OCR Text |
Show M Has in Englifh on unvarie 1. To make lean ; to wear away 3 lo rude coarfe \Yhenc fellow amacaronick poetry, in which the languag is purpofely corrupted render the looks of patients confumptive and pinTarwey on Confumptions ing 2. To mortify ; to harafs wit hardfhips made of flour bifcuit and fugar Maca'w. #./ Out of an excefs of zeal they practife mortifi A kind of fwee French. 2. [Macaron A bir almonds eggs cations 5 the their health i Wi 7. / He mightily upheld that royal mac "‘Which now thou bear'ft Fairy Quecen mafla Frenchs 2. [Mafue Latn. heavy blunt weapon ; a club of metal O murth'rous flumber $ay'ft thou thy leaden mace upon my bo ‘That plays thee mufick Shakef. Fulius Czfar ‘The Turkith troops breaking in with their fcymitars and heavy iron maces, made a moft blood execution Knolles Death with his mace petrifick fmote. -~ Milton With his mace their monarch ftruck the ground ‘With inward trembling earth receiv'd the wound And rifing fireams a ready paflage found. Dryden The mighty maces with fuch hafte defcend "They break the bones, and make the armour bend Dryden A kind of {pice 4. [Macis, Latin. Th nutme is inclofed in a threefold covering of which the fecond is mace : it is thin and mem.branaceous, of an oleaginous and a yellowifh coJour: it has an extremely fragrant, aromatick p2greeable fmell, and a pleafant, but acri ‘oleaginous tafte et 9 and honey Macea'LE {pice is a moft excellen "fudorifick : it is more effectual with a little mac added to it an an Hill's Materia Medica ‘Water, vinegar Arbuthnot #. f wit I preferibe [mace and ale. Al mace hi a draugh hopes to difpofe him to reft of maceale wit Wifeman's Surgery Ma'ceBEaRER. 7. f. [mace ard bear. One who carries the mace before perfons in authority I was placed at a quadrangular table, oppofite t the mace-bearer Spectator 70 MA‘CERATE macerer, Fr. YOL II «.a [macero an impai Fiddes Aibuthnat Mace. 2. /. [maggza, Saxon; maga Spanifh. 1. An enfign of authority borne befor magiftrates e their bodies In lotions in women's cafes, he orders two portions of hellebore macerated in two cotyle of water in the Weft In A Apecies of the palm-tree, very common in th Caribbee iflands, where the negroes pierce the tender fruit, whence iffues a pleafant liquor ; and th body of the tree affords a folid timber, fuppofed b Mibler fome to be a fort of ebony macerat 3. To fteep almoft to folution dies, the largeft fpecies of parrot Macaw-TREE corpora Covetous men are all fools: for what greate folly can there be, or madnefs, than for fuch man to swacerate himfelf when he nced not Burton on Melancholy Like a big wife, at fight of lothed meat Ready to travail; fo I figh and fweat Donne To hear this macareon talk on in vain veflel Derive their fccondary pow' Recurrent pains of the ftomach, megrims, an other recurrent head-aches, macerate the parts, an found, by compreflion of th lips 5 as, mine, tame, camp: i is never mute MacarooN. u. f. [macarone, Ttalian. M A A Lat MacEerA TION. 2. /. [maceration, French fro macerate. 1. The a& of wafting, or making lean 2. Mortification; corporal hardfhip 3. Maceration is an infufion either with o without heat, wherein the ingredient are intended to be almoft wholly diffolved Quiney The faliva ferves for a maceration and difiolutio of the meat into a chyle Ray on Creation MA'CHINATE Lat. machiner, Fr. «. .a [machinor 'To'plan‘; to con Mace-rEED. 7 /. [typha. An herb Ma'cHiNAL, adj. [from machina, Lat. Relating to machines Di& 7 grive. MacHINA'TION 5. f [machinatio, Lat machination, Fr. from machinate.] Artifice; contrivance ; malicious fcheme If you mifcarry Your bufinefs of the world hath fo an end And machination ceafes Shaksfpeare's King Lear O from their machinations free That would my guiltlefs foul betray From thofe who in my wrongs agree And for my life their engines lay Sandys Be fruftrate all ye ftratagems of hell And devilith machinations come to nought. Milton How were they zealous in refpet to their temporal governors Not by open rebellion, not b private machinations ; but in blefling and fubmittin to their emperors but their idolatry MACHI'NE and obeying the n. / in all thing Spratt [machina, Latin ; ma chine, Fr This word is pronounce mafbeen. 1. Any complicated work in which on part contributes to the motion of another We are-led to concelve this great machine of th world to have been once in a ftate of greater fimplicity, as to conceive a watch to have been onc in its firft materials Burnet In a watch's fine machine The added movements which declare How full the moon, how old the year From that which fimply points the hout z Prior An engine In the hollow fide Sele€ted numbers of their foldiers hide With inward arms the dire machiz they load And iron bowels ftuff the dark abode Dryden 3. Supernatural agency in poems Th marvellou fable include whateve is fu pernatural, and efpecially the imachines of the gods Pope Macui'Nery. #./. [from machine. 1. Enginery; complicated workmanfhip felf-moved engines 2. 'The machinery fignifies that part whic the deities, angels or demons in poem Pope Ma'cuinist. n. /. [machinefle, French from machina, Latin. A conftruo of engines or machines Ma'crLency. #. / [from macilent. Leannefs Dia MA'CILENT adj [macilentus, Latin. Lean Ma'ckEREL n. [ maquerean [mackereel French. Dutch A fea-fith Some fith are gutted, {plit, and kept in pickle as whiting and mackerel, Carew's Surwey of Cornzu Law ordered that the Sunday fhould have reft And that no nymph her noify food fhould fell Except it were new milk or mackerel. | King's Caok Sooner fhall cats difport in water clear And fpeckled mackrels graze the meadows fair Than I forget my fhepherd's wonted love Gay MackerEL-GAL den' cant fuppefe feems to be, in Dry a ftron breeze fuch as is defired to bring mackere frefh to market They put up every fail The wind was fair, but blew a mackrel-gale. Dryd Ma'crocosM paxpo an n. f. [macrocofime xiopoc. or vifible fyftem microcofm French The whole world in oppofitio to th or world of man MacTa'rioN n. f [maZatus The aé of killing for facrifice MA'CULA. a. /. [Latin. 1. A fpot Latin. And laftly, the body of the fun may contrac fome {pots or maculee greater than ufual; and b that means be darkened. Burnet's The of tk 2. [In phyfick. An fpot upo th fkin, whether thofe in fevers or fcorbu tick habits Zo Ma'cuLATE. w. a. [maculs, Latin, To ftain; to {pot Macura'rion. #n. [ [from maculate. Stain; {pot taint I will throw my glove to death himfelf That there's no maculation in thy heart. = Shakefs Ma'cuLE. #. /. [macula, Latin. a ftain & A f <4 MAD |