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Show GA o dure to have trade fick ‘T'hey rais'd a feeble cry with trembling notes the weak voice deceiv'd their ga/ping throats Bu Dryder The gafping head flies off; a purple floo Dryden's ZEn Flots trom the trunk "The ladies gafp'd*and fcarcely could refpire The breath they drew no longer air, but fire. Dryd A feantling of wit lay ga/pixg tor life, and groan Dryden faint an ing beneath a heap of rubt th in Auftria wer rich countryme Th Brown's Travels ga/ping for breath and faint Pal He ga/ps for breath; and, as his life flows fromhim Addifon's Cato Demands to fee his frieads emit breath by opening the mout 2. T convulfively to gafp my latelt breath I lay me geta breakfzlt by my death. Dryd The wolves wi Fe ftaggers round, his eyeballs roll in death wit An fobs he ga/ps away his breat fhor in Dryden' 3 is, I thm‘k 'This fenf for lon T not proper, as nature never exprefies defir by galping The Caftilian and his wife had tke comfort to b under the fame mafter, who, feeing how dearly the on love ~demande another an ga/pe afte their liberty a moit exorbitant price for their ranfom Spectator Gase. 7 /. [from the verb. 1. The aét of opening the mouth to catc breath 2. The fhort catch of breath in the laf , agonies His fortunes all lie fpeechlefs, and his nam Shakefpeare's Cymbeline Is at laft ga/p Montagu Warwick Ah And to the lateft ga/ If in the dreadtu If at the lateft ga/ When the cold dam hath breath'd his laft cry'd out for Warwick hour of death of breath bedews your brow 90 Gast Shak Addifon "You hope for mercy, fhew it now Se @. a. [from gaye, Saxon Acuast. To make aghaft to fright to fhock to terrify3 to fear to affray When he faw my beft alarmed fpirit Bol in the quarrel's right rous' to th' encounter Or whether ga/fed by the noife I made Shakefpeare's King Lear Full fuddenly he fled Ga'sTriCK. ad). [from yasse. Belongin to the belly ‘GasTRORAPHY. . f. [vesnz and ¢anrw. In ftriGtnefs of etymology fignifies n more than fewing up any wound of th belly; yet in common acceptation it implies, that the wound of the belly i complicated with another of the inteftine Sharp's Surgery iGasTrO'ToMY. 7. [ [y#ene and 7éizoma. The act of cutting open the belly 'The preterite of gez Gar Mofes gat him up into the mount GATE #. /. [geac, Saxon. 1. The doo of a city Jarge building caftle Ex. xxiv. 18 palace o Open the gate of mercy, gracious God My foul flies through thefe woundsfo feek thee. Shak Gates of monarch Are arch'd fo high, that giants may jet through And keep their impious turbands on, withou Good-morrow to the fun, Shake/peare's Cymbeline 2. A frame of timber upon hinges to give a paffage into inclofed grounds Know'ft thou the way to Dover -Both ftile and gate, horfeway and footpath 3. An avenue Shak an opening Auria had done nothin but wifely and politickly in fetting the Venetians together by the ears with th Turks, and openinga gate for a long war. Kuolles Ga'TEVEIN, 2 / 'The wena porta that loved wealth, he catld not en Beinz a kin Diyden "Fhe fick for air before the portal gafp no any obftruction ta con _ Madamoifelle de'Scudery, wha is as old as Sibyl is tranflating Chaucer int Frenchi from which gather that he has formerly been tranflated into th tinue in the gazevein which difperfeth that blood Bacon's Henry VI1I old Provengal Ga'reway. n [ [gate and way.] 1 A wa through gates of inclofed grounds Gateways between inclofures are fo miry, tha they cannot cart between one ficld and another Mortimer's Hufbandry 7o GA'THER. @. a. [zadenan, Saxon. 1. To colle&t; to bring into one place Gather ftones-and they took ftones and made a Gen heap 2. To get in harveft The feventh year we fhall not fow, nor gather i Lev, xxy. 20 our increafe 3. To pick up ; to glean Dryder 15. To draw together in needlework 16. 70 GATHER Breath. PA proverbia expreffion.] 