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ture.

get off,

If any thing be stated in a different minner

Am I so much deform'd! from what you like, tell me freely.

Wbar partial judges are our love and hate! Pope to Swift.

Dryden. Whatever commodities lie under the greatest 10. It is sometiines used for whatever. discouragements from England, those are what Whether it were the shortness of his fore

they are most industrious in cultivating. Swift. sight, the strength of his will, or the dazzling of 2. Which part.

his suspicions, or obat it was, certain it is that If we rightly estimate things, wbat in them is the perpetual troubles of his fortunes could not purely owing to nature, and w bai to labour, we have been without some main errors in his na.' shall find ninety-nine parts of a hundred are

Bacon. wholly to be put on the account of labour. 11. It is used adverbially for partly; in

Locke.

part. 3. Something that is in one's mind inde

The enemy having his country wasted, what finitely.

by himself and what by the soldiers, findeth I tell thee wbat, corporal, I could tear her, succour in no place.

Spenser. Sbakspeare. Thus, what with the war, what with the Which of several.

sweat, what with the gallows, and what with Comets are rather gaz.ed upon than wisely

poverty, I am custom shrunk.

Sbakspeare. observed; that is, what kind of comet for mag

The year before, he had so used the matter, njcude, colour, placing in the heaven, or lasting,

that what by force, what by policy, he had produceth what kind of effect.

Bacon.

taken from the christians above thirty small See wbat natures accompany wbat colours;

castles.

Knolles. for by that you shall induce colours by produc

When they come to cast up the protit and ing those natures.

Bacou.

loss, what betwixt force, interest, or good mante Shew what aliment is proper for that-inten

ners, the adventurer escapes well if he can but tion, and what intention is proper to be pursued

L'Estrange. in such a constitution.

Arbuthnot.

What with carrying apples, grapes, and feuel, so. An interjection by way of surprise or

he tinds himself in a hurry. L'Estrangan

W bat with the benefit of their situation, the question. Wbat! canst thou not forbear me half an

art and parsimony of their people, they have

grown so considerable that they have treaiad hour, Then get thee gone, and dig my grave thyself.

upon an equal foot with great princes. Temples

They live a popular life, and then what for

Sbakspeare.
W bat if I advance an invention of my own to

business, pleasures, company, there 's scarce

room for a morning's reflection. Norris. supply the defect of our new writers? Dryden.

If these halfpence should gain admittance, in 6. WHAT though. What imports it no long space of time, what by the clandestine

ibough? notwithstanding. An ellipti. practices of the coiner, wbat by his own counal mode of speech.

ierfeits and those of others, his limited quantity What ihough a child may be able to read ?

would be tripled.

Swift. There is no doubt but the meanest among the

12. What be! An interjection of cail. people under the law had been as able as the ing. priests themselves were to offer sacrifice, did W bat ho! thou genius of the clime, robat ko! this make sacrifice of no effect? Hooker. Liest thou asleep beneath these hills of snow? W bat though none live my innocence to tell ? Stretch out thy lazy limbs.

Dryder. I know it; truch may own a generous pride? WHATE'VER. I clear myselt, and care for none beside. Dryden. Whatso'.

pronouns. [from

zobat 7. WHAT time, What day. At the tiine WHATSOEVER.

and soever.) Whatsa

is not now in use. when ; on the day when.

Having one nature or another ; being W'bat day the genial angel to our sire

one or another, either generically, speBrorght her more lovely ihan Pandora. Milt. Then baimy sieep had charm'd my eyes to

cifically, or numerically. rest,

To forfeit all your goods, lands, tenements, What time the morn mysterious visions brings,

Castles, and whatsoever, and to be While pærer slumbers spread their golden wings.

Out of the king's protection.

Sbakspeare. Popes

Whatsoever is first in the invention, is fast in Me sole the daughter of the deep address'd;

the execution.

Hamrunde W bat time, with hunger pin'd, my absent mates

If thence he 'scape into whatever world. Roam'd the wild isle in search of rural cates.

Milton Pope.

In whatsoever shape he lurk I'll know, Milt. 3. (pronoun interrogative. Which of Wisely restoring abatsoever grace

It lost by change of times, or tongues, or place. many? interrogatively.

