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Show P Oo FO . Mature in years, to ready honours move 10 of celeftial feed| O fofferfon of Jove! Dryd. Virg In the art o FOUGA'DE. . /. [¥rench. war, a fortof little mine in the manne of a well, fcarce more than ten feet wid ‘and twelve deep, dug under fome wor ot fortification, and charged with barrel or facks of gunpowder to blow it up, an _ Dia - covered over-with earth ‘The preterite and participle o Foucut ht figf‘hough unknown to me, they fure foxght well "Whom Rupertled, aqd who were Britifh born. Dryd [The paflive participle o Folvcaren fight. Rarely ufed.] Contefted; difpute by arms On the foughten fiel Encamping, plac'd in guard their watches roun Cherubick waving fires Milton's Paradife Loft YOUL. adj. [ fuls, Gothick; yul; Saxon. 1. Notclean; filthy; dirty; miry. Throug moft of its fignifications it is oppofed t air Foby xvi. 16 My face is_fox/ with weeping " 1¢'s monftrous labour when I wafth my brain And it grows fouler. Shake/p. Antony and Clespatra ~ He that can travel in deep and jfow/ ways, ‘ough Tillotfon not to fay that he carinot walk in fair The ftream is fox/ with ftain Addifon Of rufhing torrents and defcending rains 2, Impure; polluted And in the witnefs of his proper ear To call him villain. Shakefp. Meafure for Meafure Kill thy phyfician, and the fee befto Upon the fox! difeafe Shakefpeare's King Lear Intemperance and fenfuality debafe mens minds clog their fpirits, and make them grofs, fou/, liftlef Tillotfon and unaltive 3, Wicked ; deteftable ; abominable Jefus rebuked the fou/ fpirit Mark, ix. 25 He hates fou/ leafings and vile flattery Two filthy blots in noble gentery. Hubberd's Tale This is the grofleft and moft irrational fuppofition as well as the fou/e/t atheifm, that can be imagined tHale Satire has always fhone among the reft And is the boldeft way if not the beft To tell men truly of their foulef? faults To laugh at their vain deeds, and vainer thoughts Dryden blithed rules not according to the efta . By foul play were we heav'd thence But blefledly help'd hither. Shakefpeare's Tempefs 5. Hateful; ugly ; loathfome Th' gther half did woman's fhape retain Moft loathfome, filthy, foul, and full of vile difdain. Fair Queen Haft thou forgo The foul wit_Ch Sycorax, who with age and env a5 grown into a hoop Shakefpeare's Tempeft Foul fights do rather difpleafe, in that they excit the memory of. fou/ things than in the immediat objects; and therefore, in pictures, thofe fox/ fight not muchoffend Bacon All things that {eem fo fox/ and difagreeable i Rature, are not really fo i telatively 6. Difgraceful; thameful themfelyes ~ bu onl More Too well I fee and rue the dire event Hhat with fad overthrow and_fou/ defea ath loft us heay'n Milton's Paradife Lofs Who firft feduc'd them to that foul revolt? Milt Reafo half extindt Tr !mpotent, or elfe approving, fee he faul diforder Thomfon's Spring 7» Coarf grofs Witiorhwm have no notion of delicacies if you tabl and £ em #4 they-are 31‘1 for ran wanting purgation or mundification and fou/ feeding dpoil the beft proyifions in cooking Ben Forfrn It is the wickednefs ofa wholelife, difcharging ai its filth and jfoulnefs into this one quality, as into South great {ink or common fhore You perceive the body of our kingdom How foul/ it is; what rank difeafes grow And with what dai. ~>r near the heart of it. Shake/p 9. Not bright; not ferene 4. Uglinefs Who's there befides fou/ weather H One minded like the weather, moft inquietly. Shak force Piety is oppofed to hypocrify and infincerity an all falfenefs or foulnefs of intentions; efpesially t that perfonated devotion, under which any kind o Opprefs'd by thofe who ftrove to be her guard fal Foul in a tempeft on their admiral Waller In his fallie their men might fall fox/ of eac Clarendon The great art of the devil, and the principal deceit of the heartis to keep fair with God himfelf South while men fall fox/ upon his laws 11. [Among feamen. Entangled: as, rope is foul of the anchor 7o FouL. v. a. [pulan, Saxon.] To daub to bemire to make filthy to dirty Sweep your walks from autumna worm draw the into their holes left th leaves Evelyn garden While Traulus all his ordure fcatters Swift To_fou! the man he chiefly flatters She fou/s a fmock more in one hour than th of find I am fought of them that afked not for me: I am Jound of them that fought me not. Ifaiah, lxv. 1 Authors now find, as once Achilles found The whole is mortal if a P part's unfound Young 70 ¥OUND French. It {ell not; for it was founded upon a rock. Matth H 2. To build Felton 3 Shakefp over wit did full and am Hayward O brother, brother! Filbert ftill is trues; 1 foully wrong'd him: do, forgive me,. do z fi [from foul. g as