OCR Text |
Show 6. Tendency to difeafe; morbid difpofition denied himfelf nothing that he had a min H to eat or drink, which gave him a body full o humours, and made his fits of the gout frequent an violent The child had a Aumou whic Temple was cured b Fielding the waters of Glaftonbury peevifhnefs =+ Petulance Is my friend all perfection, all virtue and difcreHas he not Aunours to be endured, as well a tion South kindnefes to be enjoyed '8. A trick ; a prattice I like not the Aumour of lying: he hath wronge me in fome Aumonrs: I fhould have borne the hu.Sba_kefp mowr'd letter to her 9. Caprice; whim; predominant inclination ar me private I and in confort humours mor .in their ow bol men ar more obnoxiou therefore it is good to take both Bacon to others Awmours 70 Hu'mouRr. @. 2. [from the noun. If 1 had a fuit to mafter Shallow, 1 would bumou his men; if to his men, I would curry with maite Shakefpeare Shallow 1f I were Brutus now, and he were Caflius Shakefpeare He fhould not humour me Go to humou were never enjoin'd b paflions th luft an vanitie o to obey our governours Sawift You bumour me, when I am fick thofe who are commande Wh not when 1'm fplenetick are fond of fomethin Childre Pope ftrike whic their fancy moft, and fullen and regardlefs of ever thing elfe, if they are not bumoured in that fancy Watts's Logick to comply with 2. Tofit To after age thou fhalt be writ the man That with fmooth air could Aumour beft our tongue Milton >Tis my part to invent, and the muficians t that invention. Dryden's Preface to Albion bumou Fountainblea is fituated among rocks and woods that give a fine variety of favage profpe@s: th king has humounred the genius of the place, and onl made ufe of fo much art as is neceflary to regulat Addifon nature Hume. 7 /. [corrupted perhaps from bump The ptotuberance forme See Bumr. by a crooked back Thefe defeCts were mended by matches; the eye were opened in the next generation, and the hun fell Tatler Hu''meBACK. 7, [. [hump and back.] Crooke back'; high fhoulders Th chief of the family wasborn wit back_an a AumpTatler very high nofe HuwmeBackep. adi. Having a crooke back 7o HUNCH. w. a. [hufch, German. 1. To ftrike or punch with the fifts Jack's friends began to Aunch and pufth on another: why don't you go and cut the poor fello down Arbuthnot 2 [Hocker a crooke back, German crook the back ]T "Thy crooked mind within Aunch'd out thy back And wander'd in thy limbs Dryden Huwcusa'cxep. adj. [hunch and back. Having a crooked back His perfon deformed to the higheft degree, flatwofed, and bunchbacked L' Eftrange But I more fear Creon To tak that bunchback'd monfte Th' excrefcence of a man The fecond daughter wa in my arms Dryden's Oedipus peevifh, haggard, pale with faucer-eyes, a fharp nofe, and Aunchbacked Dryd, Zn Arbuthnot's Hiftory of Fobn Bull Hu'NpRrED. adj. [pund, and Junbped Saxon; honderd, Dutch. "The numbe confifting of ten multiplied by ten tranfaction feen th ha thoufand Man o our Saviour, and many Aundred thoufands receive an account of them from the mouths of thofe wh Addifon were eye-witnefles 7. / Hu NDRED body company r. collettio o con of an hundred fitin Aunared thin t reafo fo, will hav take divide wer enemy th fro o Lorfie propofitions innate Lands into centuries or Aundreds, and diftributed amongf Arbuthnot the foldiers z. A canton or divifion ofa county, perhaps once containing an hundred manors bundrede latin lo ol Impofts upon merchants do feldom good to th king's revenue; for that that he wins in the bundred Bacon he lofeth in the fhire under a tree, wher For j{lfl'iCC they had a benc Ket fat, and with him two of every bundred whenc their companies had been raifed: here complaint were exhibited Hayward Hu~DREDTH adi [pundpeonceogopa 'The ordinal of an hundred; th Saxon. tenth ten times told We thall not need to ufe the bundredth part o that time, which themfelves beftow in makin Hooker invetives If this medium is rarer within the fun's bod than at its furface, and rarer there than at th bundredth part of an inch from its body, and rare there than at the orb of Saturn, 1 fee no reafo Newton why the increafe of denfity fhould ftop [The preterit Hunwec and part. paf o bang. A wife fo hung with virtues, fuch a freight ? Dryden's Juvenal What mortal thoulders can fuppor adorned, ‘an that is richl A roo with a great variety of pictures HU'NGER Dutch. roun hun firikes the eye a Watts once = /. [hungen, Saxon bouger the pain felt from fafting 1. Defire of food An uneafy fenfation at the ftomach for food. Wke the fiomach is empty, and the fibres in their natura tenfion, they draw up o clofe as to rub againtt eac other, fo as to make that fenfation: but when the are diftended with food, it is again removed; unlef when a perfon fafteth {o long as for want of fpirits or nervous fluid, to-have thofe fibres grow too flacci to corrugate, and then we fay a perfon has fafte Quincy away his ftomach Thou fhalt ferve thine enemies in hwnger and i par of th Deunt. xxviii. 