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Show OW o f c a t lo r m ' r f d ha "Tho I Pyt 'tis thy fate to give, and mine to ozve. D‘z_-yd(_-n the general balance of trade, I;nghl n f o t r n h o r n i r f t o merchant f m n m o no d i i o m c i s n o If, upo Goes All his deliv'rance i ]l!m‘o:n and to none but me en c t a i t a o f . To hav goodwif nence of a caufe lete, we now ufe oav Mty 3 Thou doft here ufur vul. . The name thou oz' not, and haft put thyfel Skakefpeare's enpeft Upon this ifland as a fpy Fate, thew thy force; ourfelves we do not owve What is decreed muft be; and be this fo. Skake/p Not poppy nor mandragora Nor all the drowly firups of the world Shall ever med'cine thee to that {weet fle Which thou owed'f} yefterday. Shake[peare's Othello If any happry ey This roving wanton ihall defcry \v2g efm | Let the finder furely kno Mine is the wag; 'tis I that ozv ra Crafbaw The winged wand'rer b ufe owing th thi impropriet writer fom Wep 2. It is adde Ever the I that value effects fent thither t Ticelz 3. Imputable to, as an agent If we eftimate things, wha to nature, and wha 3. Sometime 4 w fhal o owing to the former, as that of Rom latter 8)v1, } n. / [ule find i Greec 70 Ow~. @, 4. [from the noun., 1. To acknowledge; to avow for one' When you come, find me out Diyden's Cleomenes And ozwn me for your fon 2. T Saxon Others on earth o'er human race prefide wa Of thefe che chicf Pope hulote . To avow an Nor hath it been thus only amongft the mor civilized nations; but the barbarous Indians likeWilkins wife have owned that tradition I'll ventur Since you, fair princefs, my protection gwn Shake[peare's Macheth Return to her T-owh;e a comrade with the wolf and owl Shake/p Sm;i;vzi'wl‘\in the dog-figr's unpropitiou ray S T out alone brain, and wither'd every bay was the fup, the ow/ forfook his b w'r Dunciad D!}'x{ih‘ 4 To confefs not to deny Make this truth fo evident, that thofe whe ar unwilling to ovx it may yet be athamed to deny it Tiilo 91 Others will o2v7 their weaknefs of underftanding Lock hat, gererally fpeaking It mult be owned Latin. Ainfw [o0xa, Saxon oxe - Danit 1. The general name for black cattle The black ox hath not trod on his foot. Camdesm Sheep run not haif fo tim'rous from the wolf Or horfe or oxen from the leopard As you fly from your oft-fubdued flaves I faw the river Clitumnus poets for making cattle whit The inhabitants of that countr opinion, and have a great man colour to confirm them init z Shakefp celebrated by th that drink of it have @il the fam oxen of a whitifh Addifers A caftrated ball The horns of oxen and cows are larger than th bulls ; which is caufed: by abundance of moifture Bacon. males' than Although there be naturally mor females, yet artificially, that is, by making geldings, clean.sh data import.tsv out README oxen, and weathers, there are fewer. Graunt The field is {fpacious I defign to fow With oxen far unfit to draw the plough Dryden The frowning bul And:ox half-rais'd Thomfon's Susmimnere OxBa'NE O'xEYE n. f [buphonos. A plant Ainfavorth A plant n. f. [buphthalmus. /17//[:‘7' O'xFLY the care of nations 0TUN And guard with arms divine the Britith: throne .Add,er's fotk, and blind worm's fting Lizards leg, and gauler's win Yol rather ¥ abjure all roofs, and chu poflefs; to claim; to hold by right Tell me, ye Trojans, for that name you own Nor is your courfe upon our coafts unknown Dryden was to th Savift WLET French and Scottih. . bird that flies about in the nigh catches mice For a charm % domefick yours; no [urus jubatus Ox. #. /. plur. OxEN to note oppo There'Svnothing fillier than a crafty knave outL'Effrange witted, and beaten at his ozon play that of firuggles betwee the rui it is adde #. / gain any thing beyond the hoevery one's right to their juf Attert JUTY which muft our cares employ that other men enjoy Pope beaft Pope Thefe toils abroad, thefe tumults with his oz Daniel Fell in t}g revolution of one year ~ The cuftom of particular impeachments was no commons if i underftanding fition or contradiftin&ion not foreign; mine, his, o another's Locke hob_les an tha own moft of them %% to be on the account of labour limited any more tha rathe concei Convinc'd that virtue only is vur