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Show MO In the fouth part of Staffordfhire they go to th Demoniac Forget the travel of the day in flecp Care only wakes, and moping penfivenefs A fpecies of granite With meagre difcontented looks they fit And watch the wafting of the midnight taper Wosdward on Foffils watry To make fpiritlefs; t deprive of natural powers 7o MoPE The duft the fields and paftures covers As when thick mifts arife from moory vales The In Effex, moory-land is thought the moft pro Mortimer Wloosk. #z. /o The large American deer the biggelt of the fpecies of deer Zemot haps a moz mozian, [fro a @w meeting together, Saxon; or per i i la mot fro term French.] T ftate a poin cife, as wa inns of cour plead a mock caufe; t of law by way of exercommonly done in th at appointed times A point or cafe unMoo cafe or point fettled and difputable, fuch as may properly afford a topick of difputation In this moot cafe your judgment to refufe Dryden's Fuvenal Is prefent death ‘Would you not think him crack'd, who woul requir anothe to mak a argumen o moo who underftand nothing of our laws Locke on Education Let us drop both our pretences; for I believ ~ it'ds a moot pein:y, whether I am more likely t make a mafter Bull, or you a mafter Strutt point Arbuthnot' Mo oTED Hfi or Plucke ad; Qur fovereign lady: made for a queen With a globe in one band, and a fceptr in t'other e{hlcks Law as Obdicut ; Hobbididen 2. Reafonin to vic exceedingl an wit Zo MO'RAL1ZE Burnet' demonftracion; conclufion are capabl 70 MOPE. «. n. [Of this word I cannot find a probable etymology. T be ftupid; to drowfe; to be in a conftant day-dream; to be fpiritlefs, un o proo of Mo'RAL 1 unde th in natura philofoph by an indu&ie of experi univerifal {fubject L E o I o»eqfi; it feems to mean to furnil manners or examnles 1(m' « trumpets tane his lyre he ffrung And wit th his prince's arms he moralized his fon Pr 7o MO'RALIZE. on mroral fubjets Mo RALIZER. 7z.f To fpeak or writ [from moralize. H who morali m/ L\uo RALLY [from moral. 1. In the ethical fenfe By gog tu*fl. good o cundum cood morally fo called, honum hon efly to be und erftood; and that th ¢ or pleafure, the bonum utile or july come into any account here. South Becaufe this, of the two brothers killing eac ion morally wnnatural; Lh\xu'orc other, is a by way of preparation, the tragedy would hav ity5 practice or doftrine of th duties of life: this is rathera Frenc than Englith fenfe Mora begun "~ith heaven and easth in diforder, fomething Their moral and @conomy . The do&rine inculcated by a fi&tion the accommodation of a fable to for the morals if indeed it has any fenfe Hig W atts Prior -ain Prm;, who imitates the forequmoline, it has a fenfe not eafily difcovered f Moft perfetly they made agree Shakefpeare Fierce warres and faithful love A moral univerfality, is when the predicate :iglC\_ to th ateft part of1 the particulars which ar contai ne or moral of his figns and tokens wit ments; things of a smoral nature by moral arguments, and matters of falt by credi ble te? *r':m, altive and inatientive; to be ftupid an to ex -O yes, into a thoufand fimilies ‘S'/.".ai";/}mz'u This fable is morglized in a common proverb. Theo Mathematical things are upa'n in th V. a. [moralifer, Fr. -1 pray thee moralize themn Did he not moralize this fpettacle lefs fand with a moral certainty, t 'uy' is founde Ro am)]y to moral purpofes plain in a moral fenfe in re gar Phyfical and mathematical certainty may b ftiled infallible; and mora/ certainty may properl be ftiled indubitable Vilkin of the Mofaica atio He has left me here behind to expound the mean virtue We have found of a in the agent's power, having all things ready an requifite to the pexformum of an aion, eithe to perform or not perform it South's Sermons fuch as is know gt Popular; cuftomary or admitted in the Gcmral bufinefs o life L' Eftrange Eyes without fecling, feeling without fight Eays without hands or eyes, fmelling fans all Or but a fickly part of one true fenf Could not fo mepe Shakefpeare's Hamlet Ev'n in a dream, were we divided from them And were brought moping hither Skakelpeare or inftru&in With plumed helm thy flay'r begi Whilit thou, a moraf fool, fit'ft itil pofielles chamber- maids bLzzm,fbmu An afs fell a mopping and