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Show GUF C U of, is only rated off and cudgelled for all his court Clapping farces ated by the court Th ee duels he fought, thrice venturld his life Went home, and'was cadgell'd again by his wife Savift - Cudgel thy brains no moye about it for | you dull.ats willnot mend his pace with beating _Sbakefpeare's Hamlet TS pany of young fellows were cudgelling a walnut- tree CupGEL-PROOF adj L'Effran Cu'pLE Afmall fea-fith # / Cu''pWEED. 7. /. [from cud and aweed.[ Cuk. n. /. [queue, a tail, French. 1. The tail or end of any thing; as, th long curl ofa wig .. . . 2. 'The laft words of a fpeech, which th :‘: . Pyramus yo your fpeech enter int begin tha one according to his cue whe : doi oSiig i An -his turn Hold your hands | at arms ) the audience of his party o feen, Rymer's Tragedies of the laft Age . /. [Spanifh. -.'To be i cuerpo, is:to be:without the upper coa or cloke, fo as to difcover the true fhap of the cuerpo or'body. s & o Expos'd in cuerpo to their rage Without'my arms and equipage. ~ Hudibras CUFF n ). [zuffa, a battle fight, Ttal.] =" uffare, t ft let fall the book And as he ftoop'd again to take it up The mad-brain'd bridegroom took him fuch'a cxf fThat down fell prieft and book; and book "an prieftd < Shakefpeare There was no money bid for argument, unlef t.he,xpogt and the player went to cuffs in the quefLIR Shake[peare < He gave her a cuff onthe ear, and fhe woul prick him with her knitting-needle Arbuthnot's Fobn Bull ‘Their own feéts, which now lie dormant, woul be foon at caffs again' with each other about powe and p'rcferment. s B Sawift 2. Itisufed of birds that fight with thei 7o Curr $i20 s @. z [from the noun.] T fight; tofcuffle L with profit With humble duty, and officious hafte Locke T'll cu/] the fartheft mead for thy repaft Prior Popé CU'LLION And makes a god of fuch a cullion Shakifpeare's Taming of the Shrew Up to the breach, you dogs; avaunt, you cz//iors Cu'ruroNLn¥.adj ing the qualitie < Dryden's Zneid But what had our author to' wound Aneas wit at fo critical a time And how cam the cuifbe to be worfe tempered than the reft of his armodr Cu'LpEeEs n in Scotland Cu'LERAGE Cu'LiNaRY to th Great weight may condenfe thofe vapours an exhalations, as foon as they fhall at any time begi T | « Her goodly bofomy like a ftrawberry bed Her neck, like to a bunch of cwllumbines. Spenfer CULLY from the fun, and make them prefentl again into him, and by that action inheat; much after the manner that, i the air increafes thé heat of a culinar Neavton thofe: who, by ' reafo of'thei norther #n. / [coglione Ital. a fool. .man deceived or impofed upon fharpers, or a ftraumpet as b Why fhould you, whofe mother-wit Are furnifh'd with all perquifites B' allow'd to put all tricks upo Re M:ller blue, purple, red, and white Ainfaworth kitchen ; relating to th art of cookery to afcen fall bac creafe hi our -earth fire Cu'LLUMEBINE. . /. [more properly fpelt The flowers of thi . Corumsiine. ' plant are beautifully variegated wit Monk adj. [culina, Latin.]. Shake[peare's King Lear . yo whorefon, cullionly, barber-monger, draw 7, /. The fame plant wit ARSE-SMART - latin Dryden [colidei, Lat. [from cullion.] Havof a cullion ; mean P'll make a fop o> th' moonthine of you With filver plated, and with duétile gold Shakefpeare bafe Shake[peare's Henry IV It feems to imthan folly.] Such a one as leaves a gentieman His cuifbes on his thighs, gallantly arm'd Rife from the ground like a feather'd Mercury Of wh On 7. /. [coglione, a fool, Ital. o perhaps from feullion port. meannefs rathe 1 faw young Harry, with his beaver on cxll. Cvu'rLEr. n f. [fro picks or choofes fcoundrel ; a mean wretch . The croflet fome, and fome the cxifbes mould 1. A blow with the £ 2 box; a firoke, oy . .. The pri talons that covers the thighs ¢#// out'the heavier, and melt them dow The various off'rings of the world appear From each fhe nicely cu//s with curious toil | And decks the goddefs with the glitt'ring fpoil The field, all iron, caft a gleaming brown . Humour ; temper of mind ; a low word. | Cyi6H. 2. [0 [cuiffe, French.] The armou CUERPO ‘are of different weights, then the trader in mone a foldier in armour. The pi€ture of St. George, wherein he is deferibed like a cuiraffier," or horfeman completel ; armed; is rather a fymbolical image than any pro. | per ' figure