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Show KRN KN Ardam poor Stella danc'd and fung a knigh w b h n o a u y - The am'rou At night her fatal dze// was rung I faw, and kifs'd her in her fhrowd Kxew 'The preterite of Anow Kwire / plur Sax [cnip kzives An inftrament edged an kniff, Danifh. ointed, wherewith meat is cut, and ani mals killed. Com thick night That my keen zife {ee not the wound it makes Shakefpeare Bleft powers, forbid thy tender lif Crafhaw ~ Should bleed upon a barbarous £zife The facred priefts with ready Azives bercav i There are Anights of the poft, and holy cheat ewqgh, to fwear the trut dldlm_xs, where pious fraud traordinary call The beaft of life, and in full bowls receiv Dryden' The ftreaming blood Kxi1cHT I of the Shire A lit b hiids conif v isell tendo the king form feats of arms lifts, an Favour That fame 4night's own {word this is of yore This #night but yet wh WShakefpeare And fo defend thee Heaven and thy valour Shakefpeare Is this the fir, who fome wafte wife to win A knightheod bought, to go a-wooingirn? Ben Sonfon If yo So grievous was the pother So that the kzights each other loft -And ftood as ftill as any poft Did I for this my country brin Drayton And raife the firft fedition Denham XNieHT Epmant. [chevalier errant. wandering knight; one who went abou an queft of adventures, Like a bold £night errant did proclai Lombat to all, and bore away the dame Denbain The ancient errant knight Won all their miftrefles in fights "They cut whole giants into fritters "To put them into am'rous twitters Hydibras Kn1eur Errantry. {from knight errant. ‘The charaGter or manners of wanderin knights Th?t which with the vulgar paffes for courage i a brutith fort of knight errantry, feeking out necedlefsencounters KK1GHT of the P muf praife Cefar' writ write You'll gain at leaft a knighthood, or the bays. Pope Knt'curLess Obfolete knight becomin Arife, thou curfed mifcreant That haft wit w. a preter Fairy Queen knit or Kuitted Saxon. [enizTan unite by texture without Sleep, that £nits up the ravell'd fleeve of care The birth of each day's life, fore labour's bath Shakefpeare's Macbeth Balm of hurt minds A thoufand Cupids in thofe curls do fit Thofe curious nets thy flender fingers kni¢: Waller Norris A hireling evidence Send for the county ; go tell him of this 1'11 have this knot &7 up to-morrow morning Shakefpeare 3. To joinj to unite a wor of extenfiv This was formerl ufe frequent it is now lef His gall did grate forgrief and high difdain e f n h o g e r f hi al n t i k A Spenfer Thefe, mine enemies, are all £zif u Shakef power m i ar the diftraction In thei O let the vile world end da laf oflth flame premife th An earth and heav'n together V1 Henr Shakefpeare' Lay your highnefs Command upon me;; to the which my dutie Are with a mof ingiffeluble ty For ever bait And the conjunétion of our inward foul Married in league Shakefpeare's King Fobtt By the fimplicity of Venus' doves By that which 4zitteth fouls, and profpers loves Shakefpeare If ye be come peaceably, mine heart thall be £7i unto you 1 Chron, Xii. 17 That their hearts might be comforted, being £zi together in love He doth fundamentall an Col it 2 mathematically de monitrate the firmeft nittirgs of the upper timbers which make the roof Watlon's Architeélure Pride and impudence in faction 4xit Ulurp the chairof wit Ben fonfon's New Inn Ye knit my heart to you by afKing this queftion Bacon Thefe two princes were agrecable to be joined i and thereby £zit both realms into one Hayward Come, £»it hands, and beat the groun In a light fantaftick round Miltor God gave feveral abilities to feveral perfons, tha each might help to fupply the publick needs, and by joining to fill up all wants, they be 4#it togethe by juftice, as the parts of the world are by nature Taylor's Rule of living Holy Nature cannot £zi¢ the bones while the parts ar under a difcharge Wifeman's Surgers 4. To contract Wha ar the thoughts that £n/r thy brow i frowns And turns thy eyes fo coldly on thy prince Addifon s tic up He faw heaven opened, and a certain veffel defcending unto him as 1t had been a great (heet, ni at the four corners and let dow To Kn11. v, 1. To weave without a loom voic youn fhepherdef comforte knittin her hand to the earth Aéisy o 11 an to work Shakefpeare's Macketh finging: he