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Show of that and one of tart new cyder together Mortimer Ho'ckuers. 7. /. [hock and berb.] A plant the fame with mallows Ainfworth To Ho'ckre. v. 4. [from Aock. To hamftring; to cut the finews about the ha or hough Hanmer HOCUS POCUS [The original of thi The terms hogherd and cowkeeper ate not to b of ‘a qualitie felfifh Sufpicion Mifo had, for the Aoggi/b fhrewdnefs o her brain, and Mopfa, for a very unlikely envy Sidney a cheat Thi gift of hocus pocuffing matters and of difguifin is furprifing L' Effrange HOD. . /. [corrupted perhaps in contemp from hod head. ho bein carrie o th A kind of trough in which a la dily; felfifhly Ho'csSFENNEL a hod or a tray Ho'omawN. z. /. [bod and man. that -carries mortar Hopmaxpo'p., 7. / Thof erab tha the crawfith 2.. Any large barrel have preferved; and in the inftant tha draw the bellows, ftop the hole and the hodmandod or dodman Bacon have mad ou Englif tongu corp, whereo make their trachana and bouhourt Ho'cstY. 7. /. [hog and fy. podge of fundry ingredients Th Bovor1e'rRNAL. ed). [hediernus, Latin. - to-day Hozw A O /. [hone, French; houwe, Dutch, inftrument to cut up the earth, o -which - the blade is- at - right angles wit the handle They fhould be ‘thinned with a Aoe Hok v Dutch. a T [houer nefs the Turk Sandys's Traz els Mortinmer French houwen Mortimer HOG. . /. [hweh, Welfh. 1. The general name of {wine 2. A caftrated boar 3. To bring Hocs 70 a fair market ail of one's defign ward country girl 7o Ho'ipex. @. z. [from the noun. romp indecently Hoife fail, and fly 'T Mut of a {mal Auria had Aoifed fail, -and was on his way towar for a fhee mainfail to the wind HoGGEREL #./ A houf A two year old ewe hi father bu becaufe his ambitio woul need be fingering the fceptre, and Aoi/ffizg him into hi South father's throne We thought for Greec hough, from boogh, Dutch.] A hill ; rifin ground; a cliff Obfolete A keeper of hogs xxvil. 40 What made Abfalom kick at all the kindneffes o Mortimer 7. /. [hog and ypo, a keeper. Aés his fails of mean length and breadth, and conten Raleigh himfelf with a flow and fure navigation Ainfworth ‘HocH. #. /. [otherwife written Ao, Ao, o Ho'cuerp made toward fhore That man which prizeth virtue for itfelf, an cannot endure to Aoife and firike his fails, as th divers natures of calms and ftorms require, muft cu Skinner That well can witnefs yet unto this day The weftern /ogh, befprinkl'd with the gor Of mighty Goemot Fairy Queen an The fails were hoifted and our fears releafe Dryd They hoif? him on the bier, and deal the dole Dryden's Perf And there's an end What haft And to appea Drew half ou Their nav fhe made to /4oj/# her purple fails magnificent in flight firength away. Diyden's All for Love {warms upon the coafts: they cr To hoift their anchors, but the godsdeny Drypdesn t gripe : t Shakefp from feparation to retain; to gripe fait; no Prove all things: Ao/d faft that which is good 2 Thef. V 4. 'To maintain as an opinion Thou haft there them that hold the do&rine o ‘Balaam Rez 5. To confider; to regard 1 as a flranger to my heart and m Hold thee from this for ever 6. To think of; to judg praife or blame Shakefpeare with regard t I /o/d him but a fool, that will endange His body for a girl that loves him not One amongft the faireft of Greece S/m&qf;:mre That Ao/ds hishenour higher than his eafe. S/Jakef' This makes thee bleffed peace fo light to Ae/d Like Summer's flies that fear not Winter's cold Fairfax Hold {uch in reputation Phillips He would make us amends, and fpend fome tim with us, if we Ae/d his compan agreeable an conferenc Baco As Chaucer is the father of Englifh poetry, fo in th fame degree of veneratio as th Grecians Ae/d Homer, or the Romans Virgil. Dryder Ye Latian dames, if any her Hold your unhappy queen Amata dear Drydes 7. 'To receive, and keep in a veflel She tempers dulcet creams, nor thefe to 4o Mil Wants her fit veflels pure 8. To contain; to receive into its capacity as, a hogfhead Ao/ds fixty-three gallons Krolles's Hiffory the bay of Naupactus They loofed the rudder-bands, and Aoifed up th hogeote fixty or eighty load o dung hath been raifed Chapman And in thy flight aloud on Cratis cry hand Fairy Queen hold hi We'll quickly Aoiff duke Humphrey from his feat Shakefp Pope in th Too late it was for fatyr to be told Or ever hope recover her again In vain he feeks, that having cannot 4o/d Tis the fport to have the engineer boi/# up wit Shakefpeare's Hamlet his own petar of a certain age, I think of two years Hoccote. 