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Show SI he purer and pcrf?&er our religion is, the wor \thier effe@s it hath in them wh fedfaftl an 2. Strong ; firm ; vigorous Ourfelves well fnawed to onr defence Shakefpeare's King Fobn That you may, fair lady . Perceive I fpeak fincerely, the king's majeft ' Does purpofe honour to you. Shakefps Henry VIII ' Ip your whole reafoning, keep your mind fin SINEWSHRUNK efus Chrift has purchafed for us terms of recon ciliation, who will accept of fincerity inftead of perfedtion 3 but then this Jincer(]ity implies our hone Rogers U endeavours to do our utmo."r. y, Fréedom from hypocrify ¢ For thee fhe feels fincerity of woe an a boo confounded, from nerwus :~ of linen INE. #. /. [ firus, Latin. Bacon A right fze An Th A fineoure is a benefice withcut cure of fouls f{y/z*ru No fimony nor finecure were known Norwould the bee work honey for the drone. Garth I'NEW. 7./ [yenpe Datch. Saxon ; fencwen The torrent roar'd, an With lufty fincaws w ‘ Applied to whatever gives ftrength o Atompaine(s : as, money is the Aunew of war Wrought in her {o, that, feeing me 4 I NEW. @. a. [from the noun. A0It as by finews. Not in ufe ;s I8 AAIflc the lady. Bon All this fro Sinfully plack'd Th Of ufelefs wealth, and greatnefs unenjoy'd T0.SING fhe turn humbl 2 of yo [from fnful. To: celebrate; to' giv verie Who thou fhalt paint or I thall fug Addifon Incles, caddiffes, them over as th outh Alie Expeé to hear; fupernalgrace contendin With finfulnefs of men falm cXXXVile J 7 could we to his godhead fin 1allelujahs 7 a. [rengan, Saxon; fengS1NGE. v hen to burn flightl or {uperficially Zi They bour ti SING. @. n. preterite I fang, or fung participle pafl. fung. [yingan, Saxon Iflandick ; finghen, Dutch. Tolcorch Dutch. Peevithnefs, the general fault of fick p is equally to be avoided for the folly ?‘"d/‘?'f},,‘i 1. To form the voice to melody ; to arti culate mufically .to, i 3. To utter harmoniouily religious goodnefs [fingia praife The laft, the happieft Britith king nation from God; neglet or violatio of the duties of religion ; contrariety t I fing the day he could no he was fure. to wear TI Q & & 1k(peare's Richard 111 es himfel and contented ma S1'NFULNESS. #. J a All the prophets in their age the time DMiltos ffiah fing I fing the man who Judah's fceptre bor In that right hand which held th my remembrance brutifh wrat perhaps unfuccefsfully too Prior 1. To relate or mention in poetry innocently and eafily, while the ambitious man attempts to pleafe others fnfully and difficultly, an T of bone Dryden And rais'd from earth, and fav'd from paffion, fin Of human hope by crofs event deftroy'd South and not a wing Bid her exalt her melanchol Had fo much grace to put it in my for thy queen : ;EWFD. adj. [from finevy. ¥ s‘zmlfhed with finews. f Y008 finew'd was the youth, and bi 4. 'To tell in poetry SI'NFULLY. adv. [from finful.] Wickedly; not piouily; not according to th ordinance of God Dawies Shakefpeare's Henry V1 O'er his head the flying fpea Sung innocent, and fpent its force in air y Queen I am fen To thew thee what fhall come in future day To thee, and to thy offspring : good with ba alt thou fincw both thefe lands together Fly with falfe aim ; pierce the ftill moving air That fings with piercing; do not touch my lord Milton word for perturbation isis lili fe's' roo ,'hke a net, all o'er the body fpread You leaden meflengers feéts and irregularities, as fo many deviations fro right reafon, making paflion to be only anothe Through ey ry living part itfelf doth fhed dYfiflfi_vs, which extend from head to foot > Milton The foicks looked upon all paflions as finful de 1 Mufcle or nerve. The fee which i ing pow'rpow'r,, whi A man may hear this thower fing in( th Nature herfelf, though pure of firful though th B0 employ-the fineaus of his art; for in the "confifts the principal beauties of his worlk Dryden's Dufrefuoy [ fin and full. God; not holy; unfanc And fhews the way his finful foul to