OCR Text |
Show FY a i pr | ar ~ A s-‘omg T U Carew the whale Peacham -NMb{ fifhes you fhall find in arm bo tu th on "I the f;‘qor o:v(}crs of the Lucrnpe lak My fober appetite would with Nor turbot o 1 have dream' ence; and this whole nig u r t t)hi" Milton . They oft fore-fignify and threaten ill o 2 D e mind [come to calm thy turbulenco clean.sh data import.tsv out README If reafon will refume her fov'reign fway '3.‘ Tumultuoufnefs ; tendenc t . Which thus fermenting by degrees Dryden confu [tm‘éulentus, Latin. 43, Raifing agitation ; producin . tion commo clear milky juice allayin th o il i ThirftF , and refrefh'd5 nor envy'd them the grape " Whofe heads that turbulent liquor fills with fumes Milton 2. Expofed to commotion; liable to agitation Calm region once GAED And full of peace; now toft, and turbulent I Milt . Tumultuous; violent What wondrous fort of death has heav'n defign' Dryden For fo untam'd, fo turbulent a mind Nor need we tell what anxious cares atten \ The turbulent mirth of wine, nor all the kind ;14p+ OF maladies that lead to death's grim cave Wrought by intemperance Dryden ‘Men of ambitious and tuwrbulent {pirits, tha were diffatisfied with privacy, were allowed to enage in matters of ftate Bentley URBULENTLY. adv. [from turbulent. _Tumultuoufly; violently TE'RAD- #. /. [zund, Saxon. ground Where was this lane ¥ C‘lofebvy the battle, ditch'd, and wall'd with turf Shakefpeare Turf and peats are cheap fuels, and laft long Bacon s Could that divide you from near ufhering guides '3 uThcy left me weary on a graffy turf Milton J‘;ach place forme monument of thee fhould bear - Lwith green surfs would grateful altars raife Dryden Th . Their bucklers ring around 1eir trampling turns the turf, and fhakes th foT}ll"l.gmund Dryden's Aneid i 2eambaflador every morning religioufly falute / f lrf of earth dug out of his own native foil, t emind him that all the day he was to think of hi fefted parts Gowernment of the Tongue White o'er the turgent film the living dew URG 2. Empty magnificence 1. Swelling; bloated; filling more roo A bladder, moderately filled with air, an ftrongly tied, held near the fire, grew zurgid an hard; and brought nearer, fuddenly broke wit a vehement noife Boyle The fpirits embroiled with the malignity, ‘an drowned in the blood turgid and tumified by th febrile fermentation, are by phlebotomy relieved Harwey on Confumptions Difburthen thou thy fap':fs woo Of its rich progeny ; the turgid frui Abounds with mellow liquor Philips Thofe channels, turgid with th' obfructed tide Stretch their fmall holes, and make their mefhe Addifon His flock daily erop Their verdant dinner fr m the mofly turf uificient Philip A;lge:hfhall thy grave with rifin flow'rs be drepfi b € green furf lie lightly on thy brea . Pope ° LURE. @, . 4, a, [fio m th noun. - Cover wigh turfs e face of the bank next the fea is turfed WMortimer Blackmore 2. Pompous tumid faftuous vainl magnificent Some have a violent and turgid manner of talking and thinking; whatloever they judge of i with a tinture of this vanity Watts's Logick Turci'piTy. 2. [ [from turgid. of being fwollen Stat The forerunners of an apoplexy are dulnefs, flownefs of {peech, vertigos, weaknefs, waterinefs an turgidity of the eyes Arbuthnot on Diet Tu'rRkEY. n /. [gallina turcica, Latin. A large domeftick fowl fuppofed to b brought from Turkey Here he comes fwelling like a turkey-cock Th lefs turkey-coc hath fwellin Shake[peare gills, the he Bacon So fpeeds the wily fox Who lately filch'd the turkey's callow care Gay [turquoife, French fro T rko1s . / turkey.] A blue flone numbered amon the meaner precious ftones, now difcovered to be a bone impregnated wit capreous particles Thofe bony bodies found among copper-ore are tinged with green or blue: the turcois ftone as it is commonly ftiled by lapidaries, is part o Woodward a bone fo tinged Tu'rkscaPp. a f. [martagon. TueM n. An herb Ainfworth [tarme, Lat.] A troop. No in ufe Legions and cohorts, turms of horfe, and wings Milton MERICK s . [ [tarmerica Lat. A Indian root which makes a yellow die TurMO'IL. . /. [derived by Sinner fro tremauille, French, a mill-hopper; mor robably derived from moil, tolabour. ‘}"rouble ; difturbance; harafling unca finefs; tumultuous moleftation in ufe That is not fault of will in thofe godly fathers tries, to be miferably toffed and turmoiled with thef frorms of affliftion Haughty Juno, who with endlefs broi Spenfer Did earth, and heav'n, and Jove himfelf tzrmoil At length aton'd, her friendly pow'r fhall join Drydes 2. 