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Show TECA ;!'AUNT ".j:'[fro flight 5 excurfion th LEC verb, Ran]bl It is commonly ufe Our Saviour meek, and with untroubled mind After his airy jaunt, th.ough hurry'd fore Milton Hudibras ‘Old houfes in the night to haunt They parted, and away pofts the cavalier in quef of his new miftrefs: his firft jaza is to court L' Efirange 1f youare for a merry jaunt, 1'll try for once wh Dryden's Spanifb Fryar can foot it fartheft . ¢Thus much of the fcheme of my defign in thi part have run over, and led my reader a long an tedious jaunt, in tracing out thofe metallick and miWoodward qeral bodies Jh'uNTINESS. 720 /- [from jaunty, or janty Se from gentil, French corrupte Janry.] Airynefs; flutter; genteelnefs A certain ftiffnefs in my limbs entirely deftroye thatjuuntinefs of airI wasonce mafter of Addifon Jaw. m. /. [ joue, a cheek, French; whenc joowbare, Or cheekbone, then jaw. 1. The bone of the mout A 7 ufe anLdro th in whic ‘Ageneration whofe teeth are as fwords, and thei jaw teeth as knives, to devour the poor. Prov. xxx ~ The jaw bones, hearts, and galls of pikes are ver Walton's dngler -medicinable Pifo, who probably fpeaks Ariftotle's meaning, fai "that the crocodile doth not only move his upper jaw Grew but that his nether jaw is immoveable More formidable hydra ftands within Dryden Whofe jawws with iron teeth {everely grin 2, The mouth "My tongue.cleaveth to my jaws, and thou haf brought me into the duft of death Shakefpeare A fmeary foam works o'er my grinding jaws ‘And utmoft anguith fhakes my lab'ring framc. ! , Jellor Hrodhin DIeTe n}: tie 5 d, an muc diver ga[t{ic in 1 f blcod Pfalm, xxii. 15 My bended-hook fhall pierce their flimy jaws ous owve Skinner. Jax. », . [named from bis cry A bird ; piaglandaria Two fharp winged (heers ' Deck'd with diverfe plumes, like painted says ‘Were fixed at.his back, to cut his airy ways Fairy Queen We'll ufe this unwholfome humidity, this grof ‘wat'ry pumpion-we'll teach him to know turtle from jays Shakefpeare What, is the jay more precious than the lark Becaufe his feathers are more beautiful ? Shakefpeare 1am highly delighted tofee the jay or the thruf "hopping. about my walks Speétator. Admires the ja9, the infes gilded wings Or hears the hawk, when Philomela fings Pope Ja'zer. #./. A precious ftone of an azur or blue colour Dit ICE. n. /. [1y, Saxon ; eyfe, Dutch. ‘1, Water or other liquor made folid b cold You are no furer, no Than is the coal of fire upon the ice + Or hailftone in the fun. - Shake/peare's Coriolanus Shakefp Thou art all ice, thy kindnefs freezes If I fhoul af whether ice and water wer tw diftin& fpecies of things, I doubt not but I fhould b ~anfwered in the affirmative Locke 2, Concreted fugar 3. To break the Ice. 'To mak ‘opening to any attempt th firf It you break the ice, and do this feat -Atehicye the elder, fet the younger fre For onr accefs, whofe hap fhall be to have her ill not fo gracelefs be to be ingrate Shakefpear Thus hav 1 &roken th ice to invention for tl_m lively reprefentation of floods and rivers neceflary fo our painters and poets Peacha on Drawing After he'd a while look'd wife At lat broke filence and the ice eove wit conerete { Here feel we but the penalty of Adam ar U'cenoOUS USE, , # 7 /i [ice and hox e.% A houfe i The feafon's difference ;5 as, the icy phang And churlifh chiding of the Winter's wind Shabs He relates the exceffive coldnefs of the water the Icane'vmon n /o [fgéopar. animal that break codile IcanrumoNFLY A {mal The generation of the ichneumonflyisin the bodie of caterpillars, and other nymphe of infeéts Denbam's Phylico-Theol Milk draw fro A thin watery huQuincy fome animal that fee Hudibras Yo lcr. v, 4. [from the noun. 1. To cover with ice ; to turn to ice adj [fro The icy precepts of refpect If thou do'ft find him tractable to us Encourage him, and tell him all our reafons If he be leaden, icy, cold, unwilling Be thou fo too Whatfoever the min immediat mind Arbu h. on Diet Some there are, as camals and fheep, which carr no name in ichthyology. Brown's Vulgar Ervours Mental; intelby the fenfes Cheyne's Piil. Prin Ipe'arnry. adv. [fromideal.] IntelleCtually mentally A tranfmiffion is made materially from fome parts and ideally from every one Brown's Vulgar Err Ipe'NTIiCcAL. | adj. [identigue, French. | Th Ipe/NTICK fame; implying the fam thing comprifing the fame idea The beard's th' identick beard you knew The fame numerically true Hudibras Hale There majus is identical with magis Thofe ridiculous identical propofitions, that fait is faith, and rule is a rule, are firft principles:in thi controverfy of the rule of faith, without which nothing can be folidly concluded either about rule o faith Lillotfon's Serraons If this pre.exiftent eternity is not compatible wit a fucceffive duration, as we clearly and ditinétl perceiv being fions that it is not the it remains tha fom though infiuitely above our finite comprehen muf hav ha an identical tinuance from all eternity, whic than God invariabl con being is no otle Bentley's Sermons IDE/NTITY, 2. [, [identité, French; identitas {chool Lat.