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Show - CH They are a kind of corpo " tical court Ther fhoul fire the dea are buried; a cemetery confum the coxps in far; fhorte tim CHURL #. / tha a gentleman Dutch ; ‘cepene alway and fcornet 70 CHURN Shakefpeare Dryden Shakefpeare A lion in love with a lafs, defired her father' confent 'The anfwer was churlifb enough: He' never marry his daughter to a brute L'Effrange Whe mente Waller An art whereby fenfible bodies contained inveflels, or capable of being contained therein, ar fo change hy means of certain inflruments, an principaily fire, that their feveral powers and virtues are thereby difcoveréd, with a view to philofophy or medicine Boerhaawe Operations of chymiffry fall fhort of vital force no chymift can make milk. or blood of grafs Arbuthnot on Aliments of onion ufed in-fallads the {fpirits of the chyl th chylaccou mafs hav it ha commo 'This word is in the Scotch dialeét ; but the / is not pronounced half fer Ciboules, or. {callions, are a-kin the ftate o O/nions by fermentation Floyer on the Humsurs. 8?82¥§%§ of degenerate Mortimer }n_/' {cicarrix, Latin. CHYLE. . /. [x/r®-.] The white juic formed in the ftomach by digeftion of L 1. The {car remaining affer a.wound One captain Spurio, with' his cicatrice, an emathe aliment, and afterwards change blem of war, here on his finifter cheek Shakefp. into blood: 2 mark; an impreflion : fo ufed. b This powerful ferment, mingling with the parts Shakefpeare lefs properly ' The leven'd mafs to milky chyle converts 1 Samuel This fullen churlifh thie Had-all his mind plac'd upon Mully's beef, King Arbutbnot on Aliments drink not ripene The man was churlifb and evil in his doings cording to the fuppofed etymology, it i written with y or e Cuyra'ceous. adj. [from chyle.] 'Belonging to chyle; confifting of chyle €uts off more circumftance; they are at han xvu®-, Juice, Or xiw, to melt ; by other from: an oriental word, Aema, black. Ac An' infeét that turns about nimbly ; Cisa'R10US. adj. [cibarius; Lat. from cibus, food. Relating to foody ufeful called alfo a fancricket Skinner, Phillips. . for food;s edible Ci"Bor.n f. [cibovle, Fr.] A {mall fort 70 Cruse See 7o CHOOSE The interruption of their chur/ifp drum 3. [Of things.] Unpliant; crofs-grained unmanageable ; harfh; not yielding Cry M1sTRY. 2./ [derived by fome from Cuu'rrwWORM. 7 /. [from cyppan, Sax. Sbakefpeare Wotton The Rarving chymift, in his golden view Supremely bleft Pope's EfJay on Man Bacor's Natural Hiftory Thofe at her father's churlifp feet the tender'd You may try the force of imagination, upo ftaying the coming of butter after the churning A fea of melting pearl, which fome call tears If there be emiflion of fpirit, the body of th metal will be hard and cburlifp. Bacor's Nat. Hift Obfolete Cuy'MrcaLLy. adu [from chymical.] I a chymical manner CHY'MIST. . /. [See CryMmIsTRY. A profeflor of chymiftry; a philofophe by fire The churning of milk bringeth forth butter Proverbs mercilefs ; unkind ; uncivil A chymift kept up by a few chymics 2. To make butter by agitating the milk Cuvu'riisH. ad). [from churl 1. Rude; brutal; harfh; auftere; four n / The ancients obferving in that material a kin of metallical nature, feem to have refolved it int nobler ufe: an art now utterly loft, or perchance @. a. [kernen, Dutch. together Shakefpeare 2. Selfith; avaricious Cuy'mic and in the aétion of the folid parts, churning the © churl, drink all, and lzave no friendly dro He the purfuit of churifh beaft Preferr'd to fleeping on her breafts i Addifon The mechanifm of nature, in convertiug ou aliment, confifts in mixing with it animal juices Poifon, I fee, hath been his timelefs end vefle Th Sax. Cried Oh Shakefpeare Froth fills his chaps ; he fends a grunting found And part he churns, and part befoams the ground Dryden Churn'd in his teeth the foamy venom rofe 3. A mifer; a niggard; a felfith or greed wretch J Methinks already, from this chymick flame I fee a city of more precious moid Dryden With chymick art exalts the min'ral pow'rs And draws.the aromatick fouls of flow'rs Pope Bacon Like a full-acorn'd boar, a churning on A churl's courtefy rarely comes, but either fo gain or