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Show H H Bur clearelt day here is mifty and hezpy w fee not far, and what we do fee is in a bad light All knees in heav'n Thom/for "' Myriads on myriads, infeét armies waft "Hg. pronoun. gen. him; plur. they; gen. them (495 Dutch Tt feems to hav pe, Saxon ~ borrowed the plural from Biy, plural vay dative obrpum 1. The man that was named before ¥ All the confpirators, fave only Ae Did that they did in envy of great Cafar Shakefp If much you note Aim You (hall offend 4im Shakefpeare Teed and regard Aim not I am weary of this moon Ada Milton . When Adam wak'd, be on his fid Leaning half rais'd hung over her Milton DMilton Exto Him ficlt, bint laft, him midft Milton 2o The man; the perfon. It fometime . ftands without reference to any foregoin word He is never poo That little hath, but be that muc 3. Man or mal defires. Daniel being Such mortal drugs I have; but Mantua' la Shake/peare Is death to any Ae that utters them I ftand to anfwer thee, or any Ae the proudeft o thy fort Shakefpeare " T'ros and his race the fculptor fhall employ And be the god who built the walls of Troy. Dryd 4. Male: as, a be bear, a ke goat. Iti . ufed where the male and female have no different denominations The be's in birds have the faireft feathers, Bacon 3. In the two laft fenfes /e is rather a nou than pronoun HEAD. #. /. [peapodb, peayo, Saxon hoofd, Dutch 3 hewed, old Englith, whenc by contraction Aead. 1, 'The part of the animal that contains th brain or the organ of fenfation and fea | of thought The dew paths of meadows we will tread For crowns and chaplets to adorn thy bead. Drydern I coul fill hav offers hel wh fome tha their heads higher, would be glad to accept Swwift 2. Perfon as expofed to any danger or penalty What he gets more of her than fharp words, le it lie on my Aead Shakefpeare Who of all ages to fucceed, but feelin The evil on him brought by me, will curf My head2 ill fare our anceftor impure 3. Hea 7. Plac and Ears Milton In jingling rhimes well fortified and ftrong He fights intrench'd o'er Aead and ears in fong Granville duk of Marlborough at the Aead of them When Innocent defired the marquis of Carpio t he coul no fpare them5 but thirty thoufand lawyers he had a ‘his fervice Addifon The tax upon pafturage was raifed according to Certain rate per head upon cattle Arbuthnot §+ Chief; principal perfon; one to who the reft are fubordinate; leader; commander For their commons, there is little danger fro them, except itbe where they have great and poten Buacon eads Your bead I him appoint could d Addifon on the War 8. Countenance By gallies with brazen heads the might tranfpor over Indus at once three hundred thoufand foldiers Raleigh His gallies moor Their heads are turn'd to fea, their fterns to fhore Dryden 17. That which rifes on the top Let it ftand in a tub four or five days before it b prefence pu Richard not far from hence hath hid his bead Shakef R. 1 9. Underftanding facultie of th mind commonly in a ludicrous fenfe fo and a goa wentdow the goat fell to huntin Oh fay Reynard whic neve a wel wa Aead, bu beating their sead Locte no religion, wh Aead, aud trouble of this or that docLocke When in ordinary difcourfe we fay a man has fine bead, we exprefs ourfelves metaphorically, an fpeak in relation to his underftanding; and whe we fay of a woman fhe has a fine Aead " only in relation to her commode lai ou Aead together t we fpea Addifon confide wha grievances the nation had fuffered under king George Addifon fore part front 10. Face The gathering crowd purfues The ravifhers turn bead, the fight renews Dryden 11. Refiftance; hoftile oppofition hath Henr hal b Sin havin doze deprave feffion of his.will hea mad Bolingbrok more mad forty ru Raleigh his judgment and got pof othe principle lef is n ther him naturally, by which he can make bead againf it South 12. Spontaneous refolution Th borderin altogethe withiou b war in this kingdo voluntaries l{POllrlllfil were mad hbead ow any pay or commiflion from the frate Dawvies 13. State of a deer's horns, by which hi Shake/p It was a buck of the firft fead The huck is called the fifth year a buck of th Shak firlk head It 1s ufe As eaftern priefts in giddy circles run And turn their beads to imitate the {un in number o Pipe 21. Drefs of the head Ladies think the gai a point when they hav teazed their hufbands to buy them a lace Aead a fine petticoat o Swift 22. Principal topick of difcourfe Thef heads are ofa mixe order an we . pro pofe onl fuch as belong to the natural world Burnet's Theory >Tis our great intereft, and duty, to fatisfy ourfelves on this head, upon which our wlole conduc depends Atterbury 23. Source of a ftream It is the glory of Go delighteth in it to give; his very natur his mercies in the current through which they would pafs, may be dried up, butat th head they never fail Hooker The current by Gaza is but a fmall ftream rifing between it and the Red fea, whote bead fro Gaza is little more than twenty Englifh miles Raleigh's Hiftory Some did the fong, and fome the choir maintain Beneath a laurel (hade wher mighty P Mounts up to woods above, and Rides his Aead below Dryde The indifpofition which has long hurig upon m# is atlaft grow to fuch a head that'it muft quickl make an end of me, or of itfelf Addifon 25 Power; influence force; ftrength; do minion Within her breaft though calm, her breaft thoug pure Motherly cares and fears got head, and rais' Some troubled thoughts Milton 26 conflux Body People under command chufe to confult, an to marc i order an rebels contrariwile upon an Aead together in confufion A mighty and a fearful ead they are afte ru Eacona Shake[p, As ever offer'd foul play in a ftate Far in the marches here we heard :you were another bead to fight again Shakefpeare. Let all this wicked craw gathe Their forces to one bead. 27 Power Ben Fonfons armed force. My lord, my lord; the French-have gathier'd Aeads Sl!zl/:/y}) computation If there be fix million abotit four acre Gen. xlvii. 31 'The brain Makin age is known Individual 20 Fairy Queen {lew Shakefpeare againft my power Two valiant gentlemen making bead againft them feconde awaye 19. Upper part ofa bed 24. Crifis; pitch Then made he bead againft his enemies And Hymne Mortimer Deéut, xix. 5 to get back leave that to me L' Effrange Work with all the eafe and {peed you can, without breaking your bead, and being fo very induftrious in ftarting fcruples Dryden The lazy and inconfiderate took up their no W the bead or yeaft into it and beat A man fetcheth a ftroke with the axe to cu down the tree, and the Aead flippeth from the helve to drink trouble you tions by chance, without muc about them If a man fhews that he ha fhould we think that he beats hi himfelf to examine the ground trine a-day Ifrael bowed upon the bed's Aead The wenches laid their Aeads together. L'Eftran ftirring it twic 18, The blade of an axe Dryd Ere to-morrow's fun fhall fhew his head into the cafk ing dow With Cain go wander through the fhade of night And never thew thy bead by day or light. Shake/p i4 4. Denomination of any animals 16. The fore part of any thing, as of a fhip An army of fourfcore thoufand troops, with th 'The whole perfon furnith thirty thoufand Aead of fwine the firft place Watts of command Sometime Vein healing verven, and ead purging dill. Spenfer Over head up-gre Milton Infuperable height of loftieft thade Wartt Head is an equivocal term; for it fignifies th head of a nail, or of a pin, as well as of an animal Notwithftanding all the juftices had taken thei places upon the Bench, they made room for the ol knight at the head of them Addifon hand in hand along zhey pafs' ‘On to their blifsful bow'rs heads or tops ; fo heads of afparagus or artichoaks lord Milton and Pythagoras, did confent t Tillotfon 6. Place of honour Shakefpeare fpoke If the buds are made our food, they are calle heads of the chief fe@ts of philofophy, a Thales, Anaxagoras this tradition would Je would change So chicer'd Ae his fair fpoufe, and fhe was cheer'd Thus talking Th and fhall confefs hi nothing and increafe his paflion HE And by myfelf have fworn, to him fhall bo Burnet's Theory Oft engender'd by the baxy North of peaple then ther for every bead i Graunt 15. The top of any thing bigger than th reft His fpear's head weighed fix hundred fhekels o 1 Sam iron As hig As his proud head is rais'd towards the {ky Denham So low tow'rds hell his roots defcend Treesy which have large and fpreading heads would lic with their bratiches up in the water Hsedward At fixteerr years; When Tarquin made a Aead for Rome, he fough Beyond the mark of others Shake[peare 28. Liberty in running a horfe He gav his able horfe the Aead And bounding forward ftruck his agile heel Againft the panting fides of his poor jad Up to the rowel-head Shakefpeare 29. Licence; freedom from reftraint metaphor from horfemanthip God will not admit of the paflionate man's apoe logy, that ke has fo long given his unruly p;\fli}v)l} thel |