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Show ¥. Thofe that lived in old time were callAnd though the ancients thus their rules invade made Moderns, beware hav themfelve law wit difpenf king Bid him make hafte Shakefp. Tw be corrupted from* band-iron 5 an iro that may be moved by the hand Pope at the end of a fire-grate, in which th {pit turns; or irons in which wood 1 He toucheth it as a {pecial pre-eminence of Ju nia an that in Chriftianit A'NCIENT. 7. / 1. The flag or ftreamer of a fhip, and formerly of a regiment 2. The bearer of a flag, as was Ancien Piftal 5 whence, in prefent ufe, enfign This is Othello's ancient, as I take it Shake/p The fame indeed, a very valiant fellow adv A'NcienTLY old times [fro have neithe A''NCIENTNESS. 2 /. [from ancient.] Antiquity ; exiftence from old times The Fefcenine and Saturnian were the fame they were called Saturnian from their ancientnefs Dryden when Saturn reigned in Italy A'NCIENTRY. 7 /. [from ancient.] Th honour of ancient lineage ; the dignit of birth Of all nations under heaven, the Spaniard i the moft mingled, and mof uncertain Where fore, moft foolithly do the Irifh think to ennobl themfelves, by wrefting their ancientry from th Spaniard, who is unable to derive himfelf fro Spenfer on Ireland any in certaine There is nothing in the between, but gettin wenches wit Shakefpeare See ANKLE AncLE A'Ncony. z /. [in the iron mills. bloom wrought into the figure of a fla iron bar, about three foot long, wit two fquare rough knobs, one at eac Chambers end AND 1. Th comjunition particl b terms are joined whic whic fentence o eaf it is no to explain by any {ynonimous word Sure his honeft Got him fmall gains, but fhamelefs flatter And filthy beverage, and unfeemly thift And borrow bafe, and fome good lady's gift Spenfer What fhall I do to be for ever known Comwley Ad make the age to come my own Danes unconquer'd offsprin hind And Morini, the laft of human kind Th marc be clean.sh data import.tsv out README Dryden It fhall ever be my ftudy to make difcoveries o this nature in human life, and to fettle the proper diftinétions between the virtues and perfections of mankind, and thofe falfe colours and re femblances of them that fhine alike in the eyes o Addifon the vulgar 2. And fometimes fignifies though feems a contrattion of axd if an It is the nature of extreme felt-lovers, as the will fet an houfe o their eggs ANDRO'GYNAL. adj. [from dwe and ydwm. Having two fexes ; hermaphroditical yo d a r [ v a nal] In the form of hermaphrodites with two fexes fire, and it were but to roaf Bacon 3. In and if, the and is redundant, and i omitted by all later writers hereof have undergone n example Th rea or new tranfexion, but were androgynally born and under fome kind of hermaphrodites Brown's Vulgar Errours adj Axpro'cywovus 'Th fam wit androgynal ANDRO'GYNUS. n./. [See ANDROGYAn hermaphrodite ; one tha var. is of both fexes ANDRO TOMY. 7 /. [from cyne and réurw. prattic Th o huma cuttin dies A''NECDOTE bo Dia 7. /. [&véndoron. 1. Something yet unpublifhed ; fecret hiftory Some modern anecdotes aver He nodded in his elbow chair Prior French, for 2. It is now ufed, after th biographical incident; a minute paffage of private life ANEMO'GRAPHY. 7. /. [drep®-and yedouw. The defcription of the winds ANEMO'METER. 7. f. [dvep®- and pérgor. An inftrument contrived to meafure th child, wronging the ancientry, fteal ing, fighting Bacon " and at the bottom a bafer title to hold it, nor virtu Sidney to rule it The colewort is not an enemy, though that wer anciently received, to the vine only, but to an other plant, becaufe it draweth frongly the fattef Bacon Juice of the earth If you ftrike an entire body, as an andiron o brafs, at the top, it maketh a more treble {ound ancient.] I Trebifond anciently pertained unto this crown now unjuftly pofiefied, and as unjuftly abufed, b thofe wh laid to burn the Hooker were his ancicnts o may fupply the place of a hand.] Iron -Againft the precept, ne'er tranfgrefs its end Andronicus of Verona Gent A'npriron. n /. [fuppofed by Skinner