falfehood. Sidney To parly, or to fight 2. Relating to chymiftry Perchance he fpoke not; bu From this light caufe th infernal maid prepare The country churls to mifchief, hate, and wars To help me after 'm tird with waiting for this chymick gold Which fools us young, and beggars us when old DiydeneThe medicines are ranged in boxes, accordin to their natures, whether chymical or Galenical pre.parations Watts 1. To agitate or fhake any thing by a-violent motion Churl, upon thy eyes I thro 2. A rude, furly, ill-bred man Cax'micar. ) adj, [chymicus, Latin. Crx'mick 1. Made by chysniftry Her avkward fift did ne'er employ the churn Gay's Paftorals being reproved for his oath, anfwered confidently that his lord commanded him Spenfer's State of Ireland All the pow'r this charm doth owe Milk is the chylous past of an animal, alread prepared Arlbuthnot which the butter is, by long and violent agitation, coagulated and feparate from the ferous parts of the milk to work or ufe any bard labour, which he fait is the life-of a peafant or chus/ Spenfer's State of Ireland One of the bafer fort, which they call churis M [from churlifh Brutality ; rug CHURN. . /. [properly chern, from kern [ceonl, Sax. carl, in Ger himfel Hozwvel of a thoufand taunts and reproaches 1. A ruftick'; a countryman ; a labourer He holdet He was conveyed to the Tower, with the churm Pope man, is ftrong, rufticks bein obferved to be ftrong bodied. Cuy'rLous, adj [from chyle. Confiltin Hizisbe of chyle ; partaking of chyle A confufed found ; a noife other earth will Bacon No place fo facred from fuch fops is barr'd - Noris Paul's church more fafe than Paul's churchyard CuurmE. #. /.. [more properly chirnm from the Saxon cynme, a clamour o noife; as to chirre is to coo as a turtle. I am almoft afraid to ftand alpn Here in the churchyard, yet I will adventure Skake[peare In churchyards where they bury much, the cart wil more or lefs chyle may be extracted from the fam food Arbuthnot ~ Better is the churlifhnefs of 8 man than a courteous womarn Ecclus. xlii. 14 In the churlifonefs of fortune, a poor honeft ma fuffers in this world L' Eftrange CuurcayarD. 7/ The ground adjoinwhic According to the force of the chylopoetick organg gednefs of manner Feaft on the filver, and give us the farthings. Gay i Cav'rRLISENESS. n. cynlyreneyye, Saxon. graveft men in the parith, be appointed, as they b Spenfer here in England Our church-warden ing to the church churlifh. put over the fon fora reward of the fervice of hi of ‘th church~avardens [fro To the oak, now regnant, the olive did chur/ifbl Gowell likewif edv Rudely ; brutally thing belonging to their church, or poo - of their parith Cuu'rrisuLy ration, enabled by law to fue for an c1 Q The veflels chyle canno paf throug Lean but upon a rufh The cicatrice and capable impreflure Thy palm fome moments keeps. Blackmere the fmalleft Arbuthnot Shakefpeare, Cicarrisant. n [ [fromeicatrics.] A application that-induces a cicatrice C1CATRISIVE. adj. [from cicatrice.] HavDrinking' exceflively during the time of cb Jifh blue clay ing the qualities: proper to-induce a ¢i-Mortimer's Hufbandry. lefaction, fops perfpiration. Arbutbnot on' Aliments 4. Vexatious ; obftrutive catrice ‘CHYLIFA'CTIVE. adj. [from chylus, and 1 CicaTr1zaTION.. 2 £ [from cicatric Will you again unkni This churlifb knot of all abhorred war ? Shakefp Jacia, to make, Lat.] Having the power t1.. The*a® of healing the w und. Spain found the war fo churlifh and longfome, as o ma in ch le ve n burfted, or corroded, in the lungs, i they found: they fhoul Cryrira'crron z /. [from chyle.] Th al o pro ef o mak n chy i th break than bow Bacon's Henry VIIL. body in the hundreds of Effex they have a very churThe Cornifh were become, like metal ofte fired and quenched, churlifb, and that would foone confume themfelyes in a endlefs war Spreads a.path clear as the day, Where no churlifp rub fays nay " Bacon Crafbaw ‘C YL PO 'T CK adj. ; [xir® and maite. Having the power, or the office, of form- ing chyle, looked upon to be for the moft part incurable becaufe of the motion and coughing ofithe lungs tearing the gap wider, and hindering ‘the conglu tination and citatrization of the vein. Harvey 2.. Th |