Brown's Vulgar Errours tleman : nothing appears:in hiscze to move pity orany way mak natio Milton Shakefpeare's Othello a much more taking gen the current pieces of the fame denomii Whe Cuiraffiers, all in fteel, for ffanding fight Were it my: cze to fight, I {hould have known i Dryden's Virgil | Nor wanted clouds of foot, nor on each hor Both you of my inclining, and the reft Without a prompter Neither is Otto her Dryden Howel's Parley of Beafis of rhetorick thou would' cull D/')‘i Truft nature, do not labour to be dull From his berd he culls For flaughter, four the faireft of his bulls n, /. [cogfe; French.] Part of th fign'd his bofom with a purple dint falfe flow'r Whe Dryden's Aineid Curra'ssiEr. 7. /. [from cuirafs.] A ma The part which any man is to play i Bai as it were, thi charter was extraéted gran Cur'nacs. # /. The making up of twin % cwlled laws, bein Norma an He railed at fops 5 and, inftead of the commo fathion, he would vifit his miftrefs in a mornin gown band, fhort cuffs, and a peaked beard Arbuthot an intimation; -a fhort direc hs This feem into fuch forms, as it is commonly fram. 'What 's Hecuba torhim, or he to Hecuba That he fhould weep for her.? What would he do ed into for carriage to other places Fad he the motive and the cze for paflio Cowell That I have? He would drown the ftage with tears CUIRASS. #. /. [cuiraffe, Fr. from cuir Shakefpeare leather ; coraccia, 1tal. A breaftplate Let him know how many fervants there arey o ‘The lance purfued the voice without delay both fexes, who expeé vails; and give them their i And pierc'd his cuirafs, with fuch fury fent eue to'attend in two lines; as'he leaves the houfe V fleeve fpoke and fo ever tion anshiga Shakefpeare's Midfummer Night's Dream 3. Ahint I do remember an apothecar In tatter'd weeds, with overwhelming brows Culling of fimples Shakefpeare's Romeo and Julict ‘Thenin a moment fortune thall cu// forth Out of one fide, her happy minion. Shak. K. Fehr The choiceft of the Britith, the Roman, Saxon euff the cliffs with pinions not their own CurF you hav brake Shakefpearc heney Hov'ringabout the coaffs, they make their moan, i An player, who is to anfwer, catches, an regards'as intimation to begin Thofelazy owls, who, perch'd near fortune's top 3. 'To firike with the wings | improper had being culled outin their flocks an the keeping, the altar of Gad Our engincs fhall be ben Againft the brows of this refifting town 3 Call for our chiefeft men of difcipline T6 cull the plots of beft advantage. Skak. K. FobnLike the bee, calling from ev'ry flow'r QOayr thighs are packt with wax, our mouths wit ! And cuff'd the tender chickens from their food Dryden Miller I' French. Hogker | Who; fafe in numbers, cyff the noble bird. Dryden They with their quills did all the hurt they cou'd Carezw "pla.nt I'll after him again, and beat him,m- { ==-Do, cuff him foundly ; but never draw th ! fword Shakefpeare | With her loud kaws her craven kind does bring ~Of round fifhl there aie britt, fprat, cudles, ecls [cucillir The beft of every thifng the for themfelves, if there wer poor difeafed thing not wort thought it good enough for th To nobler heights, and make the grove harnsoniSy ugaa Otavay | ~£Thedaftard crow) that to the wood made wing @. a rye felet from others ; to pick out of many | Sit only watchful with their heavy wing To cuff down new-fledg'd virtues, that would rif " His doublet was of fturdy buff b And though not {word, yet cudgel-proofs Hudibras Arbutknot CULL ‘T'o firike with the fit I wlbe basd wi dens ftick. 2. To ftrike with the talons to refift Abl manufaéture Wete not you, my friend, abufed, and cuffed, an i kicked Congrewe's Old Bachelor to pafs by, as a comA good woman happene and afked them what they did that for of culinary fires, it will reduce the price of thei Dryden's Fuvenal 90 'CoFr. . 4 . 2.-To beat in general. .» ‘While the peers'cuff to make the rabble fport South $ e\ i thip { Our cully fex,'and we ufe none Hudibras Ye®therich dullies may their boafting {pare ' They'purchafe but fophifticated ware Drydet He takes it in mighty dudgeon, becaufe I won' let him make me over by deed as his lawful cufy Arbuthbnot 7o Cu'Lry . a. [from the noun. befool ; to cheat _ to impofe upon totrick ; to deceiv CurMi‘PEROUS, adj ~ expofition; will be flill forced ra'be at the expence § T [cwlmu and fero Latin, Colmifarou |