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Show ST The French year has got the ffart of ours mor The fright awaken'd Arcite with a furt Againft his bofom bounc'd his heaving heart Dryden 2. A fudden roufing to a">n; excitement How much had I to do to calm his rage Now fearI this will give it fart again Shake[peara's Hamlet 3. Sally; vchement eruption; fudden effufion Thou art like enough, through vaffal fear Bafe inclination, and the flart of fpleen To fight againft me under Percy's pay To check the farts and fallies of the {oul Addifor's Cato were well enough pleafed with this flart o thought STA'RTER. #.[ [from fart. 1. One that fhrinks from his purpofe Addifon STA'RTINGLY. adv. [from farting.] B fudden fits ; with frequent intermiflion Wh The fartling ftee And, bounding, o'e T0 STARTLE 1. To fright {udde The gods are fartled in their peaceful manfions And nature fickens, at the fhocking found. Smith His books had been folemnly burnt at Rome a heretical : fome people, he found, were fartled a it; {fo he was forced boldly to make reprifals, t buoy up their courage Atterbury Now the lea Inceffant ruftles, from the mournful grov fetting out You ftand like greyhounds in the flips Straining upon the fart Shakefpeare's Henry V All leapt to chariot And every man then for the ffar¢ caft in'his prope lot Chapman If a man deal with another upon conditions, th party during that time doth cauteloufly ger the flar and advantage at commo law yet the pretoria court will fet back all things in fatu quo prius Bacon''s War awith Spain Doubtlefs fome other hear Will get the flart And, ftepping in before ‘Will take pofieffion of the facred for Of hidden fweets Crafhaw Ere the knight could do his part ‘The fquire had got fo much the fart H* had to the lady done his errand And told her all his tricks aforehand. Hudibras She might have forfaken him, if he had not go 2be flart of her Dryden's ZEneid, Dedication "The reafon why the mathematicks and mechanick arts have fo much got the flart in growth o other {ciences, may be refolved into this, that thei progrefs hath not been retarded by that reverentia awe of former difcoverer Glanville terrour, furprife, or alarm moft learned fathers feemed to believe that the had bodies Loctke Inceft! Oh name it not The very mention fhakes my inmoft foul 6. Firft emiflion from the barrier; a@ o Shakefpeare's Fulius Cefar All pretorian courts, if any of the parties be lai afleep, under pretence of arbitiement, and the othe to imprefs wit From his watch-tower in the fkies Till the dappled dawn doth rife Milten The fuppofition that angels aflume bodies need not flartle us, fince fome of the moft ancient an vifible ffarts upo freezing principl Cofmologia Sacra Get the flart of the majeftick world U, 2 to fhock Such whifp'ring walk'd her, but with fartled ey On Adam Milton To hear the lark begin his flight And finging ffartle the dull nigh Bacon other iz'd with fudden fright pommel caft the knight ‘Why fhrinks tlie fou Back 'on herfelf, and fartles at deftrution Addifor's Cato My frighted thoughts run back And flartle into madnefs at the found. Addif. Cato are, or lefs wound up, the bafer is the found Bacon's Natural Hiftory Both caufe the ftring to give a quicker fart T Dryden the more treble is the found ; and the flacker the 7. Lo get the Start To begin befor another ; to obtain advantage over an @w. n [from flart. fhrink ; to move on, feeling a fudde impreflion of alarm or terrour Shakefp Bacon do you fpeak {0 flartingly an h Shakefpeare's Otbello To STA'RTLE In ftrings, the more they are wound up an ftrained, and thereby give a more quick ffart back Sfart of firfk performance is all Sta'RTINGPOST. . [, [ ffart and poft. Barrier from which the race begins puth How could water make thof freezing, but by fome fubtil which as fuddenly fhoots into i Grew' Delany pack, he was at leaft the beft farter 5. A quick {pring or motion; a fhoot; in th I1f Sheridan was not the ftauncheft houn Methought her eyes had crofs'd her tongue Thy forms are ftudied arts Thy fubtile ways be narrow ftraits Thy curtefy but fudden farss And what thou call'ft thy gifts are baits Ben Fonfon Nature does nothing by farts and leaps, or i a hurry; but all her motions are gradual. L'Efir An ambiguous expreflion, a little chagrin, or fart of paffion, is not enough