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Show 3. Brotality ; favagenefs of manners ; in_civility Moderation ought to be had in tempering an managing the Irifh, to bring them from their delight of licentious barbarifm unto the love of goodSpeafer's Ireland nefs and civility Divers great monarchie have rifen from bar barifm to civility, and fallen again to ruin Dawies on Ireland 4. Cruelty; barbarity; unpitying hardnefs of heart : notin ufe They muft perforce have melted clean.sh data import.tsv out README Andbarbarifmitfelf have pitied him, Shak. Rich. II BarBA'RITY. #./o [from barbarous. 2. Cruelty ; inhumanity . And they did treat him wit all the rudenefs reproach, and barbarity imaginable Clarendon 3. Barbarifm ; impurity of {peech ‘What rhyme, improv'd in all its height, can be At befta pleafing found, and fweet barbarity. Dryd Latin exprefles that in one word, which eithe the barbarity or narrownefs of modern tongues canDryden refinements, whic ended by degree ; in many barbaritics, before the Goths had invade Ttaly Sift BA'RBAROUS 4dj, [barbare Fr. Bag Cup®- 1. Stranger to civility ; favage; uncivilized What need I fay more to you ? What ear is f barbarous but hath heard of Amphialus Sidney ‘The doubtful damfel dare not yet commi Her fingle perfon to their barbarous truth. Fairy Q Thou art a Romanj be not barbarous. Shakefp He left governour, Philip, for his country Phryglan, and for manner more bardsrou tha he that fet him there Macc A barbaroys country muft be broken by war before it be capable of government; and whe fubdued if it be not well planted, it will eftivon return to barbarifm Dawies on Ireland 2. Ignorant ; unacquainted with arts ‘They who reftored painting in Germany, no having thofe reliques of antiquity, retained tha barbarous manner Diryden 3. Cruel ; inhuman BARE. adj fire 1. Naked Oldfield, with more than harpy throat endued Th Cries, Send me, gods, a whole hog barbecued. Pope Ba'rBECUE, 7. /. A hog dreft whole, i the Weft Indian manner Ba"RBED. part. adj. [from To barb.] 1. Furnifhed with armour His barbed fteeds to ftables By their barbarous ufage, he died within a fe days, to the grief of all that knew him. Clarendon " Whilefwelling coffers break their owners reft, Steps 3. Cruelly inhumanly But yet you barbaroufly murder'd him. Dryden She wifhes it may profper; but her mothe ufed one of her nieces very barbaroufly. Spefiator Ba'rBaroUSNESs. 7. /0 [from barbarous. 1. Incivility of manners Excellencies of mufick and poetry are grow to be little more, but the one fiddling, and the othe rhiming; and are indeed very worthy of the ig 4. Deteéted ; no longer concealed 2. Knots of fuperfluous flefh growing up i _the channels of the mouth of a horfe Farrier's Dié Ba'rBER. #. [ [from o barb.] A ma who fhaves the beard Thefe falfe pretexts and varnifh'd colours failing Bare in thy guilt, how foul thou muft appear Milton 5. Poor ; indigent ; wanting plenty notance of the friar, and the barbaroufnefs of th Goths Temple 2. Impurity of language s It is much degenerated, as touching the purenefs of fpeech; being overgrown with barbarou/ngfs Brerewood. 3. Cruelty The barbaroufnefs of the trial, and the perfuafive of the ¢lergy, prevailed to antiquate it Hale's Common Lazw To BA'RBECUE. w. a. A term ufed in th a Weft Indie for dreflin a ho whole which, being fplit to the backbone, i Jaid flat upon a large gridiron, raife that the clerg Were it for the glory of God thould be left as bare as the apoftles, when the His chamber being ftived with friends or fuitors - had neither ftaff nor fcrip3 God would, I hope endue them with the felf-{fame affection he gave his legs, arms, and breafts to his fervant to drefs; his head and face to his barber, his cye to his letters, and his ears to petitioners. Hotton Thy boift'rous looks No worthy match for valour to affail Hud¥er's Preface Even from a bare treafury, my fuccefs has bee contrary to that of Mr. Cowley Dryden Ailton 6. Mere; unaccompanied with ufual recommendation Prior 1t was a bgre petition of a ftat To one whom they had punifhed Shakefpeare. Nor are men prevailed upon by bare words, onl through a defect of knowledge; but carried, wit thefe puffs of wind, contrary to knowledge. Soutb 76 BA'RBER.v. 2. [from the noun.] T drefs out ; to powder 7. Threadbare ; much worn Gur courteous Antony You have an exchequer of words, and no othe treafure for your followers; for it appears, by thei bare liveries, that they live by your bare words Shakefpeare ‘Whorn ne'er the word of No woman heard fpeak Being barber'd ten times o'er, goes to the feaft Shake[peare BarBEr-CHIRURGEON. 