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Show TA T A No temptation hath faken you, but fuch as i 1.CoryXe 13 1MON to man 1 th fro® and rain have faken them, the Ten:ple. grow dangerous rft they warm, then fcorch, and then the take it !"Jng necks from fide to fide they feed \ arown {trong their mother fire forlake, Dryden lony of flames fucceed No beaft will eat four grafs till the 'froft'hat Mort en In burning of fubble, take care to plow th tak no ma fir th th ld fi th n ro u la the- hedges. 33 Mortimer. Not to refufe; to accept Take no fatisfation for the life of a murderer Num. Xxxv. 31 he fhall be furely put to death Thou tak'ff thy mother's word too far, faid he Dryden And haft uiurp'd thy boafted pedigree He that thould demand of him how begetring child gives the father abfolute power over him, wil find him anfwer nothing : we are to zake his wor Locke for this Who will not receive clipped money whilft h fees the great receipt of the exchequer admits it and the bank and goldfmiths will sake it of him Locke 34. To adopt I will zake you to me for a people, and T will b Exodus, Vie 7 to you a God 35.- To change with refpect to place When he departed, he tock out two pence, an Lukey %o 35 gave them to the hoft He put his hand into his bofom; and whe Exodus, iv. 6 he to0k it cut, it was leprous If you flit the artery, thruft a pipe into it, an caft a frait ligature upon that part containing th ; pipe, the artery will not beat below the ligature yet do but zake it off, and it willbeat immediately Ray Lovers flung themfelves from the top of the precipic into th taken up : alive fea, wher 36. To {eparate multitude they wer how great foever fomectime Addifen bring not man any nearer to the end of the inexhanftibl frock of number, where ftill there remains as muc Locke to be added as if none were taken out The living fabrick now in pieces take Of every part due obfervation make All which fuch art difcovers Blackmore 37. To admit Let not a widow be zzken into the number unde 1 Tinm. V. 9 threefcore "Fhough fo much of heaven appears in mymake Saift "Tke fouleft imprefiions I eafily rake 38. To purfue ; to go in He alon To find where Adam fhelter'd ook his way To the port fhe takes her way And fiznds upen the margin of the fea Milt Dryden Where injur'd Nifus zakes bis airy courfe. Dryd Cive me leave to feize my deftin'd prey Dryden And let eternal juftice zake the way It was her fortune once to take her wa Along the fandy margin of the fea Dryden 39. To receive any temper or difpofitio of mind Mic. ii. 6 They fhall not zake fhame Thou hatt fcourged me, and haft taken pity o Tobit me They take'delight in approaching to God Haiak; Wiii. 2 Bar. iv. 30 Take a good heart, O Jerufalem Men diein defire of fome things which they ak Bacon 10 heart Few are fo wicked as to take deligh Dryd:n In crimes unprofitable Children, kept out of ill company, zake a prid ehave themfelves prettily, perceiving themielve efteemed 40. To endure ; to bear Locke 1 can be as quiet as any body with thofe that ar gquarrelfome an are real things, and we fee in God ¢ in tabing ¢h as nnoghe be as troublefom when I meet with thofe that will rake it Won't you then take a jeft along with me, to make it prove any thin fo hi purpofe, the argument muft fand thus 'Locke Young gentlemen ought ‘not only to tafe abn L' Efir Spectator He met with fuch a reception as thofe only de- ferve who are content to take it Savift''s Mifcell. 41 To draw with them a clear idea of the antiquities on medal and figures, but likewife to exercife their arithm to derive tick in reducing the fums of money to thofe o; is the mof The firm belief of a future judgmen forcible motive to a good life, becaufe tzken fro this confideration of the moft lafting happinefs an their own country 5o, Toreceive payments do what fhe v&:]l), take all, pay all 42. To leap ; to jump over That hand which had the ftrength, ev'n at you The knight coming to the taylor's to take mea fure of his gown, perceiveth the like gown clot lying there Camden With a two foot rule in his hand meafuring m walls, he fook the dimenfions of the room To cudgel you, and make you take the hatch Shakefpeares Fit you to the cuftom And take t' y¢, as your predeceffors have Your honour with your form. .S:bakzj'p. Coriolanus I take liberty to fay, that thefe propofitions-are f far from having an univerfal affent, that to a grea part of mankind they are not known Locke Take not any term, howfoever authorized by th language of the fchools, to ftand for any. thing til Locke you have an idea of it Chemifts take, in‘our prefent controverfy, fomething for granted, which they ought to prove Boyle Dryden I took your weak excufes Honeycomb, on the verge of threefcore, ook m afide, and afke Took you into my bofom 46. 