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Show NO No'rep Re note. [fro adj part NO "Tis notling, fays the fool; but fays the friend This nothing celebrated markable; eminent a privilege A noted chymift procure D that non e y B i i f n v but he fhoul o t a t n e l b m ultinian's laws, if w no hav No'rER th ! No'rHING. 7. fo [no and thing5 nathing Scottifh. 1. Negatio verfal negation It is moft certain 11 there neve tha be wmothing3 the We do not create the world from #othing an by nothing5 we aflert an eternal God to have bee Bentley the efficient caufe of it This nothing is taken either in a vulgar or philoin the cu fophical fenfe; fo we fay there is mothin in a vulgar fenfe, when we mean there is no liquo in it; but we cannot fay there is nothing in th cup, in a ftrié philofophical fenfe, while there i 4. No other thing Nithing but a fteady refolution brought to practice 5, God's grace ufed, his commandments obeyed and his pardon begged ; #othing but this will intitl ' you to God's acceptance. W ake's Prep. for Death Words are made to declare fomething; wher they are, by thofe who pretend to inftruét, otherwife ufed, they conceal indeed fomething; bu that which " they conceal, is nothing but the ignorance, error, or {ophiftry of the talker, for ther is, in truth, nothing elfe under themi Locke 5. No quantity or degree The report which the troops of horfe make would add #othing of courage to their fellows Clarendo 6. No importance; no ufe Th outwar no value fhew of churches draws the rud people to the reverencing and frequenting thereof whatever fome of our late too nice fool fay, ther is siothing in the feemly form of the church with fuc His ar did expre quin 2nc Fro 2 with the greatnefs o on his courfe Kapolles counfel nothing fivay' eve too duil privation Nothing 3 an lean emptinefs. Donne thing to b i Hudibras takin notic of 8. No difficulty; no trouble 9. A thing of no proportion . The charg . Wile, is great of makin the ground and other but nothing to the profit Bacon ¥0. Trifle; fomething of no eonfideratio Or importance I had rather have one fcratch my head ©* th' fun ¥ hen the alarum were ftruck, tha idly fi I\rily'dear nothings, take your leave Shakefpeare Crafbaw fenf i frequen no i ufe bu i No'rioNaL adj. [from notion. Imaginary 1 fub intelle€tual ideal fifting only in idea; vifionary; fantaftical little motice : very quick th ations of the mind a.e performed Lycke How ready is envy to mingle with the norice which we take of ether perfons Watts of the influences of heaven, are to be fet afide being but notional and ill-limited; and definit axioms are to be drawn out of meafured inftances Bacon t root it {prings from 1s This is done wit 2. Information; intelligence given or received I bave given him #otice, that the duke of Cornwal and his duchefs will be here.Shakefp. K. Lear Noririca'rion. zn /. [notification, Fr from notify. A& of making known reprefentation by marks or fymbols Four or five torches elevated or deprefled out o in breadth or longways, may théir order, eithe mofifications by agreement, give great variety o Holder on Specch @ No'r1ry French 'To declare; to mak to publifh known There are other kin will o [notifier a notifico, Latin. of laws, which zotify th God Hooker Happinefs objet of that waking drea Which we call life, miftaking; fugitive them Of my purfuing verfe, ideal fhade Notional good, by fancy only made We muft be wary, left we afcribe any real fub fiftence or perfonality to this nature or chance; fo it is merely a notional and imaginary thing ; an abftract univerfal, which is properly nothing ; a conception of ou refleting upo own making, occafioned b the fettled courfe of things ou de noting only thus much, that all thofe bodies mov and act according to their eflential properties, without any confcioufnefs or intention of fo doing Bent ,"»1 Jo 2. Dealing in ideas i Th mof contente not realities forwar motiona dicta ignorance fit. dow Glanwville's Sue]g/f: Good and evil operate upon the mind of man, b Ctiv appellations by which they are # t ho Norrona'vity. =z /. [from notional. Empty, ungrounded opinion A wor South d tothe mind T'his folar month is by civil fan&ion notified i authentic calendars the chief meafure of the year I aimed at the advance of fcience, by difcredit 'ed an con a kind of ftandar by which we meafure time Holder a. / NO'TION . ptio conc 5 p ng we ar [#notion, French; wnotio upo at this tim -~ c u c on of th it ‘as comprehendin of men We are induftrious to preferve our bodies fro - flavery, but we make notwing of fuflering our foul to be flaves to our lufts I\AI)‘ Thi intelletua Locke riag Lzatin. Behold, ye are of sothing, and your work of | 1. Thought; reprefentation of any thin naught Ifaiab formed by the mind; idea; image A moft homely fhepherd ; a man that from ver nothing is grown into an unfpeakable eftate Shakefpeare's Winter's Tale underftanding The general and indefinite contemplations an notions, of the elements and their conjugations child's mifc Spenfer's Ireland. 