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Show FO FIL Mow Oppos'd againft the act, bending his fwor To his great mafter; who, thereat enrag'd Flesw on him, and amongft themfell'd him dead Shake[p Though the dogs have never feen the dogat him Bflco}{?):} Nat. Hift No honour, no fortune, can keep a man fro being miferable, when an enraged confcience {hal quires efpecially into faults 10. To Fry in the face 'To infult difcourage anry ma This woul To revolt of 90 Fr 12 Deny to fpeak tome ? They're fick, they're weary They have travell'd all the night! mean fetches Shakefp The images of revolt and fying of The traytor Sypha Flezv off at once with his Numidian horfe Addifon's Cato 'To burft into paflion 13. 70 FLy out How eafy is a noble {pirit difcern'd From harth and f{ulphurous matter that fies ou In contumelies, makes a noife, and ftinks Ben. Sonf. Catil Paflion is apt to ruffle, and pride will fy out int contumely and negle&t Collier of Friend/bip 14. 90 Fr out 'T break out into Ii cence You ufe me like a courfer. fpurr'd and rein'd If I Ay out, my fiercenefs you command Dryden Papifts, when unoppofed, Ay ozt into all the pag antries of worfhip; but when they are hard preffe b arguments, lie clofe intrenched behind the coun cil of Trent Dryden 'To ftart violently fro 15. 70 FLy ont any direction All bodies endeavou move circularly, hav to recede from the centre a perpetua and every mo ment would fy oxt in right lines, if they were no reftrained Bentley's Sermons 'To difcharge 16, To /et FLy And burfts, unaiming, in the rended fky 17 Granville To be light and unencumbered as, ing camp Tor i 1. To thun; to avoid; to decline Lov like fhado flies, whe f{ubftanc lov Shakefpeare O TJove, I thin Foundations fy the wretched ; fuch I mean Where they fhould be relieved Shakefpeare If you #y phyfick in health altogether, it wil be too ftrange for your body when you fhall need it Bacor's Efjays O whither fhall I run, or which way f Milton 2. 'To refufe aflociation with Sleep fies the wretch 3 or when with cares oppreft And his tofs'd limbs are weary'd into reft "Then dreams invade Dryden's Fuvenal Nature fies him like enchanted ground Dryden 3. To quit by flight Dedalus His heayy limbs on jointed pinions bore The firft who fail'd in air Dryden's in 4. 'To attack by a bird of prey If a ma other ravening fowl, and kill them worth itis fomewha Bacon §. It is probable that few was originally th preterit of fy whe it fignified vola Shakefpeare at mouth, and was fpeechlefs To Pallas high the foanting bowl he crown'd Pope And fprinkl'd large libations on the ground | days wa nee mor of Brutu Th 1. On that flies or run The well-fill'd fo4, not empty'd now alone. Dryd. He put his hand into his fo6, and prefented m in his name with a tobacco-ftopper This i They hit one another with darts, as the others d counter Sandy's Fourney but at the back of the fier He grieves fo many Britons fhould be lofts Taking more pains, when he beheld them yield, Paller To fave the jfiers than to win the field fquar To Fon w. a Stairs mad for whof figure of a an 2. 70 Fos gf. 'To fhift off; to put afid with an artifice; to delude by a trick to fly off from one another Moxorn's Mech. Exer «@. z [ fuppen, German. 1 think it is fcurvy, and begin to find myfelf fobd' Shakefpeare's Orhell in it Shall there be a gallows ftanding in England when thou art king, and refolution thus fo64'd as it is with the rufty curb of old father antick the law. Shakefpeare's Henry TV He goes prefling forward, 'till he. was fubbe L' Eftrange again with another ftory back fides are parallel to each other, an fo are their ends: the fecond of thef Jlyers ftands parallel behind the firft, th third behind the fecond, and fo are fai To Fry'risH Swifts Fancies his finger's in the cully's: fo5 1. To cheat; to trick ; to defraud 4. [In architecture. oblon Addifon. Two pockets he called his fobs : they were to large flits fqueezed clofe by the preflure of his belly Sawifta Orphans around his bed the lawyer fees And takes the plaintiff's and defendant's fess His fellow pick-purfe, watching fora job written more frequently fier which they never thro Dryden Hudibras Who pick'd a_fob at holding forth When were the dice with more profufion thrown L' Efr away SI‘L:flé:y; FOB. n. f. [ fuppe, fupfacke, German.] fmall pocket in Domitian' Fuy'er. #. f. [from f. face Behold how high the foamy billows ride The winds and waves are on the jufter fide On fpider Covere foam. When ftruggling rocks he would embrace a fycatcher as well as th wa and gnathed with his