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Show TR When root and branch in nature fill agree Dawiés From thefe only the race of perfeét animals wer Hale propagated and traduced over the earth Bacon's Advice to Villiers and fome:by the generant immediately created or traduced, hath been . th great ball of contention to the latter ages Glanville's Scepfes TRADU'CEMENT. 7 f Cenfure ; obloquy [from traduce. TRAFFICKER Rome muft kno The value of her own : *twere a concealmen Worfe than a thef?, no lefs than a traducement Skakefpeare's Coriolanus To hide your doings *TrapU CER Do overpeer the petty trafficker Shakefp. Merch. of Venice ‘That curtfy to them 2. One who derives. "TRADU'CIBLE. adj. [from traduce. as may be derived Suc Though oral tradition might be a competen difcoverer of the original of a kingdom, yet fuch tradition were incompetent without written monuments to derive to us the original laws, becauf they are of a complex nature, and therefore no orally rraducible to fo great a diftance of ages. Hale tin. on t another Touching traditional communication and #radultion of truths connatural and engraven, I do no doubt but many of them have had the help of tha derivation Hale Tra'Frick. 2. [0 [trafigue, Fr. trafico Italian. 1. Commerce ; merchandifing ; larg trade ; exchange of commodities. 77rafJick was formerly ufed of foreign commerce in diftinction from zrade - My fathe Dryden to their god Dionyfus, whil& th calle The dagger, wont to pierce the tyrant's breaft W. 7, [lmfigzwr, Fr. traf- | £o exchange commodities infolence of the under Decay of Picty TRAGICO'MEDY. 7. /. [tragicomedie, Fr from tragedy and comedy.] A drama com. pounded of merry and ferious events ftage, when our applaufe grow For'a&ing here life's tragi-comedy The lookers-on will fay we aé not well Unlefs the laft the former fcenes excel The faults of that drama are in the kind of i which is #ragicomedy ; but it was given to the people Dryde We have often had ¢ragi-comedies upon the Englith theatre with fuccefs: but in that fort of compofition the tragedy- and comedy are in diftin fcenes Gay 1. Relating to tragi-comedy 2. Confifting of a mixture of mirth wit forrow Tracrco'MicaLLY. adv. [from tragi comical.] In a tragicomical manner Laws my Pindarick parents matter'd not So I was tragicomically got Brampflor caft through; to throw The difputes of thofe affuming confidents, tha controverfy of thofe in Plato's den, who havin never feen but the fhadow of an hotfe trajeéfed eagerly contended, whethe a different degree of rarity; by which it become fo fit a medium for trajecting the light of all celef tial bodies dreadful more crofs prifms fucceflively, thofe rays which i the firft prifm are refracted more than others, h in all the following prifms refracted more tha Neawton others in the fame proportion TRrA'JECT. 2 /. [#rajet, French; trajecius Latin. r t w fo a f p y r f carriage , e t v g ; d h t e ‘ ngult notes and gar ety _ forrowful A dire induction I am witnefs t And will to France, hoping the confequenc Will prove as bitter, black, and tragicals Shakefp Greaw's Cofmalogia If the fun's light be trajeffed through three o Untimely fmother'd in their dufky graves Shakefpeare's Richard 111 calamitous its neighin_g proceeded from its appearing mane or tail. Glanwille's Scepfis If there are different kinds of zther, they hav The root and tragical effet Mournful u interweaving the feveral kinds of the drama, f that they cannot be diftinguifhed Gay's What d' ye call if I live to look upon their tragedy. Shak. Rich. I11 1 look upon this now done in England as anothe act of the fame tragedy which was lately begun'i Scotland King Charles And the beholders of this tragick play T Derbam think fo highly of their attainments, are like th That wont'ft the #ragick ftage for to direét In funeral complaints and wailful tin Reveal to me Spenfer's Muiopotmos Thy Clarence he s dead that ftabb'd my Edward I fhall laugh at this That they, who brought me in my mafter's hate Vouchfafe, O thou the mournfull'® mufe of nine Jfrcare, Ital. 2. To prattife commerce; to merchandif taking as in th Pope Heylyn To 'TrRA'FFICK of the event o TrAJE CT. @. a. [trajeftus, Latin.] T 2. Any mournful or dreadful event Gay father of light, unlefs we may guide his chariot The whole art of the tragi-comical farce liesi anthe Like bold Phagtons, we defpife all benefits of th you never fee a poor man have a part unlefs it b as a chorus, or to fill up the fcenes, to dance, or t be derided Taylor's Holy