English Synonyms Explained, in Alphabetical Order: With Copious Illustrations and Examples Drawn from the Best Writers |
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Page 9
... Addison . I look upon an abut statesman out of business like a huge whale , that will endeavour to over- turn the sbip unless be has an empty cask to play with . Steele . The object is too big for our capacity , when we would comprehend ...
... Addison . I look upon an abut statesman out of business like a huge whale , that will endeavour to over- turn the sbip unless be has an empty cask to play with . Steele . The object is too big for our capacity , when we would comprehend ...
Page 16
... Addison . Whatever tbe will commands , the whole man must do ; the empire of the will over all the fa- culties being absolutely overruling and despotic . Sodth . Such an history as that of Suetonius is to me an unanswerable argument ...
... Addison . Whatever tbe will commands , the whole man must do ; the empire of the will over all the fa- culties being absolutely overruling and despotic . Sodth . Such an history as that of Suetonius is to me an unanswerable argument ...
Page 21
... ADDISON . Nothing less than Infinite wisdom can have an our affairs . ADDISON . Men arc exposed to more casualties than women , as battles , sea - voyages , with several dan- gerous trades and professions . Addison . Accident , v ...
... ADDISON . Nothing less than Infinite wisdom can have an our affairs . ADDISON . Men arc exposed to more casualties than women , as battles , sea - voyages , with several dan- gerous trades and professions . Addison . Accident , v ...
Page 34
... ADDISON . themselves . ACTIVE , BRISK , AGILE , NIMBLE . ACTIVE , v . Active , diligent . BRISK has a common origin with fresh , which is in Saxon fersh , Dutch frisch or bersk , Danish fritk , fersk , & c . AGILE , in Latin agilis ...
... ADDISON . themselves . ACTIVE , BRISK , AGILE , NIMBLE . ACTIVE , v . Active , diligent . BRISK has a common origin with fresh , which is in Saxon fersh , Dutch frisch or bersk , Danish fritk , fersk , & c . AGILE , in Latin agilis ...
Page 35
... ADDISON . I was forced to quit my first lodgings by reason of an officious landlady , that would be asking me every morning how I had slept . ADDISON . ACTOR , AGENT . These terms vary according to the different senses of the verb from ...
... ADDISON . I was forced to quit my first lodgings by reason of an officious landlady , that would be asking me every morning how I had slept . ADDISON . ACTOR , AGENT . These terms vary according to the different senses of the verb from ...
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Common terms and phrases
action ADDISON admit affections animals applied bad sense BLAIR body BURKE cation cause cerned character Christian Cicero circum circumstances civil comes common compounded comprehends conduct confined CUMBERLAND degree denotes disposition distinction Divine DRYDEN employed endeavour epithets evil exer express feeling figurative former French frequently friends German give Greek habit happy heart Hebrew honor human idea implies individual indulge JOHNSON judgement Latin latter lence less look low German manner marks means ment MILTON mind mode moral nature neral ness never nexion nifies object offended one's opposed ourselves pain participle particular party passion perly person pleasure POPE principles produce proper sense properly racter regard religion respects Saxon sentiment serve SHAKSPEARE signifies literally signifies the thing sion society sometimes speak species spects spirit STEELE superior temper THOMSON thought tion truth vice vidual virtue wish words
Popular passages
Page 65 - Immediately the mountains huge appear Emergent, and their broad bare backs upheave Into the clouds, their tops ascend the sky. So high as heaved the tumid hills, so low Down sunk a hollow bottom broad and deep, Capacious bed of waters...
Page 103 - Of him that knows much, it is natural to suppose that he has read with diligence ; yet I rather believe that the knowledge of Dryden...
Page 3 - ... coronation ; such a king to whom the allegiance of an English subject is due ; and hath set up another kind of dominion ; which is to all intents an abdication or abandoning of his legal title as fully as if it had been done by express words.
Page 239 - If we consider the world in its subserviency to man, one would think it was made for our use ; but if we consider it in its natural beauty and harmony, one would be apt to conclude it was made for our pleasure.
Page 347 - Sunday clears away the rust of the whole week, not only as it refreshes in their minds the notions of religion, but as it puts both the sexes upon appearing in their most agreeable forms, and exerting all such qualities as are apt to give them a figure in the eye of the village. A...
Page 247 - We conquer an enemy by whatever means we gain the mastery over him; we vanquish him, when by force we make him yield; we subdue him by whatever means we check in him the spirit of resistance. A Christian tries to conquer his enemies by kindness and generosity; a warrior tries to vanquish them in the field; a prudent monarch tries to tubdue his rebel subjects by a due mixture of clemency and rigor.
Page 107 - As some lone miser, visiting his store, Bends at his treasure, counts, recounts it o'er; Hoards after hoards his rising raptures fill, Yet still he sighs, for hoards are wanting still? Thus to my breast alternate passions rise, Pleas'd with each good that Heaven to man supplies: Yet oft a sigh prevails, and sorrows fall, To see the hoard of human bliss so small...
Page 57 - HAVING notified to my good friend Sir ROGER that I should set out for London the next day, his horses were ready at the appointed hour...
Page 569 - Habits which are ingrafted into the natural disposition are properly inbred ; whence the vulgar proverb that ' what is bred in the bone will never be out of the flesh...