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Show cu L Roman cut Addifon Sometimes an old fellow fhall wear this or tha fort of cut in his cloaths with great integrity Addifon's Spectator perforation with a pointed inftrument 3. A wound made by cutting Sharp weapons according to the force cut int the bone many ways; which cuts are called Jedes and are reckoned among the fratures Wifeman's Surgery This great cur orditch Sefoftris the rich king o Egypt, and long after him Ptolomeus Philadelphus, purpofed to have made a great deal wide and deeper, and thercby to have let the Red Se into the Mediterranean Krnolles 5. A part cut off from the reft broad a boar to be ten foot long, and on one cut is reckoned fo many foot 6. A {mall particle It hat Mortimer's Hufbandry fhreddings which may be better called withes than prayers Hooker 7. A lot made by cutting a ftick My lady Zelmane and my daughter Mopfa ma draw cuzs, and the fhorteft cut fpeak firft. Sidney A man may as reafonably draw cuwzs for hi tenets, and regulate his perfuafion by the caft of die Locke 8. A near paflage, by which fome angle i cut off The ignorant took heart to enter upon this grea calling, and inftead of their cutting their way to i through the knowledge of the tongues, the fathers and councils, they have taken another and a fhorte cut South There is a fhorter cut, an eafier pafiage Decay of Piety The evidence of my fenfe is fimple and immediate, and thereforeI have but a fhorter cxf thereb to the affent to the truth of the things fo evidenced Hale's Origin of Mankind But the gentleman would needs fee me part o my way, and carry me a fhort cz through his ow ground, which faved me half a mile's riding Savift's Examiner 9. A piture cut or carved upon a ftam of wood or copper, and imprefled fro The In this form, according to his defcription, he i {et forth in the prints or cuts of martyrs by CevalBrown lerius It is, I believe, ufed improperly b Addifon Madam Dacier, from fome old cuts of Terence fancies that the larva or perfona of the Roma ators was not only a vizard for the face, bat ha Addifon on Italy falfe hair to it io.. The ftamp on which a picture is carved, and by which it is imprefled 11. The a& or prattice of dividing a pac of cards How can the mufe her aid impart Unfkill'd in 2ll the terms of art Or in harmonious numbers pu The deal, the thuffle, and the cut 12 Fafhion form fhape Saift o cutting inte fhape Their clothes are after fuch a Pagan cut too That, fure, they >ve worp out Chriftendom. Shakefpeare's Henry VI1I His tawny beard was th' equal grac Both of his wifdom and his face Tn cat and dye fo like a tile A fadden view it would beguile Hudibras They were fo familiarly acquainted with him, a to know the very cut. of his beard Upon 2 knife; love me, and leaye " In a bye cutler's fhop he bough € nots Shap t a tep jen knife: fo cheap was the inftrume t of this greg attempt Wotto He chofe no other inftrument ‘ than an ordinar. knife, which he bought of a co MMon cytl y who fteals by the method of c ftin purfes: a . common pratice- whey €0 r menwore their purfes at their girdles Stilling flect Children love breeches, not for their cut or eafe but becaufe the having them is a matk or ftep toLocke wards manhood A third defires you to obferve well the toga o fuch a reverfe, and afks you whether you can i was once the cuftom. A thief; a robher To hav an open ear, a quick eye, and 2 nimbl hand, is neceflary for a cutpurfe.. [cuticula, Latin. 1. The firlt and outermoft covering of th body, commonly called the fcarf-fkin This is that foft fkin which rifes in blifter upon any burning, or the application of asbliftering plafter. It ftick tru fkin, t which it is alfo tied by the veffels whic nourifh it, though they are fo {mall a not to be feen. When the fcarf-fkin i examined with a microfcope, it appear to be made up of feveral lays of exceeding {mall {cales LQuincy In each of the very fingers there are bones an griftles, and ligaments and membranes, and mufcles and tendons, and nerves and arteries, an veins and fkin, and cazic/e and nail Bentley's Sermon 2. A thin fkin formed on the furface o any liquor When any faline liquor is evaporated to cuticle and let cool, the falt concretes in regular figures which argues that the particles of the falt, befor they concreted, floated in the liquor at equal diftances in rank and file