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Show Sk SI m f t o o n k m f t o O .~ condition That this new comer, fhame There/it not and reproach us Whe A fudden filence fate upon the fea ~ And fweeping oars with ftruggling urg'd their way Dryden He to the void advanc'd his pace Than let afij}cr-pla'\ntifi" lofe the caufe Pale horrour fa¢ on each Arcadian face As judges on the bench more gracious are Gried, one and all, the fuppliant thould have right And to t Dryden There grew two olives, clofeft of the grove With roots entwin'd, and branches interwove Alike their leaves, but not alike they fmil' one fertile, one was wild. Pope " fiter Thy fiffer in lazv is gone back unto her people Ruth, i, 1 1. The office or duty of a fifter Dan. Ciwil War i 2. A fet of fifters ‘3. A number of women of the fame order Your preferring that to all other confidera tions Upon the fifferbood, the votarifts of Saint Clare does, in the eyes of all men, fiz well upon you S}J{l,f‘('f A woman who flourifhes in her innocence, amidf that fpite and rancour which prevails among he "exafperated fifferbood, appears more amiable S157ErRLY. adj. [from fiffer. fiter; becoming a fifter Lik My fiflerly remorfe confutes mine honour Shakefpeare 90 S11. . ». preterite I Jat. [ firan, Gothick; yreean, Saxon; ferzen, Dutch. 1, To reft upon the buttocks As a farmer cannot hufband his ground fo well if he fir at a great rent; fo the merchant canno drive his trade fo well, if he fiz at great ufury Bacon up t Suppofe all the church-lands were throw the laity; woul 4 2:0To perch the tenants/ Swift than now 11. 'To be convened, as an aflembly of publick or authoritative kind ; to hold the laf feflion: as, the parliament fits general council{ate at Trent 13. To exercife authority What do T care if all the world me fail Bourd 3. To be in a flate of reft, or idlenefs Shall your brethren go to war, and fhall ye f here Num Whyfit.\ve here each other viewing idly ? Adilt Dow To be in any local pofition Tfhould be ii Pluc.kmg the grafs, to know where fits the wind Peering in maps for ports Thof Shak. Merch. of Venice AEP"mted t> fif there had left their charge, Milton The fhips are ready, and the wind fits fair 5. To reft as a weight or burthen A. Philips Ytz'.u' brother's death fits at your heart Wnen_c lets loof upe Shak us a ficknefs, if w €r to die, then the caldmity fizs heavy on ‘Tz!_}‘//)l‘ F tofs and fling, and to _be reftlefs, only g?.l.w‘ T fores, and makes the burden that is upon us fi OIS yoeafy A"Ijlem.' the laft of ills, remain'd behind Tillotfon 4n horrour heuvyj.}t on every mind Dryden i ur Whplc endeayours are intent to get rid of th ia ent evil, as the firt n ceffary condition to ou thinlk, ca paffionatel w a Nothing ppinels € ualthe uneafinefs =that frs fo£ heav upon us» Locke Affext, ye fair ones, who in Your ancient empire over love and w t Three hundre daily and twent They are glad, rather than it aut, to play ver fmall game, and to make ufe of arguments, fuc as will not prove a bare inexpedie Bifbop Sanderfon's Fudgment 20. To Sit #p. To rife from lying to fit ting He that was dead, fat up, and began to fpeak bed Be courtly And entertain, and feaft, fit up, and revel Call-all the great, the fair, and {pirited dame Of Rom about thee, and begin a faf Of freedom Some fit up late at wint Their fharp-edg'd tools Moft children fhorten that time by fiuting up Locke the company at night e Do S 1. To keep the feat upon Hardly the muie can fi# the head-ftrong horfe Nor would fhe, if fhe could, check his impetuous 2..[When the reciprocal pronoun followsT Jit, it feems to'be an aflive verb. place on a feat ‘What perils paf Would thut the book, andiz b 16. To S1T down Nor woul armed uninvited guefts 'To begina fiege the erem hav fate dowo befo till they had done their bufinefs in all othe C.L 17. 