The 7167 quotations containing remain in the Oxford English Dictionary, 2d edition
In chronological order
- (1424.1) E.E. Wills (1882) 60 "The remaindre of þe maner of Steneby..[I bequeath] to Thomas my son and heir. (1424)"
- (1424.2) Sc. Acts Jas. I (1597) §.8 "All the greate and smal customes, and burrow-mailles of the Realme, abide and remaine with the King till his living. (1424)"
- (1430.1) R. Gloucester's Chron. (Rolls) 4920 + 20 "To byleue [= remain] þere Among mys bylyuede [MS. &epsilon. vnbelefful] men. (1430)"
- (1460.1) Holinshed Hist. Scotl. II. 89 "Such coisterels and other as remained with the Scotish cariage, seeing the discomfiture of their aduersaries, ran foorth and pursued them into those marishes. (1460)"
- (1469.1) Househ. Ord. (1790) 93 "To see the remaines hadde into the lardre, and the lardener to be charged with it. (1469)"
- (1472.1) Plumpton Corr. (Camden) 26 "One Richard of the Burgh, that had take and led away feloniously certaine ky and other cattell..was take and arested with the said manor att Spofford, whearat they yett remaine. (1472)"
- (1476.1) Acta Auditorum (1839) 49/1 "Þare to remain apoun þare awin expenss. (1476)"
- (1483.1) Acta Audit. in Acta Dom. Conc. II. Introd. 114 "The said Thomas sall remain with the said land and tenement. (1483)"
- (1485.1) Act 1 Hen. VII, c. 1 "Subjects having cause of Action by Formedon in the descender, or else in the remainder. (1485)"
- (1506.1) in Mem. Hen. VII (Rolls) 288 "A little before..my lord Herberd voided all the King's chamber except lords and officers..which remained there still. (1506)"
- (1513.1) Douglas &Ae.AElig;neis iii. vi. 176 "Thai leifis remainis onsterit of thair place, Ne partis nocht furth of reule. (1513)"
- (1513.2) More in Grafton Chron. (1568) II. 766 "To remaine..till the matter were..examined..and either iudged or appeased. (1513)"
- (1516.1) Reg. Privy Seal Scot. I. 422/2 "The kingis grace dischargis thaim apone thair remaining in ward for the said errour. (1516)"
- (1517.1) in Plead. Duchy Lancast. (1896) I. 70, "[60 others, who remained] in Hiddelles [near the said tenement]. (1517)"
- (1526.1) Househ. Ord. (1790) 157 "One of the groomes..to carry to the chaundrie all the remaine of morters, torches, quarries, pricketts. (1526)"
- (1528.1) Lyndesay Dreme 360 "That was the Lymbe, in the quhilk did remaine Our Fore-fatheris, because Adam offendit. (1528)"
- (1528.2) Perkins Profit. Bk. v. §.326 (1642) 144 "If a man seised of three acres..enfeoffeth a stranger..of two of the three acres..and the wife is endowed of the third acre which remaineth as allowance of the other acres. (1528)"
- (1528.3) Tindale Doctr. Treat. (1848) 301 "By the reason of original sin, or *birth-poison, that remaineth in him. (1528)"
- (1529.1) Latimer Serm. (1844) 20 "Yet there may remain a bag of rusty malice, 20 years old, in thy neighbour's bosom. (1529)"
- (1529.2) More Dyaloge ii. iv. Wks. 185 "Than shall al these scalde &. scabbed peces scale clene of, &. the hole body of christes holy church remaine pure. (1529)"
- (1529.3) Act 21 Hen. VIII, c. 13 §.8 "Only the Remain and Overplus above their Expences of their Housholds. (1529)"
- (1530.1) in Arch&ae.aeig;ologia III. 156 "Returning to the chaundry all the remains of mortars, torches, quarries, prickets and sizes. (1530)"
- (1531.1) Elyot Gov. (1875) 3 "Take awaie Ordre frome all thinges, what shulde than remaine? Certes nothing finally, except some man wold imagine eftesoones, Chaos, whiche of some is expounded, a confuse mixture. (1531)"
- (1531.2) Elyot Gov. i. xix, "At that tyme Idolatry was nat clerely extincte, but diuers fragmentes therof remained in euery region. (1531)"
- (1533.1) More Apol. xxii. Wks. 882/2 "A great some remaining after al the spiritual folke sufficiently prouided for, then had it bene good that he hadde yet farther deuysed, how it would please him that his discretes should order the remanaunt. (1533)"
- (1533-4.1) Act 25 Hen. VIII, c. 22 §.11 "Your said issue..shalbe &. remaine..at and in the gouernance of their naturall mother. (1533-"
- (1535.1) Coverdale Josh. x. 40 "Thus Iosua smote all the londe.., with all their kynges, and let not one remaine ouer. (1535)"
- (1535.2) Act 27 Hen. VIII, c. 27 "Which regester of enrollementes, shall remaine and be safelie kepte in the said courte. (1535)"
- (1536.1) Statutes Irel. 28 Hen. VIII (Bolton, 1621, 108) "The writings obligatorie or money taken for the same shall rest, remaine, and abide in the hands of the underthesaurer, or in the Hanaper of the kings Chauncerie in Ireland. (1536)"
- (1539-40.1) Coverdale in Money Parish Goods Berks. (1879) p. vi, "All the beams..remain still untaken down. (1539-"
- (1540.1) Act 32 Hen. VIII, c. 16 §.11 "The same proclamacion shal abide, be, and remain in the same plight and strength that it is, and as if this acte had neuer bene made. (1540)"
- (1540.2) Act 32 Hen. VIII, xxix, "Landes..shall..be descendable, remaine, auert, come, and be inheritable. (1540)"
- (1540.3) Househ. Ord. Hen. VIII in Thynne's Animadv. Introd. 35 "The Clerkes-Comptrollers to goe with him to take the said Remaines to be advouched with him, what the expence shall rise to. Item..the Booke of Comptrollment..shall be put yearly into the Exchequer, to be advoucht to the Cofferers account. (1540)"
- (1541.1) Act 33 Hen. VIII, c. 9 §.2 "Other cities..remaine and be vnfurnished of artificers and craftes men before rehersed. (1541)"
- (1542.1) Recorde Gr. Artes (1575) 95 "Subtraction or Rebating is nothing els, but an arte to withdrawe and abate one summe from another, that the Remainer may appeare. (1542)"
- (1542.2) Udall Erasm. Apoph. 74 b, "Onely in the children remained the aunciente integritee &. uncorrupcion. (1542)"
- (1542.3) Udall Erasm. Apoph. 264 b, "Hymselfe remained prisoner emong the most uncourtise Silicians. (1542)"
- (1542.4) Udall Erasm. Apoph. 302 "Onely Phocion was remainyng unserved by reason that the poison had been all consumed by the others. (1542)"
- (1542.5) Udall Erasm. Apoph. 206 "The deformitee and disfigure of hymping on the one legge..did still remain. (1542)"
- (1542.6) Wyatt Poems, `Unstable Dream' 13 "Where it was at wysshe it could not remain. (1542)"
- (1542.7) Wyatt in Tottel's Misc. (Arb.) 71, "I was content thy seruant to remain; And not to be repayed after this fashion. (1542)"
- (1543.1) transl. Act 13 Edw. I, c. 2 "If he that repleuied make defaut agayne, or for an other cause retourne of the dystres beyng now twyse repleuied be awarded, the distres shal remaine irrepleuiable. (1543)"
- (1544.1) Extracts Aberd. Reg. 193 "For furnesing of ane thowsand horse to remain with the locumtenant on the bordouris, for resisting of our auld ennimeis of Ingland. (1544)"
- (1544.2) in Lett. &. Papers Hen. VIII, XIX. ii. 175 "Personages to remain here at Boulloyn..Edw. Brown, water-bailly, [and others]. (1544)"
- (1544.3) tr. Littleton's Tenures (1574) 13 "Yf a man let landes..for terme of yeres, the remainder ouer to an other for terme of lyfe. (1544)"
- (1544.4) tr. Littleton's Tenures (1574) 95 b, "If a lease bee made to a man for terme of life, the remaynder unto another for terme of life, the remaynder unto the thirde in taile, the remainder unto the fourth in fee [etc.]. (1544)"
- (1545.1) Joye Exp. Dan. x. 169 b, "It behowued not one stone vpon another nor vestigie of the temple to stand and remaine. (1545)"
- (1545.2) Joye Exp. Dan. i. 13 b, "In that cite yet..there remaineth the temple of Iupiters image,..or els is there no nother memoriall or skant any vestigie thereof. (1545)"
- (1545.3) Raynold Byrth Mankynde iii. iii. (1634) 167 "That that remaineth, fry it together in a Frying panne with Suger. (1545)"
- (1545.4) Raynalde Byrth Mankynde ii. vii. (1634) 137 "If one of the brests swage which before was in good liking, the other remaining sound and safe. (1545)"
- (1545.5) Raynold Byrth Mankynde (1634) iv. vi. 197 "Be [the earth]..neuer so well diligented and picked, yet alwayes therein will remaine..seeds of vnlooked for weeds. (1545)"
- (1545.6) Reg. Privy Council Scot. I. 5 "Becaus of the fere of the pest that is laytlie risyn in the toun of Edinburcht, the seite of Sessioun may nocht surelie remaine thairin. (1545)"
- (1546.1) Phaer Bk. Childr. (1553) Q viij, "The swellyng or puffyng vp..pressed wyth the finger, there remaineth a print. (1546)"
- (1547.1) Surrey &Ae.AElig;neid iv. (1557) E iv b, "Troy and the remainder of our folke Restore I shold. (1547)"
- (1547.2) Injunc. Edw. VI, xxviii. c ij b, "That they shall take awaie..all shrines [etc.],..so that there remain no memory of the same, in walles, glasses, windowes, or els where. (1547)"
- (1547-8.1) Mervyn in Brooke Abridgem. (1586) tit. Patentes 97 II. 128 "Vn Constat est pledable, contrarie dun Inspeximus, car in lun case le patent remaine, &. in lauter il est parde. (1547-"
- (1548.1) Hall Chron., Hen. VIII, 14/b, "And there remained at the kynges charge, til other direccion was taken for theim. (1548)"
- (1548.2) Hall Chron., Hen. IV (an. 13) 32 "Taken prisoner and so remained in Englande..till the flower of his age was passed or sore blemyshed. (1548)"
- (1548.3) Hall Chron., Edw. IV 223 b, "That no print or shadowe should remain of the adverse faccion, in his realme. (1548)"
- (1548.4) Hall Chron., Hen. VIII 185 "That the realme of Napels should for euer remain to the Emperour. (1548)"
- (1548.5) Recorde Urin. Physick viii. 35 "There remaineth yet somewhat of that distemperate trouble in the blood. (1548)"
- (1548.6) Udall, etc. Erasm. Par. Rom. Prol. sig. &dag.&dag.i, "Else shalt thou remaine euermore faithlesse. (1548)"
- (1548.7) Udall, etc. Erasm. Par. John vi. 41 b, "Where as all men did eat therof, they neuertheles dyed, nether did any one of so great a number remain vndead. (1548)"
- (1548.8) Udall, etc. Erasm. Par. Luke xxii, "Tempering his woordes to the rawnesse of his disciples, which rawenes he suffred..to remaine a long season in them. (1548)"
- (1549.1) Cranmer in Strype Life App. xl, "Vigils, otherwise called Watchings, remain in the Calendars upon certain Saints' Evens. (1549)"
- (1549.2) Paget in Froude Hist. Eng. (1860) V. 182 "Send for all the council that be remaining unsent abroad. (1549)"
- (1549.3) Act 3 &. 4 Edw. VI, c. 1 §.2 "The said Offices have remained void for a long Time, to the great Let of Justice. (1549)"
- (1550.1) Cranmer Wks. (Parker Soc.) I. 6 "But what availeth it to take away beads, pardons, pilgrimages, and such other like popery, so long as two chief roots remain unpulled up? " (1550)"
- (1550.2) Disc. Common Weal Eng. (1893) 76 "Therof to this daie remaineth these vocables of coine, as libra, pondo, dipondium,..vocables of weight; that afterward weare gyven to coines pretending the same weight. (1550)"
- (1551.1) Recorde Pathway to Knowl. ii. Introd., "And if you abate euen portions from things that are equal, those partes that remain shall be equall also. (1551)"
- (1551.2) T. Wilson Logike 76 "There remaineth a wicked inclination, the same must alwaies be brideled and kept in, even with the terror of the law, as though it were a mouse-roll. (1551)"
- (1553.1) S. Cabot Ordinances in Hakluyt Voy. (1589) 259 "To put the same into a common leger to remain of record for the companie. (1553)"
- (1553-87.1) Foxe A. &. M. (1596) 51/1 "The celebration of Easterdaie remained adiaphoron, as a thing indifferent in the church. (1553-"
- (1555.1) Eden Decades (Arb.) 285 "What parts of the baul of the earth remained yet vndiscouered. (1555)"
- (1555.2) Ridley Wks. (Parker Soc.) 34 "Saying: `We grant the nature of bread remaineth..and yet the corporeal substance of the bread therefore is gone, lest two bodies should be confused together, and Christ should be thought impanate'. (1555)"
- (1555.3) W. Watreman Fardle Facions ii. xii. 294 "How she from thre yeres of age..remained ther [in the temple] seruing God stil a peace. (1555)"
- (1556.1) Phaer &Ae.AElig;neid iv. (1558) K j, "What meanes he? why remaines he thus within his enemies ward?" (1556)"
- (1557.1) Recorde Whetst. L iij b, "If the remainer, and the roote in the quotiente, bee nombers communicante, diuide them so. (1557)"
- (1557.2) Order Hospitalls D vj b, "An Inventorie..shall be Indented, th' one part thereof to remaine in your custodie, and the other in the custodie of the persons charged. (1557)"
- (1557.3) Order of the Hospitalls G viij, "You shall also kepe the *Wardrobe-booke, wherein shalbe written..the remainder of all things at euery Michaelmass [etc.]. (1557)"
- (1557.4) Order of Hospitalls C j, "The Number of children remaining and Pencioners relieved at the Cities charge. (1557)"
- (1558.1) Phaer &Ae.AElig;neid. ii. E iv b, "In his purpose still he fixt remainyd fast. We therageinst with streaming teares. (1558)"
- (1558.2) Warde tr. Alexis' Secr. 13 b, "A verie goodly secrete for the gommes [It. gomme] or burgeons that remaine of the great Pockes. (1558)"
- (1558.3) Warde tr. Alexis' Secr. i. 45 "Take..Ambergryse,..Styrax calamita, [etc.]..And the Ambre, Styrax, and other thinges that remaine in the bottome of the sayd vessel,..will be excedinge good to make muske or swete balles. (1558)"
- (1558.4) Warde tr. Alexis' Secr. (1568) 110 b, "Thinges that remain in the fire without melting, wherein men print very well all maner of metall. (1558)"
- (1558.5) in Feuillerat Revels Q. Eliz. (1908) Table i, "The Master and officers..shall..peruse the remaines of the whole stuffe and other stoare lefte at the laste vewe. (1558)"
- (1558.6) in Strype Ann. Ref. (1709) I. App. iv. 4 "All such as governed..and now remain unplaced and uncalled to Credit. (1558)"
- (1559.1) Abp. Hethe in Strype Ann. Ref. (1824) I. App. vi. 399 "What..spirituall government is, and in what pointes it dothe cheffely remaine. (1559)"
- (1559.2) Morwyng Evonym. 376 "Pres it out strongly and put the decoction prest out through a wullen sight, and pres it out, that the substance may remaine in the sight. (1559)"
