OCR Text |
Show T H Thou noble thing ! more dances my wrapt heart Shake[peare o THINK w. n. preter. thought. [thank gan, Gothick ; encean en Saxon ;- denck Dutch. 1. To have ideas; to compare terms o things; to reafon; to cogitate ; to perwhethe any mental operation for o apprehenfion, judgment, or illation T hinking, in the propriety of the Englifh tongue fignifies that fort of operation of the mind about it ideas, wherein the mind is ative; where it, wit fome degree of voluntary attention, confiders an thing Wha Locke am I? or from whence? for that I a T know becaufe I think ; but whence I came Or how this frame of mine began to be Dryden What other being can difclofe to me Thofe who perceive dully, or retain ideas in thei minds ill, will have little matter to think on. Locke It is an opinion, that the foul always thinks, an that it has the actual perception of ideas in itfel conftantly, and that aGual thinkizg is as infeparable from the foul, as aétual extenfion is from th Locke body Thefe are not matters to be flightly and fuperfiTillotfor"'s Sermons cially thought upon His experiencg ofa good princ kmow an Locke The opinions of others whom w think well of are no ground of affent Sigh'd truer breath : but that I fee thee here muft give grea 7o THINK @. 4 Tillotfon 3. 7o Taink forn To difdain Jcorn to lay hands on Mordecai alone He though Efther, iii Me TuinkeTH, It feems to me 4 1 M: Tuovcur It appeared to me Thefe are anomalous phrafes of lon continuance and great authority, but no In eafily reconciled to grammar thinketh, the verb being of the third perfon, feems to be referred not to th thing and is therefore either ative, a fignifying fo caufe to rhink; or has th fenfe of Jeems, methinks it feems to me Laav to know them, or keep them 3. To intend Tho thought't to help me and fuch thank I give As onenear death to thofe that with him live 4. To imagine Sbakefpeare to fancy Something fince his coming forth is thought of whic Imports the kingdom fo much fear and danger That his return was moft requir'd. Shak. K. Lear Edmund, I tbink, is gone In pity of his mifery, to difpatc Shake[p. King Lear His nighted life ‘We may not be ftartled at the breaking of th exterior earth; for the face of nature hath pro voked men to think of and obferve fuch a thing Burnet's Theory of the Earth Thofe who love to live in gardens, have neve Speftator thought of contriving a winter garden 5. To mufe; tomeditate You pine, you languith, love to be alone Think much, fpeak little, and in fpeaking figh Dryden 6. To recolleét ; to obferve One wh Tui'NKER. #. /. [from think. thinks in a certain manner No body is made any thing by hearing of rules or laying them up in his memory; praétice muf fettle the habit : you may as well hope to make good mufician by a le¢ture on the art of mufick, a a coherent thinker, or ftriét reafoner, by a fet o rules Ifa man had an ill-favoured nofe, dee ers would impute the caufe to the prejudic education Tur'NKING 7 [from think. Locke thinkof hi Swift Imagi nation; cogitation; judgment H put it b once but to my thinking h would fain have had it Skakefp. Fulius Cafar If we did thin His contemplations were above the earth And fix'd on fpiritual objeéts, he fhould fil Dwell in his mufings ; but I am afrai His thinkings are below the moon, nor wort His ferious confidering. Shakefpeare's Henry VIIL I heard a bird fo fing Whofe mufick,.to my thinking, pleas'd the king Si\li‘&:/}/‘:‘ul'(‘ I was a man, to my thinking, very likely to get rich widow Addifen Tai'NLY. adv, [from thin. 1. Not thickly 2. Not clofely; not numerouily It is commonl opinioned that the earth wa Fhink upon me, my God, for good, according t Nebemiab, V. 19 all that I have done The reft, an heartlefs number, {pent with watching Dryden If your general acquaintance be among ladies provided they have no ill reputation, you rthin Saift you are fafe 8. To confider; to doubt ; to deliberate Any one may think with himfelf, how then ca any thing live in Mercury and Saturn Bentley's Sermons 9. 