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Show Back to thy native iflands might't thou fail And leave half-heard the melancholy tale Half-wits are fleas, fo little and fo light We fcarce could know they live, but that they bite Pa[?c HALF-MOON. 7. /f 1. The moon in its appearance when at hal increafe or decreafe 2. Any thing in the figure ofa half moon Dryden HALr-wiTTED. adj. [from halfavit.] Imperfectly furnifbed with underftanding I would rather have trufted the refinement of ou language, as to found, to the judgmen of the wome than of balf-awitted poets Swift Jack had pafled for a poor, well-meaning witled, crack-brained fellow: people were ftrangel See how in warlike mufter they appear + In thombs and wedges HaLr-pENY y. pe an 1. A coppe and balfmoons and wings Milton plural balf-pence. [ hal # J/ whic coin, o two make eny Rardolph flole a lute~cafe, bore it twelve leagues furprifed to find him in fuch a roguery. Arbuthnot When Aa/f is added to any word noting perfona qualities, it commonly notes contempt Ha'visur Ha'vivpom Shakefpear and fold it for three balf-pence this pernicious coin, no not fo muc as one fingle half~peny S con 2, It joined with any thing of which it denote the price There fhall be in Englan feve Abalf-peny loave Vou will wonder how Wood could get his ma f and that the nobility here could not obtain th a fame f 1) ufed to do fmall pike carried by cofficers Th of paying the falute with th ‘Tzrzl‘fwr The various way half-pike ~One imperfectl Harr-stas over. A proverbial expreffio for any one far advanced. It is commonly ufed of one half drunk ment The officers of the king's houfhold had need b thrift an the mutt look both ways, elfe they are but balf:/ighted Bacon Havr-spuere clean.sh data import.tsv out README Hemifphere #z / [balf and fphere. Let night grow blacker with thy plots; and day . At fhewing but thy head forth, ftart awa onfon Be Yrom this half-fphere HALr sTrRATNED adj I find I'm but a /)a:/f-/imi;z'd villain yet But mungril-mifchievous; for my blood boil' She came adorned hither like fweet May Sent back like Aalimafs, or thortett day Skakefp wine Boyle Havrr 2./. [pal, Saxon Aalle, Dutch. I. A court of juftice; as Weftminfter Hall O loft too foo in yonder houfe or hall Pope 2. A manour-houfe {o called, becaufe in i were held courts for the tenapts Captain Sentry, my mafter's nephew, has take poffeflion of the g/l houfe, and the whole eftate 3. The publick room ofa corporation Wit 4 expedition on th beadl call To fummon all the company to the Aa/l The firft large roo Garth Courtefy is fooner found in lowly fhed With fmoky rafters, than in tap'firy hall And courts of princes Milton faint fhall th Unfained Aallelujabs to Thee fing Milton Hymns of high praife Singing thofe devout hymns and heavenly anthems in which the church militant feems ambitious t emulate the triumphant, and echo back the folem praifes and ballelujahs of the celeftial choirs Boyle Ha'troo. #nterj. The original of this wor is controverted: fome 1magine it corrupted from & /u, to him! others from allons let us go! and Skimwer from baller, t A word of encouragement whe draw. dogs are let loofe on their game, Some popular chief More noif And than the reft but cries balloo in a trice, the bellowing herd come out Dy yden To Ha'Lroo . z [haler, French. 1. To cry as after the dogs A cry more tuneabl Was never halloo'd to, nor cheer'd with horn Iam a rogue, if 1 were not at half~fword wit a dozen of them two hour together S/m/z_e[pearf Havr-way. adv. [balf and way. middle Shak Fond of his hunting-horn and pole Though gout and age his fpeed detain Old John Aalloos his hounds again let fortune fmile or frown Serencly a5 he liv'd refigns his breath Meets deftiny half-way, nox fhrinks at death Granville /- [ half and awit. Havr-wir § ?lockhead ; a foolifh tellow with fhouts Prior Hallao me like a hare 3. 