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Show GA GA Others fought themfelves a name by being his Fel but failed of their purppuorpofe yi nfaying gainfaa ,'?Ggmés.'r. prep i (G arNsT. 1 Tremble, ye nations If there be nothing elfe between Men doubt, becaufe they ftand fo thick import.tsv th' iky 1f thofe be ftars that paint the galaxy who W fecure before W ma f o for th ?z nfi ga dut ren rev o fwor Sidney to drefs fine adj. [geppan GAIRISH fplendid ~ Saxon. 1, Gaudy ; fhowy Afcham Shake/p monkfhood Lairy Queen Hubb Tale 3 The manner and air of walking reroes Shakefpeare which he preferve in hi Leviathan Wallowing, unwieldy, enormous in their gaiz. Miltorn d s e 1 deferib' for its fuppofed bitternefs his Way Gir l r n /, A fliepherd's clog in ufe Com . / medicinal root [galange ~Milton French. No ‘A honey tongue, a heart of ga/l Is fancy's fpring Thi termin of th thicknef l\]ger; a brownifh red colour Pungent o a mar' abl The larger galangal is in pieces,- abou Cleaveland fweeter Th concord the altar thei i moft proverb implies an ‘wha unétuou guftmuf one drop of the gal Arbuthnot on Diet marrie did caf couple a teftimon o the ga// of the facrific futur behin Brown 3. Any thing extremely bitter Thither write, my queen And with mine eyes D'l drink the words you fend Shakefp. Cymbeline Though ink be made of gall Poifon be their drink gn the. galaxy Milton's Paradife Lof? drown, for which heaven would difban e galaxyy and fars be tann'd a errour vulga 2. The part which contains the bile "‘\ibroad and ample road, whofe duft is gold iy pavement ftars, as ftars to thee appear bitter the ga/ us o inform Boerhaave has given atatim of an eel with fuccefs extremely hot an l}[EhA XY. n. [ [varekiz; galaxie, Fr. e milky way; a ftream of light in th Ky, confifting of many fmall ffars Malpighi Gall, worfe than gald, the daintieft meat they tafte Shatke/peare beareth ga//s Bacon's Natura in his treatif of ga//s oak iflory unde which name he com-prehends all preternatura and morbof excrefcences demonftrate tha all fuc excrefcen ces, where any infeéts are found, are excited b fome venenofe liquor, which, together with thei eggs, fuch infe@ts fhed Ray on the Creation The Aleppo ga/ls, wherewith we make ink, ar no other than cafes of infets them whic ar bred i Derbam To GALL. w. a. [galer, French. 1. To hurt by fretting the fkin I'll ‘touch my poin With this contagion, that, if I ge// him flightly It may be death Shakefp. Hamlet His yoke is eafy, when by us embrac'd But load and ga//s if on our necks 'tis caft Denbham Shakefpeare arvey needs partake of a {weet favour Gall is the greateft refolvent of curdled miik littl o inches or more in length, and an inch in thick- nefs: 1ts colour is brown, with a faint caft of re I At: it has a difagreeable, but much lefs acri and pungent tate Hill pofitio but forrow's tall 1t's as bitteras ga// ; whereas there's nothin The lefler galangal is in pieces, about an inc gr two long woman's breaft And take my milk for gz//, you murthering minifShakefpeare ters My heart-blood is well nigh frorne, I feel - And g galage grown fat to my heel. = Spenfer GAL.A'N_GAL to m the oa apples, and oak-nuts an GALL. #. /. [zeala, Saxon ;. ga/le, Dutch, 1. The bile, an animal juice remarkabl Bent all on fpeed, and mark'd his airy, gai Befides the acorns galiots, who, landing their men, were valiantly encountered, and forced again to their galiots Knolles's Hiffory And fierce demeanour, feems the prince of hell Milton not produce galls in cold countries: but this obfervation fhall be confined to the medicinal gall for all thofe excrefcencies which we call oak apples, oak-grapes, and oak-cones, are true galls Hill though lefs firm in their texture thirt wit Barbaroffa fent two notable pyrate that the oak doe obferved It has bee within Difz ers, with one man to eachr oar hole found in the gall; and where no hole is-feen the maggot, or its remains, are fure to be foun or twenty feats for the row has fixtee Clarendon A third, who, by his gai b winged ftate, gnaws its way out, as appears from th patte thre fail and row can bot I o tw an maft on ba Great Juno comes ; I know her by her gait is thus defended from all injuries. This tumou alfo ferves for the food of the tender maggot, produced from the egg, which, as foon as it is in it galerus [fro egg th wher mour or woody cafe about the hole Covered as with a hat Latin. He had in his perfon, in his afpec, the appear Latin. adj GALERUCULATE are light, ofte the furfaces fpongy, and cavernous within, and always of They have a lefs auftere tafte, an lax texture are of much lefs value than the firft fort, Th general hiftory of galls is this: An infe¢t of th fly kind wounds the branches of the