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Show OB 7o Ore'v w. a. [obeir OB French An objeciglafs of a telefcope I once mended, b ededio Latin. grinding it on pitch with putty, and leaning eafil on it in the grinding, left the putty fhould fcratc it Neawton's Opticks 1. To pay fubmiflion to; to comply with fro reverence to authority Yo OBjE'cT The will of Heav' Re don his and all things! X obey Shakefp m'd, that womien are fo fimpl To feek for rule, -fupremacy, and fway When they are bound to ferve, love, and cdey Jicio Was fhe thy God Bef Drayton that her thou didft obey is voice 2. 'T'o propofe as a charge criminal; or reafon adverfe: with #o or again/?. Were it not fome kind of blemith to be lik unto infidels and Heathens, it would'not fo ufuall be objzéZed; men would not think it any advantag in the caufe of religion to be able therewith juftl to charge their adverfaries Hooker The book requiréth due examination, and givet Miltow's Paradife Loft 2. It had formerly fometimes 70 before th perfon obeyed, which 44difon has mentioned as one of Milton's latinifms; bu it is frequent in old writers; when w borrowed the French word we borrowe the {yntax, obeir au ro; liberty to objei? any crime againf? fuch as.are to b ordered knight obeying the performe their courfes, breaking their ftaves The flit bark, obeying to her mind Forth launched quickly, as fhe did defire His fervants ye are, o whom ye dbey Nor did they not perceive the evil pligh In which they were, or the fierce pains no Yet to their general's voice they foon obey'd O'BJECT Sidney objef? all crimes Spenfer Romans crimes feel Milton but againft the faith itfelf nothing at all On this unworthy fcaffold to bring fort .So great an object Shake[peare's Henry V They are her fartheft reaching inftrument Yet they no beams unto their objeffs fend But all the rays are from their objefs fent And in the eyes with pointed angles end. Dawies The objec? of true faith is, either God himfelf or the word of God : God who is believed in, an the word of God as the rule of faith, or matter t be believed Haimmond The aét of faith is applicated to the cbjesamccording to the nature of it; to what is already paft -as paflt; to what is to come, as ftill to come; t that which is prefent, as it is ftill prefent. Pearfon Thofe things in ourfelves, are the only prope sbjects of our zeal, which, in others, are the un Spratt Truth is the o4jecZ of our underftanding, as goo is of the will Dryden's Dufiefnoy As you have no miftrefs to-ferve, {o let your ow foul be the obje? of your daily care and attendance Law 2. Something prefented to the fenfes t raife any affeCtion or emotion in'th mind Difhonour not your ey By throwing it on any other obje? Shakefpeare Why elfe this double cbje? in our fight Of flight purfu'd in the air, and o'er the ground.Milton This paflenger felt fome degree of concern, a the fight of fo moving an objec?, and therefor Atterbury withdrew Any thing influence 3. [In grammar. by fomewhat elfe The accufative after a verb tranfitive, or a fentence in room thereof, is called, by grammarians Clarke the otjef? of the verb O'sjecTerass from the eye z / Glaf remotef Holiday Spratt It was objeéted againft a late painter, that h drew many gracefu like Others obje? th culties in furnifhin There was bu though an enemy or fa The flat unrais'd {pirit, that hath dar'd This the adverfaries of faith have too muc reafon to objef? againft too many of its profeflvrs Pardo gueftionable fubjeéts of our praifes and is it not as old a truth, is i not a higher truth, 0bjec7 rebellion, and ye obje al 2. /. [objet, French ; objectum Latin. 3. That about which any powe calty is employed Whitgifte Men in all ‘deliberations find eafe to be of th negative fide, and affect a credit to objec? and forete difficulties5 for when propofitions are denied, ther is an end of them; but if they be allowed, it requireth a new work; which falfe point of wifdo is the bane of bufinefs Bacon The old truth was, obje& ingratitude, 4and y He commanded the trumpets to found; o whic brav Latin. Flowers growing fcattered in divers beds, wil thew more fo as that they be obje? to view a once Bacon allas to their eye The mift objeéted, and condens'd the fkies. Pope Affrick and India fhall his pow'r obey He {hall extend his propagated fwa Beyond the folar year, without the ftarry way Dryden