70 S fatisfied deawn T reft naoc to ceafe a and die for a chair, fa Bacon 3. To befettled to do bafinefs DMiltone Thi i rather neuter > court was fat before Sir Roger came ices miade room for the old knigh head of them bu th /14« SmE.snsfonl fitnss Lat.Ja 1. Situation ;. local pofition.The cit Thre Mani felf he ftréngly f Fairfax defence we le rivers, a ms o chains environed the fame fite and te nple Baci 't in its conftituent parts ar, but what is in an ‘‘‘‘‘ pofture of their fefor an funétion j) if on earth o tain unce t butimp {elf . n adv Pope 2. It'is taken by Thom/fon for pofture o fituation of a thing, with refpe to.it 7 When we fit down to our meal, we need not fu low yre my view appear'd a ftruéture fair as Luke; xvii S Thu But not -at reft-or eafe of mind They. fat them down to weep men fa¢ in counci 1 Mac Go and fit dowwn to meat e youth viewing his progrefs throug The happief fpect the intrufion o Prior force 15. 70 S1T down. Down is little more tha emphatical 'To watch; not to got 21. To Sit. #p Rozve aflembl any folem 14. To be i member Spenfer or employment men fo man to the golden Cherfonefe, or an Huns Goths 'To be without engage 19. 7o St out If w Perfian in Ecbatan fare Th Getes fat down h The judgment fhall fi#, and take awa minion Affes are ye that/i in judgment. F th Tanais befide Fro He came to vifit us, and, call bim down, and we fa eafier in their rent T S1T down, To fettle; to fix abode 18 5/5'.2}\‘1:[ Whether is greater, he that fizreth at meat, or h b uke, xxils 27 that ferveth L Now I am a frifker, all men on me look What fhould I do butfi# cock on the hoop 1 will ha\'? a garment reach to my tail 12. To be placed at the table All new fafhions be pleafant to me " 1 will have them whether I thrive or thee painter is to make every face that /izs to him handfome Garth l. "Their wives do fit befide them, carding wool May's Virgil Aloft, in awful ftate The godlike hero fa On his imperial throne Diyden One is under no more obligation to extol ever thing he finds in the author he tranflates, than 10. To be in any fituation or condition After much debatement And I did yield to him 9. To be placed in order to be painted Rogers fearch, and look higher for a fupport S T Addifon's Frecholder ocke inde o decoru unfitnefs o How troublefome it fate upon my head 2akBoefl¥p Sh quiet bette wit defcen thal i To the I fpeak Withing a more ftriét reftrain = 8. To be adjufted ; to be with refpeét t "l‘his new and gorgeous garment, majefty Shake/peare Sits not fo eafy on me as you think Heav'n know By what by-paths and indiret crook'd way 1 met this crown ; and I myfelf know well Her proper blood, and left to do the par Of fiflerbood, to do that of a wife Addifon corum She abhorr' upon it in the fame manner " hen, hath no more nourithment from the hen; bu only a quickening heat when fhe firteth Bacon's Natural Hiftory She miftakes a piece of chalk for an egg, an fi fitnef 7. /. [from fifer. MUk y'sTerHOOD fhall leave them in the midft of his days Fer. xvil. 11 The egg laid, and fevered from the body of th e return thou after thy fiffer in laww As the partridge fitteth on eggs, and hatchet them not, fo he that getteth riches not by right Dryden 7. To brood ; to incabate And more attent to brothers of the bar Withfifier-fruits Thetis blufh'd in purple not her own And from her face the breathing winds were blow The women, who would rather wreft the law Milton Shakefps Macbeth 6. To fettle; to abide He chid the fiffers And bade them fpeak to him Here we cannotfit down, but fill proceed in ou e e e---- ettt ---- e ----------------------retment e th t f e n ar i w g i t f th no e g 15 ii s m F body; what dothit profi n k m f t o l m 5 A f o is unde P ti [+ | Obfolete of the fith i "tha h's ow mof pre tombed fo I than Il love no friend, fizb love bre |