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Show RATLE L But fafe repofe, without an air of breath Dwells here, and a dumb quiet next to death Dryden Let vernal airs through trembling ofiers play And Albion's clifts refound the rural lay Pope's Paftorals 4. Scent ; vapour Stinks which the noftrils firaight abhor are no the moft pernicious, but fuch airs as have fom fimilitude with man's body; and fo infinuat Bacon themfelves, and betray the {pirits 5. Blaft; peftilential vapour All the ftor'd vengeances of heaven fal On her ingrateful top ! ftrike her young bones You taking airs, with lamenefs! Shak. King Lear 6. Any thing light or uncertain; that i as light as air O momentary grace of mortal men Which we more hunt for than the grace of God "Who builds his hope in air of your fair looks Lives like a drunken failor on a matft Ready with ev'ry nod to tumble down Shakefp. Richard 111 ». The open weather; air unconfined The garden was inclos'd within the fquare Where young Emilia took the morning air Dryd. Fables 8. Vent; utterance ; emiflion into the air I would have afk'd you, if I durft for thame If fill you lov'd? you gave it air before me But ah! why were we not both of a fex For then we might have lov'd without a crime Dryden g. Publication; expofur view and knowledge to the public I am forry to find it has taken air, that I hav Pope's Letters fome hand in thefe papers information ao. Intelligence not now in ufe A 'This i It grew from the airs which the princes an ftates abroad received from their ambaffadors an Bacon's Henry VII agents here 14. A affe@te or laboure manne o Fowid, .v%; Call in fome mufick; I have heard, foft air Can charm our fenfes, and expel our cares Denbam's Sophy "The fame girs, which fome entertain with mof delightful tranfports, to others are importune Glanwille's Scepfis Scientifica. Since we have fuch a treafury of words fo proper for the airs of mufick, I wonder that perfons fhould give fo little attention Addifon, Speftator, N° 406 Borne on the {welling notes, our fouls afpire "While folemn airs improve the facred fire And angels lean from heav'n to hear Pope's St Cecilia -VWhen the foul is funk with cares Exalts her in enliv'ning airs 12. Poetry Pope's St. Ccilia a fong The repeated ai Of fad Ele@ra's poet had the pow' To fave th' Athenian walls from ruin bare Paradife Regained 13. The mien, or manner, of the perfon the look Her graceful innocence, her ev'ry air Of gefture, or leaft a&tion, over-aw' His malice Miltow's Paradife Loff For the air of yout Hopeful.and cheerful, in thy blood fhall reig A melancholy damp of cold and dry "To weigh thy fpirits down ; and laft confum The balm of lite Miltow's Paradife Loft But, having the life before us, befides the experience of all they knew, it is no wonder to hi fomc airs and features, which they have miffed Dryden an Dramatick Poetry Th(?ugh. the airbladder in fithes feems neceffar x v v e t a b o r f e t o There a o r a e e f d t a laft but fo a e e x n _ a o g f t an affembly, upo e o v ' t a u i r p m f c j o uncomm c a g e i f o t a u e a paffion, fome g for {wimming without it AIRBUILT yet fome are {o formed as to e Cuduwort adj [from air and i Built in the air, without any folid .fom; ‘dation y i a g o o l o l u n a f d of an eye g i t k l c f h o n f o t an Hence the fool's paradife, the fatefman's fohems Dryden's Dufrefnoy The airbuilt caftle, and the golden dream The maid's romantick with, the chymift's flyy u i t i i e o p e r w v l Their who r a e l f e t v g l r And poet's vifion of cternal fame t n e t a e a f o o e f n m th i w o Pope's Dunciad, ), i s nc pr an of kin s v t t e e p r t l o ar o t n AIR-DRAWN. adj. [from air and drawn. oth Addifon's Remarks on Italy p wor air i painte o Draw To curl their waving hairs ufed p P Afift their bluthes, and infpire their airs fear, you o paintin ver th i Thi r v o fe r He affumes and affe@s an ent faid yo whic dagger air-draw th i Thi o n be e m h ve ce co h different ai Macket Shakefp Duncan you.t Le ft Sw fuperiour nature ‘A‘irER. #./. [from Zoair. 15. Appearance cret, it foon foun its way into the world Pope's Ded. to Rape of the Lock 16. [In horfemanthip.] 