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"Section F, G and H"


Were the great duke himself here, and would lift
up

My head to fellow pomp amongst his nobles.

Ford.


Fel"low (?), v. t. To suit with;
to pair with; to match.
[Obs.] Shak.


Fel"low-com"mon*er (?), n. A
student at Cambridge University, England, who commons, or
dines, at the Fellow's table.


Fel"low-crea"ture (?; 135), n. One
of the same race or kind; one made by the same Creator.


Reason, by which we are raised above our fellow-
creatures
, the brutes.
I. Watts.


Fel"low*feel" (?), v. t. To share
through sympathy; to participate in.
[R.] D.
Rodgers.


Fel"low-feel"ing, n. 1.
Sympathy; a like feeling.


2. Joint interest. [Obs.]
Arbuthnot.


Fel"low*less, a. Without fellow or
equal; peerless.


Whose well-built walls are rare and
fellowless.
Chapman.


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