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Show RE RE 7. To fend money to a diftant place They obliged themfelves to remit after the rate o twelve hundred thoufand pounds fterling per annum divided into fo many monthly payments. 4ddifon €. Toreftore Not in ufe The archbifhop was retained prifoner, but afte a fhort time remitted to his liberty Hayavard Zo Remt'tT. @. 2 1. To flacken ; to grow lefs intenfe 2. To abate, by growing lefs eager As, by degrees, they remitted of their induftry loathed their bufinefs, and gave way to their plea fures, they let fall thofe generous principles, whic had raifed them to worthy thoughts South 3. [In phyfick. To grow by interval lefs violent, though not wholly intermitting RemrrmenT. 7. /. [from remit.] Th adt of remitting to cuftody 2. /. [from remiz. 1. The aét of paying money at a diftan place 2. Sum fent to a diftant place A compaét amen private perfons furnifhed ou the {everal remirtances Addifon on Ttaly REMITTER. 7. /. [remettre, French. 1. One who remits, or procures the conveyance and payment of money 2. [In common law. A reftitation o one that hath two titles to lands or tenements, and is feized of them by his latte title, unto his title that is more ancient in cafe where the latter is defe&ive Cowel You faid, if I return'd next fize in Lent I fhould be in remitter of your grace In th' interim my letters fhould take plac Of affidavits Re‘mnanT manent. [corrupte Refidue that which remains fro that whic re is left Poor key-cold figure ofa holy king Thou bloodlefs remnant of that royal blood Be't lawful that T invocate thy ghoft Shakefp Bear me henc ¥rom forth the noife and rumour of the field Where I may think the remnant of my thoughts Shakefpeare About his fhelve Remmants of packthread and old cakes of rofe Were thinly fcatter'd Shakefpeare I was entreated to get them fome refpite an breathing by a ceffation, without which they fa no probability to preferye the remnant that had ye efcaped It were good to try in glafs works, whetker th crude materials, mingled with glafs already mad and remolten, do not facilitate the making of glafl REMO'NSTRANCE King Charles It feems that the remnants of the generation o .men were in fuch a deluge faved Bacon The remnant of my tale is of a lengt To tire your patience Dryder's Knights Tale A feeble army and an empty fenate Remnants of mighty battles fought invain. Addifon See the poor remnants of thefe flighted hairs My hands fhall rend what e'en thy rapine fpares Poj«:' The frequent ufe of the latter was a remnant o pepery, which never admitted feripture in the vulgar tongue Swift Re‘myanr. adj. [corruptly formed fro remanent.) Remaining ; yet left igned at the bar of ¢ vine juftice! when he fhall fee hi FA » ceufer, :k Judge, the witnefies, all his remorfelefs adw";fi:‘; [remonflrance 2. f French ; from remonfirate. 1. Show ad of your lov'd Lycidas O the i{lcxprcfiible horro r-that w)il'lll f:?z.eltn‘fl/lm finner, when he ftands arr Bacon with lefs heat South's Serme Not in ufe difcovery Shakefpeare Than let him be fo loft REMO'TE. adj. (remotus, Latin.], 1. Dif ant not immediate In this natrow fcantling of cap city, it is not repote and e The fame God, which revealeth ittothem, woul alfo give them power of conflrming it unto others either with miraculous operation, or with ftrong an Hocker invincible remonftrazce of found reafon en apparent good that affetsus, Lack 2. Diftant; not at hand o Their rifing all at once was as the foun Of thunder heard remote Milin 3.. Removed far off placed not near A large family of davghters have drawn upi remonfirance, in which they fet forth, that thei father, having refufed to take in the Speétator Here in the dark fo many precious things, Miliy 2. Strong reprefentation The arch-chymick fun, fo far from us rem fe Produces with terreftrial humour mixe Remote from men with God he pafs'd his days, they offcred to 'bate him the article of bread an butter in the tea-table Addifen's Spefiator Pray'z‘all his bufinefs, all his pleafure, praife Parnd In guiet thades, content with rural fporfs, Give me a life, remate from guilty courts, Granvillp Importunate pafiions furround the man, and wil not fuffer hi Jjuftice to atten to the. remonfirances o Rogers 70 REMO''NSTRATE. @. n. [remonfiro Latin j remonfirer, French.] ‘To'make ftrong reprefentation ; to fhow reafon on any fide in ftrong terms RE'MORA. n. /. [Latin. 