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Show --7 GR EM EM Buch wete the features of her heav'aly face - %er limbs were form'd with fuch harmonious grace §o faultlefs was the frame, as if the whol 1 T That beam on earth, eac Each art he prompts 2. To ftop; to hinde block up Pope She Ayliffe's Parergon EmBa'Rco, n. f Arbuthnot EMaxncipa'tioN, n /i [from emancipate. put to trade flavery hope of emancipation Glanville's Scepfis o ErMa'RcINATE. v. @ [margo, Latin. clean.sh data import.tsv out README To take away the margin or edge of an From wars and from affairs of ftate abftain Dryd Dangerous principles impofe upon our underftandings, emaftulate our fpirits, and fpoil our temper 2, 'T EmascuLA'TION, 7. /i [from emafculate. 1. Caftration 2. Effeminacy womanit qualities manly f{oftnefs To EMBA'LE. . 4. [emballer, French. . To make up into a bundle 3. To bindup; to inclofe Below her ham her weed did fomewha Embalm me Vexfe embalm rhymes virtue and tomb 1 have no fervice or ignoble end in m one as being honey in the mouth gall or gravel in the belly Bacon's Natural Hiftoy too ftrongl Joy of my life, full oft for loving yo I blels my lot; thatavas fo-Jucky plag'd de emlattic Shakefp return T be ranged i to wafh Not ufed His cruel {por For in her ftreaming blood he did emda His little hands, and tender joints embrew, Fairy Q Everyidenfe the ‘humour Tweet embay'd And, {lumb'ring {oft, my heart did ffeal away Lairy Queer 2. [From bay. ‘Toinclofe in'a bay; t land lock 1t that the Turkifh flee Be not infhelter''d and embay'd, they're drown'd Shakefp never turns t to vilify 7 In her lap a little babe did pla prefen South French. 1. To bathe; to wet Bacon A pleafure high, rational fure embafed with no appendant fting; ‘but fuc 2, To degrade ar other he To EMBA'Y. v, g, [from baigner, to bathe King Charles and angelical; a plea The Romans were not fo good embalmers as th a thoufan The nigh Is fhiny, and they fay we fhall emdartl By the {econd hour of the morn Shakefpeare embafed fiexiblencls fhall be forced to bend Empa'Lmer. 2 [ [from embalm.] On "that pracifes the art of embalming an preferving bodies clean.sh data import.tsv out README Egyptians, fo the body was utterly confumed turne I will rather chufe to wear a crown of thorns than to exchange that of gold for one of lead, whof ‘Mufe! at that name thy facred forrows fhed Thofe ‘tears eternal that embalm the dead, Pope no 7o EMBA'TTLE battle array labour, which may, on either fide, reftrain or embafe the freedom of my poor judgment Wotton Donne an And overwhelm the war Miltor's Par, Loff Embattl'd nations frive in vai The hero's glory to reftrain Streams arm'd with rocks, and mountains red with fire In vain againtt his force confpire Prior fo that the virtue of the fee the ground or thrones o whic againft me 1s not worn out; whereas in a tree it is embafed b Preferve frail tranfitory fame as muc 45 fpice doth bodies from corrupt wir's touch fences To EMBA'sE, @, @. [from baf. 1. To vitiate; to depauperate; to lower to deprave; to impair What you were, and teach them t'urge towards fuch 'f Englith are enbartled her marriage-vow Speét Grains are annual Shakefp. Rich. 1 To horfe! you gallant princes, ftrait to horfe! Shak X could drive her from the ward of her reputation run through it without embarra/finent, and take clear view of the whol Watts's Logick Shakefpeare. 1 would fhew future time Th Let your method be plain, that your hearers ma and daughter to a king, inter me If dead, ho Sidney 7o EMBA'TTLE. v, @. [from barle. range 1n order or array of battle EMBA'RRASSMENT. 7 /. [from embarrafs. Perplexity; entanglement taight And am I latt that know it A. Phillips away Then lay me forth; although unqueen'd, yet lik (A queen 1 faw my friend a little embarraffed, an thut it may refif ho Nimble mifchance, that artfo lizht of foot Doth not thy emba/fage belong to me To EMBA'RRAS. @.a. [embaraffer, French. To perplex; to diftrefs; to entangle, train bird On their embarzP'd ranks the wave 2. To engage in any affair To EmBa'LM. w. a. [embaumer, French embalfumer, Spanifh.] To impregnate putrefattion fay, If a liv made engage another in any affair And her ftraight legs moft bravely were embal' -In golden bufkins of.coftly cordwain. Fairy Queen ‘body with aromaticks Dryd I fhould with fpeed emdark And with their embafly retura to Greece un Taylor A bird was made fly with fuch art to carry a written embaffage among the ladies, that one migh 7o EMBA'RK. 2. 