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Show SHD $H ' The man tha fiver'd on the brink of fin Around the goddefs rol Broad hats, and hoods, and caps, a fable fhoal Thus.fteel'd and harden'd, ventures boldly in D:y({m He defcribed this march to the temple with f much horror, that he fhiwv everyre joint, Addifon Give up Laius to the realms of day Whofe ghot Jpiv'ring on Cocytus' fand Expeéts its paffage to the farther ftrand Prometheus is lai On icy Caucafus to fbiver While vultures eat his growing liver To Su1'VER. v. 7 [from fhiwe. Pope Swift To fal at once 1nto many parts or thives Hadf So man Thow'df Upo you ma thou been aughtbut gofi"mer, feathers, air fathom down precipitating fhiver'd like an egg. Shak. King Fobn the breaking and fhiwering of a great ftate be fure to have wars Bacon The natural world, fhould gravity once ceafc o be withdrawn, would inftantly fbiwer into million of atoms Woodavard 7o Su1'vEr. @, a Tobreak by one ac into many parts ; to fhatter The.ground with fhiver' armour ftrown. Milt Show'rsof granados rain, by fudden burf Difploding murd'rous bowels; fragments of fteel A thoufand ways at once the fhiver'd orb Fly diverfe, working torment Philips SHI'VER. ./ [from the verb.] One fragment of many into which any thing i broken He would pound thee into fhiwers with his fift as.a failo SH Thick, and more thick, the black blockadeextends Pope 2. A fhallow; afand-bank Th haven' the dargerou mout they durf no ‘enter fo fhoals. Abbot's Defcrip. of the World He heaves them off the fboles \Dryden The depth of your pond fhould "be fix foot; an on the {ides fome fholes for the fifh to lay thei fpawn Mortimer 7o SHOAL. w. [from the noun. 1. 'T'o crowd; to threng The wave-fprung entrails, about which faufen and fith did fbole Chapman 2. To be fhallow ; to grow fhallow What they me Solid, or flimy, as in raging fe Toft up and down, together crowded drove From each fide fhoaling tow'rds the mouth of hell Milton SHOAL. adj. Shallew ; obftruéted or incumbered with banks SHoA'LINESS. n. [ [frem fhoaly.] Shallownefs ; frequency of fhallow places Sroa'Ly. adj. [from fhoal.] Full of fhoals full of fhallow places Dry The watchful hero felt the knocks, and foun Dryden { Suock. . fi [choc, Fr. fehocken, Dutch. breaks a bifcuit 1 Con li® mutu impr flio o vioShake[peare's Troilus and Creffida lence As ‘brittle asthe glory is the face For there it is crack'd in an hundred fhivers If you ftrik a foli breaketh not only wher bod th Shakefpeare that is brittle, it immediat force is but breaketh all.about into fhiwers and fritters Bacon's Natural Hiftory. ‘Surging waves againft a folid rock "Though all to Jpiwvers dafh'dy th' affault rencw Vain batt'ry,and in froth or bubbles end Milron Survery. adj. [from fiver.] Loofe o coherence ; incompaét; -eafily fallin into many fragments There were obferved incredible numbers of thef dhells thus flatted, and extremely tender, in fbiver ftone Woodward SHO'ADSTONE 7. / {mooth without o a dark liver colour, and of the fame colour within only with the addition of a faint purple It is fragment broke off an iron vein. Wosdw. on Foffils Certain tin ftones lie on the face of the ground whichthey call /boad, as fhed from the'main load and made fomewhat round by the water Carew's Surwey of Cornwall "The loads or weins of metal were by this actio of the departing water made eafy to be found out o train of metallic fragment borne off from them, and lying in trains from thof veins towards the fea, in the fame courfe that wa ter falling thence would take Woodward Sroar. 7 /. [ycole, Saxon. 1. A crowd ; a great multitude ; a throng When there be great fboals of people whic g on to populate without forefeeing means of {uften tation, onc people upo A leagu of people a 2. Concuflion Milton external violence It is inconceptible how any fuch man, that hat ftood the fhock of an eternal deration without corruption or alteration, fhould after be corrupted o altered Fudge Hale Thefe ftrong unfhaken mounds refift the fbock Of tides and feas tempeftuous; while the rocks That fecret in a long continued vei Pafs through the earth, the pond'rous pile fuftain Blackmore Such s the haughty man ; his tow'ring foul *Midft all the,fbocks and injuries of fortune Rifes fuperior and looks down on Ceefar. Addifon in an age they difcharge patt of thei other nations Bacon is made againft fuch routes and fhoal have utterly degencrated from nature Bacon The vices of a prince draw jbales of