czon in them is owin to labour is OWwWRE Paffion and pride were to her foul unknown Here due is undoubt rea taken advantage f nour of reftorin oTwners What is this wit The owner's wife and pu 2 Kings, xvii. 29 places forfe he cometh to the Jcnowhim Bacon of my labours to my szoners. Miltcn And what's permitted to the flames invade. D yderna A frechold, though but in ice and fnow, wil make the swner pleafed in the pofleflion, and in the defence of it Addifo That fmall mufcle draws the nofe upwards, whe it exprefles the contempt which the ¢zuner of it ha upon feeing any thing he does not like _Addifun Vi&ory hath not made us infolent, nor have w G(J_y Atterbury be paid withou in hig made gods of their o7z Thefe wait the orwners laft defpair Shake[p muft be under the reftraint of receiving and holding opinions by the authority of any thing bu Locke their ozuz perceived evidence Will fhe thy linen wath, or hofen darn And knit thee gloves made of her oz fpun yarn edly the proper word canno natio becaufe it h appeneth- t owner hath incurred th profit of his lands, befor ledge of 'the procefs againf They intend advantag With no fmall profit dail Dryden For my own fhare one beauty 1 defign Engage yonr honours that fhe {hall be mine. Dryd fures of life, and an averfion to the pomps of it Dryd The debt, owing from one country to the other Here fhew favour by way of em Scarcely bave coveted what was my ozwn to the plea You are both too bold Tl teach you all what's cwing to.your queen generall 1 yet never was forfworn ' putation, which by other writers is onl 2. Due as a debt thefe gracelefs ozvlers gain phafis or corroboration aware, and having no quick fenfe o the force of Englith words, have ufe due, 1n the fenfe of confequence or im This was owing to an indiferenc A bark Stays but till her ozyner comes aboard. Shakefpeare It is not enough to break into my garden Climbing my walls in {pight of me the czvner But thou wilt brave me Shak C/‘vufl' paflive of the verb owe, in the participle owezn or own : my own; the thin owned by, or belonging to me wer ufed of debr. We fay, the money is du to me; they fay likewife, the effet i due to the caufe. 1. Confequential pofleflor to be a fubftantive ; as, my own, my peculiar: bat is, in reality, the participl O for owed or due O'wWNER. 7./. [from ¢gwn.] One to who any thing belongs; mafter; rightfu Wodller Inachus in his cave alone not another's lofles, but his own Pro In a real aétion, the proximate caufe is th property or ownerfbip of the thing in controverfy Ayliffe's Parergen O\VN: n./. [agen, Saxon; epgen, Dut. 1. This is a word of no other ufe than a it is added to the pofleflive pronouns It feem my, thy, his, our, your, their altive participle of owe in a paflive fenfe to goody Law O''wNERSHIP. #. /. [from owner. perty; rightful pofleflion We underftand by fome owlers, old people dic i France Tatler A praftic writers, t OwinG. part. [from owe has long prevailed amon is change felves Savift 4. Topoflefs; to be the right owner of One who carries contrain the legal fenfe, on By running goods FPope For owe, which is, in this fenfe,. obfo Young ooller, owler e c d n m t v o no fa th e d ?c tf i c e G ' f n p a c e G t ]‘bve h to bed that carries out wool illicitely. Perhap fro the neceflity of carrying on a illicit trade by night: but rather, I b lieve, a corruption of awooller, by a colloguial negle& of the av, fuch as i often obferved in avoman, and by whic frai By me upheld, that he may know ho His fall'n condition is, and to me ow with the fathionable ow/s O'wrLEeR. n./ band goods g l o b t i c a t g l o b T 2 for good parents are never more fond of their dang ters, than when they fee them too fond of them Then lady Cynthia, miftrefs of the fhade 1_4"'1‘" clean.sh data import.tsv out README go out to pay i RA OW 7. /. [from ox and fy ; zalbanus Latin.] A fly of a particular kind Oxca'NG of land. n. f 'Twenty acre Oxur'aL z.f [fro lebors nigriradix. Ainfavorth ox and leal A plant 7 Ainfawert Oxii'p. n. /. [from cx and Jip; weris pri mula, Latin. The fame with cczu/lip a vernal flower Wher whereon the wild thyme blows cxli Oxsta'LL and the nodding violet grows #. / [ox and fall. for oxen O'xTONGUE #, [buglofa. Shakefp |