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Show L CU a bell is cuftomarily rung towards bed " My foul is il the fame Unmev'd with fear, and mov''d with martial fame time, it is faid to ring curfew But my chill blood is curdled in my veins i And feaice the fhadow of 'a man remains Dryden's Pirgil Swinging flow with fullen roar 2. A cover for a fire; a fireplate Coagulated The court and curiality This league that we have mad Cur10'siTY, % [ [from curious. "This widow lady 1. Inquifitivenefs ; inclination to enquiry 2. Nicety ; delicacy clean.sh data import.tsv out README Brother of England, how may we conten Shake[peare's King Fobn Cold, hunget, prifons; ills without a cure At firfiyout curey and after your difeafe. Granwille Saift can make choice of either's moietys.Shak, K. Lear I do cures to-day and to-morrow. Luke, xiii. 32 grofs to difcern the curiofity of the workmanthip o nature Ray Our fenfes 3+ The benefice or employment of a curat -.or clergyman. . If his'cure lies amon the lév&yeré,- lét nothin . therefore all contufions of bones, in hard weather Addifor's Freebolder 1. Inquifitive ; defirou of information From love, the {ole difeafe thou canft not cure Sk §ie Pope -2, To prepare in any manner, o as to b preferved: from corruption clean.sh data import.tsv out README Holland 1435 Temple *Cu'RELESS. adj. [cure and Jefs.] Withou cufe; with u . remedy darknefs with her prou 2. To writhe ; to twift 3. To drefs with curls in heart and mind Shakefpeare's King Lear It is pity a gentleman {overy curious after thing that were elegant and beautiful, fhould not hav 4. To raife in waves, undulations, or finuofities times with afrer Woodward Well read, and curious of antiquities Dryden's Fab 14+ Accurate'; careful not to:miftake ‘Till Arianifm bad made it a matter of grea fharpnefs and fubtlety. of wit to bé a found believing Chriftian, men were not czrious what fyllable or particles of fpeech they ufed Hooker 5. Difficult to pleafe ; folicitous of perfection ; not negligent ; full of care Cu'rrrw. n:f. [convre feu, French. A temperate perf.n is no 1. An evening-peal, by which the Con.,delic h think no oufnef \querer willed that every man fhould rak ‘often, of meat and drink up his' fire, and put out his light'; fo 6. Exa&t'; nice ; fubtle man that cu#led my hair, wore gloves in my;cap, ferve the luft of my miftrefs's heart, and did the a& o Wefley Then thus a fenior of the place replies - Lhe. indexterity and worfe fuccefs. of the. mof fam otu aiir. confumption curersy do- evidentl ,demonfirate their dimnefs in beholding its caufes |« Harvey on Confupptions fervin fome 3. Sometimes with of Shakefpeare thatin many places, at this day, wher - If the firft meet the curled Antony Shakefpearz kifs He'll make demand of her- They, up the tree locks" fnak th tha thicke fa Climb ng lition's Paradife Loff A YR s A their natural hiftory ¥ He'is 2 curer of*fouls, and you a cuser of bo2dies:: if you fhould fight, you, go againft'the hair of your profeflions What hatt thou been ? The vifitation of the winds been as curious as to their origin, their ufes, an For love of heav'ny with patience underg A curelefs 1ll, fince fate will have it fo. Dryd. Fab A healer 1. Toturn the hair in ringlets Conceals' me from my thame a1 Attentive to; diligent about . a. [#rollen, Dutch 5 cypnan Sax. 4rille, Dan. ¢ Tell them, the grave that hides my cla clean.sh data import.tsv out README To curelefs xuin Shakejpeare''s Merchant of Venice clean.sh data import.tsv out README "If; faid he 1 Your grief alone is'hard captivity ‘Cu'RER, 7 /v [from care. "phyfician 70 CURL To afk my hated name |2 wave ; finuofity ; flexure Neavton's Opticks - Reader if any curious fta Bdotlefs are plaints, and curelefs are my wounds Ho way to fly, nor firength to hold odt flight Shakefpeare's Henry V1 ¢ Repair thy'wit, good youth, or it will fal ‘Dryden's Fable Thus it happens, if the glafs of the prifms b free: from veins,‘and their fides be accurately plai and avell polifned, without thofe numberlefs wave or curls, which ufually arife from the fand holes . If any one too curious Thould enquir After a vi€ory which we difdain Then let him know the Belgians did retir Before the patron faint of injur'd Spain. Dryden < as to ftink many times before it came fo far a blacker an Newicn's Otticks 2. Undulation' A curizus withy which'did cotrupt their will, Dawies The beef would be fo ill"chofen, or fo ‘ill cured appeared muc fmalle herfelf like a pagey cutting of Fer And breath'd into their uncorrupted breaft fevera To him, and him alone, confefs'd in view Be not curious in unneceflary matters ; for mor things are fhewh unto thee than men underftand Ecclus. iii. 2.3 Even then'to them the fpirit of lyes fuggeft That they Wwere blind; becaufe' they faw not ii Hear what from love unpraétls'd hearts endure fpots, whic i Then backward by his yellow caris fhe drew addicted to enquiry d Waller il Qéi{ér‘kneyv any man cured of inattention. Savift roun withi Her hand {he faffen'd on his hair behind CURIOUS. 