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Show T A TLAL od thall take away his part out of the book o Rewe xx. 19 ¥ e'f‘he bill for zaking away the votes of bifhop syas calleda bill for taking away all tcmpt():x)al _]u;xfarendon fi%{:';y difperfed objeéts breed confufion, and tak 4uway from the picture that grave majefty whic ives beauty to the piece Dryden You fhould be hunted like a beaft of prey Dryden By your own law I take your life away The fun'ral pomp which to your kings you pay Dryd. An g5 all I want, and all you take away One-who gives another any thing, has not alLocke yays a right to take it away again " Not foes nor fortune zake this pow'r away Pope ‘And is my Abelard lefs kind than they To fet afide; to re 6. 7o TakE away move If we take away confcioufnefs of pleafur to kno ain, it will be har perfonal identity . folicitous for t plac Locke To l?e careful ; to b 67. To TakE care wherei an to fuperintend Thou fhalt not muzzle the ox that treadeth ou Doth God take care for oxen the corn 1 Cor. ix. 9 To be cautious 68. To TakE care be vigilant 69. To TakE courfe t 'To have recourfe t meafures They meant to fake a caurfe to deal with particulars by reconcilements, and cared not for an head Bacon " Theviolence of ftorming is the cour/e which Go is forced to take for the deftroying, but cannot withaut changing the courfe of nature, for th converting, of finners Hammond 70. 70 Take down duce; to {upprefs T cruth; to re Do you think he is now fo dangerous an enem as he is counted, or that it is fo hard to tate hi down as fome fuppofe " Spenfer on Ireland Take diwn their mettle, keep them lean and bare Dryden pragmatica Lacqueys were never {o faucy an as now, and he fhould be gla down to fee them take Addifon 71 To Taxe down by the mouth To fwallow; to tak We cannot take dozun the lives of living crea tures, which fome of the Paracelfians fay, if the could be taken dowwn, woul mak us immortal the next for fubtilty of "operation, to take bodie putrefied, fuch as may be eafily taken 72, Y;gtTAxnfi'om Bacon To derogate ; to de tract It takes not from you, that you were born wit principles of generofity5 but it adds to you tha you have cultivated nature 73 Lo Taxe from Dryden To deprive of Converfation ‘will add to thejr knowiedge, bu e too apt to take from their virtue Locke .Geriltle gods, take my breath from me Shakefp Twill fmite thee, and take thine head from t ee I Sam 7 To TAkE beed 'To be cautious; t eware Take beed of a mifchievous man. Ecclys xi. 33 Take beed left pafiio Sway thy judgment to _Childr h Milton n to ferve their parents' int'reft liv Take heed what doo e againft yourfelf you give 5. To TARE beed t0 N Dryden To attend thing fivecter tha t ta e beed ynto the comMandments of th Lord Ecclus. xxiiio.27 76 g'o Take in 7 To inclofe pon the fea-coaf are parcels of land that woul Payqt_\‘/ell for t e taking ine Mortimer's Hufbandry ZTAKE'i"' Toleflen ; to c a3, ke took in ;s Jails T 78. 7o Take in. To cheats to gull as, the cunning ones avere taken in. low yulgar phrafe 79 7o TAKE in hand 'To undertake Till there were a perf reformation would profper that they took in h nd 80 To Tak prehend in nothin Clarendon To comprife ; to com Thefe heads are fufficient for the explicatio o this whole matter; taking in fome additio al difcourfes, whic make the work more even Burnet's Theory of the Earth _This love of our country takes in our famil es friends, and acquaintance Addifon The difufe of the tucker has enlarged the nec of a fine woman half the body that at prefent it zakes in almof Addifon _ Of thefe matters no fatisfaory account ca b given by any mechanical hypothefis, witho t raking in the fuperintendence of the great Creator Derbam's Phyfico-Theology 81. 70 TAK A opinio in 'To admit brought into hi head b courfe becaufe he heard himfelf called a father, rathe than any kindnefs that he found in his own heart made him zake us in Sidney A great veflel full being drawn into bottles, an then the liquor put again into the veffel, will no fill the veflel again fo full as it was, but that it ma take in more Bacon Porter was taken in not only as a bed-chambe fervant, but as an ufeful infirument for his {kill i the Spanifh Wotton Let fortune empty her whole quiver on me I have a foul, that, like an ample fhield Can take in all; and verge enough for more Dryden The fight and touch zzke in from the fame obje€t different ideas Laocke There is the fame irregularity in my plantations : I zake in none that do not naturally rejoic in the foil Spectator 82..70 TakE iz To win by conquett He fent Afan-aga with the Janizaries, an pieces of great ordnance, to take in the other citie of Tunis Krolles Should a great beauty refolve to take me in wit the artillery of her eyes, it would be as vain as fo a thief to fet upon a new-robbed paffenger. Suck/ Ope places are eafily taken in, and town no ftrongly fortified make but a weak refiftance Felton on the Clafficks 83. 