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Show BA BA What vigorous arm, what repercuflive blow Bandies the mighty globe ftill to and fro ? Blackmore exchange ; to give and take reci procally Do you.bandy looks with me, you rafcal Shakefpeare >Tis not in the To grudge my pleafures, to cut off my train To bandy hafty words Shake[peare 3. To agitate ; to tofs about This hath been fo bandied amongft us, tha one can hardly mifs books of this kind. Locke Ever fince men have been united into governments, the endeavours after univerfal monarch have been bandied among them Sawift Le 9 not obviou an known truth, or fom o the moft plain and certain propofitions, be bandie about in a difputation Watts Ba'Npy. @. 2. To contend, as a fome game, in which each ftrives t drive the ball his own way No fimple man that fee "This fa&ious bandying of their favourites But that he doth prefage fome ill event Shakefp 1 2. Deftruétive water 2 The filver eagle too is fent befote That Tyber trembled underneat his bm' t a ' v o m c th t i v' ce co th A Richmond, in Devonthire, fent ou¢ Unto the fhore, to afk thofe on the-[;an},o?te If they were his affiftants Ben Fonfon The nightly wolf is daneful to t.he fold Storms to the wheat, to buds the bitter coide 231 7. Ba'NEruLNESs bangful. [fro A brock whofe ftream fo great, fo- good‘-‘@ Was loy'd, was honour'd as a flood Ao Poifonoufnefs ; deftru@tivenefs Whofe banks the Mufes dwel 7. /. [from bane and awort. Ba'NEwORT To Banc. v. a. [vengolen, Dutch. 1. To beat; to thump; to cudgel: a lo He tells aloud your greateft failing Nor makes a feruple to expof One receiving from them fome affronts, me with them handfomely, and banged them to good Hoawel purpofe He having got fome iron out of the earth put it into his fexrvants hands to fence with, ary] Locke bang one another Formerly I was to be banged becaufe I wa too ftrong, and now becaufe I am too weak., t refift ; I am to be brought down when too rich BA'NDYLEGGED. adj. [fro Having crooked legs Savift bandyleg. The Ethiopians had an one-eyed bandylegge prince;- fuch a perfon would have made but a odd figure Collier BANE. z. /. [bana, Sax. a murderer. 1. Poifon Begone, or elfe let me The fame air with thee Bane *Tis bane to dra Ben Fonfon All good to me become and in heav'n ‘much worfe would be m fate Milton They with fpee Their courfe through thickeft conftellations held Spreading their dane Milton Thus am I doubly arm'd 5 my death and life My bane and antidote, are both before me This, in 2 moment, brings me to an end But that informs me I fhall never die 2. Tha whic 4d . ifon deftroys ; mifchief ruin "Infolency muft be repreft, or it will be the ban of the Chriftian religion Hooker I will not be afraid of death and bane Till Birnam foreft come to Dunfinane. Shakefpear Suffices that to me ftrength is my baze And proves the fource of all my miferies. Milton So entertain'd thofe odorous {weets the fiend Who came their bane ‘Who can omit the Gracchi Milton who declar The Scipios worth, thofe thunderbolts of war The double barne of Carthage Dryden Falfe religion is, in its nature, the greateft ban and deftruction to government in the world. South %o BaNE.v. a, [from the noun.] To poifon What if my houfe be troubled with a rat And I be pleas'd to give ten thoufand ducat To have it ban'd Shake[peare Ba'NEFUL. ad). [from bane and full. 1 Tlus refus'd ¢ impart the bareful truft Let it be no bank Pope Bar'sEfp "This mafs of treafure you fhould now redu But you your ftore have hoarded in fome bank - Debam There pardons and indulgences and givingme a fhare in faints merits, out of the common fon and treafury of the church, which the'gog hasth fole cuftody of b managing a bank 2 /S 7o BANK. @. a. [from the noun. 1. Toinclofe with banks Amid the cliff And burning fands, that fank the fhrubby vales 2. To lay up money in a bank Bawk-BiLL. n /. [from bank and bi A note for money laid up in a b the fight of which the moneyi Oh, fare thee well Let three hundred pounds be paid h ready money, or bank-bills Shakefpeare. Ba'NKER. #. /. [from bank.] O trafficks in money ; one that manages a bank Banifb bufinefls, banifb {orrow To the Gods belongs to-morrow Cowley It is for wicked men only to dread God, an to endeavour to banifp the thoughts of him ou " of their minds Tillotfon Whole droves of lenders crowd the banker' To call in money By powerful charms of gold and filve The Lombard bankers and the *change Succefslefs all her foft_eareffes prove Pope. Ba'wisHER. 