and her hand kept time to her voice's mufick Make the world diftinguifh Julia's fo From the vile offspring of a trull, that fit By the town-wall Sidney and for her living knits. Dryden 2. To join; to clofe; to unite Not ufed Our fever'd navy to Have £#i4 again; and float, threat'ning moftfea-like KniT #./. [from the verb. Let their heads be fleekly comb'd knzightle/s guile, and treacherou train KNIT Un [from kuight. adj 258 Tositye To help their knight againft their king o 'AC‘,T"Sflfl","l"( need 1. To make o loom As ready was them all to choke 1 Therewith to doen his foes eternal fmart Fairy Queen T Which out of it fent fuch a fmoke fword which Metlin made Fair knighthood foully fhamed ‘He fuddenly unties the poke Th For that his nourfling, when he £zighthood {wore Daniel Thofe that flew thy virgin 4»ight 3. A champion Di yden Kxi'caTrOOD. 7. /. [from kwight.] characer or dignity of a knight goddefs of the night For the which, with fongs of woe Round about her tomb they go ‘and the martyr Charies As knightly rites require, nor judge to try muft theréfore be underftood in its ori‘ginal meaning, pupil or follower Pardon next St Unafk'd the royal grant, no marfhal by Shak. King Lear fhould I call hi Hudibras Yn parts, in manners, and in wit 2. Shake[peare ufes it of a female, and i i th Speak truly on thy knighthood, and thine oath "To give impiety to this rev'rent ftile "Wo fquire with kzight did better fi King him that a more knight/y combat fhall be performed between us Sidney How dares your pride prefume againft my laws Asin a lifted field to fight your caufe Spenfer knight ] o thick upo Let us take care of your wound, upon conditio No (quire in debt, and no poor kzight J e i cam Th This royal hand and mine are newly Ariz marriage Kni'enTLY. adv. [from kright.] Befitting a knight; befeeming a knight When every cafe inlaw is right bids him rif ope Spenfer Which Merlin made Sir knight, if knight thou be Abandon this foreftalled place an One knighted Blackmore, and one penfion'd Quarle as, fir Tho knight but no the perfon kneelin a fword The hero William to per mas, /i Richard. When the name wa not known, it was ufual to fay /i repre George's day h= was knighted Whotton The lord protector knighted the king; and immediately the king ftood up, took the {word from th lord protetor, and dubbed the lord mayor of Londo knight Hayward In England knight hood confers the title of / who give a blow wit up fir Ain KNIGHT. #. /. [cnipe, Sax. kxecht, Germ a fervant, or pupil 1. A man advanced to a certain degree o military rank. 1t was anciently the cufto to knight every man of rank or fortune that he might be qualified to give challenges, to fight in th of th any man having an eftate in Jand of fi hundred pounds a-year is qualified 70 KNIGHT. w.a. Hfr<)m the noun.] 'T create one a knight, which is done b it cutting in the &zife, and pain only in ourfelves Watts fur On fentatives of a county in parliament: h Ev'n in his fleep he ftarts, and fears the 4xife And, trembling,"in his arms takes' his accomplic Dryden wife ‘Pain is not in the &zife that cuts us; but we cal nlkh of the broadeff contrafhall give them an exSouth formerly was a military knight And pall thee in the dunneft fmole of hell at the whipping poft dubbe or pillory P lor KN brufh'd, an Shatkefpeare Texture their biue coat their garters of an indifferent £#iz Shakefpearé Kyi'TTER, 2 /f [from #kzit. weaves or knits On The fpinfters and the £zizzers in the fun And the three maids that weave their threa bones Do ufe to chant it wh wit Shakefpeare's Twelfth Night KN1/TTINGNEEDLE. 7. /. [knit and needle. A wire which women ufe in knitting He gave her a cuffon the ear, fhe would pric him with her kwittingneedle Arbuthnor's Fobe Bull A ftrin Kxi'tTLE. #z /. [from fzi. dinjavorth that gathers a purfe round KNOB. 7. /. [cnzp, Saxon; ézaop, Dutch. A protuberance; any part bluntly rifin above the reft Jult before the entrance of the right auricle o the heart is a remarkabl 470 from the fubjacent fat or bunch Kno'BBED. a@dj. [from kmb. knobs ; having protuberances raifed u Ray Set wit The horns of a roe deer of Greenland are pointe at the top, and kzobbed or tuberous at the bottg;m Kno'sBINEss. 7z f [from knobby. quality of having knobs Kno'BBY. adj. [from kaeb. 1. Full of knobs 2. Hard; ftubbomm 6 X rew ~'Th |