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Show P W She fhall be his wife, he may not put het away The Chinefe fail where they will ; which fheweth Deut. xxii that their law of keeping out ftrangers is a law o Bacon pufillanimity and fear It is obvious, to diftinguifh betwecn an aét o courage and an act of rafhnefs, an aét of pufillanimity, and an act of great modefty or humility Daniel faid, put thefe two afide adj. [ pufillanime ‘PUSILLA'NIMOUS French; pufillus and animaus, Latin. Meanf{pirited cow narrowminded ardly An argument fit for great princes, that neithe by overmeafuring their forces, they lofe defign upon another man's life, puts him in a ftat in vain enterprizes; nor, by undervaluin defcend to fearful and pufillanimous counfels Locke of war with him As for the time of putting the rams to th ewes, you muft confider at what time your graf Mortimer will maintain them If without any provocation gentlemen will fal Bacon He became pufillanimous, and was eafily ruffle with every little paffion within; fupine, and a openl expofed to- any temptation from without Woodward's Natural Hiftory What greater inftance can there be of a wea upo 4. To repofe PUsILLA'NIMOUSNESS. #. /. [from pufillanimous. Meannefs of {pirit Puss. z. /. [I know not whence derived How wilt thou puzt thy truft on Egypt for chaGo L' Efrange N looking back, is fit for the kingdom of God. Luke Rejoice before the Lord in all that thou purre thine hands unto Deuteronomy, Xii. 18 Pu'sturovus. adj. [from puflule.] Ful of puftules; pimply 2o Pur. w. a. [Of this word, {fo commo Chymical operations are excellent tools in th hands of a natural philofopher, and are by hi applicable to many nobler ufes, than they are won ver to be put to in laboratories Boyle The avarice of their relations prt them to painting, as more gainful than any other art. ~ Dryden The great difference in the notions of mankind is from the different ufe they pus their faculties to difficult to find the etymology; putter to plant, is Danith Faunius. 1. To lay or repofite in any place and there he puz man Genefis 8peak unto him In thefe he put two weights Feed land with beafts and horfes vt in fheep Milton an after bot Mortimer's Hufbandry 2. To-place in any fituation When he had pur them all out;, he entereth in Mark Locke ii. 3 and put words in kis mouth Lxodys, iv. 15 1f a man put in his beaft, and feed in anothe man's field; of the beft of his own fhall he mak reftitution Exodus, xxii. 5 v. 40 Four fpeedy cherubim Put to their mouths the founding alchimy. Milton 3. To place in any ftate or condirtion Before we will lay by our juft born arms We'll pur thee down, 'gainft whom thefe:arms w bear Or add a royal number to the dead Shake[peare Put me in a furety with thee Fob, xviis 3 The ftones he puz for his pillows Genefis He hath put my brethren far from me Fob As we were put in truft with the gofpel, even f we {peak, nct as pleafing men, but God. 1 The/ They thall ride upon. horfes, every one put in array like a man to the battle againft thee Fer He put thera into ward thyee days, Gene #lii, 17 Kkaving put his hand to the plough an ma I expe&t an offspring whatever we pur them to docile an tratable i Tatler 9. To ufe any altion by which the plac or ftate of any thing is changed 1 do but keep the peace, put up thy fword. Shak Put up your fword ; if this young gentlema Have done offence 1 take the fanlt on me Shak He put his hand unto his neighbour's goods Exodus, xxii ‘Whatfoever cannot be digefted by the ftomach, i by the ftomach either puz up by vomit, or pu down to the guts Bacon It puts a man from all employntent, and make a man's difcoutfes tedious Taylor's Holy Liwing A nimble fencer will puz in a thraft fo quick that the foil wiil be in your bofom, whea yo thought it a yard off Digby A man, not having the power of his own life cannot put himfelf under the abfolute arbitrar power of another to take it Locke Inftead of making apologies, I will fend it wit my hearty prayers, that thofe few dire@ions I hav here put together, may be truly ufeful to you. Wake He will know the truth of thefe maxims, upo the firft occafion that fhall make him pur together thofe ideas, and obferve whether they agree or difagree Locke Whe yo clock back canno et diria 10. 