OCR Text |
Show 7. Before a thing in the paflive voice, / implies command the objeés which eught to be contited, and /e thofe which ought t ed be apparently fo to us; but /et this b done by a {mall and pleafing difference. ~ Drydsn Let no 1ous b 8. Ler has an infinitive mood after i without the particle #0, as in the former examples But one fubmiffive word which you Zez fall Will make him in good humour with us all. Dryd The feventh year thou fhalt /et it reft, and li Exod fill 9. To leave: in this fenfe it is commonl followed by alone They did me too much injury to give There's a letter for you, Sir, if your name be Horatio, as I am /et to know it is Shakefpeare z . a J { i t L Let's purge this chole adverfaries o H a To-morrow are Jet blso : r , o b o e Hippocrates /et g s i C o a l . b r / a opened feveral vei I5. 12. To fuffer any thing to take a courfe which requires no impulfive violence In this fenfe it is commonly joined wit a particle She /et them dozvn by a cord through the win dow Fofpua Launch out into the deep, and /et.down you mets for adraught Lukey Vo 4 Let down thy pitcher, that I may drink Getio XxXiVe 14 The beginning of frife is as when one letrer out water Prove xviie 14 As terebration doth meliorate fruit, fo dot pricking vines or trees after they be of fome growth and thereby /erting forth gum or tears And if I knew which way to do't Your honour fafe, I'd /et you out A Bacnd tin tempering t forth tears 16. To LeT in Pope that is, make it fofter b Moxon's Mechanical Exercifes 33. To permit to tzke any ftate or courfe Finding an eafe in not underftanding, he/et loof bis thoughts wholly to pleafure Sidrey Let reafon teach impoflibility in any thing, an the will of man doth 7 it go Huooker He was /it loofe among the woods as foon as h wag able to ride on horfeback, or carry a gun Addifen's Spetator i4. To LT blood, s elliptical for to e out blood. To free it from confinement to {uffer it to fream omt of the vein dot meliorat fru Bacon 'To admit Let in your king, whofe labot}r‘d fp‘n'nt e a S s l w t c u y i t w g r o Crave har t g t o e l h t e e p e e Rof i r u w n z t c t a t p h i of the cit Knolles and /et him in What boots it at one gate to make defence And at another to /et in the foe Milton's Agoniftes Effeminately vanquifh'd The more tender our fpirits are made by religion the more eafy we arc to Jez in grief, if the caufe b Taylor innocent They but preferve the afhes, thou the flame True to his fenfe but truer to his fame Fording his current, where thou find'ft it low Ler'f} in thine own to make it rife and flow Denbam To give a period to my life, and to his fears you're welcome; here's a throat, a heart, or an other part, ready to /et in death, and receive hi Denkam comrnands 17. Ifa noun follows, for let iz, let int is required Jt is the key that /ets them into their very heart and enables them to command all that is there South's Sermons There are pi¢tures of fuch as have been diftinguithed by their birth or miracles, with infcrip tions, that /2z you into the name and hiftory of th perfon reprefented Addifon Moft hiftorians have fpoken of ill fuccefs, an terrible events, as if they had been /et into the fecret of Providence, and made acquainted with that private conduct by which the world is governed Addifon Thefe are not myfteries for ordinary readers to b let into As we rode through the town Addifon T was /et into th charaters of all the inhabitants; one was a dog another a whelp, and another a cur Addifon 18. ZoLieT im, or into miffion 'To procure ad They fhouild fpeak properly and correitly whereby they may /et their thoughts info othe men's minds the more eafily Locke As foon as they have hewn down any quantity o the rocks, they /e in their fprings and refervoir among their works 19:«Zo LeTigf Addifon T difcharge nally ufed of a narro Hudilras but.enlarge our hearts, aad make them the wide marks for fortune to be wounded Boyle My heart finks in me while I hear him fpeak And every flacken'd fibre drops its hold Like nature letting dowwn the fprings of life. Dryd From this point of the flory, the poet is / You muft %z it down terebratio fo dot tl e e t s n v n k i p letting plants blood, a th "The Jetting out our love to mutable objects dot doon to his traditional poverty Le with a dativ is ufe blood t l i o b o r p of th ts 11. To put to hire; to graat to a tenant Solomon had a vineyard at Baal Hamon; he /e the vineyard unto keepers Cant. viii. 11. Nothing deadens fo much the compofition of picture, as figures which appertain not to the fubJje€t: we may call them figures to be /et Dryden She /et her fecond floor to a very genteel man Tatler A law was enafted, prohibiting all