70 Taxe in 'To receive locally We went before, and failed unto Aflos, ther intending to rake in Paul Aéisy xxo 13 That which men take in by educatio is nex to that which is natural Tillotfon As no acid is in an animal body but muft b taken in by the mouth may get into the blood 84. 90 Taxe iz fo if it is not fubdued i Arbuthnoton Aliments To receive mentally Though a created underftanding can never tak in the fulnefs of the divine excellencies, yet f much as it can receive is of greater value than an other objeét Hale The idea of extenficn joins itfelf fo infeparabl with all vifible qualities, that it fuffers to 'fee n one without zaking in imprefiions of extenfion too Locke It is not in the power of the moft enlarged underftanding t fram one ne fimple ide i mind, not taken in by the ways aforementioned th Locke A man can never have taken in his full meafur of knowledge before he is hurried oft the ftage Let him take in the intru&ion Addifon you give him in a way fuited to his natural inclination #arts Some genius can take in a long train of propofitions Watts 85. o TAKE notice 86. 70 Take notice T'o obferve To thew by any a that obfervation is made Some Jaws reftrained the extravagant power o the nobility, the diminution whercof ‘they too very heavily, though at that time they fook littl Clarendon notice of it 'To {wear 87. 70 TAkE oath The king of Babylon is come to Jcrufalem, an hath taken of the king's feed, and of him taken a Ezckiel oath We take all oath of {ecrecy, for the concealing o thofe inventions which we think fit to keep If;crct aco 88 70 T'ake of to de 'Toinvalidate When it 1s immeftroy ; to remove diately followed by from, without a elt.he accufative, it may be confidere as elliptically fupprefling the accufative or as being neutral You muft forfake this room, and go with us Your power and your comman And Caffio rules in Cyprus is taken off Shakefpeare's Othells The cruel minifter Took off her life Shakefpeare If the heads of the tribes can be taken off, an the mifled multitude return to their obedience fuch an extent of mercy is honourable Bacon's Adwice to Villiers Sena lofeth its windinefs by decofting; an fubtile or windy fpirits are taken off by incenfio or evaporation Bacon To ftop fchifms, take of the principal author by winning and advancing them, rather than en rage them by violence Bacon What taketh off the objection is, that in judgin fcandal we are to look to the caufe whence i cometh Bifpop Sarderfor The promifes, the terrors, or the authority o the commander, muft be the: topick whence tha argument is drawn; and all force of thefe is zake off by this doctrine Hammond It will not be unwelcome to thefe worthies, wh endeavour the advancement of learning, as bein likely to' find a clear progreflion. when fo man untruths are taken off Brown This takes not off the force of our former evidence Stilling fleet If the mark, by hindering its exportation, make it lefs valuable, the melting-pot can eafily zake itoffLocke A man's underftanding failing him, would tak off that prefumption moft men have of themfelves Locke It fhews virtue in the fairet light, and zakes of from the deformity of vice Addiforn When we would take off from the reputation o an action, .we afcribe it to vain-glory Addifin This zakes off from the elegance of our tongue but exprefies our ideas in the readieft manner Addifon The juftices decreed, to take offa halfpenny i a quart from the price of ale. Swift's Mifcellanies Ho man live bav bee loft in ho blaod and how many likely to be raker off in cold Blount to Pope Fayourable names are put upon ill ideas, to zak off the odium Watts 89. 7o T'axEe of. Towithhold; to withdraw He perceiving that we were willing to fay fomewhat, in great courtefy to0k us off, and condefcended to afk us quefiions Bacon Your prefent diftemper is not fo troublefom as to fake you off from all fatisfaction Wake There is nothing more refty and ungovernabl than our thoughts they will not be direéted wha objedts to purfue, nor be taken ¢ff from thofe the have onc fixed on ; but run awa wit a ma i puifuit of thofe ideas they have in view, let him d what he ca Keep "foreign idcgs fro from its prefent purfuit Locke taking off our min Locke He has taken you off, by a peculiar inflance o his mercy, fiom the vanities and temptations o the world Wake Ty o 9o. T |