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Show SO 3 O To Soar. v. n. [ forare, Italian. 1. To fly aloft; to tower; to mount; pro mad : there was not a fober perfon to be had; al Dryden was tempeftuous and bluftering No fober man would put himfelf into danger, for the applaufe of efcaping without breaking his neck Dryden perly to fly without any vifible a&tion o the wings. Milton ufes it aétively >Tis but a bafe ignoble min That mounts no higher than a bird can foar. Shak Feather'd foon and fledg'd They fumm'd their pens, and foaring th' air fublime Milton With clang defpis'd the ground Shakefpeare make him laugh Cieca travelled all over Peru, and is a grave an Young men likewife exhort to be fober minded Tit. ii. 6 The governour of Scotland being of great cou 3. To rife high Who afpires muft down as lo Milton As high he foar'd Flames rife and fink by fits; at laft they foa In one bright blaze, and then defcend no more Dryden When fwallows fleet foar high, and fport in air Gay Towerin the verb. Within foa Of tow'ring eagles, to all the fowls he feem Milton A phenix 70 Sos. w. 7. [yeob, complaining, Saxon Perhaps it is a mere onomatgpeia copie from the found.] To heave audibly wit convulfive forrow ; to figh with convulfion ever fo fober, and your fearches direéted in the fea o 5 Break, heart, or choak with obs my hated breath Do thy own work, admit no foreign death. Dryd There oft are heard the notes of infant woe A wond'rous bag with both her hands fhe binds make {ober A little learning is-a dangerous thing Drink deep, or tafte not the Pierian {pring 9o Sos. v. To{oak A cant word The tree being fobbed and wet, fweils. Mortimer So"BER. adj. [ fdbrius, Lat. fobre, Fr. 1. Temperate, particularly inliquors; no drunken Live a fober, righteous, and godly life. Com. Pr 7 he vines give win to the fober man No fober temperat he may be guilty of upon the drunkennef to the drunkar 2. Not overpowered by drink la ther is amon th Grecians whereo 1. Without intemperance 2. Without madnefs 3. Temperately; moderately as if he had done th Hooker 3. Not mad; right in the underftanding Another who had a great geniu for tragedy follewing the fury of his natural temper, mad there. was no need‘that.;h;n bgoic?h'z:‘[:n brae Suther the ]e.a.fn'mg of' arfit, owth unfitn ;n ignorant, minifter 5 more than: thye he eh W fcribeth the manner how to pitch fl‘fic;:l ch de fpeak of moderation and fibriet in dier, 'g;?: 4. Freedom:from inordinate pafiion The libertine could no preyai and fobriety to give up, theisreligi;:)nr: mnom ¢, Calmnefs coolnefs; Enquire,, wit all. fériet an fevr there be'in the footfi{ps ofy natur:e:;;uf):,'c}‘,vh-cw miflion of immateriate virtues, and what th;?lr of imaginationsis.Bm Bacon his militia of natives be valiant foldiers 4. Coolly calmly Whenever children are chaftifed, let it be don without paflion, and foberly, laying on the blow Locke flowly So'BERNESS. #. /. [from jober. 1. Temperance in drink freedo fro enthufiafm coolnefs A perfon noted for his fobernefs and fkill in fpagyrical preparations, made Helmont's experimen Boyle {ucceed very well Lhe fobernefs of Virgi difference SoBrRIETY migh hav fhewn th Dryden 2 /[. [from fobrieté, French Temperance in drink ; {obernefs is more uncharitabl to the foul and in feripture is more declaimed againft, tha gluttony; and fobriety hath obtained to fignify temperancein drinking 2. Prefent freedo ftrong liquor fro hufbandly fervices to. be performedto i the lord of the fee s all fervices duefor land being knight's fervice,. or fcage fo that whetever is not knight's fervice is foccage:. This. foccage is of three kinds a. foccage of free tenure, where a man holdeth by free fervice of twelve pence a-year for all manner of fervices, cage of ancient tenure is of land of anorigin wri n wher demefne cien {hall be fued, but the writ Jecundum w Soccage of bafe te Juetudinem manerii. m i hol tha thof wher i nur monfiate- th bu wri othe non hav cer- b no hol fockme fuc an runt G i m he o al a e l h n a n The l sr te a m b b f i c in e l not h Bati SO'CIABLE. adj. [ ficiables Fr. b Latin. ‘fa_)f/w' the powe o b t F 1 fi ] l ; ; t a e t t Another law touch a l w u l, parts united into on : ' o s . h o t u r f them each