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Show VA LN YALUE. % VA {value French g~y.Wi a n Price; worth walor Ye are phyficians of no walue Fob, xiii Learn to live for your own fake, and the fervic of God; and let nothing in the world be of an " walue with you, but that which you can turn int 2 fervice to God, and a means of your future hap "pinefs ¢. High rate Law VA V ALVF,. . /o [valva Latin. I. A folding door Swift through the walwes the vifio a fai Repafs d Pope's Odyffey 2 Cefar is well acquainted with your virtues And therefore fets this walue on your life Let him but know the price of Cato's friendfhip Opening th.cn‘ valves, felf-mov' on either fide he adamantine doors expande wide When death commands they clo e, when deat commands divide Harte .i wit th Fr fro th noun. 1. To rate at a certain price Whe the country grow better inhabited, th tithes and other obventions will be more augment " ed, and better walued Spenfe A mind walzing his reputation at the due price will repute all difhoneft gain much inferior thereunto Carexv's Survey God alone walues right the good Milton 2. To rate highly; to have in high eftcem Some of the finelt treatifes in dialogue, man " very walued pieces of French, Italian, and Engl!f appear ‘ Po[:: 3. To appraife ; to eftimate ( he be poorer tha « dhall waiue him thy eftimation, the prief Leviticusy xxvii. 3 4. To be worth; to be equal in worth to The peace between the French and us not walue The coft that did conclude it 5. To take account of Her fadtion will be full as ftrong as outs Shak 7 To confider with refpect to importance to hold important The king muft take it ill So flightly walued in his meffenger, Shak. K Lear Neither of them walued their promifes, according to rules of honour or integrity Clarendon 8. To compare with refpe to price, o excellence It cannot be walved with the gold of Ophir 9. To raife to eftimation not in ufe Job xxviii. 16 This is a fenf She ordered all things, refiing t e wifdom o the wifet, by making the poffefi r thereof mifer abl valuing th foll of th making the {uccefs profperous mof foolith, b Siidney dnay Some walye themfelves to thei countr by jealoufies _of the crown Temple . Vanity, or a defire of valuin ourfelves by fhew1ng other faults Tenmple ALUELESS. adj, [from value. of 1o valge Bein A counterfei %cfemhhng majefty; which touch'd and tried Yoves walyeles Shakefpeare's King Fobn ALUER. 7. /. [from valye. H values Hammond vyag n o, alyer of trifle oL, II "tha Fell VA'NGuarD. n [ [avant garde, French. The front; or firft line of the army The king's want-guard maintained fight againf the whole power of the enemies Bacon The martial Idomen, who bravely ftood befor In want-guard of his troops, and marcht, fo ftrength a favage bore Chapman Vanguard to right and left the front unfold Milton to prevent its re Jo [valvule French. Vaniy'vra. n [ [vanille, French. plant The fruit of thofe plants is ufe 1 to fcent chocolate Miller When mixed with wanillios, or fpices, chocolat acquires the good and bad qualities of aromati oils To Va'Nisu . /. The upper leather of a fhoe nouir, Fr. piece new Vax # /. [fio Diaticy While fancy brings the vanifb'd piles to vie ' And builds imaginary Rome anew Pope z. 'To pafs away from the fight; to difappear Whither are they wanifp'd -Into the air; and what feem'd corpora -One W}[ out an old thing with {fomethin n The foe he had furvey)d Milto = Arrang'd, ds £ him they did appear wan, main battle, wings and rear Hudibras Van to wav the foremoft fquadrons meet The midmoft battles haft'ning up behind. Diryden [Van, Fr. wannus Latin.] once Va'NiTy fide, an narrowe on the other; both which minifter to the progreffive motion of the bird Derbam o VaN. v. a. [from wannus, Latin ; vanners Fr.] To fan ; to winnow Not i ufe "The corn which in wanning licth loweft is th beft Bacon VA'NCcOURIER. n. [ [avantcourier, Fr. A harbinger; a precurfor VANE. #. /. [waene, Dutch. A plat hung on a pin to turn with the wind Pope's Ody[Jiy a fpirit of infidelit an prophanenef Atterbury n.f. [vanitas, Lat. wanité, Er. 1. Emptinefs ; uncertainty ; inanity Vanity of wanities, all is vanity Eccl 2. Fruitlefs