the mof certain truth, it coul A right to the ufe' of the creatures is founde Locke originally in the right a man has to fubfift ca defcen him who has a right by that contract "Fhe reputation of the Iliad they foun ignorance of his times 6 onl t Locte upon th Pope's Preface to th Iliad To fix firm Fleance is efcap'd fit again: I had elfe been perfet, -Then co Whole as the marble, founded as the rock. Sha befp To Founp. w. a. [ fundere, Latin; fondre French. To form by melting and popring into monlds; to caft A fecond multitud 1. The: quality of being foul; filthinefs naftinefs The ancients were wont to make garments tha were not deftroyed but purified by fire; and wherea the fpots or fuulnefs of other cloaths are waflac_@ out Wilkins With wondrous art foxzded. the mafly oze, Severing eachkind, fcum'd the bulliondrofs Founpa'rioN It is no vicious blot, murder, or foulnefs No unchatte action, or difhonour'd ftep That hath depriv'd me of your grace and favour Shake[peare There is not {o chafte a nation as this, nor fo frc from all poltution or foulnefs: itis the virgin of th Bacon #. f. [ foudation., F 1. The bafis or lower parts of an ed The ftatelinels of houfes,*the goodlinefs of .irees, when we behold them, delighte Jfoundatio 2. Pollution ; impurity 1 Decay mfPi:‘z:y vilely of you, like atrocioufnefs 2 V Po\\‘erhflzmdfd on contralt Pope 3. Hatefulnefs to ereth never warrant any fuch fanguinary method Shakefpeare [ foul and mouth. To eftablifh Though fome have made ufe of the opinion o fome fchoolmen,. that dominion is fownded in.grace Gay foulmonth'd man as he is, and faid he would cudge Shakefpeare's Henry IV you It was allowed by every body, that fo_fou/mouthe Addifon a witne{s never appeared in any caufe My reputation is too well eftablithed in th world to receive any hurt from fuch a fou/mouthe Arbuthnot {coundrel as he Now finging fhrill, and fcolding oft betaveen Scolds anfwer foubmonth'd feolds; bad neighbourhoo world %Xiv. 2 to raife were it admitte in thefe they were ufually burnt away efta to as h 44. To g give birth or origina vunded an art; he i founded a family. ‘¢, To raife upon, as on a I principl o ground probrious terms and epithets FolvinEss Pf of the'kings and propheéts Scurrilous; habituated to the ufe of op 1 ween an This alfo thall they gain by their dela In the wide wildernefs; there they fhall foun Their government, and their great fenate chufe Through the twelve tribes,. to rule by laws ordain'd Milton He founding a library, gathered together the aét 2. Not lawfully; not fairly mof feas They Gabian walls, and ftrong Fidenz rear Nomentum, Bola with Pometia found Fo'vivry. adj. [from foul. 1. Filthily; naftily; odioufly; hatefully {candaloufly; difgracefully ; fhamefully he fpeak th Thefe tunes of reafon are Amphion's Iyre Wherewith he did the Theban city found Davies From all the impure blots and ftains thereof. Shake/p My Lord it upo blithed it upon the floods. Your mere enforcement fhall acquittance m adj ‘hath foznde And raife Colatian tow'rs on rocky ground. Dryden If black fcandal, or forlfac'd reproach, Attend the fequel of your impofition FovLmouTHED «. a. [ fundare, Latin} fonder 1. To lay the bafis of any building an ugly or hateful vifage Thou play'dft moft fou//y for't. The preterite and participle pafliv Founv kitchen-maid dothinaweek, Swif#'s Direct. to Serv. bition Hammond impiety is wont to be difguifed and foz/ you We in the world's wide mout Live fcandaliz'd, and fox/ly {poken of The letter to the protector was gilde many fmooth words; but the other tw and foxlly fet forth his obftinacy, avarice excefliv fro 5. Difhonefty ; want of candour So in this throng bright Sachariffa far'd As fhips, though neyer fo obfequious u Her looks and limbs and with new methods trie Dryden The foulnefs of th* infernal form to hide with unfeafonabl violence fprun affetio fall in love with my anger. Shake/p. As you like i The fury laid afid The joys I haye profefs'd, in [pite of fate are mine Dryden roug a He's fallen in love with your foulnefs, and ihe'l Be fair or foul, or rain or fhine 1o. Wit b deformity beauty, {hould not delight in horrible fou/ncfs. Sidney Fo'yLFACED. adj. [ fou! and faced.] Having full of filth With fox/ mouth 4 Not lawful 8, Full of grofs humours, or bad matter other ‘Michael and his angels, prevalen Conful, you are too mild The foulnefs of fome falks takes thence all mercy which bearet u which mi eth unto the gi the bof lom of the earth eoncea t is the way to make th the ¢ve; but tha @ one, that 1do r nourithment isi thg.roof to the fonndation 5 all Shakefp. Coriclapus O Jove I think Foundations fly the wretched5 fuch I mean Wherc they fhould be reliev'd. Shakefpp. Coriolaaus 1 draw: a line along, (hore; Bla |