Denban W bat art thou,

Holy writ abounds in accounts of this nature, That here in desart hast thy habitance? Spenser.

as much as any other history buislever. Aeldies W bat is 't to thee if he neglect thy urn,

No contrivance, no prudence wlaisoever can Or without spices lets thy body burn? Dryder. deviate from his scheme, without leaving us Whate'er i bege'd, thou like a dotard speak'st

worse than it found us.

AtterburyMore than is requisite; and what of this?

'Thus wbatever successive duration shall be Why is it mention'd now?

Dryden. bounded at one end, and be all past and preseut, W bat one of an hundred of the zealous bigors,

must come infinitely short of infinity. Bentley. in all parties, ever exan.ined the tenets be is so W'batever is read differs as much from what sciA in!

Locke.

is repeated without book, as a copy does fron When any new thing comes in their way, children ask che coinmon question of a stranger,

an original.

Szeift.

I desire nothing, 1 press nothing upon you, what is it?

Loke.

but to inake the most of human life, and to as9. To how great a degree: used either in.

pire after perfection in zbuteter state of life you terrogatively or indefinitely.

1.

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an axis.

2. Any thing, be it what it will.

What cook would lose her time in picking Whatsoever our liturgy hath more than theirs, larks, wbeatears, and other small birds ? Swijt. they cut it off.

Hocker. WHEA’T PLUM. n. s. A sort of plum. Whatever thing

Xinsuorih. The scythe of time mows down, devour. Milt.

TO WHEE'DLE. v.a. [Of this word I can 3. The same, be it this or that. Be whate'er Vitruvius was before.

find no etymology, though used by

Pope. 4. All that; the whole that; all particu

good writers. Locke seems to mention lars that.

it as a caot word.) To entice by soft From hence he views with his black-lidded eye

words; to flatter; to persuade by kind W batsa the heaven in his wide vault contains.

words.

Spenser. His bus’ness was to pump and wbeetle, W bate'er the ocean pales, or sky inclips, And men with their own keys unriddle, Is thine.

Shakspeare.

To make them to themselves give answers, At once came forth whatever creeps. Milton. For which they pay the necromancers. Hudik. WHEAL. 1. 5. (See WEAL.] A pustule ;

A fox stood licking of his lips at the cock, and a small swelling filled with matter.

wbcedling him to get him down.

L'Estresa

His sire The humour cannot transpire, whereupon it

From Mars his forge sent to Minerva's school, corrupes, and raises little wbears or blisters.

Wiseman.
To learn the unlucky art of wheidling focis.

Dryden. WHEAT. n. s. (hpeare, Saxon; wryde,

He that first brought the word sham, or me Dutch ; triticum, Latin.] The grain of

dle, in use, put together, as he thought fit, idas which breat is chiefly made.

he made it stand for.

Loch It hath an apetalous flower, disposed in spikes; A laughing, toying, wheedling, whimp'ring sàe, each of them consists of many stamina, which Shall make him amble on a gossip's message. are included in a squamose flowercup, having awns: the pointal rises in the center, which af- The world has never been prepared for these terwards becomes an oblong seed, convex on one trifies by prefaces, wbeedled or troubled with es. side, but furrowed on the other; it is farinaceous, and inclosed by a coat which before was Johnny beedled, threaten'd, fawn'd, the flower-cup; these are produced singly, and Till Phillis all her trinkets pawn'd. Szrift. collected in a close spike, being affixed to an in- Wheel. n. s. [hpeol, Sax. wiel, Dutch; dented axis. The species are, 1. White or red wbeat, without awn. 2. Red wbrit, in some

bioel, Islandick.] places called Kentish wheat. 3. White-wheat. 1. A circular body that turns round upon 4. Read-cared bearded wbtat. 5. Cone wbeat. 6. Grey wbeat, and in some places duck-bill Carnality within raises all the combustions wheat and grey pollard. 7. Polonian wheat. without: this is the great wbeel to which the 8. Many-eared wheat. 9. Summer wheat. 10. clock owes its motion.

Decay of Piss. Naked barley. 11. Long-grained wheat. 12. Where never yet did pry Six rowed wbeat. 13. White-eared zubeat with The busy morning's curious eye; long awns. Of all these sorts, cultivated in this The wheels of thy bold coach pass quick and free, country, the cone wheat is chiefly preserved, as And all's an open road to thee. it has a larger ear and a fuller grain than any The gasping charioteer beneath the rhed other: but the seeds of all should be annually Of his own car.