'T'o caufe; to produce Ther is great variet in men' yn and their natural confiigxtions ;2:&‘)";%:'3 ndil;g ence between fome men, that in uftry woua;kidln ::: be able to mafter Lode 11. To comprife; to con g1 to writing Cyrus made proclam tion, and pur it 4fy in writing 2 Chron 12. To add Whatfoever God doeth, nothin 3 can be pyt t it, nor any thing taken fiom it. Ecclus, iii 1 13. To place in a reckoning If we will rightly eftimate things, we fhal] fin that moft of them are: wholly to be put on th; account c-‘f labour Lock That fuch a temporary life, as we now have, i better tha no being, is evident by the high valge we put upon it outfelves Lacke 14." To reduce to any ftate Marcellus and Flavius, for pulling fearfs of Cefar's images, are put to filence Shakefpeare ‘This'difhonours you no more Than to take in a town with gentle words Which elfe would. put you.to your fortune Shaks And five of you fhail chafe an hundred, and an hundred of you fhall put ten thoufand to flight Lewiticus, %xVie 8 With well-doing, ye may put to filence foolif men 1 Peter, The Turks were in every place put to the worft, and lay by heaps flain. Kuolfes's Hift. of the Turks "This {crupulous way would make us deny ou fenfes ; for there is fcarcely any thing but puss ou Colliers reafon to a ftand Some modern authors, obferving what firits they have been puz to to find out water enough for Noah's flood, fay, Noah's flood was not univerfal; Burnets but a national inundation We fee the miferable fhifts fome men are pu to Your goodlieft young men and affes he will pu them to his work 1 Samuel, viii. 16 Arbuthnot a garden forme 8. To apply an eflcrefcence plante it be any intercourfe of civility and good will. Szvift The blood turning acrimonious, corrodes th veflels, producing hemorrhages, puffules red, black Go recover Milton When men and women are mixed and well chofen, and put their beft qualities forward, there ma Gay it i feldo Thank him who puts me loth to this revenge PU'STULE. n. /. [pafiule, Fr. puftula Lat.] A {mall fwelling; a pimple; language cracke fine 7. To puth into aétion 2, The fportfman's term for a hare Englif 1 Chronicles, v. 20 ftrength, or the memory of it leaves a laftin caution in the man, not to put the part quickl _ Laocke again to robuft employment Let pufs praltice what nature teaches Watts 1 will permit my fon to play at apodidrafcinda which can be no other than our pxfs in a corner Arbuthnot and Pope th they pu of them, becauf 5. To truft; to give up: as, he pur himfelf into the perfuer's hands 6. To expofe ; to apply to any thing humble fuit to Venus to turn pu/s into a woman i was entreate their truft in him A young fellow, in love with a cat, made it hi and gangrenous 2 Kings riots pufie, Latin, is a dwarf. 1. The fondling name of a cat pufh in an affair wherein his intereft and re one putation are embarked, they cannot complain o Pope being put into the number of his enemies pfillanimous temper, than for a man to pafs hi whole life in oppofition to his own fentiments Spectator Poor honeft pufs It grieves my heart to fee thee thus But hounds eat fheep as well as hares Sufan. v. 51 Milton This queftion afk'd puts me in doubt So nature prompts; fo foon we go aftray Dryden When old experience puts us in the way Men may put government into what hands the Lacke pleafe He that has any doubt of his tenets, receive without examination, ought to pz¢ himfelf wholl into this ftate of ignorance, and throwing wholl by all his former notions, examine them with Locke perfeét indifference Declaring by word or aétion a fedate, fettle South P whe fupporte atheifm that wa whic founde upon, an by idolatry, is become the fanuary of Bentley 15. To oblige; to urge Thofe that pur their bodies to endure in bealgh may, in moft ficknefles, be cured only with dic Bacon and tendering The difcourfe T mentioned was written to a pri Boyle vate friend, who put me upon that tak. the wifeft council of men have with the Whe laws, yet frequent emer mad greatef prudenc of fuc their laws gencies happen which they did not forefee, and nts lem fup an al rep up pu ar th or re th forefight fimpl therefor made bu forefa Almight al God, by one events anfl mukl] Ie gi th th t a o t o o p w fit l i ale We are put to prove things, which can ‘hardiy 71/10{/:‘& be made plainer Where the: lofs. can be but tcmporfil, every g ytz zo an 1 u pu no ne i o t il proba tm‘hol' prevent it m d u ab pu bedo fe They fhoul e things, but when they-bave a niind 16. To incite; to inftigate; to exhort to urge by influence Thebg_rcat preparation put the king 141"'"(;2‘3‘;; : way hi i bo fu in ha o folution he re, bc! l ke wi liv ha Thofe wh meet with a great deal more troubic, b;"‘:; thei Epnp the i c'onfidc:;g'r 2:" upo This.caution will pu teach them the neceflity of examiniug the o do I); need not be any wonder, why Ihg:‘s":};:? O u o y ftu tha up el my plo e h, He . replied woul undertak wit fome vehemel‘-fi‘;' tfiftruin to prove trade \?9"1‘; z\:e o fi nid ta) l wo io na li En of th duta lm'&qfidfl upon it Sr'fi This, put me upos ohfzxvmg the th |