- (1559.3) National Covt. in Knox Hist. Ref. ii. 313 "Item the sayd Lords of the congregation and all the members therof shall remaine obedient subiects to our soueraigne Lord and Ladies authoritie. Item the said congregation nor none of them shall not trouble or molest a Church-man. (1559)"
- (1559.4) in Neal Hist. Puritans (1754) I. 93 "After the consecration [of the host] there remains not..any other substance but God-Man. (1559)"
- (1560.1) Becon New Catech. Wks. I. 465 b, "Whatsoeuer the Papistes..pratle in this behalf, I am sure, reason sayeth, that there remaineth bothe bread &. wyne. (1560)"
- (1560.2) Daus tr. Sleidane's Comm. 139 "The remainder to be restored when the warre is finished. (1560)"
- (1560.3) Daus tr. Sleidane's Comm. 7 "He was commaunded by his prince to remain at home. (1560)"
- (1560.4) Whitehorne Ord. Souldiours (1588) 30 b, "If the pouder bee good, you shall see them all to fire at ones; so that there shall be no residence remaining. (1560)"
- (1560.5) Whitehorne Arte Warre 69 "The other twoo shal remain behinde, distaunte other thirtie yardes: the which facion maie bee ordained in a sodaine. (1560)"
- (1561.1) T. Norton Calvin's Inst. i. 18 b, "Among so manifold miserable afflictions of the Jewes..they [the tables of God's covenant] remained still safe and extant. (1561)"
- (1561.2) T. N[orton] Calvin's Inst., "It remaineth that by applyance all the same [benefits] may come to us. (1561)"
- (1561.3) T. Norton Calvin's Inst. i. 52 "Although we graunt that the Image of God was not altogether defaced and blotted out in him, yet was it so corrupted, that all that remaineth, is but vggly deformitie. (1561)"
- (1561.4) T. Norton Calvin's Inst. i. 53 "Euen in the vices themselues there remain emprinted some leauinges thereof. (1561)"
- (1561.5) tr. Calvin's Foure Godlye Serm. iii. G iij b, "It is..suche a special prerogatyue as can not for ye great dignitie therof sufficiently be pryced to remaine and lyue in the churche. (1561)"
- (1562.1) Bulleyn Bk. Simples (1579) 75 "They remaine Kiddes for six monethes, and afterward..be called Goates. (1562)"
- (1562.2) Cooper Answ. Priv. Masse (1850) 108 "Ergo it ought to remain indifferent. (1562)"
- (1562.3) Apol. Private Masse (1850) 8 "To enclose that to some one sort of private profit, that ought to remain in common. (1562)"
- (1562.4) Act 5 Eliz. xxiii. §.8 "The same Party..shall remain in the Prison..without Bail, Baston or Mainprize. (1562)"
- (1563.1) Foxe A. &. M. 1353/1 "Shaxton byshop of Salisburye resigned also with him his bishoprick. And so these two remained a great space vnbishopped. (1563)"
- (1563.2) Harding Answ. to M. Ivelles Challenge To Rdr. (1565) 4 b, "The note of vndiscretion shall remaine to them. (1563)"
- (1563.3) Shute Archit. C j b, "Coronix..you shall deuid into .4. partes. geue one part vnto Cimatium vnder Corona..geue likwise .2 parte vnto Corona..&. the fourth part which remaineth, geue vnto Cymatium ouer Corona. (1563)"
- (1563.4) Shute Archit. C j b, "Coronix..you shall deuid into .4. partes. geue one part vnto Cimatium vnder Corona..the fourth part which remaineth, geue vnto Cymatium ouer Corona. (1563)"
- (1563.5) Win&ygh.et Four Scoir Thre Quest. Wks. 1888 I. 109 "He geuis ane expres command to the innocent woman demittand hir husband, to remain vnmariit or to be reconcilit to hir husband [marg. 1 Cor. 7]. (1563)"
- (1563.6) Homilies ii. Sacrament i. (1859) 443 "Not as especially regarding the terene and earthly creatures which remain. (1563)"
- (1563.7) in W. Nicolson Leges Marchiarum (1705) 138 "If it shall happen the Cattel or Sheep of the one Realm to be *staff-herded, or to remain depasturing upon the ground of the opposite Realm. (1563)"
- (1563-87.1) Foxe A. &. M. (1596) 936/2 "He remained so long manicled that his haire was folded togither. (1563-"
- (1563-87.2) Foxe A. &. M. (1596) 936/2 "He remained so long manicled that his haire was folded togither. (1563-"
- (1565.1) Calfhill Answ. Treat. Crosse (1846) 153 "The same divine nature, after the assumpting of flesh, to remain notwithstanding incircumscriptible. (1565)"
- (1565.2) Cooper Thesaurus s.v. Reliquus, "Camillus writeth that he hath receiued the remaines due vnto me. (1565)"
- (1565.3) Harding Confut. Apol. iv. 212 b, "They can not be the..shining church of Christ... Wherefore it remaineth that it is the synagog of Antichrist, and Lucifer. (1565)"
- (1565.4) Jewel Repl. Harding (1611) 391 "There be certaine men, that..fearing, that if they attaine to any knowledge, they shall be proud: and so they remaine still only in Milke [tr. Augustine: et remanent in solo lacte]. (1565)"
- (1565.5) T. Stapleton Fortr. Faith 16, "I wil be a remainer in thy tabernacle for euer. (1565)"
- (1565.6) MS. Cott. Cal. B. 10. fol. 270 "Which charters remain still undefaced. (1565)"
- (1566.1) Adlington Apuleius 51 "Whether thou wilt remaine with the serpent and in the ende to be swallowed up into the gowlfe of his bodie. (1566)"
- (1567.1) Allen Def. Priesthood 228 "Wherof yet in most Churches ther remaineth a smal signe, by disciplin geuen [etc.]. (1567)"
- (1567.2) Ld. Herries in Robertson Hist. Scot. (1759) II. App. 51 "He hoped the remainder noblemen of their party..would come to the same conformity. (1567)"
- (1567.3) Painter Pal. Pleas. (1813) II. 160 "That I remaine in fielde it is to me greate fame. (1567)"
- (1567.4) Q. Eliz. Let. to Throgmorton in Robertson Hist. Scot. (1759) II. App. 47 "We..cannot but think them to have therein gone so far beyond the duty of subjects, as must needs remain to their perpetual touche for ever. (1567)"
- (1568.1) North tr. Gueuara's Diall Princes iv. II. 104 "The memory of you shall remain eternized to your Successors for euer. (1568)"
- (1569.1) Kingesmyll Confl. Satan (1578) 14 "Gods words remaine beyond the days of the Sunne. (1569)"
- (1570.1) B. Googe Pop. Kingd. iv. 51 b, "And least in grave he shoulde remaine, without some companie, The singing bread is layde with him. (1570)"
- (1570.2) Dee Math. Pref. 10 "Who can remaine..vnpersuaded, to loue..the excellent Science of Arithmetike? " (1570)"
- (1570.3) Levins Manip. 149/35 "A collip, cremium [Cremium, what remains dry in the pan after frying anything, rendering of suet or the like (Du Cange).]" (1570)"
- (1570.4) St. Andrews Kirk-Sess. Reg. (1889) 345 "Content to remain wytht hym oure-alquhair. (1570)"
- (1570-6.1) Lambarde Peramb. Kent (1826) 143 "There standeth yet, upon the high cliffe,..some remaine of a Tower. (1570-"
- (1570-6.2) Lambarde Peramb. Kent (1826) 394 "What remaineth..but that altars should be raised..to this our newe found Godlyng? " (1570-"
- (1570-6.3) Lambarde Peramb. Kent (1826) 243 "As touching this privilege.., although it continue not altogither in the same plight, yet some shadowe thereof remaineth even to this day. (1570-"
- (1570-6.4) Lambarde Peramb. Kent 287 "This place..as also the whole track of their iourney (remaining euer after a greene pathe) the Towne dwellers were wont to shew. (1570-"
- (1571.1) Campion Hist. Irel. ii. vii. (1633) 99 "It shall never bee chronicled, nor remaine in scripture,..that Ireland was lost by my negligence. (1571)"
- (1571.2) Campion Hist. Irel. II. viii. (1633) 102 "For which cause the Earle of Desmond remained many yeares Deputy to George Duke of Clarence his god-brother. (1571)"
- (1572.1) Bossewell Armorie ii. 94 "A great Parke..that had remained vnhunted, duringe the time of foure mens ages. (1572)"
- (1572.2) Gascoigne Counc. to B. Withipoll 7 "Beleeue me now it is a friendly touch, To vse fewe words where friendship doth remaine. (1572)"
- (1572.3) Mascall Plant. &. Graff. v. (1592) 28 "But alwayes take good heede to the binding of your heds that they waxe slack, or shagge, neyther on the one side or other, but remaine fast vpon the clay. (1572)"
- (1572.4) Plat Floures Philos. Addr. to Rdr., "The Iohn so sweete in shewe and smell, distincte by colours twaine, Aboute the borders of their beds in seemelie sighte remaine. (1572)"
- (1573.1) Northbrooke Poore Mans Gard. To Rdr., "The Earth then remained to man as a thing tillable. (1573)"
- (1573.2) Twyne &Ae.AElig;neid xi. Gg iij, "Here now remaine the spoiles, and hansell, of the hautie kinge [de rege superbo Primiti&ae.aeig;] Mezentius loe here lies. (1573)"
- (1573-80.1) Tusser Husb. (1878) 59 "Make hillocks of molehils, in field thorough out, and so to remaine, till the yeere go about. (1573-"
- (1574.1) Hellowes Gueuara's Ep. (1577) 354 "If we sinke not to the bottome, at the leaste we remaine all bemyred. (1574)"
- (1574.2) Newton Health Mag. 8 "The matter..which remained in the fleshe might be extenued. (1574)"
- (1575.1) Fenton (title), "Golden Epistles, contayning varietie of discourse, both morall, philosophicall, and divine, gathered as well out of the remainder of Guevaraes workes, and other authors. (1575)"
- (1575.2) Gascoigne Flowers Wks. 1907 I. 109 "The meanes to single forth The stricken Deare which doth in heard remaine. (1575)"
- (1575.3) in W. H. Turner Select. Rec. Oxford (1880) 367 "To remaine as a perpetuall memory and record of such orders. (1575)"
- (1575.4) tr. Luther's Galat. iii. 1 "The slimy Body and the Remnants of Sin remain still in us. (1575)"
- (1576.1) Baker Jewell of Health 161 b, "When as in it shall no other be contayned or remaine then the excrementes of the sage. (1576)"
- (1576.2) Fleming Panopl. Epist. 67, "I suppose that al your sorrow cannot with such facilitie be supplanted, but that a few sparkles wil remaine. (1576)"
- (1576.3) Fleming tr. Caius' Dogs 33 "It remaineth that we deliuer vnto you the Dogges of a mungrell or currishe kind. (1576)"
- (1576.4) Fleming Panopl. Epist. 68 "So would I have you thinke mee to be, at this present, and for ever hereafter to remaine. (1576)"
- (1576.5) Fleming Panopl. Epist. 272 "To weede out..the bitter plant of couetousnesse,..that of the same not..one braunch, sprig, leafe nor seede be remaining. (1576)"
- (1576.6) Fleming Panopl. Epist. 83 "One refuge yet remaineth, that is patiently to suffer what so euer lucke allotteth. (1576)"
- (1577.1) B. Googe Heresbach's Husb. ii. (1586) 62 b, "Set in grounde well covered with..moulde, and afterwarde hilled, and so suffered to remaine al Winter. (1577)"
- (1577.2) B. Googe Heresbach's Husb. iv. (1586) 188 b, "If any thing remaine, not washed away, you must sweepe it out with a Goose wing. (1577)"
- (1577.3) B. Googe Heresbach's Husb. ii. (1586) 80 "The ground is matted, and as it were netted with the remaines of the olde Rootes. (1577)"
- (1577.4) Dee Relat. Spir. i. (1659) 174 "There remaineth on the Table a goldish shine. (1577)"
- (1577.5) Frampton Joyful Newes ii. 50 "They did remaine opilated, and with euill colour of the face. (1577)"
- (1577.6) Grindal Let. Wks. (1843) 395 "By that occasion my appearance was respited; and I now remain as a man in suspense. (1577)"
- (1577.7) Harrison England ii. iii. (1877) i. 87 "The students also that remaine in them, are called hostelers or halliers. Hereof it came of late to passe, that..Thomas late arch&dubh.bishop of Canturburie, being brought vp at such an house at Cambridge, was of the ignorant sort of Londoners called an `hosteler', supposing that he had serued..in the stable. (1577)"
- (1577.8) Harrison England ii. xxv. (1877) i. 363 "We haue yet remaining, the riall..the salut, the angell [etc.]. (1577)"
- (1577.9) Harrison England iii. viii. (1878) ii. 57 "Notwithstanding that they haue remained there vnset by the space of fortie dais and more: yet some [saffron heads]..haue brought foorth two or three floures a peece. (1577)"
- (1577.10) Hanmer Anc. Eccl. Hist., Euseb. i. vi. (1663) 7 "It remaineth that we begin after a compendious sort from the coming of our Saviour Christ in the Flesh. (1577)"
- (1577.11) F. de L'isle's Legendarie G iv, "Fiue of them came short home, and the most doulte of all remained behinde. (1577)"
- (1577.12) tr. Bullinger's Decades (1592) 460 "The iudgement of Paule in this matter remaineth firme and inuincible. (1577)"
- (1577.13) tr. Bullinger's Decades (1592) 236 "He would not haue so much as the very cinders to remaine of so wicked men. (1577)"
- (1577.14) tr. Bullinger's Decades (1592) 410 "The law, so far as it is the rule howe to liue well and happely,..doth remaine vnabrogated. (1577)"
- (1577.15) tr. Bullinger's Decades iii. ix. 460 "That diuine saying of Sainct Peter remaineth for euer vncomptroleable. (1577)"
- (1578.1) Fenton Guicciard. (1618) 30 "So that the Florentines by this meanes should remaine battered. (1578)"
- (1578.2) Lindesay (Pitscottie) Chron. Scot. (S.T.S.) I. 86 "The Earle of Douglas..was remaining thair..witht out ony suspetionnis of Schir William Creichtounis gaddering. (1578)"
- (1579.1) Churchyard Gen. Rehearsal Wars I j, "He remained with the whole power of footemen nere the Blacke Neastes, as a stale to annoye the enemie. (1579)"
- (1579.2) Fulke Heskins' Parl. 147 "He remained whole in that his indiuided vnity with his father. (1579)"
- (1579.3) Fulke Heskins' Parl. 207 "The distinction remaineth without a difference. (1579)"
- (1579.4) Fenton Guicciard. ix. (1599) 382 "It was hard for him to remaine there, both for the want of victuals, and distemperance of the time, winter approching. (1579)"
- (1579.5) Fulke Heskins' Parl. 146 "It is to be..prayed for, lest while any being sequestred, is separated from ye body of Christe, he remaine farre from health. (1579)"
- (1579.6) Fulke Refut. Rastel 783 "What so euer remained..shoulde be giuen to..children..(not spred..with butter) but sprinkled with wine. (1579)"
- (1579.7) Fulke Refut. Rastel 763 "Prayers remaine still in the Saxon or old English tongue. (1579)"
- (1579.8) Fenton Guicciard. (1618) 233 "In the end..they had recourse to the remainders of the family of the Manfredi their ancient Lords. (1579)"
- (1579.9) Fulke Heskins' Parl. 476 "It still remaineth vnremouable, that a signe and the thing signified, be distinct things. (1579)"
- (1579.10) J. Stubbes Gaping Gulf D iv, "Yf they..remained but in theyr pure naturalles, they would neuer so speake for a faultor prince of Rome. (1579)"
