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Webster
KJV
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In my view, the Christian religion is the most important and one of the first things in which all children, under a free government ought to be instructed... No truth is more evident to my mind than that the Christian religion must be the basis of any government intended to secure the rights and privileges of a free people. Preface to 1828 Dictionary
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QUAKE, v.i.
QUAKE, v.t. To frighten; to throw into agitation. [Not used.]
QUAKE, n. A shake; a trembling; a shudder; a tremulous agitation.
To be agitated with quick,
short motions continually repeated; to shake with fear, cold, etc.; to
shudder; to tremble.
"Quaking for dread."
Chaucer.
She stood quaking like the partridge on which the hawk is ready to seize. Sir P. Sidney. To shake, vibrate, or quiver, either from
not being solid, as soft, wet land, or from violent convulsion of any
kind; as, the earth quakes; the mountains quake.
"
Over quaking bogs." Macaulay. To cause
to quake.
[Obs.] Shak. A tremulous agitation; a
quick vibratory movement; a shudder; a quivering.
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