OCR Text |
Show DR DR If the pipe be a little wet on the infide, it wil make a differing found from the fame pipe dry Bacon Whe God faid Be gather'd now, ye waters under heav'n Milton Into one place, and let dry land appear Of turbid elements the fport From clear to cloudy teft, from hot to cold Thomfon And dry to moift ‘Which, butning upwards in fucceflion, dric The teavs that ftood confidering in her eyes tween Th weather feafon w agreed Bacon too dry for th wa Addifon 3. Not fucculent ; not juicy I will drain him dry as hay Sleep fhall neither night nor da Hang upon his penthoufe lid _He fhall live a man forbid The Shakefp. Macbeth Dry mourning will decays more deadly bring As a north wind burns a too forward fpring Give forrow vent, and let the fluices go. Dryden g. Thirfty ; a-thirft So dry he was for {way Skakefpe Tempeft Void of a bulky charger near their lips With which, in often interrupted fleep Their frying blood compels to irrigat . Their dry furr'd tongues Philips 6. Jejune; barren ; plain; unembellifhed ; without pathos without flowers . As we fhould take care that our ftile in writin be neither dry nor empty, we fhould look agai it be not winding or wanton with far-fetched de Ben Fonfon. {criptions ¢ either is a vice It remainet to trea concernin ornament within or without the fabrick ; a piece not fo dr as the meer contemplation of proportions: an therefore I hope therein fomewhat to refreth bot Fotton's Architefture the reader and myfelf That the fire burns by heat, is an empty dr return to the queftion, and leaves us ftill ignorant Glamvilie. Itis a dry fable, with little or nothingin it L' Efirange Authority and friendfhip work upon fome, dr and fober reafon works upon others L'Effrange To clear up this theory, I was willing to la afide dry fubtilties with which the fchools ar filled Burnet's Theory Thefe epiftles will become lefs dry, and mor . fufeeptible of ormament Pope. 7. Hard; fevere. [Drien anciently to endure ; dree, Scottifh. Of two noblemen, the one was given to fcoff but kept ever royal cheer in his houfe; the othe would afk of thoft that had been at his table, wa there never a flout or dry blow given Bacon i I rather hop'd I fhould no mor Hear from you o' th' gallanting fcore ; For hard dry baftings us'd to prov The readieft remedies of love Next a dry diet See, at your bleft returning Rage difappears The widow'd ifle in mournin exficcate t The meat was well, if you were fo contented ~1 tell thee, Kate, twas burnt and dried away Shakefpeare Heat drieth bodies that do eafily expire, a . parchment, leaves, roots, and cldy; and fo dot Bacon Herbs and flowers, if they be dried in the fhade of dried in the hot fun2 fmal} time, keep beft L Bacen The running ftreams are deep See, they have caught the father of the flock Who drics his fleece upon the neighbouring rock 2. To exhale moifture Dryden "Twas grief no more, or grief and rage were on Within her foul : at laf "twas zage.alone &NoL. I Dryden's Albion 4. To fcorch with thirft Thei honourabl men are famifhed, and thei multitude dried up with thirft 5. Todrain Ifaiab, v 13 to exhautt ¥. 2. Want of embellithment; wan thos; jejunenefs ; barrennefs of pa Their new flowers and fweetnefs do as muc corrupt as others drynefs and fqualor, if they chuf Ben Fonjon not carefully Be faithful where the author excels, and paraphrafe where penury of fancy or drynzfs of expreflion afk it Garth 4. Want of fenfibility in devotion; wan of ardour ; aridity It may be, that by this drynefs of fpirit, Go intends to make us the more fervent and refigne in our dire€ and folemn devotions, by the perTaylor ceiving of our weaknefs DrY'NURSE, n. /. [dry and narfe. 1. A woman who brings up and feeds Rath Elpenor, in an evil hour Dried an immeafurable bowl, and though Philips child without the breaft 2. One who takes care of another: wit fome contempt of the perfon taken car of The water of the fea, which formerly covere it, was in time exhaled and dyicd up by the fun. Mrs. Quickly is his nuife, or his drynurfe, o his cook, or his laundry, his waflier, and hi 6. 