- (1579.11) Spenser Sheph. Cal. Jan. 36 "Whose drops in drery ysicles remaine. (1579)"
- (1579.12) Tomson Calvin's Serm. Tim. 125/1 "Now it remaineth that we looke peecemeale vnto these wordes. (1579)"
- (1579.13) Tomson Calvin's Serm. Tim. 222/1 "Yet they remaine vnpunnished, yea they are holden vp by the chinne to harden them in their wickednesse. (1579)"
- (1579.14) Tomson Calvin's Serm. Tim. 2/2 "This rule..whiche shal remaine of strength vnto the worldes end. (1579)"
- (1579.15) W. Wilkinson Confut. Family of Love, Heret. Affirm. b b, "Not that they should alwayes remaine as subject thereunder. (1579)"
- (1579.16) W. Wilkinson Confut. Familye of Loue, Heret. Affirm. b j b, "Not that they should alwayes remaine as subject thereunder [the ordinance of the Lord], but vntill the appoynted tyme, vntill the manly old age in the godly vnderstanding of the holy word. (1579)"
- (1579-80.1) North Plutarch (1676) 507 "Though now they lead me bound, yet do I remain free unovercome. (1579-"
- (1579-80.2) North Plutarch, Theseus (1676) 9 "Those which then returned with Theseus, did seethe in a great brasse pot all the remain of their provision. (1579-"
- (1579-80.3) North Plutarch (1657) 31 "He..remaineth now no more a King or a Prince, but becometh a *People-pleaser, or a cruell tyrant. (1579-"
- (1579-80.4) North Plutarch (1595) 242 "When the golden and vnfoiled age remained yet whole..at Rome. (1579-"
- (1580.1) Baret Alv. B 1200 "The workes be broken and remaine vnperfite for a time. (1580)"
- (1580.2) Sidney Arcadia (1622) 407 "Yet remained there such footsteps of the foretaken opinion. (1580)"
- (1581.1) A. Hall Iliad i. 15 "The God his mansion keepes, In *Welkin Countrey he remaines. (1581)"
- (1581.2) Fulke in Confer. iii. (1584) Y, "The proper substance of Christes body remaineth not, but a generall being thereof. (1581)"
- (1581.3) J. Bell Haddon's Answ. Osor. 444 "Albeit the thing it selfe..be past, and ye tyme thereof determined: yet doth the power..thereof remaine unmoveable, sure, and undeterminable beyond all ages. (1581)"
- (1581.4) Mulcaster Positions viii. (1887) 51 "Would any man beleue it,..that one Milo so strutted himselfe, so pitcht his feet, so peysed his bodie, as he remained vnremoueable from his place, being haled at..by a number of people. (1581)"
- (1581.5) Pettie tr. Guazzo's Civ. Conv. i. (1586) 8 "You cannot goe to visite the sicke..if you remaine alwaies mewed vp. (1581)"
- (1581.6) W. Blandy Cast. Policy 18 b, "Captayne, Lieutenent, Auncient, Serieant of a Company, gentleman in a company or of the Rounde, Lance passado. These are speciall; the other that remaine, priuate or common Souldiars. (1581)"
- (1582.1) N. Lichefield tr. Castanheda's Conq. E. Ind. lxxix. 163 "With this spoyle the king..remained so *ill contented. (1582)"
- (1582.2) N. Lichefield tr. Castanheda's Conq. E. Ind. i. lxv. 132 b, "That you shoulde understand, wherefore and for what cause I remained in the Indias, for that it is possible that all you do not know. (1582)"
- (1582.3) N. Lichefield tr. Castanheda's Conq. E. Ind. i. lxiii. 128 b, "First he would nominate him that should remaine in the Indias for Captaine generall. (1582)"
- (1582.4) N. Lichefield tr. Castanheda's Conq. E. Ind. i. xxii. 57 b, "Not [to] disclose, that the Factour with the others did remaine prisoners. (1582)"
- (1582.5) N. Lichefield tr. Castanheda's Conq. E. Ind. xxi. 54 b, "To the intent hee might remaine in the Factorye with the Factour. (1582)"
- (1582.6) N. T. (Rheims) 1 Thess. iv. 15 "Vve vvhich liue, vvhich are remaining in the aduent [other versions coming] of our Lord. (1582)"
- (1582.7) N. Lichefield tr. Castanheda's Conq. E. Ind. 163 "With this spoyle the king of Calicut remained..ill contented. (1582)"
- (1582.8) N. Lichefield tr. Castanheda's Conq. E. Ind. i. lxxvi. 156 b, "And so they remained untill the comming of the Vizeroye Don Francisco de Almeda. (1582)"
- (1582.9) N. Lichefield tr. Castanheda's Conq. E. Ind. i. lxxix. 163 "The king..remained so ill contented, that..for a good while after, he could not restore himself. (1582)"
- (1582-8.1) Hist. James VI (1804) 21 "It was decernit that..shoe sould be transportit to the fortalice of Lochlevin, and thair decernit to remaine in captivity. (1582-"
- (1583.1) Golding Calvin on Deut. xxxix. 235 "Let vs glorifie him, and beware yt he remaine vnimpeached in his Maiestie. (1583)"
- (1583.2) Hollyband Campo di Fior 335 "There will alwayes remaine some heare in the cliffe of the penne. (1583)"
- (1583.3) Rich Phylotus (1835) 10 "In the gallant citty of Naples, there was remaining a young man, called by the name of Alberto. (1583)"
- (1583.4) Stubbes Anat. Abus. B vj, "The pride of apparel remaining in sight, as an exemplary of evill. (1583)"
- (1583.5) T. Stocker tr. Civ. Wars Low C. ii. 16 b, "Wee agree..not one forraine Souldier to remaine there generally. (1583)"
- (1584.1) Montgomerie Cherrie &. Slae (1597) 243 "Bot now na bluid in me remaines, Vnbrunt and bruil&ygh.eit throw my vaines, Be luiffis bellowes blawin. (1584)"
- (1584.2) R. Scot Disc. Witchcr. (1886) 445 "An example taken out of the Rosarie of our Ladie, in which booke doo remaine..ninetie and eight examples to this effect. (1584)"
- (1584.3) ?Sidney Disc. Def. Earl of Leicester Misc. Wks. (1829) 272 "In sum, in one the same man, all the faults that in all the most contrary-humoured men in the world can remain. (1584)"
- (1585.1) Fetherstone tr. Calvin on Acts xv. 7. 355 "There remained no phariseisme in Paul. (1585)"
- (1585.2) Higins Junius' Nomencl. 107/2 "Stramentum,..the strawe, stubble, or stumppes remaining in the grounde after the corne is rept. (1585)"
- (1585.3) Higgins tr. Junius' Nomenclator 107 "The strawe, stubble..remaining in the grounde after the corne is rept. (1585)"
- (1585.4) James I. Ess. Poesie (Arb.) 31 "We remaine With Iuglers, buffons, and that foolish seames. (1585)"
- (1585.5) Polwart Flyting w. Montgomerie 254 "Passe to the pothingars againe; Some recipies does yet remaine. (1585)"
- (1585.6) R. Browne Answ. Cartwright 34 "What remaineth but an Idol or counterfet christ? " (1585)"
- (1585.7) T. Washington tr. Nicholay's Voy. iv. xiii, "Vsing in their fightes many guyles and craftes, which are remained to them from their auncestors. (1585)"
- (1585.8) T. Washington tr. Nicholay's Voy. ii. xiii. 49 b, "The title of great..to this day remaineth vnto the house of the Othomannes. (1585)"
- (1585.9) W. Whitaker Answ. Rainolds 283 "The garden wherein Adam for a time remained, was sited in the east. (1585)"
- (1585.10) Faire Em i. 222, "I thank your highness, whose bounden I remain. (1585)"
- (1586.1) C'tess Pembroke Ps. civ. viii, "That safe in rocks the conyes may remaine, To yield them caves, their rocky ribbs are torne. (1586)"
- (1586.2) Day Eng. Secretary ii. (1625) 20 "Him, whose approued fidelity for that it remaineth of no small record to my certaine knowledge, I will presume to verifie. (1586)"
- (1586.3) Lupton Thous. Notable Th. (1675) 122 "Bodies that are strucken with Lightening do remain uncorrupt. (1586)"
- (1586.4) Sidney Arcadia ii. (1622) 113 "In this depth of muzes, and diuers sorts of discourses, would shee rauingly haue remained, but that [etc.]. (1586)"
- (1586.5) Sidney Arcadia (1622) 113 "In this depth of muzes, and diuers sorts of discourses, would shee rauingly haue remained. (1586)"
- (1586.6) Sidney Arcadia iii. xxii, "Yet shewed it most the perfection of the beautie, which could remaine unoverthrowne by such enimies. (1586)"
- (1586.7) T. B. La Primaud. Fr. Acad. i. (1589) 718 "All the Frenchmen that were in the Ile of Sicilia..upon Easter day, at the first peale to Evensong..were al put to death..whereupon this proverbe doth yet remaine amongst us, The Sicilian Evensong. (1586)"
- (1586.8) W. Webbe Eng. Poetrie (Arb.) 75 "Heere by the quainted floodes and springs most holie remaining. (1586)"
- (1587.1) Golding De Mornay, Pref. 8 "Those common and generall Insets haue remained barren in the most part of men. (1587)"
- (1587.2) Garrard Arte Warre (1591) 236 "Such..as bring wares to the campe, he [the High Marshall of the Field] must take order that they be courteously..vsed..procuring them a conuoy..to the intent they may..remaine..satisfied, without suspect of being robbed..of theeues and flibutors. (1587)"
- (1587.3) Harrison England ii. ii. (1877) i. 87 "The students also that remaine in them [Oxford hostels or halls] are called hostelers or halliers. (1587)"
- (1587.4) in Cath. Rec. Soc. Publ. V. 140 "The young king of Scotland remaineth still amongst his..ennemies, who suffer him to take his pastime..under a shew of liberty, but they think themselves sure ynough of him. (1587)"
- (1588.1) A. King tr. Canisius' Catech. in Cath. Tractates (S.T.S.) 209 "That blissit Marie remaines still puir virgine. (1588)"
- (1588.2) J. Mellis Briefe Instr. F iij b, "Diuers parcels more may remaine vnpricked in the Leager, which ought not to bee put in the Iournall. (1588)"
- (1588.3) J. Mellis Briefe Instr. B ij b, "The remaine is the net rest, substance or capitall of the owner. (1588)"
- (1588.4) J. Harvey Disc. Probl. 35 "They will seeme..to haue borrowed euen from the mouth of mightie Ioue, or the oracle of wise Apollo himselfe, or Zenocratically, and Pythagorically to haue remained..Instar Sybill&ae.aeig; cuiusdam vaticinantis, furentisque. (1588)"
- (1588.5) Lambard Eiren. iv. iv. 456 "If they of the towne where the kings Standerd is appointed to remaine, haue not their common weights and measures signed. (1588)"
- (1588.6) Parke tr. Mendoza's Hist. China 395 "Whose memorie doth remain vnto this day amongst the..people, although diffusedly. (1588)"
- (1588.7) Parke tr. Mendoza's Hist. China 252 "The Spaniardes..remained a good while, and passed great heate. (1588)"
- (1588.8) R. Parke tr. Mendoza's Hist. China 76 "The other thirteene prouinces that do remaine haue eyther of them a vizroy or governor. (1588)"
- (1588.9) Shaks. Tit. A. iii. i. 31 "Or shall we bit our tongues, and in dumbe shewes Passe the remainder of our..dayes? " (1588)"
- (1588.10) Shaks. Tit. A. i. i. 147 "Remaineth nought but..with low'd Larums [to] welcome them to Rome. (1588)"
- (1588.11) Shaks. Tit. A. v. iii. 131 "Where you behold vs now, The poore remainder of Andronici. (1588)"
- (1588.12) Shaks. L.L.L. ii. i. 135 "There remaines vnpaid A hundred thousand [crowns] more: in surety of the which, One part of Aquitaine is bound to vs. (1588)"
- (1589.1) Fleming Virg. Georg. ii. 28 "Vnstird it doth remaine, And conquereth..by lasting many yeares. (1589)"
- (1589.2) Puttenham Eng. Poesie i. iii. (Arb.) 22 "The people remained in the woods and mountains, vagarant and dispersed like the wild beasts. (1589)"
- (1589.3) Warner Alb. Eng. vi. xxxi, "They A People shall remaine..and of that Streene Shall Fiue at length re-raigne. (1589)"
- (1589.4) Warner Alb. Eng. v. xxiii. (1592) 102 "We here a blisfull Vintage gayne, That..euermore vnblasted may remaine. (1589)"
- (1590.1) Spenser F.Q. i. i. 1 "Ycladd in mightie armes and silver shielde, Wherein old dints of deepe woundes did remaine. (1590)"
- (1590.2) Spenser F.Q. i. i. 16 "Ay wont in desert darknes to remaine, Where plain none might her see, nor she see any plaine. (1590)"
- (1590.3) Spenser F.Q. ii. vi. 6 "She..greatly ioyed merry tales to faine, Of which a store-house did with her remaine. (1590)"
- (1590.4) Spenser F.Q. ii. ix. 6 "Were your will her sold to entertaine..Great guerdon, well I wote, should you remaine. (1590)"
- (1590.5) Spenser F.Q. i. i. 16 "Ay wont in desert darknesse to remaine. (1590)"
- (1590.6) Shaks. Mids. N. iii. i. 156 "Thou shalt remaine here, whether thou wilt or no. (1590)"
- (1590.7) Spenser F.Q. ii. x. 32 "So to his crowne she him restor'd againe, In which he dyde, made ripe for death by eld, And after wild, it should to her remaine. (1590)"
- (1590.8) Shaks. Mids. N. iii. ii. 171 "My heart to her, but as guest-wise soiourn'd, And now to Helen it is home return'd, There to remaine. (1590)"
- (1590.9) Swinburne Testaments 7 "The definition remaineth irreprehensible. (1590)"
- (1590.10) Spenser F.Q. i. xii. 12 "Where that champion stout After his foes defeasaunce did remaine. (1590)"
- (1590.11) West Symbol. i. ii. §.311 "An Instrument of Surrender is an instrument testifiyng..that the particuler tenant of landes..doth..agree, that he which hath the next immediate remainder or reuersion thereof shall also haue the particuler estate of the same in possession. (1590)"
- (1591.1) Greene Farew. Folly Wks. (Grosart) IX. 324 "Yet remaines there in the minde certain Scyntillul&ae.aeig; voluptatis, which confirmed by a saturnall impression, were harder to root out than were they newly sprong vp in youth. (1591)"
- (1591.2) R. Bruce Serm. (Wodrow Soc.) 298 "It may remain a sure foundation and Ground&dubh.stone to us. (1591)"
- (1591.3) Shaks. 1 Hen. VI, i. i. 175 "For me nothing remaines: But long I will not be Iack out of Office. (1591)"
- (1591.4) Spenser Ruines of Time 578, "I in minde remained..Distraught twixt feare and pitie. (1591)"
- (1591.5) Sylvester Du Bartas i. iii. 513 "What will remaine? Ah! nothing (in respect). (1591)"
- (1591.6) Savile Tacitus, Agricola (1622) 184 "Lest any sparkle of honesty should by mischance remaine within view. (1591)"
- (1591.7) Vestry Bks. (Surtees) 30 "Shepe remainynge in this parishe... At North Pittington a *tuppe hogge. (1591)"
- (1592.1) Constable Poems (1859) 1 "As my heart shall aye remaine A patient object to thy lightning eyes. (1592)"
- (1592.2) Kyd Sp. Trag. ii. v. 17 "O speak, if any sparke of life remaine. (1592)"
- (1592.3) Kyd Sol. &. Pers. ii. i. 303 "Ah, Ferdinand, the stay of my old age, And cheefe remainder of our progenie. (1592)"
- (1592.4) Warner Alb. Eng. vii. xxxiv. (1602) 165 "This Henrie, Earle of Richmond, now poore Lancasters remaine. (1592)"
- (1592.5) West 1st Pt. Symbol. (1647) 100 "[To] suffer the same and every part and parcell thereof to descend come and remaine according to the true meaning of this Indenture. (1592)"
