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Show SW It Takeno: this¢name, € W m d c th m u h i v i invai L ig;.t{stnc; nothing, and hath no excufe very few excepted, all became fubjeé n n w e t d o h o e i ! tm'ayof ; ing that fome fell fooner, an d fome later, y fro Hooker e adnefs of belief o l f l o n t d i o t g An evil mind in a the frway of the defires already within it, bu o g o t r f b n r f d n l itf Sidney y w v g o w n l t r t g o a f They r y D a f p e i e t phebranches bend befor 7, SWEAR. @. z. preter. Jwore ot fware r v J part pafl ‘rpeptan, Saxon 5 fweeren Dutch. u t w p o r p f m f To obtef t o a te If 2 man VoW a YOW unto the Lord, or fwwear a ~oath to bind his foul with a bond, he fhall notTt breaok Numbers " Thee, thee an hundred languages thall claim 7 ickel ' And favage Indians fevear by Anna'sname t o o u i o p o a ) To dec 'iTh" they did give the rings away to men But we Il outface them, and outfwear them too Shakefpeare Tgave my love a ring, and made him fwea d a f h r h a it t w c p t v N - T dave be fworn for him, he would not leave it Shakefpeare My Nor pluck it from his finger I would have kept my word . Bug, when I favear, it is irrevocable. Sh. Hen V1 ~ Jacob faid, faear to me ; and he favare unt Genefis ~ him Bacchus taken at Rhodes by Demetrius Polior | cetes, which he fo eftcemed, that as Plutarch re ‘poits, he fware he had rather lofe all his father' Peacham "*] images than that table . To give evidence upon oath togove At what eaf Might corrupt minds procure knaves as corrup To fwear againft you ! Shakefpeare's Henry VIII b To obteft the great name profanely Becanfe of fwearing the land mourneth Fer. xxiii. 10 Obey thy parents, keep thy word juftly Swear not Shakefpeare's King Lear None fo nearly difpofed to fcoffing at religion as thofe who have accuftomed themfelves to fzvea " ontrifling occafions Tillotfon Hark !'the fhrili notes tranfpierce the yieldingair And teach the neighb'ring echoes how to fawear Young . a #1. Toput to an oath; to bind by an oat adminiftred Mofes took the bones of Jofeph firaitly faorn the children of Ifracl ~Swom ‘a{hore, man xiii. 19 like a duck; I can fwi ‘ likeaduck, Tl be fzvorn for he ha Ex Shakefpeare's Tempef? Let me fawear you all to fecrecy ~ And, to conceal my fhame, conceal my life. Dry 2, To declax;e upon oath : as, bz fwor tréafon againft his Sfriend To obteft by an oath Now,v by Apollo, king, thou fwear'fs thy gods i ain vaffal | mifcreant WEARER. 7 /. [from javear. I Shake[peare A wretc who obtefts "the great name wantonl and profanely And muft they all be hang'd that fwear and lie XAvery one ~-Who muft hang them --Why, the honeft men Rfllflea i'{efl th/e liars and favearers are fools 5 fo B "me f hon th bea t eno 1'ed 1ars and fawearer hang them up Lets his foul run for naught Herbert b Of alal l memen n a y ph hilo loop foe pher fhould] be no fz Bearer lm an oath, which is the end of controverfics i d\\', cannot determine any here, where reafon onl 4. T'0 emit moifture Wainfcots will fwear fo that they run with wa- " Y0 SWEAT in the fame compan SWEAT n. f b repeate abov nin by the fame Iperion Swift's Polite Conrwerfation [rpeaz Saxon fweet Dutch. 1. The matter evacuated at the pore heat or labour Saeat is falt in tafte b Greafe that 's. faeate From the murtherer's gib'r;ct, thy: Shkakefpeare's Macketh Into the flame For him the rich Arabia fzveass her gum. D7y d 2. To make to {weat {weats SwEeA'TY. adj. [from fweat. 1. Covered with fweat; moift wit Shakefpeare And flafhes in the face of guilty men A cold fwweat ftands In drops on ev'ry part And rage fucceeds to tears, revenge tofmart, Dry Swveat is produced by changing the balance between the fluids and folids in whic heaith confifts, fo as that proje&ile motion of the fluid overcome the refiftance of the folids. Arbuthnot 2. Labour ; toil ; drudgery "This painful labour of abridging was not eafy but a matter of fwwear and watching. 