OCR Text |
Show HA HA How long balt ye between two opinfong$ 1Kings 4. To fail; to faulter Fathion'd to Beatrice Shakefp All my familiars watched for my Aalting, faying peradventure he will be enticed, and we fhall prevai againft him Jeremiab Lame pled crip Luke Havt, 2 /. [from the verb. 2. The act of limping; the manner of limp [dlte French. A ftop in a march The heav'nly band Down from a fky of jafper lighted no I Paradife and on 4 hill made Aa/r 1"/'110;1. Scouts each coaft light armed fcou Each quarter to defery the diftant foe Where lodg'd, or whither fled, or if for figh In motion or in Aa/t Milton Ha'Lrer. z /. [from balt | He who limps Ha'tTer. # /. [pealpzne, Saxon, fro paly, the neck. 1. A rope to hang ‘malefators And humbl Expet you They wer defence, an and all his pow'rs do yield thus, with Aalters on their necks highnefs' doom of life or death. Shak to die by the fword if they ftood. upo by the halter if they yielded; where fore they made choice to die rather as foldiers tha as dogs Hayward Were I a drowfy judge, whofe difmal not Difgorgeth halter, as a juggler's throa Doth ribbands Cleaveland He gets renown who to the Azlter near But narrowly efcapes, and buys it dear Dryden 2. A cord; a ftrong ftring Who neither Aa/rer binds nor burthens charge Sandys Zo HA'LTER. @. 2. [from the noun. bin T witha cord ; to catch in a noofe 'He might have employed his time in the frivolou delights of catching moles and Aa/zering frogs Atterbury To HaLvE. w. 4. [from half, halves.] T divide into two parts Hacves. inters. [from balf, halves'bein the plural.] An expreflion by which an one lays claim to an equal fhare Have you not feen how the divided da Runs to the fummons of her hungry lamb But when the twin cries balves, fhe quits the firft Cleaveland Hawm, whether initial or final, is no othe than the Saxon pam, a houfe, farm, o village. Gibfor's Camden HAM. 7. /. [pam, Saxon; hamme, Dutch. 1. The hip; the hinder part of the articulation of the thigh with the knee The ham was much relaxed ; but there was fom contration remaining Wifeman 2. The thigh of a hog falted Who Lkas not learn'd, freth fturgeon and bam py Are no rewards for want and infamy Pope Ha'MaTED ad). [bamatus ed; fet with:heoks Latin. Hook %o Ha'mBLE. 2. 2. [from ham. To cu the finews of the thigh ; to hamftring Hawme 7 /. [pama, Saxon. The colla by which a horfe draws in a wagoon Ha'vvrer. 7 /. [pam, Saxon, and /e, th diminutive termination.] A fmall village Within the felf~fame lordthip, parith, or hamlet tands have divers degrees of yalue Dryd wafted and the hamlets burn'd 1. T HA'MMER. #. /. [pamen, Saxon; bammer Danifh. 1. The inftrument confifting ofa long handle and heavy head, with which any thin is forged or driven That my free foul may ufe her Wing Which now is pinion'd with morgality -As an entangl'd, bamper'd thing We fhall find fuch engines to affail With bufy bammers clofing rivets up Give dreadful note of preparation and wil Brown Bacon 3. To complicate Sandys to tangle And when th' are bamper'd by the laws Releafe the lab'rers for the caufe Drudg'd like a fmith, and on the anvil beat *Till he had bammer'd outa vaft efiate Dryden I muft pay with hammered money inftead o milled Dryden Hudibras Ha'msTrING. 7./. [bham and firing. tendon of the ham Th A player, whofe concei 3. To work in the mind; to contrive b intelle¢tual labour: ufed commonly i Lies in his hamftring, doth think it ric T'o hear the wooden dialogue, and foun *Twixt his ftretch'd footing and the fcaffoldage contempt Wilt thou fill be hammering treachery To humble down thy hufband and thyfelf Shak He was nobody that could not Aammer out of hi name an invention by this witchcraft, and pictur it accordingly Camden Some {pirits, by whom they were ftirred and guide in the name of the people, hammered up the arti Shakefp. On the hinder fide it is guarded with the two bam Srings 7 Wifem Ha'MSTRING @, 4. preter an part pafl. hamftrung. [from the noun.] T lame by cutting the tendon of the ham Hamfiring'd behind, unhappy Gyges dy'd Then Phalaris is added to his fide Dryden Hayward . 