- (1592.6) Warner Alb. Eng. vii. xxxvii. 166 "What might remaine but death for me that liued so vnblest? " (1592)"
- (1592.7) Sc. Acts Jas. VI (1597) §.145 "The cedent remainis Rebelle and at the Horne. (1592)"
- (1593.1) Fale Dialling 19 "Which you shall find least subtract that from the greater, and that which remaineth keep, (for it shall be called the difference kept). (1593)"
- (1593.2) Fale Dialling 14, "I take the complement of the Elevation, which is 38d. out of the reclination of the plat which is 55d., and there remain 17d. (1593)"
- (1593.3) Nashe Christ's T. (1613) 75 "No Trophy remaining, no stone but discituate. (1593)"
- (1593.4) Shaks. Rich. II, i. iii. 149 "Norfolke: for thee remaines a heauier dombe, Which I with some vnwillingnesse pronounce. (1593)"
- (1593.5) Shaks. 3 Hen. VI, iv. iii. 60 "What now remaines my Lords for vs to do..? " (1593)"
- (1593.6) Shaks. Rich. II, i. i. 130 "My Soueraigne Liege was in my debt, Vpon remainder of a deere Accompt. (1593)"
- (1593.7) Shaks. Lucr. 520 "So thy suruiuing husband shall remaine The scornefull marke of euerie open eye. (1593)"
- (1593.8) Shaks. Rich. II, i. i. 130 "My Soueraigne Leege was in my debt, Vpon remainder of a deere Accompt. (1593)"
- (1593.9) Shaks. 3 Hen. VI, iv. vii. 9 "What then remaines..But that we enter, as into our Dukedome? " (1593)"
- (1593.10) Shaks. Lucr. 1452 "Her cheeks with chaps and wrinkles were disguised; Of what she was no semblance did remain. (1593)"
- (1594.1) Blundevil Exerc. vii. ix. (1636) 661 "Adde to the yeere of the Lord given 3, and divide the product thereof by 15, and the remainder shall be the number of the said Indiction. (1594)"
- (1594.2) Blundevil Exerc. i. vii. (1636) 25 "But such [numbers] as cannot bee divided but that there will remaine some odde unite, those are called Primes. (1594)"
- (1594.3) Blundevil Exerc. i. vii. (ed. 7) 25 "Such numbers as may be evenly divided by another number without leaving any remainder, are called Compounds. (1594)"
- (1594.4) Blundevil Exerc. i. v. (1636) 14 "The third number is called the Quotient,..and the fourth number is called the Remainder, if any be. (1594)"
- (1594.5) Blundevil Exerc. l. 176 b, "There will remaine 9. houres 4&p.8. which is the length of the artificiall day, when the Sunne is in the first degree of Scorpio, the one halfe wherof is called the semi-diurnall Arke of that artificial day. (1594)"
- (1594.6) Blundevil Exerc. i. iii. (1636) 8 "Then I say take 10 out of 17 and there remaineth 7, which I set downe. (1594)"
- (1594.7) Blundevil Exerc. i. iii. (1636) 7 "Take 7 out of 14 and there remaineth 7. (1594)"
- (1594.8) Carew Huarte's Exam. Wits iii. (1596) 25 "There will remaine..the forehead and the nape with a little bunchinesse. (1594)"
- (1594.9) Carew Huarte's Exam. Wits v. (1596) 55 "If the other two [ventricles] remained not sound, and without endammageance, a man should thereby become witles, and void of reason. (1594)"
- (1594.10) Carew Huarte's Exam. Wits vi. (1596) 84 "To remaine..affixed, in sort as the sparrowes are attached to birdlime. (1594)"
- (1594.11) Carew Huarte's Exam. Wits xiv. (1596) 250 "Our first parents..lost this qualitie, and the irascible and concupiscible remained. (1594)"
- (1594.12) Kyd Cornelia ii. 360 "The formes of things doe neuer die, Because the matter that remaines Reformes another thing thereby. (1594)"
- (1594.13) Nashe Unfort. Trav. 56 "During my remainder there [in Rome]. (1594)"
- (1594.14) O. B. Quest. Profit. Concern. 10 "Notwithstanding all this, there remained a sculke of such, as neither care nor castigation could amend. (1594)"
- (1594.15) O. B. Quest. Profit. Concern. 17 "There is also a certaine sparke or seed of vertue euer remaining in man..vnlesse reprobacie haue ouer-run all. (1594)"
- (1594.16) Plat Diuerse New Sorts of Soyle 59 "The Coast-men..doo also bestow that which remaineth of the pilchardes upon their leane and hungrey grounds. (1594)"
- (1594.17) Plat Jewell-ho. ii. (1653) 39 "Lettinge the cloues &. riendes [of oranges and lemons] remaine in oile. (1594)"
- (1594.18) Plat Jewell-ho. i. 21 "[Quick lime] whose moisture is altogether exhaled, so as there remaineth therein nothing else, but the terrestrial parts replenished with a fiery vertue. (1594)"
- (1594.19) Plat New Sorts of Soil 25 "When they [corne and other seedes] are ripe..the exhalative water flyeth away, and the generative remaineth. (1594)"
- (1594.20) R. Ashley tr. Loys le Roy 24 "The learning of the Athenians was lost in Athens; only remaining in that towne the school or house of studies. (1594)"
- (1594.21) Spenser Amoretti xlv, "Within my hart..The fayre Idea of your celestiall hew..remaines immortally. (1594)"
- (1594.22) Spenser Amoretti xii, "I then disarmed did remaine. (1594)"
- (1594.23) T. B. La Primaud. Fr. Acad. ii. 394 "The seede..receiueth not fashion presently vpon the conception, but remaineth for a time without any figure. (1594)"
- (1594.24) West 2nd Pt. Symbol. §.136 "The end and effect of such recoueries, is to discontinue and distroy estates tailes, remainders, and reuersions and barre the former owners thereof. (1594)"
- (1595.1) Capt. Wyatt R. Dudley's Voy. W. Ind. (Hakl. Soc.) 56 "In the night a substance of fyre resemblinge the shape of a fierie Dragon should fall into our sailes and theare remaine some quarter of an ower. (1595)"
- (1595.2) Spenser Epithal. 399 " And thou, glad Genius! in whose gentle hand The bridale bowre and geniall bed remaine. (1595)"
- (1596.1) Bacon Max. &. Use Com. Law xxiv. (1630) 94 "So if tenant for life the remainder in fee bee, and they ioine in graunting a rent, this is one solid rent out of both their estates. (1596)"
- (1596.2) Bacon Max. &. Use Com. Law (1635) 52 marg., "A recovery barreth an Escheat taile and all reversions and remaindments thereupon. (1596)"
- (1596.3) Fitz-Geffray Sir F. Drake (1881) 25 "Her silver-feathered turtle-doves, Which in their *golden-wired cage remaine. (1596)"
- (1596.4) Spenser F.Q. v. ii. 36 "But if thou now shouldst weigh them new in pound, We are not sure they would so long remaine. (1596)"
- (1596.5) Spenser F.Q. v. vi. 24 "There all that night remained Britomart, Restless, recomfortlesse. (1596)"
- (1596.6) Spenser F.Q. iv. viii. 51 "Him wretched thrall vnto his dongeon [he] brought, Where he remaines, of all vnsuccour'd and vnsought. (1596)"
- (1596.7) Spenser State Irel. 28 "A nation so antique, as that no monument remaines of her beginning. (1596)"
- (1596.8) Spenser Hymn Love 106 "Man..hauing yet in his deducted spright, Some sparks remaining of that heauenly fyre. (1596)"
- (1596.9) Shaks. 1 Hen. IV, iv. i. 53 "Where now remaines a sweet reuersion, We may boldly spend, vpon the hope Of what is to come in. (1596)"
- (1597.1) Blundevil Exerc. (ed. 2) i. vii. 12 "Such [numbers] as cannot bee divided but that there will remaine some odde unite, those are called Primes. (1597)"
- (1597.2) Beard Theatre God's Judgem. (1612) 465 "His carkasse..was hanged vpon a gallowes, and all his kindred and children put to death, that there might not one remaine of his straine. (1597)"
- (1597.3) Daniel Civ. Wares iii. xx, "That Richard should remain for evermore, close-prisoner. (1597)"
- (1597.4) Daniel Civ. Wars vii. 10 "For all this ebbing chance, remains The spring that feeds that hope. (1597)"
- (1597.5) Hooker Eccl. Pol. v. lxviii. (1611) 368 "Sound and sicke remaining both of the same body. (1597)"
- (1597.6) Hooker Eccl. Pol. v. liii. §.1 "Whatsoeuer is naturall to Deitie, the same remaineth in Christ vncommunicated vnto his Manhood. (1597)"
- (1597.7) Hooker Eccl. Pol. v. lxxi. §.2 "Because by repetition they..confirme the habites of all vertue, it remaineth that we..keep them as ordinances. (1597)"
- (1597.8) Hooker Eccl. Pol. v. §.22 (J.) "Sermons are the keys..and do open the scriptures; which being but read, remain, in comparison, still clasped. (1597)"
- (1597.9) Hooker Eccl. Pol. v. lxxix. 5 "He simply deliuered vp a large morsell whereby the value of that which remained was betrayed. (1597)"
- (1597.10) J. King On Jonas (1618) 493 "What remaineth, but to repent? to change our Morian skinnes, to put off our stained coats, and to wash our feet from their filthinesse. (1597)"
- (1597.11) Lowe Chirurg. (1634) 381 "There remaineth lappered bloud. (1597)"
- (1597.12) Skene De Verb. Sign. s.v. Annuel, "Top-annuel, is ane certaine duty, given and disponed furth of ony bigged tenement or land, of the quhilk tenement the propertie remainis with the disponer, and he is onely oblished to pay the said annuel. (1597)"
- (1597.13) in St. Papers, Dom. 360 "There remain 70 ships of all sorts: six Levantiscoes. (1597)"
- (1597-8.1) Bacon Ess., Faction (Arb.) 78 "When one of the Factions is extinguished, the remaining subdiuideth. (1597-"
- (1598.1) Barckley Felic. Man (1631) 635 "A faithfull friend is hard to be found; the bare name onely remaineth; the thing is obsolet and growne out of use. (1598)"
- (1598.2) Deloney Jacke Newb. ii. 38 "There were shearemen everie one,..And hard by them there did remaine Full foure score rowers taking paine. (1598)"
- (1598.3) Hakluyt Voy. I. 164 "One part of which indentures remaineth in the custodie of the English ambassadors, and the other part in the hands of the commissioners of Prussia. (1598)"
- (1598.4) Hakluyt Voy. I. 150 "One deceased by the way,..and the other remained sick..so that ambassage took none effect. (1598)"
- (1598.5) Hakluyt Voy. I. 97 "The churnmilke which remaineth of the butter. (1598)"
- (1598.6) Hakluyt Voy. I. 595 "The principall catholique recusants..were sent to remaine at certaine conuenient places. (1598)"
- (1598.7) Stow Surv. 361 "Part of the ruines of the old Temple were seene to remaine builded of Cane stone. (1598)"
- (1599.1) Hayward 1st Pt. Life &. Reign Hen. IV 4 "Neither did the continuance of his Raigne bring him to a proude port and stately esteeming of himselfe, but in his latter yeares he remained so gentle and faire in cariage, that [etc.]. (1599)"
- (1599.2) Minsheu Span. Gram. 20 "Now it remaineth to giue a Paradigma or example of euery Coniugation of their Moodes. (1599)"
- (1599.3) Nashe Lenten Stuffe Wks. (Grosart) V. 277 "Nothing of that Castle saue tattered ragged walles nowe remaines. (1599)"
- (1599.4) Nashe Lenten Stuffe 10 "That manner of prouostship or gouernment remained in full force and vertue all their fowre throneships, alias a hundred yeare. (1599)"
- (1599.5) Nashe Lenten Stuffe 59 "Not a scrap..but the cobs of the two herrings the fisherman had eaten remained of him. (1599)"
- (1599.6) Sandys Europ&ae.aeig; Spec. (1632) 142 "This man is very charie over that one remaining, and distilleth all other devises rather than set finger to that string. (1599)"
- (1599.7) Sandys Europ&ae.aeig; Spec. (1632) 111 "In those places where their power remaineth yet unabridged. (1599)"
- (1599.8) Sandys Europ&ae.aeig; Spec. (1632) 232 "There remaines nothing for a Iew converted, but to bee Friered. (1599)"
- (1599.9) in T. Stafford Pac. Hib. i. i. (1633) 11 "To bee committed to ward, there to remaine in safe custodie, untill [etc.]. (1599)"
- (1600.1) Coke Rep. v. 106 b, "Ietsam est quant le nief est in perill d'ê.tre merge et pur disburden le niefe les biens sont iects in le mere..et nul de ceux byens que sont appelles Ietsam Flotsam ou Lagan sont appeles wreck cy longe come ils remain in ou sur la mere, mais si ascun de eux sont mise al terre per le mere, donques ils seront dit wreck. (1600)"
- (1600.2) C. Percy in Shaks. C. Praise 38, "I will ever remain Your assured friend Charles Percy. (1600)"
- (1600.3) Edmonds Observ. C&ae.aeig;sar's Comm. 101 "Such other Commonweales, as before that time had remained newtrall. (1600)"
- (1600.4) E. Blount tr. Conestaggio 4 "Remaining peaceable Lord of the Realme. (1600)"
- (1600.5) E. Blount tr. Conestaggio 74 "This Letter..remained still with them vnopened. (1600)"
- (1600.6) E. Blount tr. Conestaggio 28 "He gave them impresse, and they remained for his service. (1600)"
- (1600.7) F. Davison Ps. cxxxii. in Farr S.P. Eliz. (1845) II. 328 "Where this love-knot remaines vnbroken, God heapes of blisse doth send. (1600)"
- (1600.8) Fairfax Tasso xix. lxv, "Vafrine..with griefe and care Remain'd astound. (1600)"
- (1600.9) Holland Livy xxvii. xxi. 644 "By whose cold and delayfull proceedings..Anniball now these ten yeares had remained in Italie. (1600)"
- (1600.10) Holland Livy 147 (R.) "When they had registered and placed the coloners, they remained still themselves in the same colonie. (1600)"
- (1600.11) Holland Livy 881 (R.) "It were a great disworship and shame even for them, that there should remaine in bondage any [etc.]. (1600)"
- (1600.12) J. Pory tr. Leo's Africa iv. 224 "Batha, whereof now there remaine but very few ruines. (1600)"
- (1600.13) J. Pory tr. Leo's Africa viii. 304 "Inscriptions engrauen in marble, and remaining til this present. (1600)"
- (1600.14) Shaks. A.Y.L. i. i. 179 "This wrastler shall cleare all: nothing remaines, but that I kindle the boy thither. (1600)"
- (1600.15) Shaks. Sonn. cxxii, "Which shall..remain Beyond all date, even to eternity. (1600)"
- (1600.16) Surflet Countrie Farme, iii. liii. 553 "If it spatter, there is yet some waterish moisture remaining in it. (1600)"
- (1600.17) Shaks. A.Y.L. i. i. 179 "Nothing remaines, but that I kindle the boy thither. (1600)"
- (1600.18) Shaks. A.Y.L. i. i. 179 "Nothing remaines, but that I kindle the boy thither. (1600)"
- (1600.19) Shaks. A.Y.L. ii. vii. 39 "As drie as the remainder bisket After a voyage. (1600)"
- (1600.20) Shaks. A.Y.L. ii. vii. 39 "His braine..is as drie as the remainder bisket After a voyage. (1600)"
- (1600.21) W. Watson Decacordon Pref. (1602) A 3 b, "The Germaines (where the imperiall triple Crowne of Caesar yet remaines vp and downe). (1600)"
- (1600.22) W. Watson Decacordon (1602) 350 "A resolute intent..in well, and in woe, to remaine constant. (1600)"
- (1600.23) W. Watson Decacordon ix. x. (1602) 332 "A maxime in the lawes, either vnauthentically defined, or remaining litigious. (1600)"
