OCR Text |
Show general for the king: of Parthia, who firoke off hi Hakeavill head A mafs of water would be ffruck off and feparat « from the reft, and toffed through the air like a fly 16. 7o STr1KE out lifion Burnet 'To produce by col "My thoughtlefs youth was wing'd with vain defires My manhood, long mifled by wand'ring fires Follow'd falfe lights ; and, when their glimpf{c wa gone My pride fruck out new fparkles of her own 17. Yo STrRIKE out ?lj‘d' To blot; to efface By expurgatory animadverfions, we might ffrik out great numbers of hidden qualities; and, havin once a conceded lift, with more fafety attempt thei reafons Browin To methodize is as neceffary as to ffrike out. Pope 18. 70 Str1KE out. 'To bring to light 19. 7o STRIKE out. To form at once by quick effort Whether thy hand f#rike out fome free defign Where life awakes and dawns at ev'ry line clean.sh data import.tsv out README Or blend in beauteous tints the colour'd mafs And from the canvafs call the mimick face. Pgpe 76 STRIKE 2. 7 And with the other fling it at thy face ‘Than bear fo low a fail, to fErike to thee I, in mine own woe charm'd Could not find death where I did hear him groan Nor feel him where he ffruck. Shakefps Cymbeline It pleas'd the kin To frike at me upon his mifconftruction ~ When he tript me behind. Shakefpeare's King Lear He wither'd all their ftrength before he f#rook Dryden 2. To collide; to clzfh ‘The intereft of our kingdom is ready to [frik to that of your pooreft fithing towns: it is har you will not accept our fervices Thof who b th prerogativ thould frown youth into fobriety, imitate and ffrik i1 aith them, and are really vitious that they ma be thought young South They catch at every fhadow: of relief, ffrikein a a ventute with the next companion, and, fo th dead commodity be taken off, care not who be th chapman Norris The cares or pleafures of the world frike in awit every thought Addifor He immediately ffruck in with them; but deferibed this march to the temple with fo muc horrour, that he fhivered every joint Addifon's Freeholder In this plain was the laft general rendezvous o mankind ; and from thence they were broken into companies, and difperfed; the feveral fuccefliv generations, like the waves of the fea, over-reaching one another, and friking out farther and farthe upon the land Burnet's Theory When a great man frikes out into a fudden irregularity, he needs not queftion the refpect of a retinue Collier Stri‘kEBLOCK. # /. Is a plane fhorte than the jointer, having its fele mad exatly flat and ftraight, and is ufed fo the thooting of a fhort joint 4. Tofound by the ftroke of2 hammer. Cafar, *tis frucken eight Shakefpeare Deep thoughts will often fufpend the fenfes o far that about a man clocks may fhrike, and bells ring which he takes no notice of Grew t5'T'o make an attack Is not the king's name forty thoufand names Arm, arm, my name; a puny fubject ffrike At thy great glory Shakefpeare's Richard 11 When, by their defigning leaders taugh "To firike at power which for themfelves they fought The vulgar, gull'd into rebellion, arm'd "Fheir blood to adtion by their prize was warm'd Dryden 6. To a& by external influx Confider the red and white colours in porphyre hinder light but from f#riking on it, and its colour vanifh Locke 7. To found with blows 7hilft any trump did found, or drum firack up His fword did ne'er leave ftriking in the field. 4 2. To be dafhed The admiral galley, wherein the emperor was fruck upon a fand, and there ftuck faft Kunolles 9. T'o pafs with a quick or ftrong effe& Now and then a glittering beam of wit or pafGon frikes through the obfcurity of the poem: an of thefe effet a prefent liking, but not a laftin admiration Dryden to. To pay homage, as by lowering th fail We fee the wind fit fore upon our fails And yet we frike noty but fogwiely pexith Shak Wing, cartnave, and buthel, peck, frike, read at hand Tuffer's Hafbandry Moxon's Mechanical Exercifes STRI'KER. #. /. [from frike. thing that firikes A bifhop then muf be blamelefs wine, no fHriker Perfon o not given t 1 Timeiile 3 He thought with his ftaff to have ftruck th frriker Sandys The friker muft be denfe, and in its beft velocitys STRI'KING. part. adj. [from frike. fefting5 furprifing STRING #. / [young Digby Af Saxon; freng German and Danifh ; f#ringhe, Dutch Sringo, Latin. 