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Show Within this three mile may you fee it coming Shakefpeare's Macbeth 1 fay, a moving grove Fortunate fields, and groves, and flow'ry vales Thric h\flw} ifles Milton She left the flow'ry field, and waving grove Blackmore Banifh'd from courts and love Abandon'd truth feeks thelter in the growe, Granville Can fierce paffions vex his breaft While every gale is peace, and every grov Is melody Thy next defign is on thy neighbour's grounds on the face. It may perhaps come D gradual corruption from ground fell. to cree lie prone Thy own feems thin, becaufe it is thy own. Dryd 6. Land occupied The fea o'erflow'd my ground ground The ftecl-head paffage wrought And through his fhoulder pierc'd; wherewithto groun e groveling fell, all gored in his guthing wound 2 Sam. ii. 22 Dagon was fallen on his face to the grozzd 1 Sam.w. 4 Som lak hole Shakefp Until thy head be circled with the fame Oke maft and beech, and cornell fruit they eate in fowleft fort Chapman Now they li "Groveling and proftrate on yon lake of fire. Milton Upon thy belly groveling thou fhalt go Milton Let us then conclude that all painters ought t swequire this part of excellence: not to do if, is t and not dar to fhew themfelves 2. "To be mean Dryden to creep and growve/ on the ground to be without dignity o elevation I muft difclatm whate'er he can exprefs His groveling fenfe will thew my patfion lefs. Dyydern Several thoughts may be natural which are lo Addifon's Speciator and groveling GROUND. 7. /. [gnund, Saxon; groudt Danifh. 2. The ecarth, confidered as fuperficiall extended, and therefore related to tillage travel habitation or almof an attion The main mafs of terrene matter is neve called the ground We never diftinguit the terraqueous globe into grovnd an water, but into earth, or land, and water again, we never {ay under earth, but unde round Ifrael fhall go on dry ground through the fea Ex. xiv. 16 Man to till the groun None was, and from the earth-a dewy mif Went up, and water'd al] the ground From the other hil "To their fix'd ftation, all in bright array Th cherubi defcended o Miiton the groux ‘Gliding meteorous Milron A black bituminous gurg Boils up from under ground And yet fo nimbly he would bound As if he feorn'd to touch the ground 2. The eart as diftinguifhed fro Blilton Hudibras air o water 1 have made man and beaft upon the grownd Feremiah There was a dew upon all the growund. Fudg. vi. 40 They fumm'd their wings, and foaring th' air fubIime With clang defpis'd the ground Milton "Too late young Turnus the delufion found Far on the fea, fiill makingfrom the ground. Dryd 3. Land country The water breaks its bounds And overflows the level grounds 4. Region territory Hudibras On heav'nly ground they ftood, and from the fhor They view'd the vaft immeafurable abyfs Milton With thefe came they, who from the bord'ring floo Of old Euphrates to the brook that part Egypt from Syrian ground, had general name ©Of Baalim and Afhtaroth Milton's Paradife Lof? that whic feces lecs fettle at the bottom of liquors Set by them cyder, verjuice, four drink, or grounds Mortimer Some infift upon havin Inchas'd with all the honours of the world want courage Mart.xv. 3 multitude fit on the grownd part of the month of June, the water of thi defcends under grownd, through many grea Browsn at the bottom 8. Dregs What fee'ft thou there? king Henry's diadem Groveling like fwine on carth Milto Thou could'ft not have difcern' Fraud in the ferpent, fpeaking as he fpake No ground of enmity between us known Milton Nor did either of them ever think fit to make an particular relation of the ground ad particular fuccefs i ftopping gangrenes, from «the ufe of the grouxds o ftrong beer, mixed up with bread or oatmeal Sharp's Surgery 9. The firt ftratum of paint upon whic the figures are afterwards painted We fee the limner to begin with a rude draught and the painter to lay his grownds with darkfom colours Whe foli bodies Hake to the feeling an fenfibl tranfparent grouzds dark, are placed on light an as for example the heavens, the clouds and waters and every other thing which is in motion of different objets the ough to be mor and voi rough and more diftinguifhable, than that with which the are encompafled Dryden's Dufrefnoy 10. The fundamental fubftance; that b which the additional or accidental part are {upported O'er his hea A well-wrought heaven of filk and gold was fpread Azure the ground, the fun in gold fhone bright Cowley Indeed it was but juft that the fineft ines .in nature fhould be drawn upon the moft durable groxnd Pope Then, wrought into the foul, let virtues fhine The ground eternal, as the work divine Young 11. ‘The plain fong defcants are raifed the tune o whic Get a prayer-book in your hand And ftand between two churchmen good my lord For on that ground 1'1l build a holy defcant Shak 12. Firft hint; firft traces of an invention that which gives occafion to