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Show T TH' 7o T'HRONG. w. n.:[from the noun. ‘Thou' talk'ft like one who never-fel Th.impatient throbs and longings of a fou That pants and reaches after diftant good « Ad {on's Cato THROE.7,/. [from Bpopran, fo fu/fe nyiSax. 1. The pain of travail; the anguifh o b inging children: it is likewife writtea throw Lucina lent not me her bed Shakefp. Cymbeline But took me in my throes e His perfwafive and praétical trat, which wa ceeding agreeable to his defires, coft him moft zbroe Fell and pangs of birth My womb pregnant and now exceffive grown AMilton Prcdigious motion felt and rueful throes Not knowing twas my labour, I complai Of fudden thootings, and of grinding pain My throes come thicker, and my cries increas'd Dryden Refleét on that day, when earth fhall be again i travail with her fons, and at one fruitful thro bring forth all the generations of learned and unRogers's Sermuons learned, noble and igaoble duft 2. Any extreme agony mortal firuggle fina th an O man ! have mind of that moit bitter throe For as the tree does fall fo lies it ever low. Spenfer To eafe them of their griefs Their fears of hoftile ftrokes, their aches, lofles T'heir pangs of love, with other incident throes That nature's fragile veflel doth fuftai In life's uncertain voyage, I will d Shake[peare's Timon Some kindnefs to them 7o THROE. @. a. [fro put in agonies the noun. T crowd; to com A matter from thee, and a birth, indeed Shak. Tempeft THRONE. 7. /. [thronus, Lat. $poy®-. 1. A royal feat; the feat ofa king Boundlefs intemperance hath bee Th' untimely emptying of the happy throne Shakefpeare's Macbeth And fall of many kings Th' eternal Father from his ¢throne behel Their multitude Milton Stonchenge, once thought a temple, you hav 1 have fee The dum 7o TraroNG T enthrone ; to fet on a royal feat They have, as who have not, whom their grea ftar Thronw'd and fet high Shakefpeare True image of the father, whether thron' In the bofom of blifs and light of light Saxon ; fro A crowd a multi tude prefling againft each other Let us on heaps go offer up our lives We are enow yet living in the field Tofmother up the Englith in our throngs. Shakefp A thron Of thick fhort fobs in thund'ring vollies float And roul themfelves over her lubrick throa In panting murmurs. "This book, the image of his mind ‘Will make his name not hard to find I wifh the throng of great and goo Made it lefs eas'ly underftood Wit ftudiou thought obferv' Crafbaw Waller th' illuftriou throng In nature's order as they pafs'd along Their names, their fates Dryden's Zneid di through idlenefs of ‘the hands the & decayet}i a houfe droppet through You will not make this a'general ‘ruje cclus, to ‘del fuch from preaching the gofpe 5 as hgve tbrgn firmity fallen, " L15 b Some throughambition, or throag thirg c;‘f"gg H ve flain their brothers Thick fwarm'd Milton Trro sTLE 7. /. [piorele, Saxon. thrafh; a {fmall finging bird The'tbrsftle with his note {o true The wren withlittle quill Th #. Shakefpearc Th [from threat. At the upper extreme it hath no larinx or throttle to quilify the found. « Brogon's Vulgar Errours 7o THROTTLE. @w. a. [from the noun. To choak ;' to fuffocate ; to kill by ftopping the breath 1 have feen them fhiver and look pale Make periods in the midft of fentences With Jove's Alcides, and oft foil'd"fill rofe Receiving from his motherearth newiftrength Frefh from his fall and fiercer grapple join'd Throttled at length in th' air, expir'd and fell, Milt His throat half throttled with corrupted phlegm And breathing through his jaws a belching fteam Dryden The throttling quinfey 'tis my {tar appoints And rheumatifm I fend to rack thejoints, Dryden Throttle thyfelf with an ell of ftrong tape For thou haft nota groat toatone for a rape. Swift the preterite of thrive England never throve fo well, nor was there eve brought into England fo great an increafe of wealt fince Locke Dutch 5 durch, German. 