OCR Text |
Show X WOu Wovs The preterite and participle paf five of aveawe Adam, waiting her return, had wsw Of choiceft low'rs a garland Wo'vex Dilton The participle paflive of aweave The preterite of i/ WouLp 1. It is generally ufed as an auxiliary ver with an infinitive, to which it gives th force of the fubjunétive mood If God' providence did no fo order it, cheaf ewonid daily be committed, which would jufile private men out of their rights, and unhinge ftates Ray 2. I Wovurp doit. My refolution is tha it fhould be done by me Thow WOULDEST do it. Such muftb the confequence to thee, that {uch fhoul be thy a& He WovLp, or it avould the confequenc This muftb to Abim or it, that fuc thould be Ais aét, ot its effeft To themfelves they live And to their ifland, that enough wwon/d giv A good inhabitant Chapman He, by the rules of his own mind, could conftrue no other end of men's doings but f{elf-feek .ing, fuddenly feared what they could €6, and a "faddenly {ufpeéted what they wwexld do, and as fuddenly hated them, as having both might and min {o tq da Sidney here are feveral who wow/d, ot at leaft preten they wonld, bear much in their own bufinefs, wh will bear nothing at all Kettlezvell 4. Was or am refolved; I with or withe to; I am or was willing She wonld give her a leflon for walking fo late that (hould make her keep within doors for on ‘fortnight Sidn Jealous Philoclea, that was evea jealous of her felf; for Zelmane wou/d needs have her glove Sidney You qvsuid be fatisfied ? w-TVo1ld2 nay, and will Shakefpeare's Othello They know not what they are, nor what the awould be, any further than that they 2wou/d not b what they are L Efrange it will be needlefs to enumerate all the fimpl to eac WRa 11 underftood, came awonld1o God, thenc I avould to God; and thence I wwould or elliptically aonld, came to fignify avi/p : and fo it is ufed even in goo anthors but ought not to be imitated I would my father look'd but with my cyes Shakefpeare I avonld this mufick wonld come 1, this found I better know Shake[peare Wife men will do it without a law; I wwou/ there might be a law: to reftrain fools Bacon's Adwice to Villiers Lift! I <would 1 could hearmo. Ben Fonfon Would to heaven that youth fuch fpirit did fee Now in my nerves, and that my joints were kni With fuch a ftrength, as made me then held fi To lead men with Ulyfies Chapman. This is yet the outward, faireft fid Of our defign: within refts more of fea Than, my moft worthy lords, I would there were Daniel Would thou hadft hearken'd to my words, an fray' fenfe: nor indeed is i poffible, if we wwould; there being a great man more of them belonging to moft of the fenfes tha we have names for Locke By pleafure and pain I would be underfrood t fignify, whatfoever delights or molefts us, whethe from the thoughts of our minds, or any thing operating on our bodies Locke 5. It is a familiar term for wifb 20 4o, or 7 hawe Defire of wand'ring, this unhappy morn Poflefs'd thee Milton's Paradife Loft Would God we might prevent the need of fuc unkindly expedients, and, by a thankful fenfe o what we have, provide to conferve it. Dec. of Piety I fcarce am pleas'd, I tamely mount the throne Would Aurengzebe had all their foulsin one. Dry And awould to heav'n the ftorm you felt woul brin On Carthaginian coafts your wand'ring king Wou'LDING ,-,./ [from .-wg,,][{. Dry Motio of defire; difpofition to any thing; propenfion ; inclination; incipient purpofe Tt will be every man's intereft to join good per formances to fpiritual purpofes;. to fubdue the cx orbitancies of the flefh, as well 25 to continue th wonldings of the fpirit Hammiond Wounp. # Dutch. / [pund Saxon ; awonde A hurt given by violence I am faint; my gathes cry for help. -So well thy words become thee as thy zwounds They fmack of honour both. - Shakefp. Macbeth Now fhew the wwound mine eyes have mad thee i Scratch thee but with a pin, and there remain Seme fcar of it Shakefpeare He, ftooping, open'd my left ide, and too From thence a rib : wide was the wousnd But fuddenly £ill'd up and heal'd Milton Notpoifon, but a wound, the foldier flew. Rozwe The aliment of fuch as have frefh wwonsnds fhoul be mild, without'ftimulating or faline fubftances Arbuthnor on Aliments They feel the fmart and fee the fear of thei former wounds 5 and know that they muft be mad a facrifice to the leaft attempt towards a change Sai t What 2wouldft thou with us Shak. King Lear 7 W U D « a [from the noun.] T Mr.