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Show T A To {wallow 90, To Taxe off Were the pleaiure of drinking accompanied, th ! Th Over-much anxiety in worldly things takes u the mind, hardly admitting & fo much as a though Dugpa of heaven my efteem z k aflc or hope for more If from my hedrt Diyden grieve the place is taken up before -will take off; above the value of one hundred thou Lecke to Dunftable to take off yearly fo many ton of ftraw hats Sawift's Mifcellanies 'To copy g2. 7o Take of Th s one knows that mines alone furnith thefe hal; countries ftored with mines are poor the digging and refining of thefe metals taking u the labour, and wafting the number of the people Locke We were fo confident of fuccefs, that moft o my feilow-foldiers were taken up with the fam To find place for 93. 7o T'axe of of nobility brings a ftat multiplyin t neceflity; and, in like manner, when more ar bred fcholars than prefermenta can take off Bacon's Effays off unti Mofes went in, he ook the vei Whe Addifon imaginations The fellowing letter is from an artift, now take 'To remove gd. Zo TaxEe off Addifon up with this invention There is fo much: time faker up in the ceremony, that before they enter on their fubjeét th Addifon on Medals dialogue is half ended The affairs of religion and war took up Conftantine fo much that he had not time to think o Arbutbnot trade When the compafs of twelve books is taken u in thefe, the reader will wonder by what method our author could prevent being tedious Pope's Efjay on Homer Exod. xxXiVe 3 he came out If any would reign and take up all the time let him zake them off; and bring others on. Bacon 95. To TakE order with t To check take courfe with Though he would have turned his teeth upo Spain, yet he was taken order with before it cam Bacon to that 96. 7o TaxE out. To remove from withi any place Griefs are green And all thy friends which tho friend mul mak 105. o Take up. To have final recourf th to Arnobius afferts, that me Have but their ftings and teeth newly 22'en oxt an Shakefpeare *'To fhare 57. To Taxe part Take part in rejoicing for th Turks vi€tory over th Pope 08. 7o TAKE place. "To prevail; to hav effelt Where arms take place, 2]l other pleas are vain Love taught me force, and force fhall love tain YactH The debt a man owes his father rakes p/;un', an gives the father a right to inherit 49. 7a TaxEe up Locke To borrow upon credi or intereft The fmooth pates now wear nothing but hig fhees ; and if a man is through with them in honeft taking up, they ftan upon fecurity. - Shakefp We take up corn for them, that we may eat an five Nebem She to the merchant goes Rich cryftals of the rock fhe takes up there Huge agat vafes, and old china ware. Dryd. Fav I have anticipated already, and taken up fro Dryden's Fables Boccace before I come to him Men fo up th wan of due payment are forced t neceflaries of life at almof velue doubl Savift 1o0o. To be ready for; to engage with His divifions are, one power againft the French And cne againft Glendower; perforce, a thir Shakefpeare's Henry 1V Mu#t take np us 10z o Take up 'To begin They fhall rake up a lamentation for me Exzek, xxv 1 Princes friendthip, which they take up upon th accounts of judgment and merit lay lm..;n out of humour they moft time South 103. Y0 Take up. To faften with a'ligature paffed under A term of chi rurgery rhetoricians learning part of the finef phyficians lawyers defpifing the fentiments they had once been fon of, task up their reft in the Chriftian religion Addifon on the Chriffian Religior: 106. 70 Tak to arreft up To feize to catch Though the fheriff have this authorit to fak up all fuch ftragglers, and imprifon them, yet fhal he not work that terror in their hearts that a mar thal ‘will, whom they know to have power of lif Spenfer and death I was taken up for laying them down Shake/p You have taken up Under the counterfeited zeal of God Shakefpeare The fubjeéts of his fubftitute 107. 7o Take up 'To'admit The ancients took up experiments upon credit and did build great mattert upon them Bacon's Netural Hiffory 108. 70 TakE up. 'To anfwer by reproving; to reprimand One of hi relation ftooping fo muc feflion belo 109. 