Drita changed; for if they are sown on the same farm, Fortune sits all breathless, and admires to feel they will not succeed so well as when the seed A fate so weighty, that it stops her whel. is brought from a distant country. Miller,

He mildews the white wheat, and hurts the Some watches are made with four week. poor creature of the earth.

Sbakspeare. Reuben went in the days of wheat-harvest. A wheel plough is one of the easiest draughes Genesis.

Mariis. August shall bear the form of a young man A circular body. of a fierce aspect; upon his head a garland of Let go thy hold when a great abeel runs wheat and rie.

Peacban.

doun a hill, lest it break thy neck with fellor. Next to rice is wheat; the bran of which is

ing it.

Slakstur. highly acescent.

Arbuthnot.

3. A carriage that runs upon wheels. The damsels laughing fly: the giddy clown

Through the proud street she moves the pubAgain upon a wheat-sheat drops adown. Gay

lick

gaze, Wheaten. adj. [from wheat.] Made The turning wbeel before the palace stays. Pepe of wheat.

4. An instrument on which criminals are Of wbeaten flower shalt thou make them.

tortured. Exodus.

Let them pull all about mine ears, present the Here summer in her wbeaten garland crown'd.

Addison.

Death on the wbudl, or at wild horses heels, The assize of wbeaten bread is in London.

Sbalspert Thou art a soul in bliss, but I am bound

Arbuthnot. His task it was the wbeaten loaves to lay,

Upon a wheel of fire.

Sbaispeare.

For all the torments of her abeel And from the banquet cake the bowls away.

Pope.

May you as many pleasures share. There is a project on foot for transporting

His examination is like that which is made by our best wheaton straw to Dunstable, and ob

the rack and wbeel.

dlaises. liging us by law to take off yearly so many tun

s. The instrument of spinning. of the straw hats.

SwiA.

Verse sweetens care, however rude the sound; WHEA'Tear. n. s. [ocuantbe, Latin.) A

All at her work the village naidlen sings,

Nor, as she turns the giddy wbeel around, small bird very delicate.

Revolves the sad vicissitudes of things. Girl

0

a

swine

His rage,

6. Rotation ; revolution.

TO WHEEZE. 0.1. [hipecson, Sax.] To Look not too long upon these turning wbeels breathe with noise. of vicissitude, lost we become giddy. Bacon. The construction of the trachæa streightene According to the common vicissitude and

the passage of the air, and produces the whez. qubeel of things, the proud and the insolent, after

ing in the asthma.

ilover. long trampling upon others, come at length to gte is easy to run into ridicule the best descripbe crampied upon themselves.

South. tions, when once a man is in the humour of 7. A compass about; a track approaching laughing, till he torbeezes at his own dull jest. to circularity,

Dryden. He throws his flight iir many an airy zwheel.

The fa:vning dog runs iad; the wbcésing

Milton TO WHEEL. V. n. (from the noun.]

With coughis is choak’d.

Dryden. 1. To move on wheels.

Prepare halsam.ick cups, to wheezing lungs

Medicinal, and short-breach'd. Philips 2. To turn on an axis,

W beezing asclama lot to stir. Scuit The moon carried about the earth always

WHELK. n. s. (See To WELK.] shews the same face to us, not once whecling upon her own center.

Bentley

1. An inequality; a protuberance.

His face is all bubuckles, and whelks, and 3. To revolve; to have a rotatory motion.

knobs, and flames of fire.

Sbakspears. The course of justice wbeel'd about, And left thee but a very prey to time. Sbaksp. To Whelm. v.a. [apbılgan, Sax. wilma,

2. A pustule. (See WEAL.] 4. To turn; to have vicissitudes,

Islandick.] s. To fetch a compass.

1. To cover with something not to be Spvies

thrown off; to bury. Held me in chace, that i was forc'd to wheel

Grievous mischiefs which a wicked fay Three or four miles about. Sbakspeare. You, my Myrmidons,

Had wrought, and many whelm'd in deadly painia, Mark what I say, attend me where I wheel .

Spenser.
This pink is my prize, or ocean whelm thera
Sbakspeare.
all.

Sbakspeare. Continually wheeling about, he kept them in

On those cursed engines triple row so strait, that no man could, without great dan

They saw them wbelm'd, and all their confidence ger, go to water his horse.