'T'o weary ; to keep in unquietnefs Latin. wide 7o TurMO'1L. @. a. [from the noun. 1. 'T'o harafs with commotion Lat. The inftant turgefeence is not to be taken off but by medicines of higher natures [turgidus To foice me live, and will not let me die. Spej There Il reft, as after much turmoi Shakefpeare A blefied foul doth in elyfium Blinded greatnefs ever in turmoil 8till feeking happy life, makes life a toil. Daniel Happy when I, from this turmoil fet free That peaceful and divine affembly fee Denbam realm hath continually been turmoiled Spenfer 1t is her fatal misfortune above all other coun 1. The a& of fwelling; the ftate of bein {wollen adj He feeks, with torment and tzrmoil but the troublous occafions wherewith that wretche SCENCE Tu'RcID Ur Thomfon TurcE'scEnCy. }"'fi [turgefeens Excrement C,fl',URF #. /. {<ypg, Saxon s zorf, Dutch Jorf, Swedith.] = A clod covered wit grals; a part of the furface of th only to purge them, but alfo to frengthen the in than before Savift Exalts the fpirits, finks the lecs adj it is neceflary no Brown's Vulgar Errours §ou think this turbulence of bloo . From ftagnating preferves the flood MTy/RRULENT tumid Where humours are turgent been but forms of ilaug'l.m:r. Shak Oft-times noxious wbcrc they ligh On man, beaft plant, w.'.fe.tul and turbulent o i f a t e c i e u r t k L _ Qvér whofe heads they roar, and feem to point G ing; protuberant The clufters clear W & gg;l;}? W ___of abounding with turfs 'EU,RFY. adj. [from turf.] Full of turfs LU'RGENT. adj. [ turgens, Lat,| Swell Dryden 1, Tumult;; confufion Tu'rriness. #, /. [from zurf.] The fat 7. /o [ turbulence, Fr turbulentia, Latin. ‘Ty'RBULENCE Miy/RBULENCY Littl Having newly left thofe grammatic fhallows where they ftuck unreafonably to learn a fe words, on the fudden are tranfported to be toft an turmoiled with their unballafte - wits in fathom lefs and unquiet deeps of controverfy 7o TurRN w. a. [zupnan Milror Saxon s Zour ner, French 5 from zorno, Latin. 1. To put into a circular or vertiginou motion ; to move round ; to revolve Sh woul hav made Hercules turn th fpit yea, and have cleft his club to make the fire too Shake[peare He turned me about with his finger and thumb as-one would fet up a top Shakefpeare Here's a knocking, indeed: if"a man wer porter of hell-gate, he fhould have old turning th key Shakefpeare They in numbers that comput Days, months, and years, towards his all-cheerin lam Turn fwift their various motions, or are turs' By his magnetic beam Milton's Paradife Loff 2. To put the upper fide downwards ; t thift with regard to the fides When the hen has laid her eggs o that fhe ca cover theni, what care does fhe take in turning the frequently, that all parts may partake of the vita warmth =g Addifon 3. To change with refpe& to poition Exper When to advance, or ftand, or zurn the fva Of battle Milron He bid his angels turn afcanfe the poles. Milion 4. To change the ftate of the balance You weigh equally, a feather will zusz the fcale Sbake[peare IfI furvive, fhall Troy the lefs prevail A fingle {oul's too light to zarn the fcale, Dryd 5. 'To bring the infide out He call'd me fot And told me I had rur#'d the wrong fide out Shakcfpeare The vaft abyf Up from the bottom turn'd by furious winds. Mi 6. To change as to the pofture of the body or diretion of the look Apollo, angry at the fight, from top of Ilio cride Turne head, ye well-rod peeres of Troy. Chapman His gentle dumh exprefiion turi'd at lengt The eye of Eve to mark his play Milton The rage of thirft and hunger now fuppreft The monarch t#rns him to his royal gueft Pope's Ody/Fy 7. 'T'o form on a lathe by moving round [l;riz.o La[in. As the placing one foot of a pair of compafle on a plane, and moving about the other foot, de{cribes a circle with the moving point; fo an fubftance, pitched fteddy on two points, ason a axis, and moved about, alfo defcribes ‘a gircl conceatric to the axis ; and an edge-tool fet fedd o |