OCR Text |
Show l p w H . l h r [ / e ' H l h e 7 l a p x S t o f s hal an te ie ni fi / i t G I palace Sa al [p ve ba ra vpl f L H ng ld bu u m f e ple, or any ot Shakefp My flecee of woolly hair uncurls Shall the difference of Aair only, on the fkin, b a mark ofa different internal conftitution betwee Locke a changeling and a drill do'ft rayith from my chin Shakefpeare Will quicken and accufe thee Much is breeding ‘Which, like the courfer's Aair And not a ferpent's poifon 4. Courfe; order; grain; the hair fallin Draw forth to comba halberd halberdeers, in a livery of murrey and blue, to atten The king had only his halberdeers, and fewer o Clarendoi them than ufed to go with him be written Aarebrained, uncenftant, unWild; irrefettled, wild as a hare. gular; unfteady of which it is faid that the breeds in th fea, and that there is always a cal during her incubation flaves Such fmiling rogues, as thefe, footh ev'ry paffion And hunger will enforce them be more eager Bring oil to fire, fnow to their colder moods Renege, affirm, and turn their halycon beak Shakefp breadth. With ev'ry gale and vary of their mafters Amidft our arms as quiet you fhall be As halycons brooding on a Winter fea A very {mal]l diftance; the diameter of hair Haireer, 7 /. 'The name of a flower the hyacinth Ha'trcrorn. 7. f. [hair and clorh.] Stof wor fometime prickly an very roug hail, from helTS, health.] Healthy; found hearty; well complexioned in mortification It is compofed of reeds and parts of plants wove Grew together, like a piece of haircloth 2. j Hairralce My feely fhee 'Th [hair and Jace. fillet with which women tie up their hair adj Ha'triess hair White beards have arm' fealp Againft thy majefty Hairiness ftat z bein o Wantin [from hair. their thin and hairle/ covere covere wit Children are not Aairy, for that their fkins ar Bacon more perfpirable -2. Confifting of hair Dryden z /. Akind of fith The coaft is ftored with mackrel and bake fith Havs French. To drag by force to pul Carew A kind o is derive lik Ltke af in pieces cut And fet me as a mark on every butt Thither by harpy-footed furies bal'd Atrertain revolutions, all the damn' Are brought "Chis finiftrou gravity is draw woul Wh an not be difgufted with an in itfelf indifferent Sandys Milton b that wa the great artery, which then fubfideth the heart unto it tion Ainfavorth IiaL, in local names N ) hono=3 of their head z f. [from hake. baler [halen He by the neck hath Az/'d his hairy temples then had rounde Shakefpeare With coronet of flowers . Ha'kor Dutch w«. a from him, lefc he ba/e thee to the judge Sh o n Haxe Swift Starr'd moft unluckily, is from my breaf Shakefpeare Hal'd out to murder Give diligence that thou mayeft be delivere hair Y His ftomach too begins to fail Laft year we thoughthim ftrong and hale But now he's quite another thing 1 wifh he may hold out 'till Spring My third comfort bounding with hair Ha'iry, adj. [from hair. 1, Overgrown with hair Addifon he plebeians have got your fellow tribune Shakefpears And hale him up and down haif,soria wit if not executed Fly to your houfe 'Th bhairp. [fro 2. It fometimes has a plural fignificatio when a number is divided Ead the land feledted of the beft Half had come hence, and let the world provide th Diyden reft Havr adv 1. In part; equally 1 go with love and fortune, two blind guides To lead my way; Aalf loth, and 4alf confenting Dryden halet Brewnn recrea if he fhould with blow Locke be Aaled to it when he had ne mind In all the tumults at Rome, though the peopl proceeded fometimes to pull ‘and Aale one anothe about, yet no blood was drawa 'till the time of th Gracchi Swift 2. It is much ufed in compofition to fignif as the followin a thing imperfect examples will fhow HaLr-BLOOD, 7. /- One not born of th fame father and mother {hall inherit before a brother's daughter by the avhole violently and rudely Shakefpeare Arbuthnot as the pretended cap men, t ha/ tives Saift of the world, not to neglet Which fhall be heir of the two male twins, who, by the difeGion of the mother, were laid open t be pinioned Harvey who had propofe prince For they been Aale enough I trow