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Show RE RE 2. To arrive at; to attain any thin diftant; to ftrike from a diftance The coaft fo long defir' Thy troops fhall reach, but having reach'd, repent Diyden ‘What remains beyond this, we have no more- pofitive notion of, than a mariner has of the dept of the fea; where, having let down his foundin Locke line, he reackes no bottom ThatI may reach the beatt Dryden §. To bring forward from a diftant place 4. Power ; limit of faculties Our fight may be confidered as a more diffufiv kind of touch, that brings'into our reach fome o Be fure yourfelf and your own reach to know come fhor Cheyne The knowledge of the gods is reach'd to man Rowve 9. To penetrate to alterations are mad in the body, i they reach not the mind, there is no perception Locke 10. To be adequate to The law reached the intention of the promoters and this aét fixed the natural price of money. Locke If thefe examples of grown men reach not th cafe of children, let them examine Locke 11. To extend to Thy defire leads to no excefs that reaches blame Milton Her imprecations. reach not to the tomb They fhut not out fociety in death. 4ddifor's Cato 12. Toextend ; to fpread abroad Trees reach'd too far their pamper'd boughs Milton 13. To take in the hand Left he reach of the tree of life, and eat. Milton Ta Reacu v. 1. To be extended We hold that the power which the church hat tawfully to make laws, doth extend unto fundr things of ecclefiaftical jurifdi€ion, and fuch othe matters whereto their opinion is, that the church' authority and power doth not reach Hooker The new world reaches quite crofy the torri zone in one tropick to the other Boyle When men purfue their thoughts of {pace, the are apt to ftop at the confines of body, as if fpac were there at an en too, and reached no farther L'J(‘kv IfI do not afk any thing improper, let me b buried by Theodofius; my vow reaches no farthe than the grave Addifon "The influence of the ftars reaches to many events which are not in the power of reafon Swifp 2. To be extended far Great men have reaching hands 3. To penetrate Shakefpeare He hath delivered them into your hand, and v have flain them in a rage, that reacheth up int beaven 2 Chronicles, xxviil We reach forward into futurity, and bring u to our thoughts objets hid in the remoteft depth of time Addifon To make efforts to attain Coul a failor always fupply new line, and fin Hozvcl fetch a artific attai t fom diftant advantage Th end duk of Parm of his ow had particular reache underhand and | to crofs the defign Bacon 7. Tendency to diftant confequences Strain not my fpeec To grofier ifiues, nor to larger reach Than to fufpicion Shakefpeare's Othello 8. Extent on the left hand hel With long reach interpos'd. Miiton's Paradife Loff 7o REACT. @.a. [re and a&. return the impalfe or impreffion pret, read/ Db paf I bave feen her take forth Paper, wr te "M't read it, and afterwards feal i The paffage you mutt hay ¢ read, thouARelpears gh fini flipt out of your memory P If we have not leifure to o itfelf regularly, then by the titlcse‘:f{c}(::eic:he o be directed to perufe feveral feétions T 2. To difcover by charaters or marks, An armed cotfe did ye In whofe dead face he read grea magnanimit Sperj' 3. To learn by obfervation Thofe about he From her fhall read the perfedt ways of hon ur Sbahfpéa" 4. To know fully O moft delicate fiend Who is't can read a woman Sbaktfpgan 7o READ. . 2 1. To perform the a& ofperufing Writidg fhall be with him and he fhall read thesei that he may learn to fear the Lord 2. To be ftudious in books Deus. xyi, 19 *Tis fure that Fleury reads Tfl}hh 3. To know by reading I have read of an caftern king, who put ajudé to death for an iniquitous fentence Suwift Virgil's fhepherds are too well read in the philofophy of Epicurus Dryden We have a poet among -us..of a geniusasexalted as his ftature, and who is very wellreadi Longinus his treatife concerning the fublime Addifn reading an - Thoug u and things, yetit ideas of me man wit converfation may furnif our owa meditation muft form our judgment Watts on theMind Lefs reading than makes felons *feape Lefs human genins than God gives an ape it to a frrongly Can make a Cibber fluid muf b rezéfed. upon a Arbathnot Cutoff your hand, and you may d Wit Swift's Mifcel Rea'crion. #.f. [rea&ion, French; fro reals. 