the reft Though jealoufy of ftat Yet love refin'd upon th That way the tyrant ha Purfuing hate, now ferv' th' invention found former grownd referv'd to fly to bring two lovers nigh Dryden 13. The firft principles of knowledge The concords will eafily be known, if the foregrounds be thoroughly beaten in. Pref. to Accidence. Here ftatefmen, or of them they which can read May of their occupation find the grounds. ~ Donne "The grounds are already laid whereby that is unqueftionably refolved; for having granted that Go gives fufficient grace, yet when he co-operates mof effeCtually, he doth it not irrefiftibly Hammond After evening repaits 'till bed-time, - thei thoughts will be beft taken up in the eafy ground of religion and the ftory of feripture 14. The fundamental caufe reafon ; original principle Milton th tru He defired the fteward to tell him particularl the ground and event of this accident Sidney Making happinefs the grouzd of his unhappinefs and good news the argument of his forrow. Sidzney The ufe and benefit of good laws all that liv under them may enjoy with delight and comfort albeit the grownds and firft original caufes fro whence they have {fprung be unknown Hooker In the folution of the Sabbatizer's objection, m method fhall be, to examine, in the firft place, th of their proceed ings, or the caufes of their mifadventures Sound judgmen Clarendon is the ground of writing well Rofcommon Wherefore fhould I fmite thee to the ground: Spenfer 1f fo, gaze on, amd grovel on thy face beft Flanders mare was drown'd And m th o lo to full pcn!k'.&}ox} grown His crop invites fla 1. T Uneafy ftiil within thefe narrow bounds 7. The floor or level of the place w. n. [grafde, Hlandick main grounds and principles upon which he buildeth White 5. Eftate; pofleflion Thomfon's Spring 9o Gro'vevL G.R# GR GR Love-once given from her, and plac'd in you Would leave no ground 1 ever would be true. Dryden It is not eafy to imagine ho coul ther I ther tha pofe arife fo early an any fuch traditio fprea fo univerfally, i were not a real grownd for it Wilkins it be natural, ought we not to conclude tha is fome ground and reafon for thefe fears, an nature hath not planted them in us to no pur ZLillotfon Thus it appears, that fuits at law are not finfu in themfelves, but.may lawfully be ufed, if there i no unlawfulnefs in the greuzd and way of management Upo that prince's death © Kettlewell although the ground of our quarrel with France had received no manne of addition, yet this lord thought fit to alter hi fentiments Swift The miraculous increafe of the profeflors o Chriftianity was without any vifible grounds an caufes, and contrary to all human probability an appearance Atterbury 15. The field or place of aétion Here was thy end decreed;, when thefe men rofe And ev'n with theirs this act thy death did bring Or haften'd at the leaft upon this ground. Daniel 16. The fpace occupied by an army as the fight advance, or retire At length the left wing of the Arcadians bega to lofe ground Sidney Heartlefs they fought, and quitted foon their grousd While our's with eafy victory were crown'd. Dryden He ha loft groun by purfuin at the latter end of the day his poin to far lik th princ o Conde at the battle of Senefte. Dryd. Fables, Pref 17. 'The intervening {pace between the flye and purfuer Ev'ning mift Ris'n from a river, o'er the marifh glides And gathers ground faft at the labourer's heels Homeward returning Milton's Paradife Loff Superiors think it a detraction from their meri to fee another get groznd upon them, and overtak them in the purfuits of glory. Addifon's Spectatur Even whilit we fpeak our conqueror comes on And gathers ground upon us every moment. Addjfon 18. Th t ftate in which one is with refpec opponent o competltors Had'it thou {way'd as kings fhould da Giving no ground unto the houfe of York They never then had {prung Shake/p. Henry VI If they get ground and 'vantage of the king Then join you with them like a rib of fteel To make them ftronger. = Shakefpeare's Henry 1V He will ftand his ground againft all the attack that can be made upon his probity Atterbury Whiatever grownd we may have gotten upon ou enemies, we have gotten none upon our vices, th worft enemies of the two; but are even fubdue and led captive by the one, while we triumgh f glorioufly over th others 19. State of progrefs or receffion Arterbury 1 have known fo many great examples of thi cure, and heard of its being fo familiar in Auftria that I wonder it has gained no mor ground i Temple other places The fquirrel is perpetually turning the wheel i her cage: fhe runs apace, and wearies herfelf wit her continual motion, and gets no gromnd. Dryden 20. The foil to fet a thing off Like bright metal on a fullen ground My reformation glittering o'er my fault Shall fhew more goodly, and attrat more eyes Than that which hath no foil to fet it off Shakefpeare To GrounD . 7 [from the noun. 1. To fix on the ground 2. T |