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Show T RI T R and heir-apparenty or to deflower th @. a 7o TrEAD king's wife, or his eldeft daughter un to feel under the foot 1. To walk on Would I had never trod this Englifh earth Shake/p Or felt the flatteries that grow upon it He dy'd obedient to fevereft law Forbid to tread the promis'd land he faw Prior 2. 'T'o prefs under the foot Tread the {nuff out on the floor to prevent ftinking Swif 3. To beat ; to track Full of briars is this working world -They are but burs: if we walk not in the trodden paths, our very petticoat s will catch them cfpeare's As you like i 4. To walk on in a formal or ftately man unde crufl 5. T groun #rod th fh foot wit greate Dryden trampl t i contempt or hatred name will we tread them unde Pfalm xliv. 5 5 'd the meteor of the world 1e fkies, and blazing as I travell'd ; fires were {pent; and then caft downth Diryden's All for Love To be trod out by Caefar 6, To put in a&ion by the feet They tread their wine-prefies, and fuffer thirft Foby xxiv 7. To love as the male bird the female He feather'd her and trod her Dryden's Fables TrREAD. 7 /. [from the verb. 1. Footing ; ftep with the foot If the fireets were pav'd with thine eyes Her feet were much too dainty for fuch #read Shakefpeare The quaint mazes in the wanton green Milton For want of tread, are undiftinguithable High above the groun Their march was, and the paffive air upbor Milton Their nimble ¢read The dancer on the rope, with doubtful tread priv A difh of tea, like milk-pail, on thy head ! Swift track ; path Cromwell is the king's fecretary; further Stands in the gap and tread for more preferment Shakefpeare 3. The cock's part in the egg TrE'ADER He wh n. /. [from tread. trea ou no win in thei i juftices in eyre, juftices of aflize, juftice J treaal o an mad terminer whe i thei place and doing their duty ; or forgin Coavel He made the overture of thy zreafons to us Shake[peare TrEASONABLE. TrE asonOUS offenc committe credi to ru parliamentar perha te million i fecurity is dangerous deb withou illegal treafonable an hoarded riches accu \\'/'w,i'zjll,vz'al‘fs }1;‘?,')')7 Vi as well for colle&in furey as ng o of trea manners > as wel Bacon as filver becauf no Romans, ii. fure gnit th tioa, word imagin o fre priace, or th 1. eaiti i man' wndle of the Lord in th Iifcovers what he is to do South res honeft thoughts thee 5 1 fcorn thy friend t i nwea comm th o majeft an v is divided into high #reafor and peti treafon. High treafon is an offence again the fecurity of the common u Roawe rought it mounted to the lunar fphere 74 L I things loft on ea th are sreafur'd there ]‘:‘lf,'.‘ ASUREHOUSE . [treafur an treafurers an their own fancies bot hangmen weighing in thi Raleigh TrRE ASURERSH1P. z /. [from treafurer. Office or dignity of treafurer He preferred a bafe fellow, who was a fuitor fo the treafurer/bip, before the moft worthy TrE ASURY. z. Jorerie, French. [fro Hakew treafure tre 1. A place in which riches are accumu lated And yet I know not how conceit may ro The treafury of life, when life itfel Shakefpeare's King Lears" Yields to the theft Ulyfles® goods A very treafuri Of brafs, and gold, and fteele of curious frame, Chapma He had a purpofe to furnith a fair cafein tha univerfity with choice colletions from all parts like that famous treafury of knowledge at.Oxford Wotton The flate of the treafury the king beft knows Temple Phyficians by treafuries of juft obfervations grow to fkill in the art of healing Watts 2. It is ufed by Shake/peare for treafure An his chronicle s rich with prize mal As is the ouzy bottom of the. fe Shak With funken ‘wreck and {fumlefs ¢reafurics Thy fumptuous building Have coft a mafs of publick treafury Shakefpeare's Herry V To TREAT. @. a. [traiter,Fr. trado, Lat.] 1. To negotiate ; to fettle To treat the peace, a hundred fenator Savift . /- [trefor,y Fr. thefaurus