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Show PA 11. To be enaéted things gratefu mo wer whic and whic majefty to 'ln notwithftandin ftill pafled Neither of thefe bills have yet pafféd the houf be \'C)\C&r:d of commons, and fome think they ma Savift 12, To be effedted to exift .U"I(;‘ th t w u n g o t b m thi articles fupprefled, and be explaine %4 it came to the pa/s that thus it enguired, ho that the churc I have hear brought to paf it might b fhould ever where have able preachers to inftruct the people Hooker When the cafe required diffimulation, if the ufed it, it came to pafs that the former opinion o their good faith made them almoft invifible. Bacon as, this mone rent cur to becom gain reception 13. T will not pa/s That trick, faid the, will not pafs twice. Hudib they are a Though frauds may pafs upon men open as the light to him that fearches the heart L' Efrange Their excellencies will not pafs for fuch in th opinion of the learned, but only as things whic true is no Falfe eloquence paffeth only wher bad writers underftood, and no body will commen that is acquainted with good. Felton on the Clafficks The grofleft fuppofitions pafs upon them, that th wild Irifh were taken in toyls; but that, in fom Sawift time, they would grow tanie 14. Tobe pra&tifed artfully or fuccefsfully This practice hath moft threwdly paff upon thee But when we know the grounds and authors of it Thou fhall be both the plaintiff and the judge Shakefpeare 15. To be regarded as good or ill He rejeéted the authorit fo d . all the reformed ; fo that this won't pafs for a faul Atterbury 16. To occur; to be tranfated Ifwewould judge of the nature of fpirits, w muft have recourfe to.our own confcioufnefs of wha paffes within our own mind Watts 17. To be done Zeal may be let loofe in matters of dire¢t duty as in prayers, provide upon them to defile them tha n . 18. To heed; to regard indire a& paf Taylor in vfe No It is to you, good people, that I fpeak O'er whom, in time to come, I hope to reign Shake[peare pitally finally to judg ca Though well we may not ‘pafs upon his life to b can ferve but to make many me ing 26. 7o Pass away Zo Pass. . a 1. To go beyond To fee thee fight, to fee theepafs thy punéto Shakefpeare Both advanc Againft each other, and with fword and lanc They lafh, they foin, they pafs, they ftrive to bor Their corflets Dryden 22, T'o omit the height ¢ for in both the noxjous humour dot firft weaken, and afterwards wafte to nothing Hoywward 2. To go through: as, the horfe pafe the river 3. To fpend; to live through aljci)s hard cannot be diffolved Prior but the powe]r?:j'fz d_ut fuch, \.vhofe. tenacity exceeds th of digeftion, will neither 24afs, nor be coninto aliment Arbutbnot 24, ;I‘o.be_in a tolerable flate . middling f I pafs their warlike pomp They did pafs thofe bounds, and did r that time 16 I fhould paf Locke ferene and gay untroubled hours away. Addifor at Londo wit he hufband the congregation 4. To impart to any thin moving Dr Thurfto fpiratio to be think the principa move t entere Addifon o the powe ufe of infro orpafs the blood 5. To carry haftily rt of man was left well enou h t that man know but the decree ma be already pa/féd againft him, and his allowance o mercy fpent South Among the laws that pafs'd, it was decreed That conquer'd Thebes from bondage thould b freed Dryden Could the fame parliament which addrefled wit fo much zeal and carneftnefs againft this evil, paf Savift it into a law His majefty's minifters propofed the good of th nation, when they advifed the paffing this patent Sawift In the midft of the fervice, a lady who had paffi winte Hudibras To enact a law How doe We have examples of fuch, as pafs moft of thei th '17.5!;'_\' cf the Earth To admit ; to allow 17 D/jz[ffl Pafs all their mil Burnet' The money of every one that pa/f let the priefts take I'll pafs them all upon account As if your nat'ral felf had don't Were I not affured he was removed to advantage my time extremely ill without him Collicr You know in what deluding joys we paf The night that was by heav'n decreed our laft their proud array Dryden 15. To tranfcend ; to tranfgrefs 18. To impofe fraudulently Th' indulgent mother did her care employ And pafs'd it on her hutband for a boy Dryden I had only time to pafs my eye over the medals 19. To praétife artfully ; to make fucceed Addifon on Italy Time lays open frauds, and after that difcover here is no pajfis 1g the fame trick upon the mice which are in