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Show Te GA G A GilnereRovs, adj, [from gangrene.] Mortified; producing or betokening mortifiW cation The blood, turning acrimonious, corrodes th yelfels, producing hzmorrhages, puftules red, leadcoloured, black and gangrenous. - Arbuthnot on A Ga'neway. # /. In a fhip, the fevera ways or paffages from one part of it t Dis ‘the other GA/NGWEEK, 7. /o [gang and week, Ro when proceflions are mad ation week Dis to luftrate the bounds of parifhes Ga/NTELOPE. | 7 f- [gantlet is only cor rupte Ga/NTLET fro gantelspe gant, all; and /Zopen, to run, Datch. A military punifhment, in which the criminal running between the ranks receive alath from each man But would'ft thou, friend, who haft two legs alone Would'ft thou to run the gantler thefe expofe To a whole company of hob-nail'd fhoes? Drydes Young gentlemen are driven with a whip, t Locke un the gantles through the feveral claffes Ga'nza. #. /. [ganfa, Spanifh, a goofe. A kind of wildfgoofe, by a flock of whic fabled to be carried to th a virtuofo wa Tunar world They are but idle dreams and fancies Hudibras And favour ftrongly of the ganza's GAOL. . /. {geol, Welth; geole, French. A prifon; a place of confinement It i always pronounced and too often writte _ sail, and fometimes goal Then am I the prifoner, and his bed my gas/ Sh. K, Lear Have 1 been ever free, and muft'my houf Be my retentive enemy, my gao/ Shakefpeare _If we mean to thrive and do good, break ope the gaols, and let out the prifoners Shakefpeare 99 Gaor ~ imprifon v [fro th noun. T to commit tv gaol Gaoling vagabonds was chargeable, pefterous, an of no open example Bacon GA'OLDELIVERY, 7 /i [gaol and deliver. The judicial procefs, which by condemnation or acquittal of perfons confined evacuates the prifon Then doth th' afpiring foul the body leave Which we call death; but were it known to all What life our fouls do by this death receive Men would it birth of gaoldelivery call Davies Thefe make a general gao/delivery of fouls, no for punihment South Galovzr. #. /. [from gaol. Keeper of .pnfon_; he to whofk care the prifoners ar committed This is a gentle provoft; feldom, whe The fieeled gaoler is the friend of men 1 know not how or why my furly gaoler Hard as his irons, and infolent as pow' Put off the brute Dyyden's Cleomenes From the polite part of mankind fhe had bee ‘banithed and immured, 'till the death of her gaoler Latler . [from gape. L. An opening in a broken fence Behold the defpai 3y-€ufiom and covetous pates, Byggp.r and opening of gates. Tu/fer's Hufbandyy With terrouys and with furies to the bound and'cryflal wall of heav'n; which, opening wid oll'd inward, and a {pacious gap difcl s' Into the watteful deep Milton's Paradife Loft Bufhes are moft lafting of any for dead hedges, o to m Itnd gaps., Bortimer's Hufbandry ought for a man, fays God, that thould mak up the hedge, and itand in the gap before me, fo clean.sh data import.tsv out README the land that | {hould no deeftftroyrey itit Rogers 2. A breach commonweal b th openin manifold miferies afterwards enfue o tha ga t Chriftendom al tha fide o Kualles 3. Any paflage So ftands the Thracian herdfman with his fpea Full in the gap and hopes the hunted bear And hears him ruftling in the wood 4+ Anavenue Dryden 2n open way The former kings of England paffed into the a great partof their prerogatives; "which though the 1t was well intended and perhaps well deferved ye now fuch a gap of mifchief lies open thereby, tha I could wifh it were well ftopt 5+ A hele Spenfer a deficiency If you violently proceed againft him, miftakin his purpofe, it would make a great gup in your ho nour Shake[p. King Lear Nor is it any botch or gap in the works of nature More 6. Any interftice; a vacuity Each one demand and anfwer to his par Perform'd in this wide gap of time, fince firf We were diffever'd Shakefpeare's Winter's Tale Tha I might fleep ou my Antony is away To mak this great ga of tim Shake/peare's Ant. and Cleap *twixt words and lines huge gaps Wide as meridians in maps Hudibras One can revive a languithing converfation by fudden furprifing fentence; another is more dexterou in feconding ing a third can fill the gap with laughSwift 7. An opening of the mouth in fpeec during the pronunciation of two fuccefliv vowels The hiatus, or gap between two words, is caufe by two vowels opening on each other Pope 8. To flop @ Gar mea fhift is t efcape b alluding t hedge fom mende with dead buthes, 'till the quickfets wil grow His policy confifts in fetting traps In finding ways and means and ffopping gaps Sawift What would become of the church if ther wer none more concerned for her rights than this ¥ Wh Lefley would fand in the gap GaR-TOOTHED. adj. [gap and reorh.] Having interftices between the teeth The reeve, miller, and cook, are diftinguithed fro each other, as much as the mincing lady priorefs and Dryd the broad fpeaking gaproothed wife of Bath 70 GAPE. «. z. [geapan, Saxon. 