7o Take #p former left off tov th hi u roundly fo dignity of his proL'Eftrange To begin where th the hiftory has laid it down Dryden's Don Sebaft Soon as the evening fhades prevail Repeats the ftory of her birth 70 Tax up Addifon's SpeZ 'To lift chambers whicfi'dpéne wards the fcaffold were taker up Al viciou confequent enormou wher th Committees Where 's the cowlftaff Shake[peare The leaft things are taken up by the thumb an forefinger: when we would take up a greater quantity, we would ufe the thumb and all the fingers Milo took up a calf daily on his fhoulders practice ar other hat mon-counci for th regularly 7aken up'th Hammond convenienc of the com. who took up the Guildhall, fat i Clarendon Grocer's Hall Whe to ‘Haoyavard lodging my concernment fakes 4 no more roo than myfelf then, fo lon as T know where t breathe, I know alfo where to be happy Soml;. Thefe things being compared, notwithftandi the room that mountains take up on the dry land there would be at leaft eight oceans required Burnet's Tbeory When thefe water were annihilated fo' much other matter muft be created to fake up their places Burnet with wars, ‘that fe Princes were fo faken u could write or read befides thofe of the long robes Lemple The buildings about fook #p the whole fpace. . 112. 7o Taxke up place of another Arbuthnet 'To manage in t I have his horfe to take up the quarrel, Shakef Th greatef ‘empires hav ha their rife from the pretence of taking up quarrels, or Keeping th L Eftrange, peace 'To comprife 113. 70 Take up I prefer in our.countryman the noble poem o Palemon and Arcite, which is perhaps not muc inferior to the Ilias, only it takes up feven years Dryder's Fables To adopt 70 Taxs zp 114 God's decree to affume .of falvation and dammation hav been taken up by fome of the Romifb and reforme churches, affixing, them to men's, particular enti- Hammond. ties, abfolutely confidered The command in war is given to the ftrongef or to the braveft; and in peace, taken uprand ex Temple ercifed by the boldeft Affurance is properly that confidence which' man takes up of the pardon of his fins, upon fuc South grounds as the fcripture lays down The French and we fill change; but here's th curfe They change for better, and we change for worfe They'take up our old trade of conquering And we are taking theirs, to dance and fing Drydes He that will obferve the conclufions men fak up, muft be fatisfied they are not all rational. Locke vch of Rome, was comCelibacy, in th monl forced, and taker up under a bold vow Atterburys Lewis Baboon had taken up the trade of clothier without ferving his t Lnot's Hiftory of Fobn Bull Every man take up thofe interefts in which hi _ Pope humour engages hi If thofe proceedings werg obferved, morality a.:x fathionable court vir religion would foon becom be-taken up as th tues, an only methods to ge b‘zu.{f! or keep employments Take up no more than you by worth: may claim Left foon you prove a bankrupt in your fame 115. 70 TAK Young To colle@ # 5 to exak a tax dre chi ut tri th u tak a fu b en pa tia Kuolles's Hiflory ¢ r.be Turks 116. o Tax Take up thefe cloaths here quickly Ray an at laft arrived at firmnefs to bear the bull. = #atts 111. 7o 'T'ake up th _ nt_ 'co poo i bo wa fa ba gre Thi i.Ch hi fr e ta ho il 'c hi i village, an The moon takes up the wond'rous tale And nightly to the lift'ning eart 110 the place, tha The plot is purely fiétion ; for I rake it up wher 101. 70 Take up. Toapply tothe ufe of We took up arms, not te-revenge ourfelves Addifon But free the commonwealth Locke is a man, takes up his whole time Addifon Take off all their models in wood inclined me, for a work whic would ‘have taker up my life in the performance Dryden's Fuveral To underftand fully his particular calling in th commonwealth, and religion, which is his calling obliging u an m have left the ftage, to whic t intende genius never muc There is a proje& on foot for tranfporting ou ftra To engrofs; to en up o in plenty, the labourer will have at hi e, elfe he'll not take it off the farmer' for wages w Spaniards having no commodities t beft wheate large veflel opened by incifion muft be take Sharp wp before you proceed gage To purchafe fand pounds per annum, cannot pay us 104. Zo Tax Corn own hand T A off his glafs , with that fic moment a man ftomach which, in fome men, follows not man hours aftery-no body would ever let wine tough hi Locke lips gi. 7o Taxe of 'To occupy locally The people by fuch thick throngs fwarme t upon 'To appropriate t0 to ut im b t i to affume ; to ad 2 f.llfl If I had no more wit than he, to tak t for g' ha be ha h did h upsn me tha Shake[peare th bu gel a o r t n He tosk not ¢» him t 16 i He feed of Abraham th m upo tak mo wil For confederates, I day thi a p r E o s c i p knowledge how th ' n a / t cted towaxds Sp Bocar's War with Spain fta afff andd a Woul |