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Show T A A 6. To TAKE in avith g i ' f f u y u Would T c ome new wa a invent pe on{ e:g:;nmc;‘};}g ;four puni(hmZnt T.OS;; 'iov{s me, ev'n to {uffer for my fak +And on herfel€ would my refufal take Dryden Dryn:m iy, To TAKE upon. To afi'ume.; to clai fometime fenf Th | Zuthm'it)' ap neutral be kin th i lune unfa : Pfl(')liff}el‘fii:;mu' offi th fll(;l h an ;t :: a:g‘( :;\\t mu!?l H sn beft : I'll'mkaj t{z({)onfl?:lc'idb/m}: . Becoam wom . Look that you take upon you as y qu.ak‘f[;mr This every tranflator taketh upon himfelf;;ad:i: ' ':. . The patliament ook upon them to call an :\fl‘c.m bly of divines, to fettle fome church cont‘l'O\"'crl.\cs _ of which many were unfit to judge. Sanderfon nc Fr i dr pre lik ver Thi . 118 . isufed with endlefs multiplicity of relations. Its ufes are fo numerous tha ' they cannot eafily be exemplified ; an its references to the words governed b « itfo general and lax, that they can hard. "ly'be explained by any fuccedaneou that is hardef But commonl I, terms to explain which lealt wants explication. I have expanded this word to . "wide diffufion I think which " that could be done is al . 7o TAKE. @. 7 1. To dire&t the courfe; to have a tend ‘ency to The inclination to goodnefs if it iffue not to wards men, it will take unto other things Bacon The king began to be troubled with the gout but the defluxion taking alfo into his breaft, wafté his lungs Bacor All men being alarmed with it, and in dreadfu fufpenfe of the event, fome /o0k towards the par Dryden To fhun thy lawlefs luft, the dying bride Unwary, tosk along the river's fide Dryden 2, Topleafe; to gain reception Anapple of Sodom, though it may entertai the eye with a. florid white and red, yet fills th band with ftench and foulnefs : fair in look an motten at heart, as the gayeft and moft taking thing are South Words and thoughts, which cannot be change but for the worfe, muft of neceffity efcape the tran fient view upon th= theatre; and yet without thef aplay may zake Dryden Each wit may praife it for his own dear fake And hint he writ it, i the thing thould take. Add The work may be well performed, but will ne clean.sh data import.tsv out README Ver fake if it is not fet off with proper {cenes Addifon's Frecholder . May the man grow wittier and wifer by finding that this fuff will not #ake no fince bya litle fmattering in learning pleafe! an and grea conceit of himfelf, he has loft his religion may h find it again by harder ftudy and an humble mind " epliobhs b Bertley 3 To have the intended or natural effect In impre lions from mind to mind the impref fion taketh, but is overcome by the mind p; m\'é before it work any manifeft effe. Bacon' Nat. Hift The clods, €xpos'd to winter winds, wil bake or putrid earth will beft in vincyarl; mke. Dryd 4 To catch; to fix When flame takerp and openeth, it giveth a n ife Bacon 5- o Taks, fter. To learn of; to re emle; to imitate A o refort to Men once placed take in avith the c ntrary faétio to t_h'\t by which they enter Bacon's EfJays 7- 0 TARE on 'Tobe violently affeéted Your hufband is in his old tune again; he f takes on yonder with my hufband, t at any madnefs I ever yet beheld feemed but ta enefs to thi diftemper Shakefpeare I horfes, the fmell of a dead hotfe m ket the fly away, and take on as if they were m d i Bacon's Natural Hiftory 8. To TaK o 'To claim a charaer I take not on me here as a phyfician Nor do I, as an enem to peace Troop in the throngs of military men But rathe To purge th' obfre&ions, which begin to fto Ou'r very veins of lite 9. 0 Tak Ho on will m Shake To grieve mother are's Hmr}; Iv to pine for a father's death Take on with me, and ne'er be fatisfied 10. 7o TakE fond of z To apply to Have him underftan to b it as a play of older peo ple, and he will take to it of himfelf Mif Th ver tak fied t Shake[p Locke Betfy won't take 1o her book Savift heirs to titles and large eftates could neto their books, yet are well enough qualifign a receipt for half a year's rent Savift's Mifcellanies 11. 90 TakE to recourfe To betake to ; to hav If1 had taken to the church, I fhould have ha more fenfe than to have turned myfelf out of m benefice by writing libels Dryden The callow ftorks with lizzard and with fnak Are fed, and, foon as e'er 0 wing they rake At fight thofe animals for food purfue Dryder: Men of learning who ake to bufinefs, difcharg it generally with greater honefty than men of th world Addifon 12. 70 Tax #p 'To fop The mind of man being naturally timorous o truth, and yet averfe to that diligent fearch neceffary to fts difcovery, it muft needs zake up fhor of what is really fo Glanwille "This grated harder upon the hearts of men, tha the ftrangenefs of all the former articles that zos up chiefly in fpeculation South Sinners at laft zake up, and fettle in a contemp of all religion, which is called fitting in the fea of the fcornful Tillotfon 13. 