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Show MO MO T? ings had been bound by fuch a pow'rful chain That all would fix'd and motion/efs remain Blackmore Mo r1vE. adj. [motivus, Latin. 4g1 Caufi n‘O"Ofl thln( moment argument ufed in fuch kin be made a rule for others ftill t of lik conclude the like by, concerning all thing ma inducement as probabl whe {O\Vel Cllfi ‘53 placc‘ h'lvm nerves ferve for the conveyance of the moligatures for th may not flag i Wilkins ¢ vigour flow from the brainj th 1at the them motion We alk vou whence doe ancy is eafil v of fouls cxnlodm Luz.\z"m ved from the and the gradual increaf en and "‘nm S TI1VE. 7. /. [motif, French. That which determines th that which mu(e: the a&ion n choice eithe u‘vrw‘&mc'\t i > or il;';';pm:v, which doth exaét them at ou yet thofe motives there ave in both, whic iraw moft effetuc ally our minds unto them Hocker ‘Why in that rav \ncf left you wife and children thofe ftrong knots of love Shake[peare's Macbeth wout leave- tn'(mg What can be a fironger mative to a firm truft o Malker, than the giving us his fon to fufter fo ‘Thofe precious smoti ves Heaven brought me up to be my daughter'sdower As it hath fated her to be my motiv Shake[peare And helper to a hufband Her wanton fpirits look ou At every joint, and motive of her body Mo'TLEY fro mothlkike co fro perhap medley Shakefp [fuppofed to be corrupte adj loured, fpotted or variegated like a garden mo//y ] Mingled of various colours They that come to fee a fello In a long )un/z, coat, guarded with yellow Shake[peare's Henry VIII Will be deceiv'd 'I‘Apcna and after-thought, and idle care And doubts of mutley hue, and dark defpair Dryden Enquire from whence this motley ftyl Dl\' firft our Roman purity d Traulus Dryden of dnl}‘hlomualncm fruit of mungril feed Motle By the dam from lordlings {prung Sawift By the fire exhal'd from dung ‘Mo'Tor #. /. [ mmoteur, French; fro A mover moweo, Latin. Thofe bodies y receive the if not fettered by their g to fituations, wherein t Brow 2aimator Mo'rory. adj. [motorius, Latin. ] (:wmr motion Th grea bones, w r difficulty they dry of the 10tory ¢+ not, withou coul ks s\n 1 t Ra attraétion n the Creatio Mo rTo. #. /. [motto, If:m"n ] A fentence or word added to a device, o prefixed to any thing written t may be {aid to be the motto of human nature We ought to' of the honefty o Fob To give an impulfe to xxvil 1 He forrows now, repents, and prays contrite My motionsin him ; longer than they mswe Hi heart [ know, how variable and vai S ft Milton The pretext of piety is but like the hand of clock, fet indeed more confpicuoufly, but direéte wholly by the fecret mowvings of carnality within of Piety Deca he will being the power of direfting our operative faculties to fome action, for fome end, cannot at any time be mowed towards what is judge at that time inattainable Locke If th to recommend firft confultatio b no will may mowe a review, an ftanding to inform itfelf better fufficient th require the under Bifbop Bramball againft Hobbes They are to be blamed alike, who mowe an who decline war upon particular refpeéts I[uyum ‘d's Edward V1 They find a great inconvenience in moving thei fuits by an interpreter Dawics on Ireland Dryden To Indamora you my fuit muft mowve perfuade T pofe b choice to prevai fomethin to dif on determinin th A thoufand knees Ten thoufand years together, naked, fafting ~Not in ufe L>Eftrange till.we are aflure for covetoufnef and circumvention m z}:a no g0od migtte for a coat T Upon a barren mountain, and ftill Winte In ftorm perpetual, could not mowe the God To look that way thou wert Shake[peare Grittus offered the Tranfylvanians money ; bu minds defirous of revenge were not moved with gold Krolles Sometimes the poffibility of preferment prevailin with the credulous, expectation of lefs expenc with the covetous, opinion of eafe with the fond and affurance of remotenefs