1. A let or obftacle 2. A fith or a kind of worm that fticks t thips, and retards their ‘paflage throug the water 4. Foreign 5. Diftant 5 not clofely conneéted An unadyifed tranfiliency from the effed to th remotefl caufe Glapville Syllogifm ferves not to furnifh the mind withintermediate ideas, that thew the conneionof remst __ones o Lcke 6. Alien ; not agreeing ting, voach, and remorq Peachamon Blazoning The rerrora is about three quarters of a yard long his body before three inches and a half over, thenc tapering to the tail end ; his mouth two inches an a half over; his chops ending angularly ; the nethe a little broader, and produced forward near an inch hislips rough with a great number of little prickles Greaw 7o RE'MORATE, @. a. [remoror, Latin. To hinder; to delay D&, REMO'RSE. #. /. [remor/fus, Latin. 1. Pain of guilt Not tha h believe they coul b reftraine from that impious aét by any remiorfe of conicience or that they had not wickednefs enough to defig and execute it z. Tendernefs pity Clarendon fympathetick for Irow Many little efteera of: their own lives, yet, fo . remorfe of theix wives and children, would be withbeld Spenfer Shylock, thou lead'ft this fafhion of thy malic To the laft hour of a& ; and then 'tis thought ‘Thow'lt fhew thy mercy and remorfe more {trange Than is thy firange apparent cruelty. Shakefpeare The rogues flighted me into the river, with a little 7cmorfe as they would have drowned a bigch' blind puppies Shake[peare Curfe on th' unpard'ning prince, whom tears ca dra To no remorfe; who rules by lion's law Dryden ReMO'RSEFUL. adj. [remorfe and full. 1. Tender compaflionate O Eglamour, think not I flatter Valiant and wife, remorfeful, well accomplifh'd. Sh Love, that comes too late Like a remorfcful pardon flowly carried Tothe great fender turns a fowre offence. Shakefp The gzudy, blabbing, and romorfeful da Is arept into the bofom of the feas Shakgfpeare All thofe propofitions, hew remate foeser fro reafon, are {o facred, that men will fooner partwit their lives, than fuffer themfelves to doubtof them Of fifhes you fhall find in arms the swhale, her Denye 7 / Melt You may marvel, why I would not rathe Make rath remonflrance of my hidden power When our paffions remit, the vehemence of ou fpeech remits too Broome's Notes on the Ody[fey REMI'TTANCE ReEMO'LTEN. part. [from remelt, ed again REMO'RSELESS. adj. [fro remsy 2] U‘ pitying; cruel; fayage & Wherc were ye nymphs when'the t;m?j;lifi‘h 0s'd o'er the h Latke 7 Abftra@ed Xo ; Wherever the mind places, itfel by any th'onght all bodies, it can ¢ither amongft or yemote fro in this uniform bounds., idea of fpace, -no where find an Locke ReMO'TELY adw. [from remote.] ‘No nearly ; at a diftance It is .commonly opinioned, that the earth wa thinly inhabited, at leaft not remorely plantedibefor B‘rcfwn the flood -Two lines in-Mezentius and Lavfus are indec remotely allied to Virgil's fenfe, but. tooi like th " Dryden tendernefs of Ovid How, while the fainting Dutch remtdy fire, And the fam'd Eugene's iron troops retire In the firft front amidft a flaughter'd pile High on the mound he dy'd Sait REMO'TENESS. . /. [from remote.] Stat of being remote not nea diftance nefs The joys of heaven: are like the fiars,‘ -"(ml by reafon of our remoicnefs appesr extremey };mf ojle Titian employed brown and ea{t_hly ‘CO]O‘llfsh‘:y‘:)‘ the forepart, and has referved his greater g remoteneffes and the back part of his la\ndfcéufifst-_lc.e g i g( ou ap ef e d b o pa f t e g If th t0 b le ce co le n ar x h o f n r m their r minutenefs Lfll'kb L tentf from. the 7% 0 His obfcurities generally arife pgrfons, an@ things he allufidw of the cuftoms Remo'TioN, #. /. [from remotsss %Z‘:fl " The a& of removing; the {fate 0F D remove to diftance fenc All this fafety were remotion; and é%kff; abfence foa be a fallaB The confequent ftrictly taken cious illation, in reference to antecedency oO ©o fequence ; as to. conclude fiom the B‘Zfit:m"d This bold return with feeming patience heard The pris'ner was remitted to the guard. - Dryder yyllo ochus ftraight hafted thee epor Of this his fellowes moft rem wrcfulp f::ef Cbnp 6. To put again in cultody Priot 2. ItLt feems to have had o ce the f pitiable \ 'e'vfenfe Eu times fuch fhiverings within them Government of the Tongue It bid her fee No future pain for me; but inftant we A lover more proportion'd to her bed And quict dedicate her remnant lif To the juft duties of an humble wife A X remit me to themfelves, and challenge their natural ingenuity to fay, whether they have not fome |