1. To open the mouth wide; to yawn Some men there are love not a gaping pig that are mad if they behold a cat an ftretching Shakefp do paf fro man to man; for that that caufeth gapizg an firetching is when the {pirits are a little heavy b Arbuthnot any vapour She ftretches, gapes, unglues her eyes Saift And afks if it be time to rife 2. To open the mouth for food, as a youn bird As callow birds Whofe mother's kijll'd in feeking of the prey Cry in theirneft, and think her long away And at each leaf that tirs, each blaft of wind Gape for the food which they muft never find Dryden As in a drought the thirfty creatures cry And gape upon the gather'd clouds for rain Then firft the martlet meets it in the fky And with wet wings joys all the feather'd train Dyyden . To defire earneftly And thou, who gap'ft for my eftates draw near For I would'whifper fomewhat in thy car. ~ Dryd 4+ With after. What thall we fay of thofe who fpend their day in gaping after court-favour and preferments L Efrange ¢, With ar Many have gaped at the church revenues; but befor the coul fwallow them hav ha thei mouths ftopped in the church-yard South 6. To open in fiffures or holes 1f it affume my noble fathei's perfon 1'll fpeak to it, though hell itfelf fhould gap An Shakefpeare' bid me hold my peace Hamlet May that ground gape, and fwallow me alive Where I {hall kneel to him that lew my father. 54 Th great horfe-muffel wit the fine fhell dot gape and {hut as the oyfters do. Hacen's Nat Hiff. The reception of one is as different from the admiffion of the other, as when the ecarth falls ope under the incifions of the pleugh, and when it gape and greedily opens itfelf -to drink in the dew of he ven or the refrethments of a thower Eonth The mouth of a little artery and nerve gapes int the cavity of thefe veficles. - Cheyne's Phil. Prin 7. To open with a breach The planks, their pitchy coverings wath'd away Now yield, and now a yawning breach difplay The roaring waters with a hoftile tide Rufh through the ruins of her gaping fide. Dryden That all thefe ations can be performed by aliment, as well as medicines, is plain; by obfervin the effe¢ts of different fubftances upon the fluids an folids, when the veflels are open and gage by a wound Arbuthnot 8. To open; to have an hiatus There is not, to the beft of my remembrance, cn vowel gaping on another for want of a czfura in thi poem Dryden 9. To make a noife with open throat And, if my mufe can through paft ages fee That noify, naufeous, gaping fool is he. Rofrommeon 10. To ftare with hope or expectation 9 To fland in the Gap 'To make defence to expofe himfelf for the protgétion o fomething in danger Gapifig or yawning When put in vulgar hands, Cleanthes AP The lofs of that city concerned the ‘Chriftia Some n‘j‘"bdf%c:/;b G A to crave: with for Others will gape t' anticipat The cabinet defigns of fate Apply to wizards, to forele Hudibras What thall, and what fhall never be 11, To ftare with wonder Parts of different fpecies jumbled together, accordand th ing to the mad imagination of the dawber end of all this to caufe laughter: a very monfteri a Bartholomew fair, for the mob to gape at Dryd Where elevated o'er the gaping crowd Clafp'd in the board the perjur'd head is bow'd Betimes retreat Gay's Trivia 12. To ftare irreverently They have gaped upon me with their mouth - Foby xvis 19 Ga'per. z. L [from gape. 1. One who opens his mouth 2, One who ftares foolifhly 3. One who longs or craves "The golden fhower of the diffolve abbey-land rained well near into every gaper's mouth Gar i Saxon fignifie Carezv weapon f r A Eadgar is a happy % weapon l;f/.v.,‘lg , noble weapon Gibfor's Camde To GAR, . a. [giera, Iflandick. to make Obiolete To caufe It is ftill ufe Scotland i ‘Tell me, good Hobbinol, what gars thee greet What! hath fome wolf thy tender lambs Or is thy bagpipe broke, that {founds fo {weet:? Or art thou of thy loved lafs forlorne Spenfer Gars,, 7. f. [garbe, French. 1. Drefs; cloaths; habit Thus Belial, with Words cloath'd in reafon's garé Counfel'd ignoble eafe and peaceful floth Adilton He puts himfelf into the gard and habit of a pro fefifl‘or of phyfick, :m\l‘ fets up "To her grim death appears in all her thapes Denh. i 2. Fathion of drefs The hungry grave _for her due tribute gapes To thy fortune be not thou atlave Horace's wit, and Virgil's ftate He did not fteal, but emulate Tor what hafk thou ¢o fear heyond the grave F Q L' Eftra ng An |