teeth Mar. 1%, 1 More white than Neptune's foam Dryden fwallo Roswe 2. To be in rage; to be violently agitated [fro Fo'amy. adj with foam ; frothy to mend, than of Horace, to laugh at a fy catcher Upon a jfoaming horf There follow'd ftrait a man of royal port He foameth Pope [fy and fi/b. T You muft not thin To fob off your difgraces with a tale angle with a hook baited with a fly, either natural or artificial FOAL. 7. /. [rola, Saxon. Watfor 'The offsprin of a mare, or other beaft of burthen. Th and foa/ for a young mare ; but there wa not originally any fuch diftinétion. And with his winged hecls did:tread the wind F. & As he had been a foa/ of Pegafus's kind Twenty fhe-affes.and ten foals, Gen. xxxii. 15 7o ¥oar. @. a. [from the noun. bring forth, Ufed of mares 'T Shakefp For they, poor knaves, were glad to cheat, To get their wives and children.meat ; But thefe will not be f2bb'd off fo They muft have wealth and power too Hudibras. By a Ravenna.vintner. once betray'd, 1 fhall give you fome direétions for fy-fi/bing Alfo flew his fteed can tame this monfter, and with her f Cafar fell down in the market-place, and foam'd that hunts flies Ther Thomfon's Sprin What a beard of the general's cut will do amon foaming bottles and ale-wafh'd wits, is wonderful Shakefp. Henry V Swift = /. [ fy and cazch. froth of liquours 7o ¥oam. @. 7z [from the noun. 1. To froth ; to gather foam Frx'soar. #. /. [y and boat. A kin of veflel nimble and light for failing FrycalrcuEer the to Defcends the billowy foam Like a _flyblown cake of tallow So morning infects, thatin muck begun Shine, buz, and fyblotw m the fetting fun The whit Saxon. Hof. % 7 The foan upon the water Whitening dewn their moffy tinGtur'd ftrea 3. That part of a vane which points how th wind blows 'T 7o ¥ry'sLow. w.a. [fy and blow. taint with- flies; to fill with maggots ink turn'd yellow {pume balance of the jack, to draw him up from the ground Wilkins cuftomnow is to ufe co/ fora younghorfe to fy the Cretan thore gathers o If we fuppofe a man tied in place of the weight it were eafy, by a fingle hair faftened unto the fy o Or, on parchment th fubftance which agitation or fermentatio into a quick motion, regulates and equalifes the motion of the reft I am unwilling to believe that he defigns to pla tricks, and to flyblew my words, to make other diftafte them Stilling fleet int mare you tak Folarerr Fo/aLroor. [ FOAM. 7. /. [pam 'That part of a machine which, being pu 2. One that ufes wings 3. The fly of a Jack purfues Purfuing that which flies, and fying what purfues The fight of this fo horrid fpectacle 2 Septembe houfe, where keep them 'till they foal Mortimer's Hufbandry To heedlefs fies the window prove Thomfon's Summer A conftant death with their hands The noily culverin, o'ercharg'd, /lets fly Abou Morgimer's Hufbandry with the feed Saift's Drapier's Letters Fly in nature's face -But how, if nature fy in my face firft ~-Then nature's the aggreflor Dryden To ¥oar. @. n. 'To be difburthened o the feetus. Ufed of beafts of burthen to fow afhe the /7, fome propof To preven May's Georgicks Walk proudly Locke tares in their corn th o their fheep Such colts as ar Shakefpeare They kill us for their {port Myy country neighbours begin to think of being i general, before they come to think of the fy i from doing yo 'To a& in defiance likewif As fies to wanton boys, are we to th' gods good, when you will either negle& him, or Ay in bi Jface; and he muft expect only danger to himfelf 11, 0 FLY in the face Of generous race, ftraight, when they firft are foa?'d confine confounded, 1 know not any book except the Scriptures in which #y and fe are carefully kept feparate Fry. n. /. Trleoge, Saxon. 1. A fmall winged infeét of many fpecies South thefe diftinctions are no fhould b volation; bu South and en Ay at him, and take him by the throat This is an age that fies ¢ all learning t Cive my hotfe to Timon ¢ it foals me fraigh Shakefpeare's Timn Ten able hotfes tion, and fed when it fignified efcape A fervant that he bred, thrill'd with remorfe killer, yet they will come forth, an P So much. for wine and water mix'd I paid But when 1.thought the purchas'd liquor mine, The ralcal f0b6'd me off withonly wine.. Addifons Being a great lover of country-fports, . [ ablcluwel determined not to.be: a minifter of ftate, nor to b Addifon's Freeholder Jobb'd off with a garter Fo'car th adi focus [from focus. belonging to See Focus Schelhammer demandeth whethernthe convexityop concavity of the drum colleéls rays into 2 foc or featters them. Derbanz Flacuh |