7 1. To go on fhipboard Collier a chofen ban 3. An errand in an ironical fenfe The king had provided a good fleet, and ha caufed a body of three thoufand foot to be embarke on thofe fhips Clarendon Straight to the fhips Zneas took his way Embark'd his men, and {kim'd along the fea Dryden's Zn 2, To effeminate; to weaken; to vitiate b Coriolanus. folemn fo treat an Hemry V1I He fends the argels on embaffies with his decrees Of mankind, fo numerous late All left, in one fmall bottom fwam embard'd Milton Graunt friends, hereafter 2. Any folemn meflage To EMBA'RK. v. a. [embarguer, French, 1, To put on fhipboard hinder the increafe 7/i [Tt may be obferved that though our authour He firlt commiffions to the Latian lan In threat'ning emba/fy Dryden's Zn Wotron for the embargo which was laid upon it ‘one ram will ferve, we may geld nineteen, or thereabouts; for if you emafculare but ten, you fhall, b E'MBAssacE. E'MBassy 'l‘}xe peace polluted thus I was not much concerned, in my own particular When it is found how many ews, fuppofe twenty there did fucceed the action of Rheez Tv EMA'SCULATE. w. a. [emafiuls, Latin. ». To caftrate; fo deprive of virility Garth's Ovid Will I lend ear to Soakefp When he was at Newcaftle he fent' baffage unto James king of Scotland conclude a peace with him Bacon' of Bourdeaux, and other points of fovereign affront Dic And to the bright emba/fadrefs replics Erefh entbaffy and fuits He knew that the fubje@s of Flanders drew f great commodity from the trade of England, as b embargo they would foon wax weary of Perkin Bacon's Henry VII After an embargo of our trading fhips in the rive Obftinacy in opinions holds the dogmatift in th matron lifts her eyes Nor from the ftate nor privat [embargar, Spanifh. fent o ing bufinefs between princes or flates prohibition to pafs; in commerce, a fto The a& of fetting free; deliverance fro A woma yet there is fcarcely an example of axbaffy, all concurring to write exmbafy. 1. A publick meflage; a meffage concern 2. The a& of going on thipboard They emancipated themfelves from dependence Women emafculate a monarch's reign for whofe lofs we have lamented thus The French gentlemen were very folicitous fo the embarcation of the anny, and for the departur of the fleet Clarendon the inteftate fucceffion of their parents that were i the parents power, excluded all emancipated chil Empa'ssapress. 2 / a public meffage write almoft indifcriminately embaffado or :zmérfl}z'a'ar, embaffage or (17///5117;1(;'{‘ EmsarcarioNn. = /i [from embark. I, The aét of putting on fhipboard By the twelve tables, only thofe were called unt unmanly {oftnefs Mighty Jove's embaffador appear' With-the fame meffage Denbarm Myfelf, my king's embaffadsr, will go. Diyden With fear the modef Would work more fully and pow'rfully on us. Donre Brown by prohibition; t Embar''d, and all this traffick quite forgot Having received the probable inducements o truth, we become emancipated from teftimonial en promifcuous copulation Fairfax further trade for the future Bacon's Hénry VII If this commerce 'twixt heav'n and earth were no reftore to liberty thing Spenfer Tranflating the mart unto Calais, he embared al Di& Iffuing from another. o EMA/NCIPATE. w. a, [emancipo, Latin. To fet free from {ervitpde; t chains of error, withou EmBa'ssapor. 7. /; [See AMBAssaDOUR. One fent on a publick meffage His fpirits pure were fubjek to our fight Ema'NaTivE, adi. [from emans, Latin. dgen That are fo much by {o mean love embas'd, Spenfer thrall In form of airy members fair embar' each charm he can create gagefnents . But then the more your own mithap I rue 6flfu He has them now four years befieg'd to make the virtue he infpires Whate'er he gives, are giv'n for you to hate. [fi'o Where faft embar'd in mighty brazen wall Pope Each emanation of his fire Themfelves for fear into his jaws to fall He forc'd to caftle ftrong to take their fligh The letters, every judge will fee, were by n means efforts of the genius, but emarations of th heart U 1. 'To fhut; to enclofe Dryd F1ad been an emanation of the foul EN'BA'R To EMBE'LLISH. w. a. [embellir, French.] "To adorn; to beautify; to grace wit ornaments t decorate How much more beauteous had the fountain hee Embellifb'd with her firft created green Where cryftal ftreams through living turf had run Contented with an urn of native ftone. Dryd. Faew The names of the figures that emdel/i/bed th 4 difcourfe |