the tw objectum [objeler, French; ob 1. T'o oppofe ; to prefent in oppofition Shake[peare Let not fin reign in your mortal body, that y should obey it in the lufts thereof. Romans, vi. 12 'The ancient Britons yet a {ceptred king obeyed w.a piCtures, but few of them wer Diyden poverty of the nation, and diffigreater fupplics Addifon this fingle fault that Erafmus could objef to him. Atterbury Orje'ctroN. n. /. [objedion, French objeftio, Lat. 1. The a& of prefenting any thing in oppofition z. Criminal charge Speak on, Sir I dare your worft objections. Shakefp. Hemry VIII 3. Adverfe argument There is ever between all eftates a fecret war, know well this fpeech is the ckjetion and not th decifion; and that it is aftec refuted Bacon Whofoever makes fuch objections againft an hypothefis, hath a right to be heard and genius be what it will 4 let his tempe ~Burnet Fault found I hav fhew your verfe made that objecion to them O'BJECTIVE Latin. to fome, wh hav Walfb's Letter adj. [objectif, Fr. objedus 1. Belonging to the objett; contained i the obje& Certainty, - according to the fchools, is diftinguithed into. objective and fubjetive. Objeiv certainty is when the propofition js certainly tru in itfelf; and fubjetive, when we are certain of th truth of it. The one is in things minds Mad jeét a obje@ the other in ou W atts's Logjck propofe refiding in objedls as an ob If this one fmall piece of nature fill affords re matter for our difcovery, when fhould we be abl to fearch out the waft treafuries of ofjeFive knowledge that lies within the compafs of the univerfe Hale's Origin of Mankind O'BJECTIVELY. adv [from oljedtive. 1. In manner of an obje& This may fitly be called a determinate idea when, fuch as it is at any time objecively in th mind, it is annexed, and without variation deter- "Mined to an articulate found. whian t e fign of that fame obje g'o‘?r:; 2. lnhthe ftate of an obj g _ The bafilifk fhould: b f rl defiroyed. rcc‘eive‘;h the rays of h?sd: :ys:,}i@ ous emiffion, which objcfl we{jv‘inofie his f O'BJECTIVENESS, n. /. [fr m o The ftate of being an objed Is there fuch a motion or abj fli-w;; b_odics, which produceth light Th light is fitted to receive that i preffion o nefs, and that objeivencs fitte t t at fac Halp's Origim Osje'cToR. 2. . [from oéj &;}«- who offers objections; on whu" difficulcies But thefe obj ) fzors muft the cauf b ral That has not mortal man immorta mgde.d; objecor Let th confider, that thefe i muft have come from the laws of mechan OziT [a corruption of odiit, or obi Funeral obfequies 7o OBJU'RGATE To chide v. a. [ofijm to reprove Osjurca'TION. 2. f [objurgat Reproof; reprehenfion If there be no true liberty, but all th to pafs by inevitable neceffity, then what terrogations and objurgations, and reprehe expoftulations Osju'rRcaTorY adj [ojurg Lat.]. Reprehenfory; culpator ing OBra're. adj. [oblatus, Latin.] Flatie §: at the poles. - Ufed of a fpheroi By gravitation bodies on this globe wil e wacds its center, though not exaétly thither, b reafon of the oblate fpheroidical figuofr th +arifing from its diurnal rotation aboutit Osra'tron ax Cheyne's Philofsphical Pr n. /. [oblation, French latus, Latin. An offeting; a facr any thing offered as an aé of worl reverence "She looked upo the picture befor ftraight fighed, and ftraight tears followed the idol of duty ought to be honoured wit oblations Many conceive in the oblation of Je daughter, not a natural but a civil kin and a feparation from the world brow level with the richeft The kind ob/ation of a falling tear Behold the coward, and the brave All make oblaiions at this fhrine The will gives worth to the oblation, 25 toGo acceptance, fets the pooreft giver upon th Osrecra'rION. 7. /. [oéleflam,m@l Delight; pleafure 7o O'BLIGATE. . a. [obligo, Lo To bind by contraét or duty OsriGA TION, 7. J. [obligatit 1 obligo, Lat. obligation, F:?nch‘ 1. The binding power of any oath contract 03 dut Your father loft a father That father his ; and the furvivor bound In filial obligation, for fome term !‘ fm 'S a, te fm fo ro ob c( ;uiou To d There was no means for him:as a Chritii fatisfy: all obligations both to God and :;an' ihdie ofter himfelf for a mediator of a; 3C:n°, M th ch t;‘lc I e rea onabi Nothing can be mor creatures fhould be under the'ablig‘mf;! o thei ing fuch evidence, as in itfelf is fofil"‘ conviction P Th |