'To carry out for ufe of it Dryden Swift 48. To feparate for one's felf from an quantity ; to remove for one's felf fro any place 1 will zake of them for priefts. Ifaiab, Ixvi. 21 Hath God aflayed to rake a nation from th midft of another Deute ive 34 1 might have taken her to me to wife Gena xiie 19 Enoch walked with God, and he was not, fo Gene Vo, 2 God took him Four heifers from his female ftore he tocks Dry The difcourfe here is about ideas, which he fay taken with a fit of generofity, and divided them in Arbuthnot Had thofe who would perfuad are innate principles, ot zzken them together i grofs, but confidered feparately the parts, the would not have been fo forward to believe the were innate Lcke 55. To have recourfe to A fparrow ook a bufh juft as an eagle made L'Effrarge ftoop at an hare The cat prefently zakes a tree, and fees the poo . L'Eftrange fox torn to pieces 56. To produce ; or fuffer to be produced No purpofe the goo whatfoever which are meant fo of tha lan Spenfers 1 57. To catch in the mind Thefe do be® who zake material hints to be Lockee. ™ judged by hiZory To hire ; to rent 58 If three ladies like a lucklefs play Pope Tate the whole houfe upon the poet's day 59 will profper, or feke good- effect To engage in ; to be altive in Queftion your royal thoughts, make the cafe yours Be now the father, and propofe a fon Behold yourfelf fo by a fon difdain'd And then imagine me zaking your part S And in your pow'r fofilencing your fon Shakefpeare's Hery 60 To incur to receive as it happens In ftreams, my boy, and rivers zake thy chance £ds There fwims, faid he, thy whole inheritance Now take your turn; and, as a brother fhou'd, S Attend your brother to the Stygian floods" Dryden's L neid 61. To admit in copulation Five hundred affes yearly 700k the horfe L‘ y n S force an {pee greate o Producing mule preaching are, to tell the people whatis their duty and then to convince them that it is fo Atterbury us that ther So foft his trefles, fill'd with trickling pearl Youd doubt his fex, and zake him for a girl. Zate Time is taken for o much of infinite duratio as is mcafured out by the great bodies of the uniLocke verfe They who would advance in knowledge fhoul lay down this as a fundamental rule, not to fak Locke words for things Few will zake a propofition which amounts to n more than this, that God is pleafed with the doin of what he himfelf commands, for an innate mora Locke principle, fince it teaches (o litdle Some tories will zake you for a whig, fome whig Pope will zake you for a tory As I take it, the two principal branches o Tiberius, noted for his niggardly temper, onl gave his attendants their dict'; but once he wa We always take the account of a future flate in- to,our fchemes about the concerns of this world The fpirits thatarein all tangible bodies are fearc caufe he was deceived; and fo tesk that for virtu and affeétion which was nothing but vice in a difSouth guife Depraved appetites caufe us often to take that fo true imitation of nature which hasno refemblanc a tranfitory impulfe 54. T'o comprife ; to comprehend Shakefp known': fometimes they take them for vacuum whereas they are the moft active of bodies Bacon's Natural Hiffory He zook himfelf to have deferved as much as an man, in contributing more, and appearing foone in.their firfk approach towards rebellion. Clarend Is 2 man unfortunate in marriage? Still it is be feize wit Spetato to three claffes He commanded them that they fhould zake nothing for their journey fave a ftaff. Mark, vi. 8 This T take i Is the main motive of our preparations T whether I would advife hi to affeét fo as not to laft Dryden 47. To fuppofe ; to receive in thought to entertain in opinion me to marry 45. To receive with fondnefs I loy'd you ftill, an Swiff 52. To withdraw 53 44. To allow; to admit Sbalzefpcare s1. To obtain by menfuration door . Not to leave ; not to omit Arbuthnot oy Coins Never a wife leads a better life than fhe does Tillotfon mifery 43. To aflume P 62. To catch eagerly Drances zook the word 5 who grudgjdy lo The rifing glories of the Daunian prince 63. ‘To ufe as an oath or aexpreflion me of th Tho fhalt not ak vai the Drjdmo Lox:d Exids a 64. ng fince ° fl e t t a They that come ab . i l ken wi th ficknefs commonly z 1 am taken o my head i t he fudden with a {wimm?ifnygd'- 65. away from the boo If any tak o |