rulers mad balance good and evil Him by proofs as clear as founts in Jul I know to be corrupt and treafonous Shakefpsare's Henry VIII Againft the undivulg'd pretenceI figh Of treas'nows malice Shakefpeare's Macbeth Moft men's heads had been intoxicated wit imaginations of plots and treafonable praétices Clarendon Were it a draught for Juno when fhe banquets I would not tafte thy treafonous offer Milton Before the invention of laws, private affegtion Treafinous is out o 7o TRE"ASURE. . a. [from the noun. hoard ; to repofit 5 to lay up agai Shakefpeare's Antony and C/eopatm adj. [from treafon. Having the natur decaying, and never finking much in value. Locke S [. [trabifs7. That I have referv'd nothing Man difobeying Difloyal breaks his fealty, and fin Againft the high fupremacy of heaven To expiate his treafon hath nought left Milton This being a treafon againft God, by a commerce with his enemy Holyday Athaliah cried, Treafon, treafon. 2 Kings, xis 14 hardnefs and impenitent heart, tho p unto thyfelf wrath againft the day o N. n This is my treafurer, let him fpea thei f the eg TRE'ASURER. m [ [fromy trmfijg ;m::f_ Jorier, French. One who has care o money; one who has charge of treafye feits his lands and goods to the king and it is called ##¢afon paramount. Peti own fec : both sreafons are capital not only all the promife but alfo the former fenfes of the divin Taylor's Holy Lin in fuprem Ric Pl of God favours money : and, in fuch ¢reafon, a man for The feveral parcels of his plate, his treafure o Jurehoufe the memory or diminifhing or impairing the curren a wife her hufband; a clerk fecular o religious kills his prelate; this zreqfo gives forfeiture to every lord within hi Tell me once more, what title doft thoy bear Shakefpeare Gather together into your {pirit, and its trea the king's feal manual, or privy fignet treafor 1s when a fervant kills his mafter Hooker Thou filver treafurebouf kunow An inventory, importin 2. The fperm of the cock it is no o kill the king's chancellor, treafurer, juftice of the one bench or of the other Lat. Wealt mulated The farther the fore-end of the zreadle r th lathe th o fore-fid th beyon ou will the fwess of the fore-end of the trea vol | confequently the Moxon's 1 tread Whethe money for which there is not in th Jurehoufe a prefent comfortable remedy to be ,fs'o:;:; England, and to utter the fame; or t Yaiab. | TREASURE. TrEADLE. n. /. [from tread. 1. A part of an engine on which the fee aét to put it in motion foul of men ingly to bring falfe money into thi realm counterfeited like the money o treads The treaders fhal prefles o ufe Dryden How wert thou wont to walk with cautious ¢read 2. Way feal or guilt of treafon Gets wherewithal to clothe and buy him bread Let there be any grief or difeafe incident to th levy war againft the king in his realm or to adhere to his enemies by aidin them; or to counterfeit the king's grea feal Place where l{oardé;i 'ri'éhes‘ai'i kept o wife {fon' eldef or hi married of oye ner Methough grace boufe. Shall be commiffioned 2 [Tra&o, Latin. J .,Dry(!cn's Eflmfo To difcourfe on 3. To ufe in any manner, good or bad He treated his prifoner with great harfhnefs Spectater Since living virtue is with envy curs'd And the beft men are treated like the wordt D thou, juf our merits forth goddefs, cal h r w c f i t i a e t e d c e And giv Pape 4. To handle; to manage ; to carry g"- Zeuxis and Polygnotus treated their fubjects their pitures, as Homer did in his poetrys Dryd 5. To entertai gueft To TREAT Saxon without expence t0 th @, #. [traiter, Fr. gahtiat 1. To f difcourfe; to % makeSy d1fcnfixons.e" hea O G ap}mmfl fta ev'nin th til love they trea 1};3 l.O\C i Abfence, what the poets call dent}. given occalion to beautiful fiamp]&!msi;nverl paflio thi o thon i Aidi oo's Specfalir authors who have treate 2. To pradtife negotiation The king treated with them 2 Maca xiii. 22 |