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Show ENT hat angenders thunder in his breaft Ag}r:gkeghim roar thefe accufations forth, Shake/ 1. To fwallow up any fenfe engenders thoughts, an Addifon mind It unloads th animates virtue 4. To bring forth Prior 'To be caufed be produced Dryden E'NGINE. #. /. [engin, French; ingegno Italian, 1. Any mechanical complication, in whic various movements and parts concur t one effect 2, A military machine Our fpear that hurts, our {word that wounds our foes Fairf 3. Any inftrument The fword, the arrow, the gun, with many terrible engines of death, will be well employed. Ra/eigh He takes the {ciffars, and extend The little engize on his fingers ends Pope to throw water upo Some cut the pipes, and fome the engines play And fome, more bold, mount ladders to the fire Dryden . Any means ufed to bring to pafs, or t effe¢t Ufually in an ill fenfe Prayet muft be divine and heavenly, which th devil with all his ezgizes fo violently oppofeth Duppa's Rules for Devotion 6. An agent for another In contempt They had th' efpecial engines been, to rea His fortunes up into the ftate they were Daniel ENGINE'ER. #. [. [engingnier, French. One who manages engines; one who dire€ts the artillery of an army For *tis the fport to have the engiree Hoift with his own petard Shakefpeare's Hamler Him thus enrag'd Deferying from afar, fome engineer Dext'rous to guide th' unerring charge, defign'd By one nice fhot to terminate the war Philips An author, who points his fatire at a great man is like the engineer who fignalized himfelf by thi ungenerous practice Addifon E'Nc1NERY. 2 /. [from engine. 1, 'The att of managing artillery They may defcend in mathematick tion, a.rchite&ure, enginery 2. Engines of war to fortifica or navigation. Milton artillery We faw the fo Approaching, grofs and huge, in hollow cub Training his dev'lith enginery Milton o ExcI'RD. @. 4, [from gird. circle compafs to furround To en to environ 3 to en My heart is drown'd with grief My body round engirt with mifery +For what's more miferable than difcontent? Shakefp That gold muft round engivt thefe brows of mine Shakefpeare ENGLISH adj. [engley Saxon.] = Be longing to England; theénce Englith is th language of England He hath neither Latin, French, nor Italian; an ‘you may come intc})l‘ghe %oug, a]nd fwearSt/h t I hav @ poor pennyworth in the Eng/i/h hakefpeare Of Englg% tale, the coarferg fo{t is called plfl:ifler Of parget; the finer, fpoad Wovdward. o E'NGLIsH. @, 4. [from the noun. tranflate into Englifh . The hollow inftrument terebra Piercer 'T we may engli/ Bacon We find not a word in the text can properly b #ende ed anife, which is what the Latins call anethum, and rroperly englifbed ik Brown 4o Excru't, v, 4, [englutir, French, YQL Engraves the knowledge witha beam of light. /¢ 4. [from grave. 'To bury to inhume to inter Engluts and fwallows other forrows In' feemly fort their corfes to engrave Shakefpeare 2. 'To fill Whofe grieved minds, which choler did eng/ut Againft themfelyes turning their wrathful fpight Spenfer . 'T Lives long upen the mind: the faithful fizh Hath rais'd me from my bed; nor doth the genera Take hold on me: for my particular grie glut t pamper Beingg once cng[gtlfldgvith vanity, he will firaight way loath all learning Afcham's Schoolmafter 7¢ ENGO/'RE. w. 4. [from gore. This is our engine, towers that overthrows 4. Any inftrumen burning houfes Certainly, thou art fo near the gulf Thou needs muft be englutted Shakef. Henry V How many prodigal bits have flaves and peafa.mt This night exglutted Shakefpeare's Timon t Thick clouds are fpread, and ftorms ezgenderthere It is now little ufed i Neither my place, nor ought I heard of bufinefs Vice engenders thame, and folly broods o'cr grief 90 ENcE/NDER. w. 7 EN E N to prick To pierce Not ufed As favage bull, whom two fierce maftiffs bait Whe rancour doth with rage hi onc engore Yorgets with wary ward them to await But with his dreadful horns them drives afore. Spen/ 70 ENGO'RGE a throat, gorge w. 2 [from gorge, French To fwallow; to devour t Then fraught with rancour and engorged ire That deep engorgeth all this world is preys Spenfer 70 ExGo'RGE. w. . To devour; to fee with eagernefs and voracity; to riot Greedily fhe engorg'd without reftraint To ExcraiL hail. T . a Milton's Par. Loft [from grele variegate to fpo French as wit hail. A word now ufed only in heraldry for to indent in curve lines /Eacides then fhew A long lance, and a caldron twenty hues new, engrail'd wit Chapman's Iliads Polwheel beareth a faultier engrail'd