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Show BE BE They are content to bear wwith my abfence an folly Thoug Sidney. I muft be content to dear with thof that fay you are reverend grave men; yet they li deadly, that ‘tell you, you have good faces. Shat Look you lay home to him Forgive the bearer of unhappy ;tewb BEARD. . /. [beapb, Saxen. 1. The hair, that grows on the lips an chin Your alter'd father openly purfue Your ruin No gentleman fends a fervant with 3 meifage without endeavouring to put it into terms brough down to the capacity of the bearer Swl Ere on thy chin the fpringing beard bega To fpread a doubtfuldown, and promife man. Prior "Tell him his pranks have been too broad to bear | 2. Beard is ufed for the face; as, to doan awith Shakefpeare thing toa man's eard, is to do it indeBear with me then, if lawful what I afk. Milton firme his corn cut the reapers and threfhers fingers L' Eflrange 5. A barb on an arrow 6. The beard or chuck of a horfe 1. A place in which bears are kept fo fport Hurrying me from the play-houfe, and the fcene to the bear-garden, to the apes, and afics Stilling flect 2. Any place of tumult or mifrule I could not forbear going to a place of renow for the gallantry of Britons, namely to the bearSpectator Brar-carRDEN. adj. A word ufed in familiar or low phrafe for rude or turbulent as, a bear-garden fellowv ; thatis, a ma rude enough to be a proper frequenter o the bear-garden. Bear-garden fport, 1 ufed for grofs inelegant entertainment Th 1. The fmooth-leaved garde bear's-breechs 2. The prickly bear's-breech. 3. Th fpines, &Fc. Th fuppofed to be th leaves of this plan Corinthian pillars and were formerly in great efteem with the Romans Miller or duricula [auwricela urfi Lat.] The name of 2 plant Bear's-EAR or Sanmicle [cortufa from duty Lat. A plant Brar's-rooT. . /. A {pecies of hellebore Bear's-worT. 7 /. An herb Shakefpeare May draw with you Old prophecies foretel our fall at hand When bearded men in floating caftles land. Dryden 2. Having fharp prickles, as corn As when a fiel ripe for harveft, waving bend The fierce virag Flew o'er the field, nor hurt the earded grain, Dryd 3. Barbed or jagged Thou fhould'ft have pull'd the fecret from m breaft Torn out the bearded fteel to give me roft. Dryden adj. [from beard. 1. Without a beard fom coin of Cunobelin kin o Effex and Middlefex, with ‘a beardlefs image, inferibed Cunobelin Camden z. Youthful And, as young ftriplings whip the top for fpor On the fmooth pavement of an empty court The wooden engine flies and whirls about Admir'd with clamours of the beardlefs rout. Dryd Be"arer. n fi [from 70 bear. 1. A carrie of any thing, who convey any thing from one place or perfon t another T am not for him 7. /. [from bear. Look'd through ? or can a part contain the w}Il'olc 0?5 2. Gefture ; mien; behaviour That is Claudio; I know him by his bearing Shake[peare 3. [In architeGure.] Bearing of a piece o ‘timber, with carpenters, is the fpace either between the two fixt extreme betwee one extreme and poft or wall, trimmed up between th ends, to fhorten its bearing Build. Dift Br'arwarp. . /. [from bear and ward. A keeper of bears And manacle the begravard in their chains. bjbm The bear is led after one manner, the multitud after another the bearavard leads but one brutt and the mountebank leads a thoufand. L' Effrarge BEAST . /. [befte, Fr. beftia, Fat 1. An animal diftinguithed from birds infelts, fithes, and man The man that once did fell the lion's fki While the beaft liv'd, was kill'd with hunting him Shakefpeart Beafls of chafe are the buck, the doe, the fox Beaffs of the foreft-ar the martern, and the roe the hart, the hind, the hare, the boar, and th wolf. Beafls of warren are the hare and cony. Cowell 2. An irrational animal, oppofed to man as, man and bea/? I dare do all that may become a man Who dares do more, is NONgme- --What beaft was 't the "That made you break this enterprize to me Shakefpeare's Macbetb Medea's charms were there, Circean feaft He thould the bearers put to fudden death Not fhriving time allow'd is not for me We'll bait thy bears to d'eath Her bearded grove of ears, which way the win Milton Sways them ar weight at the ends only 7. [In heraldry.] A fupporter BE'ARHERD, 7. /. [from bear and lerd as fhepherd from fbeep.] A man tha thereof, o every bearded fellow, that's but yok'd Ther raifed up between the ends ofa piece o timber, to fhorten its bearing; or t prevent its bearing with the whol The ftrong connetions, nice dependencies Gradations juft, has thy pervading fou Be"ARDED. adj. [from beard. 