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Show S Up he rode Follaw'd with acclamation and the foun Symphonious of ten thoufand harps, that tun' pathetick conveyances, may be as ufual to futur times as to us in a literary correfpondence Glanwille's Scepfis To you our author makes her foft requeit Wh fpeak the kindeft, and who write the beft Your jympathecick hearts fhe hopes to move From tender friendfhip and endearing love. Prior All the ideas of fenfible qualities are not inhe A learned fearcher from Pythagoras's fchool where it was a maxim that the images of all thing Symphyfis connaicency is meant o are diftin& an [ympathizes h i concerne SYMPO's1ACK. adj. [ fympofiaque, French cupwormiarde.] Relating to merry makings ; happening where company. i drinking together fo Leccke them Their countrymen were patticularly attentiv to all their fory, and [ympatbized with their heAddifon's Spectator roes in all their adventures Though the greatnefs of their mind exempt them from fear, yet none condole and [ynmipathiz Collier more heartily to fit 2. To agree By defiring a fecrefy to word rofz Not proper and yellow are two colours which fympathize . /. [ ympathie; Fr. ovp Fellowfeeling; mutual feafi . bility'; the quality of being affe¢ted b the affection of another Shakefpear¢'s Henr young no mor n ha the there' 1:.g 2. A fign; a token Ten glorious campaigns are pafied, and now like the fick man, we are expiring with all forts o goo fuch cafes to be had recourfe to, but to what wil remove the pain; for, when that ceafes, the feve will ceafe, without any dire&t means taken fo Milton's Paradife Loft There never was any heart truly great and gene and compaffionate . it is this noble quality that makes all men to be o one kind ; for every man would be a diftinct fpecies to himfelf, were there no [ympathy among inSouth's Sermon dividuals Can kindnefs to defert like your's be ftrange Kindnefs by fecret [ympathy is ty'd Dryden For noble fouls in nature are ally'd There are fuch affociations made in the minds o moft men; and to this might be attributed mof them antipathie occafion ence between the primary and fecondary caufes i difeafes; as a fever from pain is faid to be [ymptomatical, becaufe it arifes from pain only; an therefore the ordinary means in fevers are not i Milton an o Symptomatical is often ufed to denote the differ Pow'rful at greateft diftance to unite With fecret amity, things of Jike kind f[ympathie concurrentl Happenin ally Or [ympathy, or fome connat'ral force of th Fr. from fymptom. SyMPTOMA TICK Of ugly ferpents: horror on them fell rous, that was not alfo tende ‘S'w'.‘/: 'f)vn;/)/wx.r SyMmpToMA TICAL. } adj.[ [ymptomatique 'They faw, but other fight inftead, a crow By fecreteft conveyance neceffary or conitan "The [ymptoms, as Dr. Sydenham remarks, whic are commonly fcorbutici, are often nothing bu the principles or feeds of a growing, but uniip Blackmore gout Milton's Paradife Loft And horrid [ympathy th nor a caufe to fack, and fo do 1; would you defire better [ympaShakefpeare's Merry. Wives of Windjor thy But what it 1s The a&ion of my life is like it, which I"ll keep Shake[peare's Cymbeline If but for [ympathy I frarted back It ftarted back: but, pleas'd, I foon return'd Pleas'd it return'd as foon, with anfwering look Of [ympathy and love French 1. Something that happens concurrentl with fomething elfe, not as the origina V1 lov more [ympathy : yo obfervabl i Locke Quincy that fomentation and a cataplafm the fwellin was difcufled ; and the fever, then appearing bu B Jymptomatical, leflene as the heat an SYMPTOMA'TICALLY tomatical. Th caufe miti Wifornan's Surgery -bat.ul pai [ymp[fro adv In the nature of a {ymptom o bub ar viciou -humour abounding in the blood, or in the nerves, excrete fometimes critically, fometimes [ymptomatically Wile man [ from fmphony.]