- (1600.24) Flodden F. vii. (1664) 68 "And in perduring peace remain. (1600)"
- (1600.25) in Turreff Gleanings (1859) 29 "The said day John Michel is ordaint to be put in kirk wolt, thairin to remain quhile he sett caution to adhear to Margratt Quhytt, his spous. (1600)"
- (1601.1) Daniel To C'tess Cumbld. xvi, "This note (Madam) of your Worthiness Remaines recorded in so many Hearts. (1601)"
- (1601.2) Holland Pliny I. 233 "Brought there were thither..such [frogs] as would crie in the water: and that whole kind still remaineth vocall. (1601)"
- (1601.3) Holland Pliny xxxv. xi. II. 550 "In these [unfinished paintings] a man may (as it were) see what traicts and lineaments remaine to bee done. (1601)"
- (1601.4) Holland Pliny II. 517 "The third part of the vein which remaineth behind in the furnace, it is Gal&ae.aeig;na, that is to say, the very mettal it selfe of lead. (1601)"
- (1601.5) Holland Pliny ii. lxv. 31 "Wonderfull it remaineth..How it should become a Globe, considering so great flatnesse of Plaines and Seas. (1601)"
- (1601.6) Holland Pliny I. 65 "In the generall deluge of the countrey by raine they only remained aliue. (1601)"
- (1601.7) Holland Pliny II. 535 "Many other plots and projects there doe remaine of his [Parasius'] drawing. (1601)"
- (1601.8) Holland Pliny I. 359 "Ouer and aboue those monstruosities which Italy hath deuised of it selfe, we haue remaining..those also of strange..nations abroad. (1601)"
- (1601.9) Holland tr. Pliny's Nat. Hist. I. xii. xx. 374 "The Troglodyte Nabath&ae.aeig;ans: who onely of the ancient Nabath&ae.aeig;ans, there setled and remained. (1601)"
- (1601.10) Holland Pliny II. 141 "A faire medicine to cure..the black prints remaining after strokes. (1601)"
- (1601.11) Holland Pliny I. 110 "The rest that Homer so much speaks of..there is no mention or token remaining of them. (1601)"
- (1601.12) R. Johnson Kingd. &. Commw. (1603) 19 " By remaining full of French soldiers all things were turned vpsidowne. (1601)"
- (1601.13) Shaks. All's Well iv. iii. 313 "For a Cardceue he will..cut th' intaile from all remainders. (1601)"
- (1601.14) Shaks. Jul. C. v. v. 1 "Come poore remaines of friends, rest on this Rocke. (1601)"
- (1601.15) Shaks. All's Well iv. iii. 272 "Not that I am afraide to dye, but that my offences beeing many, I would repent out the remainder of Nature. (1601)"
- (1601.16) Shaks. All's Well iv. iii. 313 "Sir, for a Cardecue, he will sell the fee-simple of his saluation, the inheritance of it, and cut th'intaile from all remainders, and a perpetuall succession for it perpetually. (1601)"
- (1601.17) Shaks. Jul. C. i. iii. 18 "His Hand, Not sensible of fire, remain'd vnscorch'd. (1601)"
- (1601.18) Shaks. All's Well iv. iii. 272 "My offences being many, I would repent out the remainder of Nature. (1601)"
- (1601.19) Shaks. Jul. C. i. iii. 18 "Yet his Hand, Not sensible of fire, remain'd vnscorch'd. (1601)"
- (1602.1) Carew Cornwall 111 b, "Onely there remaine the Iuie&dubh.tapissed wals of the keepe. (1602)"
- (1602.2) Carew Cornwall 111 b, "Onely there remaine the *Iuie-tapissed wals of the keepe. (1602)"
- (1602.3) Carew Cornwall i. 3 b, "Where the Horse walloweth, some haires will still remaine. (1602)"
- (1602.4) Fulbecke 2nd Pt. Parall. 68 "As to conditions impossible in facte, such conditions if they go to the defeasans of an estate, the estate notwithstanding remaineth good. (1602)"
- (1602.5) J. Davies Mirum in Modum (Grosart) 9/2 "Let vs with Eagles eyes without offence Transview the obscure things that do remaine. (1602)"
- (1602.6) Marston Ant. &. Mel. v. Wks. 1856 I. 67 "There remaines no discord that can sound Harsh accents to the eare of our accord. (1602)"
- (1602.7) Patericke tr. Gentillet's Disc. 90 "In this contestation..remained their affaires by a long and great space of yeares. (1602)"
- (1602.8) Stillingfl. Orig. Sacr&ae.aeig; ii. ii. §.9 "Especially when he..married into that branch of the family that was remaining there. (1602)"
- (1602.9) Shaks. Ham. iii. iii. 97, 98 "My words flye vp, my thoughts remain below, Words without thoughts, neuer to Heauen go. (1602)"
- (1602.10) Shaks. Ham. iii. iv. 179 "Thus bad begins, and worse remaines behinde. (1602)"
- (1602.11) Segar Hon. Mil. &. Civ. i. v. 7 "That no Citizen unsworne, should remaine out of Italie more then three yeares. (1602)"
- (1602.12) Warner Alb. Eng. Epit. (1612) 396 "No leisure remained the King for his formall courting of so contrarious a Ladie. (1602)"
- (1602.13) 2nd Pt. Return Parnass. iii. i. 1151 "It remaines to try whether you bee a man of good vtterance. (1602)"
- (1603.1) Florio Montaigne ii. iii. 210 "I wil now departe, and licence the remainder of my soule [F. donner cong&eacu. aux restes de mon ame]. (1603)"
- (1603.2) Holland Plutarch's Mor. 794 "The combat remained unatchived and unperfect, neither had it a certaine and doubtlesse conclusion. (1603)"
- (1603.3) Holland Plutarch's Mor. 1143 "Pythia the Priestresse of Apollo, being once come downe from her three footed fabricke, upon which she receiveth that incentive spirit of furie, remaineth quiet. (1603)"
- (1603.4) Holland Plutarch's Mor. 1140 "If love be away,..the act thereof remaineth altogether not expetible, dishonourable, without grace and unamiable. (1603)"
- (1603.5) Holland Plutarch's Mor. 558 "The wales, marks, scarres and cicatrices of sinne and vice remaine to be seene. (1603)"
- (1603.6) Holland Plutarch's Mor. 223 (R.) "Many men do let their fortunes run (as it were through a colander or strainer, wherein the worst stick and remaine in the way behind, whiles the better do passe and run out. (1603)"
- (1603.7) Knolles Hist. Turks (1621) 268 "The Bassa..began..with fire and sword to wast that part of the countrey which yet remained vnspoiled. (1603)"
- (1603.8) Owen Pembrokeshire (1892) 84 note, "No traces remained..but highe and rounde toompes of earth. (1603)"
- (1603.9) Shaks. Meas. for M. i. ii. 154 "This we came not to, Onely for propogation of a Dowre Remaining in the Coffer of her friends. (1603)"
- (1604.1) E. G[rimstone] D'Acosta's Hist. Indies vii. x. 523 "The Mexicaines by this meanes, remained much eased and content, but it lasted little. (1604)"
- (1604.2) E. G[rimstone] D'Acosta's Hist. Indies vi. xiv. 459 "The Edifices and Buildings..were many in number..as doth appeare at this day by their ruines and remainders. (1604)"
- (1604.3) E. G[rimstone] D'Acosta's Hist. Indies iv. iii. 210 "That [metal] which remaines of the refining of gold and silver. (1604)"
- (1604.4) E. G[rimstone] D'Acosta's Hist. Indies iii. xv. 169 "But now that we have left the sea, let vs come to other kinde of waters that remaine to be spoken of. (1604)"
- (1604.5) E. G[rimstone] D'Acosta's Hist. Indies iv. xii. 244 "They put all the mettall into a cloth, which they straine out,..and the rest remaines as a loafe of silver. (1604)"
- (1604.6) E. G[rimstone] D'Acosta's Hist. Indies iv. xii. 245 "They put all the mettall into a cloth, which they straine out very forcibly, so as all the quicke-silver passeth out..and the rest remaines as a loafe of silver, like to a marke of almonds pressed to draw oyle. And being thus pressed, the remainder containes but the sixt part in silver, and five in mercurie... Of these markes they makes pinnes, (as they call them,) like pine apples, or sugar loaves, hollow within, the which they commonly make of a hundred pound weight. (1604)"
- (1604.7) Shaks. Oth. v. ii. 368 "To you, Lord Gouernor, Remaines the Censure of this hellish villaine. (1604)"
- (1604.8) Merch. New-Royall Exchange B ij b, "The Merchants [at Rouen]..shall chuse out of the said number three officers, viz. A Prior and two Consulls, to remaine in their authoritie for one yeare. (1604)"
- (1605.1) A. Wotton Answ. late Popish Art. Ded., "All that remaines is by this, or some such like deed, to professe my sensiblenes of your great fauour. (1605)"
- (1605.2) Bacon Adv. Learn. ii. fol. 9 "The Sunne..passeth through pollutions, and it selfe remaines as pure as before. (1605)"
- (1605.3) Montgomerie Flyting 443 "Whan thae dames deuoutly had done their devore..Of that matter to make remained no more. (1605)"
- (1605.4) Shaks. Lear i. i. 82 "To thee, and thine hereditarie euer, Remaine this ample third of our faire Kingdome. (1605)"
- (1605.5) Shaks. Lear ii. i. 59 "Let him fly farre: Not in this Land shall he remaine vncaught. (1605)"
- (1605.6) Saltern Ant. Laws Gt. Brit. E 2 b, "The Saxons..called their Nobles by a name of the same signification, viz. Earles or eldermen, a name of nobilitie vnknowne in their owne Countrie; where (as I take it) they are called Graues or Greues, signifying a gouernor, which name also they brought hither, and it remaineth in some vse to this day. (1605)"
- (1605.7) Shaks. Macb. iv. iii. 148 "A most myraculous worke..Which often since my heere remaine in England, I haue seene him do. (1605)"
- (1605.8) Shaks. Macb. iv. iii. 148 "Which often since my heere remaine in England, I haue seene him do. (1605)"
- (1605.9) Timme Quersit. ii. iii. 113 "Salt-peter remaineth liquid and fusible in a red hote crucible. (1605)"
- (1605.10) Timme Quersit. ii. iii. 115 "The which water, albeit it alwayes remaineth fluxile and liquid. (1605)"
- (1605.11) Verstegan Dec. Intell. iv. 91 "The redeemer of the remainder of the captiue Troyans that were in Greece. (1605)"
- (1605.12) Verstegan Dec. Intell. iii. (1628) 63 "Aduanced to the honourable titles of Earles and Lords, with Establishment for the continuall remaining of these titles. (1605)"
- (1605.13) Verstegan Dec. Intell. v. (1628) 137 "There remaines yet a tole called *Guid-law, which is paid for cattell at Bowdumbar, a Gate of the City so called, and was first granted for the payment of guides. (1605)"
- (1605.14) Verstegan Dec. Intell. iv. (1636) 100 "This coniuncture to haue remained for some space after the great and generall deluge. (1605)"
- (1606.1) G. W[oodcocke] Hist. Ivstine xxxiv. 112 "That the kingdome should remaine in more safety, and lesse vprore. (1606)"
- (1606.2) S. Gardiner Bk. Angling 85 "Elias thought himself the only remainder of the Church of Israel..: But God otherwise rounded him in the eare. (1606)"
- (1606.3) Shaks. Ant. &. Cl. i. iii. 44 "But my full heart Remaines in vse with you. (1606)"
- (1606.4) Shaks. Tr. &. Cr. ii. ii. 71 "Nor the remainder Viands We do not throw in vnrespectiue siue. (1606)"
- (1606.5) Shaks. Cymb. iii. i. 87, "I know your Masters pleasure, and he mine: All the Remaine is welcome. (1606)"
- (1607.1) E. Grimstone tr. Goulart's Mem. Hist. 278 "He never sturd one iot, but remained firme and inviolable, as if he had beene planted there. (1607)"
- (1607.2) Heywood Wom. Killed w. Kindn. (1617) C 2 b, "Sir I accept it, and remaine indebted Euen to the best of my vnable power. (1607)"
- (1607.3) J. Carpenter Plaine Mans Plough 89 "What gaine these..when they..themselves remaine castawayes, wracking in the depth of hell. (1607)"
- (1607.4) Shaks. Timon iv. iii. 399 "Where should he haue this Gold? It is some poore Fragment, some slender Ort of his remainder. (1607)"
- (1607.5) Shaks. Cor. iii. iii. 124, "I banish you, And heere remaine with your vncertaintie. Let euery feeble Rumor shake your hearts. (1607)"
- (1607.6) Shaks. Timon iv. iii. 400 "It is some poore Fragment, some slender Ort of his remainder. (1607)"
- (1607.7) Shaks. Cor. ii. iii. 191 "If he should still malignantly remaine Fast Foe toth' Plebeij. (1607)"
- (1607.8) Shaks. Cor. ii. iii. 192 "If he should still malignantly remaine Fast Foe to th' Plebij. (1607)"
- (1607.9) Shaks. Cor. ii. iii. 149 "Remaines, that, in th' Officiall Markes inuested, You anon doe meet the Senate. (1607)"
- (1607.10) Shaks. Timon iii. vi. 30, "I hope it remaines not vnkindely with your Lordship, that I return'd you an empty messenger. (1607)"
- (1607.11) Shaks. Timon v. i. 101 "Know his grosse patchery..Yet remaine assur'd That he's a made-vp Villaine. (1607)"
- (1607.12) Shaks. Cor. v. vi. 17 "The People will remaine vncertaine, whil'st 'Twixt you there's difference. (1607)"
- (1607.13) Shaks. Cor. ii. ii. 43 "It remaines, As the maine Point of this our after-meeting. (1607)"
- (1607.14) Shaks. Cor. iv. i. 51 "While I remaine aboue the ground, you shall Heare from me still. (1607)"
- (1607.15) Shaks. Cor. ii. iii. 147 "Remaines, that in th' Officiall Markes invested, You anon doe meet the Senate. (1607)"
- (1607.16) Shaks. Cor. ii. ii. 44 "It remaines..To gratifie his Noble seruice. (1607)"
- (1607.17) Shaks. Cor. ii. iii. 148 "The Tribunes endue you with the Peoples Voyce, Remaines, that in th'Officiall Markes inuested, You anon doe meet the Senate. (1607)"
- (1607.18) Shaks. Timon iii. vi. 39, "I hope it remaines not vnkindely with your Lordship, that I return'd you an empty Messenger. (1607)"
- (1607.19) Topsell Four-f. Beasts 137 "Their common properties of nature, such as..remaine like infallible and invariable truths in euery kinde and country of the world. (1607)"
- (1607.20) Topsell Four-f. Beasts (1658) 329 "To cure a wound made with harquebush-shot... First seek with an instrument whether the pellet remain within or not. (1607)"
- (1607.21) Topsell Four-f. Beasts 669 "That a Bore or male swine wil not remaine of validity and good for breed past three yeare old. (1607)"
- (1607.22) Topsell Four-f. Beasts 415 "It will ranckle worse, by reason of the flaw of yron remaining in the flesh. (1607)"
- (1607.23) Topsell Serpents (1653) 639 "It remaineth to discourse of the Politick, Ethical, and Oeconomick vertues and properties of them [bees]. (1607)"
- (1607.24) Topsell Four-f. Beasts (1673) 435 "If they [Asses] do not breed..before the casting of their Colts-teeth, they remain steril..all their life. (1607)"
- (1607.25) Topsell Four-f. Beasts 124 "If they remaine abroad in the aire,..they grow as light as any vanishing or softer substance. (1607)"
- (1607.26) T. Rogers 39 Art. xxviii. (1633) 176 "The Metusiastes and Papists..beleeue the substance of Bread and Wine is so changed into the substance of Christ his Body, as nothing remaineth but the reall Body of Christ, besides the accidents of Bread and Wine. (1607)"
