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Show without any government of the following words Qf thee, kind boy, I afk no red and whit To make up my delight No odd becoming graces Black eyes, or little know not what, in faces Suckling Their difcourfes are fuch as belong to thei age, their calling, and their breeding; fuch a are_becoming of them, and of them only. Dryden Yet fome becoming boldnefs I may ufe T've well deferv'd, nor will he now refufe. Dyryden Make their pupils repeat the a&icn, that the may corre€t what is conftrained in it, till it b perfeted into an habitual and becoming cafinefs Laocke Beco'ming. #. /£ [from become.] Orna. ment. A word not now in ufe Sir, forgive me Since my becomings kill me when they no Eye well to you Shakefpeare Brco™MINGLY. adv. [from becoming.] After a becoming or proper manner Brco'mMiNGNESS #. / See 70 BecomEe. [fro becoming Decency ; clegan congruity ; propriety Nor is the majefty of the divine governmen greater in its extent, than the becomingnefs hereof i in its manner and form Grew " BED. 2. /. [bebd, Sax. 1. Something made to fleep on Lyin no ere& bu hollow whic is in th making of the bed; or with the legs gathered up which is in the pofture of the body, is the mor wholefome Bacen Rigour now is gone to bed And Advice with fcrupulous head Milton "Thofe houfes then were caves, or homely fheds With twining oziers fenc'd, and mofs their béds Diryden 2. Lodging ; the convenience of a plac to fleep in On my knees I beg That you'll vouchfafe me raiment, bed, and food 3. Marriage Shakelpeare George, the eldeft fon of this fecond Zed, was after the death of his father, by the fingula car an affe¢tio of hi up mother well brough Clarendon 4. Bank of earth raifed in a garden Herbs will be tenderer and fairer, if you tak them out of beds, when they are newly come up and remove them into pots, with better earth Bacen 5. The channel of a river, or any hollow So high as heav'd the tumid hills, fo lo Dow funk a hollow bottom, broad, and deep Capacious bed of waters Milton The great magazine for all kinds of treafur is fuppofed to be the bed of the Tiber We ma be fure, when the Romans lay under the apprehenfions of feeing their city facked by a barbarou enemy, that they would take care to beftow fuc of their riches that way, as could beft bzar th water Addifon 6. The place where any thing is generated or repofited See hoary Albula's infeed tid G'er the warm bed of {moaking fulphur glide no reafon bu lie as even Andwas brought in a laudable manner 1o bed, Prio 9. 7o make the Bep 'To put the bed i order after it has been ufed I keep his houfe, an bake, fcour, drefs meat, and make the beds, and d all myfelf Shakefpeare Bep of a Mortar. [with gunners.] folid piece of oak, hollowed in the middle, to receive the breech and half th trunnions Bev of @ grea Gun They have married me T'll t5 the Tufcan wars, and never bed her 2. To place in bed Shak She was publickly contracted, ftated as a bride It is often ufed with the particle of fbe avas brought zo bed of a daughter as does little harm, fave to his bedclothes aboyt hi Be'oper to the knee, betwee the efpoufal fheets The bedded fith in banks outwreft Donne A fnake bedded himfelf under the threfhold o a country~-houfe L' Efirange 6. To lay 1n order to ftratify And as the fleeping foldiers in th' alarm Your bedded hairs, like life in excrements, Start up, and ftand on end 70 BEp. w. # Shakefpeare 'To cohabit ‘Firft, with afliduous care from winter keept:'ff Well fother'd in the ftalls, thy tender theep Then fpread with ftraw the bedding of thy fold With fern beneath, to fend the bitter cold, Dryd Arcite return'd, and, as in honour tied His foe with bedding and with food fupply'd, Dryd 70 Bepe'ck. v. a. [from deck.] To deck to adorn ; to grace Thou fham'ft thy fhape, thy love, thy wit And ufeft none in that true ufe indeed Which fhould bedeck thy fhape, thy:love, thy wit Come Be'penousE. #. /. [from bebe, Sax. prayer, and box/e.] An hofpital or almshoufe, where the poor people prayed fo their founders and benefaétors Bepe'rTErR See BEDDER 7o Bepe'w. . a. [from dew.] To moiften gently, as with the fall of dew Bedew her pafture's grafs with Englith blood Shakepeare Let all the tears, that thould bedezv