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Show G A GA' em appear cloaths did wea*. Denb ANCe doth affe the gar seare's King Lear "Thi Spanifh ». [. [ garbear ‘tymology is very doubtful. 1. 'The bowels; the offal; that part of th inwards which is feparated and throw :{\VE\)' The cloyed will "That {atiate, yet unfatisfy'd defire, that tu Both fill*d and running, ravening firft the lamb Shake/peare's Cynib Longs after for the garbage Luft though to a radiant angel link'd Will fate itfelf in a celeftial bed Shakefpeare's Hamlet And prey on garbage A flam more fenfele(s than the rog'r Or old Arufpicy and aug'ry That out of garbages of cattl Prefag'd th' events of truce or battle Hudibras W ho, without averfion, ever look' On holy garbage, though by Homer cook'd? Rofe When vou receive condign punifhment, you ru to your confeflor, that parcel of guts and garbage Dr_)'a_'m Aplant next the keel of / Ga'rBer B({i[&_')' f'flip 7 / Ga'rRBIDGE Corrupted from garbage All fhavings of horns, hoofs of cattle, blood, an Mortimer garbidge, is good manure for land 7. f. Corrupted from garbage Ga'rBisa In Newfoundland they improve their ground wis Mortimer's Hufbandry the garbifb of fith T GA'RBLE [garbellare @. a To fift; to part; to feparat from the bad Italian. the goo Dryd Had our author fet down this command, without garbling, as God gave it, and joined mothe ZLocke 10 father, it had made direCly againt him The underfranding works to collate, combine, an garble the images and ideas, the imagination an Cheyne nemory prefent to i He wh 7. f. [from garble. {eparates one part from another A farther fecret in this claufe may beft be difco vered by the projectors, or at leaft the gardlers of it Switt's Examiner Ga'rvoiL 7z buglis, Italian. roar [garbouille French; gar Diforder tumult; upHanmer Look here, and at thy fovereign leifure rea Shakefp What garboils fhe awak'd Garp. # /. [garde, French.] Wardfhip care; cuftody GA'RDEN. 7. /. [gardd, Wellh; jardin French; giardino, Italian. 1. A piece of ground inclofed vate wit extraordinar with herbs or fruits for food for pleafure and culti care plante or laid ou Thy promifes are like Adonis' gardens Which one day bloom'd and fruitful were the next My lord of Ely Shakefp when I was laft in Holbourn i faw good ftrawberries in your garden there Shak. Rich. 1TE In the royal ordering of garders, there ought t Buacon be gardens forall the months in the year In every garden thould be provided flowers, fruit Lemple fhade and water My garden takes up half my daily care And my field afks the minutes I can fpare.' Hayze 2 A place particularly fruitful or delight{ul cr 1 am arriv'1 from fru ful I,ombaw.ly sreat Italy Tre pleafant zard. fit for a garden Moul Garden-mould They delight moft in rich black gfll'{lfilf-i)wl'(/f{ that is deep and light, and mixed rather with fan Mortimer than clay in culti Tillage ufe s. Garden-tillage The figns ot the gargo/ in hogs are, hangin down of the head, moift eyes, ftaggering, and.lof Mortimer of appetite beans are what belong to garden-tillag Peas an Mortimer's Hufbandry as well as that of the field Stre}vhon, with leavy twigs of laurel-tree A garland made, on temples for to wear 'The produce of gardens 6. Garden-ware A clay bottom is a much more pernicious foil fo Mortimer trees and garden-ware than gravel For he then chofen was the dignit A reeling world will never ftand upright *Till Richard wear the garland of the realm -How ! wear the garland At firft, in Rome's poor age When both her kings and confuls held the plough Ben Sfonfon's Catiline Or garden'd well When ages grow to civility and elegancy, me come to build frately, fooner than to garden finely as if gardening were the greater perfection. Bacon Stak do'it thou mea -Ay, my good lord Shakefpeare's Richard 111 Then -party-colour'd flow'rs of white and re She wove to mak Vanquifh again; though {he be gone Whofe garland crown'd the vitor's hair And reign; though fhe has left the throne Prior. made thy glory worth thy care attends or cultivates gardens are ggrdeners; fo that, if we plant nettles, or fo Shakefpeare lettuce, the power lies in our will Gardeners tread down any loofe ground, after the And all her faded gar/ands bloom anew Her gods and godlike heroes rife to view Qur bodies are our gardens, to the which our will An Skinner fubrotund fruit, divided into three cells, which con wildnef Milier tain roundith feeds Garlick is of an extremely ftrong fmell, and o an acrid and pungent tafte. It is extremely aétive as may be proved by applying plafters of garlick tothe feet, which willgive a ftrong fmell to the breatl}} Garlick has, of all our plants, the greateft frength affords moft nourithment, and fupplies moft {pirits to Tentple thofe who eat little fleth, - rifme, French.] A liquid form of medicin Quincy to wafh the mouth with Apophlegmatifms and gargarifms draw the rheu Each clove of garlick is a facred pow'r To GARGARYZE. v, a. [yaevzeile; gargarifer, French.] 