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Show OB OB "When fhepherds pipe on caten ftraws formed from different languages. A cor or promife negation yoborated by the atteftation of the Divine Being OBDURATE Go hav no in fluence, except upon thofe who believe that ke is Savift [from ocath A wer Capable of having an ocat adj .. JA'THABLE not ufed. o by v adminiftered O JATBBREA RING . /. [oath and break. ! Perjary; the violation of an oath His oathbreaking he mended thus By now foifwearing that he is forfivorn QA TMALT an Mortimer Flowe made by grinding oats Ontmeal -and! butter, outwardly applied, dry th feab on the head Arbuthnot on Al ments Cur neighbours tell me oft, in joking talk Of afhes, leathes; oatmeal, bran, and chalk. Gay QA TMEAL [panicum. #. f An herb Ainfworth Oars. #. £ [azen, Saxon. A grain which'in: England is generally given t borfes people bu Scocland: fupport i th It is of the o afs.leaved tribe5 the flowers hav mo petals, and are difpofed in a loofe panicle the grain is catable ‘The meal make good bread the turning of a wild oatbecrd I;me_ firft, and the o4z firaw lafk His horfe' j allowanc o Mortimer's Hufb cats an beans greater than the journey required wa Savift QA TTHISTLE, 2. /. [oar and thiftle:] A herb. OraMBYLATION from. obambuls n. [ Latin. Ainf [obambulatio Th a o walking about Di& ] %o Osnv'ce, 2. 4. [0bduc , Latin. draw ov Jg r as a covering No animal exhibits its face in the nativ coou3 r of its fkin but many all others are cov re with fcathexjs, hair, or.a corte that is obduce over the cutis Hale Orovcrion ducg, Latin. hymg a.cover n. [ [fro firm ;. ftubbor fome degree of evil : or arm th? ohdurate breaf Harfh ; rugged They joined the moft cddurate confonants wit out one intervening vowel obdutio The 46 of covering Q.‘"W RACY. . [0 [from obdurgte. ob 2 o In- St OBE' DIENTLY -adwv With obedience Hardnef Wha = of heart ward'an wanto firainedly" thof give a courtefy in €vil for which confcienc wa Hooker This barren feafon is always the'rewaid of ob&iHuammend Hard 1nflexible ; impenitent foes, but ftood: of ur'd This faw his haplef And to rebellious fight rallied:their pow'r Milton's Paradife Lof? Infenfate OBE'DIENCE. 7. [. [obedience," Fr. obeCbfequioufnefs; fubdientia, Latin. miffion to authority; compliance wit command or prohibition If you violently proceed againft him fhake in pieces the heart of his oled Craves no other tribute a But love, fair looks,: an His fervants ye are, t of fin unto déath, or o nefs It was both a ftrang it woul hufban thy hands true obedience Shakefp whom ‘ye obey, whethe obedicnce unto rightesulRomy iv. 16 commiffion; and a ftrang obedience to a- commiflion, for. me aflailed, to hold their hands In vain thou bidft'me to forbear Obedicnce were rebellion here and juf Lillotjon af o reverenc mad by inclination of the body or knee Bartholomew my page Seerdreft in-all fuits lilze a lady Then call him Madam, do him.a Bathflieba bowed and did obeifu 1 and ladies pai t we did con pretended Th revereitly and obe that through a fro defire of innovation things a The-lord to think oebedient. abaifance; an a&k of reverence: ] A bow obdurate. the Death Oee1SANCE n. f. [cbéifance, Frénch T'his word is formed by corruption fro ftubbornnefs 'occafion it ha their greater obduratio [fro [from tly towards the Divine Majefty che itably towards men Sawif / Pi‘(]}./‘m n'. tence Ospura'rioN Wake' We fhould behave ourfelve OBpU'RATELY adv. [from. obdurate. Stubbornly ; inflexibly ; impenitently OBpU'RATENESS, 7. /. [from obdurate. Stubbornnefs ; inflexibility ; impeni ned Locke with barle Pope Sometimes the very cuftom of evil maies th heart obdurate againft whatfoever inftruétions to th conwrary Hosker A pleafing forcery could char Pain for a while, or anguifh, and excit OBDU'RED. adf. [obduratus, Lat. by the infin of the particles of moifture For your lean cattle, fodder- the 3 The chief his orders gives ; th' chedient band ‘With- due obfervance; wait the chief's command Faith is fuch as God will accept of, when i affords. fiducial reliance on the promifes, and ohediential fubmiffion to the command Hammond Faith is then perfe€t, when it prod luces inus