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Show TR TR . Appoint é-o every one that is not able to live o i w t f l o a t a r c his freel hold e I o f e S o l f t u b b l fh ~ prade h How dizzy! half way dow a t u d e d r h m f e t g Hangs on Sllfll;z_‘/j}[{.'?‘f their loves I'li mounteban pelov' hom com an u a o r C p e a S m R i of all the trades i y e p a a F trades myfteries, an anners Shake[p : ';{g‘cm?l&n'yxr conf.f,mn()ling contraries The rude Equicola f ; / ) l e t w n r d u p a t Hunting their fpo h l t c n l p ' f' .t h Fight unde Dryd. Fuwenal : Acaptain is a v-mly'gamtul trade n a i p r M t a t o f v d The who ) Al trades of death, that deal in fteel for gains Dryden The empero Pertina applie himfc!f in_hi father, judging hi hJ;} a mind to tur youth to a gainful trade; hi 1 | Gt for a better employment obftinat ‘,;‘»' his education another way ; the fon wa in Pu;'fui::g fo profitable a trade, a fort ot mcyc‘hf Ar :i'r/v.'oi on Coins dife of wood o t p c o a o t e u f 2, I ‘L he fhepherd bear r w o a z h s o g l h u h an u h " Hi g ;‘ ;" D r c t a t hi a e i g a b e ~ His 4 Any employment not manual; habi tual exercife Call fome of youn year to train them up i that trade; and fo fit them for weighty affairs. Bac , Cuftom ; habit ; ftanding practice ~ Shak Thy fin's ot accidental, but a rrade 6 Formetly trade was ufed of domeflick lu and #raffick of foreign commerce & 95 TrapE. v. n [from the noun. 1. To trafick to deal t com hol - merce He commande called, t thefe f{ervants to b - know how much every man had gained by trading Luke, Xix 15 Delos, a facred place, grew a free port, wher nations warring: with one another reforted wit their goods, and traded Arbuthnot on Coins Maximinus traded with the Goths in the pro* du& of his eftate in Thracia Arbuthnot 2, To att merely for morey Saucy and overbald | how did you dar " To trads and traffick with Macbet Inriddles and affairs of death? Shakefp. Macketh o . 3. To have a trade wind "They on the trading flood ply tow'rd the pole Milion 90 TraDE. v. 4 To fell or exchange i commerce They were thy merchants: they traded the perfons of men and veffels of brafls in thy market Exekiel, xxviie 13 Tra'DED. adf pradifed ~ Truft not thofe cunning waters of his eyes . For villany is not without fuch rheum - And helong traded in it makes it fee ~ Like rivers of remorfe and innocence. Shake[peare Eyes and ears Two traded pilots twixt the dangerous fhore Of\,mll and judgment Shakefp. Troil. and Crefl i Tra DEFUL. adj. {trade and full. Com € tradeful merchants, that with weary toi ‘And both the Indies of their treafure fpoil hat needeth you to feek fo far in vain ? Spenfer :rka DER. 7 /. [from trade. clean.sh data import.tsv out README Ve engaged in merchandif merce or com {erli'll\gnms are going to Canterbury with rich of1 udr;gs, and fraders xiding to London with fa prst Now the vi€ory 's won e return to our laffes like fortunate traders Triumphant with fpoils Shakefpeare's Henry I Dryden TRADI'TIONAL. adj. [from tradition. 1. Delivered by tradition ; defcending b oral communication; tranfmitte the foregoing to the following age Many uyidm': will neceflitate merchants to trad for lefs profit, and confequently be m re frugal Child on Trade Tha week day trader 2. One lon fu the methods of mo ney-getting ; a praitioner Tra'DESVOLK. 2. /. [ trade and Jolk. People employed in trades By his advice vi€tuallers and tradesfolk woul foon get all the moncy of the kingdom into thei hands TRADESMAN fhopkeeper dgz',_but'no diftinguithe that labour Ilive by the awl I meddl matters with no tradefmen' Shake|peare They rather had behel iffentious numbers pef'ring ftreets ; than fe Qur tradefmen finging in their fhops, and goin About their fun@ions Shakefpeare's Coriolanus Otrder a trade thit\er and thence 2 as fome fe merchants and tradefmen, under colour of furnifhing the colony with neceffaries, may not grin them Bacon Tradefme might conjeftur wha doing the were like to have in their refpeétive dealings Graunt M. Jordain would not be thought a tradefman but ordered fome filk to be meafured out to hi partner's friends : nowI give up m thop. ~ Prior From a plain tradefman with a fhop, he is no of traditions 2. Obfervan No Swift n./o [trade and man. A merchant is called a #raa tradefman ; and it feem in Shake/peare from a ma with his hands or idle rites ufed, nor proper Go forbi We fhould infringe the holy privileg Of fanétuary You are too fenfelefs