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Show DO With downvard force That drove the fand along, he took his way Aund roll'd his yellow billows to the fea. Dryden 2. Declivous ; bending How to the banks, where bards departed doze Chieflefs armies doz'd out the campaign And navies yawn'd for orders on the main 79 DOZE 3. Deprefled; dejefed lowef o m downwar thoughts pulled up my heart to remember, that nothing i achieved before it be thoroughly attempted, an that lying ftill doth never go forward Sidzey Do'zEN. n. f. [ douzaine, French. number of twelve. It is feldo but on light occafions By his gates of breat ‘There lies a dowory feather, which ftirs no Did he fufpire, that light and weightlefs dow Perforc muft move Shakefpeare There be plants that have prickles, yet haw #owwny or velvet rind upon their leaves, as ftockglllyflowers and coltsfoot; which down or na coniifteth of a fubtile fpirit, in a foft fubftance Bacon's Natural Hiffory A fide breeze fro weftwar And refts in thofe high beds his downy wings Dryden 3. Soft tender Shake off this downy fleep, death's counterfeit And look on death itfelf Shakefpeare's Macbeth. The night's companion kindly cheating the Of all their cares, tam'd the rebellious ey Draz Sidn And afk no other diwury but fuch another jeft Shakefpeare ‘The king muft die, that I may make you great And give a:crown in dozvry with my love Dryden's.Spanifh Fgiar Tethys all her waves in dozory gives. Dryds Virg 2. A reward paid for a-wife An hundred of the faithlefs foe fhall flay Andfor 3 dowore a hundred forefkins pay.. Cozwley 3. A gift ; a fortune given Deoxo'rocy. n. [ [%¢: and 2y6. form of giving glory to. God Dayid breaks forth into thefe triumphant praife Blefled be the Lor Go of Ifrael who has kept me this day from fhedding blood and from avenging myfelf with my own hand South Little did Athanafius imagine, that ever it woul bav bee receive conclude their book t'!x'«:. bleffed virzin in th Chriftia church t with a doxology to God an Stil in fleer Boxy. ». /. A whore; a loofe wench When daffodils begin to purs With heigh | the doxy over the dale Z DOZE w.n Dutch. 3. To flamber [opzy Saxon daes, to fleep lightly There was no {leeping under his roof: if he Hap pened to doze a little, the jolly cobler waked hi L'Efrange 2. To live ia a fate of droufinefs; to b half afl ;ep 1¢ hus pappened to young men of the greatef wit to wafke their fpirits with anxiety and pain, far as to "IJI":‘{A apon .tbeh‘ war cagernefs of u‘j(é wall i lees. long as I am able Can I, who lov'd fo well wit to muc Dryden Dryde To part with all my blifs to fave my lover h! can I drag a wretched life without him Stith, 3. To draw contemptuoufly along, as thing unworthy to be carried. He triumphs in. St.. Auftin's opinion; and.i not only content to drag me at his.chariot-wheels but he makes a-fhew of me Stilling flets 4. To pull about with violence and igng miny They fifall furprif The ferpent, prince of r, and drag in chain Through all his realm, and there confounded leaye, Shake/p. Wilton The conftable was no fooner efpied but he wa Ditch-deliver'd by a drab. = Shakefp. Macheth Curs'd be the wretch {0 venal, and fo vain Paltry and proud as drals in Drury-lane Pope reproache wit difdainfu words beate an dragged in fo barbarous a manner, that he hardl efcaped with his life Dracuwm. n. /. [drachma, Latin. 5. To pull roughly and forcibly 1. An old Roman coin Clarendon To fall, that's juftic But then, to drag him after For to die that do prize their ho neaur At a¥crack'd drachm Swif "Tis long fince I, for my celeftial wife Loath'd by the gods, have dragg'd a ling'ring life Babe Sce here thefe movers z. 'To draw any thing burthenfome, an thing from which one cannot dife gage one's {elf 1If your worfhip will take order for the drabs an the knaves, you need not fear the bawds Denbam ta be a day that I can hold a peny I will draf it a And yet in death to conguer, is my with Shakefpeare's Macbeth Dryd 2. The eighth part of an ounce In my fatal caufe your fword was drawn The weight of my misfortunes dragg'd you down Dryden. bred in the hot countries, which grow to many yards length between the fki and flefh Dran. adj. [for dread, or the part. pafiiv of 7o dread.] 'Terrible; formidable dreadzd 70 Drac. @. 