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Show T T A TA SN e It was prettily faid by Sen ea, fllathfr"ignid i » /. [tag and tail.] "A'worm The are of | Ta'aratt TaeTICKS, 7t J [radlun which has the tail of another colour ranging men in the field of battle Whe Tully had read the tacicks, he was think Dryden as the marfh and ragWalton TA'CTILE. adj. [taltile, Fr. tadilis, tattum Lat.] Sufceptible of touch Ta1L. n. /. [zzgl, Saxon. 1. 'That which terminates the animal be ing on the bar, which was his field of battle At this proud yielding wor She on the fcene her rafile fweets prefented Ta'cTiON Per ¢zaiile. [taétion, Fr. tafio, Lat. 2. / The-a&t of touching TA'DPOLE. #./. [Tad, toad, and pola, young one, Sax.] A young fhapelefs fro or toad, confifting only of a bod and tail; a porwiggle 1'11 broach the radpole on my rapier's point Shake[peare Shak Poor Fom eats the toad and the tadpole The refult is not a perfe@ frog, but a radpole -without any feet, and having a long tail to {wi Ray with A blac and roun fubftance bega t dilate and after a while the head, the eyes, the tail to b difcernable, and at Jaft become what the ancient we a porwigle or radpolc called gyrinus Brown's Vulgar Errours T'a'Ex, the poetical contraction of raken TaA'FFETA n. J [taffetas Fr taffetar A thin filk Spanifh.] Al hail, the richeft beauties on the earth -Beauties no richer than rich taffata. Shakefpeare Never will I truft to fpeeches penn'd 1raf Taffata phrafe filken terms precife Three pil'd hyperboles Shak. Lowe's Labour loff Some think that a confiderable diverfity of coIours argues an equal diverfity of naturej; but a no of thei mind changeable taffety, whof fo not t mentio th colours the philofopher call not real, but apparent Boyle on Colours Tac. n /. [ tag, Iflandick, the point of lace. 1. A point of meta] put to the end of ftring 2. Any thing paltfy and mean If tag and rag be admitted, learned and unlearned, it is the fault of fome, not of the law Whitgift Will you henc Before the tag return, whofe rage doth ren Like interrupted waters? Shakefpeare's Coriolanus The tag-rag people did not clap him and hif him Shakefpeare He invited tag, rag, and bob-tail, to the wedding L'Eftrange 3. A young fheep 70 Tac. w. a. [from the noun. 3. To fit any thing with an end of metal; as, to tag a lace 2. To fit on pended thing wit another ap 3. The word is here improperly ufed Compell'd by you to rag in rhime The common flanders of the times Refiftance Thisis properly z0 tack an Oft have 1 feen a hot o'er-weening cu "Run back and bite, becaufe he was withheld Who having fuffer'd with the bear's fell paw the fucceffion of the houf o Hanover, the whig writers perpetually zag together Swift's Mifccllanics W and boats his active tai/ confounds Waller The lion will not kick, but will firike fuch ftroke with his z4i/, that will break the back o More his encounterer Rouz'd by the lath of his own ftubborn tail Dryden Our lion now will foreign foes aflail The ¢tail fin is half -a foot high, but underneat level with' the tail Grew 3 Of vegetable venom taints the plain tail A fweet-bread you found it tainted or fly-blown, SegRos The yellow tinging plagu Internal vifion taints Thomfon's Spring 5. A corrupt contraction of attaint TFurnifhe Snouted and tailed like a boar, footed like a goat Greaw Jo TainT. w. n. 'To be infefted; tobe :i touched with fomething corrupting I cannot taint with fear 1 Taille genera is that whereby lands or tenements are limited t a man, and to the heirs of his body begotten and th recafon of this term is, becaufe how man trimony, his iffue by them all have a poffibility t inherit one after the other Faille fpecial is tha whereby lands or tenements be limited unto a ma and his wife, and the heirs of their two bodies begotten Cowel Ta'1LOR to cut. clothes 7. / [taillewr fro tailler Fr One whofe bufinefs is to mak To ftudy fafhions to adorn my body Shake[peare's Richard I11 Here's an Englith tailor come for ftealing out o come tailor yo ma roaft you goofe Shakefpeare The knight came to the tailor's, totake meafur of his gown Camden The world is com tailor an they pleafe fhoe-make no to that pafs, tha may cut out wha A tinéture; a ftain th religio Hoavel taint, of- a red colour, and fo little, that ten of th largeft will hardly outweigh a grain S Broaon's