- (1607.27) W. Sclater 3 Serm. (1629) 11 "Temporall paines remaine as preuentions, as admonitions, as restrainments. (1607)"
- (1608.1) Bp. Hall Epist. i. vi. 284, "I haue noted foure ranks of commonly-named Miracles: from which, if you make a iust subduction, how few of our wonders shall remaine either to beleefe or admiration! " (1608)"
- (1608.2) H. Clapham Errour Left Hand 72 "Some doubts, which yet (as stumps) remaine behind vnpulled vp. (1608)"
- (1608.3) H. Wright in Lismore Papers Ser. ii. (1887) I. 127 "For the remainder of sowe iron nowe Restinge, there is litle or noe barre Iron made thereof. (1608)"
- (1608.4) J. King Serm. St. Mary's 7 "There yet remaineth a fourth point to make vp a quadrate and perfitt honor of the King. (1608)"
- (1608.5) Shaks. Per. iii. iii. 29 (Q.1), "Till she be married, madam,..Vnsistered [read Vnsissered]..shall this hair of mine remain. (1608)"
- (1608.6) Shaks. Per. iii. i. 63 "Aye-remaining lamps. (1608)"
- (1608.7) Topsell Serpents (1658) 621 "From that time forwards, he remained well and lusty, and as sound as a Bell. (1608)"
- (1608.8) Topsell Serpents 779 "Will not permit a [spider's] web-the very pattern, index, and anathema of supernaturall wisdome-to remain untouched. (1608)"
- (1608.9) Willet Hexapla Exod. 487 "How much should he remaine vndemnified,..which goeth to the bosome of his mother the Church?" (1608)"
- (1609.1) Bible (Douay) Jer. xi. 23 "Their sonnes and their daughters shal die in famine. And there shal be no remaines of them. (1609)"
- (1609.2) J. Douland Ornith. Microl. 54 "If you finde two Semibreefe Rests after a perfect Breefe, it shall remaine perfect, vnlesse punctuall Diuision come betweene. (1609)"
- (1609.3) Skene Reg. Maj., Act Jas. II, 132 "Gif any person is sklandered, or suspect of treason, he sal remaine in firmance. (1609)"
- (1609.4) Skene Reg. Maj. 78 "The distres (or gudes poynded) sall remaine in the possession of the complainer, vntil it be discussed, quhither he is lawfullie or vnlawfullie distressed. (1609)"
- (1609.5) Skene Reg. Maj. ii. 12 "The poynds..salbe reteined..in sic ane place pertaining to the poynder..quhere sic poynds or distresse may remaine and be keeped. (1609)"
- (1609.6) T. Jackson (title Ded. A ij b, )"My selfe [shall] remaine the safer from the teeth of vncouched Foxes, if [etc.]. (1609)"
- (1609.7) Bible (Douay) Gen. i. 16 comm., "Ancient Doctors judged it possible, that accidents may remaine without their subject. (1609)"
- (1610.1) Guillim Heraldrie ii. iii. 42 "Adumbration, or Transparency, is a cleere exemption of the substance of the Charge, or thing borne, in such sort as that there remaineth nothing thereof to be discerned, but the naked and bare proportion of the outward lineaments thereof. (1610)"
- (1610.2) Guillim Heraldry ii. iii. 42 "Adumbration or Transparency is a cleere exemption of the substance of the Charge..in such sort, as that there remaineth nothing thereof to be discerned, but the..bare proportion of the outward lineaments thereof. (1610)"
- (1610.3) Gwillim Heraldry (1660) i. iii. 15 "I call those notes or marks, Accidents of Armes, that..may be annexed unto them, or taken from them, their substance still remaining. (1610)"
- (1610.4) Healey Epictetus (1636) 70 "So shall thy thoughts remaine undisturbed. (1610)"
- (1610.5) Holland Camden's Brit. (1637) 608 "Certaine women..put it [sc. salt] in baskets, they call them *Salt barowes, out of which the liquor runneth, and the pure salt remaineth. (1610)"
- (1610.6) Holland Camden's Brit. (1637) 269 "there stood in old time a citie, but now neither top nor toe, as they say, remaineth of it. (1610)"
- (1610.7) Holland Camden's Brit. (1637) 256 "Being now daunted by time, there remaineth an heape of rammell and rubbish, witnessing the ruines thereof. (1610)"
- (1610.8) Holland Camden's Brit. ii. Irel. 86 "In steed of a city it is altogether as one saith po&acu.lij a&lenis.&acu.polij that is A City Citylesse, or The remains of that which was a city. (1610)"
- (1610.9) Holland Camden's Brit. 499 "Albeit the foulers doe..catch great store of young water-foule, yet..abundance..remaineth untaken. (1610)"
- (1610.10) Holland Camden's Brit. (1637) 113 "The residue of Britans remaining alive, withdrew themselves. (1610)"
- (1610.11) Holland Camden's Brit. (1637) 268 "And verily there remaineth yet a great Castle. (1610)"
- (1610.12) Holland Camden's Brit. (1637) 541 "His hand remained heere uncorrupted many hundred yeeres after. (1610)"
- (1610.13) Holland Camden's Brit. 547 "There be many tokens remaining of old antiquity. (1610)"
- (1610.14) Holland Camden's Brit. i. 520 "There is neither tippe nor toe remaining in it [Leicester] of the name Rat&ae.aeig;. (1610)"
- (1610.15) Healey St. Aug. Citie of God xxi. xvii. 858 "Assigning..a false blisse, vnto the Saints in heauen, where they..could neuer be secured to remaine. (1610)"
- (1610.16) J. More in Buccleuch MSS. (Hist. MSS. Comm.) 90 "Such..of their goods as remains in the Styllard and other places of this town. (1610)"
- (1610.17) Shaks. Temp. i. ii. 281 "Imprison'd, thou didst painefully remaine A dozen yeeres:..where thou didst vent thy groanes As fast as Mill-wheeles strike. (1610)"
- (1610.18) Shaks. Temp. i. ii. 277 "She did confine thee..Into a clouen Pyne, within which rift Imprison'd, thou didst painefully remaine. (1610)"
- (1610.19) Shaks. Temp. i. ii. 277 "She did confine thee..Into a clouen Pyne, within which rift Imprison'd, thou didst painefully remaine A dozen yeeres. (1610)"
- (1610.20) Shaks. Temp. i. ii. 278 "She did confine thee..Into a clouen Pyne, within which rift Imprison'd, thou didst painefully remaine A dozen yeeres. (1610)"
- (1610.21) W. Folkingham Art of Survey ii. viii. 61 "Eradicate the ductat of the said mediatie and remainders. (1610)"
- (1610.22) W. Folkingham Art of Survey ii. viii. 61 "From the medietie of the sides vnited, subduct each side seuerally; eradicate the ductat of the said medietie and remainders. (1610)"
- (1611.1) Bible 1 Sam. xxiv. 3 "Dauid and his men remained in the sides of the caue. (1611)"
- (1611.2) Bible Job xxi. 34 "In your answeres there remaineth falshood. (1611)"
- (1611.3) Bible Job xxxvii. 8 "Then the beastes goe into dennes: and remaine in their places. (1611)"
- (1611.4) Bible Heb. iv. 9 "There remaineth therefore a rest [marg. keeping of a Sabbath] to the people of God. (1611)"
- (1611.5) Bible Gen. viii. 22 "While the earth remaineth, seed-time and haruest..shall not cease. (1611)"
- (1611.6) Bible Heb. iv. 9 "There remaineth therefore a rest to the people of God. (1611)"
- (1611.7) Bible Isa. lxv. 4 "A people..Which remaine among the graues, and lodge in the monuments. (1611)"
- (1611.8) Bible Transl. Pref. &page.17 "It remaineth, that we commend thee to God. (1611)"
- (1611.9) Bible Numbers xxxiii. 55 "Those which ye let remaine of them, shall be..thornes in your sides. (1611)"
- (1611.10) Chapman Iliad x. 181 "O friends, remains not one That will..mix..With their outguards, expiscating if the renown'd extreme They force on us will serve their turns? " (1611)"
- (1611.11) Cotgr., "Bressaudes, the crispie mammocks that remaine of tried hogs grese. (1611)"
- (1611.12) Florio, "Bocchina..that stalke or necke of a bullet which in the casting remaines in the necke of the mould, called of our Gunners the bur of the bullet. (1611)"
- (1611.13) Mure Misc. Poems i. 54 "Lyk to a blooming meadow, Quhose pryd doth schort remaine. (1611)"
- (1611.14) Shaks. Cymb. iii. ii. 47 "So he wishes you all happinesse, that remaines loyall to his Vow, and your encreasing in Loue. (1611)"
- (1611.15) Shaks. Cymb. iv. iii. 14 "But for my Mistris, I nothing know where she remaines. (1611)"
- (1611.16) Speed Hist. Gt. Brit. v. iii. §.22. 18 "By which account the great supposed antiquity of Brute, is now lessened by seuen hundred fiftie and two yeares; and the time so scantelized betwixt his and Cesars entrance, that two hundred forty six yeares onely remaine. (1611)"
- (1611.17) Shaks. Cymb. ii. iv. 2, "I would I were so sure To winne the King, as I am bold, her Honour Will remaine her's. (1611)"
- (1611.18) Shaks. Cymb. iv. iv. 43, "I am asham'd To looke vpon the holy Sunne,..remaining So long a poore vnknowne. (1611)"
- (1611.19) Speed Hist. Gt. Brit. ix. xv. §.86. 649/2 "Her Coffin..hath euer since so remained, and neuer reburied. (1611)"
- (1611.20) Shaks. Cymb. i. iv. 173 "If shee remaine vnseduc'd, you not making it appeare otherwise [etc.]. (1611)"
- (1611.21) Speed Hist. Gt. Brit. vi. xvi. 96 "Many remnants [of causeways] remaine, especially in pastures, or by-grounds out of the rode way. (1611)"
- (1611.22) Speed Hist. Gt. Brit. ix. viii. §.46 "Neither is the Popes reuenge thus appeased, some higher greeces yet remaine, on which his Greatnesse..must display it selfe. (1611)"
- (1611.23) Shaks. Wint. T. ii. i. 51 "He ha's discouer'd my Designe, and I Remaine a pinch'd Thing; yea, a very Trick For them to play at will. (1611)"
- (1611.24) Speed Hist. Gr. Brit. vii. xlv. §.13. 371 "The remembrance of which field is retained vnto this day, by certaine small Hilles there remaining, whence haue beene digged the bones of men, Armour, and the water-chaines of horse-bridles. (1611)"
- (1611.25) Sir W. Mure Misc. Poems i. 54 "Lyk to a blooming meadou Quhose pryd doth schort remaine. (1611)"
- (1611.26) Speed Hist. Gt. Brit. vii. xliv. 366 "His..bones as yet remaine..in a Chest of Grey-Marble, reared vpon foure small pillars, couered with a copped stone of the same. (1611)"
- (1611.27) Shaks. Wint. T. v. ii. 130 "This Mysterie remained vndiscouer'd. (1611)"
- (1611.28) Shaks. Cymb. iii. ii. 47 "So he wishes you all happinesse, that remaines loyall to his Vow, and your encreasing in Loue, Leonatus Posthumus. (1611)"
- (1611.29) Shaks. Cymb. i. iv. 173 "If shee remaine vnseduc'd..you shall answer me with your Sword. (1611)"
- (1611.30) Tourneur Ath. Trag. v. i, "If any roote of life remaines within 'em..feare 'em not. (1611)"
- (1611.31) Tourneur Ath. Trag. v. i. Wks. 1878 I. 136 "If any roote of life remaines within 'em Capable of Phisicke, feare 'em not my Lord. (1611)"
- (1611.32) Panegyr. Verses in Coryat's Crudities, "For he would not Take orders but remaine an Idiote. (1611)"
- (1612.1) Benvenuto Passenger's Dialogues, Ital. &. Eng. (Nares) "Specially, when wee would abstergifie, and that the huske remaine behind in the boyling of it. (1612)"
- (1612.2) Brerewood Lang. &. Relig. (1614) 94 "It is alleaged that the word Tatari, or Totari, (for so indeed they are rightly called, as learned men obserue, and not Tartari) signifieth in the Syriaque and Hebrew tongues, a Residue or Remainder such as these Tartars are supposed to bee of the Ten Tribes. (1612)"
- (1612.3) Colson Gen. Treas., Art Arithm. B bb 2 b, "Of Substraction... The first number is to be called the Maior, grosse sum, sum total, or superior number... The second is named the Minor... The third is called the Remainer. (1612)"
- (1612.4) Drayton Poly-olb. ix. 14 "A constant Mayden still she onely did remaine, The last her genuine lawes which stoutly did retaine. (1612)"
- (1612.5) Shelton Quix. iii. vii. 182 "They shall remaine captiue, and intangled in the intricable amorous net. (1612)"
- (1612.6) Woodall Surg. Mate Wks. (1653) 201 "Some cholerick matter remaineth behinde in right-gut yet unevacuated. (1612)"
- (1612.7) Woodall Surg. Mate Wks. (1653) 270 "Divaporation is exhalation by fire of vapour, remaining in liquid substances, till all aquosity be consumed. (1612)"
- (1613.1) Brerewood Lang. &. Relig. 196 "Although the wound be in some sort healed, yet the wem or scar still remaineth. (1613)"
- (1613.2) Purchas Pilgrimage 814 "Scarce any mention of the houses remained. (1613)"
- (1613.3) Purchas Pilgrimage vi. xi. (1614) 632 "Causing (as the Moors report) that the bullets should still remaine in the Pieces when they were discharged. (1613)"
- (1613.4) Purchas Pilgrimage (1614) 400 "These reeds would fight together, and the victorie should remaine with him whose reede got the better. (1613)"
- (1613.5) Purchas Pilgrimage (1614) 338 "Benjamen Tudelensis telleth that one..had taken..the remainder of the Arke, and therewith built an Ismaeliticall Meschit. (1613)"
- (1613.6) Sherley Trav. Persia 32 "The eldest son of the King remained at the Court of his father, administring all that, which his fathers defect of light vnabled him to doe. (1613)"
- (1613.7) Shaks. Hen. VIII, v. iii. 181 "As I haue made ye one Lords, one remaine: So I grow stronger, you more Honour gaine. (1613)"
- (1613.8) Tapp Pathw. Knowl. 8 "And when you haue all added them, see what remaines besides the nynes, and drawing a short line [etc.]. (1613)"
- (1614.1) Earl Stirling Domes-day v. (R.), "When humaniz'd our Saviour did remaine. (1614)"
- (1614.2) Raleigh Hist. World ii. 312 "His Sepulchre remained in S. Hierome's time, and over it the Sunne engraven. (1614)"
- (1614.3) Raleigh Hist. World §.5. 40 "Or if the soile and seate had not remained, then would not Moses, who wrote of Paradise about 850 years after the floud, haue described it so particularly. (1614)"
- (1614.4) Selden Titles Hon. 286 "Thanes remained as a distinct name of dignitie, and vanisht not at the innouation of new honors. (1614)"
- (1614.5) Sir W. Mure Dido &. &Ae.AElig;neas Wks. (S.T.S.) I. 78 "None sluethfull in the citty do remaine. (1614)"
- (1614.6) Sir W. Mure Dido &. &Ae.AElig;neas iii. 446 "Seazing on her death&dubh.seal'd lipps to knowe If any sponk of breath as &ygh.it remain'd. (1614)"
- (1614.7) Selden Titles Honor 93 "Whil'st the Chaliphat remained vndeuided. (1614)"
- (1614.8) T. Bedwell Nat. Geom. Numbers ii. 22 "The Remaine or difference of 144, and 148, is 4. (1614)"
- (1614-15.1) Boys Wks. (1622) 597 "Soules departed..doe not obambulate and wander vp and downe, but remaine in places of happinesse or vnhappinesse. (1614-"
