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Show T-H 3. Difficult; perplexidg Ey ho com man tiorny end hard ways they ar thereunto, by how many civil broils St enfer cn Ireland Usao'rRoucH. prepo/. [the word through extended into two fyllables. 1. By way, of making paflage or penetration 2. By means of Mark Antony will follo Thorough the hazards of this untrod ftate With all true faith Shake[peare' Fulius Cefar Tuo'rRousg no'rRovGH adiectiv P 4dj.i [Th adjeftive is1 always written thorough, the prepofitio commonly through. 1.' Cemplete; fuil ; perfed The lrifh horleboys, in the thorough reformatio of that reaim, fhould ke cut off Spenfer He did not defire athor:ugh engagement till h hid time to reform fome, whom he refolved neve n cre to truft Clarendon A thorougp-tranflator muft ‘be a rhorough poet Dryden A thoroygh prattice of fubjecting ourfelves to th wants ot others, would extinguifh in us pride Saift Bow can I call a general difregard and a réorough negleét of all religious improvements, a frailt or imperfeion, when it was as much in my powe to have been exaét, and careful, and diligent Law 2. Pafling through Let all three fides be a double houfe, withou therough lights on the fides Bacon 7. f [ thoroug an . Yare. 1. A paffage through; a paffage withou any ftop or let Th* Hyrcanian deferts are as thoroughfares no For princes to come view fair Portia. Shake[peare His body is a paflable carcafe, if he be not hur it is a zhoroughfare for fteel, if it be not hurt Shakefpeare The ungrateful perfon is a monfter, which i all throat and belly; a kind of tharoughfare, o <cmmon fhore for the good things of the world t Soutb pafs into The courts are fill'd with a tumultuous di Of crowds, or ifluing forth, or ent'ring in A thoroughfare of news; where fome devif Things never heard; fome mingle truth with lies Dryden 2. Power of pafling Hell, and this world, one realm, one continen Milton's Paradife Loft Of ealy thoroughfare I'HO'ROUGHLY. adv Completely; fully [ fro Look into this bufinefs thoroughly thorough. Shake[pears We can never be grieved for their miferies wh are thoroughly wicked, and have thereby juftly calle their calamities on themfelves. Dryden's Dufrefnoy One would think, that every member of the community who embraces with vehemence the princi ples of either party, had rhoroughly fifted and exAddifon zmined them They had forgotten their folemn vows as rhoroughly as if they had never made them. Arterbury adj [thorough an in wha is undertaken THOROUGHPA CED ‘pace. Perfeé complete ; thoroughfped a bad fenfe Generally i ‘When it was propofed to repeal the teft claufe the ableft of thofe who were reckoned the mof ftanch and thoroughpaced Whigs fell off at the firf Sawift mention of it THO'ROUGHSPED TuorovGHusTI TCH. adv, [thorough an Jitch.] Completely j fully. A low word adj [ thorough an /ped.] Finifhed in principles ; thoroughpaced: commonly, finifhed in i Our thorough/ped republick of Whigs, which contains the bulk of all hopers, pretenders, and pro feffors, are moft highly ufeful to princes Swifz You fhall not quit Cydaria for me *Tis dang'rous though to treat me in this for And ta refufe my offers, though in fport, D""‘kd Pesfcverance alone can carry us thoroughffitch L' Eftrange TuorPe. z fo Thorp, throp, threp, trep trop, are all from the Saxon Bopp, whic Gibfor's Camden fignifies a village THOSE THO'ROUGHFARE TH TH A good caufe would do well though L It gives my fword an edge, Dryd. Spanifps Frigr TroucHT think the preterite and pare, el o I told him what I thought. Shakefpeare's Othelly pronoun Are my friends embark'd 1. The plural of that Can any thing be thought of for their fervice al Whiltt I yet live, let me not live in vain Adif No other tax could have been thought of, upo Thofe clam'rous harbingers of blood and death Shakefpeare Sure there are poets which did never drea which fo much' money would have been immed; Addifon ately advanceds fpeak all our trampet Mak give the breath Upon Parnaflus, nor did tafte the ftrea Of Helicon; we therefore may fuppof THOUGHT 2. Thofe refers to the former, zhefe to th latter noun THovu prononn nor tears are true idly fall at all Cowley have fexes too Saxon [ Su thinking And cards are dealt, and chefsboards brought Brior To cafe the pain