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Show GR [ from gravis @, ¢ GRAVITATE 'To tend to the centre of atLatin. traftion Thofe who have nature's fteps with care purfu'd That matter is with a&ive force endu'd ‘That all its parts magnetick pow'r exert And to each other gravitate, aflert Livin wit Tho of tending to the centre Gra'viTy [gmwa , Lati #.f French: 1. Weight tendenc heavinefs th YA} i Qpincy Bodies do fwim or fink in different liquors, accord ing to the tenacity or grawvity of thofe liquors whic Brown are to fupport them Though this increafe of denfity may at grea diftinces be exceeding flow, yet if the elaftick ton of this medium be exceeding great, it may fuffice t impel bodies from the denfer patrts of the mediu towards the rarer, with all that power which we cal Newton's Optics gravity 2. Atrocicufnefs; weight of guilt Great Cato there for grawvity renown'd A Gra'vy. n / The ferous juice that run from flefh not much dried by the fire Meat w lov half raw wit the blood tricklin down from it, delicately terming it the gravy, whic in truth looks more like an ichorous or raw blood matter tHarvey on Confumptions There may be ftronger broth mad than of any gravy fou of vegetable Aybutimot on Aliments GRAY. adj. [znzg, Saxon; gran, Danifh graau, Datch. TLike a fad votarift i whea the gray headed even er's weed Rofe from the hindmoft wheels of Phebus' wain Milton Thefe gray and dun colours may be allo produce by mixing whites.and blacks, and by confequenc differ from perfe& whites, not in fpecies of (,Q‘_).‘rs but only in degree of luminoufnefs The trodden herb, of abject thoughts and low. Mil Their fteeds around Free from their harnefs, graze the flow'ry ground Dryden Some graze their land 'till Chtiftmas, and fom . longer Mort This Neptune gave him, when he gave to kee His fcaly flocks that graxe the wat'ry deep Dryd The lambs with wolves fhall graxc the verdant mead Pope 3. To fupply with grafs H GraY.# / Gra'z1ER Have I in conqueft ftretcht mine arm fo far To be afraid to tell graybeards the truth GRrA'YLING. 7. /. [thymallus. a fifh Shakefp The umber no To compals wealth, and bribe the god of gai To give thee flocks and herbs, with large encreafe Fool! to expect them from a bullock's greafe Dryd. Fuv Walton's Angler Gra'ynrss. #. /. [from gray.] The qualit of being gray To GRAZE. v, 7. [from grafs. A girdle, foul thh gn'qfe, binds his obflcne aftite Diryd 1. To eat grafs; to feed on grafs z One wh Into the flame Shakefp. Macketh To take out a fpot of greafe they ufe a coal upo brown paper Bacon's Natural Hiftory Thou hop'#t; with facrifice of oxen flain He isnot fo general a fifh as th fo good to eat [from graze. Greafe, that's fweate From the murth'rer's gibbet, thro the fame manner : he is of a fine fhape, his flet \NhlLC, and his teeth, thofe little ones that he has trout One tha GREASE. . /. [ graiffe, French. 1. The foft part of the fat; the oily a un&uous part of animals The grayling lives in fuch rivers as the trout dots and is ufually taken with the fame baits, and afte are in his throat a fiel Gentle peace, which filleft the hufbandman's barns the grazier's folds, and the tradefman's thop Howel. His confufion increafed when he found the alder man's father to be a grazier Speéiator Of agriculture the defolation made in the countr by engrofiing graziers, and the gieat yearly importation of corn from England, are lamentable inftances under what difcouragement it lies Swift thou can'ft ot Tove fo dear as I Shakefpeare an All graziers prefer their cattle from meaner paftures to better Bacon Gay A gray colour thy love doth freeze 7. feeds cattle in contempt s=Graybeard barn in repair His flock daily crop Their verdant dinner from the mofly tur Sufficient: after them the cackling goofe Clofe grazer, finds wherewith to eafe her want Philips Grav.7 f A badger Ainfaworth GRrA'YBEARD. 7 /. [gray and beard. A Youngling a houfe an Gra'zer. 7. /. [from graze. grazes ot feeds on grafs _ Down funk the fun, the clofing hour &4f da ‘Came onward, mantled o'cr with dufky gray Parnel old man hat or two to graze his cows, with a garden and or chard Swift The grratc& of my pride is to fec my ewes gmz,e, . [In horfemanthip.] A fwelling and gourShakefp. As you like i and my lambs fuck dinef o th legs whic happen t Graze where you will, you {hall not houfe with me horfe after a journey, or by ftanding lon Shak in the ftable Leaving in the fields his grazing cows He foug! 1t Iximfclf fome hofpitableghoufe Dryden 7o GREASE. @. a. [from the noun. The more ignoble thron 1 T {mea o anoin wit greafe Attend their ftately fteps, and flowly graze along 2 T bribe t corrup wit prefents Dryde Env no th ftor To fapply grafs Phyficians advife théir patient to remov airs which are plain champaigns, but