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Show BI Bewi'rcrMENT. 2, £ [from berwiteh. Fafcination; power of charming 1 will counterfeit the bewitchmen of fome po pular man, and give it bountifully to the defirers Shakefpeare 70 BEWRA'Y. @. a. [pnegan, beppegan Saxon. 1. To betray ; to difcover perfidioully Fair fecling words he wifely *gan difplay And, for her humour fitting purpofe, fai To tempt the caufe itfelf for to bezoray. Fairy Q 2. To fhow; to make vifible : this wor 1s now little in ufe She faw a pretty blufth in Philodea' bewray a modeft difcontentment cheek Sidney Men do fometimes bewray that by deeds, whic to confefs they are hardly drawn Hooker Next look on him that feems for counfel fit Whofe filver locks beavray his ftore of days. Fairf BewRA'YER 7 / [fro Jewray. Be trayer; difcoverer; divalger ‘When a friepd is turned into an enemy, and bewvrayer of fecrets, the world is juft enough t accufe the perfidioufiiefs of the friend Beyo'sp prep [begeondb Addifrn begeoadan Saxon. 1. Before ; at a diftance not yet reached What 's fame ? a fancy'd life in others breath A thing-beyond us, ev''n before our death Juft what you hear, you have Pope 2. On the farther fide of Neither 1s it beyond th fea, that tho fhouldf day, Who fhall go over the fea for us, and bring i unto us Deyt. xxx0 13 Now we are land, we are but betwee deat and life; for we are beyond the old world and th new Bacon We cannot think men beyord fea will part wit sheir money for nothing Locge Farther onward than He that fees a dark and thady grove Stays not, but looks beyond it on the fky 4. Paft Herbert out of the reach of if tho She made earnclt benefit of his jeft, forcln aen didft this deed of death he fill thought h whil coftly; an berfom cum bot as wer him to do her fuch fervices beyord her, becaufe his heart did not com mit the idolatry Sidney That no man go beyond, and defraud his _bEOtht'« 1 Theffe iv- 6 in any matter 1 Be'zeL. } n. /o That part of a rin Be‘zir. § which the ftone is fixed BE'ZOAR. . /. [from pa, againft, an Perfick. zahar, poifon for ftone merly in high efteem as an antidote and brought from the Eaft Indies, wher it is faid to be found in the dung of a animal called pazan; the ftone bein formed in its belly, and growing to th to tha fize of an acorn, and fometime ofa pigeon's egg. Its formation 1s no fuppofed to be fabulous, The name 1 applied to feveral chymical compofitions, defigned for antidotes; as mineral, folar, and jovial dezoars Savary. Chambers Bezoa rpick Me adj. [from bezoar. . dicines compounded with dezoar The bezoardicks are neceflary to promote fiveat Flgyer and drive forth the putrified particles B1a'NGULATED. | adj. [from binus an angulus, Lat.] Havin Bia'NGULOUS Di& two corners or angles BI'AS. n. /. [biais, Fr. faid to come fro an old Gaulit bibay word fignifyin on on fide of crofs or thavart. weight lodge 1. Th bowl, whic turns it from the fraigh line Madam, we'll play at bowl -~-Twill make me think the world is full of rubs And that my fortune runs againit the bias. Shak 2. Any thing which turns a man to a particula Beyond the infinite and boundlefs reac Of mercy B Li courfe or gives the direction t his meafures Art thou damn'd, Hubert Shakefpeare Yet thefe declar Thy goodnefs beyond thought, and pow'r divine You have been miftook But nature to her bias drew in that, Shakefpeare This is that boafted bias of thy mind Milton By .which one way to dulnefs 'tis inclin'd. Dryden The juft, wife, and good God neither does no can require of man any thing that is impofiible or naturaily beyond his power to do South Confider the fitzation of our earth; it is place fo conveniently, that plants flourith, and animal live: this is matter of fact, and beyond all difpute Bentley 5. Above; proceeding toa greater degre than Timotheus was a man both in power, riches parentage, goodnefs, and love of his people, beyon any of the great men of my country Sidney One thing, in this enormous accident, is, muft confefs, to me beyond all wonder Wutton To his expences, deyord his income, add debauchery, idlenefs, and quarrels amongft his fervants, whereby his manufadtures are difturbed and his bufinefs neglected Locke As far as they carry convition to any man' underftanding, my labour may be of ufe: beyon the evidence it carries with it, I adyife him not