2 Mac. ii. 26 The fiel To labour calls us, now with fzeeat impos'd. Miit What from Jonfon's oil and fzvear did flow Or what more eafy nature did befto On Shakefpeare's gentler mufe, in thee full grow Denbant Their graces both appear 3. Evaporation of moifture Beans give in the mow; and therefore thof that are to.be. kept are not to be thrathed til March,. that they have had a thorough fwea the mow To SWEAT i Mortimer's Hufbandry faweated jawer, it w.n, prete particip. pafl. faweazen. [from the noun. 1. To be moift on the body with heat o labour Let them be free, marry them to your heirs Why [weat they under burthens Shakefpeare Merchant of Venice Miftrefs Page at the door, fweatizg and blowing, and Yooking wildly, would needs fpeak wit Shakef A fzveaty rcaper from his till ge brou Firft-fruits, the green ear, and t he yello Iilton 2. Confifting of {weat An then, fo nice, and fo gentecl Such cleanlinefs fro hea to heel No humours grofs, or frow(y fteams No noifome whifts, or faweaty ftreams Savift 3. Laborious ; toilfome who labou Thof The fweaty forge, who edge the crooked feythe Bend frubborn fteel, 4nd harden gleening ar Acknowledge Vulcan's aid Sweke. @. a Jawept. [ypapan 1. To drive awa 2. To clean wit T Pri pafl pret. and part Saxon. with a befom a befom What woman, having ten pieces of filver, if fh lofe one doth ot faweep the houfe, and feek d'ii Like, xv. 8 gently till fhe find it 3. To carry with pomp Let frantick Talbot triumph for a while And, like a peacock, [weep along his tail Shakifpeare's Henry V1 4. To drive or carry off with celerity an violence Though I could With barefac'd power, Jzveep him from my fight An bid m will avouch it; yet I muft not. Shak The river of Kithon fzvept them away, Fud.v The bluftering winds ftriving for victory favep the fnow from off the tops of thofe high mountains, and caft -it down unto the plains in fuc abundance, that the Turks lay as men buried alive Knolles's Hiftory Flying bullets no To execute his rage appear too flow They mifs or fweep but commoen fouls away For fuch a lofs Opdam his life muft pay. Waller My looking is the fire of peftilence Shakefpeare you ‘When he was brought again to the bar, to hea judgment, he was ftirr' His knell rung out, hi With fuch an agony, he fevear extremely Shake/peare's Henry VIIL time in autumn, there reigned in th parts of the kingdom a di of the accidents and raanner thereof faveating ficknels. Bacon's Hen VI A young tall fquir Did from the camp at firft before him go At firfk he did, but fcarce could follow ftrait Seveating beneath a ihield's unruly weight, Cow/ About thi city and othe new ; which they called th 2, To toil ; to labour ; to drudge To earn his cream bowl duly fet When in one night, ere glimp{e of morn Eis fhadowy flail hath threfh'd the corn Our author, not content to fe That others write as carelefsly as he Dryden I hav Milton Though he pretends not to make things complete to pleafe you, he'd have the poe:s Javeat Waller already fwrp the ftakes, an wit th comme 1 good forturn of profperous gamefters ca Diryden. 1s this the man who drives me before hi To the world's ridge, and fawegps me off like rub Dryden of motion knows bith Fool! time no chang With equal fpeed the torrent flow To fawee fame, power and wealth away The paft is all by death pofieft m frugal fate that guards the reft An By giving, bids them live, to-day How the drudging goblin fewe Yet e and threw u caps on the fkins of animals Byyle Soft on the low'ry herb I found me lai Milton fweat hoote rabbleraen chepp'd hands for that part of the nou In balmy febeat When Lucilius brandifhes his pen One wh 7 /. [from favear. SwEeA'TER Th rithment which is freth and fw cf't, turneth int E)lood and flefh; and the faeas is that part whic 15 excerned Bacen Some infenfible efluvium, exhaling out of th ftone, comes to be checked and condenfed by th v. 4 1. To emit as {weat time a moifture o Mortimer will b In cold evenings ther Jaweating upon the ftool muft induce Brow . : l.t is thvf.: opinion' of cur moft refined Jar wearers, ".".‘ toe fame oath or curfe cannot, confiftentl 1 true politenefs Bacin ter air on the fuperficies of it, as it happens to jfzmz We fhall have old favearin B u anx; winnne pleao d .a ni ple fur , avaric5 e a gain1 4 e 5 Fhe..(.}‘C. 1eaR p (11 frweare thr ugh his5 open fl ic .\wt duk holdin i a great man Fenton hands, dre a huge heap of gold 5 but neverobferved a fharper who under his arm fzuept a great deal of it int Savift his hat 5. To pafs over with celerity and force 6. To rub over Their long defcending train With rubigs edz'd and f2pphires, fawepr the pla Dryde Zeo |