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Show JA JA Ja'scrER. #. /. [from the verb. A wran gling, chattering, noify fellow Ja'n1zary. n /0 [A Turkith word. of the guards of the Turkifh king On With the firft charge compell'd in hafte to rife and janizaries flain Roars horrible Dryden's fn 4, 'To quarrel; to difpute Then Orpheus with his harp their ftrife did bar Render the hopes he gave his mafter vain found in maffes of various fizes and thapes As when a torreat rotls with rapid raee The flood, conftrain'd within a fcanty fpaee When thofe renowned noble peers of Greece Through ftubborn pride, among themfelves did jar Forgetful of the famous golden fleece His grand vizir, prefuming to invef The chief imperial city of the Weft The {tandards loft JA #aller The Spenfer muft be fometimes ignorant of the mean conducing to thofe ends, in which alone they ca Ja'x~ock. #./. [probably a corruption o en Dry othe eac oppo an Ja bannock.] Oat-bread. A northern word . ver th [fr / # Jar Ja'nty. adj. [corrupted from gentil, Fr. ati d lin fou o vib rat o kin 1 Showy; fluttering t In 7, the tongueis held ftifly at its whole length by the force of the mufcles; fo as when the impulf of breath ftrikes upon the end of the tongue, wher it finds paffage, it fhakes and agitates the whol tongue, whereby the found is affected with a trembling jar Flolder's Elements of Speech the Romans confe 2z, Clafh of interefts or opinions; difcord This fort of woman is a janty flattern: fhe hang on her cloaths, plays her head, and varies her pofture Speétator Th [ Fanuarius, Latin. JA'NUARY, 2. / amon whom it wa crated Fauus year, fro firt month of th Fanuary is clad in white, the colour of the eart at this time, blowing his nails. This month ha the nam from Janus painted with two faces, figni Peachant fying Providence [from Faparin A4fia, wher n f JAPAN figured work was originally done.] Wor varnithed and raifed in gold and colours It is commonly ufed with another fubftantive, an therefore may be confidere as an adjeCive The poor girl had broken a large japan glafs, o great value with a firoke of her brufh Swift To Jara/N. v. a, [from the noun. 1. To varnifh, an and raifed figures embellit wit gol Swift The god of fir Among thefe gen'rous prefents joins his part Gay And aids with foot the new japanning art Jara'swer. #. /. [from japan. 1. One fkilled in japan work 2. A fhoeblacker. So called becauf makes the thoes fhin h The poor have the fame itc Pope's Horace anger, Saxon or garren, ol "Tentonick, to clamour. 2. 'To ftrike together with a kin rattle of fhor "The rings of iron, that on the doors were hung and harfhly rung Dryden My knees tremble with the jarring blow Gay 2. To ftrike or found untuneably and irregularly O, you kind gods Cure this great breach in his abufed nature O, wind up Of this child-changed father Shakef. King Lear I perceive you delight not in mufick ~-Not a whit, when it jars fo Shakefpeare A ftring may jar in the beft mafter's hand And the moft {kilful archer mifs his aim, Rofcomm He keeps his temper' mind ferene and pure And every paflion aptly harmoniz' Amid' a jarring world Thomfon's Summer 2. To clafh ; to interfere; to a& in oppofition ; to be inconfiftent At laft though long, our jarrizg notes agree For orders and degree 7ar not with liberty right and wrong Between whofe endle jar jufti s e prefides Would lofe their names, and fo would juftice too Shakefp 3. A ftate in which a door unfaftened ma ftrike the poft ; half opened The chaffering with diffenters, and dodging abou this or t'other ceremony, is but like opening a fe wickets, and leaving them a jar, by which no mor than one can get in at a time Swift An earthen veflel but well confift Venalus concluded his report b jarring munmur fill'd the faQious coyrt Shakefp Milton Boyle He mead for cooling drink prepares Of virgin honey in the jars Dsyden Warriors welter on the ground Whilft empty jars the dire defeat refound JA'RDES u. /i [French. Garth Hard eallou tumours in horfes, alittle below the bend ing of the ham on the outfide. 'Thi diftemper in time will make the horf halt, and grow fo painful as to cauf him to pine away, and become lightbellied They change their weekly barber, weekly news "Th' untun'd and jarring fenfes or rather good number of bubbles 2. 