Knolles.
He at hand provokes
Under the weight of mountains bury'd deep.

Milioa. and plies him with redoubled strokos;

Se the sad offence deserves, Wheels as he wheels.

Druten.

Plung'd in the deep for ever let me lie,
Half these draw off, and coast the south

W belm'd under scas.

Addison. With strictest watch; these other wheel the

Discharge the load of earth that lies on you, north; Our circuit metts full west: as flame the part,

like one of the mountains under which the poets Hali wheding to the shield, half to the spear.

say the giants and men of the earth are whelmeda Milton.

Popce

Deplore Now smoothly steers through air his rapid

The whelming billow and the faithless oar. Gay. flight, Then wheeling down the steep of heav'n he fies,

2. To throw upon something so as to And draws a radiant circle o'er che skies. Popes cover or bury it. 6. To roll forward.

Wbeln some things over them, and keep them Thunder there.

Mertimer. Must wheel on the earth devouring where it WHELP. K. s. [welp, Dutch; buotpur, rolls.

Milion. Isl indick; bwalp, Swedish.] TO WHEEL. v. a. To put into a rotatory 1. The young of a dog; a puppy. inolion; to make to whirl round.

They call'd us, for our fierceness, Engliske Heav'n rowl'd

dogs; Her motions, as the great first Mover's hand Now, like their zubelps, we crying run away. First wheels their course. Milton.

Sbakspeart, WHEELBARROW. n. s. (rubeel and bar.

Whelps come to their growth within three quarters of a year.

Bacana row.) A carriage driven forward on

Whelps are blind nine days, and then begin to one wheel.

see, as generally believed; but, as we have eiseCarry bottles in a wheelbarrow upon rough where declared, it is rare that their eye-lids ground, but not filled full, but leave some air.

open until the twelfth day.

Brown Bacon. 2. The young of any beast of prey. 'Pippins did in wheelbarrozus abound. King.

The lion's wbelp shall be to himself unknown. WHEE'LER. N. s. [from wheel.] A maker

Sbakspeare of wheels.

Those unlickt bear whelps.

Dannt. After local names the most have been derived 3. A son. In contempt. from occupations, as Potter, Smith, Brasier, The young cobelp of Talbot's raging brood W becler, Wright.

Camden. Did flesh his puny sword in Frenchmen's blood. WHEE’LWRIGHT.n.s. [wheel and wright.]

Sbakspeare. A maker of wheel carriages.

4. A young man. In contempt. It is a tough wood, and all heart, being good

Slave, I will strike your soul out with my foot, for the wheclwrights.

Mortimer.

Let me but find you again with such a face,
You whelp!

B:n 10950k WHEE’LY. adj. [from wheel.] Circular;

That awkward whelp, with his money bags, suitable to rotation.

would have made his entrance

Addison Hinds exercise the pointed steel

To Whelp. v.n. To bring young. ApOn the hard rock, and give a wheely form To the expected grinder,

Philipso plied to beasts, generally beasts of prey

a

WHENSOEVER.}

A lioness hath wbelp'in the streets,

I have shewn whence the understanding may And graves have yawn'd. Slakspeare. get all the ideas it has.

Locke. lú their palaces,

8. From which cause. Where luxury late reign'd, sea-monsters wbelp! Ulcers which corrode, and make the windpipe And stabled.

Milton. dry and less flexible, wbence that suffering proIn a bitch ready to wbelp we found four pup- ceeds.

Blackmore. pies.

. Wuen. adv. [whan, Gothick ; hpænne; 9. From WHENCE. A vitious mode of

speech. Sax, wanneer, Dutch.)

From whence he views, with his black-lidded 1. At the time that.

eye, Divers curious men judged that one Theodo- Whatso the heaven in bis wide vault contains. sius' should succeed, wben indeed Theodosius

Spenser, did.

Camden. To leave his wife, to leave his babes, One who died several ages ago, raises a secret His mansion, and his titles, in a place fondness and benevolence for him in our minds, From wbence hiniself does fiy. Sbakspear?: quben we read his story.

Addison. O how unlike the place from wbence they fell! 2. At what time? interrogatively.

Miltas, When was it she last walka ?

10. Of Whence. Another barbarism. -Since his majesty went into the field.

He ask'd his guide, Sbakspeare. What and of whence was he who press’d the If there's a power above us,

hero's side?

