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Show HU HU 1. To prefs, clofe in an embrace tion, Hooke 1s likewife in German a corner and moky is in Englith dart 1 know no He bewept my fortune Shakefpeare And Augg'd me in his arms What would not he do now to bxg the creatur how to determine. Ev'n in that urn their brother they confefs And bug it in their arms, and to their bofom prefs Where e'er th' in huggermugeer lurk I' make them rue their handy work Hudibras There's a diftinéion betwixt what's done openl and bare-faced, and a thing that's done in Augger Dryden whic Hr‘u"uey on Confumptions he would Azg and kifs 1, under fair pretence of friendly ends And well-plac'd words of glozing courtefy Hvu'cy. adj huge Milton Huxz came on hule, Saxon, The cuftom of giving the colour of the fea to th bulks, fails, and mariners of their fly-boats, to kee Age makes us moft fondly Azg and retain th good things of life, when we have the leaft profpect Atterbury. of enjoying them them from being difcoyered, came from the Veneti Arbuthnat They Argo's hulk will tax And {crape her pitchy fides for wax "The footy hul 4. To gripe in wreftling Huc. 7 /. [from the noun. Swift Steer'd fluggith on 1. Clofe embrace ‘Why thefe clofe bzgs 2 Towe my fhame to him 2. An hulk is a fellow 2. A particular gripe in wreftling, called Cornifb hug HUGE. adj. [hoogh, bigh, Dutch.] I, Vaft; immenfe Let the eftate of the people of God thing bulky and unweildy And Harry Monmouth's brawn, the Az/k Sir John Shakefpeare Is prifoner to your fon 'To exentrate: as, to Aul 7o Huvrxk. w. 2 when the were in the houfe of bondage, and their manne of ferving God in a ftrange land, be compared wit afford an who feeth not what Axge difference there was beHooker tween them 2 This fpace of earth is fo buge, as that it equallet a hare Hinfworth Hvuvi. m /. [hulgan, Gothick, to cover. 1.. The hufk or integument of any thing the outer covering: as, the Ax// of a nu covers the fhell. [ Hule, Scottifh. 2, The body of athip; the hulk Hul Aul and bulk are now confounded ; bu Europe,and Africa, bu Abbor feems- originally to have not merely th 2. Very great The mountain Axge Thompon "Thi fenfe 1s ftill retained in Scotland : as, Gay body or hull, but a whole thip of burden Milton heavy and bulky Part, huge of bulk "Tempeft the ocean; there leviatha Diyden Hugeft of living creatures, in the dee Stretch'd like a promontory, fleepsor {wims And feems a moving land Milton The patch is kind enough, but a Azge feeder Shakefpeare . Through forefts Axg¢, and long unravell'd heaths With defolation brown e wanders wafte. Thompfon [from huge. 1, Immenfley ; enormoufly Who cries out on pride That can therein tax any private party Doth it not flow as bugely as the fea? Shakefpeare So many arts hath the Divin gether only for the Ax/ cieature 7 Huivr float @v. Wifdo and tackl [fro put to 2 thipk?n o Gre T the noun. to drive to and fro upon the wate without fails or rudder They faw a fight full of piteous firangenefs; fhip, or rather the carcafe of a fhip, or rather fom few bones of the carcafe, hu/ling there, part broken Sidney part burned, and part drowned Will you hoift fail, fir? here lies your way -No, good fvabber, I am to A#// here a little longer that wheneyer yo Shake[peare He look'd, and faw the ark Az// on the flood Milton Sawift People walking down upon the fhore; faw fomeL Eftrange what come bu/ling toward them 2. Greatly; very much clean.sh data import.tsv out README toncern yourfelves in our affairs, it is for our good #./. [from huge. 1. Enormous bulk; greatnefs 3. Utmoft extent. Not in ufe Hu'LLy. adj. [from bull.] Siliquofe; hufky Ainfworth My miftrefs exceeds in goodnefs the Augerefs o Sharefpeare UGGERMUGGER. #. /. [corrupted perhaps from buger mucker.} or hug in th dark. Morcker in Danith is darknefs whence our murky. It is written by Si Thomas Moore, hoker moker Hiker, i Chaucer, is peevifb, crofsgrained, of whic woker may only be a ludicrous reduplica5 2. To mak found Hvu'tiver 2./. Holly Save hulver and thorn, thereof flail for to n‘}ake uifer of bees is an unequal buzzing Bacon An airy nation flew Thick as the humming bees that hunt the golden de Drydern In Summer's heat So weary bees in little cells repofe an inarticulat and buzzin And bum at good Cominius, much unhearts me Shakefpeare Upon my honour, Sir, T heard a humming And that a ftrange one too, which did awake me S/fiaéf.flmm'e' The cloudy meffenger turns m his back And hums; " as who fhould fay, You'll rue. Shake/p 3. To paufe in fpeaking, and fupply th interval with an audible emiflion of breath Having pump'd up all his wit And bumm'd upon it, thus he writ Huydibras I ftill acquieft never humm'd and haw'd fedition An Nor fnuffled treafon Hudibras "The man lay humming and hawing a good while' butin the end, he gave up himfelf to the phyficians ‘4. 