t W r f b o w prefer the good of th 2. Reaady to u;ni d JoeJociablesto mab e particular To make man mild a To > culti; vate the ewild With wifdom, difcipl familiar 3. Friendly Wit Them th pit heav'n's hig INID a t i i f Ralplmgl,ythc jba'izzl‘ ny Comfgliz_llm)d' 4. Inclined t ot filence"'_"""l%? W i t a o l f c m e d In chi W"‘"" ti h r f b r b nor any thin e a e o .in that fociable and exl needs b Jobrius, Latin. Drunkennef m [ [Joc, Fr. a ploughihare Jfoccagiuns; barbarous Latin.] In law, i ow Kecep my body in temperance, fobernzfs, and chafCommon Prayer tity 2. Calmnefs So'ccaGE e t e a c f r [ / 7 So'cCAG by foccage Let any prince think foberly of his forces, excep 1 Pittacps is author; thathe which being overcom with drink did chen ftrike any man, fhould fuffer punifhment double as muc fame being fober o Joccage, or by knight's fervice SOo'BERLY. adv. [from fober. as well a South's Sermons Pope And drinking largely fobers us again Taylor's Worthy Communicant perfon, whatfoever other fin can look with complacenc and fottithnefs of his neigh ‘bour of tain fervice There fhallow draughts intoxicate the brain There fhe colleéts the force of female lungs Sighs, fobs, and paflions, and the war of tongues Pope Pope 76 So"BER. . 4. [from the adjeétive.] T "The fhort thick (65, loud fcream, and fhriller fquall Pape Twilight gre Milton fober liv'ry all things: clad parts gay Brance from fober Spain ? rifing rocky chain baby Harte figh.; a convulfive act >f refpiration obfiruted by forrow Shake[p See her fober < ver a fampler, or gay over a jointe A convulfiv the vesb. the for a tenure of lands for certain inferiouro A littl Of men born fouth or north o' th' hill Thofe feldom move, thefe ne'er- ftand fill. Prior For Swift and him defpis'd the farce of ftate Pope The fsher follies of the wife and great 1 fobb'd5 and with faint eye 7. /. [fro Serious Had in he Wha their defire, they will, by their clamour and fobbing Locke on Education maintain their title to it 8os grave folemn Come, civil nightsThou fober-fuited matron, all'in blacke She rent her garments Look'd upwards to the Ruler of the fkies God Shall offer me, difguis'd in fober robes Shake[peare To old Baptifta as a fchoolmafter Some tears fhe fhed, with fighs and Jobbings mixt As if her hopes were dead through his delaying Fairfax She figh'd, the fobb'd, and furious with defpai Whe Waterland Petruchi When thy warlike father, like a child Told the fad ftory of my father's death He twenty times made paufe to fob and weep Shakefpeare As if her life and death lay on his faying and fhe tore her hair Dryden children have not the power to obtai In fetting dow Sobriety in our tiper: yeass is: the effet a?, rage, and fuber judgment, amply performed his duty well concoéted warmth; but where the prinfi l both before the battle and in the field. Hayzward are only phlegm,-what can be expected byt an!;: Thefe confufions difpofed men of any fcher unClarendon fipid marhood, and old infancy D Jen derftanding to wifh for peace If fometimes Ovid appears too gay, fl',,,gis Among them fome fober men confefled, that a fecret gracefulnefs of youth which accompanies hi his majefty's affairs then ftood, he could not gran Clarendon writings, though-the ftayednefs and Jbriety Of:ag it be wanting. To thefe that fober race of men, whofe live D'jflm Religious titled them the fons of God 6. Serioufnefs;: gravity. Sha'l yield up all their virtue, all their fam A report without truth; and, I had'almoft fi Ignobly to the trains and to the fmiles without any fobriety or modefty Wa!trllud:" Milton Of thefe fair atheifts Mirth makes them not mad Be your defigns ever f good,. your intention Nor [obricty fad Derbam A(Idl'/},fl Soar. # /. [fro slight Abbot's Defcription of the Werld Jfober writer Shake/p He told us that the welkin would be clear inordinat free fro 'I'his fame young fober blooded boy a man canno Valour foars abov What the world calls misfortune and affliions calm 4. Regular affion 2. To mount intelleGtually ; to tower wit the mind How high a pitch his refolution foars 3. General temperance. in his plays ftark ragin every man and woma So'C 1. Incliinnatti f{ien 1 c u w ofane Suchch a To Tfhoeciabtlweon main p1OPe rties tion, a nvcrfca |