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Show The inward coat of a lion's ftomach has ftronges Tie hew'dy and lath'd, and foin'd, axd thundee'd Jolds than a human blows And every way did feek into his life different Ne plate, ne mail, conld ward fo mighty throws Fairy Queen But yiglded paffage to his cruel knife He cares not what mifchief he doth, if his weapo be out: he will fuiz like any devil; he will fpar n¢ither man woman Shakefpeare. nor child Then both, no moment loft, at once advanc Againft each other, arm'd with fword and lance They lath, they foin, they pafs, they ftrive to bor pufh To'ininerLy. adwv. [from fiix.] In a pulhing manner IFo'tson. z. /. [roryron, Saxon.] Plenty abundance A word now out of ufe Pay juftly thy tithes, whatfoever thou be That God may in blefling (end foifon to thee and unfkilful to ftore And look for no foifon, 1 tell thee before Nature thould bring forth Of its own kind Tx/f ~ Txffer Three iron 70 ¥oLp. . a. [from the noun. 1. To fhut fheep in the fold 'To in 2 it, feal it, and again-retur Confcious of its gw Drefs muftard, and lay it in cellar up {weet Left foi/tine/s make it for table unmeet "The two lcaves of the one door were fo/ding, an the two lzaves of the other door were folding FOLIA'/CEQOUS And Philome! becometh dumb Raleigh liwm, Latin, leaves The flock of fheep And this you fee I fcarcely drag along Who yeaning on the rocks has left her young The hope and promife of my failing fo/d 4 Dryden Fo'L1acE French. double i gums numbe of fold Shakefpeare's K. Lear muminies were fhrowde befmcare Leaves Latin feuillage tufts of leaves Gold foliated cleaveth Bacon collettive flower, being the collection of thofe fugacious coloured leaves called petala an ha .S‘x'dng; Dorilaus having married his fifter, had his marriage in fhort time bleft, for fo are fo/k wont to fay how unhappy foever the children after grow, with fon Sidney When with greateft art he fpoke You'd think he talk'd like other fi/k For all a rhetorician's rule Teach nothing but to name his tools Hudibras 2. Nations ; mankind Thou fhalt judge the fo/ 3. Any kind o from others righteoufly and gover Pfal. lvii. 4 peopl a difcriminate The river thrice hath flow'd, no ebb between And the old fo/k, time's doting chronicles Say it did {o a little time before Shakefp. Anger is a kind of bafenefs; as it appears wel! the weaknefs of children, women, old folks, and fic Solks Bucen. 4. It is now ufed only in familiar or burlefque langunage Old good man Dobfon of the green, h the tree has feen Aad goes wit folks to thiw the fight He walk'd and wore a threadbare cloak He din'd and fupp'd at charge of other fo/k S=viftr. Fo'LkmorE. 7./ [from folk and mers. Thof an hills were appointe built b twa fevera Swife for two fpecial ufes nations th on is tha which you call folkmoies, built by the Saxons, an fignitics in the Saxon a meeting of folk Sperjei Folvrrevre n. /. [ follicutus, 1atin. 1. A cavity in any body with ftrong coats Althoug there be no eminen icley, no round bag o veficle and circular_fo// which long containet this humour; yet is there a manifeft receptacle o choler trom the liver into the guts Birotva 2. Follicle is a term in botan feed-vellels capful whic fruits an fom them ; as tha laris, &c Neavton's Op Dutch other folks misfortupe If gold be foliated, and held between your eye and the light, the light looks of a greenith blue FoLia'rt10N. 7. [. [ foliatie, folium, Latin. 1. The aét of beating into thin leaves 5 Foliation is one of the parts of th wolf Never troubling him, either with afking queftions or finding fault with his melancholy, but rather fit ting to his dolor dolorous difcourfes of their own ap Philips or any metal foliated Saxon 1. People, in familiar Janguage th "T'o beat into laminas or leaves Bacon's Natural Hiflory "The gloves of death, with feven diftinguilh'd fo/d' Liryden's Kirg, n Of tough bull hides [filium [rolc it 1s properly a nou 9o ¥o!L1ATE. w. a. [ foliatus, folium, Latin. wit Circular bafe of rifing folds, that tower' Milton #old above fold, a {urging maze Let the draperies be nobly fpread upon the body and let the fo/ds be large « the parts fhould be ofte traverfed by the flowing of the fo/ds Dryden With fear and wonder feiz'd, the crowd hehold n f 7. / Remember Redundant Not with indented wave, the ferpent the FProne on the ground, as fince; but on his rea Yor, I o When fwelling buds their od'rous fo/iage {hed And gently harden into fruit, the wif Spare not the little offsprings, if they gro She in this trice of tim Lommits a thing fo monftrous, to difmantl linen of lamin ‘Thegreat columns are finely engraven with fruit and foliage, that run twitting about them irom th Addifon very top (o the bottom another o FOLK apparel of Jeaves to a plant complication; an jnvolution; one par added to another; one part doubled upo So many fulds of favour The ancient Egyptia Confiltin a ruddy talky fpar, and a blue talky fo/iaceous fpar Woodward on J/] _Secure from meeting, they're diftintly roll'd Nor leave their feats, and pais the dreadiul fo/d Creech rilo, Saxon. 