Dryder. And that there is all nature cries aloud

WHENCESOE'VER. adv. [wbence and Through all her works, he must delight in virtue,

ever.] From what place soever ; from And that which he delights in must be happy.

Addisox. But when? or where?

what cause soever. 3. Which time.

Any idea, wbercesoever we have it, contains in it all the properties it has.

Locke, I was adopted heir by his consent; Since wben, his oath is broke.

Wretched name, or arbitrary thing! 'Shakspeare.

W bence ever I thy cruel essence bring, 4. After the time that.

I own thy influence, for I feel thy sting. Prier. When I have once handed a report to another, Whenever. adv. (wben and ever, how know I how he may improve it. Government of tbe Tongue.

or soever.) At what5. At what time.

soever time. Kings may

O welcome hour whenever! Why delays Take their advantage tuben and how they list.

His hand to execute?

Milton Daniel. Men grow first acquainted with many of these 6. At what particular time.

self-evident truths, upon their being proposed; His seed, wben is not set, shall bruise my

not because innate, but because the considerahead.

Milton.

tion of the nature of the things, contained in 7. When as. At the time when ; what

those words, would not suffer him to think

otherwise, how or wbensoever he is brought to time. Obsolete.

reflection.

Lake This when as Guyon saw, he 'gan enquire

Our religion, whenever it is truly received inWhat meant that preace about that lady's throne.

to the heart, will appear in justice, friendship, Spenser. and charity.

Rogers. When as sacred light began to dawn In Eden on the humid flow'rs, that breath'd

WHERE. adv. (hpær, Sax. waer, Dutch.} 'Pheir morning incense, came the human pair. 1. At which place or places.

Milton. She visited that place where first she was so WHENCE. adv. (formed from where, by happy as to see the cause of her unhap. Sidney. the same analogy with bence from here.]

God doth in publick prayer respect the so1. From what place?

lemnity of places, wbere his name should be called on amongst his people.

Hoeker. Wbence and what art thou, execrable shape?

In every land we have a larger space,
Milton.

W bere we with green adorn our fairy bow'rs. 2. From what person ?

Dryden. W bence, feeble nature! shall we summon aid,

In Lydia born, If by our pity and our pride betray'd? Prior. W bere plenteous harvests the fal fields adorn. 3. From what cause ?

Dryde. W bence comes this unsought honour unto me? The solid parts, where the fibres are more W bence does this mighty condescension flow? close and compacted.

Blacksort. Fenton.

2. At what place? 4. From which premises.

Where were ye, nymphs, when the remorseTheir practice was to look no farther before

less deep them than the next line; whence it will follow, Clos'd o'er the head of your lov'd Lycidas? that they can drive to no certain point. Dryden.

Milten, s. From what place or person : indefi- Ah! where was Eloise ?

Pepe nitely.

3. At the place in which. Grateful to acknowledge whence his good de- Where I thought the remnant of mine age scends.

Milton. Should have been cherish'd by her child-like 6. For which cause.

duty, Recent urine, distilled with a fixed alkali, is I now am full resolvd to take a wife. Sbalsp. turned into an alkaline nature; whence alkaline 4. Any WHERE. At any place. salts, taken into a human body, have the power Those subterraneous waters were universal, of turning its benign salts into fiery and volatilé.

as a dissolution of the exterior earth could not

Arbutbyt. 7. From what source : indefinitely,

be made any wbere but it would fall into waters.

Barse. in use.

a man.

5. WHERE, like bere and there, has in fury; whereat he was no less angry, and ashamcomposition a kind of pronominal sig

ed, than desirous to obey Zelmane. Sidney nification; as, wbur of, of which.

This is, in man's conversion unto God, the 1. It has the nature of a noun.

first stage wisereat his race towards heaven beNot now ginneth.

Hooker.

Wbereat I wak’d, and found
He shall find no where safe to hide himself. Before mine eyes, all real, as the dream
Spenser. Had lively shadow'd.

Milton
Bid them farewell, Cordelia, though unkind; When we have done any thing wohereat they

Thou losest here a better wbere to find. Sbuks. are displeased, it they have no reason for it, we WHERE AROU'T. adv. [where and about.] should seek to rectity their mistakes about it, 1. Near wha: place ? as, whereabout did

and inform them better:

Kettlewell. you lose what you are seeking ? 2. At what? as, whereat are you offended ? 2. Near which place.