- (1615.1) Crooke Body of Man 698 "It remaineth that wee proceede vnto the dilucidation of some difficult questions concerning the Eares. (1615)"
- (1615.2) Chapman Odyss. xxiii. 349 "The scar That still remaines a marke too ocular To leaue your heart yet blinded. (1615)"
- (1615.3) Crooke Body of Man 376 "The heat of the right must..be in time extinguished, the heat of the left remaining inviolate. (1615)"
- (1615.4) G. Sandys Trav. 119 "That three dayes battell..maintained by a poore remainder of the Mamalucks. (1615)"
- (1615.5) G. Sandys Trav. 225 "But no tract therof [of the Labyrinth] remained in the days of Pliny. (1615)"
- (1615.6) Goddard Neaste of Waspes F iij, "Why howe nowe Waspes, are you returnd agen? I knowe vnstung remaines a worlde of men And therefore once more out. (1615)"
- (1615.7) G. Sandys Trav. Ded., "Those rich lands..remaine waste and ouergrowne with bushes, receptacles of wild beasts. (1615)"
- (1615.8) G. Sandys Trav. iv. 274 "Passing by Ciceros Villa, euen at this day so called, where yet do remaine the ruines of his Academy. (1615)"
- (1615.9) G. Sandys Relation III. 153 "On the twentieth of March with the rising Sunne we departed. A small remainder of that great Caruan; the Nostraines (so name they the Christians of the East) that rid vpon Mules and Asses being gone before. (1615)"
- (1615.10) G. Sandys Trav. 227 "To be conueyed by him vnto the Lazaretta, there to remaine for thirtie or fortie dayes before I could be admitted into the Citie. (1615)"
- (1615.11) G. Sandys Trav. 77 "Whose posterity in part remaineth to this day, though vassaled to the often changes of forraine Governours. (1615)"
- (1615.12) J. Chamberlain in Crt. &. Times Jas. I (1848) I. 362 "The place of Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports hath..remained in the lord chamberlain's hands as *in deposito. (1615)"
- (1615.13) Latham Falconry (1633) Words Art expl., "Pill, and pelfe of a fowle, is that refuse and broken remains which are left after the Hawke hath been relieued. (1615)"
- (1615.14) Rowlands Melancholie Knt. 33 "Old bookes, wherein the worm-holes doe remaine. (1615)"
- (1615.15) W. Lawson Country Housew. Gard. (1626) 16 "There is another way..to get not onely Plants for graffing, but Sets to remaine for Trees, which I call a Running Plant. (1615)"
- (1615.16) W. Bedwell Moham. Impost. ii. 59 "Therefore there remaineth yet another great difficultie, videl. How this law should be vniuersall. (1615)"
- (1615.17) tr. De Montfart's Surv. E. Indies 31 "Their Venus-shells consist of certaine kind of earth or clay which hath remaind a 100 yeares in one place. (1615)"
- (1616.1) Brent tr. Sarpi's Hist. Counc. Trent (1676) 518 "The Pope, considering that the Conclavists of account remain at Rome. (1616)"
- (1616.2) Brent tr. Sarpi's Counc. Trent (1676) 166 "The whole nature of man..remained crooked; not by the curvity of Adam, but by his own. (1616)"
- (1616.3) J. Lane Contn. Sqr.'s T. vii. 68 "Of his litle virtue whiche remaines Hee to his inmost reason recomplaines. (1616)"
- (1616.4) Surfl. &. Markh. Country Farme 568 "To the end that..in beating it with beetles, heckling and spinning of it, such filth may not remaine among the tow. (1616)"
- (1617.1) Moryson Itin. i. 161, "I will..scoure up that little Toscane language, which..shall be remaining unto me. (1617)"
- (1617.2) Moryson Itin. ii. 100 "Two things remained to settle the Kingdome. First the ridding Ireland of the Swordmen. (1617)"
- (1617.3) Moryson Itin. ii. iii. i. 213 "The remainder can hardly beare such deminution, as all Armies are subiect vnto. (1617)"
- (1617.4) Moryson Itin. ii. 202 "Don Iean and the remaine of the Spaniards at Kinsale, were all embarked ready to be gone. (1617)"
- (1617.5) Moryson Itin. i. 37 "After they had fined me some cannes of wine, and..had made me free, it remained that he whom they had chosen to be my God-father,..should instruct me with some precepts. (1617)"
- (1617.6) MS. Acc. St. John's Hosp., Canterb., "The remainor [of the money is] in the boxe. (1617)"
- (1618.1) Hist. P. Warbeck in Select. Harl. Misc. (1793) 70 "Loth to remain amongst such distrustful enemies, he quietly returned to his most assured friend, the lady Margaret. (1618)"
- (1618.2) in Capt. Smith Wks. (Arb.) 541 "There are so many sofisticating Tobaco-mungers in England, were it neuer so bad, they would sell it for Verinas, and the trash that remaineth should be Virginia. (1618)"
- (1618.3) in Capt. Smith Wks. (Arb.) 541 "There are so many sofisticating Tobaco-mungers in England, were it neuer so bad, they would sell it for Verinas, and the trash that remaineth should be Virginia. (1618)"
- (1618.4) in J. Charnock Hist. Mar. Archit. (1801) II. 237 "There will remaine in stock at Deptford 738 t. 14 c. 0 q. 9 lb. (1618)"
- (1619.1) Sir J. Sempill Sacrilege Handl. 73 "So must it not remaine still e&lenis.n au&lenis.tw&frown., but returne e&lenis.pi xriston. All these prerogatiual Prepositions end euer in Christ. (1619)"
- (1620.1) Melton Astrolog. 18 "If you should kill three hundred, you would still remain but a Quack-salving Physician. (1620)"
- (1620.2) Robinson Mary Magd. 534 "Vaine woman!..shall thy heart vnsounded, still remaine vnsound?" (1620)"
- (1620.3) Shelton Don Quixote ii. iv, "A great deal of Goods..of all which the young man remained a dissolute Lord. (1620)"
- (1620.4) Shelton Don Quixote I. iii. i. 116 "He arose, remaining bended in the midst of the way, like unto a Turkish Bow, without being able to address himself. (1620)"
- (1620.5) Venner Via Recta viii. 190 "They remaining crude and inconcocted in the body..doe at length settle and produce morbificall affects. (1620)"
- (1620.6) Venner Via Recta viii. 179 "This order of supping being obserued, there will remaine a competent time..before they goe to bed,..for the meats..to concoct. (1620)"
- (1620.7) tr. Boccaccio's Dream 33 "No imbarment remained but remembrance of the Marquesse. (1620)"
- (1620-55.1) I. Jones Stone-Heng (1725) 40 "There could not possibly be a convenient *Head-height remaining a Passage underneath. (1620-"
- (1620-55.2) I. Jones Stone-Heng, (1725) 42 "The Ruin yet remaining drawn in Prospective. (1620-"
- (1621.1) Burton Anat. Mel. iii. ii. i. i. (1651) 436 "Lions and Harts, which..many times kill each other, or compell them to abandon the rut, that they may remain masters in their places. (1621)"
- (1621.2) Lady M. Wroth Urania 174 "They went to eate that poore remaining that there was left them. (1621)"
- (1621.3) Lady M. Wroth Urania 274 "Your dearest selfe remaines infigured in my chastest breast. (1621)"
- (1621.4) Molle Camerar. Liv. Lib. iii. xx. 217 "The third made that which remained to hang a tone-side. (1621)"
- (1621.5) Quarles Esther xviii, "That remainder of proud Haman's straine, Their hands haue rooted out. (1621)"
- (1621.6) T. Granger Exp. Eccles. vii. 12. 175 "The swellings and diseases of the body, whose root remaineth still within, and pullulateth againe after the same, or some other manner. (1621)"
- (1621.7) Execution at Prague in Harl. Misc. (Malh.) III. 411 "Remain in perpetual prison. (1621)"
- (1621.8) First Bk. Discipl. 10 "Because..Articles thereanent remaine yet unresolved, and referred to further conference. (1621)"
- (1622.1) Bacon Hen. VII, Mor. &. Hist. Wks. (Bohn, 1860) 311 "To remain with the queen dowager her mother. (1622)"
- (1622.2) Donne Serm. i. 5 "He that comes alive out of that field [a duel] comes a dead man, because he comes a deadly sinner, and he that remains dead in the field is gone to an everlasting death. (1622)"
- (1622.3) Fletcher Love's Cure iii. ii, "Be there but one spark Of fire remaining in him unextinct, With my discourse I'll blow it to a flame. (1622)"
- (1622.4) H. Sydenham Serm. Sol. Occ. (1637) 178 "Rather..than sacrifice the remainder of a famin'd body to an honourable death. (1622)"
- (1622.5) Mabbe tr. Aleman's Guzman d'Alf. i. 148 "It was my hap to meet with the shanke-bone [orig. Sp. can&tilde.illa] of a Heyfer..and presently..I had lapt vp my Shanker [orig. Sp. cancarron] in the Paste that remained. (1622)"
- (1622.6) Malynes Anc. Law-Merch. 370 "Take all the remainders of the Accounts by Debitor and Creditor, which is the ballance of the Booke. (1622)"
- (1622.7) Misselden Free Trade 73 "It now remaineth briefely to show the Too Loose Vse thereof, by Vngouerned Trade. (1622)"
- (1622.8) Malynes Anc. Law-Merch. 274 "There remaineth a Paste..called the Almond Paste, which by a limbecke receiuing fire, causeth the Quickesiluer to subleme [sic]. (1622)"
- (1622.9) R. Hawkins Voy. S. Sea xli. 99 "Arrowes..headed with a flint stone, which is loose, and hurting, the head remaineth in the wound. (1622)"
- (1622.10) in Buccleuch MSS. (Hist. MSS. Comm.) I. 210 "He seeks not that the children should remain under the tutle of women. (1622)"
- (1623.1) Bingham Xenophon 62 "There remained yet a little knop aboue them..where the enemies guards did sit. (1623)"
- (1623.2) Gouge Serm. Extent God's Provid. §.15 "The Coroner and his Inquest comming to view the bodies, found remaining but 63. (1623)"
- (1623.3) Gouge Serm. Extent God's Provid. §.15 "The Coroner and his Inquest comming to view the bodies, found remaining but 63. (1623)"
- (1623.4) J. Johnson Arith. i. C 1, "The proofe of Addition is made by Subtraction; for if you subtract the numbers which you added from the totall of the Addition, there will remaine nothing, if the worke be truly done. (1623)"
- (1623.5) Jobson Golden Trade 145 "The Lyon..remaines feeding..whilest his small seruant [sc. the Jackal] stands barking, and yalping by. (1623)"
- (1623.6) W. L'Isle Sax. Treat. conc. Old &. New Test. f. e 3, "I meane ere long to let the world know what is more remaining; as more I have seene both in our Universitie Libraries, and that of Sir Robert Cotton. (1623)"
- (1623.7) tr. Favine's Theat. Hon. iii. vi. 374 "That the Order may remaine pure and vndefamed, according as it ought to doe. (1623)"
- (1624.1) Bp. M. Smith Serm. (1632) 34 "Fabricius..remained..vndauntable, and vnmoveable. (1624)"
- (1624.2) Capt. Smith Virginia ii. 29 "The groutes and peeces of the cornes remaining, by fanning..away the branne, they boyle 3 or 4 houres with water. (1624)"
- (1624.3) Capt. Smith Virginia (1629) 212 "Such like as they spare of the remainings. (1624)"
- (1624.4) Darcie Birth of Heresies xxii. 104 "The body it self of the planetall Sunne remaines and continues in his sphericall Orbe. (1624)"
- (1624.5) F. White Repl. Fisher 421 "In Transubstantiation the matter is destroyed, and the quantitie and accidents remaine, and in Transelementation the matter remaineth, and the essentiall and accidentall formes are altered. (1624)"
- (1624.6) Gataker Transubst. 107 "Under them all and each particle of them undevidedly remaining. (1624)"
- (1624.7) Gataker Transubst. 173 "The accidents of bread and wine remaine without actuall inhering and being in their naturall subject. (1624)"
- (1624.8) Wotton Archit. i. ad fin., "I will conclude the first Part of my present Travel. The second remaineth concerning Ornaments. (1624)"
- (1625.1) Bacon Ess., Truth (Arb.) 499 "And though the Sects of Philosophers of that Kinde be gone, yet there remaine certaine discoursing Wits. (1625)"
- (1625.2) Bp. Mountagu App. C&ae.aeig;sar vi. 169 "The blot..of sin..remaining in the soule of man, in like manner as it did before condonation. (1625)"
- (1625.3) Fletcher, etc. Fair Maid Inn iii. ii, "The lesse remainer Is dowry large enough. (1625)"
- (1625.4) Jackson Creed v. xliv. §.1 "It is the remediless remainder of our first parents' pride. (1625)"
- (1625.5) Markham Farew. Husb. (1625) 115 "Neither will the Corne corrupt or grow faughty, as long as the wormewood remaines amongst it. (1625)"
- (1625.6) Massinger New Way i. i, "The remainder of a single can Left by a drunken porter, all night pall'd too. (1625)"
- (1625.7) Massinger New Way i. i, "Wellborn. No bouse, nor no tobacco? Tapwell. Not a suck, sir, Nor the remainder of a single can. (1625)"
- (1625.8) Purchas Pilgrims I. v. 650, "I caused all my Laskayres to remaine aboord the Vnicorne. (1625)"
- (1625.9) Sir H. Finch Law (1636) 225 "There remaineth yet one generall and common affection scattered throughout the whole Law..which we call an Action. (1625)"
- (1625.10) Sir H. Finch Law (1636) 135 "A Mill-stone, though it be lifted vp to be picked and beaten..remaineth parcell of the Mill. (1625)"
- (1625.11) tr. Gonsalvio's Sp. Inquis. 145 "Clapped a Barnacle vpon his tongue, which remained there vntill the fire had consumed it. (1625)"
- (1626.1) Bacon New Atl. 25 "They haue some few Stirps of Iewes, yet remaining amongst them, whom they leaue to their owne Religion. (1626)"
- (1626.2) Bacon Sylva §.31 "Flame doth not mingle with Flame..but only remaineth contiguous; As it commeth to passe betwixt Consisting Bodies. (1626)"
- (1626.3) in Rushw. Hist. Coll. (1659) I. 230, "I have been so frugal of making use of the old remain, that there is no need of ammunition, or other necessaries. (1626)"
- (1627.1) Abp. Abbot in Rushw. Hist. Coll. (1659) I. 461 "Thus..to quicken my remembrance, I have laid down the Cause and the Proceedings of my sending into Kent, where I remain. (1627)"
- (1627.2) Capt. Smith Seaman's Gram. ii. 13 "There remaines nothing..but onely seeling the Cabins. (1627)"
- (1627.3) Earl of Manchester in Buccleuch MSS. (Hist. MSS. Comm.) I. 267 "Therefore the remain [of the loan] must needs be got up, which is not past 50,000 l. (1627)"
- (1627.4) Earl Manch. in Buccleuch MSS. (Hist. MSS. Comm.) I. 267 "The loans have brought in 240,000l. at least; therefore the remain must needs be got up, which is not past 50,000l. (1627)"
- (1627.5) Hakewill Apol. 35 "Onely this part of [Christendom]..remaines..vnlightned, in the darkenes of ignorance. (1627)"
- (1627.6) Hakewill Apol. (1630) 113 "Notwithstanding their [the elements] continuall transmutation, or transelementation,..of one into another, yet by a mutuall retribution it still remaines the same. (1627)"
