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Show SE 7 [ Ta aftronomy. "\ An afpe& of the planets when at the dif My, tance of thirty-fix degrees from one anoo ther w emise/xTiLE Bailey 7 [In aftronomy. ‘femifixth ; an afpect of the planets whe ‘they are diftant from each other on .twelfth part of a circle, or thirty de grees Bailey $MISPHE RICAL. adj. [ femi and fpherivcal.] Belonging to half a {phere. Bailey YMISPHERO IDAL. adj. [ jemi and fpheroidal.] Formed like a half {pheroid UMITERTIAN. 7. /. [ femi and tertian. _An ague compounded of a tertian and quotidian Bailey The natural product of fuch a cold moift yea ‘are tertians, femitertiansy and fome quartans Arbutbnat on Air Milton He had not us'd excurfions, fpeats, or darts But counfel, order, and fuch aged arts Whic if our anceftors had not retain'd The fenate's name our council had not gain'd Denbam Gallus was welcom'd to the facred ftrand The fenate rifing to falute their gueft Dryden SE'NATEHOUSE. n /. [ fenate and houfe. Plo2ace of publick council The nobles in great earneftnefs are goin All to the fenateboufe5 fome news is come SE'NATOR #. S [ fenator teur, French. Shak Latin fena A publick counfellor Moft unwife patricians You grave but recklefs fenators. Shakefp. Coriolanss As if to ev'ry fop it might belong Like fenators, to cenfure, right or wrong. Granwville SENATORIAL ) adj. [ Jenatorius, Lat. fe SMIVO'WEL 7o SEND. . a. preterite and part. pafl Jeat. [ fandgan, Gothick; yenban, Saxon; fenden, Dutch. 1. To defpatch from ene place to another ufed both of perfons and things 7 f whic or doe [ /em make no ‘clufion of the mouth and wowwel a deman imperfe( a total oc i When Homer would reprefent any agreeable ob"I"je@, he makes ufe of the fmootheft vowels an ] tmoft flowing femivozels Broome YMPERVIVE. 7. /. [ femper and wivus uLatin; that is, always alive.] A plant ¢ The greater [emperviwe will put out branche "two or three years; but they wrap the root in a vil-cloth once in half a year Bacon \IMPITE'RNAL.adj. [ fempiternel, Fr, fomwpiternus, from femper and wternus, Lat. clean.sh data import.tsv out README Eternal in futurity; havin /but no end beginning Thofe, though they fuppofe the world not to b eternal, a parte ante, are not contented to fuppof iyt to be fempiternal, or eternal a parte poft 5 but wil jmcarry up the creation of the wo.ld to an immenf " antiquity Hale In poetry it is ufed fimply for eternal f *twill, then muft we through the order ru To fome one man whofe being ne'er begun Jf that one man was fempiternal, wh Blacknore ; being admitted, though the eternity a parte ante b denied, there will be a future infinity for the eman;flion of the divine goodnefs. Hale | #B MSTRESS. 7. /. [yeameyepe, Sax. woman whofe bufinefs is to few ; a wo _ man who lives by her needle Two hundred femfireffes were employed to mak me fhirts, and linen for bed and table, which the were forced to quilt together in'feveral folds Gulliver's Travels The tuck'd-up femfirefs walks with hafty ftrides Savift *E'NAP}Y. adj. [ fenarius, feni, Latin.] B{ longm fix E'NATE to the number fix ; containin #, [ [ fenatus Latin fenat French.] An affembly of counfellors ; body of men fet apart to confult for th publick good f ,J;? Th 4 We debaf s:0p he locks o' th' Jenatey and bring in the crow 9 peck the eagles Wor. I He fent letters by pofts on horfeback Efpher His citizens fent a meflage after him, faying We will not have this man to reign over us Lukey xix. 14 There have been commiffion Sentdown among them, which have flaw'd the hear Of all their loyaities Shakefpeare's Henry VII My overfhadowing fpirit and might with the I fend along IMilton To remove him T decree And fend him from the garden forth to til The ground whence he was taken, fitter f{oil Milton His wounded men he firft fénds off to fhore Dryden Servants, fent on meflages, ftay out {fomewha longer than the meffage requires Savift Shakefpeare's Coriolanus fhall we fen In fearch of this new world ? Here he had nee All circumf{peétion, and we now no lef Choice in our fuffrage ; for on whom we fen "The weight of all and our laft hope relies. Milton 3. To tranfmit by another; not to bring They [ent it to the elders by the hands of Barna bas Aés 4. To difmifs another as