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Show KI 2. Sert ; kind : in ludicrous Tanguage Thin o of that, a man ‘of my kidney; thin Ki'seo. adf. [ fehembo, Italian.] Crooked bent ; arched that, that am as fubje&t to heat as butter; a ma Shakefp of continual diffolution and thaw ‘ "There are millions in the worl u kidney, that tak the fam noife The kimbo handles feem with bears-foot cary'd And never yet to table have been ferv'd Dryden's Virgil of this man' withou refolutio He obferve L' Eftrange Ki'DNEYBEAN. 2 /i [phafeolus. So name from its fhape.] A leguminous plant Kidneybeans are a fort of cod ware, that are ver HMortimer's Hufbandry pleafant wholefome food z /- Plants K1I'DNEYVETCH. [mz[/)z'l/zlf. Kiw. 2. /. [cynne, Saxon. 1. Relation either of confanguinity or affi nity You muft ufe them with: fit refpe&s, according t the bonds of nature; bu 2. Relatives; thof t 2. To deftroy animals for food We're mere ufurpers, tyrants, and what's wotfe To fright the animals, and to 47/ them u A citizen of Heav'n Kin to Jove's thunder 4. To deprive. of vegetativ ) or other mo tion, or a&tive qualities Try with oil,. or barm of drink, fo they be fuc things as £/// not the bough. Bacon's Natural Hijt Catharticks of \mercurials mix {Yvithl all anima fpittle acids, as appears by 4i//ing it wit : FEloyer a}:z the Humours A [0 b om ‘,W KrtLer Z DUICJ]J k ‘],'\ ( e 1. Benevolent When couch'd in dreadful dens Sandys By the %ind Gods, *tis moft ignobly don To pluck me by the beard. Shakefpeare's King Lear Some of the ancients, like 424 hearted men hanty "F So rude a time Thu always ‘ufe to difcharg their birding-pieces into the £i/x hole I grant cree felve T _ The beft way is to i/zdry them Kt for killed Mortimer Spenfer i but not rationalia th prefervatio o particulars Arbuthnot or tithes ¢. Manner ; way Send me your prifoners with the fpeedieft means Or you fhall hea in fuch a #ind from m As will difpleafe you Shakefpeare's Henry 1 "This will encourage induftrious improvements, be caufe many will rather venture in that kind, tha Bacon take five in the hundred 6. Sort {enfe It has a fligh and unimportan Diogenes was atked, in a izd of {corn, What wa the matter that philofophers haunted rich men, an not rich men philofophers? He anfwered, Becauf the one knew what they wanted, the other did not 1. To fet on fire; to light burn Hudibras bu t to mak He will take thereof, and warm himfelf; yea, h I/ xliv. 15 kindleth it and baketh bread 1 was not forgetful of thofe fparks, which fom formerly ftudie men's diftemper liaments to &izdle in parKing Charles If the fire burns vigoroufly, it is no matter by what means it was at firft £ind/ed:* there is the fam force and the fame refrefhing virtue in it, kizdled b a fpark from- a flint, as if it were kindled from th South fun 2. To inflam the paflions; to exafperate to fire the mind. to animate; to heat I've bee At all ime Ever in fea He hat to you a true and humble wife to your will conformable Shakefp to kizd/e your diilike kizdled his wrath againft me, and count eth me as one of his-enemies Fob, xix. 11 Thus one by one kind/ing each:other's fire Daniel »Fill all inflam'd, they all in one agree Each was a caufe alone, and all combin' To kindle vengeance in her haughty mind To KINDLE Drydex w. 7. [cinnu, Welth ; cynde lan, Saxon.] 1. To catch fire When thou walkeft through the fire, thou fhal not be burnt, neither.fhall the flame kizd/e upo Zy. xhii. 2 thee 2 [From cennan, Saxon.] 'To bring forth It is ufed of fome particular animals Are you native of this place -As the coney that you fee dwells- where, fhe i Shak kindled Ki/'NDLER..z On /. [from lindle. tha lights ; one who inflames " God and Nature do not principally concern them Moxon's Mech. Exer dry by means of a kiln Specifick difference we find Shakefp ' ToKi'LypRrY. @. a. [Ailn and dy. Milton's Paradife Loft For though they do agree in #izd Bacon of malt Phyficians chufe lime which is newly drawn ou of the iz, and not flacked Hooker to receiv That both are animalia upon the 4i/z, there will be gained a bufhel in eigh to thei laws are, accordin Their names of Thee and called decume ‘The fkilful {hepherd peel'd me certain wands And in the doing of the deed d of o He ftuck them up before the fulfome ewes Shake[peare Some of you, on pure inftin& of nature Are led by kind t admire your fellow-creature Dryden this diftin&ion, in po Came fummon'd over Eden After the putting forth in fprouts, and the dryin to genus, and for As when the total kiz Of birds, in orderly array on wing There the L'll creep up into the chimney Kizd in Teuto kinds on the backs o Woodward them i 4+ Nature; natural determination hav far we havé endeavoured