4dj. [éuridfis, Latin. are more difficult to cure. Bacon's Natural Hiftory Here the poor lower, that has long endur' . Some proud nymph's fcorn, of his fond paffion' fa i her hair, leaving nothing but the fhort cur/s t cover that noble head Siditey uft as in a¢t he ftood, in clouds enthrin'd Bacon's Natural Hiffory " of this great town ' ‘She apparelle . -We took a ramble together to fée the curigfitie brittle5- an curioufly but obfervin 3. Artfully ; exattly 4. Captioufly. CuRrL. 7. /. [from the verb. 1. A ringlet of hair 5. An obje& of curiofity ; rarity "-difeafe. Ufed of patients or difeafes colds,, wa or aflifted, are to lower part of the ftock fhould enjoy the: frethnef ~ of the fhade, and the upper boughs and fruit, th comfort of the fun; but it forted not to re himfelf, fome Nor is it the having of wheels and fprings, tho never fo curioufly wrought, and artificially fet, bu the winding of them up, that muft give motion't the watch South _height, to draw it through the wall, and fpread i . upon the fouth' fide; conceiving that the root an . medy 5 to recover : with of before th in fhar arme mor 2. Elegantly; neatly a tree upon the north fide of a wall, and, at a littl 'greate:: grievance than thofe who break theme Co/l banes howeve very curioufly upo darker than the reft There hath been practifed alfo a curiofity, to; fe be faid againt entangling property, fpinning ou _ caufes, fqueezing clients, and making the laws Th Signior Baptifta, of whom I hear fo well. Skakefp ed from the water in that place 4. An a& of curiofity; nice experiment o CurEL @. a. [curo, Latin. 1. Totheal 5 ‘to ‘reftore to' health For curious I cannot be with you had not yet forfaken him Sidrey At firft I thought there had been no light reflect Qualities are fo weighed, that czrisfiy in neithe fome remote part, by way of a cure for the corriip Rigid; fevere; rigorous times fetching alictle fkip, as if he faid his ftrengt 3. Accuracy ; exatnefs a feat i finifhed Underftanding to devife cxricus works, to wor in gold . Exodus He looke When thou waft in thy gilty and thy perfume they mocked thee for too much curigfity; in th rags thou knoweft none, but art defpifed for th contrary Shake[peare's Timort | ‘All'thefe he'muft, and guiltlefs oft, endure Dryden's Fables " Now we re ador'd, and the next hour difpleafe e. A& of healing. Bacon to Villiers clean.sh data import.tsv out README Will give her fadnefs very little cure tion of ' manners lg laboured Curia'viTy, #n. [ [from curialis, Latin. 'Cu'r10USLY adv [fro curious. The privileges, prerogatives, or per 1 Inquifitivel ; attentively; ftudioufly haps retinue, of a court CURE. . /i [cura, Latin. 1. Remedy ; reftorative to fee 8. Elegant ; neat Milton the like, the beauty will not be fo much refpected {o as the compound ftuff is like to pafs Bacon Arbutbnot on Aliments Horace advifes the' Roman A vaile obfcur'd the funfhine of her eyes The rofe within herfelf her fweetnefs cles'd Each orpament about her feemly lies By curious chance, or carelefs art, compes'd KFairfas But now for pans, pots, curfews, counters, an ing into a curdy mafs with acids Holder 7. Artful ; not neglectful ; not fortuitous Over fome wide-water'd thore Tt differs from a vegetable emulfion, by coagulatLE8%0 Coavell I hear the far off curfeaw found concreted ; full of curds ; curdled difcrimination, than the other fenfe Is to make midnight mufhrooms, that rejoic To hear the folemn curfew Shakefp. Tempeft Oft on a plat of fifing groun Swith "The lazy blood, and freezes at my heart There is in the fpirit of wine fome acidity, b Floyer which brandy ¢urdles milk V diftance, with more variety, and with a2 more carisz You, whofe paftim Ev'n now a fatal draught works out my foul Ev'n now it curdiesin my fhrinking vein Cu'rDY. adj. [from curd. CU curious of fancies an much, and fpeaks a Taylor Both thefe fenfes embrace their obje@s at greate Who talke the ruffian billows by the top Curlng their monftrous heads Shakefpeare's HenryIV Seas would be pools, without the bruthing ai To cur! the waves Dryden's Fables 7o CurL. . n 1. To fhrink into ringlets Thofe flender aerial: bodies are, feparated an firetched out, which otherwife; by reafon of thei flexiblenefs and weight, would. flag or ¢urls 2. To rife in undulations Bople ‘Lo every nobler portion, of the tow Thecurling billows rowl their reftlefs tide In parties no r firaggle up and down, As armiés; uhoppos'd,' for prey divides " "Dryder While cariingitmoaks from yillage tops.are ieen Pope 3. T |