defire ; fruitlefs endeavour Vanity poffefleth many, who are defirous to kno the certainty of things to come Sidney Thy pride And wand'ring wanity, when leaf: wa Rejected my forewarning fafe Milton 3. Trifling labour Lo ufe long difcourfe againft thofe things whic are both againft feripture and reafon, mightrightl be judge fail-broad wan The wanes are broad on on an ftarted up 3. A wing with which the air is beaten. He fpreads for flight, and in the furging fmok Up-lifted fpurns the ground. Milton's Parad. Lof A fiery glob Of angels on full fail of wing flew nigh Who on their plumy @ans receiv'd him fof From his uneafy ftation, and upbore As on a floating couch, through the blithe air Milton His difabled wing unftrung He wheel'd in air, and ftretch'd his wans in vain His wans nolonger could his flight fuftain. Dryden Shak All thefe delights will vanifb Milton That fpirit of religion and"ferioufnefs, by whic we had diftinguithed ourfelves, vanifbed all a fpread wide by which a wind is raifed a fan Hi I have taken heart, thou wvanifbeft. 3. To pafs away; to be loft A t in { Y A The other token of their ignorance of the fe was an oar; they call it a corn wan Broome on the OdyfJey Shake[peare He cut the cleaving fky And in a moment vanifb'd from her eye the firft line Before each wan prick forth the airy knight 2 No [from avant, French. 1. The front of an army Wit Melted as breath into the wind Savift vamp. . n [vanefeo, Latin ; eva or elfe vanifpeth as foon as it appears to the world That 's fure of death without. Shake[p. Corio anus This opinion hath been vamped up by Cardan Bentley I had never much hopes of your wampt play Va'mrer on Aliments High honour is not only £C 1 and born b pain and danger, but muft be nurfed by the like Ainfavorth fuppofed proto be derive and to mean To piece a part Arbuthno 1. To lofe perceptible exiftence You wit To wamp a body with a dangerous phyfick If a man be in-ficknefs, the time will fee fonger without a clock than with; for the min doth waluc every moment . Bacon The queen is walued thirty thoufand ftrong fhut 70 VAMP. . a. [This i bably enough by Skinne from avant, Fr. before laying on a new outfide. old thing with fome ne Shas. Henry VIII - 6. To reckon at, with refpe& to number o power. Vame He walues himfelf upon the compaffion wit which he relieved the afii&ted Atterbury 1 To him your orchard's early fruits are due He walues thefé ‘ VAT UL Bt {mall valve Addifon A pleafing off "ring, when 'tis made by you an The arteries, with a contra@ile force drive th blood fili forward 5 it being hindere from goin backward by the walves of the heart Arbuthnot on Aliments DIJ'{{L'II @v. a. [valir blood grg{'s y wa thi teftimony, that his defign was not to pay him th walue of his pictures, becaufe they were above an gy VaA'LUE Shakefpeare Thvis ;xir,‘hy the opening of the wvalve and forcin up of the fucker, may be drive out, Boyle oY obligin p[icc A man fhe would fpell backward If tall, a lance ill-headed If fpeaking, why a wane blown with all winds Any thing that opens over the mou h o a veffel 3. [In anatomy. kind of membrane And name your terms Addifon sin certain veflels to admi 5, Rate; price equal to the worth of the thHeing fenb u h t him mon 4 a wanit in the anfwerer not much in ferior to that of the inventor Raleigh's Hiftory of the World Falfehood ; untruth Here I may well fhew the wanity of that whic is reported in the ftory of Walfinghara Sir ¥. Dawies 5. Empty pleafure; vain purfuit; idl fhew ; unfubftantial enjoyment; pett objet of pride Were it not ftrange if God fhould have mad fuch ftore of glorious creatures on earth, and leav them all to be confume in fecular vanity, allow ing none but the bafer fort to be employed in hi own fervice 0oker I muf Beftow upon the eyes of this young coupl Some wazity of mine art Shakefpeare's Tempef Caft not her ferious wit on idle things Make her free will flave to wvanity Dawies Sin with @wazjty had fill'd the works of men The eldeft equa the youngéf Milton in the vanity o their drefs; and no other reafon can be given of it but that they equal, if pot furpafs them, in the va nity of their defires South Thin |