to take leaye upon Collier fiarw qf,hunger die; fWL:;h; 3- To be killed with cold, Tt p wit o Jfor before the cau Arbmb,, e Have I feen the naked Parv for col While avarice my charity controlf' 2. One who fuddenly moves a queftion o 4~ To fuffer extreme poverty objeétion Sometimes virtue farves while vic 3. A dog that roufes the game W 4. Sudden fit; intermitted aion For fhe did fpeak in flarts diftradtedly An animal tha and delirious Stand to it boldly, and take quarter Hudibras To let thee fee I am.no flarter Shakefp Several flarts of fancy, off- hand, look wel enough: but bring them to the teft, and there i nothing in 'em L'Efirange Are they not only to difguife our paflions To fet our looks at variance with our thoughts W in the works of nature than in the new ftyle Addifon clean.sh data import.tsv out README ing with hunger and cold, fet befors ", "' ‘would doubt which to chufe Oft flartling fuch as ftudious walk below And flowly circles through the waving air. Thom/ 2 To deter The woul to mak fin enough upo th account of his known affetions to the king's fervice, from which it was not poffible to remove o Startle him Clarendon Wilmot had more fcruples from religion to fartl him, and would not have attained his end by an grofs act of wickednefs Clarendon STA'RTLE. n /. [from the verb. Sudden alarm ; fhock ; fudden impreflio of terrour After having recovered from my firft ffartle, was very well pleafed at the accident. ~ Specfator Sta'RTUP. 2. /. [ fart and up.] One tha comes {fuddenly into notice That young flartup hat overthrow 70 STARVE a. 2 JSrerwen, Dutch all the glory of m Shakefpeare [yeeanyran Saxon to die. 1. To perifh; to be deftroyed San % at then ? is the reward of virtue bread 'p; 5. To be deftroyed with cold o ! ( Had the feeds of the pepper- lan gt from Java to thefe northe[;nppcouitries,h::;::; V,flru nex ']m'\veflarrucd for want of fun Y0 STARVE Wwdw.Nat.Hf(} l @. a 1. To kill with hunger I cannot blame his coufin king That with'd him on the barren mountains fiare'y Shakefpears Hunger and thirft, or guns and {words Give the fame death in different words To puth this argument no further To ftarve a man in law is murther Prir If they had died through fafting, when mes was at hand, they would have been guilty of flaruing themfelves Pope 2. To fubdue by famine Thy defire S E Are wolfifh, bloodyy farv'd, and ravenous. Shak He would have worn her out by flow degrees As men by fafting flarve th' untam'd difeafe Dryder Attalus endeavoured to ffarve Italy, by ftoppin their convoy of provifions from Africa 3. To kill with cold Arbuthnot on Ciits From beds of raging fire to ffarwe in ic Their foft ethereal warmth, and there to pin Mil Immoveable, infix'd, and frozen round 4. To deprive of force or vigour The powers of their minds are ffayved by difuft and have loft that reach and ftrength which natur Lock fitted them to receive STA'RVELING. n /i [from farve.] A animal thin and weak for want of noirifhment IfI hang, I'll make a fat pair of gallows; fo. old fir John hangs with me, and he's no farue Shakefpeare ling Now thy alms is given, the letter 's read. The body rifen again, the wh‘xc_h was dead,D And thy poor ffarveling boumx{ully fed. - ‘lelh The fat ones would be making fport‘WI L Efrargt lean, and calling them farweling ; pinSTA'RVELING. adj. Hungry; Je to deviate occafion Obfolete To her came meffage of the murderment, Wherein her guiltlefs friends thould hopelefs farve Fairfax 2. To perifh with hunger. It has awith o JSor before the caufe; of lefs properly Were the pains of honeft indufiry, and of flaru mg The thronging clufters thi By kind avulfion; elfe the farweling brood Void of fufficient faftenance, will yield P g A flender autumn Poor farwveling bard, how frp:ul thy S Ho unproportion'd to thy pains gains?i STA'RWORT. 7./o [affer, Latin.] Al%l;"};:r STA'TARY. adj Fixed ; fettled [ from jlatu Latin. i n par o tim ar ffa an fe Th tio inu con th bu i hai o ti cu {uperftition Brean n t L f n STAT O r t n 1. C fortune Idomo Infer as if I thought my fifter s fa i) Milm;forth Scclutrgund the whole city highly °°"::;:°§)fi foon \ V% hazardous flate of Candia, W ich fent dukes ¥y ?mfidjfi, t s " ‘w P t i i a n C after. Dom fedulous in that affair L4t ¢ being 00\ Their fins have the aggravation i d a a r f d e a a n g a a i oy fom Vo Godi |