t follow amy man's interpretation €. Above in excellence His fatires are incomparabl if to laug and rally and declaiming Locke deyond Juvenal's is to be preferred to railin Dryden 7. Remote from ; not within the fphere of With equal mind, what happens, let us bear Nor joy, nor grieve, too much for things beyon our care Dryden's Fables B. To go beyond, is to deceive ; to circumvenf Morality influences men's lives, and gives a bia to all their ations Wi Locke and humour that expof vice and folly furnifh ufeful diverfions. Raillery, under fuch regulations, unbends the mind from feverer contemplations, withou bias throwin it off fro its prope Addifor's Freeholder Thus nature gives us, let it check our pride The virtue neareft to our vice ally'd Reafon the bias turns to good or ill Pope 3. Propenfion 5 inclination A for the religion of our poet, he feem t have fome little dizs towards the opinions of Wick liff 7o Bi'as. @w. a. [from the noun. Dryden T in cline to fome fide; to balance one way to prejudice Wer I in n mor dange t b mifled b ignorance, than T am to be biafed by intereft, might give a very perfeét account Locke A defire leaning to either fide, biaffes the judgment ftrangely; by indifference for every thin but truth, you will be excited to examine., ~ #ures Bi'ss adv It feem to b ufed zdver bially in the following paffage, conformably to the French smettre une chof de binis, to give any thing a wron interpretation Every altion that hath gone before Whereo we have record trial did dra In the following paff be an adjettive Swelled on the biaffed fide i feem f s the boy This is Blow till E{;/ Bias cHiedt Outfwell the cholic of puft Aquilon R Sl‘ab.fjpearc's Troilys an Bis. #. /. A {mall piece of line Crafid put upo the breafts of children over their clothe 1 woul fain know why it fhould 0t e 4 a tafk to. write wpon a bib angd 4 'na nobl fleeves, as on the bulla and pretexsa 7o BIB w.n [bibo, Lat.] To tipple; ¢ fip; to drink frequently H A"d'fm playeth wit = Jbibbing mother M though 1;? named, " becaufe the would dyi wine without water T appeaf frowar YOE, a k mey child, they gac‘:‘;mfj; drink as often as-he cried; fo that he s con ftantly bibbing, and drank more in. twenty_foy Tii hours than I did Biex'crous. adj. [bibax, Lat.] Addige to drinking Dig Bisa'crry. n. [ [bibacites, Lat.] Th quality of drinking much Br'sBER. 7. /. [from T0 6i6.] A tippler a man that drinks often, = & Bi'BLE. 7. /. [from BiGxsos, a book ; called by way of excellence, /e Buok.] Ti facred volume in whic the revelations of God are containe ghl 0 If we pafs from th olick to the next age of the church, the primitive chriftians looked their bibles as their moft important treafure Gowernment of the Tongue We muft take heed how we accuftom ourfelye to a flight and irreverent ufe of the name of CGod and of the phrafes and exprefiions of the hol bible, which ought not to be applied upon ever flight occafion Tillotfon In queftions of natural religion, we fhould con firm and improve, or conneét our reafonings b the divine affiftance of the bible Wasts Brer1o'GrRAPHER. 7. /. [from BiCak, an yeaPuw, to write.] A man fkilled in li- - terary hiftory, and in the knowledge o B Bias and thwart, not anfwering the aim Shakefpeare's Trojlus and Crffi.da books ; a tranfcriber BierLioTHE CAL, adj. [fro Lat. Dia bibliotheca Belonging to a library [bibulus, Lat. adj Br'surous Dig Tha which has the quality of drinking moif ture; {pungy Strow'd bibulous ahove, I fee the fands The pebbly gravel next, and gutter'd rocks, Thor Bica'psvrar. adj. [bicapfularis, Lat Having the feed veflel divided into tw parts Bick. n /. The name of a colour ufe in painting gree Tak It is either green or blue bice order it as yo an do you e wa th t w i o u e a d m y blue ice of deep green adj. [biceps Brci'piTar Bicr'piTous Lat. 1. Having two heads While me believ #e.fll‘?fl?fl bicipith bicipitous C.OHfOYP‘",w".l: any fpecies, they admit a gemination of princi Brown's Vulgar Erroyrs. o parts z. It is applied to one of the mufcles the arm o ' A piece of flefh it exchanged from the blflf};j' murfcle of either party's arm. Brown's Vulg: m 7o BUCKER teft. } 1. T w. s, {bicre, Wellh, a con fkirmith battle t fight without a fe to fight off and on They fell to fuch a bickering, that he 50‘ ing, and loft his piGure halt idney I |