t or if you muft offen 2. Senior : not in ufe ANES T pray thee, Launce, an" if thou feeft my boy ed ancients, oppofed to the moderns A AN AN AN ftrength or velccity of the wind ANE'MONE. n. /. (dvuim.] The win flower Upon the top of its fingle ftalk furrounded b a leaf, is produced one naked flower, of many petals, with many ftamina in the centre; the feed are colleéted into an oblong head, and furrounde with a copious down The principal colours i anemonies, are white, red, blue, and purple, fometimes curioufly intermixed Miller Win flowers are diftinguifhed into thofe wit broad and hard leaves, and thofe with narrow an foft ones The broad-leaved anemony roots fhoul be planted about the end of September Thef with fmall leaves muft not be put into the groun till the end of O&ober Mortimer From the foft wing of vernal breezes fhed Anemonies, auriculas, enrich' With fhining meal o'er all their velvet leaves Thomfon A'NEMOSCOPE. 7. [. [&veu®: and oxéwon. machin invente t forete th changes of the wind. It has been obferved, that hygrofcopes made of cat' gut proved very good anemofcapes, feldom failing, by the turning the index about, to foretel the fhifting of th w1£1d Chambers ANE'NT. prep. A word ufedin the Scotc diale& 1. Concerning ; about; as, ke faid nothin anent this particular 2. Over againft; oppofite to; as, be live anent the market-houfe }fl. / Th fpires_or bea corn AWNS A difes [Gvevedva A'xeurisM. 7. of the arteries, in which, either b preternatural weaknefs of any part o them they become exceflively dilateq or, by a wound through their coats, tfi blood is extravafated amongft the a jacent cavities Shar In the orifice, there was a throbbing of the arte rial blood, as in an aneurifin Ane'w W ifenan adv. [from a and neww. 1. Over again; another time; repeatédl This is the moft common ufe Nor, if at mifchief taken, on the ground Be flain, but pris'ners to the pillars bound At cither barrier plac'd 5 nor, captives made Be freed, or, arm'd anew, the fight inyade ‘That, a in birth Dryden in beauty you excel The mufe might di¢tate, and the poet tell Your art no other art can fpeak; and you Lo fhow how well you play, muft play aneap Th miferie of the civil wa did, for fi'zlr years, deter the inhabitants of our ifland from th thoughts of engaging azew in fuch defperate un dertakings Addifon 2. Newly ; in a new manner He who begins late, is obliged to form g the whole difpofition of his foul, to acquire ne habits of life, to practife duties to which he i Rogers utterly a ftranger AnFrA'CTUOSE. ) adj. [from aenfraéus Axrra'cTUOUS. } Lat.] Winding; ma zy 5 full of turnings and winding paf fages Behind the drum are feveral vaults and anfrgfuofe cavities in the ear-bone, fo to intend th leaft foun imaginable that the fenfe might b affe€ted with it; as we fee in fubterraneous cave Rgy and vaults, how the found is redoubled Anrra'cTUOUSNESS. 7 /. [from a Jraduous.] Fulnefs of windings and turn ings AxrrA'cTURE. #. [ [from anfrafus Lat.] A turning ; a mazy winding an Dig turning A'NGEL 7. [o'i*yfilaq 3 angelzu, Laf-}t 1. Originally a meffenger. A {piritemployed by God in the adminiftration o human affairs Some holy angt Fly to the court of England, and unfol Shakefpeare His meflage ere he come o Had we fuch a knowledge of the conftitutio man, as it is poflible angels have, and it is certai his Maker has idea of his effence we fhould have a quite othe Lock 2. Angel is fometimes ufed in a bad fenfe as, angels of darkuefs And they had a king over them, which wa Revelation the angel of the bottomlefs pit. 3. Angel, in fcripture, fometimes mean man of God, prophet 4. Angel is ufed, in the ftyle of loves fo a beautiful perfon Thou haft the {weeteft face I ever look'd : Sir, as I have a foul the is an angel Shakelp 5. A piece of money anciently coined a imprefled with an angel, in memory 0 an obfervation of Pope Gregory, th,&'_ the pagan Angli, or Englifh, were 1 beautiful, that, if they were Chriftian T they would be dngeli, or angel coin was rated at ten thillings. Take an empty bafon, put an angel of 501";,1 |