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Show 4. To walk over That looks fo many fathoms to the fea To tri w. z. [from the noun. o Toy fle ; to dally amoroufly to play To'visH. adj. [from zoy.] Trifling ; wan 7. /o [from frace. TrA'CER tha On city; wantonnefs Your fociety will difcredit that zoyi/brefs of wanfancy 1ys trick t with words and fro licks with the caprices of frothy imagination Glanwille's Scepfis A feller o [from zep. z / To'yman toys Ambafadors fhould not be held the tracers of Nuga n. /. [from zopih. To visaness TracCK Fans, fills, ribbands, laces, and gewgaws, lay f thick together, that the heart was nothing elfe bu Milton Following the track of Satan Hung by the neck and hair, and dragg'd around 7o Tozk. v, a. [See TowsE and TEASE. ‘T'o pull by violence or importunity Think'ft thou, for thatI infinuate, or 7oze fro thee thy bufinefs, I am therefore no courtier Confider the exterior frame of the globe, i we may find any tracks or footfteps of wifdom in it Bentley conflitution 2. A road [trace, Fr An e wa race, but' fteps There are not the leaft z7aces of it to be met, th greateft part of the ornament bein taken fro Trajan's arch, and fet up to the conqueror Addifon on Italy "The thady empire fhall retain no trac Of war, or blood, but in the fylvan chace Pope Shakefp The labour'd o In his loofe traces from the furrow came Milton While lab'ring oxen, fpent with toil and heat In their loofe 7races from the field retreat. Pope TRACT [tracer bave a tale to tell concerning the reftauration Burnet's Theory They do but trace over the paths beaten by th ancients, or comment, critick, or flourith upo them Temple To-this hafte of the mind, 2 not due tracing o the arguments to their true foundation is owing Locke 2. To follow with exaétnefs Of tracing word by word, and line by line 3. To mark out Denb He allows the foul power to trace images on th brain, and perceive them His pep can frgee out a true quotation Locke Swift o fagacity, by fome more evident wor difcerned by his eye, know the fenfe 4 Courfe ; manne of procefs Holder unlef i means, ‘in this place, rather, difcourfe explanation Would, by a good difcourfer, lofe fome lif Which action's felf was tongue to. Shak. H. VIII 5+ It feems to be ufed by Shakefpeare fo track 1F thou doft id ink B asbil o Encourage him, and tell him ail our reafon If he be leaden, icy, cold, unwilling Be thou fo too Shakefpéare's Richayd I As thofe who are bent to do wickedly wil neve want tempters to urge them on in an eyil courfef' fo thofe who yield themfelves traétable to good mo tions, will find the fpirit'of God more read to ey courage them If a fric han 771/&1]5"- be kept over children fiom t'ne beginning, they wil quietly fabmit 2. Palpable in that age be tractably am{ fuch as may be handled L1 1 ik The other meafures are of continued_,qpanfity g;.: fible, and for the moft part traétabie5 whereas tim is always tranfient, neither to be feen nor felt, Ho./é_{" o Tinl:.‘ TRrRA'CTABLENESS. 7. /. [from trafabj The. ftate of being tradtable ; compli Lt will be objected, that whatfoeverI fancy o children's traéablenzfs, yet many will never apply. Tra‘cTABLY " Locke In a trattable man 2dv TRA'CTATE. 2 [, [tradatis, Latin,] treatife ; a tratt; a fmall book =, Many divines of our own nation, in fermons an written fraffates of the fabbath, and in their ex of the fourth comimandment, maintain g Wiite nee n traliate TrACTILE pabl other evidenc Brown. . than Glanville' far to be draw And, by the bright traf? of his fiery car Shakefp A treatife; a fmal The church clergy at that time writ the bef collection of tracts againft popery that ever appeared Swift . Holes., adj. [trafus, Latin. Ca out or extended i length; ductile The confiftences of bodies are very divers; fra gile tough ; flexible, inflexible; tracfiley or,to b . drawn forth in length, intractile Bac. Nat. Hif Tracti'viry. 2./ [from tradile.] Th quality of being traltile Silver, whofe ductility and traility are muchy, ~ inferiou to thofe of gold flender a wire twenty-feven feet TRrAa'CTION was draw out to f that a fingle grain amounted t Derbams 7 /. [from trafus, Latin The a& of drawing; the ftate of bemg ' o drawn The malleus béing fixed to an extenfible mem- "ti brane, follows the traféion' of the mufcle, andi drawn inwards