-Slender, what zwoxld you with me ? hurt by violence -1I 2would little or nothing with you. Shakefpeare ‘Th* untented woundings of a father's curf . Should: wifh Pierce ev'ry fenfe about thee. Shakelp. King Lear Celia, if youn apprehen L kill, and I make alive; I wound, and I heal ‘The mufe of your incenfed friend Deuteronomy. Nor awozld that he record your blame The battle went fore againft Saul, and the archAnd make it live; repeat the fame ers hit him, and he was fore wonnded Again deceive him, and again X Sqmuely xx¥i, 3 And then he fwears he'llinot complain. 272/r He wa qounded. for - our tean{greflions 7. It is ufed in old authors for frou/d "The excefs of diet wonld be avoided As for percolation, which belonget Bacon to fepara tion, trial awowld be made by clarifying by adhefion, with-miik put into new: beer and firred wit it Bacon's Natyral Hiflory 8. It has the fignification of I wif, or #ray 'This, I believe, is improper, an formed by a gradual corruption of th phsafe, would God; which originall imported zha Go would migh God willy wight Ged decree, From this phrafe he was bruifed for our iniquities Ifziab, liii. 3 When, ye fin fo againgt the brethren, and gogund their weak confcience, ye fin againft Chrift 1 Corinthians, viils 12 Adonis from his native roc Ran purple to the fea, fuppos'd with bloo Of Thammuz, yearly wounded Miiton Heroes of old, when wounded, thelter fought Dryden The favages wounded Atkins, and flew his followers Robinfon Crafoe Wounp preterite and participl paflive of awind 'Th He had raivd to eve; ayr b A front of great height; r:ndy ifl {::{l That round ye mizht b ircula A walk fo fw)r/und fbou Thefe mathematica and fpeedily wound up the other iht(.'ld' ehsieelg grace bapmay, e ngine cannot befévpe and fo cettain}y.]evgued) The parliament bein calle Hoas Wilki,, fettlement of Treland .'woind up iflefi?g?::dt_h‘e m.a into the duke of Ormond' s hand t 1lreinputy an aék, all perfons came oy r ina fhogla.rs Wou'xpEr. 2. /i [from wound.]re}- fig that wounds Wou'xprEss. adj. [from @ouna'. Ex empt from wounds Wou'xpworT. . /. [vaseraria, Lagy A plant Wou'soy With me, as I befought thee, when that firang 3. The plural as the fingular ideas belongin adi words Miller Exceflive A loy ba ‘We have fuch a world of holiday , that *is woynd hindrance to a poor man that lives b hi labour L' Eftrange Thefe frockings of Sufan's coft a Wourid dea of pains the pulling on Wox preterite of wax. Became ] Th Woxe. G Obfolete The ape in wondrous ftomach auox Strongly encourag'd by the crafty fox Spenfer Not one puff of wind there did appear That all the three the great 2ox much aftaid Wo'xen The participle of 70 was. Ob {olete Wrack Sperfir Spenfer z. /o [wrack, Dutch; ppecce Saxon, a wretch., The poets ufe wrac orwreck indifferently, as thyme requires the later writers of profe commonl awreck. See WrRECK. 1. Deftrution of a fhip by winds or rocks Now with full fails into the port I move An fafely can unlade my breaft of love Quiet and calm : why fhould I then go back To tempt the fecond hazard of a wwrack & Dryde 2. Ruin deftruétion Thi is the tru Saxon meaning With ufe of evil, growing more and more evil, they took delight in flaughter, and pleafed them felves in making others zvrack the effeét of thei Sidrty Miltot power A world devote to univerfal wrack To WrACK 1. T @. a. [from the noun. deftro i the water to wrec See WrErck 2. It feems in Miltor to mean, to rock; 1 thake Each on his rock transfix'd, the fport and pre Of awracking whirlwinds i 3. To torture; to torment. Thisis com monly written rack ; and the inftrumen . AHasHe of torture always rack Merab rejoic'd in her surack'd loyer's pain And fortify'd her yirtue with difdain Gowlty Pharaoh's and Jofeph's dreams are oftentime fy e ion.Pilgar B awracked beybeyond theirtheir fymboliza To WrA'NGLE. @. 7. [from w}'flflgl'fififg Dutch. Minfbeaw. wrong, Skmner.]" difpute peevifhly ; to quarrel pexveriiy to altercate; to {quabble Yes, for a fcore of kingdoms you fhould awranglt And T would call it fair play. _ Shakefp. Tenp Some unhateh'd pradtic Hath puddled his clear fpirit; and in fuch cai thmg;:wk inferiou wit wrangl nature Men' Sbm;6bj_e& thei ar one grea Thoug How wounding a fpeacleis it fo fee th0 were by Chri defigned for fifhers of men'fangliu up fhells on the ‘fhore, and upmanly wrarg of Piety Dayf about them: too 7 Lt |