7./. A manwh joins the practice of furgery to the barber's trade; fuch as were all furgeon formerly, but now it is ufed only for low praétifer of furgery 8. Not united with any thing elfe A defire to draw all things to the determinatio of bare and naked Scripture, hath caufed muc pains to be taken in abating the credit of man Hooker That which offendeth us, is the great difgrac which they offer unto our cuftom of fare readin Hooker the word of God He put himfelf into barber-chirurgesns hands who, by unfit applications, rarified the tumour Wifeman's Surgery 9. Wanting clothes ; flenderly {upplie with clothes 10. Sometimes it has of before the thin wanted or taken away Tempt not the brave and needy to defpair For, tho' your-violence fhould leave them bar l Of gold and filver, fwords and darts re Dryden's Fuvenal Making a law to reduce intereft, will not raif Draw, you rogue; for though it be night, th I'll make a fop of the moonfhin cullionly, barber-monger Shakefpeare's King Lear Ba'REERRY. 7. [, [berberis, Lat. or oxya canthus.] Pipperidge buth common barberry 'The firt of thef fortsis very common in England, and often plante fimple ; withou Yet was their manners then but bare and plain For th' antique world excefs and pride did hate Spenfe Waltow's Angler for hedges ftatues, thefe two. parts wer ornament The barbel is fo called, by reafon of the bar or wattels at his mouth, or under his chaps . Th ftones 3. Unadorned ; plain ftrong, but coarfe The fpecies are 2. Barberry withou to cloath and houfe the kern, *Spenfer on Ircland Then ftretch'd her arms t'embrace the bod Though the lords ufed to be covered whilft th commons were ‘bare, yet the commons would no be bare before the Scottifh commiflioners; and f Clarendon none were covered But rattling ftorm of arrows barb''d with fire, Milt of you; you whorefon draw are bare and naked; which ufe bot 2. Uncovered in refpet IfI conjeture right, no drizzling how'r fhines tree always bare, and expofed to view as much as ou handsand face Addifon 2. Bearded ; jagged with hooks or points moo without covering. In the old Roma Ba'rBaROUSLY. adv. [from barbarous.] BaREBEER-MONGER. 7. /. A word of re1. Ignorantly; without knowledge or arts proach in Shakefpeare, which feems t 2. In a manner contrary to the rules o fignify a fop; a man decked out by hi {peech barber We barbaroufly call them bleft bar, Dan. Her clafping hands inclofe but empty-air, Dryden Shakefpe Richard 11 But by the barber's razor beft fubdued What fyftem, Dick, has right averr' The caufe, why woman has no beard In points like thefe we muft agree Our barber knows as much as we [bane, Sax bare His glittering armour he will command to ruft Next Petrarch follow'd, and in him we fe not fupply in more about two foot above a charcoa with which it is furrounded Ba'rBEL, 2. [ [barbus, Lat. 1. Akind of fith found in rivers, large an 1. Savagenefs; incivility Affete BA BA Miller the price of land; it will only leav barer of money th countr Locke T 7o BARE. . a. [from the adjeftive. ftrip ; to make bare or naked The turtle, on the bared branch Barberry is a plant that bears a fruit very ufefu in houfewifery'; that which beareth its fruit withMortimer out ftones is counted beft Barp a,fo [bardd, Welth. A poet There is among the Irith a kind of people calle bards, which are to them inftead of poets; whof profeffion is to fet forth the praifes or difpraife of men in their poems or rhime; the which ar had in high regard and eftimation among them Spenfer on Ireland And many kards that to the trembling chor Can tune their timely voices cunningly. Fairy The bard who firlt adorn'd our native tongu Tun'd to his Britifh lyre this ancient fong Which Homer might without a bluth rehearfe Dryden Ther i a fabulou narration groweth in the likenefs of a lamb roun tha an an 1 f Bacow''s about ¥ Baring her breaft yet bleeding with the wound Drydez He bar'd an ancient oak of all her beughs Then on & rifing ground the trunk he plac'd Can there be wantin Lights of the churc U Bake BA |