my herfe Be drops of balm to fanétify thy head Shakelp The countefs received a letter from him, where unto all the while fhe was writing her anfwer, fh bedeawed the paper with her tears Watton What {lender youth, éedegv'd with liquid odours Courts thee on rofes, in fome pleafant cave? Milt Balm, from a filver box diftill'd around Shal Be'prerrow. # /. [from éed and fellow. One that lies in the fame bed He loves your people But tie him not to be their bedfellow Shakefp Mifery acquaints a man with ftrange bedfelloos Shakefpeare Why doth the crown lie there upon his pillow Being fo troublefome a bedfellow Shakefpeart A man would as foon choofe him for his bedSellow as his play-fellow L Efirange What charming bedfe/lozss, and companions fo life, men choofe out of fuch women 7o BEpi'GuT adorn They were brough in his bedchamber word Shakefpeare Be'pcuaMBER. 7./, [from bed and chamber.] The chamber appropriated to reft to tne king abidin He was now one of the bedchamber to the prince Clarendon X t w.a drefs Addifon [from dight. t fe off To an Ql now only ufed in humorous writ ings A maiden fine dedight he hapt to love The maiden fine bedight his love retains And for the village he forfakes the plains Gay To Bep1'm. . a4, [from dim.] To mak dim ; to obfcure ; tocloud to darken. I have bedimm' the Hayward all bedewv the roots, and fcent the facre ground Dryden He faid : and falling tears his face fedews. Dryd A piteous corfe, a bloody piteous corfe Pale, pale as athes, all bedawl'd in blood My miftaken eyes Milton Now Ceres, in her prime Smiles fertile, and with ruddieft freight bedeckt _Philips Never fo weary, never fo in woe Bedabbled with the dew, and torn with briars I can no further crawl, no further go. Shakefpeare 7o BEDp A'WB. w. a. [from dawb.] To daw over ; to befmear; to foil, with fpreadin any vifcous body over it And writ my victory with my enemy'sblood, Norris 70 BEpA'EBLE. w. a. [from dabble.] T wet ; to befprinkle. It is generally applied to perfons, in afenfe including inconvenience When thy warlike father, like a child Told the fad ftory of my father's death That all the ftanders-by had wet their cheeks Like trees beda/p'd with rain Shakefpeare this way With ornamental drops bedeck'dI ftood Wifcman 7o BEpA'GGLE. @. a. [from daggle.] T bemire ; to {oil clothes, by letting the reach the dirtin walking 7o Bepa'su. @w. a. [from dab.] To bemire by throwing dirt; to befpatter; t wet with throwing water Shakefpears Female it feems That fo bedeck'd, ornate, and gay 1t he be married, and bed with his wife, an afterwards relapfe, he may poflibly fancy that fh infe&ed him Shal Lay the turf with the grafs fide downward, upo which lay fome of your beft mould to bed your quic in, and lay your.quick upon it Mortimer from flimy neft The mate There be no inns where meet bedding may b had; fo that his mantle ferves him then fors bed 4. To fow, or plant in earth Let coarfe bold hands ther-ftone of an oil-mijj rials of a bed; a bed There was a doubt ripped up, whether Arthu was bedded with his lady Bacon 5. To lay in a place of reft, or fecurity Q) [from bed] o Shake[pears Be'pp1nG. 7. /. [from bed. Bacon 3. To make partaker of the bed Bepe'rTER. and {.lemnly bedded; and, after the was laid Maximilian's ambaffador put his leg, ftript nake the furface of the lan 8. T0o bring to Bep. To deliver of a child For he will be fwine drunk, and jn hisfl‘ee? ( which lies immediately under the piece being, as it were, the body of the carriage Dic 75 Bep. @.a. [from the noun. 1. To go to bed with That have been fo bedazizled by the fun That every thing I look on feemeth green. Shak Burnet over a bed Did That thick plan fprea Addifon Be'ocLOTHES. #. /0 [fro bed and c/psp, It has no fingular.] Coverlets fprea I wafh, wring, brew Al in gore blood fhould be as regular as that of the water, in th firft prodution of it; and the frata, or deds within Ten months after Florimel happen'd to wed 7o Bepa‘zzLE. v. a. [from ‘dazzle.] T make the fight dim by too much luftre 2. A layer; a ftratum ; a bod cver another I fz BE ByEo BE T The noontide fun, call'd forth the mutinouswind And "twixt the green fea and the azure vaul Set roaring war Shakefpeart Bepi"zEn drefs out w. a. [from dizen.] T a lowW wotd BE'DLAM |