'T'he reciprocatio of any im pulfe or force imprefled, made by th body on which {fuch impreffion is made altion and realion are equal Do not igreat bodies conferve their heat th longeft, their parts heating one another; and ma not great denfe an fixe bodies whe heate beyond a certain: degree, emit light fo copioufly as, by the emiffion and reaction of its light, an the refle€tions and refradtions of its rays within it pores, to grow ftill hotter till it comes to a certain period of heat, fuch as is that of the fun Newton's Opticks Alimentary fubftances, of a mild nature, .a with {mall force upon the folids, and as the aio and reaction are equal, the fmalleft degree of forc in the folids digefts them Arbuthbnot Reap. #. /. [pxb, Saxon; raed, Dutch. 1. Counfel The man is bleft that hath net len To wicked read his ear e 2. Saying; faw fenfes obfolete T'his wor Sternhold is i bot This reade is xife that oftentim Giv do&rine attendanc raading t Hokers exhortation an 1 Timaiby 4. Variation of copies That learned prelate has reftored fopme of th cit fag gre wi ho au th readings o Arbutbnet on Cairse 7 J READEPTION Recovery Latin. [re and adepi att of.regam'mg_-i Will any fay, that the readeption of 'l;"a' was matter of fcruple REA‘DER. n. /. [from read, n tt wr n th an f r p th 1. On r word A take the care that o we muf and " l f t e p h i u f o t i f r e fenfe be c g i n t r d u o n w e a r o e a h th Ben Jorjon not to anfwer for them 2. One fludious in books e c d r d t a r t a s Bafir Of hard Eureftheus, ev'ry reader {ees 3. On whof ydet Dryd office is to read prayer1t churches ,in rcadesw a became He got into orders, an parit church at twenty pounds ayea REA DERSHIP "off ‘h e g d k t v h e Wheii t i S i orders, and follicit a readerf Great cumbers fall unfoft In humble dales is footing faft ‘Fhe trade is not fo tickle 2s A leCture; a prelection The Jews had their weekly readings of the faws Becaufe the foul her power contradls And on the brother limb reaé?s Bopte 3. Publick recital ¢ other hand the worle of two Spenfer REaD. particip. adj. [from read; theyesh Y read is pronounced reed; the preterite Wi and participle red.] Skilful by reading, ks i The lungs being the chief inftrument of fangui- fication, and ating ftrongly upon the chyleto brin anima 5‘;;';3 Rea'ping. n. /. [from read. 1. Study in books; perafal of books The confines met of empyrean heav'n And of thisworld : and o, a read. [pad, Saxon. I reaches 6 Through fuch hand dee {cheme artfu Contrivance Drawn by others, who had decper reackes tha themfelves to matters which they leaft intended Hayward Some, under types, have affeéted obfcurity t amufe and make themfelves admired for profoun "The beft accounts of the appearances of nature ‘Whateve Pgpe thought To airain ; to gain ; to obtain 8. To transfer 4 5 Hooker can reach Addijon the moft remote parts of the univerfe How far your genius, tafte, and learning go towards them penetratio in him the reach of powe withi a man feems as free as it is pofiible for freedo Locke to make him 6. To hold out ; to ftretch forth which huma of its reality Locke In a&ions and reach hither thy hand, and thruft it into m Fobny xxe 27 fidz Thefe kinds of goodnefs are {o nearly united t the things which defire them, that we fcarcely perceive the appetite to ftir in reacking forth her han th necver hav him, which yet he ma 3. Power of attainment or management Reach hither thy finger, and behold my hands 7 t. To perufe any thing writte inftrué an 2 Efdras, xivs 36 He reached me a full cup idea of infinity Locke will to open 4. To fetch from fome place diftant give To READ There may be in 2 man's reach a book: containing pictures and difcouri€s, capable to delight an 3. To firike from a diftant place the plummet fink without fopping, he would be i the pofture of the mind, reaching after a pofitiv ReacH. #. /. [from the verb. 1. Att of touching or feizing by extenfio of the hand 2. Power of reaching or taking in th hand It muft fall perhaps before this letter reackes you Pope hands O patron pow'r, thy prefent aid afford R B A REA'DILY adu {from read) ditcly {ben d |