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Show He had fo placed his horfemen and footme i up the Chriftians as i Knslles the woods, that he fhu were ina toi All great {pirit Bear great and fudden cha Endures the toi/ that holds him L'Efirange A fly falls into the toi/ of a fpider Fantaftick honour, thou haft fram'd a i Thyfelf, to make thy love thy virtue's fpoil. Dryd u. /i [toilette, Fr. A drefling table merchant from the exchange returns i peace And the long labours of the toi/et ceafe Pope Th adj. [from til.] Laborious To'1LsoME weary This, were it zoilfome, yet with thee were fweet Milton The law of the fourth commandment was no agreeable to the ftate of innocency; for in tha happy ftate there was no roi/fome labour for man o White beaft While here we dwell ‘What can be toilfome in thefe pleafant walks ? Milt Abfent or dead, ftill let a friend be dear A figh the abfent claims, the dead a tear Recal thofe nights that clos'd thy tilfome days Still hear thy Parnel in his living lays Pope To'1LsoMENESS #. / [fro zoilfome. Wearifomenefs; laborioufnefs TokEN 7. f. [taskns Saxo Gothick ; <zacn #gycken, Dutch. 1. A fign Shew me a #oken for good, that they which hat me may fee it Pfalm 1xxxvie 17 2. A mark They have not the leaft zoken or thew of the art and induftry of China Heylyn Wherefoever you fee ingratitude, you may a infallibly conclude that there is a growing ftock o ill-nature in that breaft, as you may know tha man to have the plague upon whom you fee the zokens South 3. A memorial of friendfhip; an evidenc of remembrance Here is a letter from queen Hecuba A token from her daughter, my fair love. Shakefp Whence came this This is fome zoken from a newer friend. Shakefp Pigwiggen gladly would commen Some token to queen Mab to fend Were worthy of her wearing 70 To'kEN Drayt. Nymphid w. a. [from the noun. make known. T Not in ufe May token to the future our paft deeds Shakefp Tovp. pret. and part. paff. of ze/l Men tioned ; related The aéts of God, to human ears Cannot without procefs of fpeech be to/d 90 Tore @w. a Milton [This feems to be {fom barbarous provincial word. to draw by degrees To train Whatever you obferve him to be more frighted a than he fhoyld, 7o/e him on to by infenfible degrees Locke till at laft he mafters the difficulty T LERABLE bilis, Lat. adj 1. Supportable fupported performance, but what hypocrify can make tolera [tolerable, Fr. tolera that may be endured o The reader may be aflured of a tolerable tranfl Dryde tion Princes have it in their power to keep a majority on their fide by any tolerable adminiftration Swift till provoked by continual oppreflions TO'LERABLENESS. #. /. [from zolerable. The ftate of being tolerable To' LENABLY. adv. [from tolerable. 1. Supportably; in a manner that ma be endured 2. Paflably ; neither well nor ill; moderately well Sometimes are found in thefe laxer ftrata bodie that are till colerably firm. Woodward's Nat. Hift The perfon to whom this head belonged laughe frequently, and on particular occafions had acquitted himfelf to/erably at a ball. Addifon's Spetator Diogene froft on mornin cam int th market-place thaking, to fhew his tolerance; man of the people came about him, pitying him : Plat pafiing by, and knowing he did it to be feen, faid If you pity him indeed, let him alone to himfelf Bacon's Apophthegms There wants nothing but confideration of ou own eternal weal, a tolerance or endurance of bein made happy here, and blefled eternally Hammond's Fundamentals . a. [tolero, Lat. tolerer o TO'LERATE Fr. To allow {o as not to hinder {uffer; to pafs uncenfured t Inafmuch as they did refolve to remove onl fuch things of that kind as the church might bef fpare, retaining the refidue; their whole counfe is, in this point, utterly condemned, as having either proceeded from the blindnefs of thofe times or from negligence, or from defire of honour an glory, or from an erroneous opinion that fuc things might be zo/erated for a while Hooker We fhall tolerate flying horfes, harpies, and fatyrs ; for thefe are poetical fancies, whofe fhade moralities requite their fubftantial falfities Men fhoul in any know Brown's Vulgar Errours not to/erate themlelves one minut fin Decay of Piety Crying fhould not be to/erated in children. Locke