fiduciary affent to whatever th pel has revealed and an: obedic tial fubmifficn to the commands Hardne nate ohduration The catt have eaten the horfes It is bare mechanifmy, no otherwife ToipH tolerabl She, feemingly obedient, likewife hat Made promife Shakefp. Merry Wives of Windfor Xeligion hath a good influence upon the people to make them obedient to government, and peaceabl one towards another Tillotfon alway hear at leaf No fuch thought ever ftriles his. marble, obdurate heart, but it prefently flies off and rebound from it It js impoflible for a man to be thoroug paced in ingratitude, till he has thook off all fetter of pity and compafiion South Mal In Kent they brew with one half catmalt WA TMEAL. .7z /. [oat and meal. Milton With ftubborn patience, as with triple fteel. AZi/to made of oats _the othet half barleymalt To this her mother's plo OBEDIE'NTIAL. adj. [obedientiel, Frenchs from obedient. According to the rul of obedience Fallacious hope Shakefp u. /. [oat and malt. If when you make your pray'rs thould be fo cbdurate as yourfelves wit % Into ftrong thudders th' immortal gods. ~ Shakefp Sub To this end did T write; that I the proof of you, whether. ye be. ok in al things 2 Cor. iis g Shake[peare My dying prayers, and grant my laft requeft. Dryd 2 adj. [obediens, Lat. miflive to authority; compliant wit command or prohibition ; obfequious let me teach thee for thy father's (ake Obdurate as you are, oh' You're not outhable Althe' T know you'll fivea = OBE'DIENT How would it fare with your departed fouls ? Shat Women ave foft, mild, pitiful, and flexible Thou ftern, cbdurate, flinty, rough, remorfelefs Shakefpeare To convince the proud what figns avail Or wonders move th' obdurate to relent They harden'd more, by what might more reclaim and take an oath of fe is an appeal to God, and therefore can impenitent Be not obdurate, open thy deaf cars " crecy for the concealing of thofe which we thin Bacon . fitto keep fecret Thofe called to any office of truft, are bound b an oath to the faithful difcharge of it : but an cat Latin. thee Defcended into perjury to love me All the oath-rites faid Chapman T then afcended her adorned bed ‘We have confultations, which inventions fhal not South [obduratus Duty of Man The obedience of men is to imitate the cbedicnc of angels, and rational beings on carth, are to liv unto God, as rational beings in heaven live unt him Law That gave thee life, when well he might have {lai Shake[peare whic adj ill; hardned Fot whofe dear fake thou then did'ft rend thy fait be publifhed 1 1. Hard of heart; inflexibly obftinate i Read over Julia's heart, thy firt beft love in obedience to him by a mighty grace, hinder the abfo lute completion of fin in final hduracy Oh' We muft beg the grace and afliftance of God' fpirit to enable us to forfake our fins, and to wal a for obduracy and perfiftency Shakefpeare's Henr God may Into a thoufand oazhs 3 and all thofe oath % think'ft me as far irt the Devil's book thou and Falftaff that our oldeft dialet i as it may fhe Tho is very obfervable and the verb favear Obedicnce to the law of God, impos' On penalty of death Milton's Paradife Loft nefs of heart Sax oazb OATH. n. /. [aith, Gothick; 48 The diftance between the nou affirmation flexible wickednefs ; impenitence; hard Sl?dx"{,&‘? And merry larks are pkmghmens‘clocks OB fo furioufl Lacon Conuley Nor, can this be But by fulfilling that which thou didft want L r‘nagnificsnl hig piec ( marble, or other fine ftone ufually four- faces, and leflenin ward b poin lik degrees, til ‘ap it ends in a pyramid Haryis Between the ftatues cb And the learn'd walls with hierog K grac'd 4GP 2. A mark.of cenfurein the margin of book, in the form of He publifhed the tranflatio h having compared it with the Hebrew, and noted b afterifks what was' detetive, and by obelifks wha redundant Greav OBEQUITA'TION. #: /. [frem obequi Lat.] The att of riding about OBerra‘TION. 2 fo [from oberro, Liat. The act of wandering about OBESE. adj. [obefus, Latin.] Fat; loade with flefh Oze'sENESS. | #: /s [from od2fe.] Morbi OBE'S1TY fatnefs; incumbrance o fleth On th ne o th ;- on the lar the veins, an atrophy ; on their fmalln |