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Show L. GL GLE/ANING, #, f [from glean. of gleaning, or thing gleaned 'The at There fhall be as the fhak]ing olf an c_;live-tn:ce,1 an ning of grapes when the vintage is done Bible Mt The orphan and widow are members of th fame common family, and have a right to be {uphad togather the gleanings of the rich man's harveft Atrerbury GLEBE. . / To GLERK like the moor bowers plots, delight in fedg "The graffy garlands loves, and oft attir'd with flower Drapton Of rank and mellow glede Fertile of corn the g/ebe, -of oil and wine With herds the paftures throng'd, with flocks th hills Milton. Mark well the flow'ring almonds in the wood If od'rous blooms the bearing branches load [gligman or a droll money, but th Shakefpeare in Saxon i 1. To fneer; to gibe; to droll upon I can gleck upon occafion Shakefp I have feen you glecking or galling at this gentleman twice or thrice Shakefpeare 2, I Scotlan it is ftill retained and fig nifies to fool or fpend time idly, wit {fomething of mimickry or drollery GLEEN T hanging down over thei difguifing them fhin wit Great heats will follow, and large crops of grain Dryden Sleeping vegetables lie *Till the glad fummons of a genial ra and calls them out to-day GLEET. = /. [I glit, and derive to run foftly. ichor running fro And 1 had rather glib ryfelf Should not produce fair iffu Garth 2, The land pofiefled as a part of the revenue of an ecclefiattical benefice mach of our goods rendered to God the third, inothe + offerings beftowed upon God and his church by th people Spelman A trefpals done on a parfon's glebe land, whic is a freehold, cannot be tried in a {piritual court Ayliffe's Parergon Many parifhes have not an inch of glele. Sawift Gre'sous adj. [from glebe. Turfy Turfy; per Ye fhall not eat the glede ture writing o adj th flet lof [fro it adj. [fro mnot t Carew [from zlopan, Saxon merty ; cheerful. ~ Not ufed compactly twifted together t wa S Saxon. ]Mf\z/iefufi fflik '{{ Dryden Drydern In thofe fair hields where facred Ifis glides Or elfe where Cam his winding vales divides Pope 2. To pafs on without change of ftep Ye gliding ghofts, permit me to relat The myftick wonders of your filent ftate Drydesn 3. To move {wiftly and {fmoothly aleng If one of mea affair May plod it ina week, why may not Glide thitherin a day Shakefpeare's Cymbeline Shoals of fith, with fins and thining fcalcs Glide under the green wave NMilton He trembl'd every limb and felta fmar As if cold fteel had g/ided through his heart Al thing ar behel a Diryden's Fables a hafty motian i appear Shakefpeare's King Lear nonfenf And then, to make them-pafs the glibder Revis'd by Tibbald, More, and Cibber Fairfaz where the objects only glide before the eye and dif pu Locke Dryden GripE. # /. [from the verb. Lapfe or manner of paffing fmoothly a About his nec A green and gilded fnake had wreath'd itfelf Who, with her head nimble in threats, approach' The opening of his mouth; but fuddenly Seeing Orlando, it unlink'd itfelf And with indented g/ides did {lip awa Into a bufh GriDER Shakefpeare's As you lite it n [from glide. Cr glides tha The glaunce into my heart did glide He ho the glider Therewith my foul was fharply gride Such wounds foon waxen wider GrikE 7 f fneer 7 Spenfer's Pafiorals [ghg, Saxon afcoff See Greexk. Not now i a flout Where' g likes th baftard' GLI'MIMER nifh glow. Three genuine tomes of Swift's remains Gay among the dufty vallies, glid Where ftray the Mufes, in what lawn or grove ufe together in well founding Englith Now Curl his fhop from rubbifh drains of of the Tonp2ue Juft before the confines of the wood The gliding Lethe leads her filent flood fufpect i Wifeman. Arbuthnot g/i the flexur In double ftreams the briny waters g/ide matte with a noofe that flipt a fo muc a Broke by the jutting land on either fide that g/i4 and oily ar neve muc The filver fireams of Jordan's cryftal fiood Skinner. glib as a birdcatcher's gin f ‘w. 2, [glivan, Saxon; glijdex By Eaft &lib and continually in motion, fall off from on another, which way foever gravity inclines them Burnet's Theory Habbakkuk brought him a fmooth ftrong rope Ther thing doth make a gleeful boaft Vou, I th no 1. To flow gently and filently To {peak and purpofe not, fince what