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Show cH Cabl Winds over us whifper'd, flocks by us did bleat And chirp went the grafshopper under our feet Speciator #no [;Ceffovg')'@‘ clean.sh data import.tsv out README ourfelves the chitchat club Spectator Cui'rrerLinGs [ without fingular [ from ' fehyter lingh, Dut. Minfhew The tree hath a rofe flower written,. /uxgeoi daring When a man's wounds ceafe to fmart, sonl becaufe he. has loft his feeling, they are neyerthelefs mprtal, for his not feeing his need of 2 chirurgeon Sauth's Sermons CHI'VALRY knighthood Cu1ru'RGERY. n. /. [from chirurgeon. Gyneci havin Kill in chirurgery an lart i thefe days much efteemed Sidney. ‘Nature ¢ould do nothing in her cafe without th "help of chirurgery,in drying up the luxurious fleth, |« "‘and making way to pull out the rotten.bones Fairy Qu A W ifeman CurrRUR adj. Se CHIRU'RGICK GEON 1. Having qualities ufeful in outward apCHIRURGICAL, ‘plications to hurts ' / [ chevalerie Fr from' cheval, a horfe ; a 2. Relatin to the manual part of healing 3. Manual in general, confifting in -operations of the hand. - "This {fenfe [ cifean, Fr. of feiffum, Lat. ‘Thou haft {lai What fine ckife cut with a chifel To d LHIT 2. f [according to Dr. Hickes fro #ind Germ. child perhaps fro -chico, little, Span. 2. A child; a baby. Generally ufed o young perfons in contempt Thefe will appear fuch chits in ftory Anonymous >Twill turn all politicks to jeft :2. The fhoot of corn from the end of th A cant term with maltfters couche four days, will begin to fhe the chit or {prit at the root-end Mortimer's Hufbandry 3. A freckle. [from chick-peafe.] In thi fenfe it is {eldom ufed 99 Cuit. «. ». [from the noun.] T {prout ; to'fhoot at the end of the grain cant T have known barley chit in feven hours after i Mrtimer's Hufbandry had been thrown forth Lur'Tedat And Jacois was wroth, and chode with Laban z /. [corrupted by redupli cation from ¢kat.] Prattle ; idle prate | the crown holde mediatel or immediatel that are to us an fervice ceive f they parcelle for rent an ou feryices o Choice there is not, unlefs the thing which w take be fo in our power, that we might havere ou fufed it. Jf fire confume the ftable, it choofet not fo to do, becaufe the nature thereof is fuc There's no liberty like the freedom of having i at my own choice, whether'T will live to the world as they though T Cowwell Grew's Cofmologia Sacra Whether he will remove hisicontemplation fro one idea to another, is many times in his choice Locke N 3. Car fergeantry petfon, as well as ‘of the king, is called fcutagium to be good, 15 a ma of compellin in the elective a&t of the underftanding will per and is again divided into"grand or petit, J. . grea or fmall Chiwalyy that may.hold of: a commo tal contradition ; for where there is force, there ca be no choice. Whereas, all moral goudnefs-t.:onfifiet That which may hold only of the king, is properly calle L'Eftrange or to myfelf good : and thefe fervices are by Littleton divide into chiwalry and focage ''The-one is martial an military;. tie other, clownifh and ruftick Chiwalry, therefore, is a tenure of fervice, whereb the tenant is bound to perform fome noble or military office unto his lord: and is of two forts either regal, that s, fuch as may hold cnly of th fon as well as of the king ffflflkfl.'- that it can do no other their lands, fo re king; or fuch as may alfo hold of a commo between different things propofed; eléc tion z. The power of choofing; eletion by fome fervice or other; and there- freeholds Cuorce a. f. [choix, French. 1. The a& of choofing ; determinatio If you oblige me fuddealy to chufe The choice is made for I muft both refufe. Dryd Soft clocution doth thy ftyle renown Gentle or tharp, according to thy choice To laugh at follies, or to lafh at vice. Dryds Perfise heirs, called .feuda, fees, as proceeding from th benefit of the: king As the king gave to th nobles large poffeflions for this or that rent an ‘Tmperfect fhapes: .in marble fuch are feen "When the rude chife/ does the man begin. Dryden Barley Not no Geefis fore are all ou Watton™s Architetture 9o Cui'seL. @, a, [from the noun. but.i See Cuibnk Dryden Serawitium militarey of the French chevalier; tenure of land by knight's fervice. There is n lan [the old preterite from chide Cuope And by his ligh Did all the chiwalry of England mov To do brave acts Shakefpeare } _ Tatler day at the chocolate-houfe '5. The body er order of knights. - For L will kifs'her Shake[peare There is fuch' a feeming foftnefs in the {imbs _as if not a ¢chjfe/ had hewed them out of frone, bu 2 pencil had drawn and ftroaked them in oil -grain Ever fince that time, Lifander has been twice in ufe. 16, In law. FPope CHO COLATE-HOUSE. 