2 'To hang {o low as t trail or grate upon the ground ' DRACU'NCULUS. . /. [Latin.] A worm Thine own han and doxologies Saxon with you, I will never be filent; and this chanci That I, the fon of a dear father.murder'd Mutft, lixe a whore, unpack my heart with words And fall a curfing like a very drab ! Shak. Haml Do''wrEe. ) #. /. [douaire, Ft. It ought t Do'wry. § be written dower. 1. A portion given with a wife See I could marry this wench for this dazwre [onabbe whore ; a ftrumpet Of forrow with a {oft and dozviiy hand Dower 7 / Feh Wer )/X hile I have any ability to hold-a commerc The yawning youth, fcarce half awake, effay His lazy limbs and dozy head to raife Dryden Banquo ! Donalbain ! Malcolm ! awake Crafpaw fluggith foothing Sealing all breafts in a lethean band thruf Do'zy. adj. [from doze.] Sleepy 5 droufy Her guardian f{ylph prolong'd the balmy refts Pope Such his afpe&, when, foil'd with bloody du Dragg'd by the cords which through hi 2 A man, by aviolent fit of the gout in his limbs finds a dozinefs in his head, or a want of appetite Locke to-fill to draw heavily along Do'zinEss. #. /. [from dozy.] Sleepinefs droufinefs Little ufed waits their fail Belinda @il her dozuny pillow preft Th ufe velled a dozen miles together under them. Raleigh By putting twelve units together, we have th complex idea of a dozen Locke The number of dificnters was fomething unde a dozen with them Savift 2, Made of down or foft feathers 7o DRAG. . a. [opagan, Saxon. 1. 'T'o pull along the ground by maiy force delicate fruit, I could never find; yet I have tra Ailt New gather'd, and ambrofial fmell diffus'd Be From hence are heard she groans of ghofts, th pain Of founding lafhes, and of dragging chains. Dryda A door is faid-to drag; when, by its ill hangin on its hinges, the:bottom edge of the door rides in its fweep upon the floor. Adoxon's Miche Excrciféss Th' utmoft fand-breach they thortly fetch Whilt the drad danger does behind remain Drag. n /. [from the verb. Fairy Queen 1. A net drawn along the bottom of th DRAFE. . /. [oney, dirty, Saxon; draf Dutch, -the fediment of ale. 1. Refufe; lees; dregs: properly fomething fluid Yo woul thin I ha hundre an fift tatter'd prodigals lately come from fwinekeeping fiem eating draff and hufks Shakep. Henry IV *Twere fimple fury, fill thyfelf to waft On fuch as have no tafle To offer them:a fucfeit of pure brea Whofe appetite is dead water. On what was pure Miltor's Paradife Loff 'Here rather let me drudge, and earn my bread Till vermin, or the drrw‘"of fervile food Conlbme mes Milton's dgoniftesy Cafting nets were {pread in fhailow brooks Drags in ‘the decp, and baits were-hung on hooks. Th hand the Dryden in God's creatures are but infirument the returning our asknowledgment is juf th fam to abfurdity with theirs who burnt incenfe to the drag, and facrificed to the net Rogerse 2. An infirament with hooks to catch hol of things under water. No, give them grains.their fill Huiks, draff, to drink and fiyill Ben Fonfon T call'd and drew them thither My hell-hounds to lick up the drajf and filth, Which man's polluting fin with taint had fhe Shakefpeare's Troifus and Creffida That the Indian figs bear fuch huge leaves, o A bough of faireft fruit, that dezony fmil'd Wor Worthief 5 Ulyfies and old Neftor yoke voy 1 and make yow plough uEyt(;necw)z?i‘r}. kac eftoxn We cannot lodge and board a dozen or fourtee gentlewomen, but we keep a bawdyhoufe ftraight Shakefpeare In her hand fhe hel Dra ‘FrY. adj. [from draff. - ployed to draw Stretch'd at his eafe, their fire Silenus foun Dsz'd with his fumes, and heavy with his load Dryden Do'wny. adj. [from doava. 1. Covered with down or nap s DraFT. adj. [corrupt for draus}, He was now much decayed in his parts, an with immoderate drinking dozed in his underClarendon ftanding Two fatyrs on the ground Dryden th Pope 'To ftupify ; to dull w. a 2. Refufes fweepings, Perh Younger brothers but the draff o?naflgrbjg Pope's Dunciad They led him foft When Aurora leaves our northern fphere She lights the dowvnward heaven, and rifes there A D DR You ma in the mornin find it near-to fom fixed place, and then take it up with a drag hools, or otherwife Waltr ‘3. A kind of car drawn by the hand The drag ismade fomewhat like a low car : it Is _ufed for the carriage of timber, as':léfy then i " drawnby th J handle by two or more mén Maxon's Mechanical Exercifes Dra'GNE |