WNewton's Opticks Curr'cuLar. adj. [from cutis Belonging to the fkin CurH fignifie knowledg Latin. or fkill S red knowin counfellor Cuthbert famous for fkill. Much of the {fame nature are Sophocles and Sophianus Gibjor's Camden Cvu'rrass n. [coutelns, French Thi word is written fometimes cxtlace, fometimes cuttleax 5-in Shakefpeare, curtleaxe and in Pope, cutla/b. A broad cuttin fword : the word is much in ufe amon the feamen Were 't not bette That I did fuit me all points like a man A gallant ¢urtleaxe upon my thigh A boar-fpear in my hand Shakefp. As you like it To the lodgments of his herd he run Where the fat porkets flept bencath the fun That from a fhelf the precious diadem frole Cura'NEovus. adj. [ from catis, Latin. Relating to the fkin This! ferous, nutritious mafs is more readil vc'irculated into the cutaneous or remoteft parts o the body Floyer on Humours Some forts of cutaneous eruptions are occafione by feeding much on acid unripe fruits and farinaceous {ubftances Arbuthnot Shakelpeare's Winter's Talo A vice o{fkings A cutpurfe of the empire and the rule Ben Fonfon's Underavood C a ei r o e r p a u [ #n. Cu'rrursE In honour of this bridaltee Hath challeng'd either wide counte Come cxt and long tail; for there b Six bachelors as bold as he Apaultry rin For all the world like cutlers poetr He will maintain you like a gentlewoman. -- Ay, that T will, come cuz and long tail, under th clofe to the furface of th _Of{ That fhe did give, whofe poefy wa Send her money, knight : if thou haft her not i theend, call'me cut. Shakefpeare's Twelfth Night Cuthwin is a knowing conqueror ; Cuth manne 13. It feems anciently to have fignified fool or cully. To cur ftill fignifies t cheat, in low language Cu'ricLE. n. / iy who makes-or fells kniv'es, eac, Wilt thou buy' there fome high*heads of th neweft czt for my daughter 14. Cur and long tail. A proverbial expreflion for men of all kinds. It is borrowed from dogs (2 S 7, /i [couteliery French Cu'TLER degree ofa fquire. Shak. Merry Wives of Windjor At quintin he a fhred a number of fhort cuss o Thefe quarter'd, fing'd, and fix'd on forls;sb;:‘?;ad Arbuthnot's Hiffory of Fobn Bull 4. A channel made by art Suppof Of two his cutlafb launch'd the fpouti confcience believe the fleeve of it to be of the tru G And put it in his pocket Shakefpeare's Hapy ‘Was there no felony, no bawd Cutpurfe, nor burglary abroad Hudibras If we could imagine a whole nation to be purfes and robbers, would there then be kept tha fquare dealing and equity in fuch a monftrous de of thieves Bentley's Sernans Cu'rTER. 7 /. [from cut. 1. Anagent or infirument that cats an thing 2 A nimble boat that cuts the water 5 A phi that cut th g The molares, or grinders, are behind, nearef the centre of motion, becaufe there is a greate A Do o Tib 3. [Zacifores. 'Th teet meat firength or forc to bite a piece require to chew the meat tha and the cutters before, that the may be ready to cut off a morfel from any foli food, to be tranfmitted to the grinders Ray o the Creation 4. An officer in the Exchequer that pro vides wood for the tallies, and cuts th fum paid upon them; and then caft th {fame int the court to be writte upon Cowell Cu't-THROAT. 7. /[ [cut and throat.] rufian ; a murderer; a butcher of men an aflaffin Will you then fuffer thefe robbers, cut-throats bafe people, gathered out of all the corners o Chriftendom, to wafte your countries, fpoil you and troubl all you feas Perhaps the cut-throat may rather tak from the Parifian maflacre, one of th inftances of barbarous inhumanity tha Knalles his:cop horridef ever wa cities murder your people known o ( A(TC | tric e c 4 cro 1 1 e A Ao li f 4 ( f Sauth The ruffian robbers by no juftice aw'd And unpaid cuz-throat foldiers, arcabroad . Thofe venal fouls, who, harden'd in each ill To fave complaints and profecution, kill Dryden's Fuvenal Cu'T-THROAT adj Cruel ; inhuman barbarous If to take aboye fifty in the hundred be extre mity, this in truth can be none other than cui throat and abominable dealing Cu'rTiNG Careav's Survey of Cornwall 7 /. {from cut A piec cut off; a chop The burning of the cattings of vinesy and caftin the doth much good upon land Bacow's Natural Hiftrg Many are propagated above ground by QP} oL Cutiings o 2. The impreflion or feparation of conti nuity, made by an edge or fharp inftrumcht: diftinguithed from that made b |