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Show @ GL 'To fmear with the whit ¢he noun. of an egg. 'This wor the bookbinders The abfcels begun deep in the body of the glands is fill ufed b GLANCE. #. /. [glantz, German, glitter. 1, A fudden fhoot of light or fplendour His off'ring foon propitious fire from heav' Confum'd with nimble glazce, and grateful fteam Milton. The other's not; for his was not fincere Fine complicated clues of nervous thread Involv'd and twifted with th' artérial duct The rapid motion of the blood obftrut. Blackmore Gra/npers. 7. /i [from gland.] Inahorf 1s the running of corrupt matter fro Phe nofe, which differs in colour according to the degree of the malignity, bein white, yellow, green, or black Farrier's Dift love are not gazings Bacon ‘but fudden glances and dartings of the eye There are of thofe fort of beauties which laft bu fora moment; fome particularity ofa violent paffion fome graceful attion, a {mile, a glance of an eye, Dryden difdainful look, and a look of gravity Boldly the look'd, like one of high degree Yet never feem'd to caft ag/ance on me Atwhich I inly joy'd, for truth to fay 3. A fnatch of fight His hotfe is pofleft with the glanders, and lik to mofe in the chine Shak. Taming of the Shrew Granpi'rerovs. adj. [glans and fero, Latin.] Bearing maft; bearing acorns, o fruit like acorns The beech is of two forts, and numbered amongf Harte and for.ne dift.nay 1 felt an unknown awe a quick view The ample mind takes a furvey of feveral object the glandiferous trees GLA'NDULE glandule Watts on the Mind with one glance 7y GLANCE. @. 7. [from the noun. 1. To fhoot a fudden ray of {plendour Spenfer 2. Tofly off in an oblique diretion 3, To ftrike in an oblique direGtion 4 To view with a quick caft of the eye to play the eye having the nature of glands glands bu fubfifting in th glamdulou dark Glance at my credit with Hippolita Knowing I know thy love to "Thefeus? Shakefpeare Some men g/ance and dart at others, by juttifyin themfelves by negatives; as to fay, this I do not Bacon I have never glanced upon the late defigned pro h_er Richard Hawkins hath done fomethin i thl's kind, but brokingly and glancingly, intendi _ Chiefly a difcourfe of his own. voyage Hakewill gland Fr. of a human body are reduced t conglobate and conglomerate, is a little fmooth body, wraptup i which it is feparated from all th afe‘"_Paf $, only admitting an artery and nerve t cl;nzlm' and giving way to a vein and excretor S to come out: of this fort are the glands in th A conglome o ;,gfma' 1S compofed of many little conglobat glands, all tied together, and wrapt up in the c m ~ fnon tgnicle or membrane Ruincy o th dar 2. 'To look with fierce piercing eyes int Addifor Which thou doft glare with. Shakefpeare's Macbeth Look how pale he glares | Shakefpeare's Hamlet Now friends no more, nor walkinghand in hand But when they met they made a furly ftand And glar'd, like angry lions, as they pafs'd And wifh'd that ev'ry look might be their laft. Dryd 3 T fhine oftentatioufly much Iaboured luftre or with to The moft glaring and notorious paffages are non of the fineft, or mott corret. Felton on the Clafficks %o GLARE. w. 2. To fhoot fuch fplendour as the eye cannot bear One fpiri in them rul'd, and every ey Glar'd lightning, and fhot forth pernicious fir Amon - Pope's Rape of the Lock She fighs for ever 2. A fisrce piercing look Abou them round Milton A lion now he ftalks with fiery glare Latin; from glaire. glareofus Confifting of viflike the whit cous tranfparent. matter of an egg Gra'rine. adj Yr [glairenx adj Gra'reovs. Applied to any thing no torious: as, a. glaring crime GLASS. #. /. [gley, Saxon; glas Dgt.ch as Pexor imagines from g/4s, Britifh In Erfe it is called #/dnn, an green rency. 1. An artificial {ubftanc made b fufin fixed falts and flint or fand together, wit a vehement fire The word gla/s cometh from the Belgick an High Dutch: glafs, from the verb glanfen, whic to fhine; or perhaps fro amongft the Glafs is thought fo compaét and firm a body that it is indeftruétible by art or nature, and is alf of fo clofe a texture that the fubtleft chymical fpirit Boyle cannot pervade it Show'rs of grenadoes rain, by fudden burf Difploding murd'rous bowels, fragments of ftee And ftones, and g/a/s and.nitrous grain aduft Philips 3. A looking-glafs a mirrour He was the mark and g/4fs, copy and book That fathion'd others Shakefp. Henry IV He fpreads his fubtile nets from fight With trinkling g/a/fes, to betra The larks that in the mefhes light. Dryden's Horace 4+ An Hour Grass A glafs ufed in meafuring time by the flux of fand Were my wife's live Infeed as her life, fthe would not liv The running of one glafs. Shake/p. Winter's Tal 5. The deftined time of man's life No more his royall felf did live, no more his nobl {onne The golden Meleager now, their g/z/fes all were run Chaprmarn 6. A cup of glafs ufed to drink in Thou haft no fpeculation in thofe eyes fhoot obliguely LANCINGLY. adv, [from glance.] I an obligue broken manner; tranfiently ou fuddenly into th The cavern glares with new admitted light. Dryd Alas, thy dazzled ey Beholds this man in a falfe glaring light ‘Which conqueftand fuccefs have thrown upon him @, ¢, To move nimbly; t Shak contrariwife Here in a grotto, fhelter'd clofe from air And fereen'd in fhades from day's detefted g/an', 1'1l {ee no mor And yet the eighth appears, who bears a g/a/ Which fhews me many more. Shake/peare's fifa:{] The court of Cacus ftands reveal'd to fight notwith Glancing an eye of pity on his lofles Enolugh to prefs a royal merchant down or Addifon's Guardian beaux 2. A glafs veflel of any kind glaring light, the eye is dazzled for a time, and th fight confufed Bacon His glaring eyes with anger's venom fwell And like the brand of foul Aleto flame Fairfux He is every where above conceits of epigrammatic wit, and grofs hyperboles: he maintains majefty i the midft of plainnefs; he fhines, but glares not and is ftately without ambition Dryden Pope ftanding it raight have afforded matter to many ludicrous fpeculations Addifon He had written verfes wherein he glanced at certain reverend dotor, famous for dulnefs. Saift tha To GLARE. . #. [glaren, Datch. 1. To fhine {o as to dazzle the eyes How can'ft thou thus, for thame, Titania attendants f{ubftances and looking like a fpecire amidft a g/are of flam glacies in the Latin, which is ice, whofe colour i Peacham on Drawirng refembles beaver's bags are no teflicles, or parts officia generation by me- in her chair at two o'clock in the morning fignifie hold the nature of emun&ories. Brown's Viulg. Err Such conftitutions muft be fubjet to glandulon tumours, and ruptures of the lymphaticks. #rbuzh Suckling $+ To cenfure by oblique hints glands th After great light, if you com a dunce § raten';‘he labial glands, and teftes t unt Shall take through Grub-ftreet hertriumphant round And her Parnaflus glancing o'er atonce twA"f the gland m°] orts, viz . rflig.obat? glan o ne' kin, b tainin Th Through Paris' fhield the forceful weapon went His corflet pierces, and his garment rends - . And glancing downwards near his flank defcends Pope Jo [glans, Latin collettion of glands [from glandulons. In the upper parts of worms are found certai white and oval glandulofities. Brown's Vulg. Err *Tis ten to one it maim'd you two outright. Shake/p GLAND of humours 7 I have prieved to fee a perfon of quality glidin this primarily fignifies clean or clear, being fo denominated from its tranfpa Latin Gura'Npurovus. adj. [glandulofus, Latin glanduleux, Yrench, from glandule.] Per He has a little gall'd me, I'confefs But as the jeft did glazce away from me 7o Grance [glanduln A fmall gland ferving t Granpuro'siry When through the gloom the g/ancinglightnings fly Rowe Heavy the rattling thunders roll on high ceflion of his holinefs and hi / Nature hath provided feveral glandules to feparat this juice from the blood, and no lefs than four pai of channels to convey it into the mouth, which ar called duéus falivales Ray That glancing fire out of the iron play'd As fparkles from the anvil ufe When heavy hammers on the wedge are fway'd Behold a hundred fons, and eac Mortimer's Huyfbandry ¥r. the fecretio He double blows about him fiercely laid O' th? fudden up they rife and dance Then fit again, and figh and glance . Then dance again and kifs Mighty dulnefs crown'd Wifeman The glands, which o'er the body fpread 2. A ftroke or dart of the beam of fight The afpe@s which procur GL th' accurft, that wither'd all thejr ftrength Milton GrARE. 7 /. [from the verb. 1. Overpowering luftre; fplendour, fuch a dazzles the eye The frame of burnifh'd fieel that caft a glar From far, and feem'd to thaw the freezing air .Di_}ld Fab To this latt coftly treaty That fwallow'd fo much treafure, and like a glaf Did break i' th' rinfing Shakefp. Henry VI1k When thy hear Dilates with fervent joys, and eager fou Prompts to purfue the f{parkling g/afr, be fur >Tis time to thun it Philips 7. 'The quantity of wine ufually containe in a glafs; a draught While a man thinks one g/z/s more will no make him drunk, that one g/a/s hath difzbled hi from well difcerning his prefent condition -Taylor's Rule of living holy The firft g/afs may pafs for health, the fecon for good-humour, the third for our friends; but th fourth is for our enemies Temple 8. A perfpective glafs The moon whofe or Through optick g/afs the Tufcan artiftviews. Milos Like thofe who furvey the moon by glafes, tell of a fhining world above, but not relate th glories of the place Dryden Gurass, adj. Vitreous; made of glafs Get thee glafs eyes Ang |