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Show & G.U Gu'xstone. w /o [gun and fore] 'Th fhot of cannon ‘They ufed formerly t fhoot ftones from artillery Shall ftand for charge '1‘5'\ at fhall fly with them Gu'swaLe Shakefp. Henry V . / That picce of timber which reaches o either fide of the thip from the half dec t th fore-caftle bein the uppermotf bend which finifheth upper work of th hull in that part, and wherein they pu the ftanchions which fupport the waft tree ; and this is called the guuawale, whether there be guns in the fhip or no; an the lower part of any port, where an ordnance are, is alfo termed the gunawale Harris GurGE. 7 f. [gurges, Latin. Whirlpool Boils out from under ground Gu'rcron #./ Th AMilton's Parad. Lof? coarfer part of th meal, fifted from the bran 9o GUu'RGLE. w. 2. [ gorgogliare Italian. 2 bottle Then when a fountain's gurgling waters play Fhey ruth to land, and end in feafts the day Pope Pure gurgling rills the lonely defert trace And waite their mufick on the favage race Young Gu/RNARD #. [ [gournal, French. Gu/rNET kind of fea fith clean.sh data import.tsv out README If I be not atham'd of my foldiers I am a fowc' gurnet: 1 have mifus'd the king's prefs damnably Shakefp. Henry IV Zo GusH. w. n 1. To flo [goflelen, Dutch. or rufh out with violence no to {pring in a {igyll ftream, but in a lar ger body A fea of blood g#/b'd from the gaping wound Thather gay garments ftain'd with filthy gore Spenfer The covering of this abyfs was broken afunder and the water gu/bed out that made the deluge Inceffant fireams of thin magnetick ray Burpet :Gufh from their fountains with impetuous force In‘either pole, then;take an adverfe courfe Blackmore ‘On either hand the gz/bing waters play And down the rough cafcade white dafhing fall Thomfon 2. To emit in a copious effluxion The gaping wound g«/h'd out a crimfon flood Dryden Line after line my gu/bing eyes o'ctflow Led through a fad variety of woe Pope GusH. 7. /. [from the verb.] An emiffio ot liquor in a large quantity at once the liquour fo emitted If a lung-vein be burfted, generally at the firf cough a great g#/b of blood is coughed up, Harvey fewe Dryden liking 3. Love To kill, I grang, is fin's extremeft gz/? But, in defence, by mercy 'tis made juit. Shake/p Old age fhall do the work of taking away bot L' Eftrange the gu/? and comfort of them hav W loft, in a grea meafure the gu/Agn relifh of true happinefs 4. Turn of fancy; intellettual tafte Lillotforn principal part of painting is to find wha has made moft proper to this art, and of it may be made according to the g#/# an Dryden of the ancients Th natur chotc manne 5. [From gufler, Iflandick. lent blaft of wind A {udden vio She led calm Henry, though he were a king As doth a fail, fill'd with a fretting g7/? Command an argofie to ftem the waves Shake/p You may as well forbid the mountain pine n. [. [gonfet, French. Any thin on to cloth in order to ftrengthe it GUST. n. /. [gouft, French; guftus, Latin. 2. Senfe of tafting Deftroy all creatures for thy fport or gx/2 Yet cry, if man's unhappy Shakefpeare Prefently come forth fwarms and volleys of libels which are the gu/fs of liberty of fpecch reftrained Bacon's Henry VII A Tofall or guth with noife, as water fro Gu'sser and hearing were employ'd and fmell When they are fretted with the g/#s of heav'n Marching from Eden he fhall fin "The plain, wherein a black bituminous gurg f{ight To wag their high tops, and to make a noife gulf theirs meer fenfual gz/?, and fought with furl Dryden's Fable pride And all three fenfes in full gu/f enjoy'd for the wafteful vengeanc or GunNNEL of @ Ship Where love is duty on the female fide M Tell the pleafant prince, this mock of hi Hath turn'd his ball to guuffores, and his fou :God's unjuft Pope 2. Height of perception ; height of fenfua enjoyment ‘They fondly thinking to alla Their appetite with gz/#, inftead of frui Chew'd bitter afhes, which th' offended taft With fpatiering noife rejected Milion fierce norther whe blaft fro th Alp defcend From his firm roots with ftruggling gx/#s to ren Denbant An aged fturdy oak Part ftay for paflage, 'till a gu/? of win Dryden Ships o'er their forces in a fhining theet Pardon a weak diftemper'd foul, that {well With fudden g#/#s and finks as foon in calms Addifon's Cato The fport