1. From end to en mafs or compafs of Saxon alon door of nature Browon A fimplicity thines through all he writes, Dryden Made Franceand Spain ambitious of his love 2. Noting paflage Dryden Through the gate of jv'ry he difmifs' His valiant offspring Dryden's Aneid The fame thing happened whenI removed th prifm out of the fun's light, and looking rhrough i upon the hole thining by the light of the clouds beyond it Neaton 3. By tranfmiffion Through thefe hands this fcience has jafled wit great applaufe Temple Material things are prefented only #hrough thei fenfes; they have a real influx on thefe, and ail rea knowledge of material things fs conveyed into th underftanding through thefe fenfes Cheyne's Phifofophical Principles 4. By means of; by agency of quence of THROVGH. adv 1. From one end or fide to the other You 'd be fo lean, that blafts of Janu Would blow you through and through. Sbafiefigal‘ meta may be tinged tbroug through, and with what, and into what colous s Bacg ‘a;, tbraugz an throu hi Pointed fatire run Oldbay To underftand the mind of him' tha Writyis ( rea the whole letter through, from neendto t} Lock 2. 'T'o the end of any thing 5 to the_,ul mate purpofe ; to the final conclufigh, ™ Every man brings fuch a degre of this light in the world with him, that though it cannot prip=* ™ him to heaven, yet it will carry him fo fary that he follow it fzithfully he fhall meet with anoth in confe The ftrong through pleafure fooneft falls, th weak through fmart Spenfer South TrRO'UGHBRED. adj. [through and bre commonly thoroughbred. Completel educated ; completely taught A thraugh-bred {oldier weighs all prefent circu ftances and all poffible contingents, Grew's Cafa THROUGHLI'GHTED. adj. [througha light.] Lighted on both fides That the beft pieces be placed where are the few eft lights; therefore not only rooms windowed o both ends, called throughlighted, but with two more windows on the fame fide, are enemies { this art Wotton's Architeétur Taro'vcHLY. adv. [from throug is commonly written zhoroughly, as com ; ing from thorough. Completely ; fully ; entirely; wholl The fight fo throughly him difmay'd That nought but death before his eyes he faw the whol He hath been fo fuccefsful with common heads that he hath led their belief through all the work Prig, jo 1 light, which fhall carry him quite through And, in conclufion, dumbly have ‘broke off. Shak As when Antzus in Irafla frov [Bunp Perpetual o%er the world redeem'd fhall flgy. other prep 1%? Paflion, and care, and anguifh to defirOyThrough him foft peace, and plenitude ‘o f'j Inquire ho T'he black-bird-and threflel with their melodiou voices bid'welcome to the cheerful fpring W alton's Angler THrO TTLE windpipe and their count To him, to him tis giv' Fame of th' aflerted fea through Europe blown Conceiving or remote from heav'n, enthrin' In flefhly tabernacle and human form Milton He tbron'd in glafs, and nam'd it Caroline. Pope Bpungan, #o prefi. @. a. 'To opprefs or incom 1'1l fay, thou haft gold hou wilt be throng'd too fhortly Skalefpeare The multituderhrorg thee and prefs: thee " «Luke, viii. 45 Allvaccefs was throng'd, the gate TarovcH [Bpang throng to fee him, and the blin Somethinggy you may.- y-ddeef ervelotf erve of thim‘_!b‘raugb Sbakepeg By much flothfulnefs the bui mode with crowds or tumults Bithops preached on the fteps of the altar ftanding, having not as yet aflumed the ftate of a rhrone Ayliffe's Parergon 2. The {eat of a bifhop 7. me Shake[peare's. Coriolanus, To hear him fpeak His mother could not longer bear the agitation of fo many paflions as ¢£rong'd upon her, but fel upon his neck, crying cut, My fon Tatler TrrOVE THurONG multi tudes foun Dryden A throne where kings were crown'd We have now upon the throne a king willing an able to correct the abufes of theage Dawenant 7o TeroNE. @. a. [from the noun. ‘in tumultueu T Throttie their practis'd accents in their fears The fetting of thine eye and cheek proclai Which throes thee much to yield Speaf For bed then next they were All'throughly fatisfied with compleat chearesCh Ric muf P be zhroughly boiled in refpeét of I Baes®s hardnefs No lefs wifdom than what made the world ¢ TilletfeRuy threughly underftand fo vaft a defign 2. Without referve Thoug fincerely it be fomewha fingular for:men tru and throughly to live up to the principles of th religion, yet fingularity in this is a fingular co Tillafox; mendation THROUGHOUT [through and aflt." prep Quite through ; in every partof ‘I'hus it fareth eve throughout the wh clea controverfy, about that difcipling which s fo ea neftly urged There followe ‘}{wka after the defeat an avoiding & all Spanifh forces throughout Irelan Bav As to be heard throughour the univerfey O for a clap, of thunder, as lon To tell the world the fact, and to applaad;it Be "f"\ 2;':' ve beh hav w ho ir inq ll rti Imp felves rhroughout the courfe of this long war THROUGHOUT ever part adw # Everywhere; i Subdulz it, and throughont dominion hol Over fifh of the fea, and fowl of the air M'I;‘-'l,: i |