7. No pofleflion of fortune notion of a life t His notion weakens, his difcerning Are lethargy'd Shake[peare's King Le So told, ):m earthly notion can receive ?V;ilm no value regarde Senfe Shakefpeare Norick. n. /. [notice, French; aotitia Latin. 1. Remark ; heed; obfervation ; regard Th th Atrerbury power. o thing o pleafure in ridiculin come fro Ia ;19,‘/'5-.-[{//.']?. in dee arne Did fcorn to hurt his forfeit carcafe Sebafl while any thing reAddifon on the War difmaye No'rainGNESS. 7. /. [from nothing. 1. Nihility ; nonexiitence 3. Not any thing; no particalar thing Nothing at all was done mained undone And not moleft us; unlefs we ourfelve Seck them withewand ring thoughts and notions vain Miltom It would be incredible to 2 man who has neve in France, fhould one relate the extravagan they entertain of themfelves, and the mea opinion they have of their neighbours Addifon Senfual wits they were, who, it is probable M To dulty norhing. Shakefpeare's Troilus and Creffida Dryden's Do God hath bid dwell far off all anxious cares o flcet, ftill kep But Ada Mighty ftates charalerlefs are grate duces nothing but vain ideas nothin the Turk' 2. Nonexiftence Exodusy ixs 4 There thall norhing die Yet had his afpect nothing of fevere y But fuch a face as promis'd him finceve Philofophy wholly fpeculative is barren, and pro a kin Sentiment; opinion Yo Auria Watts air in it 2 adverbial figIn no degree; not at all ha colcur found cold thought, with, or fear, which is in the mind, i called the idea of hunger, cold, found, with, &¢ Watts's Logick | make me a liar, and make my fpeec » worth Faobs xxiv. 25 Greaw of neceflity, without any beginning rlory of his rac and ye about thefe words notion of hunger Tha Pape's Letters grace nature and it's laws Cheyne's I'/Ji///fo/lzbim/ Principl {s multiplicatio ng&1 | rerpetual bufinef with a be tha few agrée in their notion 2501 to do 1\'.'///.‘/,'f a bein there is, and was doe Wh be #0 coul bufinef nification oppofed to fomething thing. - For if there could have been an inftant wherein there was #zothing, then ecither not made fomething, or fomething made itfelf5 and f But if there neve was, and atted, before it was coul For wh nonentity 5 uni of being s that might be writ t gs, and all the Narciilus is th He who take notice Sir, will bring you to your end having n Baker of difcourf I not fee your dropfy belly fwell Dryden That period includes more than a hundred fen force of laws in France or Holland #./ [from note. NO t fpea efor o fhal th pro no loo any more than the fon L EA )f'he fi&ion of fome beings which are not i wre, fecond notions, as the logicians call them has been founded on the conjunétion of two naDyyden tures, which have a real feparate being » altions are punifhed by law, that are act titude; but this is merely accidental t them, as they are fuch-aéts; for if they were punithed properly under that sotisn, and upon tha al = punithment would equally re account altions of the fame kind What hath been generally agreed on, T conten myfelf to alume wnder the notion of principles, i Newton order to what I have farther to write There is nothing made a more comuaon fubjec not in ufe ing emut an talizative notionality No'rioNnaLrLy. adv Clanville [from motional. idea mentally i though not in reality ou I conception The whole rational nature of man confifts of tw faculties, underftanding and will, whether really o wotionall diftin¢t, I fhall not difpute Norris's Mif NoTor1'ETY. #. /. [notorieté, French from notorious. Publick krowledge publick expofure We fee wha may be produce a mu paga teftimonie for all thofe remarkable pafia and indeed of feveral that mor than anfwer you nature fo expofed to publick not NOTO'RIOUS adj. [notorius, Latin ; notoire, Fr. Publickly known; evi dent to the werld; apparent; not hidden It is commoniy ufed of thing known to their difadvantage; w henc by thofe who do not kno th true fio nification of the word, an atrociou crime is called a wotorious crime, whe ther: publick or fecret Wha |