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21 
T L E 
marthen, and turning towards the south, falls into Caermar- 
then bay, in a large estuary. 
T1XALL, a parish of England, in Staffordshire; 3| miles 
east-by-south of Stafford. 
TIXENDALE, or Thkixkndale, a township of Eng¬ 
land, in the parish of Wharram Piercy, East Riding of York¬ 
shire; 8£ miles south-south-east of New Malton. 
TIXOVER, a parish of England, in Rutlandshire; 71- 
miles east-by-north of Uppingham. 
TIXTLAN, a town of Mexico, and capital of a jurisdic¬ 
tion of the same name ; situated 30 leagues from the coast 
of the Pacific ocean. 
T1ZAPAN, the name of three inconsiderable settlements 
in Mexico. 
TIZE, orTiz, a sea-port of Mekran, in Persia, the Tiza 
of Ptolemy, once important, but now reduced to a miserable 
village of fifty or sixty huts. 
TIZNADOS, a river of the Caraccas, in the province of 
Venezuela, which enters the Portugueza. 
TJERINGKIN, a considerable fishing village on the 
island of Java, on the west coast. It was formerly a military 
post, with a block-house, which was burnt by the British 
ships of war. It is situated at the mouth of a river which 
is navigable a long way up for small prows; 103 miles west 
from Batavia. 
TJIDANEE, or Tangerang, a river of the island of 
Java, which falls into the sea of Java, near Batavia bay. 
TJIDOVEAN, a river of Java, which runs a northerly 
course, and falls into the Java sea, in the bay of Bantam. 
During the rains it is very rapid, and scarcely passable. 
TLACOLTEPEC, a settlement of Mexico, in the intend¬ 
ancy of Puebla de los Angeles, containing 148 Indian fa¬ 
milies. 
TLACOLULA, a settlement of Mexico, in the intendancy 
of Puebla de los Angeles, containing 262 Indian families. 
TLACOLULA, a settlement in the intendancy of Mexico, 
containing 270 Indian families. There are two other incon¬ 
siderable settlements of the same name in Mexico. 
TLALCHICOMULA, a settlement of Mexico, in the in¬ 
tendancy of Puebla de los Angeles, containing 700 families 
of Indians, Spaniards, mestizoes, ar.d mulattoes. 
TLALNEPLANTA, a settlement of Mexico, in the in- 
tendancy of Mexico, containing 850 Indian families. 
TLALPUJAGUA, a town of Mexico, in the intendancy 
of Valladolid ; 77 miles west of Mexico. 
TLALTIZAPAN, a settlement of Mexico, in the intend¬ 
ancy of Mexico, containing 150 Indian families. 
TLAMANALCO, a settlement of Mexico, in the intend¬ 
ancy of Mexico, containing 1360 families of Indians; 6 
miles east of Chaleo. 
TLAPOYACA, a settlement of Mexico, in the intendancy 
of Oaxaca, which contains 180 families of Indians—There 
is another settlement of the same name in the intendancy of 
Valladolid. 
TLAXCALLA, or Tlascalla, a government of Mexico, 
in the intendancy of Puebla de los Angeles, which, in 1793, 
contained 5p,177 inhabitants, whereof 21,849 were male, and 
21,029 fenjale Indians. It is bounded on the north by Vera 
Cruz, on the east by Oaxaca or Guaxaca, on the south by 
the Pacific, and on the west by the province of Mexico ; and 
is about 354 miles in length, and from 40 to 150 in breadth. 
The soil anc! productions are nearly the same with Mexico. 
TLAXCALLA, the capital of the above province, situated 
cm the side of a high mountain, and on the banks of a small 
river which runs into the Pacific ocean; 64 miles east of 
Mexico. Lat. 19. 19. 30. N. long. 98. W. 
TLAZASALCA, the capital of a jurisdiction of the same 
name, in the intendancy of Valladolid ; 70 miles west-by¬ 
north of Mexico. 
TLEMSAN, or Tremecen, the most westerly of the 
three provinces into which the kingdom of Algiers is di¬ 
vided. 
TLEMSAN, or Tremecen, a city of Algiers, capital of 
the province of the same name. It was once an important 
place, and the metropolis of a kingdom ; but in 1670, on 
VoL. XXIV. No. 1624. 
occasion of a revolt of the inhabitants, Hassan, then dey of 
Algiers, laid it in ruins, so that there does not now remain 
above one-sixth part of the old City, which, when entire, 
might have been four miles in circuit. It is placed on 
a rising ground, below some rocky precipices, whence 
issue a number of springs; 220 miles west-south-west of 
Algiers, and 50 south-south-west of Oran. 
TLETCH, a small town of Tobolsk, in Asiatic Russia, on 
the Irtysch ; 72 miles east-south-east of Tobolsk. 
TLUMATSCHAU, or Tlumaszow, a small town of the 
Austrian states, in Moravia, on the river March ; 12 miles 
east of Hradisch, and 39 east of Brunn. Population 1100. 
TO, adv. [Co, Saxon ; te, Dutch.] A particle coming 
between two verbs, and noting the second as the object of 
the first.-—The delay of our hopes teaches us to mortify our 
desires. Smalridge. —It notes the intention. 
Ambitious fool! with horny hoofs to pass 
O’er hollow arches of resounding brass. 
To rival thunder. Dry den. 
It notes the consequence.—I have done my utmost to lead 
my life so pleasantly as to forget all misfortunes. Pope .— 
After an adjective, it notes its object. 
We ready are to try our fortunes 
To the last man. Shakspearc. 
Noting futurity.—It is not blood and bones that can be 
conscious of their own hardness and redness; and we are still 
to seek for something else in our frame that receives those 
impressions. Bentley. 
To and again, or To and fro, backward and forward. 
The spirits perverse 
With easy intercourse pass to and fro, 
To tempt or punish mortals. Milton. 
Quite; entirely; much ; very: preceding a verb, parti¬ 
ciple, or adjective; formerly much in use; now obsolete. 
Let them all encircle him about, 
And, fairy-like, to pinch the unclean knight. Shalcspeare. 
TO, preposition. —Noting motion towards, opposed to 
from. 
Tybalt fled; 
But by and by comes back to Romeo, 
And to' t they go like lightning. Shakspearc. 
Give not over so ; to him again, entreat him, 
Kneel down before him. Shakspearc. 
Noting accord or adaptation. 
Thus they with sacred thought 
Mov’d on in silence to soft pipes. Milton. 
Noting address or compellation. 
Now to you, Raymond : can you guess no reason 
Why I repose such confidence in you ? Dry den. 
Noting attention or application. 
Turn out, you rogue ! how like a beast you lie: 
Go buckle to the law. Drydcn. 
Noting addition or accumulation. 
Wisdom he has, and to his wisdom courage ; 
Temper to that, and unto all success. Denliam. 
Noting a state or place whither any one goes.—Take you 
some company and away to horse. Shakspearc ,—Noting 
opposition. 
No foe unpunish’d in the fighting field. 
Shall dare thee foot to foot with sword and shield. Dry den. 
Noting amount.—There were to the number of three hun¬ 
dred horse, and as many thousand foot English. Bacon. — 
Noting proportion. 
With these bars against me. 
And yet to win her—all the world to nothing. Shakspearc. 
Noting possession or appropriation.—-Still a greater diffi¬ 
culty upon translators rises from the peculiarities every lan¬ 
guage hath to itself. Felton. —Noting perception, 
G 
The 
