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Show GR His brai Outweigh'd his rage but half a grain Hudibras 6. Any thing proverbially {mall For the whole world before thee is as a little grai of the balance Wifd. x1. 22 It is a fincerely pliable, duétil temper that ne glects not to make ufe of any graiz of grace Hammond The ungrateful perfon lives to himfelf, and fubfifts by the good nature of others of Allowance dulged or remitted Something in fomething above o under the exa weight ' "He, whofe very beft a&tions, muft be feen wit grains of allewance, cannot be too mild, moderate Addifen and forgiving 1 would always give fome grains of allowance t the facred feience of theology Watts ox the Mind South felf has not the leatt graiz 7 GRAI of which he him 8. The direction of the fibres of wood other fibrous matter 9. The body of the wood as modified by th fibres The beech, the fwimming alder, and the plane Hard box, and linden of a fofter graiz Dryden 10. The body confidered with refpect t the form or direction of the conftituen particles Th tooth of a fea-horfe, i th mid of th folider parts, contains a curdled graiz not to be foun in ivory Brown Stones of a cenftitution fo compagt, and a graiz f prf, e, fine, that they bear a fine polifh Woodward 11, Died or ftained fubftance How the red rofes flufh up in her cheeks And the pure fnow with goodly vermil ftain Like crimfon dy'd in grain Spenfer Over his lucid arm A military veft of purple flow'd Livelier than melibzan or the grai Milton penfive nun, devout and pure Allin a robe.of darkeft grain Flowing with majeftick train Milton The third, his fee Shadow'd from either heel with feather'd mail Sky-tinCtur'd grain Milton's Paradife Lof? 12, Temper; difpofition; inclination; humour from the dire&ion of fibres Your minds, preoccupied with wha You rather muft do than with what you fhould do Made you againft the graiz to voice him conful Quoth Hudibras Shakefpeare it is in vain 1 fee, to argue "gainft the grain Hudibras Old clients, weary'd out with fruitlefs care Difmifs their hopes of eating, and defpair Though much againft the grain, forc'd to retire Buy roots for fupper, and provide a fire. clean.sh data import.tsv out README Dryden l; 13. The heart the bottom The one being trattable and mild, the other {tif and impatient of a fuperior, they lived but in cun ning coneord, a united in grain brother glue together, but no Hayward 14. The form of the furface with regard t roughnefs and {fmoothnefs The fmaller the particles of cutting fubftances are the fmaller will be the feratches by which they con tinually fret and wear away the glafs until it be polithed; but be they never fo {mall, they can wea away the glafs no otherwife ehan by grating an Aeratching it, and breaking the protuberances; an therefore "polith it no otherwife than by breaking it roughmefs to a very fine grain, fo that the fcratche and frettings of the furface become too fmall to b vifible WNewton's .Optick:; Geainep adj made lefs fmcoth 2. Full of grains or kernels Grawme'RCY. interj. [contrated from gran me mercy.] An obfolete expreffion of furprife fir, faid he; but mote I wee What ftrange adventure do ye now purfue? Spenfer Gramercy, lovely Lucius, what's the news Shak Grami/NEUS ad) [ graminens Latin. Grafly Gramineous plants are fuch a have a long leaf without a footftalk adj. [gmm and woro living upon grafs The ancients were verfed chiefly in the diffectio of brutes, among which the graminivorous kin hav a party-caloured choroides GRAMMAR 7. [f Sharp's Surgery [grammaire grammatica, Lating yeepymelic. French 1. The fcience of fpeaking corre@tly; th art which teaches the relations of word to each other To be accurat in the grammar and idioms o the tongues, and -then as a rhetorician to make al their graces {erve his eloquence Fe/l We make a countryman dumb, whom we wil not allow to fpeak but by the rules of grammar Dryden's Dufrefnoy Men fpeaking language, according to the grammar rules of that language, do yetfpeak improperl of things ocke 2. Propriety or juftnefs of fpeech; fpeec according to grammar Of farra, worn by kings and heroes old Come Grains of Paradife. n. [. [cardamomum Latin. An Indian fpice Gra'iny. adj. [from grain. 