2. /. [from banih.] He that Ba'NkrUPTCY 1. The ftate of forces another from his own country 7/ [from ban man broken, or z. The a& of declaring one's fel In mere fpite To be full quit of thofe my banifbers Stand I before thee here Shakefpeare rupt ban as, he raifed t‘he'clamm_lr-‘iéf creditors by a fudden bankruptey Ba'N1seMENT. 2. /o [baniffoment, Fr. 1. The a& of banithing another; as, h fecured himfelf by the dani/bment of hi BA'NKRUPT. adj. [banqueroute, F rotto, Ital.] In debt beyond the pove o enemies. exile A ji payment T%e};{ing s grown bankrupt, like abgz%;: Sir, if you fpend word for word with me I thall make your wit bankrupt Skakefpeare It is faid that the moneyof Italy had benches, prqba‘b Round the wide world in banifbment we roam [banc, Saxon. 5. The company of perfons concerned Thofe evils thou repeat'ft upon thyfel BANK. 2. / or common ftock, bt eye brooked 7o BA'NISH. «. a. [banir, Fr. banio, lo Lat. probably from baz, Teut. an outlawry, or profcription. 1. To condemn to leave his own country Now go we in conten To liberty, and not to banifbment together miflike éanks, but they will hardly b If we bangle away the legacy of peace left u by Chrift, it is a fign of our want of regard fo him Duty of Man z. The ftate of being banifhed man be matfter of his own money. Not that I Forc'd from our pleafing fields and native home. Dryden Poifonous For voyaging to learn the direful art To taint with deadly drugs the barbed dart Obfervant of the gods, and fternly juft called for occafionally Hudibras To banifb from his breaft his country's love wit Wi gifts a veflel e 4. A place where money is laid up tob 7o BA'NGLE. @. a. To wafte by little an little ; to fquander carelefsly: a wor now ufed only in converfation 2. To drive away th Lking but raifed above one another, is evident from g Arbuthny fcriptions of ancient fhips given to the eagle that held the ring of my box i Swift's Gulliver his beak Have banifp'd me from Scotland R Supplies the banks with twenty chofen oars; fid:f That banks of oars were not in the fay Pfifn a ftroke: a low word A feg of rowers deep Mean tim feveral bangs or buffets, as I thought - 1}'5 Plac'd on their banks, the lufty Trojan Neptune's fmooth face, and cleaye the i I am a bachelor.-That's to fay, they are fool that marry 5 youw'll bear me abang for thate Shak With many a &iff twack, many a bang I hear Hlan They befieged him in Abel of Bethmazh and they caft up a bank againkt the ciprinn flood in the trench -"""'dm‘e;' benc burfe or exchange ; and thatW became infolvent, his fanco Was 1 his bench was broke. It was 1. The earth arifing on each fide ofa water We fay, properly, the Jore of ths fea written barnkerout. Bankerout 15 3 VET Your bandyleg, or crooked nofe . Any heap of earth piled up 3. [from banc, Fr. a bench. Arbuthnot Hard crabtree and old iron rang When the fad pomp along his banks wag fe,df‘ A valiant fon-in-law thou fhalt enjoy 2. To handle roughly; to treat with vio* One fit to bandy with thy lawlefs fons lence, in general To ruffle in the commonwealth Shakefpeare. The defperate tempeft hath fo bazg'd the Turks Could fet up grandee againft grandee Shakefpeare That their defignment halts "To fquander time away, and &andy You fhould acceft her with jefts fire-new fro Made lords and commoners lay fiege the mint; you fhould have baznged the youth int ‘To one another's privileges Hudibras Shakefpeare dumbnefs After all the dandying attempts of refolution {Banc / [fro th verb. blo is is as much a queftion as ever Glanville Ba'NDYLEG. n. /. [from bander, Fr. crooked leg . O early loft! what tears the river fhed and opprefled when too poor upon *Tis happy when our flreafnslt':;‘ know]zzlf' To fill their banks, but not to overthrow ‘D".‘E d b t g n l a d t w m f t t A pla and familiar word Have you not made an univerfal fhoy Which I do hope will prove to them as baneful a thump and the banks of a riger, brooko What from the tropicks can the earth repel 2. T BA |