1. Aflender rope ; a{mall cord; any flender and flexible band Any lower bullet hanging upon the other abov it, muft be conceived as if the weight of it wer in that point where its fring touches the upper Wilkins's Dedalus 2. A riband Roun Ormond' Sring kne thou tieft the myftic That makes the knight companion to the king Prior 3. A thread on which any things are filed Their priefts pray by their beads; having a flrin with 2 hundred of nutfhells upon it ; and the repeatino g certain words with them they accoun meritorious Stilling fleet 4. Any fet of things filed on a line T have caught two of thefe dark underminin vermin, and intend to make a Jring of them, i order to hang them up in one of my papers wAddifon's Speator. that feem Combarahl to our violins 6. A {mall fibre Addyflfl Duckweed putteth forth a littl Jrring ity th water, from the bottom of their age Bid thy miftrefs, when my drink is ready She frike upon the bell Shakelpeare's Macbeth Cities their lutes, and fubjets hearts their frings ©n which with fo divine a hand they ffrook Confent of motion from their breath they took Waller By the appearance they mak Roge i arble, ther is not or_lej'}rmg inftrum n Geswvernment of the Tongue 12. 70 STRIKE in aith 'To conform to fuit itfelf to ; to join with at once cmk" Swells into harmony, and charms the hear:: It ffruck on a fudden into fuch reputation, tha it {corns any longer to fculk, but owns itfeif pub lickly tha When rudely touch'd, ungraéful m'zfi With pleafure feels the mafter's flying fi 11. To be put by fome fudden aft or motion into any ftate; to break forth STR1KE. #. /. A bufhel ; a dry meafur of capacity ; four pecks Thofe antique minftrels, fure, were Charles-lik kings The frin Swift Holding a ring by a thread in a glafs, tell hi "that holdeth it it fhall frike fo many times againf the fide of the glafs, and no more + Bacon's Natural Hiftory 3. To a& by repeated.percufiion Thus when two brethre fy To moye them both but on'gr(;;gt';z:: \.?: (:zz Shakefp 13. To STrRIKE out. To {pread or rove to make a fudden excurfion 1. To make a blow 5. The chord of a mufical i"fi"‘fl;efi' I'd rather chop this hand off at a blow In pulling broom up will grow 7+ A nerve the leat frings I Mort mer' a tendon B u/bandry The moft piteous tale, which in rec unting His grief grew puiffant, and the fyi < of lf Began to crack 8 Sbakejfeareg's K‘,',,Ig c[.; Lea The firing of his tongue loofed, Mar , xxvil, T n r o t b The wj?ked bend the?r w bow, they male res their arrows upon the firing Pfaln xi, 5 Th' impetuous arrow whizzes on the wip 5 Sounds the tough horn, and twangs the quiylrin fring b 9. An concatenatio Atring of propofitions 10 Z0 hav tw or feries: a, STRING to.the Bow To have two views or two expedient to have double advantage, or double fe curity No lover has that pow' T' enforce a defperate amour As he that has tzvo ffrings to's bow And burns for love and money too Hudipras 70 STRING. @. a. preterite I frung; part pafl. frung. [from the noun. 1. To furnith with ftrings Has not wife nature frung the legs and fee With firmeft nerves, defign'd to walk the ftreet Gfl} 2. To put a ftringed inftrument in tune Here the mufe fo oft her harp has firung, That nota mountain rears its head unfung. Addf 3. To file on a ftring Men of great learning or genius are t00 fuu be exact; and therefore chufe to throw dov their pearls in heaps before the reader, rather th be at the pains of fringing them Spectators 4. To make tenfe Toil frung the nerves, and purified the blood ; Dr)'.dfih STRI'NGED. adj. [from fring.] Havin ftrings ; produced by ftrings Praife him with ffringed infrumentsand ;rgans Divinely warbled voice Anfwering the flringed noifey M too r rapt u blifs i foul thei al A STRI'NGENT. adj. [ fringens Latin. Binding ; contracting ‘STRUNGHALT. n. /o [ firing and f}m(iiu'ng Stringhalt is a fudden twitching and ;‘:‘ e cg;oti hig muc horf o le up of the hind fiv convu o unta invo a the other, o .ten ben th Dd %‘a o ril ext 'Q hou n of the mufcles tha n Ha n [f om rm ad . STRI'NGLESS no ftrings i a f l n r f His. tongue i l Words, life, and a ibrou 'STRI'NGY. adj. [fmmfl""g']l Fls;(:ous'. g ‘; fi? a r t l fm o ti fi co A plain %ndian fan, ‘made of thfelatn;brm parts of roots fpread outi roun_?i 490, Gmfi Xf""'iitggc He'was takert prifoner by Surinas, lieutenant ing river A S S i |