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Show PA 2. 'To feparate ; to difunite Wha make Nought but death fhall part thee and me« Ruth . To break into pieces par chang A Jove did both hofts furvey wor .. 1. To be feparated filver 9P was for hitn 'much eafier to fubdu Thofe foes he fought with, than to part from you 2. To quit each other and fo they parted Shakefpeare Dt apl This was the defign of a people, that were a liberty' to' pars. afunder, but defired to keep in on body Locke What! part, for ever part? unkind Ifmena Oh! can you think,. thar death is half {o dreadtul As it would be to Live wigaout thee Smiith Jfiit pleafes Godito reftore me to my health, fhall make a third joucney ; if ‘not, we muft part as all human creatures have parzed Sawift . 3. To take farewel Give him that parting kifs, which T had fe Betwixt two charming words comes in my father Shakefpeare Nuptial bow'r ! by me adorn'd, from the How fhall I parr, and whither wander Milton Upon "his removal, they parted from him wit tears-in their eyes Savift . 4. To have fhare Fr. T g away t fe - out S0 parted they; the angel up to heave From the thick fhade, and' Adam to his bow'r Milton Thy fathe Embrac'd me, parting for th' Etrurian land Dryd w7 6. To Part avith. To quit; to refign tolofe5 to be feparated from For her fake, And for her fake _AAn affe@ionat With her belove dorear up her boy I will not part with him Shakefpeare wife, when in fear of partin hufband, heartily defired of Go his life or fociet ¥, upon any conditions tha were ot finful Celia, for thy fake T par Taylor With afl that grew fo)ne.]fm heart find that 1 may fuccefsful prove Transfor myfelf to what you love Waller An'gh}:)u r{r)larblc'hew'fi,' ere l_ong t part with breath Lix'(-"']' es re?r ft, unmindfu of thy death. Sandys 'vc*é:talk;qute fings, t}hough, by piercing the bodie o 'fi'l:ir tinLéi' they difpofe tl}em to part readil wwit ure, yet #ome tinctures they do not onl { i}"h‘)uf: but likewife alter Boyle ¢ idea of hunger and warmth are fome. o the firft that ch; 1 ; t_p\ier bty 'wirb.l ren have, and which they ic ;f, oL u Divifible three other o Di parting French have agreed to a difproportionate and pofleflion of the earth, having found ou this partag may fairly poffefs mor can ufe'the produk of, b for the ‘overplus, gold an of things, in an equalit 7 ParTA'KE @ n Preterite o I par took : participle paflive, partaken [ par and zake. 1. To ‘have fhare of any thing; to tak fthare with: it is commonly ufed wit of before the thing thared Locke ufe 1t with 7z Partake and ufe-my kingdom as your own And fhall be yours while I-command the crown Dryden How far brutes partake in this faculty is not caf to-determine Locke OCRE not partaker will partake in their knowledge Locke 2. To participate; to have fomething o the property nature claim or right The attorney. of the dutchy of Lancafter partakes partly of a judge, and partly of an attorneyBacon 3. To'be admitted to; not to be excluded You may partake of any thing we fay We fpeak no treafon Shakefpeare's Richard 111 4. To combine; to unite in fome bad defign A juridical fenfe As it prevents factions and partakings, fo i keeps the rule and adminiftration of the laws uniform Hale 7o PARTA'KE. @. a 1. To fhare; to have partin By and by, thy bofom- fhall partak The fecrets of my heart Shake[peare At feafon fi Let her with thee partake what thou haft heard Milton My royal father lives Dryden 2. To admit to part; to extend participation to.. Obfolete My friend, hight Philemon, T did partak Of all my love, and all my privity Spenfer Who greatly joyous feemed for my fake Your exnltation partake to every one Shak:fp o light eir night t Prior sartakers of his kind nefs, and he ftill continued to entreat them t accept of life from him, and, with tears, bewaile their infidelity Calam z Sometimes with iz before the thin partaken :" perhaps of is beft before thing, and 7z before an a&ion ‘.‘v'i.'} Whe m j/\'/‘ ,/x'«, tho ri po k do'ft meet good ha S 1:/}:&1!'