1. Having a beard Be'ArDLESS A poft or brick wal But of this frame, the bearing and the ties bearded by that new party, with whom they coul not agree about dividing the fpoil Swift Of Ceres Ewelyn fpet to fomething elfe epifcopacy, the prefbyterians alone begun, continued, and would have ended, if they had not bee Thin the raw bearers commonly perifh 1. The fite or place of any thing with re Spenfer may be able to beard him More I have been bearded by boys The defign of utterly extirpating monarchy an BEAR-GARDEN. 2. /i [from bear and gar Boyl, that are good bearersy will fucceed Repruné apricots, faving the young flloots; fo Be"ariNG 2. To oppofe to the face ; to fet at ope defiance Bacon's Natural Hiftory This way of procuring autumnal rofes, in fom therefore I will even take fixpence in earneft of th bearherd, and lead his apes intohell. Shakefpeare No man fo potent breathes upon the ground Shake[pearc But I will beard him he fhould f{werv One who carries the body to the grave A tree that yields its produce and he that is lefs than 2 man anger He, whenfoeve 4 5 He that is more than a youth 1. To take or pluck by the beard, in cono Like a rich armour worn in heat of day That fcalds with fafety Shakefpears tends bears 70 Bearp. w. a. [from beard. There be of flies, caterpillars, canker-flies, an Brar's-ear s tha part which bears the curb of the bridle Farrier's Diéz temp When thou doft pinch thy bearer, thou doft 6. [In architetture. A certain farmer complained, that the beards o Bear-BinD. 7 /i A fpecies of bindweed ‘BEarR-FLY. 7. /. [from bear and fly.] A infect middle bear's-breech, with fhor firft is ufed in medicine, and i smollis acantbus of Virgils 'Th are cut upon the capitals of th Locke ploughman loft his fweat, and the gree cor Hath rotted ere its youth attain'd a beard. Shakefp E'en then when Troy was by the Greeks o'erthrown The bear oppos'd to bright Orion fhone Creech fpecies are tradition and a reverend beard Th of the leffer bear, 1s the pole-ftar Th by genera of corn 2, Thename of two conftellations, calle the greater and leffer bear ; in the tai Eear's-BREECH. m f. [acanthus. name of a plant Shakefpeare 4. Sharp prickles growing upon the ear Bid Salifbury and Warwick come to me ~- Are thefe thy bears £ we'll bait thy bears to death And manacle the bearward in their chains. Shak ‘Thouw'dft fhun a bear But if thy flight lay tow'rd the raging fea Thou'dft meet the bear 1* th' mouth. Shakefpeare garden O majefty life I hav overturned by an upftart novelift two brave bears and tygers whof Some thin remains of chatity appear' Ev'n under Jove, but Jove without a beard. Dryd Would it not be infufferable for a profeffor t have his authority, of forty years ftanding, con faid to have no nourithment but from licking thei feet. T'his animal has naturally an hideous loaok clean.sh data import.tsv out README but when enraged it is terrible; and, as roug and ftupid as it feems to be, it is capable of difcipline; it leaps, dances, and plays a thoufand littl " tricks at the found of a trumpet. They abound i Poland. In the remote northern countries the fpecies is white Calmet there Sir fpared at fuit of his grey beard In the winter, they lie hid and afleep, themal forty days, and the female four months; and f foundly for the firft fourteen days, that blows wil not wake them. In the fleepy feafon, they ar den. rufian ancien . 2 Chromicle 3. One who wears any thing 3. Beard is uled to mark age or virility as, he has a long beard, means he is old Thi he fet threefcore and ten thoufand of the to be bearers of burdens Hudibras Their rev'send perfons to my beard lick them into form. The dams go no longer tha thirty days, and generally produce five young ones bearflies An Rail'd at their covenant, and jeer' Some have falfely reported, that bears bring thei young into the world fhapelefs, and that their dam Call hither to the ftake m 2. One employed in carrying burtheps fiance, or to his face BEAR. z. /. [bena, Saxon; arfus, Lat. 1. A rough favage animal Diydon Skakefpeare With bowls that turn'd enameur'd youths t beafts Dryden 5 |