bithops, an other ecclefiaftical corporations, from letting thei lands for above the term of twenty years Swif? Be rul'd by me fome tumult That ever faid I hearken'd for your.death It it were fo, T might have /et alon Shakef Th* infulting hand of Douglas over you The public outrages ofa deftroying tyranny ar but childifh appetites, ez alone till they are grow ungovernable L'Efirange's Fables Let me alore to accufe him afterwards. Dryder This is of no ufe, and had been better Jet alonz he 1s fain to refolve all into prefent pofleflion Locke Neftor, do-not /et us alsne till you have fhorten- ed our .necks, and reduced them to their antien #andard Addifon "This notion might be /et a/sne and defpifed, as ;picce of harmlefs unintelligible enthufiafin. Rogers 10. To more than permit b EA gripe an difmiffe Origi fro thorefore fuffered to fl off the ftring: now applied to guns Charging my piftol with powder, I cautioned th emperor not to be afraid, and then /et it off in th air 20 LeT ont hire or farm Sawift Toleafe outs to give t Zo LET. @. 4. [lezzan, Saxon. t. To hinder; to obftru& ; to oppofe Their fenfes are not letted from enjoying thei objects: we have the impediments of honour, an the torments of confcience Sidney To glorify him in all things, is to do nothin whereby the name of God may be blafphemed nothing whereby the falvation of Jew or Grecian or any in the church of Chrift, may be /et or hindered Hooker Leave, ah, leave off, whatever wight thou be To let a weary wretch from her due reft And trouble dying foul's tranquillity! Fairy Q Wherefore do ye /et the people from their works §9 you unto your burdens Exod v 4 The niyftery of iniquity doth already wor5ko he wh no of the way letteth will let, until he be taken gy 2 ‘Tb'ef I will work and who will 7z it Ifa. xliii, 1 And now no longer Jetted of his prey He leaps up at it with enrag'd defire O'erlooks the neighbours with a wide furye: And nods at every houfe his threatening fire. Dryd 2. 9o Ler leave when it fignifies 20 permis o has let in the preterite and part paflive ; but when it fignifies # binder it has letted 3 as, multa me impedierum, many things bawe letted me Introdution to Grammay To LeET. w.n himfelf 'T'o forbear to withhol After king Ferdinando had taken upon him th perfon of a fraternal ally to the king, he would ng Bane let to counfel the king Let. #. /. [from the verb. Hindrance obftacle; obftruélion; impediment The fecret Jets and difficulties in public proceed Hioker ings are innumerable and inevitable prefented his army befor Solyman without / the city of Belgrade. Knolles's Hiftory of the Turks It had been done ere this, had I been conful We had had no ftop, no lez. Ben Fonfor's Catiling Juft judge, two /ess remove; that free from dread, Sandys 1 may before thy high tribunal plead To thefe internal difpofitions to fin, add the ex and occafions concurring wit ternal opportunitie them an removing all Jets an rub out of th way, and making the path of deftruétion phi before the finner's face; fo that he may run hi courfe freely Saut LrT, the termination of diminutive words from lyce, Saxon, little, /mall; as, rivi let, a fmall kream ; hamlet, a little vil lage Lersa'rcrck. adj. [lethargique, Fre from Jlethargy.] Sleepy by difeafe, beyond the natural power of {leep Vengeanc i proclaimed i if minutel a to give men no reft in thel thunder from heaven fins, till they awake from the Zethargick fleep, an arife from fo dead, fo mortiferous a ftate Hammond's Fundamental Let me but try if T can wake his pit From his lethargick fleep Denbam's Sophy A lethargy demands the fame cure and diet asa apoplexy from a phiegmatick caie, fuch being th conflitution of the lethargick Leraa'rRcicknNEss Arbuthnot on Di #. /i [from /Jethar {leepinefs ; drowfinef Morbi gick. to a difeafe A grain of glory mixt with humblenefs Cures both a fever LE‘'THARGY gie, French. fleep fro awake and /:'tbz:rgic.(‘mj} 2. Herbert [?\";ng'yia 5 Jethar A morbid drowfinefs; whic on canno be kep 'The Jethargy muft have his quiet courfe It not, he foams at mouth, and by and b Breaks out to favage madnefs Shakefprare Though his eye is open, as the morning's Towards lufts and pleafures ; yet fo faft a lezharg Has feiz'd his powers towards public cares an dangers He {leeps like death Denben's Soply Europe lay then under a deep Jerhargy; and W no otherwife to be refcued from it, but by one th Arterbury would cry mightily A fethargy is a lighter fort of apoplexy, and de mands the fame cure and diet _Arbuthnot on Diel Le'THARGIED. adf. [fro Lalgd afleep; entranced th noun. His motion wealkens, or his difcerning Shakefpeare's King Lear Are lethargied LBs ot A .[AM'S:?. draught of oblivion Oblivion |