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Show REY n vain they crowd each other at the door Dryden For c'en reverfions are all begg'd before Fame's a reverfion in which men take place Q late rewerfion ! at their ow "y REVE'RSIONARY deceafe [fro adj 3 Young Prior Revie'w verb. % 99 Reve'RT. @.n. [revertir To return ; to fall back Thomfon old Fr. My arrows i " Too flightly timbred for {o loud a wind Shakefp Would have reverted to my bow again If his temant and patentee fhall difpofe of hi gift without his kingly affent, the lands fhall rever tothe king Bacon m from t turnable Rewery is when ideas float in our mind Loof withou wileth hi companies Locte If the minds of me were laid open, we fhoul neither be afrai of men Ifaiab, li. 7 She ftill bearet hatred invincibl a hi at hi to his face, and railet re in al Savift Re[from the verb. Revi‘Le. ». / contumely ; exprobration proach fee but little difference between that of the wif man and that of the fool; there are infinite reverie Not ufed and numberlefs extravagancies pafs through both Afraid, being naked, hid myfelf,-to who The gracious Judge, without rewile, reply'd Milton as to take pleafure i Pope 9o Reve'st. v. a. [reveffir, revétir, Fr reveflio, Latin. 1. To clothe again Her Spczrf-_r reviles fields reweft their chearful weeds Wotton 2. Toreinveft ; to veft again in a pofleflio drefles are repofited The effe€tual power of words the Pythagorean extolled; the impious Jews afcribed all miracles t a2 name, which was ingraved in the rewveffiary of th temple Camden's Remains Revi‘erion n. /. | rewitum Retorn to life Latin. Revi‘LinGLY. adv. [from revile.] JIna opprobrious manner; with contumely The love I bear to the civility of expreffion wil Maine not fuffer me to be rewilingly abroad wiclion Browen To Revi‘crvar, w. a. [reand wifual. To ftock with victuals again It hath been objected, that T put into Ireland and fpent much time there, taking care to revicFua myfeif, and none of the reft Raleigh's Apolog To REVIE'W @, 4. [re and wicw. I. To look back So fwift he flies, that his rewisaving ey Has‘ loft the chafers, and his ear the cry, Denbar 2. To fee again Review Revi‘sar. n. /. [fromrevife. re-examination The revifal of thefe letters has been a kind o fo fairly an examination of confcience to me faithfully have I fet down in the tate of the mind the undifguife Pope 7o REVI'SE. w. a. [revifus, Latin.] T review ; to overlook Lintot will think your price too muc Not, Sir, if you rewifeit, and retouch obfcurity; recall to life 70 REVI'VE Th author is te be excufcd never wh gard to his eyes and other impediments 2 Among printers theet correéted a fecon reviwo, Latin. 1. To return to life rewvife. [revifeur n. f . / revife. Review TAREVIsiT fhee whe French printed Tell But foon revives : death over him no powe Milten Shall long ufurp 2. To return to vigour or fame oblivion from languor to rif or obfcurity I reviv fhall live Milton At this laft fight, affur'd that ma than thofe gardens feign' Spot more delicious Milton Of reviv'd Adonis To raife from languor, infenfibility, o 2 oblivion Noife of arms, or view of martial guife Might not rewviwe defire of knightly exercife Spenfor 3. To renew ; to recolle&t; to bring bac to the memary The memory is the power to rewive again i our minds thofe ideas, which after imprintin Locke have been laid afide out of fight The mind has a power in many cafes to reviv Locke perceptions, which it has once had 4. To quicken ; to roufe I fhould rewiwe the foldiers hearts Becaufe I ever found them as myfelf. Shakefpeare What firft AEneas in this place beheld Rewvin'd his courage, and his fear expell'd Dryden Old Egeus only could revive his fon Who various changes of the world had known Dryden to reftore to hope 5. To recomfort God lighten our eyes, and give us a little revivEzray ix. irgin our bondage 6. To bring again into notice He'll ufe me as he dees my betters Publith my life, my will, my letters Rewvive the libels born to die Which Pope muft bear as well as I Saift 7. [In chymiftry. To recover from mixed flate Revi'vEr. n. /i [from reviwe. 