trees, and i the hole depofites her egg: the lacerated veflel of the tree difcharging their contents, form a tu Addifon very flight and fit for chafe. . It carrie gait and motion perfeétly fmoot Milton Miiton Thou art fo lean and meagre waxen late ance ‘of a great man ture, and a difagreeable, acerb, and aftringent tafte The European gall/s are of the fame fize, wit Such plants as bear 2. [In botany. flower refembling an helmet, as th walk of a very firm tex tubercles on theirfurface wit A litGa'viot. #. /. [galiotte, French. tle galley or fort of brigantine, buil We have Orienta only are ufed in medicine and European gal/s: the Oriental are brough from Aleppo, of the bignefs of a large nutmeg what more conick than any of the foregoing _ That fcarce thy legs uphold?h y feeble gair Galls or galnuts are preternatural and accidenta tumours, produced on trees; but thofe of the oa Woodward on Foffils 7. [From galla. like the bef A galeated efchinus copped, and in thape fome Taylor Nought regarding, they kepton their gaiz And all her vain allurements did forfake the former, as agangrene is to a ga// or {cratch Government of the Tongue Leclef. xxiv. 15 adj. [galeatus fuperior t as muc This is the fatalift wound 1. Covered as with a helmet Good youth, addrefs thy gait unto hes Be not denied accefs, ftand at her door Shakef indeed a pleafant odour GA'LEATED Let your hope be without vanity, or gairi/bnef yielde Frefh gales and gentle air Umbria's green retreats Where weftern gales eternally refide 2. Flighty or extravagant joy 2. March [From the verb. and folubl 1. Finery; flaunting gandinefs refin Prior 6. A flight hurt by fretting off the fkin Of gentleft ga/e Arabian odours fann' From their foft wings, and Flora's earlieft fmells Ga'irisHNESS. 7. /. [from gairj/p. Garr. z /. [ga?, Dutch. 1. Away : as, gang your gait as He hates the fight, and fhuns the blow Wind . fpirits, and leaves a kind of difiolution upon all th South faculties and filent Though he before had ga// and rage He grows difpirited and low Shakefpeare it makes the mind loofe and gairi/h, fcatters the inflammabl Milton Fame and glory tranfport a man out of himfelf of fpirit, but fober, grave bein bitternefs of mind Suppofe your hero were a lover Blows you to Padua here, from old Verona 2, Extravagantly gay ; flighty fometimes in loof What happy gal Hide me from day's gairi/b eye galbanu GavLE. 2. /. [gabling, hatty, fudden, German. A wind not tempeftuous, ye ftronger than a breeze A mother, only mock'd with two fair babes There in clofe covert by fome brook Where no profaner eye may look wit 5. Anger myrih; as galbanum I call'd thee then poor fhadow, painted queen The prefentation of but what I was To be the aim of every dangerous fhot Spenfer on Ireland in water as a gum, and will not diffolve in oil a pure refins do. It is the produce of an umbelliferou plant Hill Three or four will outrage in apparel, huge hofe A dream of what thou waft, a gairi/b flag mee a refin fine monttrous hats, and gairi/b colours They did great hurt unto his titfe, and have lef a perpetual ga// in the mind of the people granules, called drops of tears, which is the pureft and fometimes in large mafles It is foft, lik wax, and ductile between the fingers; of a yellowif or reddifh colour: its fmell is ftrong and difagreeable. It is of a middle nature between a gum an himfelf valiant, that durft with th enraged defires dare not undertake to fhew what advantag GA'LBANUM. ». / 7, GalinsTAND. @, a. ['gainftand fland. " To withftand ; to oppofe; to refit. -~ proper word, but not in ufe Love prove 4. Rancour; malignity Cowley is brought to us by thofe innumerable ftars in th galaxy Bentley Laugh'd at thofe arms, that 'gainft ourfelves we bore Dryden She ftill infults, and you muft ftill adore Grant that the honey's much, the ga// is more Dryd. Fuv Sevetal lights will not be feen See A againfi. [fo GeeA s carrier whe he would think of a remedy fo his gulled horfe, begins with catting his eye upo all things Locke. On the monarch's fpeech Achilles broke And furious thus, and interrupting fpoke Tyrant I well deferv' thy gr.[/izzg chain 2. To impair; to wear away Pogpe He doth object, I am too great of birth And that my ftate being ga//'d with my expence I feek to hea it only by his wealth If it fhould fall dow a river b th in a continua it would ga// the ground roots 3. To teaze an Shakefpeare overthro ftream lik wath awa houfes plant ~ ~ Ray to fret; to vex In honour of that a@ion, and to gz// their mind who did not fo much commend it, he wrdte hi book Wha the I‘I:; ker fee contented with even for tha very caufe' we reje¢t5 and there is nothing but i pleafeth us the better, if we efpy that it gaker them Hocker Whe |