Definitions
Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
- n. Eccles., the mark by which the absence of a prebendary from choir, either by sickness or leave, was denoted. In either case he did not forfeit any of his revenue.
Examples
“Ecce pars vestrum et major et melior alget, fame laborat, et deus patitur, dissimulat, non vult, non potest opitulari suis, et vel invalidus vel iniquus est.”
“Deliquium patitur charitas, odium ejus loco succedit.”
“Apud Christianos non qui patitur, sed qui facit injuriam miser est.”
“Only be thou patient: [4002] vincit qui patitur: and in the end thou shalt be crowned.”
“Conscientia aliud agere non patitur, perturbatam vitam agunt, nunquam vacant, &c. 6743.”
“Flagitat auxilium gratiae, quia vim patitur a natura.”
A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
“Si vero non exierit ipso motu debilitatur, ita et patitur, vt in sequenti exiens mense nullatenus conualescat. back”
A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
“Systema nervosum maxime irritabile, organos patitur.”
“Ista, cum modicum declinet à circulo terræ sub Æquatore, patitur in anno duas æstates, et duas hyemes, si tamen hyems aliqua dici debeat, et non magis æstas, quia nullus hic dies anni caret fructu, flore, germine.”
“C鎠are� vestr� Maiestatis concessio patitur, volumus.”
The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
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