70 TAkE up Thi rationa To reform thought wrough fo efietually thatit made him zake up, and from that time prov good hufband 14f9"o TAx up with with Locke 'To be contente The afs takes up ith that for his fatisfa&ion which he reckoned upon before for his misfortune L' Eftrange The law and gofpel call aloud for a&ive obedience, and fuch a piety as fakes not up awith idle in clinations, but thows itfelf in folid inftances of practice South I could as eafily rake up with that fenfelefs affer tion of th bodies an Stoicks, that virtues and vices are rea diftiné& animals, as with this of th Atheift, that they can all be derived from the powe of mer bodies Bentley A poor gentleman ought not to be curate of parifh, except he be cunninger than the devil. I will be difficult to remed this, becaufe whoeve had half his cunning would never take up wwith vicarage of ten pounds Saift In affairs which may have an extenfive influenc on our future happinefs, we fhould not take up wit probabilities Watts's Logick 15. 70' TAKE up avith. Tolodge ; to dwell Beafts, that converf With man, take afte him, as hog Get pigs al] th' year, and-bitches dogs H d b Ve cannot b ut thin that he has faken afier - 00d pattern Atterbury Who would not rather rake up with the wolf i the woods, than make fuch a clutter in the world L‘Efi/'zlfld'fr‘ Aredogs fuch defirable company to zake up q\c"i‘b/.-' WOHIRD 1 16. 70 T'axe aith 'To pleafe Our gracious mafter is a precedent to his ow fubjetts, and feafonable memento may bz ufeful and being difcreetly ufed, cannot but take well wir him Ta'ken Bacon the participle pafl. of take Thou art taken in thy mifchict 2 Sam. xvi. 8 He who letteth will let, until he be taken out o the way 2 Theffa. ii. 7 It concerns all who think it worth while to b in carneft with their immortal fouls, not to abuf themfelves with a faife confidence; a thing fo eafily taken up, and fo hardly laid down. South's Serr: Scaliger, comparing the two orators, fays, tha nothin can be taken from Demofthencs gh he that is full o an cafe than op auditor felves are per nor adde Dcnbam them thinks it rathe ik them out, yet hi 1 taken u n them Government of the Tongue The objeét of defire once *Tisthen no love,' but pity which we pay. Dryd TA'KER 7. / [from zake. He that takes He will hang upon him like a difeafe He is fooner caught than the peflilence And the taker run prefently mad Shakefpeare The dear fale beyond the feasincreafed the num ber of takers; and the takers jarring and brawlin one with another, and foreclofing the fifhes, tak ing their kind within harbour, decreafed the num»ber of the taken Careww The far diftance of this county from the cour hath afforded it a fuperfedeas from takers.and purveyors Caregp Berry coffee and tobacco, of which the Turk are great takers, condenfe the fpirits, and mak them ftrong Few like the Fabii or the Scipios are Takers of cities, conguerors in war He to betray us did himfelf betray At once the taker, and at once the prey Bacon Denlam Denbarm Seize on the king, and him your prifoner make While I, in kind revenge, my taker take. Diyden Rich cullies may their boafting fpare They purchafe but fophifticated ware *Tis prodigality that buys deceit Whete both the giver and the taker cheat. Dryde Ta'kinG. 7z [ [from take. diftrefs of mind Scizure What a raking was he in, when your hufban Bl,'\tl' [ fiill afked who was in the bafket c‘i She faw in what a takin The knight was, by his furious quaking. Buzl Ta'Lsor /. [Itis borne by the houf of Zalbot in their arms.] A hound I is {o ufed in #74/e's tranflation of Grotius TavLE. z /. [zale, from <ellan, 70 zell Saxon. 1. A narrative; a flory. Commonly a fligh or petty account of fome trifling or fabulou incident : as, z tale of a tub This frory prepared their minds for the reception of any tales relating to other countries. 7arts 2. Oral relation. My confcience hath a thoufand. feveral tongues And ev'ry tongue brings in a fev'ral rale And every fale condemns me for a villain. Shakefp Life is a tal Told by an idiot, full of found and fury Signifying nothing Shake, peare's Macketh Hermia, foraught I.could read Could ever hear by ta'e or hiftory The courfe of true love never did run fmooth W Shakefgeare fpend our years as a tale that is told 3. [Talan, to count, Saxon. koned Numbe ma P_/:.';'m XC Q Number rec ferve your purpofe with the igno rant, who meafure by rale, and not by weight Hocker For ev'ry bloom his trees in fpring afford An autumn apple was by za/e reitor'd, Dryd. Virg Bot |