'To call or fhout to Io Ha'vrLow. @. a. [palgian, palig, Saxon h'ql 7 1. To confecrate; to make holy Whe we fanétify or hallow churches it/i onl to teftify that we make them places of publick refort that we inveft God himfelf with them, and that w fever them from common ufes Hooker It cannot be endured to hear a man profefs that h putteth fire to his neighbour's houfe, but yet f halloweth the fame with prayer, that he hopeth i thall not burn Hioker Is't Cade that 1 have flain, that monftrous traitor Sword T will halloww thee for thi th deed And hang thee o'er my tomb, when I am dead Shakefpeare My prayer Afe not words duly ballow'd, nor my wifhe More worth than vanities; yet pray'rs and wifhe Are all I can return Shakefpeare's Henry V11I God from wor Now refting blefs'd and hallow'd the feventh day Asrelting on that day from all his works But not in filence holy kept Milton Then banifh'd faith fhall once again return And veltal fires in ballow'd temples burn. Dryden No fatyr lurks within thi Aa/low'd ground heroines, kings and gods abound But nymphs an Granv 2. To reverence as holy; hallowed be th name Havvvciva'tion. z. f. [ hallucinatio, Lat. Errour blunder miftake ; folly A wafting of flefh, withou caufe is frequentl termed a bewitched difeafe ; but queftionlefs a mer ballucination of the vulgar Harvey This muft have been the Aallucination of th tranfcriber, who probably miftook the dafh of the Addifon fora T Harwm 7. / [pealm Ha'vo. 7z / Saxon.] Straw : pro which {ee A red circle round the {un o If the hail be a little tlatted, the light tranfmitted may grow fo firong, at a little lefs diftance tha that of twenty-fix degrees, as to form a Aals abou the fun or moon ; whic Aalo, as often as the hail ftones are duly figured, may be coloured. Newvton I faw by reflexion, in a veflel of ftagnating water three Aalo's, crowns or rings of colours about th fun, like three little rainbows, concentrick to hi Newton body Ha'useNiNe. adj. [hals, German; bafs Scottifh, the neck.] Sounding harfhly inharmonicus in the throat or tongue Not in ufe This is halfening horny name hath, as Cornut in Italy, opened a gap to the fcoffs of many. Carew Ha'Lser. 7. /. [from paly, neck, and yeel l'OPe I i no i pronuncm marin A rope lef tion corrupted to hazufer. than a cable A beechen maft then in the hollow baf They hoifted, and with well-wreath'd Aa/fers hoif Chapmarn Their white fails s Havt pealcan 1. Tolimp [ peale Saxon Dryden lames to limp. to be lame And will fhe yet debafe her eye On me, that Aa/t and am mif-fhapen thus Siak feet Pope And Sidney's verfe Aa/ts ill on Roma 2. To ftop in a march "T'o chafe with {houts 1fI fly, Marcius Shakefp. King Lear Thus inborn broils the fa¢tions would engage Or wars of exil'd heirs, or foreign rage >Tiil halting vengeance overtook our age. Dryden Spenfer himf{elf affe@s the obfolete 1f, whilft a boy, Jack ran from fchool Fearlefs he fees, who is with virtue crown'd he tempeft rage, and hears the thunder found Ever the fame that ever fhewed his fhoulders t Sidney In the T Haltroo. w. a 1. 'To encourag No halfers need to bind thefe veflels here Nor bearded anchors; for no ftorms they fear Havrr-sworp. #./. Clofe fight; within half | ;. To treat as in contempt Country folks Aallooed and houted after me, as th the length of a {word arrantelt cowar his enemy on him Halloo the other moon Praie y Harrerv'jam. 7z f [.anbbn A fong of thank{giving the Lord The When we have found the king, he that firt light nounced Aawm of a houfe ‘That light we fee is burning in my ha/l. Shakefp Dryden this brutal act We fpeak of the atmofphere as of a peculiar thi and ' balituous liquor, much lighter than fpirit o [half and. frain. Half-bred; imperfect Tovie Th ous; fumous adj. [kalf and fight. Havr-stcutep Seeing imperfe@ly; having weak difcernhonou Ha'virvous. adj. [halitus, Lat.] = Vapor Dryden hi Hubberd Ha LiMass, z /. [palig and maf. feaft of All-fouls To make a double work of what's half finifh'd fo By my halidom, quoth he A 1 am half-feas o'cr to death And fince I muft die once, I would be lot bot In this it fhould be Hali Ye a great mafter are in your degree We have many balf-fcholars now-a-days, an there is much confufion and inconfiftency in the noWatts clean.sh data import.tsv out README tions and opinions of fome perfons provident Ou Addifor One half-pint bottle ferves them both to dine Pope And is at once their vinegar and wine 7 / A fort of fith Ainfw [palix bom, holy judg dan 'Th Hat¥-prnrt. #f. [half and pint. fourth part of a quart H learned blefled lady Shakefpeare {old for a peny 2. 7. / ment, or paliz and dame, for lady. I thank you; and fure, dear friend, my fptehaarnek. are too dear of He cheats for halfiperice, and he doffs his coa Dryden To fave a farthing in a ferryboat Never admi B Ap HA H: A Shakefpeare I was forced to 4#/t in this perpendicular march Ad 3. 'To hefitate ; to ftand dubious {/::IZ Ho |