- (1627.7) Hakewill Apol. iii. ix. (1630) 261 "That little life of it [Rhetoric] which remained being reserved only in the predicancie of Postillars. (1627)"
- (1627.8) May Lucan vii. 846 "There gold rak'd in Spaine, There th' Easterne Nations treasuryes remaine. (1627)"
- (1628.1) Coke On Litt. 326 b, "There be three kinde of Writs of Formedon, viz. The first in the Discender to be brought by the issue in taile, which claime by discent Per formam doni. The second is in the Reuerter, which lieth for him in the reuersion or his heires or Assignes after the state taile be spent. The third is [in] the Remainder, which the Law giueth to him in the remainder, his Heires or Assignes after the determination of the estate taile. (1628)"
- (1628.2) Coke On Litt. 142 "A Rent seruice cannot be reserued out of any inheritance but such as is manurable, whereinto the Lord may enter and take a distresse, as in Lands and Tenements, Reuersions, Remainders, and as some haue said, out of the herbage of lands. (1628)"
- (1628.3) Coke On Litt. 142 b, "If a man..will giue lands in taile, the remainder ouer in fee simple without deed [etc.]. (1628)"
- (1628.4) Digby Voy. to Medit. 94 "Att the ebbe shee [the ship] remained all adry. (1628)"
- (1628.5) Digby Voy. Medit. (1868) 19 "[They] gaue me leaue to carrie away all the English captiues that remained here (which were near 50), paying onely the money they cost vnto their patrones. (1628)"
- (1628.6) E. Blount in Earle Microcosm. To Rdr. (Arb.) 18 "In the meanwhile, I remaine Thine. Ed. Blovnt. (1628)"
- (1628.7) Feltham Resolves ii. lxxxix. 257 "The Act remaines adultery still:..nor can a Man vnact it againe. (1628)"
- (1628.8) Le Grys tr. Barclay's Argenis 216 "Lest my Vncle..should the more effrontedly execute vpon mee the remainder [of his treachery]. (1628)"
- (1628.9) Ld. Brooke (F. Grevil) Hum. Learn. cxviii, "And of these Arts it may be said againe, That since their Theoricke is infinite; Of infinite there can no Artes remaine... Their Theoricke then must not waine their vse. (1628)"
- (1629.1) Rutherford Lett. (1862) I. 44 "Fulfil with joy the remnant of the grounds and remainders of the afflictions of Christ in your body. (1629)"
- (1630.1) Capt. J. Smith Trav. &. Adv. ii. 57 "In this little Ile of Mevis,..I have remained..to wod and water and refresh my men. (1630)"
- (1630.2) Drumm. of Hawth. Flowres of Sion D 2, "Amidst that Masse of Ruines they did make, Safe and all scarrelesse yet remaines my Minde. (1630)"
- (1630.3) Drumm. of Hawth. Poems Wks. 34/1 "Her [Earth's] surface shakes..Towns them ingulf..Now nought remaineth but a Waste of Sand. (1630)"
- (1630.4) Hales Gold. Rem. (1688) 364 "In the blood thus drop'd there remains a spirit of life congenius to that in the body. (1630)"
- (1630.5) Levett Ordering of Bees (1634) 51 "Put the Combes and water together into a Canvas bagge,..and straine as much as you can.., casting away the rosse that remaineth in the bag. (1630)"
- (1630.6) Pagitt Christianogr. i. ii. (1636) 38 " There was an old estimate made of Germany..that..there was not past one twelfth part of it remaining Catholicke. (1630)"
- (1630.7) R. Johnson Kingd. &. Commw. 14 "The melancholike [humours]..remaine, and as dregges settle at the base of all their actions. (1630)"
- (1630.8) Wadsworth Sp. Pilgr. vii. 71 "The remainder of the regiment..[was] giuen to Sir Iames Creeton, there being behind Captain Lucy..with diuerse other..Captaines. (1630)"
- (1630.9) R. Johnson's Kingd. &. Commw. 188 "The same naturall of lightnesse and inconstancie still remaines in the French. (1630)"
- (1631.1) Donne Paradoxes (1652) 86 "[A miser's treasure profits no one;] Yet it remains intire. (1631)"
- (1631.2) Fuller Joseph's Coat, David's Sin xxxii, "So spots of sinne the writer's soule did staine, Whose soylie tincture did therein remaine. (1631)"
- (1631.3) Heywood Eng. Elizab. (1641) 90 "Thus she remained a sorrowful and dejected prisoner, in the hands of spleenfull and potent adversaries. (1631)"
- (1631.4) J. Burges Answ. Rejoined 88 "So as the same Law might ever remaine firme, and vn&dubh.broken, when occasions should varifie and change particularities. (1631)"
- (1631.5) Weever Anc. Funeral Mon. To Rdr., "Such memorials..as were remaining yet vndefaced. (1631)"
- (1631.6) Weever Anc. Fun. Mon. 573 "Dead bodies of the Nobilitie whose funerall trophies are wasted with deuouring time and..seates or Pewes for the Townesmen, made ouer their honorable remaines. (1631)"
- (1631.7) Weever Anc. Funeral Mon. 597, "I saw the remaines of a Monasterie, pleasantly watered about with seuerall streames. (1631)"
- (1632.1) Hayward tr. Biondi's Eromena 89 "Yet remain'd shee..confusedly disquieted. (1632)"
- (1632.2) J. Hayward tr. Biondi's Eromena 151 "[This] gave occasion to such as remained to yeeld themselves to the enemies discretion. (1632)"
- (1632.3) J. Hayward tr. Biondi's Eromena To Rdr., "By..earnest solicitations to re-importune him to close up what in these two remained unfinished. (1632)"
- (1632.4) Lithgow Trav. ix. 394 "This Kingdome after it was rent from the Romanes, remained in subiection vnder the French. (1632)"
- (1632.5) Lithgow Trav. i. 16 "The remainants of that auncient Amphitheatre. (1632)"
- (1632.6) Quarles Div. Fancies iii. lxxviii. (1660) 132 "If then, at most, the measur'd life of Man Be counted but a span, Being half'd, and quarter'd, and disquarter'd thus, What, what remains for us?" (1632)"
- (1632.7) Sir S. D'Ewes Autobiog. (1845) II. 71, "I spent the remainder of this month in overviewing and sorting them [coins]. (1632)"
- (1632.8) Vicars Virgil xi. 335 "Brave sirs, our main work done,..A rush for what remains. (1632)"
- (1632.9) in 10th Rep. Hist. MSS. Comm. App. v. 478 "The greate plentie of corne that remaines uppon their handes, and which they cannot utter at any saveing price. (1632)"
- (1633.1) Johnson Gerarde's Herbal iii. xl. 1353 "Of this sort [of pitch-tree] there is found another that..remaineth dwarfish, and it carries certaine little nugaments or catkins of the bignesse of a small nut. (1633)"
- (1633.2) T. Nashe Quaternio (1636) 224 "Both he and shee are branded with infamie, and the stigmaticall characters remaine as yet vndefaced in them. (1633)"
- (1633.3) T. Stafford Pac. Hib. ii. iii. (1810) 239 "And left the Wood with the Lapwings policie; that they being busied in pursuite of them, the other might remaine secure within that Fastnesse. (1633)"
- (1633.4) T. Adams Exp. 2 Peter ii. 22. 1089 "The medicining of the one, and cleansing of the other, did not take away their nature; still the one remained a Dogge, the other a Hogge. (1633)"
- (1634.1) Coke Inst. iv. lxxiii. Courts Forest (1648) 304 "Seeing the wilde Beasts doe belong to the purlieu man ratione soli, so long as they remain in his grounds, he may kill them, for the property ratione soli is in him. (1634)"
- (1634.2) Habington Castara ii. Wife, "Shee is so true a friend, her Husband may to her communicate even his ambitions, and if successe Crowne not expectation, remaine neverthelesse uncontemned. (1634)"
- (1634.3) Jackson Creed vii. xxxii. §.4 "Some authority in all this tumble did still remain in the tribe of Judah. (1634)"
- (1634.4) Strafford in Strafford Papers (1739) I. 340, "I remain Your Lordship's most humbly to be commanded, Wentworth. (1634)"
- (1634.5) T. Johnson Parey's Chirurg. xv. xii. 572 "This half crude humor remaining there, raiseth much flatuling. (1634)"
- (1634.6) T. Johnson Parey's Chirurg. xxvi. vii. (1678) 633 "If to the same frigidity remaining in Fruits, a certain humidity accrew. (1634)"
- (1634.7) T. Johnson tr. Parey's Chirurg. xxix. (1678) 711 "Every part which hath not his motion remaineth languid and atrophiated. (1634)"
- (1634.8) T. Johnson tr. Parey's Chirurg. 338 "Seate, when the marke of the weapon remaines imprinted in the wound, that the wound is of no more length, nor bredth than the weapon fell upon. (1634)"
- (1634.9) W. Tirwhyt tr. Balzac's Lett. (vol. I) 133, "I should remaine disconsolate amidst the publique Iubilations. (1634)"
- (1635.1) Cromwell Let. 11 Jan., in Carlyle (1873) I. 77 "It only remains now that He who first moved you to this, put you forward in the continuance thereof. (1635)"
- (1635.2) Corbet Poems (1648) 8 "Those Rings and Roundelays Of theirs, which yet remain, Were footed..on many a grassy plain. (1635)"
- (1635.3) J. Hayward tr. Biondi's Banish'd Virg. 29 "Strucken dumbe remain'd Feredo with this..dishonest proposition. (1635)"
- (1635.4) Jackson Creed viii. vi. §.3 "The diversity of these two natures might still remaine unconfused without diversity of persons. (1635)"
- (1635.5) Pagitt Christianogr. 222 "Some others who gape to swallow up and make a prey of that little which remaineth. (1635)"
- (1635.6) Pagitt Christianogr. i. ii. (1636) 85 "In Hispaniola there were not 300 Natives left, and a very small remaine in the other Ilands. (1635)"
- (1635.7) Pagitt Christianogr. i. ii. (1636) 71 "A few Christians remaining, called Bedwins. (1635)"
- (1635.8) Swan Spec. M. iii. §.2 (1643) 48 "Both of them [sc. the heavens] remained as it were unpolished or unfinished untill the fourth day. (1635)"
- (1635.9) Strafford Lett. (1739) I. 412 "To shew you how chearfully and settledly I remain Your Lordship's..most humble Servant, Wentworth. (1635)"
- (1636.1) Brathwait Lives Rom. Emperors 280 "Hee remained coinheritor with his brother Carolus of the Crowne of France. (1636)"
- (1636.2) E. Dacres tr. Machiavel's Disc. Livy II. 639 "Fulvius remaining Lieftenant in the army..for that the Consull was gon to Rome. (1636)"
- (1636.3) Featly Clavis Myst. xix. 188 "Where divers candles..in a room concur to enlighten the place, the light of them remaineth impermixt. (1636)"
- (1636.4) Mellis Recorde's Gr. Arts 63 "Therefore in the place of the rest or remaine, right vnder the denomination, I set down 0. (1636)"
- (1636.5) Sanderson Serm. II. 49 "The greatest blame must remain upon the untowardness of the will, resolvedly bent upon the evil. (1636)"
- (1637.1) B. Jonson Underwoods, Execration Vulcan 196 "Paul's steeple.., though a divine Loss, remains yet as unrepair'd as mine. (1637)"
- (1637.2) Gillespie Eng. Pop. Cerem. iii. viii. 192 "Which power of Iurisdiction..remaineth..both in the Bishop, and in the Presbytery, in him personally, in it collegially. (1637)"
- (1637.3) Heywood Dial. 311 "My espousals remaine in my Fathers power, and not mine. (1637)"
- (1637.4) Heywood Dial. iv. 62 "The phane Where the two brothers deify'd remain. (1637)"
- (1637.5) Heywood Royal Ship 3 "In the very Apex and top thereof [Mt Ararat], there is still to be discerned a blacke Shadow, resembling a Darke Cloud..by the Natives..held, to be the still remaining carkasse of the Arke of Noah. (1637)"
- (1637.6) Bk. Com. Prayer, Church Scot., "Communion Rubric, He that celebrates shall..cover with a fair linen cloth, or corporal, that which remaineth of the consecrated elements. (1637)"
- (1637.7) Crompton's Jurisd. 179 "No tawer or whitener of skins shall remain in the forests. (1637)"
- (1637.8) in Cramond Ann. Banff (1891) I. 79 "Ane daylie remainer fra the Kirk in tyme of dyvyne worschip. (1637)"
- (1637-50.1) Row Hist. Kirk (Wodrow Soc.) 54 "A principal act wes concluded, and also remains undestroyed in the Books..of this Kirk. (1637-"
- (1638.1) A. Read Chirurg. i. 8 "If the braine be remarkably wounded, the party remaineth foolish. (1638)"
- (1638.2) Chillingw. Relig. Prot. i. ii. §.12. 58 "That those [things] which are obscure should remain obscure, untill he please to declare them. (1638)"
- (1638.3) Dk. Hamilton in H. Papers (Camden) 11 "If you uill not be content to admitt the Couenant to remaine, call a generall assemblie uher ye may expeckt the Bishopes to be limited. (1638)"
- (1638.4) H. Peacham Valley of Varietie 131 "There remains fine hairie threds, like unto Flax, which are woven into cloth. (1638)"
- (1638.5) Junius Paint. Ancients 267 "The same admiration remaineth from what side soever you doe looke upon her. (1638)"
- (1638.6) Junius Paint. Ancients 123 "Their worke remaineth in the finest place under the Sunne. (1638)"
- (1638.7) L. Roberts Map Commerce ccciii. 39 "That parcell..remaineth entirely upon the Risgoe, perill and fortune of the party that did accept the same. (1638)"
- (1638.8) Rawley tr. Bacon's Life &. Death (1650) 64 "Aire begets new Aire out of watry moisture, yet notwithstanding the old Aire still remains; whence commeth that Super-Oneration of the Aire. (1638)"
- (1638.9) Sir R. Cotton Abstr. Rec. Tower 26 "If wee marke but of the great quantities from the penny downward since H. 8. time stamped, how few remain. Whereas of all the Coynes from three pence upwards which are manuable (or manuall) plenty passe still in daily payment. (1638)"
- (1639.1) Chapman &. Shirley Ball iv. H iij, "Luc. There remaines to take away one scruple. Co. Another gimcracke. Luc. I have none, tis your doubt sir. (1639)"
- (1639.2) R. Baillie Lett. 28 Sept., "Many of them died; and..the most part of all who remained traicked pitifullie. (1639)"
- (1639.3) R. Baillie Lett. &. Jrnls. (1841) I. 220 "Some jealousies did yet remaine, as driffling after a great shower. (1639)"
- (1639.4) S. Du Verger tr. Camus' Admir. Events 311 "Mute-strucken with this lustre..he remained quite astonished. (1639)"
- (1639.5) S. Du Verger tr. Camus' Admir. Events 308 "The middlemost called Callinice, which was likeliest to be put off, remained in the world to expect when her beauty..would purchase her a husband. (1639)"
- (1639.6) T. de Grey Compl. Horsem. 111 "That no gravell be remaining betwixt the web of the shoo and the sole. (1639)"
- (1639.7) T. Brugis tr. Camus' Mor. Relat. 320 "The very features of the faces..remained so ingraven in his imagination. (1639)"
- (1639.8) T. Carew Truce in Love entreated i, "For see my heart Is made thy Quiver, where remaines No voyd place for another Dart. (1639)"
- (1639.9) Wotton in Reliq. (1651) 340 "Julia a little before dying,..together with an infant she bare,..and she gone without any slip remaining [etc.]. (1639)"