fave Who better can the way to heaven aread 'c_:.Such‘difcouraging of men in the ways of an ac ls In the principal figures czf a pié'turc,~ the painte 3. To make any fmall or fhrill noife Whofe ftaggering fteps thy fteady hand doth lead Hooker f""w{ of government; for it weakens and damp the fpirits of the obedient South Pope's Summer his knees no mor Pope's Odyffzy F And I thofe kifles he receives enjoy Thrice happy man, faid then the father grave Some other fnezvs there ave, from which tha overplus of frength in perfuafion doth arife "‘tl‘(e conformity to the church's rules, crack fair-complex z. Wicked ; not obfervant of religion It is ufed both o contrary to religion perfons and things Dryden forme L large From hallow'd ground th" unholy did buffet i recovers it ar peopl Drive out the finful pair Shakefpeare's Fulius Cafar feldo norther SI'NFUL. adj 1. Alien fro tified 24 The rooted fibres rofe, and from the woun JiiBlack bloody drops diftiil'd upon the ground Maute and amaz'd, my hair with terror ftood ,ifgar thronk my finews, and congeal'd my blood A finew cracke ~frength Shakefpeare He dropt his fineevy arms Perform'd their office « Atendon; the ligament by which th £ joints are moved # Join voices, all ye birds Milton That finging up to heaven's gate afcend human t And parrots, imita And finging birds, in filve cages Dryden's Owid by fome transforming p made wer Oh bow'r The captive bird that fzgs within th Then might my voice thy lift'ning ears employ Shakefp. Troilus and Creffida fword{men Bacon from flying Hales Origin of Mankind Fainting, as he reach'd the fhore S of incidence, the fire of the angle. of incidence o 'NECURE. 7. J. [ fine, without, an aura, care, Lat.] An office which has rewe it yenue without any employment forcible ftrong, fnewy, and courageous ioned the rays have to the plan Cheyne's Philofspbical Principles The time -of the finging of birds is come 11. 1 Cant You will fooner bind a bird from firging tha Worthy fellows, and like to prov Moft frew in heroick verfe divinel 2. To utter {wect founds ina for thy vigour To finewwy Ajax o every ray, confidered apart, fhall have to the fine o the angle of refrattion a conftant ratio Som Bull-bearing Milo his addition yield Harris Whatever inclination I Latin, whic vigorous nervous 2. Strong « one end of an arch perpendicularly upo s the diameter drawn from the other en 44 twice the arch Their airy limbs in fp Through every part Can tie thofe parts, and make me one of all. Donre *in geometry, is a right line drawn fro iof that arch ; or it is half the chor the prefence of the Lord ‘The Anewy thread my brain lets fal bot clean.sh data import.tsv out README written in fine parchment, and wrapped in /i dor Diffentious numbe pefl Our tradefmen finging in their {hops,. a Shak. Coriolanu About their funétions friendly her The morning ftars farg t Then fhall the trees of t fignifies a finew Pope's Odyffey a letter Shake[peare's Henry VIIE weep po King Lear finews which are under his belly Farrier's Di& g SIUNEWY. adj. [from finew. 1. Confifting of a finew; nervous. .Th nerves and finews are in poetry ofte 3wpon. #. /- [Lat.] Afold; awrapper There were foun adj. [ finew and forunk. h‘c has been over-ridden, and fo fatigued that he becomes gaunt-bellied by a ftiffnefs and contraftion of the tw ''Tn thy confort ceafe to fear a foe L Ever fprung, as fun and fhower There had made a lafting {pring A horfe is faid to be finew/brunkt whe \ grely intentin the purfuit of truth. Watts's Logick §INCE RENESS. }n./fi [ fencerizé, Fr. fro e e n J §INC "{. Honefty of intention ; purity of mind Orpheus with his lute made trees And the mountain tops that freeze Bow themfelves when he did fing To his mufick plants and flower He will the rather do it, when he fee Haooker finm'dj embrace 1 5S4 SI the do€tor e fing'd off wit brands o ting ftile of a foldier, woul ing8 of the king of Spain' Bacon Phagtony no Deucalion overwhelme They leave a finp With fench apd fmoke b the-inun |