grazizg not overgrown with heath int an Bacor Of the.greas'd advocate, that grinds the poor. Dryd Grr'asiness. z, /. [from greafe.] Oilinefs fatnefs The fewers muft be kept {o as the water may no Upon the moft of thefe ftones, after they are cut there appears always, as it were, a kind of greajinefs or unctuofity Boyle ftay too long in the Spring; for then the groun continueth the wet, whereby it will never graze t purpofe that year Ba"o". Gre'asy adj [fro greafe. A third fort of grazing ground is that near the fea 1. Oily; fat; un&uous which is commonly very rich land Mortimer The fm:mcnts, feraps, the bits andg‘m_y rclxque Of her o'ereaten faith Snakefpeare 1 3. To move on devouring 1. White with a mixtaré of black "They left me then 1 was at fir(t as other beafts, that graz Popr names are motre gracious than thei Danicl's Civil War 2. To feed upon with warriours mix'd And in the doubtful day the w oodeock flies Bacon Dryd If he but know his good Walton T'll fay yon gray is not the morning's eye *Tis but the pale reflex of Cynthia's brow Shat Soon as the gray ey'd morning ftreaks the fkies Law be Si:akq[p Grazing his cattle in thofe pleafant fields Shatefp "The emperors often jeited on their rivals or preflumes, but their mints fill maintained their gruAddifon wity He will tell you with great gravizy, that itis dangerous thing for a man that has been ufed to ge money, ever to leave it off Cefilia, that is, gray eyed Camden's Remains The grayey'd morn {miles on the frowning night Chequ'ring the eattetn clouds with ftreaks of light 3. Serioufnefs; folemnity Shakefp But all be buried in his gravity For the advocates and council thatplead, patienc and grawvity of hearing is an eflential part of j}lfiic I a of the colour of afhes No man could ever have'thought this reafonable that had intended thereby only to puniflr the injur committed, according to the grawvityof the fa Hooker There is not a white hair 6n your face but fhoul Shakefp. Henry 1V have his effe& of grawity Our youths and wildnefs thall no whit appear me no 3 Dark like the opening ot clofe of day body above the 1‘pecifickgrrwig) of the fluid, whereBy it ténds downwards more than the ambient flui (."3[ Jacob graz'd his uncle Laban's (heep men Bacon's Natural Hiftory haft neither forfake - Um women' by which any body tends downwards; bu in on & tive'or vulgar is the excefs of grawvit i And Bacon trembling for his brazen head That quality By which all heavy bodies tend towards the centre, accelerating their motion the neare they approach towards it, true plnloionhv has {hew to be unfolveable by any hypothefis, and refolved i into the immediate will ‘of ‘the Creator. Of al bodies, confidered within the.confines of any fluid forc is fee Glanville's Scepfs Gray headed infant ? and #n vain grown old Art thou to learn that in another's 'rol Lie charms refiftlefs D;}r/{'n s Fuvenal We moft of us.are grown gray headed in our déa maftes's fervice Addifon's Spectator Her gray hair'd fynods damning books unread centre there is a twefold grawity, true and abfolute, an vulgar or comparative: abfolute gravity is the whol a Aflembl & Milton's Paradife L/i The reftoration of gray hairs to juvenility, an renewing the exhaufted marrow, may be effected gravité t gray Gray headed men and grave P ope if you go by b Ano the earth, do tend and preéfs towards its centre Bentley When the loofe mountain trembles from on high Shall gravitation ceafe t to feed on grafs their hai the late days of temptation t The moft confiderable phenomenon belomrm the terreltrial bodies is the general a&ion o ation, whereby all known bodies, in the vi tmnmr do chang come gray headed, nor fuffered me to forfake thee i nd' [fromgnz mtlte 7. GR AVITATION age \grifly, and many others with all other matter; and as much as is comprehended within a particular body muft graz itat jointly w xth that body creatures generall though fome earlier and fomeé later33+ in horfes, tha are dappled and turn white; inold fquirrels that tur {ubftanc Be 1, To tend grazing cattle; to fet eattf 2. White ot hoary with old age Blackrore be of the fllm That fubtle matter muf As every ftatelay next to the other that was opprefied, fo the fire perpetually grazed Zisf [ From 7afer, French. Bacon To touch lightly. ‘Mark then a bounding va our in our Lngllih That being dead, like to the bullets grazizg Breaks out into a fecond courfe of mifchief Killing in relapfe of moxtality Newton, 1 Zo GRAAE. Vi td Sbake/p. Henry V 2 Smeared with greafe ‘Even the lewd rabbl Govern'd their roaring throats and grumbled pity 1 could lnve hugg'd the greafy rogues; they pleafe Otavay Buy .hcep, and fee that they be big-boned, an Mort have a foft, greafy, well LUT]Ld clofe wool 3. Fatof body; bulky: in reproach Let' |