7 Ha to be bufy: in contempt for bave in the plural Obfolete Spenfer Nor need'ft thou much importune me to that Whereon this month I have been bammering. Shak I have been ftudying how to compar This prifon where I live unto the world And, for becaufe the world is populous And here is not a creature but myfelf I cannot do it; yet I'll hammer on't Shakefp Ha'xarer, . [ [hanaperium, low Latin. A treafury; an exchequer The cler of the hanaper receives the fees due to th king for the feal of charters and patents The fines for all original writs were wont to b immediately paid into the Aazaper of the Chancery 2. To be in agitation Baeon Vengeance is in my heart Ha'~ces #. o [In a fhip.] Falls of th fife-rails placed on bannifters on the poo and quarter-deck down to the gangway death in my hand Blood and revenge are bammering in my head Shakefpeare [fro hammer. H Har who works with a hammer Ha'MvmEerRBARD. 7./i [hammer and hard. Hammerbard is when you harde with much hammering on it Princ cuftome to catch wit 4. To perplex; to embarrafs by many let and troubles Dryden Ha'Mmock. ». / {winging bed their talents Engend'ring heats, thefe one by one unbind Stretch their fmall tubes, and bamper'd nerves unwind Blackm Some Aammer helmets for the fighting field 2. / under vizard-mafk She'll hamper thee, and dandle thee like a baby Shakefpeare His bones the hammer'd fteel in ftrength furpafs Ha'MMERER L' Effrange 2. To enfnare; to inveigle allurements 7o Ha'MMER. . 2. [from the noun. 1. To beat with a hammer 1. To work Milz And mother wits before their gallants Until they're hamper'd in the noofe Too faft to dream of breaking loofe Hudibsas They hamper and entangle our fouls, and hinde their flight upwards Tillotfon 2. Any thing deftruétive To HA'MMER hamper thee, as thou fhalt come gfforce Wea Every morning he rifes freth to his hammer an his anvil South The {mith prepares his hammer for the ftroke Dryd. Fuv cles Herbery What was it but a lion bampered in a net Shakefpeare "The fuff will not work well with a hammer Bacon 2. To forge or form with a hammer to entangle, as in chain O loofe this frame, this knot of man untie An It is' broken not without many blows break the beft anvils and bammers of iron fhackle or nets That renowned pillar of truth and Aammer o herefies, St. Auguftine Hakewill on Providence Without any Aa/ they marched between the tw armies Clarendon He might have made a Aa/¢ 'till his foot and artillery came up to him Clarendon He's fled, my lord means originally to fine when the day return'd The armourers Bring in hither the poor, the maimed, the Aalt and the blind and which is ¢commonly applied to the law the plai [pamaca [In architeCure.] 'The end Ha'nces of elliptical arches; and thefe are th iron or ftee Moxon Saxon. Maurice of Naflau, who had bee to hammoacks, ufed them all his life arches of fmaller circles than the {cheme The fweep of the arch will not contain abov fourteen inches, and perhaps you muft cement piece to many of the courfes in the bance, to make the ac long enough to contain fourteen inches Temple ment large bafket for carriage They laid bands upon him, and bound him ban and foot Knolles's Hiftory of the Turks What powder'd wigs! what flames and darts What bampers full of bleeding hearts' Sawift Teutonick is a quarrel: others imagin that hamper or hanaper, being the trea fury to which fines are paid, to hamper Moxon. HAND. 7. /. [panb, pond, Saxon, and i all the Teutonick dialeéts. 1, The palm with the fingers; the membe with which we hold or ufe any inftru Ha'mpERr. . /. [Suppofed by Minfheaw t be contratted from hand panier; bu hanaperium appears to have been a wor long in ufe, whence banaper, hamper.] 7o Ha'mper. @. 2. [The original of thi word, in its prefent meaning, is uncertain: Funius obferves that hamplyns i Harris or middle part of the arch Harr., adj. [from the verb. countr Th A halting fonnet of his own pure brain 2 pitch'd upo His mighty camp Here's a paper written in his hand lng HA They hand in hand, with wandering ftepsand flow Through Eden took their folitary way Milton That wonderful inftrument the hazd, was it mad Berkley to be idle 2. Meafure of four inches; a meafure ufe in the matches of horfes a palm 3. Side, right or left For the othex fide of the court-gate on this ba:: |