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Examples
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The way into the hold of the canoe is from off the platform, down a fort of uncovered hatchway, in which they fland to bail out the water.
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| | Laurence J fland. fl Portland Bay. •*59ofFahr. f f Cape Bridgwater of Licit.
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The prime conduftor has iikewife a conical tube, or focket, fixed in D 2 the fto DESCRIPTION OF THE PLATES* the fide or end of it, to receive the conical tube fixed to the ball B: they are made conical that they may fland fleady.
Miscellaneous Experiments and Remarks on Electricity, the Air-pump, and the Barometer: With the ... Abraham Brook 1797
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It is of a young gentleman, who having Karnt to dance, and that to great perfcAionj there happened to fland an old trunk in the room where Ch. 33/Ofiht/qfotiathn tf Ideas. 42 j where he learnt.
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His powV Thou could'll not fland: felf-vigorous he rofe,
Poems, Moral, Elegant and Pathetic: Vis. Essay on Man Alexander Pope , Helen Maria Williams 1796
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In Ihort, that which wants an excufe for being in print, ought not t« have been pri - ted at all; but whether the enfuing poems defervc to fland in that clafs, the world muft have leave to deter - mine.
The works of the British poets : with prefaces, biographical and critical 1795
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The next day he fent an exprefs, advifing him to caufe the gates of the city to be fhut, and aflured them he would hfe with them with his friends the day following, and would fland by them and ferve them to the hazard of hii life and fortune.
Derriana: A Collection of Papers Relative to the Siege of Derry, and Illustrative of the ... G. Douglas 1794
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Let the rule for quafliing the order be made abfolutc, and let the other fland for further confideration*
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Foretel favours the emen - dation of Dr. Warburton, which is made with great acutenefs; jet the original reading may, I think, fland.
The Plays of William Shakspeare: In Fifteen Volumes. With the Corrections and Illustrations of ... 1793
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James IV. of Scotland, too weak to with - fland the Englifh, was obliged to feek afrifl: ance from the fame quarter.
The spirit of general history : in a series of lectures, from the eighth, to the eighteenth century : wherein is given a view of the progress of society, in manners and legislation during that period Thomson, George, Rev., fl. 1791-2 1792
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