? { we had been in the days of our fathers, w would not bave been partakers-with them in th blood of the prophets Mattheww 3. Accomplice aflociate Thou confented(t adultererss an haf been partaker wit Plalms He took upon him the perfon of the duke o York, and drew with him complices and partakers Bacon PA'RTER 7. [fro j'art. On tha parts or {eparates The parter of the fray was night, which her black arms pule their maliciou wit fights on from the other Sidney PA'RTERRE, 7. f [parterre, French. A level divifion of ground, that, for th molt part, faces the fouth and beft fron of an houfe, and is furnithed with green and flowers Miller There are as man kind of gardening as o poetry; your makers of parterres and flower gardens are epigrammatifts and fonneteers. Spectator The vaft parterres a thoufand hands fhall make Lo ! Cobham comes, and floats them with a lake Pape adj [ partial, French. 1. Inclined antecedently to favour on party in a caufe, or one fide of the queftion more than the other Ye have not kept my ways tial in the law but have been par Malachi, 1i. 9 Self-love will make men partial to themfelve and friends, and ill-nature, pafiion, and reveng will ‘carry. them too far in puniifhing others'; an hence God hath appointed governments to reftrai the partiality and violence of ‘men Locke 2. Inclined to favour without reafon : wit 20 before the part favoured Thus kings heretofore who fhowed themfelve partial to a party, had the fervice only of the worf part ‘of their people Dawenant Authors are partial to their wit 'tis true But are not criticks to their judgment too ? Pope In thefe, one may be fincerer to a reafonabl friend, than to a fond and partial parent. ~ Pope 3. Affe&ting only one part; {ubfifting onl in a part not general ; not univerfal not tocal £ we compar Let ev'ry one partake the general joy witnef His bittereft enem themfelves knowing, and fo' muft others too, that | PA'RTIALL general As his part is, that goeth down to the battle, { thall his part be, that tarrieth by the ftuff; the thall pare alike Tfaiab 5. [Partir o Tho bleflSawift Truth and falfthood have no other trial bu reafon' and proof, which they made ufe of to mak Ere I coul i the private pofieffions, men:have made pradticablvie ou of the bounds of fociety without compaét, only b putting ‘a value on gold and filver," and tacitl agreeing in the ufe of money Locke Milton Dryden merel of‘ fharin {enpt for accefs unto {om Hosker ‘With fuch the muft returr at fettin plainl [/-zg‘lage, French. a way how a ma land, than he hi receiving, in exchang v 7 He wrung Baffunio's hand . / t'n‘m:,‘g That now our lofs mig Arterbury Camden's Rem vifion; a& Prior to mak have yet to ex Saviou adj. [from part. Pa RTAGE Me unequa Powerful hands will not par Eafily from pofleflion won with arms power, ou his miftrefies The liver minds his own affair AGRPAR riches an the whole Make us partakers ofa li 3 a to part it/ > them His hot love was partable amon 6. To fecern ar for more durable enjoy the fo w fuch as may be parted ,l }y t r p r d u t t s e p h e And, w And parts and ftrains the vital juices tha PA'RTABLE Valler good things of this world fo deligh f/ of divine fervice, opportuznit reafonable part thereof Didft tho for the ruin o their anceftors, rather tha determines, that the beft wa Ings, is to part wwith them Shakefpeare ‘Who fai King John did fly, an hour or two befor The ffumbling night did part our weary powers Skakefpeare to be hange partaker Addifon's Free remember 1n the narrow feas, that par The French and Epglifh, there-mifcarrie 5. To feparate combatants ventur moelk-patifot aith, chofe to be cut to picces in the fiel Th 4 To keep afunder A vefiel of our ‘country wh figure muf of battle Lewviticus Part itin pieces, and pour oil thereon a defpicabl thofe civil vights, whic All the world As "twere the bus'nefs of mankind to part us e y D c lo m n Is arm'd aga P A PA thefe partial diffolutions of th earth with an univerfa diffolution, we may a eafily conceive an univerfal deluge from an univerfal diffolution, as a partial deluge from a partial Burnet's Theory Tha which weaken religion will at lengt deftroy it; for the ning of a thin a partial defiruction of it All difcord, harmony, not underftood is onl South PARTA'RKER. #.‘ /. [from partake. A partia evil, univerfal good Pope S T 1. A partner in pofleflions; a fharer of | Partra'vivy. n /i [ partialité, Frenc any thing; an aflociate with: comfrom partial. Unequal ftate of th monly with of before the thing parjudgment and favour of one above the taken other, without juft reafon The who earmef lets hinde fro bein ‘Then woul N the Irith part cry out pardiality an |