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Show CA Reftore to God his due in tithe and tim A tithe purloin'd cankers the whole eftate. Herbert 2. To infe&; to pollute moderate fortune, that is gained with honour an tha i Ca'NKERBIT. particip. adj. [from canke and 4it.] Bitten with an envenome tooth An Th Th Know, thy name is loft good fkill did much endamag By treafon's tooth baregnawn and cankerbits Shak CaA'NNABINE afi‘//' Hempen Ca'wnipavn Lat. k!'"g The cannibals themfelves eat no man's flefh o EreR e Hw;:lflc that die of themfelves Yet writers fay, as in the fweeteft bu " The eating canker dwells; fo eating lov Inhabits in the fineft wits of all Shakefpeare A huffing, fhining, flatt'ring, cringing coward, A capker worm of peace, was tais'd above him. clean.sh data import.tsv out README Dawics on Freland. CA'NNIBALLY. adv. [from cannibal the manner of a cannibal Pope 4. A kind of wild worthlefs irefe; ith dogiafesi« <i; Before Corioli, he ftotcht him an Peacham CA''NON. =. / he might have broiled.and eaten him too As with age his body uglier grows So his mind with cankers, Shakcfpeare 7. A difeafe in trees Dig. 7o Ca'NkER. @, 7, -[from the noun. 1. To grow corrupt: implying fomethin venomous and malignant That cunning architet of canker'd guile ‘Who princes late difpleafure left in bands For falfed letters, and fuborned wile. "Fairy LQueen I will lift the down-trod Mortime Or what the crofs dire looking planet fmite Or hustful worm with canker'd venom bite . i/ To fome new clime, or to thy native fky Oh friendlefs and forfaken virtue! fly The Indian air is. deadly to thee grown Deceit and casker'd malice rule thy throne Dr d Le envious jealoufy and canker''d fpit Produce my aétions to fevereft light «And tax my open day or fecret night Prior 2. To decay by fome corrofive or deftruc tive principle . Silyerin will fully and' canker more than gilding; which, if it might be corre@ed wi h a littl mixtur of gold, will be profitable .4+ To corrupt ; to corrode ¥vor. Bacon ia tioned4 themy or no His books, are almoef that they decreafe in th hi 3- The books of Holy Scripture ; or th great rule Canon" alfo denotes thofe books of Scripture ‘which'are reccived as infpired and canonical, t diftinguifh them from either profane, apocryphal or difputed books Thus we fay, that Genefis i Shakefp part of th an 4 a whol cannon weighing commonly eight thoufand pounds a half canron, five thoufandy a culverin, fou thoufand five hundred; a demi-culvering thre thoufand; which, whether it be in iron or brafs muft needs be very coftly Wilkins CanNONZSHOT 4all, Sbor an .~ which are thot from great, guns . He reckons thofe for wounds that are made bullets, although it be a cannon-fhot Su Let a cannon-bullet pafs througlllllflf';ggnsz, {élfilwuy ftrike fucceflively the two fides of the room. Locke Zo CanNoNa'DE. w. n, [from carnon. 'To play the great guns; to batter o attack with great guas ' Ayliffe A digunitary in cathedral churches. For deans and canons, or prebends,. of cathedra And longs o be a cansn there A canon ! that's a place too mean No, doétor, you fhall be a dea Two dozen canons round your fall An 'The balls ifeman' Cannon bullet facred camon'ef the Scripture churches, they were of great ufe in the church they were to be of counfel with the: bithop for hi revenue, and for his government, in caufes ecclefiaftical Bacon Swift much admires the place and aik frruments,, is extremely expenfive,, as mayrbe eafil Canvon-surreT. or provincial fynod Ayliffe Thefe were looked on as lapfed perfonsy an great feverities of penance were prefcribed them b the canons of Ancyra Stilling fleet Themaking, or price, of thefe gunpowder in [fro_ by ecclefiaftical coun dained in a general council of the church Clarendon 2. Watts €anon law is that law, which is made and or "As cannons overcharg'd with double cracks CANNON-EAL‘L_ a definition mufl ibe: peculiar an 2. The laws mad cils five ounces «He had left all the' ¢canson he had taken ‘now he fent all his great cannon to a garrifon Hobker to judg Shakefpeare proper to the thing defined {fizes the foe th ve ca o i the whole ; an ball of forty-eight pounds to a ball o So they redoubled ftrokes upo the apoftic had men €anons in logick are fuch as thefe: every par of a divifion, fingly taken, muf contaif lefs tha o bore fo th Then what fhould war be two rulers, clapped to the fide of a tree, meafurin Jjudged by the weight of their materials As high i' th' air as this unthankful king; As this ingrate and canker'd Bolingbroke. Sbah'/] to obferve them, whethe Shakef They are of fo man in ‘all men's' hearts; bothReldo tr Ac pl y 2. 