of coward thought For our inftruéion to impar 3. Sentiment ; fancy; imagery ; congeit Thought, if tranflated truly, cannot be lofti another language; but the words that convey, it t men whic of that thought are the image and orna may be fo ill chofen as t Dryden make it appear unhandfome One may often find as much #fought on the, re ¥z is now commonly ufed for the nominative plural 1. The fecond pronoun perfonal verfe of a medal as in a canto of Spenfer Addiforon Medals g o faft upon me, tha T houghts come crowdini my only difficulty is to chufe or to rejeé. Dryden The thoughts of a foul that perith in thinking Is this a dagger which I fee before me The handle tow'rd my hand ? Come, let me clutc Locke thee 1 have zhee not, and-yet I fee zhbee ftill Art thou not, fatal vifion, fenfibl One only couplet fraugh With fome unmeaning thing they call a thought Pope Shakefpeare's Macbeth 4. Refletion ; particular confideration I am as like to call thee fo again To {pit on zhee again, to fpurn thee too Why do you keep alone Of forrieft fancies your companions making If theu wilt lend this money, lend it no As to thy friend apprehenfion ou Saxon ; in the plural ye, ge, Saxon ; i the oblique cafes plaral yoz, eop, Sax. To feeling as to fight Milten Things above earthly thought cafes fingular zhee, Te in the obliqu image formed in the mind 2. Idea Dut du the af o operation of the mind 1. Th Cheyne figh zhef our tear think. T'bofe made not poets, but the poets thofe. Denham The fibres of this mufcle act as rhgfe of others Neither thei T hofe idly blow Nothing like t But fighs an n /. [from the preterite of 7 Shake'peare's Merchant of Venice Thou, if there be a thon in this bafe town Who dares with angry Eupolis to frown Who at enormous villainy turns pale And fteers againft it with a full-blown fail. Dryd Ufing thofe thoughts which fhould indeed haye die With them they think on. Skakefpeare's Macbeth 5. Conception; preconceived notion Things. to their though So unimaginable as hate in heaven Miiton 2. It is ufed only in very familiar or ver nt gm ju ni Op 6 When we fpeak t folemn language He that is ready to flip, is as a lamp defpife equals or fuperiours, we fay you ; but i in the thought of him that is at eafe. jflb,‘xu. folemn language, and in addrefles o They communicated their thoughts on this fubar n reaf thei efo the an r oth cac t je u worfhip, we fay zh Dryden t ere dif litt [ Familiar. e, who always fpeaks hi [Solemn. High on the broken wave I know thou wert not flow to hear Nor impotent to fave 70 THou v. a. [from thou. thought And alway For though in dreadful whirls we hun Pride, of all others the moft dangerous fault t ug th o n w o fe fe o n w o f d e Pro Rofeommaon Addifon To trea 8. Defign ; purpofe o ght tha ar yo ar to n th The thoughts Taunt him with the licence of ink; if tho thou'ft him fome thrice, it fhall not be amifs. Shak THoOUGH. conjunction. [Bea, Sax. thaub Gothick. 1. Notwithftanding that; although Not that I fo affirm, though fo it feem to univerfal ideas, yet this abftraction is not great Asif t,x xxx ab em Fe evi no peace, an on Mil t ug th he fr he go wa No 9. Silent contemplation Who is fo grof That cannot fee this palpable devic i fe h s fa bu d bo f Yet w Bad is the world ; and all will com e f b f m g i a d i c f Whe Milton The found of love makes your foft heart afraid And guard itfelf, though but a child invade. Waller I can defire to perceive thofe things that Go has prepared for thofe that love him, though the be fuch as eye hath not feen, ear heard, nor hat it entered into the heart of man to conceive. Locke Though the name of abftracted ideas is attribute 2. 4s Tuoucu thinks the very thing he ought. Pope 7. Meditation ; ferious cenfideration with familiarity fpo Bethe Thu Cowley Here s to thee, Dick Watts's Logick like as if In_-,tl'le vine were three branches; and it was a Genefis, xl. 10 though it budded 3. It is ufed in the end of a fentence i familiar language: however ; yet not to nought in tb th ;@tsm ::ug m. r c 10. ; f ; e l t f g r c a l us return, left h Le 1 e n S and take thought for us g o t t w e d a e b o Hawis was%ut in t t IY f n r f f b and anguifj h before hi l f h n t e Adam took n 11. Expeation The main defer t g o t Stands on the lefo"i Ther mg;fi |