Carew ZoExcraTN. v. 2. [from grain. deep 'To di to die in grain See thou how fiefh my, flowers being fpread Dyed in lilie white and crimfon red Withleaves engrain'd in lufty green Spenfer 70 ENGRAPPLE. w. a. gfromgmpp/e. clofe with; to conten other fon had charge of them T with hold on eac There fhall young Hotfpur, witha fury led Engrapple with thy fon, as fierce as he. = Daniel now being dead And deck with dainty flowers their bridal bed. Spen Excra'vER. 2./. [from engrave. ter in ftone or other matter A cut Images are not made in the brain itfelf, as th pencil of a painter or engraver makes the images i the table, but are imprinted in 2 wonderful metho in the foul I]mfd ToEncriE'VE. w, 2. [from grieve. pain; to vex; to affliét T to difconfolate The gnawing anguifh, and fharp jealoufy Which his fad fpeech infixed in my breafl Rankled {o fore, and fefter'd inwardly That my engrieved mind could find no reft. Fairy 2 Aches, and hurts, and cords, do engrieve eithe towards rain, or towards froft Bacon's Nat. Hift To EnGRO'sS. v, a. [grofir, French. 1. To thicken to make thick But more happy he than wife Of that fea's nature did him not avif The waves thereof {o flow and fluggifh were Engrofs'd with mud He caft at once him to avenge for all Spenfer That is the gulf of greedinefs, they fay And knew not eating death Th which did them foul agriefe That every weighty thing they did upbear. Fusry 2 2. To encreafe in bulk Thoug pillars by channeling be fecmingly grofféd to our fight, yet they are truly weakened i themfelves Wottost 3. 'To fatten; to plump up Not fleeping, to czgr¢fs his idle body But praying, to enrich his watchful fou] Shakef 4. To feize in the grofs; to feize the whol of any thing If thou engroffeft all the griefs as thine Thou robb'ft me of a moiety Shakefpearz Thofe two great things that {o exgrofs the defire and defigns of both the nobler and igrobler fort o mankind ar t b wifdom and pleafure A dog a parrot foun in religion namely South or an ape Or fome worfe brute in human fhape Engrofs the fancies of the fair Swift 5. To purchafe the whole of any commodity for the fake of felling at a high price 6. To copy in a large hand Her is th' indi&ment of the good lord Haftingg Which in a fet hand fairly is engro/s'd A clerk, foredoom' Shakef his father's foul to crofs Who pens a ftanza when he thould exgrofs Pspe 7o ExcrasP. w. 4. [from grafp.] 'To ExcRro'sserR. 7z f [from engrofs. H that purchafes large quantities of an feize; to hold faft in the hand; to gripe Now 'gan Pyrocles wax as wood as he commodity, in order to feil it at a hig And him affronted with impatient might And both together fierce engrafped he Whiles Guyon ftanding by, their uncouth ftrife doe fee Spenf 70 ENGRA'VE. @, a. preter. engraved; part pafl engraved or engraven. [engraver French. 1, To piture by incifions in any matter Her ivory forehead, full of bounty brave Like a broad table, did itfelf difpread For love his lofty triumphs to'ezgrave And write the battles of his great godhead, Fairy Q O'er all, the heay'n's refulgent image fhines On cither gate were fix engraven figns Addifon Names frefh engrav'd appear'd of wits renown'd I look'd again, nor could their trace be found. Pope. 2. To mark wood or ftone Engrave the two ftones with the names Ex. xxviii. 11 3. To imprefs deeply; to imprint price ne fort of engroffers, or foreftallers, havin the feeding and fupplying this numerous body o workmen in the woollen manufactures, out of thei warehoufes, fet the price upon the poor landholder Lacke Excro'ssMENT. 2. /. [from engrefs.] Appropriation of things in the grofs; exorbitant acqurition Our thighs are pack't with wax, our moyths wit W honey bring it to the hive; and, like-the bees Are murder' for our paips Thi bitter taft Yield his engro/finents to the dying father. Shakefp Thofe held theirimmoderate engroffments of powe and favour by no other tenure than prefumption 70 Excuarp @. a [from guard. Szvift T prote®t; todefend; to furround.as guards Not ufed It will fearce feem poffible, that God fhould en- A hundred knights! yes, that on ev'ry drea grawe principles, in men's minds, in words of un- He may enguard his dotage with their POW'rs certain fignification Locke -And hold our lives at mercy Shake/. King Lear Our Saviour makes this return, fit to ‘be en7 Exua'NCE, 2. a. Lbanffer, enbaufir grave in the hearts of all promoters of charity Atterbury Sounds which addrefs the ear, are loft and di Inoug fhost hour; bug thiat whish fsikes the cye French. 1, Tolift up; to raife on high, A fenfeno obfolete 4 Bot |