'To make a dull heavy noife L'Efirange The mufical accents of the Indians, to us, are bu inarticulate Aummings; as are ours to their other wife tuned organs Glanville Still humming on, their drowfy courfe they keep And lafh'd fo long, like tops, are lafh'd afleep. Pope 5. To fing low Hu halfa tune Pope Approbation was com6. To applaud monly exprefled in public affemblies by ahum, about a century ago HuwM. 7. /. [from the verb. 1. 'The noife of bees or infe(ts To black Hecat's fummo "The fhard-born beetle, with his drowly buzms Hath rung night's yawning peal. Shake/p. Macbeth Nor undelightful is the ceafelefs bz To him who mufes through the wocds at noo Thomfort 2. A low confufed noife crowds at a diftance as of buftlin From campto camp, thro' the foul womb of night "The hum of either army {till refounds. Shakefpeare Tower'd cities pleafe us then Miltorn And the bufy Aui of men One theatre there is of vaft refort Which whilom of requefts was call'd the court But now the great exchange of news tis hight and buz from noon *till night. Dryd low dull noife Who fat the neareft, by the words o'ercome Pope Slept fafi s the diitant nodded to the hum 4. A paufe with an inarticulate found Thefe thrugs, thefe Aums and haws When you have faid {he's goodly, come between Lre you can fay fhe's honeft. Shakef. Winter's Tale Your excufes want fome grains to make 'em cur rent: hum and ha wilt not do the bufinels. Dryden Garin Hudibras it {feems ufed for banm And though his counttymen the Huns Did ftew their meat between their bums And the hotfes backs, en which they ftraddle Hrdibrasa And ev'ry man eatup his faddle 6. An expreflio Yo Huwm an hear a Au of applaufe in the right place interjed deliberation Speator {found implying doub Let not your eyes defpife the heavieft foun That ever yet they heard Sha kefpeare's Macbeth -Hum! 1 guers at it ! " See fir Robert And never laugh for all my life to come HUMAN adj [bumanus, Latin Pope bumain French. 1. Having the gualities of a man To HuMm. we a. [bonelan, Dutch. 1. To make the noife of bees. The bummin Dryden. I think he*ll hear me s yet to bite his lip 3. An And through the yielding planks a paffage find 3.. Great even to deformity or terriblenefs And full of A Deep in their hu/ls our deadly bullets light Wallowing unweildy, enormous in their gait, }'Olur unworthy thinking ther ftuff in him : you have not feen a Au/k better ftuffe in the hol Shake[p hold faft Hu'seness thus in conference There's a whole merchant's venture of Bourdeau Rowe I am hugely bent to believe A cloak t. The body of a fhip Mark with what joy he Axgs the dear difcovery adw # f. [hugue, Fr. HvuvLx. #. f. [hulcke, Dutch falfehood of his own flatteries, yet they love th impoftor, and with both arms Azg the abufe. South Hu'csry ufe Bacon's New Atlantis Though they know that the flatterer knows th " "in greatnefs notionly Afia America Noti Vaft; great that feemed to be a meflenger, in a rich Axke Admire yourfelf And, without rival, Awg your darling book Rofcommon Jerufalem di [See HUGE. As we wer Glanwille that which Canaan an L' Eftrange This Axgy rock one finger's force apparently wil move Carew's Survey of Cornwall We hug deformities, if they bear our name But if night-robbers lift the well-flor'd hive An humming through their waxen city grows mugger, under a feal of fecrecy and concealment 2., 'To fondle ;. to treat with tendernefs Baited with reafons not unplaufible Win me into the eafy hearted man And Aug himinto (nares bye-place And all the reft do rob of floods and land, Hubb. Tale But if I can but find them out L'E"fimnge King Xerxes was enamoured upon an oak Secrecy Now hold in huggermugger in their hand a ferenade that had given him fo admirabl HU It will never be afked whether h 2. Belonging to man The king is buta ma to hi as I am : the violet fmell as it doth to me human conditions all his fenfes have bu Shakefp Ko |