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Show JA JA it is a dull thing to tire and jade any thing too far And hens, and dogs, and hogs are feeding b And here a failor's jacket hangs to dry Pope 2. To beat one's JACKET is to beat;th If fleet dragon's progeny at laf Proves jaded, and in frequent matches caf man Ladder . / Polemonium th Locke . There are feafons when the brain is overtired o Jaded with frudy or thinking; and upon fome othe accounts animal nature may be languid or clo dy and unfit to affift the fpirit in meditation Watts 1. A pilgrim's ftaff 2. Staff concealing a dagger 3. A crofs ftaff; a kind of aftrolabe i 7./ tuft e 1. Tofling; motion 16k Ainfaw great oppreflion about the ftomach from cordials i expeé n o i [r')l'h,t 3. To employ in vile offices The honourable bloo relie Harwey 2. A term in the canon law for a falf retenfion to marriage n. [o [ jaculatio, jaculor ]ACULA'TION The a& of throwin mifliv [at. U Mutt not be thed by fuch a jaded groom So hills amid' the air encounter'd hills wha it o it d juc i Hater Q chi i e frargh i gt ¢ it if JADE Milton 7. /. ['The etymology of this wor I do not now fool myfelf; to let imagination jzd me: for everyreafon excites to this Shakefp To Jap {pirit a hired horfe worthlefs nag Alas, what wights are thefe that load my heart I am as dull as Winter-ftarveq (heep Sidney Tir'd as a jade in overloaden cartWhen they fhould endure.the bloody fpur They fall their creft, and, [jke deceitful jades Shakefp. Fulius Cefar Sink in the trial The horlemen fit like fixed candlefticks With torchftaves in their hand; and their poor jade Lob down their heads, dropping the head and hips Shakefp So have I feen with armed heel A wight beftride 2 commonweal clean.sh data import.tsv out README While itill the more he kick'd and fpurr'd The lefs the fullen jade has ftirr'd Hudibras. ‘The plain nag came upon the trial to prove thof to be jades that made fport with him L' Eftrange Falfe fieps but help them to renew their race As, after ftumbling, jades will mend their pace Pope 2, A forry. woman A word of contemp noting fometimes age, but generally vice Shall thefe, thefe old jades, paft the flowe Of youth that you have Pafs yOu Chapman But fhe, the cunning'ft jade alive Says, 'tis the ready way to thrive Stepney Getin, hufly: now will I perfonate this youn Jade, and difcover the intrigue Southern In di'monds, pearl and rich brocades 1. Vitious woman Sawift in irony and {ligh Contempt You fee now and then fome handfome young jade "among them: th and black-eyes Yape fluts have very often white teet Addifon 7 /i A fpecies of ftone The jade is a fpecies of the jafper, and of ex treme hardnefs 1ts colour is compofed of a pal blueifh grey, or afh-colour, and a pale green, not uni form. It ‘appears dull and coarfe on the furface, bu it takes a very elegant polith. 1t is ufed by th Turks for haadles of fabres Hilk %o JavE. w. 0 [from the noun. ¥. To tire; to harafs; to difpirit; to weary applied originally to horfes With his banners and kis well-paid ranks he ne'er-yet-beaten horfe of Parthi Weve jaded out o th? field, Shak. Axnt. and Cleo _ It is goo in difcourf to vary an intermingl Mpeech of the prefent occafion with arguments; fo Vor. 1 bad as an horfe That hors'd us on their backs Hudibras When once the people get the jadj/b tric Of throwing off their king, no ruler's fafe. Southersn incontinent *Tis to no boot to be jealou of a woman fo if the humour takes her to be jadifb, not all th locks and fpies in nature can keep her honeft L:Efirange 7 gagaw, {lits or holes Welfh.] To cut into indentures; to cu into teeth like thofe of a faw JAGG a fome long, fome fquare leaves are round Som and many jagged on the fides Bacon's Nat. Hift The jagging of pinks and gilliflowers is like th inequality of oak leaves; but they never have an Bacon {mall plain purls The banks of that fea muft be jagged and tor by the impetuous affaults, or tlie filent undermining of waves violen rains muft wath down earth fro Bent the tops of mountains An alder-tree is one among the lefler trees, whof younger branches are foft, and whofe leaves are jagWarts ged Jace A protube n /. [from the verb. rance or denticulation The figure of the leaves is diyided into fo man Jaggs or eicallops, and curioufly indented round th Ray edges Take off all the ftaring ftraws, twigs, and jagg in the hive, and make them as {mooth as pofiible Uneven; den Ja'ecy. adj. [from jagg. ticulated His tow'ring creft was glorious to behold His fhoulders and his fides were {cal'd with gold Three tongues he brandifh'd when he charged hi foes Add His teeth ftood jaggy in three dreadful rows Amid' thofe angles, infinitely ftrain'd Thom/ They joyful léave their jaggy falts behind Ja'ccepNEss. n. f 'Th [from jagged. ftate of being denticulated; unevennefs Firt draw rudely your leaves, making them plain before you give them their veins or jaggedne/s Peacham on Drawing JAIL » [ged Fr. gaol a pri fon ; aplace where criminals are confined Se Gaor but commonl It i a jail He figh'd and turn'd his eyes he Jived to repen Clarendon becaufe he kne *Twas but a larger jai/ he had in view Dryden One jail did all their criminals reftrain Which now the walls of Rome can fcarce contain Dyyden ‘JatLBIRD. 