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Show WI perhaps b 18. This prepofition migh exemplified in many more relations, fo " jts ufe is very frequent, and therefor W t Wit a d by it s vario an very la is not always qaf_y to diftinguifh, no perhaps is anydiftinétion always obferv ed. With feems rather to denote an in{trument, and by a caufe : thus, be Aille his enemy With a fword, fiut be die The arrow is confidere by an arrow rather as a caufe, as ther is no men " tion of an agent, If the agent be mor remote, &y 1s ufed; as, the wermin whic be could not kill With his gun, be killed b poifon : if thefe two prepofitions be tran{ pofed, the {entence, though equally in telligible, will be lefs agreeable to th common modes of fpeech 1 With, in cognpofition, fignifies oppofi tion or privation; except withal A prefent natural good may be parted wwith, up on a profitable expectation of a future moral good Wilkins. Wirsa'L. adv. [with and all 1. Along with the reft likewife fame time at th Yet it muft be witbal confidered, thatthe greatef part of the world are they which be fartheft fro perfection Hooker How well fupplied with noble counfellors How modeft in exception, and witha How terrible in conftant refolution ! Shak. Hen. V The one contains my picture, prince If you chufe that, then I am yours withal Shukefpeare This that prince did not tranfmit as a power, t make conqueft, but as a retinue for his fon and withaly to enable him to recover fome part of Ul fter Dawies on Ireland The river being wholly of frefh water, and f large withal, chilleth the air Heylyn God, when he gave me ftrength, to thew witha How flight the gift was, hung it in my hair. Mi/s *Tis neceffary men fhould be out of their nonag before they can attain to an actual ufe of this prin ciple5 and, withal, that they fhoul exert and exercife their faculties be ready t Wilkins 1 cannot, cannot bear; 'tis paft, 'tis done Perith this impious, this detefted fon Perifh his fire, and perith I avithal And let the houfe's heir and the hop'd kingdo fall Dryden Chrift had not only an infinite power to wor miracles, but alfo an' equal wifdom to know th Juft force and meafure of every argument to perfuade, and withal to look through and through al the dark corners of the foul of man, and to difcern what prevails upon them, and what does not South 2. It is fometime ufe WI W.I by writer wher we now ufe with, but I think improperly Time brings means to furnith him withal 2. To call away; to make to retire Nauficaa is withdrawony and a whole nation in troduced, for a more general praife of Ulyfies To WiTHDRA'W Broone @w. n To.retire retreat She from her hufband foft withdrew t Milton At this excefs of courage all amaz'd The foremoft of his foes awhile wwithdraa With fuch refpe in enter'd Rome they gaz'd Who on high chairs the godiike fathers faw. Dryd Tillotfon o WITHDRA'W, @, 4. [with and dra from pr3, or piden, Saxon againft, an drafw. % To take back ; to berea e hlt }s not poflible they thould obferv t o e ;v 0 from the other withdraq unneceffarily obe lence Hoyoker Impoflible it is thas God thould w ithdraww hi prefenc an thing becauf of God isfro infinite ok Yo, II fubftanc uuw/m- Larrier's Didl the bow Wi rHEREDNESS. n. fo [from awith red The ftate of being withered; marcidity Water them as foo as fet, till they have reco vered their qitherednefs MMortimer's Hufbandry contrive that the faddle may pinch the beaft in hi WiTHDRA'WINGROOM and ro0m. Tatler Room behind another room for retirement lour, with a withdrawingroom, with a kitchen, butteries, and other conveniencies, is fufficient Mortimer's Hufbandry WICTHE. 7. /1. A willow twig An Irifh rebel put up a petition, that he migh be hanged in a with and not a halter, becaufe i had been fo ufed with former rebels Bacon There let him li Till I, of cut-up ofiers, did impl A aith, a fathome long, with which his feet I made together in a fure league meete. Chapman z. A band, properly a band of twigs. [prcd fignifies a band. Thefe cords and wwythes will hold men's con fciences, when force attends and twifts them King Charles Birch is of ufe for ox-yoaks, hoops, fcrews awythes for faggots o Wi'rHER Mortimer's Hufbandry w. 7. [geprSenod, Saxon dry, faded. 