jubal was the father of all fuch as handle th harp and organ Father of verfe Gen, iv. 21 Pope 6. The ecclefiaftical writers of the firft centuries Men ma talk of the fathers, and magnify th Jathers, and feem to mak thers next to infallible contempt th authority of the fa and yet expofe them t Stilling fleet 7. One who adts with paternal care and tendernefs I was a father to the poor Fob. xxix. 186 He hath made me a_farber to Pharaoh, and lor of all his houfe Gen.xlv. 8 8. Th title of a popif confeflor, par ticularly of a Jefuit Formal in apparel In gait and countenance furely like a fazhber. Shakef There was a father of a convent, very muc renowned for his piety and exemplary life; and a perfons under any great affliion applied themfelve to the moft eminent confeflors, our beautiful votar took the opportunity of confefiing herfelf to this ce lebrated fazher Addifon 9. 'The title of a fenator of old Rome Fro hence the race of Alban fazhers come And the long glories of majeftick Rome Dryder 10. The appellation of the firft perfon o the adorable Trinity drin to d the wil o hi Father Perfia an obedience alone obtained the greateft glory for hi Tayler 11. The compellation of God as Creator Fobn, viil. 41 Almighty and moft merciful Fatber. Com. Prayer FaTHER-IN-LAW. 7. /. [from father. father of one's hufband or wife "Th I muft make my father- in-law a vifit with a grea train and equipage Addifon's Spetiator To Fa'TaER . 4 1. To take ; to adopt as a fon or daughter Ay, good youth And rather father thee than mafter thee Shakefp 2. To fupply with a father, of certain qualities I am no ftronger than my fex Being fo fzther'd and fo hufbanded. SA.4. F- Cefar Ho light and portable m pain feems now When that which makes me bend makes the kin bow He childed as 1 fatker'd. Shakefpearc's King Lear 3. 'To adopt a compofition Men of wit Often fatber'd what he writ Rom. iv. 16 A poor blind man was accounted cunning in prog We have one Father, even God 1. Decreed by fate Sufpended fhone on high who The eternal Son of God efteemed it his meat an With full force his deadly bow he bent And thus our fata/ place of reft foretold 1. Predeftination Shake/p By water fhall he die, and take his end 4. Caufe of death He dreamt of it, to profper beft Hiudibras Behold the deftin'd place of your abedes For thus Anchifes prophecy'd of old ¥ava'Lity. u Tell me what fates attend the duke of Suffofl'{ Feeds ling'ring death Son of Benfalem, thy father faith it; the man b Tell me, father, when doth the fun change Which cruel laws to Indian wives allow FATE or man, and refers only to an aé of that thing calie man,' whereby he contributed to the generation o one of his own kind Locke 3. The appellation of an old man Dentram they were not fenfible of it Father is a notion fuperinduced to the fubftance Abraham is the father of us all While he the bottom, not his face, had feen i gotten It was fai It fhould not ftand in thy pofterity But that myfelf (hall be the root and father Of many kings Shakefpeare's Macketh Fa'traLry. adv. [from faral. concurtence of atoms the fon or daughter is be Swifs 4 ‘1 |