1. ¥ull of corn Gramerey [from grain. Rough "Though now this grained face of mine be hi In fap confuming Winter's drizzled fnow Vet hathany night of life fome memory Shake/p Varium & mutabile femper femina, is the fharpef fatire that ever was made on woman; for the adjectives are neuter, and animal/ muft be underfroo te make them grammar Diyden 3. The book that treats of the various relations of words to one another Gra'MMaRr School. #. /. A {chool in whic the learned languages are grammaticall taught Thou haft moft traiteroufly corrupted the yout of the realm in ereCting a grammas fchool. Shakefp The ordinary wayof learning Latin in a gramma Locke f¢hool T cannot encourage GRrAMMA'RIAN. 7. /. [ gravamairien, French from grammar.] One who teaches grammar ; a philologer Many difputes the ambiguous nature of letters hat Holder created among the grammarians They who have called him the torture of grammayians, might alfo have called him the plague o Dryden - tranflators grammaticus [ grammatical, Fr adj Gramwma'ricar. Latin. The beauty of virtue ftill being fet before thei eyes, and that taught them with far more diligen Sid_my care than grammatical vules th take the numbe graminatica alphabet no from language bu of confonants of an from the diverfity of founds framed by fingle arti- Holder. culations with appulfe 2. 'Tanght by grammar The feldom know mor tha the grammatica conftruétion, unlefs born with a poetical genius Dryden's Dufrefnoy GrAMMA'TICALLY. adv. [from grammazical. According to the rules or {cienc of grammar When a fentence is diftinguifhed into the nouns the yerbs, proneuns grammar teachethu adverbs, and other particles o to fpea properly i it is the part of rhetorick to infhu@ how to de i elegantly, by adding beauty to that language tha before was naked and grammatically true Baker GRAMMATICA'ST ER. #. /. [Latin. mean verbal pedant; a lew grammarian I hav not vexed language with the doubts, th of the Erench gramRymer remarks, and eterpal trifling maticaflers Gra'mpLE. m fi A crab-fith Ainfworih Gra'mpus, n /. Alarge fifh of the cetaceous kind GRra'NARY. m [. [graparium, Latin.] ftorehoufe for threthed corn Ants by their labour an induftry, contrive tha corn will keep as dry in their nefts as in our granaries Addiforn The naked nations cloaths And be th' exhaufklefs granary of a world Thomfon's Spring Gra'NATE, 7 f. [from granum, Latin. A kind of marble {o called, becaufe it i marked with {mall variegation grains. , Otherwife GRANITE GRAND adj ¥rench [ graud lik grards Latin. illuftrious 1. Geeat powe i hig o dignity God had planted tha is, mad to gro the tree of life and knowledge, plants only proper and becoming the paradife and garden of fo grazd a Lord Raleigh's Hiftory fplendid 2. Great magnificent A voice has flow Young To re-enflame a graxd defign 3. Principal chief What cauf Mov'd our grand patents in that happy (tate Fayour'd of heav'n {o highly, to fall of From their Creator Milton 4. Eminent; fuperiour an 1ll fenfe ver frequently i Our grand foe, Satan Miltorn So clomb this firt grazd thizf into ‘God's fold Miltorn 5. Noble; fublime lofty; conceive exprefled with great dignity o 6. It is ufed to fignify afcent or defcent o confanguinity Gra'vpam. . /i [ grand and dam or dame. 1. Grandmother m father' or mother' mother I meeting'him, wiil tell him that my lad Was fairer than his grandam and as chaft As may be in the worid Shakefpeare We haye our forefathers and great grandames al before us, as they were in Chaucer's days. Dryderr Thy tygrefs heart belies thy angel face Too well thou fhew'ft thy pedigree from {tone Thy grandame's was the firft by Pyrrha thrown Drydese 2. An old withered woman Th 1. Belonging to grammar I fhal fpeech which compofe it, then if is faid to be anaWatls lyfed grammatically A Bon Jonfon Hufks, draff} to drink and fwill Lat.] Grafs-eating Shaé Th Give them grains their fill Gramini'vorous Knots, by the conflux of meeting fap Infeét the found pine, and divert his grai Tortive and errant from his courfe of growth o Graiwns, v /. [without a fingular. hufks of malt exhaufted in brewing GR wome Cry'd, one and all, the fuppliant fhould have right And to the grandame hagadjudg'd the knight Gra'spcHILD Dvidlo 7}(46'... 7. /o [ grand and child. The fon or daughter of my fon or daughter; one in the fecond degree of defcent Auguftus Ceefar, out of indignation againft hi daughters and Agrippa his grandchild, would fa that they were not.his {eed, but impofthumes broke from him Bacon Thele hymns may work os future wits and f May great grazdchildren of thy praifes grow. Donne He hoped his majefty did believe, that he woul never make the leaft [cruple ta obey the grardehi/ of King James Clayendon Fair daughter, and theu fen and grandchi/d both 5 Milto H |