1. To fade ; to grow faplefs ; to dry up That which is of God w mof whic of that ability whic defend, to the utter he hath given tha is otherwife, let it wither even in the roo from whence it hath fprung Hooker When I have pluck'd thy rofe I cannot give it vital growth again It needs muft wither Shake[peare's Othells It fhall wwither in all the leaves of her fpring. Exek. xviie g The foul may fooner leave off to fubfift than t love; and, like the vine, it withers and dies, if i has nothing to embrace South's Sermons 2. To wafte, or pine away Are there fo many left of your own family, tha you fhould defire wholly to reduce it, by fufferin the laff branch of it to wither away before it time Temple 3. To lofe or want animal moifture Vain men, how vanithing a blifs we crave Now warm in love, now with'ring in the grave Dryde 70 WI'THER. @. a 1. To make to fade Withers S‘wz/? The hurt exprefie by witherwrung fometimes is caufed b WiI'THERWRUNG unfit, efpecially when the bows are to wide ; for, when they are fo, they bruif the fleth againft the {pines of the fecon an third vertebr falleth Ja.i. 11 for want of animal moifture Is, like a blafted fapling, wither'd up. ~ Shakefp What are thefe So aither'd, and fo wild in their attire That look not like th' inhabitants o' th' ea:th Shakefpeare's fllfi:clze!‘b Thy youth, thy ftrength, thy beauty, which wil chang To awither'd, weak, and grey . Milzon In Spain our fprings, like old meq's children, b Decay'd and wither'd from their infancy No kindly fhowers fall on our bar}'en earth To hatch the feafons in_a timely birth Dryden of the back, whic forms that prominence that rifes abov their fhoulders Farrier's Diét To WiTHHO'LD w..a. [with and hold. Withheld, or withholden, pret. and part Spenfer has, for the fake of rhyme, ver licentioufly written wwithhault 1. To reftrain; to keep from allion ; t hold back That hand, which as no kind of imminen danger could caufe at firft to awithhold itfelf, f neither have any practices, fo many, fo bloody following fince, been ever able to make weary Hooker Sith mine he is, or free or bound Wihbold, O fovereign prince, your hafly han From knitting league with him Sgenfer The princ Would fain have come with me to meet your grace' And by his mother was perforce ewithbeld Shak A great number of fuits are for abufive words or a box on the ear, or other trivial matters, whic leave no permanent ill effe&s, but, if our paffion may be aith-held from eftimating them, pafs of without making us the worfe, or doing us any prejudice Kettleavell Be careful to <withbol Your talons from the wretched and the bold Tempt not the brave and needy to defpair For, though your violence thould leave them bare Of gold and filver, {words and darts remain. Dryd Volition is an act of the mind, knowingly exerting that dominion it takes itfelf to have ove any part of man, by employing it in, or withhsld ing it from, any particular action 2. To hinder The fun is no fooner rifen with a burning heat but it evithereth the grafs, and the flower thereo And yet are on't Let the gall'd beat wince We are unwrung in the withers Shakefpeare Rather than let your matter. take long journies a bite of a horfe, or by a faddle bein We owe to chriftianity the difcovery of the mof guainted awithal tight that for the two pieces of woo For an ordinary gentleman, a hall, a great par able only before that ftage of our being Age cannot awither her, nor cuftom ftale her infinite variety. - Shakefpeare's Antony and Cleopatra Look how I am bewitch'd ; behold, mine ar perfect rule of life that ever the world was ac fingers above the horfe's avithers, to kee 7. /- [withdra Duumvir has paffed the noon of life ; but canno withdraw from entertainments which are pardon 2. To make to fhrink, decay, or wrinkle Tillotfon fou which is laid under a faddle, abou Wi'tHERS, #. /. Is the joining of th fhoulder-bones at the bottom of the nec and mane, towards the upper part of th thoulder Farrier's Di& Let hx_m but wait th' occafions as they fall. Daniel It_ is to know what God loves and delights in and is pleafed avithal, and would have us do i order to our happinefs of iro A piec 7 fWitTtErBAND Locke to obftruct What difficulties there are whic as yet quizh bold our affent, till we be further and bette fatif fied, I hope no indifferent amongft them will fcoe or refufe to hear Higker 3. To take away to refufe Soon as Titan 'gan his head exault And foon again as he his light withbault Their wicked engines they againft it bent. Spenfer WITHHO LDEN. part. paff. of wwithhold Th wor kee back thewet tha it wa thing formerly due unto Gedj for we cannot fa that any thing is kept back, or wwithbolden, tha was 110t due before Spelma Witsno'LoEr # [fro avithhold. He who withholds WiTHI'N. prep. [pruman, Saxon. 1. In the inner part of Who then fhall blam His pefter'd fenfes to recoil and ftart Whe |