to bring the terms of that lin 3 nearer in proportion as it is curved, and fo give Holder a tenfion to the tympanum W hofoever command The weary fun hath made a golden fet 6. [Tradtatus, Lat. book that are tra&able, the grace of God holy f; concurring therewith 1 I'IQICII' Tractable obedience is a flav o each incenfed will Shakefsears TRADE. #, /. [#ratta, Italian. Traffick ; commerce ; exchange O goods for other goods, or for money The traé of every thin Gives fignal of a goodly day to-morrow That fervile path thou nobly doft decline Raleigh The myrtle flourifheth ftill; and wonderful it is that for fo long aitraé? of time fhe fhould fill continue frefh Howwel Yourbodies' may at laft turn all to fpirit Tmprov'd by traét of time; and wing'd afcen Ethereal as we Milton As in traét of fpeech a dubious word is cafil known by the coherence with the reft, and a dubious letter by the whole word; fo may a dea perfon, having competent knowledge of language I feel thy power to trace the way feripture much allegeth contrary frui ;Nh;y}'lt} fli€tion likewife hath, whenfoever i hll'etlror,cthaf. W Monte Cireeio, by Homer called Infula Aca is a very high mountain joined to the main Jand b a narrow traé? of earth Addifon acut the very natural bitternefs and gallof adverfi yili duced 3. Continuity ; any thing protratted drawn out to length i Though .philefophical trafates make enumeras . tion of authors, yet ate their 1eafons ufually intro Only there are fome traé#s which, by high moun by a of thofe affe@iong growi; the forefaid pofition Milton tains, are barred from air and frefh wind traitable, French. Latm 1. Ma[ nageable; ; docile ; com liant quious ; practicable ; gove?nable -dbfe For moderatio pofition 2. A region ; ‘a quantity of land 1. To follow by the footfteps, or remainin marks You may trace the deluge quite round the glob in profane hiftory; and every one of thefe peopl [tra&us,Lat. Nor the deep #raé? of hell Italian. Milton n [ traltabilis ner ; gently Heav'n hides nothing from thy view Fr. tracciare Of higheft agents Untrod [from frack. 1. Any kind of extended fubflance Pope's Odyffey 4 Diryden Unable to difcern the way Which Naffau's virtue only could explore. Prior New to the plough, unpractis'd in the ¢race w yo Loft in tracklefs fields of thining day Twelve young mules TRACE learned plagiary in all the others den ; marked with no footiteps e The traces, of the fmalleft fpider's web Ho only a profefle adj ance; obfequioufnefs imitator o no Tra'CKLESS. adj 3. [From #iraffer, French ; tiraffes, traces. Harnefs for beaits of draught view. Dryd. ZZn track him evety where in their fnow appearance of what has been The people of thefe countries are reported t have lived like the beafts among them, withoutan traces of orders, laws, or religion Temple Deci As thepherd's cur that in dark evening's thad Hath tracked forth fome favage beaftis treade Spenfer 1. Mark left by any thing pafling; foot z. Remain next, the two devote T 9o TrRACK. @. a. [from the noun. follow by the footfteps or marks left i the way traccia, Italian. Thefe as a line their long dimenfion drew Streaking the ground with finuous trace Milton a beaten path With track oblique fidelong he works his way Milton Behold Torquatus the fame track purfue Shake[peare n. [ ground Dryden Addifon They fhift the moving fay/bop of their heart, Pope 1d With tracks of blood inferib'd the duft With varying vanities from every part TRACE #raccia [trac, old French The hoftile-fpear yet ficking in hi A tho To'vsuor. n /o [toy and fhop. where playthings and little nice manufactures are fold 2 toy/hop 7 / Ttalian. 1. Mark left upon the way by the foot o otherwife the foremoft zgyman of his time Young Than S-- Hoavel plot of fuch malice But what in oddnefs can be more {fublime 9 Shake/p We do trace this alley up and down traces ton to Men, as they trace Both feet and face one way arc wont to lead. Spenf Shakefpeare's Hawlet hears it roar beneath Tra'cTaBLE I' R An T TR rr the fea, commands tld trade 3 whofoevér commands the trade of the war l commands the riches of the world, and confequ)e'{ltb Ra ‘tfn the world itfelf Trade increafes in one place, and decays‘zl.fl,m other 2. Occupation; particular employm : whether manual or mercantile r le o ar er li th fr guifhe profeflions Appoint |