1 l >20 Hok igiousne caman ons, civil no laws, are cru CA'NNIPEgs. #. /. [corrupted from cal/ipers5 which fee. the hand is" writte church had: for ever; no lefs than now, fcod boun the diftance between them. Mortimers Hufbandry [ndvs. CA'NNON. . /. [cannon, Fr. from canna I am not glad, that fuch a fore of tim Lat. a pipe, meaning a large tube. Should feek a plaifter by a contemn'd revolt, And heal th' inveterate canker of one wound | I. A great gun for battery By making many . Shakefpeared 2. A gun larger than can be managed b 6. Corrofion ;. virulence Arbutbaot on Coins truth s, they are rules and camons of th law, whic In "The fquare is taken by a pair of cannipers A rale s a la & D Th L like a carbenado,-Had he been cannibally given ‘Lo put down Richard, ;l:xét fiveet Iéve,l'y mfé And plant thAis_ tf}om, this t:a{n/eer, ‘Bolingbroke.‘ S b&ké_fjvéaré.‘ Draw a cherry with the leaf, - the fhaft 'of notch the trunk of a tree int timber than al Birtley tion of Hannibal's army Ralsigh In a war againft Semiramis, they had fou thoufand monoxyla, or cances .of one piece o Thou fhalt not eat human flefh; would not thefe have efteemed it more difficul upon the Rhone, ufed in affifting the tranfporta He bids defiance to the gaping crowd And fpent at laft, and {peechlefs, as he lies . With fiery glances mocks their rage, and dies ranville If an eleventh commandment had be en given cannibal Hie e of ca boat of one tree, called the casnoa, which the Gauls Of nature fierce, untameable, and proud It is the canker and ruin of many men's eftates which, in progefs of time, breeds a publick, poverty. . qun.. Sacrilege may prove an eating canker, and a confuming motbh, in the eftate that we leave-them ? 10 PUET Edvgerbyry Hayward hollow veflel Others made rafts of wood ;. others devifed' th Yet braves his foes, reviles, provokes, difilains 4. Any thing that corrupts or confumes $. An eating or corroding humour hunt one another; and he that hath moft ftrength § and f{wiftnefs, doth eat and devour all his fellows, OF the cannibals that each other eats The anthropopha_gi Shakifpeare The captive cannibal, oppreft with chains There be of flies, caterpillars, canker fies, an bear flies. Walton's Angler. Wafte in wild riot what your land allows There ply the early feafty and late caroufe They were little better than cannibals, who do | Canor". It was my hint to fpea " Otway, No longer live the cankers of my court; All to your feveral fates with fpeed refort n but of . fuch ;;ac (: of th I cannot but believe many a child ean tell twenon h ha idc o infi it a all ty3 long before h LY Forie ‘.1 bBarrad }72,/ b}' cutti .7 =L Spenfer Thatwhich the locaft hath left, hath the canke worm eaten Foely 1. 4 the force Di&. | Ca'~xor A word compounde z /£ An anthropophagite; and zor s noting inability ‘a man-eate And loathful idlenefs he doth deteft The capker worm of every gentle brealt [ cannabinus Give me the cups let the kettle to the trumpets fpeak trumpets'to the cannonier without cannons to the heav'ns, the heav'ns to earth Shakefpeare third was a moft excellent cannonier, whof 5 you the tyrant o'er them all waz'f Canons Rfigm'ar. ~Such as are placed i monafteries Ayliffe 6. Canons Secular. . Lay canons, who hav o l'aeen, e 1 slssef Baneng into fome chapter 7- [Among chirurgeons. ufed in fewin up wounds dm ad_mme An inftrumen Dig 18. A large fort of printing letter, probably {o' called from being firft ufed in printing a book of canons ; or perhap L fro Ty eftate an evergrow cankered with the acquifitions of raping and exaction Addifon with cancer, but to be accidentally written with a £, when it denotes bad qualities in a lefs degree; or canker migh come from cbancre, Fr. and cancer fro the Latin. 1. Aworm that preys upon and deftroy fruits ‘a fingle or canker rofe than i X reputation It .fef:"m CA'NKER. #. f. [cancer, Lat to have the {ame meaning and orlglqa dteeple 7o, CANNONA'DE, @, a. To fire upo with cannon CannNon1ERr. 7 /[ [from cannon.] 'Th engineer that manages the cannon An honeft man will enjoy himfelf better n 2. A {mall veflel in which any thing, fuc as tea or coffeeis, laid up 2. A fly that preys upon fruits Tatler W .. White lilies in full caniffers they bring With all the glories of the purple fpring. Dryden & Both armies cannonaded all the enfuing day _RE 12 A fmall batket. . A TR Ca'N18TER, 2. f [canifrum; Lat. ‘x«\"l\i CA Y Un-iiesw ws<a ‘ |