4irs denote th artificial or pradtifed motions of a maChambers naged horfe 7o Air. v. a. [from the noun air. 1. To expofe to the air; to open to th The French have indeed taken worthy pains tomake claffick learning fpeak their language; if they have not fucceeded,-it muft be imputedto certain talkativenefs and airinefs reprefented i air The others make it a matter of fmall commendation in itfelf, if they, who wear it, d nothin elfe but air the robes whic there hath been a little moifture or the chamber jail, and numbers of thofe that attended th bufinefs, or were prefent, fickened upon it, an died 'Therefore, it were good wifdom, that,- i fuch cafes, the jail were aired, before they wer brought forth. . Bacon's Natural Hiftary, No g14 As the ants were airing their provifions on winter, up comes a hungry grafshopper to them and begs a charity L'Efirange's Fables Or wicker-bafkets weave, or air the corn " Dryden's Virgil 2. To gratify, by enjoying the open air with the reciprocal prenoun Nay their tongue, which will never agree with the fe datenefs of the Romans their plac Hookery bo v § 29 requireth Fleas breed principally of ftraw or mats, wher ftay a littlemm- Were you but riding forth to air yourfelf Such parting were too petty Shakefp. Cymbeline I afcended the higheft hills of Bagdat, in orde to pafs the reft of the day in meditation and prayer As 1 was here airing myfelf on the tops of th mountains, I fell into a profound contemplatio on the vanity of human life Addifony Spect He thatex pofes to the air AtruovrE. . [ [from air and bole] hole to admit the air. A'tr1nESs. z. /. [from airy. 1. Opennefs ; expofure to the air. 2. Lightnefs ; gajety ; levity. As it was communicated with the zir of a fe "This smufick crept by me upon the waters, Allaying both their fury and my paffion Shakefpeare's Tempef? ‘With its {weet air found ; air modulated the properties of their weight to that o their bulk, and rife or fall a n n ; f t w o l f c A ‘Who ‘We have had, in our time, experience twice o thrice, when both the judges that fat upon th ligh com-gc‘ th b fithes i bladde Th 2 tion and dilatation of which, they Var a r a f l a eft r l p p d o p ( r P a Y i i t t w w va B a Arbutho ber of ramifications Pope c f ' e o n v d a a t e And b and bed-ftraw kept clofe, and not aired Bacon's Natural Hiftory, No 696 whethe The pulmonary artery and vein pafs algp, g.t m,m infinit a i girbladders thef furfaces o o ‘41;,"!", Addifon on Italyairs of this pi¢ture e a p r g f t a e a G t Yet fhoul or ferious 31. Mufick 1. Any caticle or veficle filled with a e} i in di l f e n w There }s fomethin Greeks A'1rinG or.the folemnity of th # f. [from.air. Felton A fhort jour ey or ramble to enjoy the free air This little fleet ferves only to fetch them win and corn, and to give their ladies an airing in th fummer feafon - Addifm Wantin A'1rLEss. adj. [from air. conumunication with the free air Nor ftony tower, nor walls.of beaten brafs s iron Nor airlefs dungeon, nor frong.linko Can be retentive to. the ftrength of fpirit Shakefpeare's Fulius Cefr A'trrixe. n /. [from air, for gayey. A young, light, thoughtlefs, gay per fon Some more there be, flight airlings, will be wo With dogs, and horfes, and perhaps a whore B. Fonfor A'trpume. #. /. [from air and pump.] machine by whofe means the air 15 ¢xhaufted out of proper veffels. The principle on which it is built, is the elafti city of the air ; as thaton which the waterpump is founded, is on the gravity the air. 'The invention of this curlow 3. To air liguors; to warm them by th fire : a term ufed in converfation Gug.d Ott t afcribe i inftrumen 4. To breed in nefts But his machine laboured under fever{x‘ In this {enfe derived from aeric, a neft of ufe it i It is now eu You may add their bufy, dangerous, difcourteous, yea and {ometimes defpiteful ftealing, on from. another, of the eggs and young ones3 who if they were allowed to air naturally and. quictly thcz‘c‘ would be ftore fuflicient, to kill not only th partridges, but even all the good houfewive chickens in a country Carew's Surwey of Cornawall A il R B]LAD DER, 7 /i [from a/r and bladera | rick, conful of Magdebourg, in 165 defes; the force neceffary to work i was very great, and the progrefs ver flow ; it was to be kept under wat fo fubject o chang n o allowe an experiments. Mr. Boyle, with the feve remove Hooke Dr o fitance ral inconveniencies; though, ftill th working was laborious, by reafon of th preflure of the atmofphere at every n f e b h u b l i T n fuCti mm |