WHEREBY'. adv. (where and by.]
Thou firm-set earth,

1. By which. Hear not my stes, which way they walk, for But even that, you must confess, you have fear

received of her, and so are rather gratefully to The very stones prate of my whereabout. Shaks.

thank her, than to press any further, till you 3. Concerning which.

bring something of your own, wbereby to claimi The greatness of all actions is measured by it.

Sidney, the worthiness of the subject from which they Prevent those evils whereby the hearts of proceed, and the object whereabout they are men are lost.

Hooker. conversant: we must of necessity, in both re.

You take my life, spects, acknowledge that this present world afe When you do take the means wbereby I live. fordeth not any thing comparable unto the due

Sbakspeare. ties of religion.

Hookor. If an enemy hath taken all that from a prince WHEREA's. adv. (where and as.]

whereby he was a king, he may refresh himself 1. When on the contrary.

by considering all that is left him, whereby ie is Are not those found to be the greatest zealots

Taylor. who are most notoriously ignorant? whereas

This is the most rational and most protitable true zeal should always begin with true know

way of learning languages, and whereby we may ledge.

Sprat.

best hope to give account to God of our youth The aliment of plants is nearly one uniform

spent herein.

Milton. juice; whereas animals live upon very different

This delight they take in doing of mischief, sorts of substances.

Arbutbnot. wbereby I mean the pleasure they take to put 3. At which place. Obsolete.

any thing in pain that is capable of it, is no They came to fiery flood of Phlegeton,

other than a foreign and introduced disposition.

Locke. W bereas the damned ghosts in torments fry.

Fairy Queen. 3. By what? as, whereby wilt thou aca Prepare to ride unto St. Albans,

complish thy design ? Whereas the king and queen do mean to hawk. WHERE'ver. adv. [where and ever.] At

Sbakspeare. whatsoever place. 3. The thing being so that. Always re- Which to avenge on him they dearly vow'd, ferred to something different.

Wberever that on ground they mought him finde Whereas we read so many of them so much

Spenser commended, some for their mild and merciful

Him serve, and fear! disposition, some for their virtuous severity, Of other creatures, as him pleases best, some for integrity of lite; all these were the Wherever plac'd, let him dispose. Miltona fruits of true and infallible principles delivered Not only to the sons of Abraham's loins unto uis in the word of God.

Hooker.

Salvation shall be preach’d; but to the sons W creas all bodies seem to work by the com- Of Abraham's faith, wherever through the world. munication of their natures, and impressions of

Milton. their motions; the diitusion of species visible W bere-e'er thy navy spreads her canvas wings, seemeth to participate more of the former, and Homage to thee, and peace to all, she b:ings. the species audible of the latter. Bacon.

Waller Whereas wars are generally causes sf poverty,

The climate, about thirty degrees, may pass the special nature of this war with Spain, if for the Hesperides of our age, whatever or made by sea, is like to be a lucrative war. Bacon. where-ever the other was.

Temples W bereas seeing requires light, a free mediu!n, He cannot but love virtue, wherever it is. and a right line to the objects, we can hear in

F. Atterbury. the dark, immured, and by curve lines. Holdr. Wherever he hath receded from the Mosaick

W bereas at first we had only three of these account of the earth, he hath receded from naprinciples, their number is already swoln to tive.- ture and matter of fact.

Woodw.irdi Baker. Wherever Sivakspeare has invented, he is But on the contrary.

greatly below the novelist; since the incidents One imagines that the terrestrial matter,

he has added are neither necessary nor probable. which is showered down with rain, enlarges the

Sbakspeare Illustrated. bulk of the earth: another fancies that the earth WHE'REFORE. adv. [where and for.] will ere long all be washed away by rains, and the waters of the ocean turned forth to over

1. For which reason. whelm the dry land: whereas, by this uistribu

The 8x and the ass desire their food, neither tion of matter, continual provision is every

purpose they unto themselves any end acteres where made for the supply of bodies. Woonw.

fore.

Hookers WHEREA'T. adv. (where and at.]

There is no cause wherefore we should think

God more desirous to manifest his favour by 1. At which.

temporal blessings towards them than towards This he thought would be the fittest resting

Hucker place, till we might go further from his mother's Shall I tell you why? VOL. IY.

us.

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