great number 6. To transfer to another proprietor He tha As T hav And hear And mak will pafs his land mine, may fet his han unto this deed, when he hath read Herbert the purchafe fpread 7. To ftrain; to percolate 20 warts They will commend the work in ge pafs fo many fly remarks upon it afterwa deftroy all their cold praifes Watts on t 23. o Pas gard othe All this makes it more prudent, rational, an pious, to fearch our own ways, than to pafs fe Ha on other men He paft his promife, and was as good as his wor L'Efirange to procure to go horfe and foo Clarcndon Martial tho as the could well enou To thy Domitian gav'ft far nobler epigram than I can my James to forgive by 'T negle® to difre matters to be mingled with them, or to pa/ Taylor's Holy Living Certain- pafiages of feripture we cannot, withou Burnet injury to truth, pafs by here in filence 24. Yo Pass over unregarded T omit;, to let go Better to pafs him:o'er, than to re t The caufe I have your mighty fire to h e« Dryden It does not belong to this place-to have that point debated; nor will it hinder our purfuit t - in filence poet paffés it ower as haftily as She more fweet than-any bird on bough Would oftentimes amongft them bear a part Their native mufick by her fkilful art Whom do'ft thou pa/s in beauty 'Toexcufe out to excel And ftrive to pafs towafie by them, and give law to them, as inferior unto itfelf Bacon It conduces much to our content, if we paf by thofe things which happen to our trouble, an confider that which is profperous; that, by the reprefentation of the-better, the worfe may be blotte We'll pafs the bufinefs privately and well. Shakefp 13. To furpafs fpend How far ought this enterprize to wait upon-thef To utter folemnly or judicially Waller paffed over five thoufan by Newbridge T However God may pafs by fingle finners in thi world; yet when a nation combines againft him the wicked fhall not go unpunithed Tillotfon Many of the lords and fome of the common paffed fome compliments to the two lords. Clarendon 11. To tranfmit 70 Pass gway 2. 70 Pass by to pronounce To fend from one place to another as, pa/s that beggar to his own parifh The father waketh' for the daughter, left fh xli Q so clil pafs azway the flower of her age They fpeak of fevering wine from water, paflin it through ivy wood Bacon's Natural Hiftory How many thoufands talte upon them to paf their cenfures on the perfon al adtic 18 of ut};crs, an o publick pronounce boldly on the L' Eftrange 21 This nigh 23, Sub(:i g0 through the alimentary duét wi Pleafe you that I may pafs this doing I pafs the wars, that fpotted linxes mak With their fierce rivals Drydens 1z. To put an end to Full piteous feems young Alma's caf Ahs in a lucklefs gamgfier'sgplace C'I‘l‘"ould not play, yet muft not pafs Can hide you Shake[peare's King Fobn Let me o'erleap that cuftom; for I canno Put on the gown, ftand naked, and entre t the As it is advantageable to a phyfician to be calle to the cure of a declining difeafe; fo it is for commander to fupprefs a fedition, which has paffe 10 21 To thruft; to makea puth in fencing If you fondly pafs our proffer'd offer >Tis not the rounder of your old fac'd wall 'To vanifh nights without dreaming The people, free from cares whether to d 14. To omit; to negle&t or to mention Locke Sir Hudibras's paffing worth The manner how he fallied forth fufpect that they have no fouls at all, fince they find good part of their lives pafs away without think 9. To utter ceremonioudly Underavood The anceftor and all his heirs Though they in number pafs the ftars of heav'n Dawies Are ftill but one a fubftance that alway Without the form. of juftice; yet our pow' Shall do a court'fy t6 our wrath Shakefpeare 20, To be fupremely excellent thinks 8. To vent As for thefe filken-coated flaves, I pafs not 19, .To determin To be loft; to glid off Defining the fou mine cannot flatter'd be Ben Fonfon Thou flattered'ft thine L'Eftrange the right to the left ventricle of the heart. Derbam of councils, an in him, till 'tis proved one in us fo long as any had more ' But in my royal fubjeét I pafs thee could never think he ha bu father hi 25. 70 Pass away Dryden have lefs of error in them 2uispiaz s enough C/m‘vm.'m: their contradiction S b paf Many of the nobility fpoke in parliament again thof R ‘The hout any part of his ftory td a tim Sp ifer Ezckiel afraid: of ftaying in n afked him, who owe Pass k thi #. /. [from the verb. 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