7 /. [hegand.coze. for hogs ; a hogity 3. 'To keep to let go T me palban "The loops held one curtain to another Exod. XX%Vi. 12 Some of them would get a fcratch; but we always difcovered, upon examining, that they had bee Swift hoidening with the young apprentices Join you wit part. paff Dutch. 2. To conneét; to kee T To Horse.\ w. a. [hauffer, French. raife up on high To HOIST. held Lift up ¢he lad, Ao/d him in thy hand. Geneffs France, thou may'ft so/d aferpent by the tongue A fafting tyger fafer by the tooth Than keep in peace that hand which thou do'ft so/d #. J. [hoeden, Welth; famin Ho'soeN levioris fama, Latin.] An ill-taught auk Spectator or Your butler purloins your liquor, and the brewe fells you hogwafb. Arbuthnot's Hift. of Fobn Bull You have brought your Aogs to a_fine market 4. Hog isufed in Lincolnfhir fhoe or ftocking to their feet 'Th not, nor obeys thy call Lives on the labours of this Lord of all HocwasH. 7. /. [hog and awap. draff which is given to {fwine This will raife. the price of -Aogs, if we grow al to be pork-eaters Shakefpeare The hog, that plow withou in filth and nafti Swift cut or dig with a hoe of farmersliv familie houfe fo convenient as an Englifh Aog fly They muft be continually kept with weeding an boeing The place i graf clutch you withBacon which {wine are fhut to be fed a galli a certain hodge 1. T They flung up one of their largeft hogfheads: drank it off; for it did not hold half a pint Gulliver's ‘Tra've.l.r maufrey, or bodge-podgeofallother fpeeches. Spenfer It produces excellen Arbuthnot «. q. preter Saxon; henden tion, our acre fhould yield fiftyfive hog/heads, an a little more Gibfor's Camden beld or holden. [haldan, Gothick Ainfaorth Varro tells, that every jugerum of vines yielde th Hovce-ropcs. . [0 [hacks pock, hochepot, quali hackis en por, French.] A medle of ingredients boiled together The Blow ftrongly with a pair of bellows into a bogJkead, putting into it before that which you woul caft their fhell are the lobfter Howrp, in the old gloflaries, is mentione in the fame fenfe with wild, 7. e. a governour or chief officer ; but in fome othe places for love, as holdlic, lovely Ho'csuEAD., 2. /. [hog and head. 1. A meafure of liquids containing fixtythree galions Tu/fer A fith Woodward's Natural Hiflory Ainfw fix-hundred urne of wine : according to this propof A laboure lay origimally at the bottorn of the fea, and that i was boiffed up by-fome vapour from beneath 70 HOLD 7. [, [hog and fennel. clean.sh data import.tsv out README plant A fork and a hook to be tampering in clay trowel Bru felfithnefs Ho'csBEaNs Ho'csBREAD jyz. /- Plants Ho'csMusHRrROOMS bourer carries mortar to the mafons A lathy hammer -Gree [from hoggih. tality; greedinefs they ftraightways concluded that the whole iflan greedy brutifh hog Ho'cGisuness. #. f. [from hoggi/h. and poke an And tofs him headlong from the temple's wall Southern If 'twas an ifland where -they found the fhells, th Havin from hocced, Welth veyance. Itis corrupted from fome word that had once a meaning, and which perhaps cannot be difcovered. A juggle [adj. from kog. Ho'ccisu Ho'ccisuLY. adv a cheat Seize him, take, 4oi/f him up, bteak off his hold ufed in our poetry; but there are no finer words i s Broome the Greek word is referred by Zi/lotfor to a form o the Romifh church., Funins derives i pocus, abag, jugglers ufing a bag for con 9 HO HYO HO the fack is too little to Ao/d the grain g To keep not to {pill. Broken cifterns that can so/d no water. Feremiah 10. To keep; to hinder from efcape For this infernal pit fhall never ho/ Celeftial fpirits in bondage Milton r1. To keep from fpoil; to defend With what arm We mean to bo/d what anciently we clai Of empire Zmltofl Man fhould better bo/d his plac By wifdom Milton 12. To keep from lofs 13. To have any ftation The ftar bids the fhepherd fold Milton Now the top of heav'n doth Ao/d And now the ftrand, and now the plain they 4e/d Their ardent eyes wish bioedy fireaks were fill'd Dryde Obferve |