Vulgar Erours As killing as the canker to the rofe Or taint worm to the weaning herds that graze. "in Miltone®on 3 Infe&ion ; corruption ; depravation Her offenc Muft be of fuch unnatural degree Which man's polluting fin with zaint hath fhe That monfters it; or your forevouch'd affection Shake[peare's Kizg Lear Fall''n into raiut My hellhounds thall lick up the draff and filthr Miltons On what was pure A father that breeds his fon at home, can kee him better from the raint of fervants than abroads Locke on Educations But is no rank, no ftation, no degree From this contagious raint of forrow free? Priorst 4. A fpot; afoil; a blemifh No et Unfpeak mine own detraion ; here abjur The taints and blames I laid upon myfelf TA'INTLESS adj. [ fro Fr. Taint A 2./ [tinfura, Lat. tenturt tinge defilement Sec here the zainture of thy neft Sii Skak from infeétion ; pure TAINTURE = FIe€iy taint. No humours grofs, or t'row;)' fteams flow faintlefss body from herher taintle suld fro Coul I'll entertain a fcore or two of zailors s There is found in the fummer a fpider called 2,5 Teami i B S becaufe it is fo minced or pared, that itis not i his free power to be difpofed of who owns it; bu is, by the firft giver, cut or divided from-all other and tied to theiflue of the donee. This limitation Shakifpeare's Macheth 2. An infedt Tuaillage originally fignifies a piece cut out of th whole; and, metaphorically, a fhare of a man' {ubftance paid by way of tribute In law, it fignifies a toll or tax Cogvel is oppofite to fee-fimple TaiNT. n. [. [teinte, Fr. from the verb, Ta'rLLacGE. n. /. [tailler, French. or taille, is either general or fpecial Tiil Birnam wood remove to Dunfinan with a tail Taille, the fee whic Pope 4. To corrupt To fly; to run away [fro to difeafe Arbuthnot on dir, With wholefome herbage mixt, the direful ban Firft Trulla ftav'd, and C:rdon tail'd. Hudibras adj To.infect ; to poifon the tainted air may affe@ the lungs by its heat The conqu'ring foe ‘they foon affail'd TA"1LED They the trut With fuperftitions and- traditions taint Mily Thofe pure immortal element Eject him tainted now, and purge him of As a diftemper M Salts in fumes contract the veficles, and perhap With the helm they turn and fteer thetai/. Butler To pull by the tail conie not by the way of ‘accufation Harwey on Confumptio 4. The hinder part of any thing w.n Tbflmfifl Nothing taints found lungs fooner than infpiring the breath of confumptive lungs 3. Any thing hanging long; a catkin Would fhe turn tail to the heron, and fly quit out another way; but all was to return in a highe pitch Sidney Sirens tain The minds of all'men, whom they can acqua nt With their attrations Chaginan's Odyfp The Lord fhall make thee the head, and not th tail5 and thou fhalt be above, and not beneath Deut. xxviiis 13 Duretus writes a great praife of the diftilled wate of thofe tails that hang upon willow trees Harwey on Confumption Shaak Lfi re. 2. The lower part 7o Tarr The fpaniel, fruc To taint-that honour ¢very good tongue bleffes And me 5. Yo turn 'TarL a. [teindre, French, or impregnate with dng 16 G 2. 'To ftain ; to fully Hath clapt his rai/ betwixt his legs, and cry'd Shake[peare This fees the cub, and does himfelf oppofe a French hofe Savift To Tarxri@ 1. To imbu thing }',th Ko Stiff by the tainted gale, with open nof Draws Ful.l upon the latent prey, take to his wives, one after another, in lawful ma or poin That fure a place deferv' in his o of. the back hanging loofe behind foever women the tenant, holding by this title, fhal His courteous hof Tags every fentence with fome fawning word Such as my king, my prince, at leaft my lord Dryden *Tis tagg'd with rhyme, like Berecynthian Atys The mid-part chimes with art, which never flat is Dryden 4. To join continuation of the vertebr hind; th Beaunont's Pfyche We have iron, founds, light, figuration, raé7il - qualities ; fome of & more altivey fome of a mor Hale paflive nature [fro Tacri'tiTy. 2z ceptibility by the touch There are other worms thould not be unript, but unftitcht theior . "h what in the phrafepo,f a mi/or{.h';cm, thquLg hgom* In Covent-Garden did a failor delf] i Carew They feed on rag worms and lugges s Sbakpearia And look thyfelf be faultlefs P part rook érit [pre a v To Taxe taken, fometimes took; taka, Iflandick T o t o t ¢ k t ¢y teh |