48 animal fpirits, bein caft off by the lowe nerve upo thirft Th ftomach fu aci vellicate th fibres the coats of th and thereby produce Grew the fenfe we call hunger Something vifcous, fat and oily, remaining in th ftomach, deftroys the fenfation ot Auxnger 2. Any violent defir Arbuthnot on Aliments The immaterial felicities we expe@, do naturall fuggeft the neceflity of preparing our appetites an bungers for them, without which heaven can be n Decay of Piety heaven to us Dryden. For hunger of my gold I dye 7o Hu'NGER. @. # [from the noun. 1. To feel the pain of hunger Shake[peare's Macbeth Widely they gape, and to the eye they roar As if they bunger'd for the food they bore Cowley 3. To defire with great eagernefs; to long Doft thou fo hunger for my empty chair That thou wilt needs inveft thee with my honours Before thy hour be ripe And from the iting of famine fear no harm Nor mind it, fed with better thoughts that fee Me hung'ring more to do my Father's will. Milton Hu'NcERBIT adj. [bunger and bit. Hu'nceRrBITTEN. } Pained or weakene with hunger O, foolifh youth Fob, xviiis 12 Thyfel Bred up in poverty and ftraits at home Loft in a defert here, and bungerbit Miltorn Hvu'ncEerLY. adj. (from bunger.] Hungry in want of nourithment His bear Grew thin and bungerly and feem'd to at His fops as he was drinking Hvu/NGERLY Shakefpeare adv. With keen appetite You have fav'd my longiug, and I fee Shakefpeare Moft bungerly on your fight They are all but ftomachs, and we all but tood They eat us hungerly They belch us and, when they're full Shakefpeare [hunger -an adj Hu'NGERSTARVED Jflarved.] Starved with hunger; pinche by want of food All my followers to th" eager fo Turn bickjand Ay like fhips before the wind Or lambs pur(u'd by bungerjtarved wolves. Shakefp Go, go, chear up thy bungerflarved men. Shakef As to fome holy houfe th' atfli¢ted came Th? hungerffarv'd, the naked, and the lame Dryden Want and difeafes, fled before her name Pinche Hvu'nerEeD. adj. [from bunger. by want of tood Odours do in a fmall degree nourifh, and we fe Bacon men an hxngied love to fmell hot bread Wit Hvu'NerILY: adv. [from hangry. keen appetite Thus much to the kind rural gods we owe Who pity'd fuffering mortals long ago When on harth acorns Auzngrily they fed Dryden And gave em nicer palates, better bread Hvu/nGrY. adj. [from banger. 1. Feeling pain from want of food That tace of his the Auzgry cannibal Woul not hav touch'd with blood By eating befor before he was dry much at a time The tha woul not hav ftain' Shakefpeare and drnkin he was Aungry he was fure never to eator drin Tempie talk thus ma fay that a ma i always Aungry, but that he does not always feel it whereas hunger confifts in that very fenfation. fweke 2. Not fat; . not fruitful; not prolifick more difpofed to draw from other {ubftances than to impart to them Caffius has a lean and Azzgry look Shakefpeare The more fat water will bear fop beft; tor th hungry water doth kill its un€tuous nature. Bacoz In rufhy grounds fprings are found at the firit an fecond fpit, and fometimes lower in a bungry gravel Mortimer "To the great day of retribution our Saviour refer us, for reaping the fruits that we here fow in th Smalridge's Sevmons moft hungry and barren foil Hunxks. 7. /. [bunfker, fordid, Iflandick. A covetous fordid wretch; a mifer; curmudgeon The old hunks was well ferved, to be tricked ou of a whole hog for the fecuring of his puddings L' Eftrange She has a hufband, a jealous, covetous, old bunks My more having, would be as a fauc To make me burger more I content me His ftrength (hall be hungerbitte Very few will take this propofition, that Go is pleafed with the doing of what he himfelf commands, for an innate moral principle: whofoeve doe HU Thou feek'k the gredtnefs that will everwhelm the Shakefpeare's Henry IV, p. ii Stay but a little A bundred altars in her temple finoke A thoufand bleeding hearts her pow'r invoke [ Hundredum French. 1. To gratify; to footh by compliance Obedience and fubjectio HU HU Dryden. Irus has given all the intimations of being a clof bunks, worth money Addifor 7o HUNT «. a. [punzian Saxon fro pund, a dog 1. To chafe wild animals The man that once did fell the lion's fkin While the beatt liv'd, was kill'd in Azatizg him Sbake/pc'&fl il |