'Tha which invigora-es or revives. @. a [revivifer French; e and wivifico, Latin. recall to life »./ T [from rewivifi The a& of recalling to life As long as an infant'is in th rent, fo lon are thef wom o medicines of re Reviviscency. n. 1. [revivifen, reviwifcentia, Lat. Renewal of life fro [revifion, French ; fro a Xvile 22 So he dies cate. fuperintendant BExaminer Revi‘sion 1 Kings in preparing His fending them fliect b and furveying the rewifes Revi'ser o French The Lord heard Elijah, and the fou! of the chil came unto him again, and he revived Revivirica'rion Dojle preo [revivre in re gives him felf the trouble of corretions and revifes «. n 70 REVIVI'FICATE 1. Review; re-examination o oblivion of languor a ftat Pope Recal [from rewive. n. / Revi'var Popz [from theverb. #. f Revi'se clude the days of the phenix, not in its own, but i without ail.hope of re wit Government of the Tongue If the Rabines prophecy fucceed, we fhall conth.c laft and general lames anothe treat wh on The bittereft réwvilers are often half .witted people or office Reve'stiary. n. f. [revefiaire, French from rewveffio, Latin. Place wher One wh contumelious terms ‘When thou of life reneweft the feeds The withere and of thy voic 7./. [from rewile. Revi'LER nathlefs Th' enchanter finding fit for his intents clean.sh data import.tsv out README Did thus reveff, and deckt with due habiliments but elegant I heard thee in the garden A{T'(I'ifdfl 1 am really fo far gone reveries of this kind Let the pale fire revifit Thebes, and bea Thefe pleafing orders to the tyrant's ear 7o Revi'vE. @. a 1. To bring to life again Aflzed for their pafs by every fquib S pen ftr That lift at will them to rewile or fnib I read in's look Matter againft me; and his eye rewil' Me as his abject object. Shakefpeare's Henry VIII of their rewilings any refleCtion or regard of the underftanding T [re and @ile. @w. a Fear not the reproac Revery'. n. f. [refverie, Fr. mufing ; irregular thought Survey; re-examination reproach ; to vilify ; to treat with contumely Re [from rewvertz. to examine #. /. [reweué, French; from th 79 REVI'LE Hath not mufick her figures the fame with rhetorick? whatis a rewert but her antiftrophe Peacham on Mufick REVE'RTIBLE. adj Pope find no dawn an find thy piercing ray Milton Atterbury's Sermons + Reve'rr. 7. /. [from the verb.] Return A mufical term recurrence L T fro He with great indifference confidered his reviezv and fubfequent editions Fell We make a general revicav of the whole work and a general rewiev of naturej that, by comparing them, their full correfpondency may appear Burnet's Theory of the Earth The works of nature will bear a thoufand view and reviews; the more narrowly we look int them, the more occafion we fhall have to admire The ftream Roil Rewerted plays in undulating flow re that the ZEneis is an imperfec 5. To furvey ; to overlook' Around the ftone, or from the hollow'd ban R Ot t Shall I the long laberious fcene revicw And open all the wounds of Greece anew 2. 'To reverberate again + To retrace w..a. [reverto, Latin. to turn to the contrary Of wit and jeft, difturbs the folemn court ove work, and that death prevented the divine poe from rewiewirg it ; and, for that reafon, he ha condemned it to the fire Dryden _Arbuthnot Wretched her fubjects, gloomy fits the queen Till happy chance rewert the cruel fcene And apifh folly, wich her wild refor counfide Segrais fays There are multitudes of rewer/fionary pateats an \ gy REVE'RT 1. To change T examine rewerfion. yeverfonary promifes of preferments. TheeI revifit (afe And feel thy fov'reign vital lamp; but tho Revifit'f not thefc eyes, - that rowl in vain I thall rewicw Sicilia; for whofe figh I have a woman's longing Shakefpeare To be enjoyed in fucceflion RE RE [rewifiter revifo, revifite, Latin. Frenc "o vifit again ioture makes mention of a reffitution an cency of all things at the end of the world Liurnet Reu'N10x union. cohelion 2. Retur [reunion, French; rcan to a ftate of juncture or concord T She |