I well intend hMY lovely Aaron, wherefore look'ft thou fad n ever - ; GrLrrx n/"[ 1 V e or mufician, an need of an Dutch Ichory 1. Smooth; flippery; fo formed as to b eafily moved I wan A provin cu)l\and obfolete word LEEFUL, "adj, [glee and Jull. ruddinefs »el&-~ 1'1l do't before I fpeak A hot glowing coal gleet. Grew. . /. [gluten, Latin. A vifcou cement made by diffolving the kins o animals in boiling water, and dryin the gelly. See GLuk Harte glow. and fo glet whofe inue afford them a bafon Cheyne's Pbil. Princ Gay = hie poor man then was rich, and liv'd with glee Ea 2 / places of the globe and by this concuffion are condenfed down the cavern$ of thefe mountains 2. Smooth; voluble GLE D hit agzainft the mountainou 'till the is the moft ready for motio 70 GLIDE whic Liquid bodies have nothing to fuftain their parts nor any thing to cement them: the parts bein h barley-head untaxt, and day-light free are carried up and down the atmofphere GLIB \ She marcheth -home, and by her takes the knight Whom al] the people follow with great g/ee Fairy Queen _ Many ‘wayfarers make themfelves gleey by vex Farewel my glee clouds Spenfer con Is Blouzelinda dead mak 7. f. [from glib.] Smoothnefs too, the more to facilitate its movin Governme And wooes the widow's daughter of the gles A kin forello fu of the Tongue joint, and by accefs of humours acquires a glibnef Wifeman th Governmen tongu member From me his madding mind is ftart Prior with fome mixture of irony an ng~the inhabitants; who agai © baigne them with perfume raifed b recoil at an obfcenity A polifh'd ice-like glibnefs doth enfol The rock Chapman's Ody/fey GLEN. . f. [gleann, Exfe. A valley; dale; a depreflion between two hills GLEE. 7. /. [3lizze, Saxon.] Joy; merriment; gayety It anciently fignifie mufick played at feafts, It is not no tempt. Vapour fto {lipperinefs I mad 2. To run flowly as well as confcienc GrUnyess this not only bled change to be thin and gleety, you ma corrupting the kite, and the vul in ludicrou into it to the bone but gleeted a few drops I Deut excep being inflamed and fwelled thinly {anious Pernicious flatt'ry! thy malignant feed In an ill hour, and by a fatal han Sadly diffus'd o'er virtue's gleby land clean.sh data import.tsv out README With rifing pride amidft the corn appear And choke the hopes and harveft of the year of hawk incifio GrLr'eTy haps in the following paflage fat or fruitful, if it has indeed any meaning Greps. 7 /. [gloaglive, Saxon. a thum parts, being hollow Di& GLE'sY. adj. [from glebe. u{:ed Hi Smoothly do yet flide glidly into a detrattion Wifeman's Surg another in tythe, which is a fet par Shakefpeare Many who would ftartle at an oath, whof 7o GLEET. .7 [from the noun. The ordinary living or revenue of a parfonage is 1. To drip or ooze with a thin fanious liquour of three forts: the one in land, commonly calle the glebe than the [from g/ih. volubly Prior A hard dry efchar, without either matter or gleet adv Gri'BLy Th is written by Skinue from gzliban, Saxon fanious ooze ; a thi a fore T To bring falfe generations; they are coheirs Thofe who labou The {weaty forge, who edge the crooked feythe Acknowledge Vulcan's aid and monftruoufl Spenfer on Ireland I'll geld them all : foutteen they fhall not fee hea or polith. I know not the origina clean.sh data import.tsv out README notion of this word: it may be of th fame race with glow or with gleam have not remarked it in any other place eyes 7o Gris. @. a. [from the adjetive. caftrate Bend ftubborn iteel, and harden g/eening armour The glebe will anfwer to the fylvan reign Unbinds the glebe v, a mimic [gleba, Latin, 1. Turf; foil; ground . This gleek: T will give you the minftrel of it, as the poor few income orted out of th What will you give us >--N t fhine; braves « an Ch [ climamer, . Da glimmer Dutch, t 1. To fthine faintly Swift Be fure he's a fine fpoken man Do but hear on the clergy how g/i4 his tongue ran Szwift GvriB. 7 / The Iiifh have from the Scythians mantles an long g/ibs; which 1s a thick curled bufh of hai The Weft yet glimmers with fome fttea The truth appears {o naked on m That any purblind eye mu find it o -And on my fide it is fo wel apparel'd So clear, .fo fhining, and { evident That it will gZimmer throuzh a blind man's eve 5 Ehaketeare |