braying at a lion of England, to m ~pe with his fat-biain'd fc \l](V\us Shakefpeare he dittinguifhet France fpreads his banners in our no nefs; Mahu, of ficelin:; Mohn, of murder; an Flibbertigibbet, of mopping and mowing, who finc What a wretched and pezvifh fellow is this kin pofitiv 'l \[ Cil of dumb delirious ordinance moralit freedom of that principle, by virtue of which it i Now, brandifh'd weapons glitt'rin in their hands Mankind is broken loofe from mora/ bands No rights of hofpitality remain The gueft, by him who harbour'd him, is fln,in Shakefpeare princ Th the law of reafon to guide life, but in fupernatura it alone guideth Hooker Five fiends have been in poor Tom at once ; o luft the compafs of mora In moral ations divine law helpet A wr mak an Bakir on Learning ‘The form of an afien which makes i the fubje@ of reward, or punifhment from the laws of the two tables, which were moral Hooker Each one tripping on his to T at the leaft withi duties. of life tura actions, which have in them vice or virtue. Hocker mouth made in C"'ltemp with a mop Z0 Mo v. n. [from moct. wry mouths in contempt French; moralis criminal ; good or bad Kee of th the writings of ancient fages, falls very fhort o that delivered. in the gofpel Swift's Mifcellany A neceffity of finning is as impoffible in #iarality, as-any the g}cauc.} difficulty can be in na Swift's Mifcel [moral doltrin The fyftem.of morality, to be gathered out o 1. Relating to the prallice of men toward each other, as it may be virtuous o Such is that fprinkling which fome carelefs.quea To ru . Th I''m grown a mere mopus ; no company come clean the floors from the noun. | MorA LITY. #. /. [moralité, French ; fro Mo'rus. =. /. [A cant word from mope. A drone; a dreamer MO'RAL . adj Latin. On The advice given by a great moralift to his friend was, that he fhould compofe his paffions; and le that be the work of reafon, which would certainl Addifon be the work of time moral But a rabble of tenants Shak Mo rALIST. 7. f. [moralifte, Fr. who teaches the duties of life Dryden's Spanifb Fryar A very pretty moppet | Pieces of cloth, or locks of wool, fixed to a Jong handle, with which maid 79 Mor. v. a Blind of one eye girl A difMo'oTER. #. /. [from moot. puter of moot points Movr. #. /. [moppa, Welth;' mappa, Liat. Will be here with msp and mow When I did hea The motley fool thus moral on the time My lungs began o crow like chanticleer That fools fhould be fo deep contemplative Mo'pPET. }n./fi [perhaps from mop.] Mo pseY puppet made of rags, as mop is made; a fondling name for up by the rmot 2. [Perhaps corrupted from mock. 7o Mo'rAL. @. n. [from the adjeltive. To moralife; to make moral reflections Not in ufe Ainfaorth o/' 7‘1/77' Bull Flirts on you from her mop, but not fo clean You fly, invoke the geds; then turning, fto To rail; fhe finging ftill whirls on her mep. Sawift are charms in herbs, faid he More-EvED. adj Ainfworth 1 fay ther fable, but could do nothing that pleafed me. Sawif and fo threw a handful of grafs; which was f ridiculous, that the young thief took the old ma to be moped L'Efirange Severity breaks the mind; and then in the plac of a diforderly young fellow, you have a low{pirited moped creatures Locke Fairf 2 Moor @. a Marfhy e moor. ing formed, he contrives fuch a defign or fable a may be moft fuitable to the moral. Dryden's Dufref I found a moral figft, and then ftudied for Rowe [fro -Moral! No, by my troth I have no mora meaning; I meant plain holy thiftle. Shakefpeare Expound the meaning or moral of his figns an S'balef//umc s Taming of the b tokens The moral is the firft bufinefs of the poet, a being the groundwork of his inftruétion; this be adj wmlo'orY , fenny moral in this benedictus moping melancholy And moon-ftruck madnefs. Milton's Paradife The bufy craftfman and o'erlabour'd hind The third ftratum is of great rocks of moorflon , and fandy carth phrenfy O -Benediétus 7 why benedictus? you have fom Inteftine fone, and ulcer, cholick pangs ‘north for feed corn, and they of the north to th Mortimer's Hufb fouth, except in the moorlands Or like a bridge that joins a marif Saift To moorlands of a different pmifh "\lo'orsTONE. 7. / MO phyfically unnatural 2 Accordin Rymer to the rules of virme To take away rewa pleafing to a man who Aelows not to liv |