70 Dry zp. To deprive totally o moifture; to take all moifture away Hoodward wringer Shakefpeare 7o Dry. @. n. To grow dry; to lofe 7o Dry'NURSE. @. a. [from the noun. To feed without the breaft moifture ; to be drained of its moifture As Romulus a wolf did rear DrY%eRr. 2. /. [from dry.] That which So he was drynurs'd by a bear Hudibras has the quality of abforbing moifture Dry'saob. adj. [dry and fbod.] Withou The ill cfie&s of drinking are relieved by thi we feet withou treadin abov th plant, whic is a great dryer and opener, efpecially by perfpiration Temple Dry'evED. adj. [dry and epe. tears; without weeping Withou Sight fo deform what heart of rock could lon Dryeyed behold 2 Adam could not, but wept Milton Dry'vy. adw. [from dry. ‘1. Without moifture 2. Coldly ; frigidly ; without affe@ion. The archduke, confcious, to himfelf ho dryl the king had been ufed by his council, did @riv to recover the king's affettion. Bacor's Henry VII Wouldft thou to honour and preferments climb Be bold in mifchief, dare fome mighty crime Which dungeons, death, or banifhment deferves For virtue is but dryfy prais'd, and frarves Sy Dryder's Fuwvenal 3. Jejunely ; barrenly; without ornamen or embellithment Some dryly plain, without invention's aid Write dull receipts how poems may be made. Pope Dry''NESS. 2. fi-[from dry. 1. Want of moifture ; ficcity The Africans are conceived to be peculiarl fcorched and- torrified by the fun, by drynefs of th foil, from want and defe& of water Form, order, beauty, through the univerfc While drynefs moifture, coldnefs heat refifts All that we have, and that we are, fubfifts from drynefs and rigidity, and keeping them fuppl the Greation by the fun then mui then, upo that fititious account, calumniate nature Bentley 2, Want of fucculence His vacancy with his voluptuoufnefs Full furfeits, and the drynefs of his bones Call on him for't Shakefp. Antony and Cloop The difference of mufeular fleth depends upo the fibres tendernefs moifture us in fuch difadvantage, a we could not return dryfbod Sidrey Dryfbod to pafs, fhe parts the floods in tway And eke huge mountains fram their native fea She would command themfelves to bear away Ha honour' Fairy Queen fountai then fuck'd back th He has; and hooting boys may dryfbed pafs And gather pebbles from the naked ford. Dryden Dvu'ar. adj. [dualis, Latin. the number two Expreflin Modern languages have only one variation, an fo the Latin; but the Greek and:Hebrew hav one to fignify two, and another to fignify mor than two : under one variation the noun is faid t be of the duzal number, and under the other of th plural Clarke's Latin Grammar 70 DUB. @. a. [dubban zo nibepe, Saxon addubba till riddara knight. Addubba fignifies to ffrike by a blow with th 1. To make a man landick or Jr to dub in its primary fenfe knights being mad fword. knight Knight, knight, good mother! Bafilifco like What ! I am dubb'd5 1 have it on my thoulder Shakefpeare The robes which the kings then allowed to eac knight, when he was dubéed, of green, or burnet as they fpale in that age, appeareth upon record The king ftood up under his cloth of ftate, too the fwvord from the lord prote€or, and dubbed th lord mayor of Londoh knight. - Haywardon E4d. V1 2. To confer any kind of dignity, or ne character The jealous o'erworn widow and herfelf hat our brother dubb'd them gentlewomen nighty goflipsin this monarshy. Sh. Ric. 111 H Gavye thee noinftance why thou thouldft do treafon Unlefs to dub thee with the name of traitors Shak Wome commence by Cupid's dart As a king hunting dubs a hart If he fill' the hardnefs He had embarke en's Remains Denbam The marrow-fupplies an oil for the inuncio of the bones and ligaments in the articulations and particularly of the ligaments, preferving the and flexible Ray o Is the fea ever likely to be evaporate or to be emptied with buckets? Wh we fancy this impoflible drysefs, an fhoes in the water ftream Such was the difcord which did firff difperf Hudibras Dyies up her tears Browon's Vulgar Errours o DrY. v. a ¥, To free from moifture ; to arefy time arefy with her veft the wound fhe wipes an dyies Denbant T" exhale his furfeit by irriguous flecp Imprudent : him death's ircn {leep oppreft 4. Being without tears Diryden 3. To wipe away moifture 2. Not rainy A dry March and a dry May portend a wholefome fummer, if there be a fhowering April be ofs o Arbuthmot A plain gentleman Cleaveland of an ancient family, is o better quality than anew knight, though the reafo of his diybbing was meritorious Collier on Pride O poet! thou hadft been difcreeter Fanging the monarch's hat fo high If thou hadft dnbb'd thy Gar a meteor That did but blaZze, and rove, and die A | Prior Thet |