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Show So venomoufly, that burning thame detains hi Shakefpeare From his Cordelia 1 had a glimpfe of him ; but he fhot by m Like a young hound upon a burning {cent. Dryden Burw. #. /. [fro caufed by fire the verb. hur [from durn. 3. To break away; to {pring You burft, ah cruel Harris re buste fro it Ini worlds inclos'd fhould on his fenfes burff He would abhorrent turn Bu'rRREL Fly. [from bourreler, Fr. to exe. cute, to torture.] An infed, called alf oxflyy gadbee, or breeze Fire Well didft thou, Richard, to fupprefs thy voice For had the paflions of thy heart busft out Di& 1 fear we fhould have feen decypher'd ther More ranc'rous fpite Shakefpeave Where is the notable paffage over the river Eu lets, nails, ftones, pieces of old iron &Jec. putinto cafes, to be difcharged ou flame; ftate of inflammation The mind furely, of itfelf, can feel none of th phrates, burfling out by the vailies of the mountai Antitaurus; fro tamia of the ordnance ; a fort of cafefhot South or on dry, to dwell Is all the fad variety of hell Dryden Bu'rrock. . /i A {fmall wear or dam Bu'rNING-GLASS. 7 £ [from burning and where wheels are laid in a river fo glafs.] A glafs which colles the ray catching of fith Phi ips of the fun into a narrow compafs, and { B r o Be c Bu g BurcH. Z increafes their force [derived from the Saxon bung, bynz, The appetite of her eye did feem to fcorch ‘'m city, tower, or caftle. Gidfon's Camden. up likea burning-glafs Shakefpeare Love is of the nature of a burning-glafs, which T. A corporaté town, that is not a city deept ftill in one place, fireth; changed often, i but fuch as fends burgefles to the pardoth nothing Suckling li me t Al places that, in forme O diadem, thou centre of ambition were fenced or fortified To BURNISH. w. a. [burnir, F polifh; to give a glofs to Deyden Miflike me not for my complexion The fhadow'd livery of the burnifp'd fun Towhom'T am a neighbour, and near bred Shakefpeare Make a plate of them, and bursifbit as they d 70 BursT glofly I've feen a frake in human form AllMfain'd with infamy and vice LeapYrom the dunghill in a trice Saift I will break his yoke from off thy neck, and wil burft thy bonds Fere xxx. 8 Mofes faith alfo, the fountains of the great abyf were burft alunder, to make the deluge; and wha means this abyfs, and the burfling of it, if reftrain ed to Judea? what appearance is there of this difruption there Burnet's Theory If the juices of an animal body were, fo as b the mixture of the oppofites, to caufe an ebullition th they would dus/? the veffels T Since T was man Suzh fheets of fire, Tuch éurf of horrid thunder Some firew fand among their corn, which, the fay, prevents mice and rats burrowing in it3 becaufe of "its falling into their ears Mortimer Little finufes would form, and durroww underneath Sharp Such groans of roaring wind and rain, I neve Remember to have heard Dryden Mrs. Primley's great belly fhe may lace dow before, but it burnifpes on her hips Congreve Bu'rnisner. n /. [from burnifp. 1. The perfon that burnithes or polifhes /2. 'The tool with ‘which bookbinders giv a glofs'to theleaves of books : it is commonly a dog's tooth fet in a ftick Burw! particip. paffi of burn': applie -to liquors, it mieans made hot. VoL T BursE #. / [éomfi Fr burfa Lat Shakefpear Dowan they came, and dre The whole roof after.them, with burf? of thunder Upon the beads of all Milrou Bu'rsar. n. /i [burfarius, Lat. To Bu'rn1su. @. u [of uncertain ety1. The treafurer of a college mology.] To gtow ; to fpread out 2 St de t fen a ex ibitioners to th This they could do, while Saturn fill'd ‘th | univerfities in Scotland by each prefbythrone Ere Juno burnift'd, or young Jove was grown | tery, from whom they havea fmall year Dryden. . ly allewance for four years To fhoot, and fpread, and burnif into man Arbutbnot BursT. 