Spenfer And liken their abode Some of thefe wife partizans concluded the governent had hired two or three hundre Some worms are commonly refembled to a wowan's hairlace or fillet, thence called tenia 1f Molly happens to be carelefs " And but negleéts to warm her bairlace She gets a cold as fure as death like well below it fo Aalf of his dominons the fea, th Dryden [This fhould rather be writte Havrzs. adj wa to himfelf the empir Shak When great Auguftus made war's tempeft ceafe His balycon days brought forth the arts of peace Denbam No man can expet eternal ferenity and balyco days from fo incompetent and partial a caufe, a the conftant courfe of the fun in the equinottia Bentle circle Shak of hair Natura Ha'Lycox. adj. [from the noun.] Placid quiet; ftill; peaceful Seven hundred chofen men left-handed could flin flones at an hairbreadth, and not mifs Fudg. xx. 16 I {poke of moft difaftrous chances Of moving accidents by flood and field Of hairbreadih *feapes in th' imminent deadl mad A bird 7. f. [haleyo, Latin. Ha'LycoN for they are bairbrain' breach Bacon his perfon [This fthould rathe [hair an In which no creature goeshis half Hudibras Unlefs it be to fquint and laugh No mortal tongue can Aalf the beauty tell For none but hands divine could work fo well Dryder Of our manufa&ure foreign markets took off on half, and the other ha/f were confumed amongft ourLocke felves The council is made up #4/f out of the noble faAddifon milies, and Aa/f out of the plebeian Half the mifery of life might be extinguifhed would men alleviate the general curfe by mutua Addifon compafiion Her beauty in thy fofter ha/ Prior Bury'd and loft, fhe ought to grieve appointed him a guard of thirt duchef Th Shakefp 2. / P8hich man can folely call his own HA/LBERDIER. 7. Jo [halberdier, Frenc from halberd.] One who is armed with He is a curer of fouls, and you a curer of bodies if you fhould fight, you go againt the bair of you Ha'irerEADTH Pope on the velvet plain Denbart And into halves divides our trouble Or what but riches is there know and halberds in their hand Caps on their heads direction Let's leave this town Well chofen friendthip, the moft nobl Of virtues all our joys makes double Four knaves in garbs fuccinét, a truity band Shakefpeare. Thou dieft He judges to a Aair of little indecencies, an knows better than any man what is not to be written Dryden Ben Fonfor the right way Shakefp Our halberds did fhut up his paflage in the eftimation of a Aair Ha'irgrainep. a; they go to hell, if they would venture their induftr Shakefp Or lefs than juft a pound; if the feale tur profeflion 1 Sam. xiv. 14 An hbalf acre of land Many might go to heaven with Aa/f the labou Advance thy balberd higher than my breaft If thou tak'ft mor in a certai part pole to a lon The dialeéts t. A moiety; one part of two; an equa A battle-axe fixe of guards. weapon hath yét but life Shakefp all the Teutonic is often not founded. halberds being the commo balz, a court 3. Any thing proverbially fmall Bu an Gibf. Camden HA'LBERD. 1./. [halebarde, French hallebarde, Dutch, from harde, an axe, an 2. A fingle hair Naughty lady Thefe Aairs which tho A the world2 Whethe a fifter b half-bloo th Locke blood [balf an HALF-BLOODED. adj Mean; degenerate bldd. The let alone lies not in your good will Nor in thine, lord ~-Half-blooded fellow, yes Shakefpeare Harr cap, z. /o Cap imperfe@ly put off or faintly moved With certain he/f caps and cold moving nods Shakefp They froze me into filence Ha'trENDEAL Part. Spenfer and faced. face 7 / [belf and bal, Sax. HALF-FACED adj [Zal Showing only part of th {mall faced in contempt Proud incroaching tyrann ou co ef ho f wh fir in en re wi n Bu Advance a half-faced fun ftriving to thine This fame Aalf-faced fellow this man he prefent no mar Shadow Shak give m to the enemy 'th o ed th a e Je ai a gr a wi ma ma fo re pe ke Sh fe kn pe Havr-HATCHED. adj Imperfectly hatched [balf and batch. Here, thick as hailftones pour Turnips, and balf-batch'd eggs, a mingled thow'r Gay Among the rabble rain HaLr-HEARD. adj. Imperfeltly heard; no Leard to an end L ' clo cou taf m yea o yea add . No i |