with the unkind parents hav move the withou difcretion t engage their children in adventures of learning, b whofe return they have received but fmall contentment Could any power of fenfe the Roma To burn his own right hand Wotton mov Dawies That which mowes a man to do any thing, muf be the apprehenfion and expeétation of fome goo from the thing which he is about to do. = South When fhe faw her reafons idly fpent An could not moz hi from his fix'd intent She flew to rage Dryden's BBut when no femdle arts his mind cou She turn'd to furious hate her impious l 8 y er'd o 2 1C were co abou Toincite to produc 9. To condué regularly in motion They, as they mov Their farry dance in numbers that compnt Days, months, and years, tow'rds his all-cheerin lamp Turn fwift their various motions Milron 70 Mov V Wi T ein a ftate of changin to be at reft Imports not t p to tou pathc ically; t G » Whic Rrohi mo > 1t to my It was gre vrance, Glofter's e To let him live ;) where he arrives h All hearts againft us Shakefpeare's Kir Should a fhipwreck'd failo fing his Would'ft thou be mow'd to pity A alms Images ar or. befto Diryden® VP.;'/h 1} iringly tol 2 mu)dm L proper | place i t ment muw 11; o terror, O let thy fifter, «humter Or all thofe tendernames COr Felto handma as immoveable itfelf, it refts to us wh Glanwille are carried with it 2. To have a particular dire&ion of paflage The fu Had firft his precept {o to mowe, fo fhine As migh affe¢t the earth with cold an heat 3. To go from one place to another Mil I look'd towa » and anon, methought The wood b Withi this three mile may you fee it coming I fay a moving grove Shakefpeare's Macketh On the green bank I fat and liften'd long Nor till her lay was ended could I move But wifh'd to dwell for ever in the grove. Dryden This faying, that God is the place of fpirits, bein literal, makes us conceive that fpirits move up an down an hav thei diftance an interval i God, as bodies have in fpace Locke When we are come to the utmoft extremity o body, what is there that can put a ftop, and fau)f th mind tha it is at the end of fpace, when i is fatisfied that bonylt elf canmowe into it Locke Any thing that moves round aboutin a circle i lefs time than our ideas are wont to fucceed on another in our minds, is not perceived to mswe, b feems to be a peifet entire circle of that matter Locke The goddef mow and ?zcx blooming groves To vifit Paphos Pope 4. To have vital we live, mowe e, and have our be A8y xvil {hall be In hi b\ ° mowves wit ". how it nur ;] intm manly grace, how rich wit fpml; If he fee aught in you that ma T I' any t I can with b y incitement Then feed on thougl 1ts, that voluntary mov Harmonious numbers Milton H n thy m to this long jo 2y 71 ou abfence to re new thy love ? D To af*e ttir paflion hem, all the cit Ruthy 1. 19 them Ano reg r 6. To march as an army den's A n Wha Or.nee t put into Ponhno ion mowve and is moved out o his place for continuing in the fame ftate i The motiv only the prefent fatisfaion in it; the motive t Locke change is always fome uneafinefs When the At this my heart trembleth 3. To propofe j Throw you And hear t put in motion Pfal. Ixviii Addifon Mover Sinai itfelf was moved at the prefence of God powe to pafs foremoft to motion Th t lea havin to move powe th Havin 6. To make angry 7o MovEe. @. a. (,,.w)v Latin. 1. To put out of one place into another Hoc ker them to the contrary : fo ehelder Shall ever y motiv nature 1t was the motto of a bithop eminen and good wi ks in king Charles l In tfervi Deo & [eetare, Serv t'n'x' To go. for ward Through various hazards and events w To Im"u'n To change the pofture of the bodv 1 ceremony Whe Hama fa Mordeca up, nor moeved for hi va h :"t o no full of Eftbery v. 9 Move. #. /. The a mon]y ufed at che!s of moving com h man 2las n hand. EABLE. adj. [from mo e upablc of bcmcr mow portable; fuch as may be not fixed ried fro place to pinu X |