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Show BI T 2. To gird; to enwrap to involve 7o Bixp ‘Who hath bound the waters in a garment Proverbs Thou thalt dind this line of fcarlet thread in th Keep my commandments, and live; and m Bind them upo law, as the apple of thine eye thy fingers, write them upon the table of thine Proverbs Gather ye together firft the tares, and bind the Matthev in bundles, to bura-them 5. To cover a wound with drefings an bandages : with up compaflion on him When he \faw him, he ha Luke and went to him, and bound up his wounds with ou Having filled up the bared craniu Wifensan dreflings, we bound up the wound 6. To oblige by ftipulation, or oath If a man vo a vow, or fwear an oath, to din his foul with abond, he fhall not break his word Numbers Swear by the felemn oath that dinds the go;las ope 2. 'To oblige by duty or law; to compel to conftrain act of duty are free to. Shak the plain languag confciences mor Though I am bound to ever I am not dound to that all flave Duties exprefsly required i of Scripture, ought to ind ou than thofe which are but dubioufly inferred. #ares -8. To oblige by kindnefs with in, if th g. To confine ; to hinder reftraint be local ; with #p, if it relat to thought or adt Now I'm cabin'd, cribb'd, confin'd, boxnd i Shakefpeare To faucy doubts and fears You will fooner, by imagination, &ind a bir Bacon from f{inging, than from eating or flying Though pafiion be the moft obvious and general yetitis not the only caufe that binds up the under ftanding, and confines it, for the time, to one ob Locke ject, from which it will not be takenoftf In fuch a difmal place Where joy ne'er enters, which the fun ne'er cheers Bound in with darknefs, overfpread with damps Dryden 30. To hinder the flux of the bowels ; t make coftive Rhubarb hath manifeftly in it parts of contrar operations3 parts that purge, and parts that bin zhe body Bacon The whey of milk doth loofe, the milk dot bind Herbert 11. To reftrain The more we are bound up to an exaét narration we want more life, and fire, to animate and infor the ftory Feltor 1¢. 70 bind a book 'To put it in a cover ‘Was ever book, containing fuch vile matter So fairly bound Shakefpeare Thofe who could never read the grammar ‘When my dear volumes touch the hammer Ma think books beft, as richeft bound "13. To éind r0 one Prior 'To oblige to ferve fom Still thou art bound to vice, and fiil aflave. Dryd T contra wit an body Art_thou found to a wife, feek not to be loofed 1 Corinthians e To bind over. 'To oblige ta mak earance ap Sir Roger was ftaggered with the reports concerning this woman, and woutd have bound her ove to the county feffigp Addifon B NATED [l[f-; [fro two Wings Havin Lat. éiflu. an { e i j e i p v h € f i e a All bipen Bapih body Bire'TarLous. adj. [of bis, Lot an meranor.] A flower ‘confifting of ty L Dip leaves the gre BI'(LUA DRATE }* [ algebra. Brquapra'rick. § The, fourth power arifing from the multiplication of Three binders ftood, and took the handfuls reap Chapman From boys that gather'd quickly up {quare number or quantity by itfelf BIRCH Z7ee. n. /. [ bine, Sax. ferula, Lat. A man, with a binder, may reap an acre of whea in a day, if it ftand well ulgar Errousy, [bipedalis, tw Lat, fget,Tw havin o length feet i - E penna BUNDER. 2. /. [from T0 bind. 1. A man whofe trade it is to bind books 2. A man that binds.fheaves The leaves are like thofe of the poplar Mortimer Brozus' adj Br'pepAL mor an hop fquar larg i latte th bind Mortimer hardy the fhoots are very flender and weak 3. A fillet ; a fhred cut to bind with A double <cloth, of fuch length and breadth a the katkins are produced at remote dif member tances from the fruits, on the fame tre migh ferve to encompafs the fracture I cut fro binders each end to th Br'NDING middle, into thre Wifcman A band #. /i [from bind. age This beloved young woma the binding of his eyes bega to take of Tatler Bi'NpwEED. 