7o Tain on To contrive 5 to ligh upon by meditation Still the work was not complete When Venus thought on a deceit Swift's Mifcell Our walls are thinly mann'd ; our beft men flain 1. Th # / contrar [from thin. t thicknefs AYhfEs Par Rarenefs ; not fpiflitude, .'I'dhofe pleailjures that fpring from honoyr ¢ mind can naufeate, and quickly feelthe /5 TwirD adj P Sous/® [Sp88a, Saxon. ] Thefiy , T after the fecond ; the ordinal of thre This is the third time: I hope good luck [ie odd numbers Such clamour ST are like the feigned q:,:{{f‘;:'; combined cheats, to delude fome hird perfon, Deca o Py TrirD 2. / [from the adjedtive 1. The third part To thee and thine hereditary ever Remain this ample third of ou fair kingdom, §hy Men of their broken debtors take a third A fixth, a tenth, letting them thrive again. Spa /. W1 The proteftant fabjeéts of the: abbey make u third of its people Addfr' No fentence can ftand that is not confirmed b4 two thirds of the council Addifn' 2. The fixtieth part of a fecond Divide the natural day into twenty-four equal, p 1 parts, an hour into fixty minutes, a minute int fixty feconds, a fecond into fixty thirds PN Hold on Tim THI'RDBOROUGH. 7. [. [third and k rough.] An under-conftable THI'RDPLY. adw. [from third.] In the*# third place Firft, metals are more durable than plants; fe. ‘-'\\S‘é' condly, they are more folid; #hirdly, theyare wholl fubterrany Bacon, 7o THIRL. w. a. [inhan, Saxon.] Te pierce ; to perforate. It is now pro nounced and written thrill. dinfworthy # THIRST Dutch. [Synyrs Saxon dorjl. 1. The pain fuffered for want of drink o want of drink But fearlefs they purfue, nor can the floo Quench their dire thirf? ; alas ! they thirft for blood:., Denbami,_ Thus accurs'd Dryde In midft of water I complain of thirf Thirft and hunger denote the ftate of fpittle an Thirft is the fig'n of an acr For forty year Arbuthnot on Allment exility Tickling is moft in the foles, arm-holes an fides, becaufe of the thiznefs of the fkin Bacon No breach, but an expanfion Denne Tranfparent fubftances, as glafs, wates, air, &c when made very thin by being blown into bubbles or otherwife formed into plates, do exhibit variou colours, according to their various thinnefs, al though at a greater thicknefs they appear very clea and colourlefs Neavton's Opticks I *ve liv'd an anchorite in pray'rs and tears ain' moun th fro e bubb whi Yon fpring fide Has all the Juxury of thirft fupply'd Hartee t w r f d n m h v e r 2. Eag Jfor, or after tenuity Like gold to airy thinnefs beat a way for Dluralitizs mony commonly alkalefcent or muriatick thinly inhabited before the flood Brown's Vulgar Errours 7. To judge; to be of opinion opene liquor of the ftomach We are come to have the warrant wWell thought upon ; I have it here about me Shake[peare Tri'NNEss whic a popular breath Me thinketh the running of the foremoft is lik 2 Sam. xviii. 27 that of Ahimaaz terms of falvation, without ever fo much as intending, in any ferious and deliberate manner, eithe habitants If we confider ourinfinite obligations to God, we | 3 Let them marry to whom they think beft; onl to their father's tribe fhall they marry Numb. xxxvie 6 I fear we fhall not fin "This long defired king fuch as was thought. Daniel Can it be thought thatI have kept the gofpe to determine dulged a prafl;ice, through the thinnefs i‘f'_fltl}tlh He thought not much to elothe his enemies. Milt Me thought 1 faw the grave where Laura lay Sidney 2. To judge; to conclude And all together make a feeming goo ly flight In country villages pope Leo the 'To grudge deareft interefts in this world f'I'h; buzzar nvites the feather'd Nimrods of k To hide the thinngfs of their fiockhf]':oz i 1 Cor. xiii. § Charity thinketh no evil Milton Nor think fuperfluous others aid Think nought a trifle, theugh it fmall appear Young Addif. Freeh fatisfaGion to every thinking man Ao to conceive have no reafon to think much to facrifice to him ou Arbuthp 2. Paucity; fearcity 1. To imagine ; to imagine in the mind 2. 70 TaiNk much 1 Such depend upon a firong pro ile motjoy / the blood, and too great thin fegf and delicacy oc(,"nt ‘ To eftimate of 1o. 7o Tuix I lov'd the maid I married; never ma TH Not hope of praife, nor tl»i:_-/{ of worldly goo ;x Q Fairfax i, Enticed us to follow this emprize Thou hatt allay'd the rbirff I had yknofie_;iltos"tte ‘\Q\\ Say, is 't thy bounty, or thy thirft ‘Zfl'g;i:;'m' afte happi i f n d a a v t a This is a quflf c j o n y i a b l f t a nefs, o 3. Draught i v } u r t t e r c p r T m j w d u f i t l n k t Of porous carth w Rofg a frefh fountaia \{:‘\ |