'To wafh the mouth wit medicated liquours Religious nations fure, and bleft abodes Where ev'ry orchar gargogliare gurgel Ital German th improper ufe Thofe which only warble long And gargle in their throats a fong Hence, rotten thing, or I.fhall fhake thy bone Shakefp. Coriolanuss Out of thy. garments Our leaf, once fallen, fpringeth no more; neither doth the fun or fumme adorn us again with th garmentsof new leaves and flowers with which the throat is wathed His throat was wafhed with one of the garg/es fe down in the method of cure Wifemun's Surgery Ga'rGLION, 2 /. Anexfudation of nervou Raleigh's Hift Faireft thing that thines below Why in this robe doft thou appear Waller n. /. [from the verb ] A liquou cloaths; drefs A So chuarm'd you were, you ceas'd,a while to doa On nonfenfe gurg/'d in an eunuch's throat. Fenton Ga'rors that ftood fo muc GA'RMENT. 7. /. [guarniment, old French. Any thing by which the body is covered ; Dryden's Perf it ufuall Upon the voice of occupation, an Shakefpeare's Coriol. The breath of garlickeaters Wifeman's Surgery by gargling with oxycrate They comb, and then they order ev'ry hair the throat wher it becomes a round fruit, which, when ripe, You and your apron men the bleeding will foon be ft(;p to play i of America an You've made good work Harvey 2. 'To warble in Jamaica mean fellow Gargle twice or thrice with fharp oxycrate Next gargle well their throats other place commo Galrrick Wild. n.f.. A plant GaRLICKEA'TER, 7. /. [garlick and eat.] A throat. 1. To wafth the throat with fome liquou not fuffered immediately to defcend The excifion made is prett tre has a rough brownifh rind, and a mealy {weet pulp, Millers but a ftrong fcent of garlick French [gargouiller fevera pointal A diftemper in cattle «. a Thi Tatco rifes to the height of thirty or forty feet, and fpread into many branches. When the flowers fall off th The garget appears in the head, maw, or in th Mortiner's Hufbandry hinder parts 7o GA'RGLE is o'er-run with gods Ga'rRLICK Pear-tree. 7. / Bacon inhibiteth the motion of the fpirit This being relaxed, may make a fhaking of th Holder larynx ; as when we gargarize Ga'RGeT. 7 to devour fin an onio *Tis morta Bacon's Natural Hiffory Vinegar, put to the noftrils, or gargarifed, dot eafe the hiccough; for that ‘it is aftringent, an Allinm, Lat. bus on the top of the ftalk; and are fucceeded b [vapyagiopes 5 garga down by the palate a lance the flowers confift of fix leaves, formed into a corym Garg. 7 /. Coarfe wool growing on th Did legs of fheep. Ga'Recarism Saxon It has a bulbous root, confifting of many fmal tubercles included in its coats : the leaves are plain Speciator 7. Shakefpeare. and /eek, the leek that fhoots up in blades in gardening are after the Pin art [zan #./ GA'RLICK Th Ga'RDENING. # /. [from garden. a&t of cultivating or planning gardens beautifu now your hate wa tha call him noble Him vile, that was your garland Dryd th Pope With every minute you do change a mind The gardener may lop religion as he pleafes fHowel The life and felicity of an excellent gardener i preferable to all other diverfions. Bwelyn's Kalendar Then let the learned gard'zer mark with car The kinds of ftocks, and what thofe kinds will bear manner, and run int 2. The top; the principal; the thing mof prized have fown onions or turnips. Bacon's Natural Hiff daric Dryd a garland for her head Wh My compofition th crown He tha Sidney Of village-lord that Whitfuntide to bear 7o Ga'RDEN. w. 7 [from the noun.] T cultivate a garden ; to lay out gardens GA'RDENER. 7./- [from garden. Fr. Ga'rRLaND. n f. [garlande, guivland 1. A wreath of branches or flowers vating gardens of nature, without affeCting the nicer elegancies o But you who fathersand traditions take And garble fome, and fome you quite forfake GA'RBLER for hortenfis, or belonging to a garden 4 tellow nefs d for juice from a bruife, or the like, whic indurates into a hard immoveable tumour Quincy Ga'rcor. x f. A diftemsper in hogs in compofitio ufe is ofte 3. Garpe Would'ft tho | Tho a while mor ‘perfeét fhow muft at all no garment wear Cowley Three worthy perfons from his fide it tore And dy'd his garment with their featter'd gore Waller Th peacock, in all his pride, does not difpla half the colours that appear in the garments of Britith lady, when ihe is drefled Addifon's Spié? et |