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Show trait not only the dainty lineaments or beauty, bu alfo round about thadow the rude thickets an craggy cliffs Spenfer 1 portrait in Arthur the image of a brave knight Wheremy Ulyffesand his race might reign Pope t e i t h n wt i r p 5, To endo with a fortune Him portion'd maids, apprentic'd orphans bleft f r o t a u b l The young w nity of mien f n h l r p c f f a p h i p " e e h i a b f n l b a T k l i f h Wo'RTLY. adj. [from port. | fe& orator Or as it were the pageants of the fea Shake[peare Do overpeer the petty traffickers A goodly, porrly man and a corpulent; of cheerful look, a pleafing eye, and a moft nobl Shakefpeare carriage A portly prince, and goodly to the fight Dryden ' He feem'd a fon of Anak for his height ", Bulky; fwelling 2. /. [por: and man. inhabitant or burgefs cinque ports " as thof A of th Disa after the life As this idea of perfection is of little ufe in por|, Irdits; or the refemblances of particular perfons neither is it in th charaCter tragedy, which are alway of comed That black and roun the ancient pole Ful crving the exat fimilitud a s vq noun. ] . | boriray tion of the antecedent unto the gofition of the con fequent, or the remotion of the confequent to th gyrinus we a porwigle or tadcown's Vulgar Errours of pores remotion of the antecedent Beholds the vaulted roofs of pory ftone 70 POSE pous; or a double confonant, as dxle Posi"rronar. adj. [from pofition. Re fpeting pofition The: leaves of cataputia or fpurge-plucked upwards or downwards, performing their operation by purge or vomit, as old wives ftill do preach is a ftrange conceit, afcribing unto plants pofitiona zepofe L4 [ Dryden @. a. [from po/e, an old wor fignifyin heavinef Saxon puzzle o ftopefation operations Skinner. to gravel t pu t of ever Reynolds [portraire Fr c.lraw 5 to por It1s perhaps il copied, and fhoul the following example commo leaft occafion for pofing of children. Locke on Educ to interrogate She in the prefence -of others pofed him an fifted him, thereby to try whether he were indee Bacon the very duke of York or no One tha Po'ser. #. /. [from pofe. atketh queflions to try' capacities; a examiner H that queftioneth much but let his queftion is fit for a pofer fhall learn rauch not be troublefame good, althoug nothing pofitive; but it is a want of that whic ought to be, or fubfift, partly in the nature of man and partly in the actions of nature Per Hardpefs carries fomewhat more of gofitive i than impenmetrability, which is negative; and i perhaps more a confequence of folidity, than folidity itfelf Locke Whatfoever doth or can exift, or be confidered as one thing, i pofitive ; and {o not only fimpl ideas and fubftances, bu modes alfo are pofiriv beings, though the parts, of which they confift, ar Glanwille enigmas of magneti{m Particularly in learning of. languages, there i 'T'o appofe abfolute It is well and truly faid in {chools, in fin there i Hammond pofing one As an evidence of human infirmities, I fhal give inftances of our intelle¢tual blindnefs, mo 2 real the remove of it, to give place to the fruit, be comparative good Bacon The only remaining queftion to me I co thof [ pofitivus, Lat. pofitif "The power or bloffom is a How God's eternal fon fhould be man' Pofetb his proudett intellectual power wit adj Not negative ; capable of being affirmed to pofe the Brown's Vulgar Errours PO'SITIVE French. 1 that I defig Browir 4. [In grammar. The"ftate ofa vowe placed before two confonants, as'pim To the court arriv'd, th' admiring fo no other means than b 1 enef};mm"fs' the grace, and, we may add, th sz} 1fi§ more in taking the general air D€ written i A fallacious illation is to conclude from the po/i fubftance began to gro an meannefs from its being familiar to us. Reynolds Y calle 3. Advancement of any principle or youn { 7, m:)regeb the drefs from a temporary fathion to en of permanent, YVhld? has annexed to it no idea v iN oval, after a while the head, the eyes, the tail t be difcernible, and at laft to become that whic aP['rogchmg it to a general idea; he leaves out ai d ch""flmf\‘ute‘breaks and peculiarities in the face, an fmg‘Rt'l}:RAxT put on, our faithful portref to {ftorm the fortrefs cat with walnuts thod ev'ry ftep fhe trod. Swift's Mif againf God, with what confcience can ye accufe us; w your own pofitions are, that the things we thould every one of them be dearer unto us tha ten thoufand lives Hooker Let not the proof of any pofitions depend on ih pofitions that follow, but always on thofe which g before Watts Milton Po'rwicLe. #. / A tadpol frog not yet fully thaped . The figure of his body was ftrong, proportionable, beautiful ; and were his pi€ture well drawn It muft deferve the praife given to the portraits o R"P!'aelPrior 1f a portrait painter is defirous to raife and im s Do Of any offence or fin therein committe The portrefs of hell-gate reply'd D)ydm he ha 2. Principle laid down to be drawn with fom in hifiory prove hxs. {ubje@ Dryden Po'rRTRESS. 