'To black and glofs fhoes. A low phrafe Sent out a jarring found Nath'lefs, my brother, fince we paffed ar Unto this point, we will appeafe our jar. Hubberd About the upper part of the jar there appeared Nor bureau of expence Nor ftandith well japanr'd, avail The writing of good fenfe 70 Jar. v. z. [from eoppe or guerre, war, French Lairy Queen Force would be right It is moft common to manage horfes, that have been kept too much upon their haunches Farrier's Dif& Ja'RGoN. . fo [ jargon, Fr. gericonga, Spanifh.] Unintelligible talk ; gabble ; gibberifh Nothing is clearer than mathematical demonftra- tion,. ye let one mathematicks hea wh i it,.an plain fuftian or jargon altogethe h wil ignorant in hol The bafis of jafper is ufually of a greenifh" hue, and fpotted with red, yellow and white,- Woodward. The moft valuable pillars about Rome are four co lumns of oriental Jjafper in St. Paulina's chapel and one of tranfparent oriental ja/per in the vatican li brary Addifon on ITtaly, IaTROLE'RTICK. ad). [iatroleptique, French {argss and daéipw,] That which cures b anointing o ]{x'vu or_jzzéle v.-a.- 'To-bemire to foil over with dirt through unneceffarytraverfing and travelling. 'This word fsftill retained in Scotland and the norther counties Ja'ver. . f. [perhaps from the verb.] A wandering or dirty fellow He maketh war, he maketh peace again,And yet his peace is but continual jar O miferable men, that to him fubject are 4. [Giarro, Italian. For not the defk with filver nails Prefer a new japanrer to their fhoes debate It is capable of a very elegant polith, an is found in many parts of the Eaft Indies and in Egypt, Africa, Tartary, and Chjna Hill it tob Bramball From this laft toil again what knowledge flows 2 Tuft as much, perkaps, as‘thow "That all his predeceflor's rule Were empty cant, all jargon of the fchools. Prior During the ufurpation an infufion of enthufiaftic Jar o pre ail in every writing Saewift JA'RGONELLE, 7 /. A {pecies of pear, Se Pear Ja'smawxk, u. /. [probably ias or eyas hawk. When as time, flying with wings fwift Expired had the term that thofe two javel Should tender up a reckoning of their travels.. Hubb Sir Thomas More, preparing himfelf for execus tion, -put on his beft apparel, which the lieutenan compelled him toiput off again, faying, That he who fhould have themiwa buta jzve/ What fays fir Thomas,. thall I account him a jave/, who fhal this day do-mie fo great a benefit More Ja'vevrin. #. f. [ javeline, French.] A fpear or half pike, which anciently was ufe either by foot or horfe. It had an.iron Fi head pointed Others, from the wall, defendWith dart and jav'/in, frones and fulph'rous fire On each hand flaughter and gigantick deeds. A/ She fhakes her myrtle jav'/iz: and, behind, like the harmlefs bee, may'(t freely range ¥rom jafmine groye to grove may'ft wander Ja'sming Perfian. n. f. A plant Thomy A fpecie of lilac Ja'sper. 7 f. [ jafpe, French ; iafpis, Lat. A hard ftone of a bright beautiful gree colour fometime clouded with white Drydens Her Lycian quiver dances in-the wind Flies the javelin fwifter to its mark, Launch'd from the vigour of a Roman arm ? Ad4if JA'UNDICE French. #. / A diftemper from obftructions of the glands of-the- liver which prevent the gall being duly feparate by the from the: blood ; and- fometimes, efpe- cially in hard drinkers, they are fo indu- rated as never after to be opened, an ftraiten the motion of the blood fo muc through that vifcus, as to make it diver with a force great enough into the gaftric arteries, which ‘go off'from the hepatick to break through them; an drai int the ftomach ; .fo that vomiting of bleed in this diftemper, is a fatal {ymptom Quincye Why (hould a man, whofe blood is warm within Sit like his grandfire cut in alabafter Sleep when he wakes, and creep into the jaundic /. By being peevith 2 . Shakefp. Marchant of Venice Thofe were thy thoughts, and thou could'ft judg aright *Till int'reft*made a jawndice in thy fight Dryden. The eyes of a man in the jaundice mak yello obfervations on every thing; and the foul, tinGture with any paffion, diffufes a falfe colour over the ap pearances of things Watts To JaunT. w. n [ janter, French.] T wander here and there; to buftle about It is no always ufed in contempt o levity I was not made a horfe g&nd yetuldbea:i at'bué'tten_ like an %f'sl ur-gall' i an ¢iy [jauniffe, jaune, yellow, A young hawk Ainfavorth. Jalunpicep. adj. [ from jaundice.] InJa'smiNe.u. [ [gelfeminums jafmin, French. fected with the jaundice All feems infected, that th' infected fpy It is often pronounced jefamine.] A creep- As all looks yellow to the jaundic'd cye Pope ing fhrub with a fragrant flower Thou auntin Bolingbroke e S Shnmat JAUNT |