2 /. [from the verb. A fudde difruption ; a fudden and violent actio of any kind Shakef make holes in the ground ; to mire, a conies or rabbits o Bu'rwisH. v. . To grow bright o t But I'will chaftife this high-minded ftrumpet Shakefpeare He faften'd on my neck, and bellow'd out As if he would burff heav'n Skake[peare man in blood, they will out of their 2usrows, lik 7o Bu'rRrOW, v, 7. [from the noun. To break fuddenly My breaft I'll burf# with ftraining of my courage And from my fhoulders crack my arms afunder 2. The holes made in the ground by coni;:as conies after rain, and revel all with him . 2 make a quick and violent difruption emple iron Bacon ‘The frame of durnifp'd ftecl, that caft a glar From fary and feem'd to thaw the freczing air Dryden Burniffy and make a gaudy fhow __+ Become a gen'raly, peer, and beau She burf? into tears, and wrung her hands Arbuthnot Cowell When they fhall fee his creft up again; an begi 6. To begin an action violently or fuddenly King of England fhalt thou be proclaim' In ev'ry burrow, as we pafs along Shakefpear. Pofleflion of land was the original right of elec tion among the commotis; and burrowws were entitled to fit, as they were poffe(led ofcertaianra&}s part of the Perfian kingdom T homfin days, were called boroughs, were fuch a As if thou wert the burning<glafs of glory the whence the plains of Mefopo to open themfelves Kinolles Young fpring protrudes the burfling gems Harris Where all its different lines are reconcil'd T homfon 5. To come with violence Bu'rrEL Shor. [from bourreler, to execute, and fboz.| In gunnery, fmall bul Skakefpeare Pope A refoived viilain Whofe bowels fuddenly burf? out; the kin ¥et fpeaks, and peradventure may recover. Shak If the world Harris pear 4. To come (uddenly 7./. A fort of pear, otherwif th from my arms And f{wiftly thoot along the Mall Or foftly glide by the Canal {mooth, delicious, and foft pulp. Philips Th burnings of a fever In liquid burnings calle The freckled cowllip, burnety and green clover 7 drawn up by a rope faftened to the middle of it; called alfo a dilge pump Bu'rrEL The even mead, that erft brought fweetly fort Buv'rNiNe Vet am I thankful5 if my heart were great *T'would bu;fl at this Shatefpeare ing powders in, as vitriol, precipitate A perfo that burns any thing Bu'rNET. n. [ [pimpinella, Lat. name of a plant. at the end, which i i Bu'rRras Pipe. [With furgeons. An in ftrament or veflel ufed to keep corrod We fee the phlegmy of vitriol is a very effectua remedy againt burns Boyle Bu'rRNER. 7. /. {from burz. of woo z. To fly afunder Imprifon'd fires, in the clofe dungéons pent Roar to get loofe, and ftruggle for a ven Eating their way, and undermining all Till with a mighty 4z whole mountains fatl BursT Burstewn. Addifon particip, adj. [from lurf. Difeafed with a hernia, o rupture | purfe; or from éyr/a, Lat. the exBu'rsTENNESS [from durf.] A rupchange of Carthage. An exchang ture, or hernia where merchants meet, and fhops are kept; {o called, becaufe the fign of the Bu'RsTWORT. 7. £. [from burff and wors herniaria, Latin.] An herb good againt purfe was anciently fet over fuch a place ruptures The exchange in the Strand was terme Dia Britain's Burfe by James 1 Philips, BurT. 7./. A flat fith of the turbot kind Zo BURST @i n. I &urft To BU'RTHEN, @. a Bu'RTHER, 7 / T have burft or burften. [bunyean, Saxon. e s i Thefe things fting him a ftaff feve Vehement ; powerful Bufting with kindly rupture, forch difclos' The callow young Milton or eight feet long is put, having a bur or kno egg, that foo Th L the participle.] Fob 1t is ready to busf? like new bottles RU fide of a fhip, into whic Prov.iii. 10 prefies fhall burf# out with new wise ‘Burr Pump, [In a fhip.] A pump by th She burns, ihe raves, fhe dies, 'tis true ' But burns, and raves, and dies, for you. //ddxfi So thall thy barns be filled with plenty, and thi King Dikt ©. It is ufed particularly of love difruption {Burwr. #. /[ The lobe or lap of the ear The groan ftill deepens, and the combat burns Pope adgj. [fro to a grave Burrr cliret firft, or Naples bifeuit, gave The nations bleed where'er her fteps fhe turns Bu'rNING to refreth th® attendant EA. ae I Who " tion t. T'o break, of fly open ; to fuffer a violen 1 find it very difficult to Krow W RRLN £ o be in 4 flate of deffra@ive eommo- BU 3 BU 67 BU s Ga Sacre |