followers when his virtue leaves him the more eminent, becaufe fingle Decay of Piety A fhoal of filver fithes glide And plays about the barges Waller God had the command of famine, whereby h could have carricd them off by fhuals. Woodwward He ftood the fhock of a whole hoft of foes. .Addifon The tender apples, from their parents ren By ftormy /bocks, muft not negleéted li The prey of worms Philips 3. The confliét of enemies Milton away are in more danger tha the others that ftand the fbock L'Eftrange The mighty forc Of Edward twice o'erturn'd their defp'rate king Twicehearan of join' ; the hotrid fhock. Philips 4. Offence; impreflion of difguft Fewer fbocks a fratefman gives his friend. Young 5. [fchocke, old Dutch. of corn A pile of fheave Corn tithed, Sir parfon, together to get And caufe it on fhscks to be by and by fet. Tu/fer In‘a full age, like as a fhock of corn comet in in his feafon b Thou, full of days, like weighty fbocks of cor In feafon reap'd, fhall to thy grave be borne Sandys Behind the mafter walks, builds up the /bocks Feels his heart heave with joy 6. [from fhagg. A rough dog Thomfon I would fain know why a sbock and a houn are not diftin& fpecies 7o Snock w.a [ fchocken, Dutch. 1. To thake by violence 2. To meet force with fo ce 5 to eneéu Thefe he f;;t"':hifigm princes are com e h i b Come the three corners of the w x:}fl ?:gxa;?}'; And we will ffock them., Shake peare's King 5‘;‘5,, 3. To offend ; to difguft Suppofing verfes are never fo bea Fif l yet i they contain any thing that fbock rel igion or goo manners, they ar Verfus inopes rerum, HUTEGUL C ndy e Dryden y fon I bade him love, and bid him no forbea If you have any kindnefs for him, g l Advife him not to_fhock a father's wil Dr]d Julian, who lov'd each fober min to fhoc Who laugh'd at God, and offer'd to a cock. - ,a Thofe who in reading Homer are fho ked tha 'tis always a lion, may as well be angr that 'ti lways a man Zo SHOCK Pope @. 1. To meet with hoftile violence And now with fhouts thc_/Zror:leiflg armies clos' To lances lances, thields to Thields oppos'd Commutual death the fate of war -confounds Each adverfe battle gor'd with equal wounds, Pope 2. To be offenfive The French humour, in regard of the libertie they take in female ‘Converfatios; is very fhukin to the Italians, who are naturally jealous To Smock. . n. [from the noun.] T build up piles of theaves Reap well, fcatter not, gather clean that is thorn Bind faft, fhock apace, have an eye to thy corn Tuffer Suop. for /boed, the preterite and participle paffive of 7o shoe ‘Tl{fl{"}‘ SHOE. 7, /. plural foes, anciently fboon [yceo, yeoe, Saxon; fchoe, Dutch. "The cover of the foot, of horfes as wel a men Your hofe fhould be ungartered, your /e untied, and every thing about you demontrating carelefs defolation Locke Shakefpeare Spare none but fuch as go in clouted fboon For they are thrifty honeft men. Shak. Henry VI This hollow cylinder is fitted with a fucker, upo which is nailed a good thick piece of tanned fhoce leather . Boyle Unknown and like efteem'd, and the dull fivai Tread on it daily with his clouted fhoor And yet more medic'nal than that mol That Hermes once to wife Ulyfles gave He call'd it hemony Milton, 1 was in pain, puiled off my fhoe, and fome eal that gave me The adverfe legions not lefs hideous join' The horrid fhock Thofe that ru . wafllf" Strong axletree'd cart that is <louted and fbod Long, at the head of his few faithful friends Shoadftone is a {mall ftone by the fboads violent concourfe Thro' the fhoc Of fighting elements, onall fides roun Environ'd, wins his way a Addifon's Remarks on Italy Thofe who liv Where with his /boaly fords Vulturnusroars The tofling veflel fail'd on fboaly ground "If"'flf 7o SHOE." w. a. preterite [ fbod; parti ciple paflive /bod. [from the noun. 1. To fit the foot with a fhoe: ufed coms monly of horfes The fmith's note for fbeeing and plough irons Sbagejpe«gfl He doth nothing but talk of hi]i‘ horfe ; 2' makes it a greas appropriation t parts, that he can fboe him himfelf his own Shakefpeare Tell your mafter that the horfes want Jpoeing Savift z. To cover at the bottom The wheel compos'd of crickets bones And daintily made for the gonce For fear of rattling on the ftones With thiftle down they fbod ite Dmy{:; SHoE'BOY. 7. /. [ fooe and bgy.] AOY -cleans fhoes L anad hi t b vi i i i If I employ a fhoeboy tage or my own convenience Ji io d;xri a fo / # SHOEING-HORN th itat faci 1. A horn.ufed t t i o f of th |