|S¥Naco'crcar. adj. [from fnagogue. Dorta fynagog t e Pertainin Harmonious; agreeing in found Sympuo'NioUs adj tratio 7 fi' [ovwaraidn], " A Con: or excifian of a {yllable in La tin \‘/erfe, by joining together two vowel in the {canning, .O_I,‘ cutting off the end ing vowel ; as, 2/ ego Virgil, though fmooth, 1s far from. affecing jg he frequently ufes fynalephas, and concludes hi Dryden fenfe in the middle of his verfe . S & an [o / 7 SyNarRTHRO'S1 Ti ~ A clofe conjunétion of two bones. ; Th.cre .is a (tonfi?.iumus fnotio;l where the cofr. junétion is called .diarthrofis, as in the elbow;'a obfcure one, where the conjunétion is caflcd[yna,- throfisy as in the joining of the carpus to the meta W feman's Surger_y carpus SyncHONDROSIS 7./ [sovand yiide6. Synchondrefis is-an union by griftles of the fierWifeman non to the ribs SYNCHRO NICAL. adj. [7iv and yz60- Happening together at the {fame time 1t is difficuit to make out how the air is conveyed into the left ventricle of the heart, the fyftol and diaftole of the heart and lungs being far fro Boyle [Jynchranical SY'NCHRONISM 7 / [oo an ixetiGu Concurrence of events happening at th compotation [ fympiome afl'embly of the Jewg t G SYNALEPH {fame time The coherence and fyzchronifm of all the part of the Mofaical chronology, after the Flood, bea a moft regular teftimony to the truth of ‘his hifHale tory Sy'NcHRONOUS. adj. [otv and yeh&- Happening at the fame time The variations of the gravity of the air kee both the folids and fluids in an ofcillatory motion [pncbronous and proportional to their changes clurlopa. are merry, fo am I' then, there's fympathy : yo ha a an effect 1f [ympatby of love unite our thoughts ar #. / SY'MPTOM A world of earthly bleflings to my foul Yo in fociet mea onl Arbuthnot Dryden's Dufrefnoy w4due. w fpoke under th from the ancient cultom of [ympofiack meetings t wear chaplets of rofes about their heads Brown's Vulgar Erveurs In fome of thofe fympofiack difputations amongi my acquaintance, I affirmed that the dietetick par of medicine depended upon fcientifick principles Green is a pleafing colour, from a blue and yellow mixed together, and by confequence blu SY'MPATHY Wifeman lidate into one bone T on the fabbath marching troops through Athens take thei way' The great earl marfhal orders their array. Dryden Nature, in awe to him Hath doff'd her gaudy trim himfelf Th in its original fignification, denotes or growing together; and perhap thofe bones which in young childre but after fome years unite and confo A [[yfldgogufi.l! / Go, Tubaly and meet me at Our-[yn[zgggue' bake[pe As his' cuftom was, he went into the j' [yragogu comelief Sy'MpHYSIS. 7. /. [oov and @lw. worfhip And warlike fymphony is heard around Shakefpeare With her great mafter fo to [ympathize. Milton The limbs of his body is to every one a part o th determine proportion between breadths and heights, reducing fymmetry to [ymphony, and the harmony o Wotton found to a kind of harmony in fight Speak, ye who beft can tell, ye fons of light Angels! for ye behold, him, and with fong And choral [ymphonies, day without night Miltor's Pars Loft Circle his throne rejoicing The trumpets found to fee The men [ympatkize with the maftiffs in roShakefpeare buftious and rough coming on The thing of courage As rouz'd with rage, with rage doth [ympathize latent in numbers ar T» SY'MPATHIZE. w.. 2. | fympatifer, Fr fromlympqtuy. 1. To feel with another; to feel in confe feels a'Jm'y(tJ'yn. harmony of mingled founds With fympathy ; in confepathetick. quence of fympathy anothe c e F c n b m f / n Y O P ' S Concert of inftruments o0y and @y [from fym adv SYMPATHE TICALLY SYNAGOGUE Milton Angelick harmonies ec ef th ar bu ie bo at ni in th i re of their motion upon our nerves, and Jympattetica and vital paffions produced within ourlelves Bentley quence of wha mutually S YiN 5Y Arbuthnot on Air Sy'~cork n. /. [ fincope, Fr. ovyromn 1. Fainting fit Th fymptom attendin gunihot wounds ar W ifeman pain, fever, delirium, and fyncope Contrattion of a word by cutting off part in the middle Co e. co fy r [ /7 s Sy'ncop tractor of words 2 tho an fs api [yr er mo th al n fh ou T t en in s de re li En m te roughly co publith a Speétator that fhall not have a fingl Speflato( vowel in it To SY'NDICATE w. zn. [ [fyndiguers Fr. o To judge ; to pals judgmen and dun, on ; to cenfure An unufual word. No T in ufe h a i n f a u n c t o r d Ariftotle u m h r f b r k m wl al a mafter idente Hakevill on Pro 7. /o [ ousdeopn. | Sy'NprOME rent a&tion ; concurrence Concu r t i u a b e t g t e n l All things bein n o o t m l n f e e rupted chain of caufe uir e e p o m r n f c f o a dependanc Glanville's Scepfis F k o c n / / SYNE'CDOCHE. # which part 1 motorse A figure b cuvindonn. take fo o w th o for the whole part 1 " a e t Becau e t b a d G hand o i ] l l t a i r w o w t our hearts; therefor c I I d e t i a t to them by a»[yn:ca'ocbc . e i d o G manner the work for whi e i u m C h r W Taylor' SyNECDO |