1 Kinge, Vi 3 [ falz'm'euf, from fo Lat. A flinty pebble was of a dark-green colour, an the exteriour cortex of a foliomort colour Weudwo A piece of another, confilting of an outer cruft, o A limit ; a boundar 3. [Fro auy [ filium mortuum the nations upon earth To FoLp. w. #. To clofe over another o the fame kind ; to join with another o the fame kind Time drives the fiocks from field to, fo/d When rivers rage and rocks grow cold 3 Shak Shak. Coriol 2. The place where fheep-are houfed And all complain of cares to come Dryd adi on the Mird A dark yellow; the colour ofa leaf faded vulgarly called philomor impotence, it fo/ds its arm Shakefp Hath in eternal darknefs fo/ded up The fires i' th' loweft hell fo/d in the people In thy book record their groans ‘Who were thy fheep, and in their ancient fu/ Slain Milton would b Plumbinus and Plumeo made lefs progrefs i knowledge, though they had read over more fulios Shakefpeare Whofe bright outfhining beams thy cloudy wrat Part arable and tilth; whereon were {heave New reap'd; the other part, fheepwalks and fo/ds Milton Spring of paper once doubled Nab, i. 10 Fo'tsty. adj. [ See Fusty. Mouldy Their fo/ded {heets difmifs the ufelefs air fufty 3. To inclofe; to inclade ; to thut We will defcend and fo/d hi~ in our arms FOLD. n [ [raleb, pald, Saxon Witnefs my fon, now in the {iade of death 1. The ground in which fheep are confined His eyes he open'd, and beheld a fiel th an FO'LIO. n. [. [ix folio, Latin.] A large boo of which the pages are formed by a fhee in defpair, and fits\carfing n a corner Collier Both furl their fails, and ftrip them for the fight Tuffer i pulpous ])l'a'] Prov. vi. 1o to bed fort an Fortature. z [ [from filiwm, Latin. The ftate of being hammered into leaves 1 have feen her rifc from her bed, unlock he clofct, take forth paper, fo/d it, write upon't, rea Fuftinefs ftan no plural but by modern corruption. To double; to com "They be folden together as thorns fometime injured by the weather, if they were no .Q{u'flg' lodged up within their flowers Dryden's Hor of the hands to fleep an being tende comin As a yefture thalt thou fo/d them up. Heb. i. 12 Yeta little fleep, a little flumber, a little fo/din was apCarew "mouldinefs [kaloan, Saxon. plicate Foige law, and foiff into fome by plac Of fome old rotten roll. ~ Dryden's Don Scbaftian z. /. [from fofty. thefe Fo'viomort as well by their warmth as by their compoft. Bacon She in pens his flocks will fo/d And thea produce her dairy ftore With wine to drive away the cold And unbought dainties of the poor pears within it, as in cherries and apricots; fo Now the top of heav'n doth hold Milton We fee that the folding of fhieep helps ground Shak and Watt ‘The ftar that bids the fhepherd fo/d Lel negligence or pariiality might admit or foif For'stness Milton ple The triple tyrant ; that from thefe may gro A bundyed fold Milton As thofe that feed grow full, as blofloming tim That from the feednefs the bare fallow bring To teeming foifor; fo her plenteous wom in abufes and corruption, an archdeaco pointed to take account of their doings three of adamantine rock O'er all th' Ttalian fields, where ftill doth fwa To feed my innocent people. Shake/peare's Tempefi 9o Yorst. w. a. [ fanffir, French. {ert by forgery Arbuthnot Their martyr'd blood and afhes fo all foifon, all abundance Exprefleth his full tilth and hutbandyy but in other things not muc But other fell into good ground, and brought forth freit; fome an bundred fold, fome jixty fold, fom thirty fold Matt At laft appea Hell bounds high reaching to the horrid reof And thrice three fold the gates: three folds were brafs A thruft; Yoriw. 7. /. [from the verb. which conftitute the compafs of th flower; and fometimes guard the frui which fucceeds the foliation, as in ap 6. From the foregoing fignification is derived the ufe of fold in compofition Fold fignifies the fame quantity added as rwo fold, twice the quantity; swent Jfold, twenty times repeated Dryd Their corflets, and the thinneft parts explore Be wiltul to kill ARO O 7 o FOLLOW «. a wolgen, Dutch. fignifyin feminalis th o cale feeds bave ove alkengi pedicuLuincy [ polzian Saxon 1. 'To go after; not before, or fide by fide I had rather, forfooth, go before you like a man than follow him like a dwait bu.ug‘m-m 2a 5 i |