2. /. [from porter.] A femal guardian of a gate Fanitrix » feck of frailty, fuch as they have been defcribe our eye, as may give us the cleareft tatio of it; for a different pofition greatly alters th appearance of bodies Waits's Logick with boaftful argument portray'd. Milton The fhoe Admits us i While like Stumbling a movin beam o refle€te as it di upon my eye WNeswton's Opticks Place ourfelves in fuch a pofitio ard the obje€t, or place the object in fuch ; towar Shield Various to tr him By varying. the pofition of my eye, an it nearer to or farther from the dire the fun's light, the colour of the fun' light conftantly varied upon the fpeculu 2. To adorn with pictures u e r n f m r d t r c o o m p 5 i clean.sh data import.tsv out README - buthe laughed, and bid another do it Speator picture draw different pofitions to it, it is not inc whether another may not have notio Oui Phenix queen was there portray'd too bright Beauty alone could beauty take fo right Temple we have dificien according to ou and the frequency of ftreams Since no one fees all, an profpe¢ts of the fame thing to defcribe by picture E will a free mobility They are the happielt regions for fruits,' b the excellence of foil, the pofition of mountains falem 'ORTMA'NTEAU. 7. /. [ portmantean, Fr. A cheft or bag in which clothes ar carried 7O RTOISE. 7. /. In fea language, a fhi # 1 faid to ride a portoife, when fhe ride «i2% With her yards ftruck down to the deck Di& S ORTRAIT. n. £ [ portrait, Fr. [pourtraire hav ma kind of inquictude till it attain the forme The earl of Warwick's ragged ftaff is yet to b feen portrayed in many places of their churc Carew fteeple Take a tile, and fo poriray upon it the city Jeru Our houfe little deferve *® The feourge of greatnefs to be ufed on it And that fame greatne(s too, which onr own hand Shake[peare clean.sh data import.tsv out README Have help'd to make fo gortly BINORTMAN @. a i wher Baker 70 PO'RTRAY Rudely thou wrong'ft my dear heart's defire Spenfer In finding fault with her too portly pride Your argofies with portly fail Like figniors and rich burghers on the flood taken, and by the help of a cork balance Her wry-mouth'd portraitur Difplay'd the fates her confeflors endure Pope He delineates and gives us the portraiture of a per 1. To paint , Grand of mien Iron having ftood long in a window, bei This is the portraiture of our earth, drawn without flattery Burnet's Theory of the Earth r g f n n f t w e l s "\ fulnef f c e t a r c Jinefs, a 10 ¢he language found other than moft full of fweet Latin. 1. State of being placed; fituation Softly on my eye-lids laid Milton Herein wasalfo the portraiture of a hart. Browun S[j.f)g/z'z' with .dt‘l!:__:hf Camden's' Remains Fr re Wave at his wings in airy ftrea Of lively portraiture difplay'd grandeur of demeanour Spreads in defiance of all enemies When fubftantialnefs combinct Posi'tion. u. f. [ pofition, French; pofitis By the image of my caufeT fe The portraiture of his Shakelpeare's Hanlet Let fome ftrange myfterious drea Dig Yy po'rrriness. z. /. [from portly. is nothing elfe but the modification of matter, o the natural motion thereof thus or thus pofired o difpofed, is moft apparently falfe femblance On " that divides n. [ [portraiture Pifture; painte ranged That the principle that fets on work thefe organ perfected in the twelve private moral virtues. Spen/ Po'RTRAITURE from portray. Placed but it has no verb. for tha Bacan It ha iPo'stTED. adj. [pofitus, Latin the appearance of a participle preter very often relative one to another 2 Abfolute particular plied A for pofitiv Locke direét not im words In moft exquifite picures, they blaze and por o i r p d g en a i p o a c i p uttso a bar between his hopes and empire, Rozwe THahvee lp Argos the feat of fovereign rule I cho'le Po Q " PO arms againft king Edward's fon feem calm, yet it was a plai ruling of the king's title 3+« Dogmatical; read woul no bea though the word and dire@® overBacsn to lay dow notion |