in part to open o what nature and forc A ftove; KILN. 7. f [cyln, Saxon. fabrick formed for admitting keat, in order to dry or burn things contained in it B corn ular language, is not always obferved doubtlefs had its name from £o//owv, by which name in the North, the fmut or grim chimneys is called anfwer to fpecies; thoug An earth of a blackith or deep blue colour, an Englif either to tak kind, or compound for them. Bacon's Henry V1 The tax upon tillage was often levied in £ind upo Luke, vi. 35 nic Ki'trow. 7 /i [This feems a corruption o coal and low, a flame, as foot is thereb produced. thofe that had taken them unthankful and evil 1. Race; generical clafs /aller But dy'd, becaufe the £i//er had been kind is Aind to th Kinp. z /. [cynne, Saxon. When love was held fo capital a crime That a crown'd head could no compailion find He did give the goods of all the prifoners unt talked much of annual refrigeriums, or intervals o punifhment to the damned, as particularly on th great feftivals of the refurretion and afcenfion South H Baker have been found to have fo many 3. Natural ftate 2. Favourable; beneficent His hungry whelps > and for the &iller ki kind filled with general good will What forrow, what amazement, what fhame wa in Amphialus, when he faw his dear fofter-fathe Sidney that have been looked upon as moft perfeét in thei adj. [from cynne, relation, Saxon. KIND 7. /. [from Zil.] . One that de find him the #4il/er of his only fon Wilt thou for the old lion hunt, or fil No human laws are exempt from faults, fince thof kin, awilkin prives of life en; 1 Shall ftretch thy conquefts over half the kind. Pope 2., Particular nature ¢. A diminutive termination from kind, child, Dutch: as, manikin, minikin, thom Bacon with a hundred arts refin'd He hot water, is altogether differing from the ftink o the other, being of 4z to that of other alcalizat Boyle falts The medicines, if they were ufed inwards, woul #ill thofe that ufe them; and therefore they wor D)flfl a littl being diffolved i it difcovers whic Atterbury perfection To K1'NDLE. v. fo furpris'd my fenfe That I was nothing. = Shakefpeare's Winter's Tale The odour'of the fixed nitre is very languid; bu tha kind from moral virtues, yet differ in the degrees O Bacon And the ear-deaf'ning voice of the oracle ment Dawvies The burf 3. To deprive of life, as a caufe or inftru potently, though outwards to earth confin'd 4. 'The fame generical clafs, though perhap not the fame fpecies ; thing related In their aflign'd and native dwelling-place Shakefpeare Shall I take my bread, and my fleth that I hav 1 Sam. Xxvi 11 killed for my fhearers M e fam Then is the foul from God; fo pagans fay Which faw by nature's light her heavenly kind Naming her #in to God, and God's bright ray 2 Mac. vo 13 of men,women, and children. of th Tumultuous war Shall ki with £in, and kind with kind confound Shakefp The father, mother, and the 42 befide Were overborne by fury of the tide Dryden Ex. xvi. 3 kill this whole affembly with hunger ‘There was killing of young and old, making awa Hiti ar Shakefp. R. 111 3. A relation; one related Ye have brouglit us forth into this wildernefs e o {o e wh race &elen, Dutch. S 0} ( fo Whom Thefeus holds in bonds, and will not fre Without a crime, except his £z to me Dryden Dar't thou refolve to £i// a friend of mine - =-Pleafe you, I'd rather £/ two encnies !)ufiej? an Th' unhappy Palamon 1. To deprive of life; to put to death, a an agent T are of kiz Bacon's Advice to Villiers Bacon a yo friend to their perfons, not to their errours Make in the ki/derkin-a great bung-hole of purpofe A tun of man in thy large bulk is writ; Dryden But fure thou'rt but a ki/derkin of wit To gue[l; Cpel 9o XILL. w. 4. [ancientl them edging towards one another t whxfper; fo that John was forced to fit with his arm a kimbo, to keep them afunder Arbuthnot Ainfw Ki'oNeYWORT. [cotyledorn. K1'LDERKIN. 7./. [ kindekin, a baby, Dutch. A {mall barrel lan, Saxon 5 KI kind s mo Se th So ie pa co an He with his wife were only left behin Of perifh'd man ; they two were human kind Dryden an n h a H t o m c ar tu vi o aé Som b me fo pe b t th po fu .b n i f r C o a th e n m m l u - r m e -af s ia if Ch i fe di no d th e w ev an n h a the H Now is the time that rakes their revels keep Gay Kindlers of tiot, enemies of fleep Ki'npLY. adv. [from kind.] Benevolently favourably; with good will Sir-Thuri borrows his wit from your ladyfhip' looks, and fpends what he borrows kindly in you Sbakefpeare company 1 fometime lay here in Corioli At a poor man's houfe : -he_us'd :me kindly. Shak Be kindly . affectione one to another wit therly love, in honour preferring.one.another bro Rom, xii, 10 Hi |