obftinate, my lord Too ceremonious and traditional TrADI'TIONALLY adv Shak. Rich. 1T [fro 1. By tranfmiffion from age to age There is another channel wherein this dotrin is traditionally derived from Saint John, namely from the clergy of Afia. Burnet's Theory of the Earth 2 From tradition withou written memorials evidenc both in one day Browon's Vulgar Errours Trapr'rioNarRY Delivere b adj. [fro tradition. tradition ; tran{miffive handed down from age to age opportunities of improving their minds, than th ordinary trade[men Swift Boaftful and rough, your firfk fon is a fquire Inveterate truth, a Oral tradition i we may take tha texts of fcripture The fame of ou Peniten wa a buf notabl tradefman profperous in his dealings, but died in the thirtyfifth year of his age Law and wind. [trad n / TRADE-WIND the periodica The monfoon wind be- tween the tropicks Thus to the eaftern wealth through ftorms we go But now, the Cape once doubled, fear no more Dry And gently lay us on the fpicy fhore His were the proje&s of perpetuum mobiles and of increafing the trade-wind by vaft plantation of reeds Arbuthnot Comfortable is the trade-aind to the equatoria parts, without which life would be both fhort an Cheyre grievous 1. Th 2 / [trodition Fr tradi aét or praftice of delivering ac counts from mouth to mout withou written memorials ; communication fro age to age To learn it we have tradition; namely, that { we believe, becaufe both we from our predeceffors and they from theirs, have fo received Hocker 2. Any thing delivered orally from age t age They the-trut With fuperftitions and traditions taint Left only in thofe written records pure Milton It is well known to have been a general trad tion amongft thefe nations, that the world wa Wilkins made, and had a beginning Our old folernitie From no blind zeal or fond tradition rife But, fav'd from death, our Argives yearly pa Thefe grateful honours to the God of day Pope's Statius earth, was confirme and perpetuated by fuch records as would preferv the traditionary account of him to after ages Addifon on the Chriftian Religion TRADITIVE adj [traditive Fr fro trado, Lat. Tranfmitted or tranfmiffible from age to age Suppofe we on things sraditive divide And both appeal to fcripture to decide Dryden's Hind and Panthere blow A conftant trade-wind will fecurel old plain Sabine's heart. Dryd more uncertain, efpecially i to be the fraditionary fenfe o Tillotforr Saviour, which in fo few year had gone through the whol ver o It croffeth the proverb, and Rome might well b built in a day, if that were true which is zraditionally related by Strabo, that the great citie Anchiale and Tarfus were built by Sardanapalu Suppofe the fame traditionary ftrai Of rigid manners in the houfe remain The next a ¢radefman, meek, and much a liar Pope's Epi tradi tional, grow a very rich country gentleman Arbuthnot's Hiftor of Fobn Bull Domefticks in a gentleman's family have mor b ‘Whence may we have the infallible tmdi:izm.z fenfe of fcripture, if not from the heads of thei Tillotfon church If there be any difference in natural parts, i fhould feem the advantage lies on the fide of children born from wealthy parents, the fame traditional floth and luxury which render their bod Saift weak, perhaps refining their fpirits up the accounts of th Sawift ufed i \TraDpI'TION Verfed tio, Lat. [from trade. mercial; bufy in traffick o T 7o TRADU'CE duire w. a [traduce, Lat, tra Fr. 1. To cenfure; to condemn; to repre fent as blameable ; to calumniate ; t decry The beft ftratagem that Satan hath, who knoweth his kingdom to be no one way more fhake than by the publick devout prayers of God' church, is by traducizg the form and manner o them, to bring them into contempt, and fo flac the force of all men's devotion towards them Hooker Thofe particular ceremonies which they preten to be fo {candalous, we thall more thoroughly fift when other things alfo traduced in the publick duties of the church are, together wit thefe to b touched Hooker Whilft calumny has fuch potent abetters, we ar not to wonder at its growth: aslong as men ar malicious and defigning, they will be ¢radacing Government of the Tongue From that preface he took his hintj though h had the bafenefs not to acknowledge his benefac tor, but inftead of it to fraduce mein libel Dryden's Fables 2. To propagate ; to increafe or continu by deriving one from another None are o grofs as to contend for this That fouls from bodies may traduced be Betwee |