Living Imitate the fifter of painting, tragedy; whic Tyre,a town indeed of great wealth and z-affck You'll fee a draggled damfe From Billingfgate her fithy traffick bear Tractco MICAL. adj. [tragicomique, Fr tragical and comical. Rynier's Tragedies of the laft Age There to her heart fad tragedy addref Commodities ; fubjeé of traffick Mmanney Tra'cicaLNess. z. /. [ from tragical.] Mournfulnefs; calamitoufnefs trage goat ftood at his altar to be facrificed, wa the goat-fong or tragedy As he was, for his great wifdom, fiiled th Englifh- Solomon, he followed the example of tha wife king in nothing more than by advancing th traffick of his people Addifon Thoufands more, that yet fufpeét no peril Will now conclude their plotted zragedy. Shakefp All our tragedies are of Kings and princes; bu A and the moft famous empory of the elder times in g high TrA‘GICALL. }aa"j. [tragicus, Latin3 traTrA'GICK gique, French. 1. Relating to tragedy A merchant of great traffick through the world Shake[peare 2 Fr action Shake[p, Timon of Athens Roye [from tragical. a tragical manner On the world' employs the whole forces of her art in the mai Add 2. Mournfully; forrowfully ; calamitoufly, 1. A dramatick reprefentation of a feriou action Bacon I ]uvenixl's genius was fharp and eager; and a5 hi provocations were great, he has revenged the trz gically Dryden dia, Lat. The reports and fugues have an agrecement wit the figures in rhetorick of repetition and traduézion adv befitting tragedy Dryden 4. Tranfition Traffick's thy god 1. I Tremble and ftart at wagging of a firaw Shakefp. Richard II1 Intending deep fufpicion To the well-lung'd tragedian's rag They recommend their labours of the ftage Since America is divided on every fide by confiderable feas, and no paffage known by land, th traduétion of brutes could only be by fhipping though this was a method ufed for the traduétio of ufeful cattle from hence thither, yet it is no -credible that bears and lions fhould have fo muc care ufed for their tranfportation Hale's Origin of Mankind T'ra'cicaLLry Speak, and look back, and pry on ev'ry fide [tragedie and p_]caics, becaufe it is 2 copy of natur 1 can counterfeit the deep tragedian / gical? Shay and we moralize the fable as well in the tragimlnefi 2. An altor of tragedy TRA'GEDY k The t:}]e of this f%mg isa prctz;ot:;;%:: fl]zmt: zragedy ; tra Many of the poets themfelves had much noble conceptions of the Deity, than to imagine him t have any thing corporeal; as in thefe verfes out o the ancient tragedian Stilling fleet 3. Conveyance ; att of transferring from th Trevoux TrAGE'DIAN. #. [. [fro gadus, Lat. 1. A writer of tragedy "propagation fro A gum which proceed {o called 3. Derivation from one of the {fame kind tranfmiflio La [tragacantha incifion of the root or trunk of a plan 2./. [from traduce. The patrons of traduftion accufe their adverfaries of affronting the attributes of God; and th afferters of creation impeach them of violence t :the nature of things Glarwille If by traduétion came thy mind Our wonder is the lefs to fin A foul fo charming from a ftock fo good ‘Thy father was transfus'd into thy blood. Dryden 2. [ Heny V1 change thofe notes Addifon Tra‘GacaNTH Shall fwallow thofe who God andjufiié hat S I now muf traffickers, that they have moft of the Englifh trad in their hands u So tragical and merited a fat fo grea In it are fo many Jews very rich, an . A falfe cenfurer ; a calumniator 2. Tradition rich burghers on the flood Like figniors an And now loud howling wolves aroufe-theraqi Eid them drefs their bloody altar . Wit/h cvery circumftance of fragick POMp Your argofies with portly fail #. /. [from #raduce. ‘Trapvu'cTION merchant :;f:im Why Took you 81l f ey 7. /. [trafiquenr, Fr. fro 'T'rader traffick. Ts crept into the bofomg,of thee?e‘: ffeful,da Sha Saucy and overbold ! how did you dar To trade and trafick with Macbet In riddles and affairs of death P Shak. Macbheth How haft thou dar'd to think fo vilely of me That I would condefcend to thy mean arts And traffick with thee for a prince's ruin ? Rowe whether it b That drag the tragick melancholy ni:httl:lejadei 2. To trade meanly or mercenarily Some believe the foul is made by God, fome b The gaudy, blabbing, and They firft plant for corn and cattle, and afte enlarge themfelves for things to #raffick withal Between whofe natures no proportion is angels TR I R t t e a t t t Brin c r V o h r M a S c n Which trades to V cm. TrRAJECTION 1 -Th a 2. / dartin of dartin [#rajectios L throug through ghee N |