7. /. [chocolate an houfe.] A houfe where company is entertained with chocelate whate"er elfe to chivalry belongs Could everyet cutbreath ?-Let no man mock me the beft of thef And tremble at the fea that froths below 4. An adventure; an exploit. ‘is certainly ‘muc colate in hot water three exotick liquors: its oil feems to be bot Tich, alimentary, and anodyne Arbuth. on A In fumes of burning chocolate ihall glow dexterity in arms v L Bolemnly he fwore That, bythe: faith which knights to knighthoo An Chapnhers 3. The liquor made by a folution of choChocolat He would not ceafe till he reveng'd their wrongs clean.sh data import.tsv out README An inftrument with which wood or fton " 4s pared away n 13+ The general fyftem of knighthood The cake 'or mafs, made by grindin enter the compofition of shecolate They four doing acts more dangerous, thoug ! ‘lefs famous, ‘becaufe they were but private chivalWilkins. Sidney res noe . CHUSEL7 foldiers an bor It.is.a native ofAmerica, drugs, which their Weft Indies furnith, and whic Shakefp The flow'r of Europe for his chiwalry I 'may fpeak it to my thame I have a truant been ‘to chivalyy. Shakefpeare i are contained feyers fumption of their cacao-nuts, achiot, and oth Bacon's Effays. | The chirurgical or'manaal part doth refer to th making inftruments, and exercifing particular experiments upo foldiers lour though the firft according to etymology, is no {carce foun e g promifcuoufl cucumber, an The Spaniards were the firft who brought ¢kscolate into ufe in Europe, to piomote the con 2. The qualifications of a knight ; as, va As to the chirurgical o phyfical virtues of wax it is.reckoned a mean between hot and cold Nortimer conferve the kernel of the cacao nut with othe fubftances, to be diflolved in hot water There be now, for martial encouragement, fom degrees and orders of chivalry; which, neverthelefs ar furrowed,"in which 2 .-~ The art of .curing by external applica- | egues in Liatin. . tiens. This is called fungerp. . ‘1. Knighthood ; a military dignity ¢ deepl fomewhat lik and is found in great plenty in feveral places be tween the tropicks, and grows wild. See Cocoa i faht { Miller A word now out of ufe In brave purfuit of chivalrous. emprife fhape fomewhat like almonds And poble minds of yore allied wete a_frui feeds, colleéted into an oblong heap, and fli¢ daw hood 3 kaightly; warlike ; adventurous of a great numbe of petals, from whofe empalement arifes the pointal being a tube eut into many parts, which become x#ies the hand, and coyor, work.] @ne iICur'rry. adj. - [from ¢chit.] Childifh that cures ailments, not by interna like a baby medicines, but outward "applications. Cur'varrous. edj. [from chiwalry.] Ret 1s now generally pronounced, and b | Jlating to: chivalry, or errant knightmany Span 1. The nut of the cacao tree from kutteln, Germ. Stizner.) The guts the bowels. | Skinner fro 2048, green z /. [fro The green-ficknefs 7o Cuoax.'' See CHoge.- CHO'COLATE. n. [ [chocolate 1 ain a member of a female fociety, who call Cu1'reer. 7 /. [from chirp.] One tha chirps § one that is cheerful %o CHIRRE, w. z. [cecan, Sax.] Se Cuurme. To coo as a pigeon. Funius CHIRU'RGEON Curoro'sis idle talk. A werd only ufed in ludicrous converfation in choofing 5 curiofity of diftinc tion Julius Crefar did rite a colletion of apoph thegms it is pity his boo is loft; for I imagin and choice| they were colle@ed with judgmen i s Bacon's Apaphtbegns s el psihe 7. It ought properly to be written che- | walry. It 1s a word mot much ufed, but' 4+ The thing chofen ; the thing taken, o - approved, in preference to others | inold poems or romances y beau a birt i ric f no i choic You Cui'ves. n f. [cive, Fr. Skinner. Shakefpeart That you might well enjoy her 1. The threads or filaments rifing in Take to thee, from among the cherubim, flowers with feeds at the end Th mafculine or prolific feed contained in th chimes or apices of the famina, Ray on the Creations | 2. A fpecies of fmall onion,"" ~ Skinner choice of flaming warriours Milton's Paradife L"fi - voice he exal fam le faid, fh Mar 'Now Th Nor let thy conquefts only be, her chaicee.. . Prio 5. Th |