2. /. [convolvulus The name of a plant Lat. BIRD Bi'~ocrEe. #. [ [from binus and ocnlus. A kind of dioptrick telefcope, fitted f with two tubes joining together in one as that a difiant objeét may be feen wit both eyes together Harris Bixo'curar. adj. [from &inus and oculus.] Having two eyes Moft animals are binocular, fpiders for the mof part oftonocular, and fome fenocular. Derbam Binvo'mrar Roor [in algebra. compofed of onl tw A roo parts, conneéte with the figns plus or minus. ~ Harris Bino'mMinous. adj. [from binus an nomen, Lat.] Having two names Bro'GraPHER z. [Bi® and ypegw. A writer of lives ; a relater not of th hiftory of nations, but of the actions o particular perfons Our Grubftreet biographers watch for the deat of a great man, like fo many undertakers, o purpofe to make a penny of him Addifon Bio'craruy In writin #. [Bi® and ypagw. the lives of men, whic is calle biography, fome authors place ‘every thing in th precife order of time when it occurred. arts Bi'ovac QYa [Fr. from awey wach, double guard by the whol German. at night performe army ; whic either at a fiege, or lying before an enemy, ever evening draws out from its tents or huts and continues all night in arms No in ufe T rewoux. Harris Br'parous adj [fro binus an pario Lat. Bringing forth two at a birth Bi'parTITE. adj. [from birus and partior, Lat.] Having two correfponden paits ; divided into two the fruit becomes a little {quamofe cone the feeds are winged, and the tree caft Miller its outer rind every year BI'RCHEN. adj. [from birch] Made o birch His beaver'd brow a birchen garland bears, Poge Bindweed is the larger and the fmaller5 the firf fort flowers in September, and the laft in June an Mortimer July Br'vouac. ) guar The fame ill habits, the fame follies too Hale. | forts are the white an bef Br'novac. If ftill thou doft retai 14. Zo bind to No ferpent, or fithes oviparous hav an fiop, at-all ; neither biped nor quadrupe d oviparous by The promifes and2 bargains for truck, betwee a Swis and an Indian, in the woods of America i perfeétl ar the thoug them t bindin ar Locke another on t referen i nature o ftat _The tw with two feet or imperial conftitutions, whic #. /. A fpecies of hops o '/ any exteriourly j.va ot been received here, do not dind Binp M ,B['PED If the land rife full of clots, and if it is abindin Thofe canons B p r i two s on making two correfpenden parts ' " [51'1 z. To make coftive 3. To be obligatory window, which thou didft let us down by. Fo/bua 4. To faften together The i a& of dividing inf i and, you muft mak ale iitt fine fine by by harrow3 in o it roker heart 1. To contract its own parts together ; t grow {tiff and hard 3. To faften to any thing ; to fix by circumvolution @. 7 7. /i [fro BrearTyTION = / Saxon. [binb, or bpud, a chicken A general term for the feaIncommon talk thered kind ; a fowl Jfowl is ufed for the larger, and bird fo the {fmaller kind of feathered animals The poor wren The moft diminutive of birds, will fight Her young, ones in her neft, againt the owl. $3ak, Sh' had all the regal makings of a queen As holy oil, Edward confeflor's crown The rod and ird of peace, and all fuch emblems Shakefpeare's Henry V1L Laid nobly on her The bird of Jove ftoop'd from his airy tour Two birds of gayeft plume before him drove. M Hence men and beafts the breath of life obta'n And birds of air, and monfters of the main, Dryd There are fome birds that are inhabitants ofth water, whofe blood is cold as fifhes, and their flef is fo like in tafte, that the fcrupuleus are allowLocke ed them on fith days T [from the noun. 7o Birp. @. catch birds 1 do invite you to-morrow morning to m houfe, to breakfaft; after we'll a birding together " Shakefpeare Br'rpBOLT 7. /i [from bird and bolt; 0 arrow.] An arrow, broad at the end, 1 be fhot at birds 1 1 on it po di fr o a u r n g To b take thofe things for irdbolss that yon deem Cat non bullets Bi'rRpCcAGE [fro # / Shakefpeare bird and cagt: An inclofure, with interftitial paces bird whic i r wick o wir o mad are kept Birdcages ta i centrifugfif forcf.ht v th pull aad tops th PA"}'Z:I'"" and ut bir [fr f Br'rpcaTcuer One that makes it his employcatch. ment to take birds A poor lark entered into a miferable expoftul tion with a &irdcatcher, that had taken her in hi net BUrBER. # catcher . L'Efl"f"{i [from &ird] A biré‘ 30 BI RMNG gyre |