71. /. [ jail and bird. has been in a jail JAtLER. 7 £, [from jail. keeper of a prifon One wh A gaoler; th Seeking many means to {peak with her, and eve kept from it, as well becaufe the fhunned if, feein and difdaining his mind, as becaufe of her jealou Jailers Sidney Thisis as a jailer, to bring fort Some monftrous malefaGor Shakefpeare His pow'r to hollow caverns is confin'd There let him reign, the jailer of the wind With hoarfe commands his breathing fubjeéts call And boaft and blufter in his empty hall Dryden Palamon, the pris'ner knight Reftlefs for woe arofe before the light And, with his jailer's leave, defir'd to breath An air more welcome than the damp beneath. Dryd. Ja'kes. 2. / [Of uncertain etymology. 1 will tread this inbolted villain into mortar an houfe of office writte Shakefp Their fordid avarice rake to fhow u A jadifb trick at laft, and throw us 2. Unchafte which, poor man daub the walls of jakes with him Mortimer's Hufbandry She fhines the firft of battex'd jades ~And flutters in her pride 3. A youn To lofe {pirit; to fink Ja'visu. adj. [from jade. 1. A horfe of n @ 7 Many offer at the effeéts of friendfhip, but they d not laft: they are promifing in the beginning, bu they fail and jade and tire in the profecution. Sowzh is doubtful: Skiuner derives it from gaad a goad or fpur, Shakefp 4+ Toride; to rule with tyranny weapons Hurl'd to and fro with jaculation dire If we live thus tamely To be thus jaded by a piece of fearlet Fa\ff:wcll nobility Shakefpeare's Hexry VIII reftlefinefs; heaving If the patient be furprifed with jaé#itation 2. To overbear; to cruth; to degrade; -t harafs, as a horfe that is ridden too hard A pigeon with a hig . /. [jacits, Lat. JacriTa'tion And no refpect for the degen'rate ftrain Dyyden The mind once jaded, by an attempt above it power, s very hardly brought to exert its force again {fame with Greek valerian JA'COB': Staff. n. / Ja'cosine No favour for the #allion we retain She fell upon the jacket of the parfon, who ftoo L' BEftrange gaping at her Jalcow' Bacon ready money either way by latter writers jas/ Away with the dotard, to the jai/ with him Shakefpeare A dependant upon him paid fix thoufand pound In excrements, and hires the very jakes. Dryden Some have fifhed the very jakes for papers left ther by men of wit Swift Ja'vare. . /. []'alfl/b, French ; jdlapium, lov Latin. Falap is a firm and folid root, ofa wrinkled {ur face and generally cu into flices heav an to break; of a faintith fmell, and of an acri naufeous'tafte har an It had its name ja/apium, or jalapa from Xalapa, a town in New Spain, in the neighbourhood of which it was difcovered; though it i now principally brought from the Madeiras It i an excellen purgative where ferous humour be evacuated Jam are t Hill''s Mar #. /. [I kno not whenc Me deriyed. A conferve of fruits boiled with fugar an water Jams n f. [ jambe, French, a ly. {upporte o An either fide, as the pofts of door No timber is to be laid within twelve inches of th forefide of the chimney jambs Mozxorn jambicus Frenc Ia'MBiCK. 7. [. [iambigue Latin.] Ver{es compofed of iambick feet or a fhort and long fyllable alternately ufed originally in fatire, therefore take for fatire In thy felonious heart though venom lies It does but touch thy Irifh pen and dies Thy genius calls thee not to purchafe fam In keen Zambicks, but mild anagram Drydern To Ja'NGLE. w. n. [ jangler, French. Skinner.] To altercate; to quarrel; to bicke in words Now a low word Good wits will be jazgling5 but, gentles agree This civil war of wits were much better us' On Navarre and his book-men Shakefp So far am I glad it did fo fort And this their jangling 1 efteem a fport Shakefp Ther is no errour whic hath not fom anc of probability refemblin men who ftudy to be fingular appear truth, whic whe find out, ftrainin reafon,. they then publifh to the world matter of con tention and yanglizg 76 JANGLE W, 4 Raleigh To make to found un tuneably Now fee that noble and that fovereign reafon Like fweet bells jazg/ed out of tune and harfh Shak. Haml *Ere Gothick forms were known in Greece And in our verfe ‘ere monkifh rhime Had jdliif/td their fantattick chimes Prior Ja'xeLER |