'To have refpite from an calamity The lucklefs lucky mai A long time with that favage people ftaid To gather breatk, in many miferies Spenfer 7o GA'THER. v. 7 1. To be condenfed; to thicken If ere night the garh'ring clouds we fear A fong will help the beating ftorm to bear Dryder When gath'ring clouds o'exfhadow all the {Kies And thoot quick lightnings, weigh my boys ! he cries His opinion Dryd Have fatisfied the king for his divorce Shalef Gather'd from all the famous colleges Caft up the highway, gather out the ftones 7. Ixii. 10 I will fpend this preface upon thofe from whom When the rival winds their quartel try South, Eaft and Weft, on airy courfers born The whirlwind gathers, and the woodsare torn. Dryd I am but a gahis rent, h 2. To grow larger by the accretion of fimilar matter Lacke Their fnow-ball did not gatker as it went; fo knowledge; fo have gathered m Whotton therer T pa the ereditor that lent hi muft gazher up money by degrees 4. To crop; to pluck 3. To aflemble my beauty and m And like a rofe jult gather'd from the fralk But only fmelt, and cheaply thrown afide To wither on the ground ! Dryden's Spanifb Fryar 5. To aflemble hav gathered themfelves together againf Fob me All the way we went there were gathered fom people on both fides, ftandin Bacon in a row 6. To heap up ; to accumulate He that by ufury and unjuft gain increafeth hi fubftance, fhall gather it for him that will pity th Proverbs pOOT 7. 'To fele& and take Save us, O Lord, and gather us from among th heathen, to give thanks unto thy holy name Ef. cvi. 47 8. To {weep together The kingdom of heaven is like unto a net tha was caft into the fea, and gathered of every kind Mat. xiil. 47 9. To colleét charitable contributions 1o, Te bring into one body or intereft I will gather others to him, befides thofe that ar gathered unto him I/ i 8 11. To draw together from a ftate of diffufion; to comprefs; to contract Immortal Tully fhone he Roman roftra deck'd the conful's throne Gath'ring his flowing robe he feem'd to ftand He gathers ground upon her in the chace Now breathes upon her hair with nearer pace. Dryd by in That which, out of the law of reafon er of God men probably gazhering to be expedient, they mak it law The reafon that I gather he is'mad Hooker Of his own door being fhut againft his entrance. Shak vifion we endeavoure t get into Macedonia, afluredly gatheaing that th Aés Lord had called us From this do€trine of the increafing and leflenin of fin in this refpet, we may gather, that all fin are not alike and equal, as the floicks of ancien times, and their followers, have falfely imagined. LPerkins Return' By night, and liftening where the haplefs pai Sat in their fad difcourfe and various plaint 4. To generate pus or matter Afk one, who by repeated reftraints hath fubdue his natural rage, how he likes the change, and h will tell yo no lefs happ 'ti than the eafe o broken impofthume after the painful gathering an Decay of Piety filling of it Ga'THER. 7. /. [from the verb.] Pucker cloth drawn together in wrinkles Give laws for pantaloons The length of breeches, and the gathers Part cannons, perriwigs, and feathers Hudibraz Ga'THERER. 7 /. [from gather. 1. One that gathers; one that collets ; collettor I will fpend this preface about thofe from whom have gathered my knowledge ; forI am but a gathere . Wotton and difpofer of other men's ftuff 2. One that gets in a crop of any kind I was-a herdman and a gazherer of fycamore fruit Asnos Nor in that lan Do poifonous herbs deceive the gatherer's hand May's Virg Ga'tueriNG 7 / [from gather. Col le&ion of charitable contributions x Cor. xvi. 2 Galrren-TREE. 7 /. A fpecies of Cornelian cherry GAUDE. 7. /. [The etymology of thi word is uncertain: Skizzer imagines i ma com from gaude, French, a yello flower, yellow being the moft gaudy co lour. Juuius, according to his cuftom talks @yar@; and Mr. Lye finds gande in Donglafs, to fignify deceit or fraud from grvawdio, Welfh, to cheat Is a mad tale he told to-day at dinner After he had feen th unruly multitude,and a falfe accufation. Ecc/ef. xxvi.i gatherings when I come 1z. To gain kno Bacon's Henry VII Let every one lay by him in ftore, that there be n In ac to fpeak, and graceful ftretch'd his hand., Pope 13. To pucker needlework 14. To colleét logically; t ference Addifos There be three things that mine heart feareth the flander of a city, the gathering together of a lov No fooner gain'd, but flighted and betray'd The And threatens every hour to burft upon it the people came in to them What have I done To fee my youth Think on the ftorm that gathers o'er your head "Thence gather'd his own doom, Mikon's Par. Lof It feem to me moft eafily deducible from gaudium Latin, joy the caufe of joy; a token o joy: thence aptly applied to any thingthat gives or exprefles pleafure. In ScotJand this word 1s ftill retained, both-as I fhowy bawble, and the perfon fooled alfo in Scotland denotes a yellow flower. A ornament a fine thing; any thin worn as a fign of joy. It is not now muc ufed e flole th? impreflion of her fantaly Wic |