of paffions 6. It is written in Spen/er vitioudly for jufks {ports For jolly knight he feem'd, and fair did fit As one for knightly gz/s and fierce encounters fit "This pofition informs us of a vulgar errour, terming the gall bitter ; whereas there is nothing gzffable{weeter Harvey 2. Pleafant to the tafte A guftabl thing feen or fmelt excite the ap petite, and affects the glands and parts of the mouth Derbams Gusta'tioN of tafting z. [, [guflo, Latin.] The a The gullet and conveying parts partake of th nerves of guflation, or appertaining unto fapor Brown Gu'struL adj [guf and full.] Tafteful well-tafted Dc'cqy f{fPic'{y GU'STO. n. /. [Italian. 1. The relith of any thing ; the power b which any thing excites {enfations in th palate Pleafant g#/fos gratify the appetite of the luxurious Derham 2. Intelle@ual taflte; liking In reading what 1 have written, let them brin no particulaggx/fo along with them Dyyden Gu'stY. adj. [from guf.] Stormy; tempef Once upon a raw and gz/y day "The troubled Tyber chafing with his fhores Shak. Ful. Cef Or whirl'd tempeftuous by the gz/fy wind GUT n. 1. The lon volution Thi Thomfon [kutteln, German. pipe reaching with many con from the ftomach to the vent lord wears his wit irn his belly Ain his head and hi b thi means th upper ftrings ftricken fhould make the lower refound Bacon's Natural Hiftory The inteftines or guts may be inflamed by an acrid or poifonous fubltance taken inwardly Avrbuthnot on Dies 2. The ftomach ; the receptacle of food proverbially And cramm'd them 'till their guss did ake With cawdle, cuftard, and plum-cake Hudibsas With falfe weights their fervants guss they cheat And pinch their own to cover the deceit Dryden 3. Gluttony ; love of gormandifing Apicius, thou did'ft on thy gurs befto Full ninety millions 5 yet, when this was fpent Ten millions ftill remain'd to thee; which thou Fearing to fuffer thirft and famifhment In poifon'd potion drank'tt Hakewill on Provid To GurT. 2. a. [from the noun. 1. To evifcerate to draw ; to exenterate The fifhermen fave the moft part of their fifh fome are gutted, {plitted, powdered, and dried Carew's Cornwal 2.2 To plunder of contents In Nero's arbitrary time When virtue was a guilt, and wealth.a crime A troop of cut-throat guards were fent to feiz The rich men's goods To a prope and gt their palaces Brown of facetious memory nam pleafed of its vowels Dyyd having gutte ufed it as freely as h Addifon Gu'rraTED. adj. [fram gutta, Latin, drop.] Befprinkled with drops; bedropped Dic Gu'rTer. n f. [from guttur, a throat Latin. 1. A paffage for water; a paffage made b Thefe gutter tiles are in length ten inches and half DMoxor. Rocks rife one above another, and have deep gut ters worn in the fides of them by torrents of rain Addifon on Italy 2. A {mall longitudinal hollow 7o Gu'tTER. ©. @. [from the noun. gut Shakefp. Troilys and Grefid T cut in {fmall hollows Tempeft themfelves howlin an high feas winds The gutter'd rocks, and congregated fands Traitors enfteep'd to clog the guiltlefs keel As having fenfe of beauty, do omi Their mortal natures, letting fafe go b Shakefpeare's Othelld The divine Defdemona My cheeks are gutter'd with my fretting tears Sandys Firftin a 'place What he defaults from fome dry infipid fin, i but to make up for fome other more gu/iful tuous mounted upon a bridge, tha water Spenfer Gu'sTABLE. adj. [gnflo, Latin, 1. To be tafted " A vial fhould have a lay of wireaftrings below clofe to the ‘belly, and then the frings of gus by nature clofe they buil A narrow flooring, guzter'd, wall'd, and til'd Dryden 7o Gu'trLe. v, luxurioufly word t [from gut. T fee gormandife lo His jolly brother, oppofite in fenfe Laughs at his thrift; and, lavifh of expence Quaffs, crams, and guit/es in his own defence Diyden 7o Gu'rTLE. v, a. [from gut. A low word Jow 'To {wal Gu'TTLER. 7. /. [from guttle. A greed The fool fpit in his porridge, to try if they' hifs : they did not hifs, and fo he guztled them up L' Eftrange and fcalded 'his chops eater Gu'rrurous adj [from guttula, TLati] In the form ofa {mall drop Ice is plain upon the furface of the water, butroun in hail, which is alfo a glaciation, and figured in it Brown's Vulg. Eir guttulous defcent from the air GU'T'TURAL adj [ gutturalis Latin. Pronounced with the throat; belongin ‘to the throat Th |