ageat; not to go God will deig To vifit oft the dwellings of juft me only their pitures or images, when the obje@ themfelves are abfent Chegne 8. To diffufe ; to propagate Cherubic fongs by night from neighb'ring hill Akreal rufic ferd Milton When the fury took her ftand on high A hifs from all the fnaky tire went round The dreadful fignal all the rocks rebound And through th' Achaian cities fend the found .Pof't 9. To let fly ; to caft or thoot 7o SEND w. n 1. To defpatch a meflage I have made bold to fend in to your wif My fuit is that fhe wili to Defdemon Procure me fome accefs Shakefpeare's Othello This fon ofa murderer hath fent to take awa my head Kings They could not attempt their perfeét reformation in churc and ftate, till thof vote were utterl abolithed ; therefore they fent the fame day agai to the king Clarendon 2. 70 fend for. 'To require by meflage t come, or caufe to be brought Go with me, fome few of you, and fee the place and then you may fend J for your fick, which brin on land He fent for me Bacon and, while I rais'd his head He threw his aged arms about my neck And, feeing that I wept, he prefs'd me clofe Dryder SE'NDER. 7. /. [from f2nd.] He that fends This was a merry mefiage ~-We hope to make the fender bluth at it SBakefp. Henry V Love that comes too late Like a remorfeful pardon flowly carried To the great fender turns a four offence. Shakefpe Beft with the beft, the fender, not the fent Mft' SENE'SCENCE. m [ [ fenefeo, Lat. Th ftate of growing old ; decay by time The earth and all things will continue in th ftate wherein they now are, without the leaft fenefcence or decay 3 without jarring, diforder, or in vafion of one another Woodwward SE'NESCHAL. #./. [ fene/fchal, Fr, of uncer tain original. 1. One who had in great houfes the car of feafts or domeftick ceremonies John earl of Huntingdon, under his feal of arms made Sir John Arundel, of Trerice, fenefchal of hi boufehold, as well in peace as in war Carew's Surwey of Cornwal Marfhall'd feaft Serv'd up in hall with fewers and fencfchals The {kill of artifice, or office, mean Miiton's Paradife Lof The fenefchal rebuk'd in hafte withdrew With equal hafte a menial train purfue Pote's Ody/Tey Delighted, and with frequent intercourfe Thither will fend his winged meflenger On errands of fupernal grace z. It afterwards came to fignify othew of fic s Milton SE'NGREEN. 2. /. [ fedum.] A plant . To grant as from a diftant place: as, i SE'NILE. adj. . fenilis, Lat.] Belongin God fend life to old age; confequent on old age 1 pray thee fend me good fpeed this day, and fhe kindnefs unto my mafter Gen. xxiv, 12 O fend out thy light and thy truth; let them Jea me Pfalms 6. To infli&, as from a diftance The Lord fhall fend upon thee curfing, vexation My green youth made me very unripe for a taf of that nature, whofe difficulty requires that i thoul be handled by a perfon in whom nat education, and time, have happily matched a fens maturity of judgment with youthful vigour o Boyle on Colours and rebuke, in all that thou fettet thine hand unto Deuto xxviii 7. To emit The nature of our feats, which will in time brea tors But firft, who The future eternity or Jempiternity of the worl fena 1 have not fent thefe prophets, yet they ran. Fer WEMPITE'RNITY. 2. [i [ fempiternitas Latin.] Future duration without end to fenators ; befittin adt ""Of fons and fathers, will it never end "'Did he, fince independent, ever die Belongin z. 'To commiflion by authority to go an Should we the long-depending fcale afcen Their government, and their great ferate chufe SENATO'RIAN. § #atorial, fenatorien, Fr. {ound : ;‘/.'f/ There they fhall foun {'MITONE. #%. [ [ femiton, French.] I mufick, one of the degrees of concinuou Yintervals of concords Bailey s confonan ( S/E - Lemt@ui'sTiLe SE to immit ; to produce The water fends forth plants that have no root fixed in the bottom, being almoft but leaves Bacon's' Natural Hiffory The fenfes fend in only the influxes of materia things, and the imagination and memory prefen Lat. 1. One olde tha account of longe periority another; one who time ha fom c {u How can you admit your feniors to the examination or allowing of them, not only being inferio in office and calling, but in gifts alfo > Zbirgifte 2. A |