| Samenefs; not diverfity There is afallacy of equivocation from a fociety i name, inferring an /denzity in nature: by this fallac was he deceived that drank aqua-fortis for ftron water Brown's Vnlgar Evvours Certainly thofe a&tions muft needs be regular, wher there is an identizy between the rule and the faculty frofty Bound in thofe icy chains by thee how fair is reprefented to and confidered on the imagination 2./ [ilBerigue, ¥rench; iZerus But my poor heart firft fet free Shake/p when the image or idea of a thing, abfent in itfelf 2. Good againft the jaundice YcY. adj. [trom zce. 1. Full'of ice; covered with ice; madeo ice Faisfax one real, when the thing, and real impreffion o things on our fenfes, is perceived; the other ideaZ Ico'NocLasT. 7. fo [ icomoclafle, French clean.sh data import.tsv out README Yimoverrusng.] A breaker of images a s c e F ie lo on [i / 7 G L IcoN0 o u c p o n r f d T . y 2 an o t t e e p r cold is called a There is a two-fold knowledge of material things Boyfardus, in his tratt of divination, hath fe forth "the icons of thefe ten, yet added two others Brown's Vulgar Errours Some .of our own nation, and many Netherlanders, whofe names and icozs are publifhed, hav deferved good commendation. Hakewill on Provid i&erical have a great fournefs, and gripes with windiFloyer nefs or the refult of our apprehenfion leétual; not perceive tation I Loctke Ine'aL. adj. [from idea. From Jecks uncomb'd, and from the frozen beard the jaundice the choler is wanting, and th n Anfwering his great idea Milton's Paradife Loft If Chaucer by the beft idea wrought The faireft nymph before his eyes he fet Dryder retains fome magnetical virtue; but if the meaftruum be evaporated to a confiftence, and afterward doth fhoot inte icicles, or cryftals, the loadftone hat Brown's Vulgar Ervours no power upon them Latin. 1. Aflicted with the jaundice o that I call /dea How good art Icre/R1CAL thought I did infer your lineaments Being the right idea of your father Both in your form and noblenefs of mind Icurayo'rHAGY. 7. [, [{8is and @ayw. Diet of fith; the practice of eating fith IU'cicre. n /. [from ice.] A fhoot of ic commonly hanging down from the uppe A pi@ure or reprefen of perception th idea Watts Happy you that may to the faint, youronly idea Although fimply attir'd, your manly affetion utter Sidney Our Saviour himfelf, being to fet down the per fe& idea of that which we are to pray and wit for on earth, did not teach to pray or wifh for mor than only that here it might be with us, as wit them it is in heaven Hooker Her {wect idea wander'd through his thoughts Icuruvyo'Loey. a f. [ichthyologie, French ixfvoroyic, from ixfie and aéys. Th doétrine of the nature of fifh. I'cow. n. /. [iewn. perceives in itfelf, ori ‘The form under which thefe things appear to th nious or ichorons exulceration Harvey on Confum The pus from an ulcer of the liver, growing thi Ucingss, 7. /. [from Z. nerating ice obje derftanding The lung-growth is imputed to a fuperficial fa The fate of ge Menta image Serous Long écicles depend, and cracking founds are heard Dryden The common dropftone confifts principally of fpar and is frequently found in form of an icicle, hanging down from the tops and fides of grottos Woodward's Natural Hiftary Shakefpeare's Richard 111 I'p Contra&ed for I wonld IDEA. #. f. [idée, French; idie. onl If diftilled vinegar or aqua-fortis be poured int the powder of loadftone, the fubfiding powder, dried Shakefpeare's Timon 3. Frigid; backward fanious ; thin; undigefted and ichorous, corrodes the veflels Thou would'ft have never learn' Arbuthnot on Aliments ichor. Pope z. Cold ; free from paffion upon flefh, will be more apt to turn rancid an putrify, acquiring firft a faline tafte, which is a fig U'cuorous where the Where clearer flames glow round the frozen pole and vedpw. It will be more intelligible to have a draught o each front in a paper by itfelf, and alfo to have draught of the groundplot or ichnography of ever {tory in a paper by itfelf Moxon I'CHOR. . /. [ixwe. mour like {ferum in that icy region Tempt icy feas, where fcarce the waters roll A fort of fly [Gp with in Summe were forced to winter Boyle Bear Britain's thunder, and her crofs difpla To the bright regions of the rifing day the eggs of the cro 7 / IcunoleraruY, 7 f The ground-plot me of putrefaction, and then it will turn into an ichor - teeth-are fixed at, fipf Who fi M, 'T which ice is repofited againft the war months ludicroufly, but folemnly by Milzon Hungry and cold, betook him to his reft He fends me out on many a jaunt 2 ID ~Confidering an South's Sermoss thing as exifting, at any deter Sl.).zk_.f['fl P u‘nnei{time and plac ,we copsparg itwith fe |