We are fully convinced that we fhall always zo Savift ToLerRA'TION. 2. /. [tolero, Lat. Allowance given to that which is not approved I fhall not fpeak againft the indulgence and toleration granted to thefe' men South TOLL #./ An excife of goods ; a {feizure of fom part for permiflion of the reft Toll, in law, has two fignifications: firft, a liberty to buy and fell within the precinéts of manor which feem Milton to impor as muc as a fai or market; fecondly, a tribute or cuftom paid fo paflage Cowel Empfon and Dudley the people eftecemed as hi mafter's grift borne with, for the furtherance of your purpofes till the corrupt eftate of the church may be bette Hooker re,rmed 1t fhall be more tolerable for Sodom in the da of judgment than for that city. Matihew, x. 15 [This word feems derive from #0/lo, Lat. zoll, Sax. 7o/, Dutch told, Danith 5 roll, Welch; zaillie, Fr. but to/erable only, and to b Cold and heat {carce rolerable Latin [tolerantia tolerance, Fr.] Power of enduring; ac Not ufed, though a goo of enduring word horfe-leeches allowable #. / To'LERANCE Th againf bol men tha too to// of thei Bacon fame Prufias joined with the Rhodian the Byzantines, and. ftopped them fro levying the #o// upon their trade into the Euxine Arbuthnot 7o Tovrv. @.n. [from the noun. 1. To pay toll or tallage b Shakefpeare's All's avell that en z. Not excellent; not contemptible; pafl Yourfelves, who have fought them, ye o excufe, as that ye would have men to think ye judg them no him : for this, I'll none of him Tillotfon ble'to itfelf lerate them, but not that they will zo/erate us What in time proceeds I will buy me a fon-in-lainw a faj There is nothing of difficulty in the externa able As a Numidian lion, w To'1LeT TO T O 130T W}{erc, when, by whom, and what y we::f;l;ufg: And in the open market #0/°d for Hudibms z. To take toll or tallage The meale the more yeeldeth, if fervan An 3 miller that fo/leth takes none but his due p [ kno no whenc derxved. found as a fingle bell Tuffer '[1‘ The firft bringer of unwelcome new Hath but a lofing office; and his tongu Sounds ever after as a fullen bell Remember'd to/ling a departed friend Shakefpeare's Henpy I Our going to church at the tolling ofa bell},, only tells us th God time when we ought to g0 to worfhi Toll, toll Gentle bell, for the fou Sli/[iflgflger Of the pure ones Denbanm You love to hear of fome prodigious tale The bell t.h:{t to/f"d aln_nf:, or Irith whale. Drydeh They give their bodies due repofe at night ‘When hollow murmur of their ev'ning bell Difmifs the fleepy fwains, and #// them to the cells Drydin With horns and trumpets now to madnefs fwell Now fink in forrows with a to/ling bell Pope's Dunciad 7o ToLvr w.a 1. To ring a bell [tdlo, Lat. When any one dies, then by #/ling or ringin of a bell the fame is known to the fearchers Graunt z. T tak away to vacate ; to anmul A term only ufed in the civil law: i this {fenfe the ¢ is thort, in the forme long An appeal fro fentence of excommunicatio does =ot Tufpend it, but then devolves it to a fupe rior judge, and #//s the prefumption in fayour of fentence Ayliffe 3. To take away, or perhaps to invite Obf{olete The adventitious moifture which hangeth loof in a body, betrayeth and to//eth forth the innat and radical moifture along with it Bacon's Natural Hiftory To'LLBooTH. #. /o [tol/ and booth.] Ainfworth prifon 7o To'LLBOOTH. w. 2. 'To imprifon 1 a tollbooth To thefe what did he give > why a hen That they might to//boorh Cxford men Bifbop Corbet ToLLGA THERER ./ [toll and gather. 'The officer that takes toll To LsEY. n. /i 'The fame with zollbaotb Dia ToLUTA TION. 7. /. [toluto, Lat. a& of pacing or ambling Th o o l g t i t a l t p r The fide together, which is zo/utation ox ambling Broawn's Valgar Errours They rode ; but authors having no Determin'd whether pace or trot That is to fay, whether to/utation Hudibras As they do term 't, or fuccuflation We leave it TOMB n. /. [tombe, tombeau, Fr. .tumba low Latin. A monument in which th dead are enclofed Methinks I fee thee, now thou ar be OW) As one dead in the bottom of a tomb. Sbakffi"l:':l" Tim is drawn upon rombs an old ma b b f l - u h a a t inged, with a f g i a D o h a P i 'm t n l f h i r b u f f t a h o P h o r o r p a t a p i Let her pofie |