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Show i 3. 7: is ufe the affair 1 T for the thing; the matter; 2. 'To To each incenfed will amples vocal Shakefp. Henry VII He rallied, and again fell to ¢3 thoug For catching foe by nearer foot He lifted with fuch might and ftrength is to avoi imputation of pedantry th though fome of them are equi ‘now I be old Are much condemn' dreadfu andiof the peace if ['fee to have an itching palm To fel and martyour offices for gold Sawift "Shake/peare The'itching ears, being an épidemick difkals, gav 5. 1t is ufed ludicroufly after neutral verbs to give an emphafis defire fyord out, my finger izches to makeone, Skakefpeare . Caflius, 'you yourfel As would have hurl'd him thrice his length, Hudibras sz feems to have contirua Mafter Shallow, you have yourfelf.been a grea fighter, ‘though mow a man of peace.--~Mr. Page 4. {¢1s fometimes exprefled by *# defign long This {fenfe appears in the following ex Ixs come to pafs That tractable obedience is a {lav Th fair opportuaity.to every. mountebanle, Decay of Liviy All fuch have ftill an izching to deride And fain would be upon the faughing'fide If Abraham brought all with him; it is not probable that he meant to walk 7z back "again forhis | I'rcHY. mz'j." [from ilc/J. Infecte pleafure Raleigh The Lacedetnonians, at the ftraights of Thermopyle, whed their arms faile with their nails and teeth them fough it out Dryden I have often feen people lavith it ‘profufely i tricking up their children, and yet ftarve their minds Locke The mole courfes ¢ not on the ground, like th the ‘itch I'TEM. adv. [Latin.] Alfo. A word ufe when any article is added to the former I'resM. 7 / 1. A new article I muft paint it Pope. . 6. Sometimes applied familiarly, ludicrouily, had been tabled by ‘his fide, and I to. perufe him b items 2. A hint S[/quefpmre an inuendo If this difcourfe have not concluded our weaknefs or rudely to perfons I have one ifert mor Let us after him be found, of mine if knowledge ca I muft lofe tha . whic 1 thought I had Whofe care is gone before to bid us welcome that there is none dt is a peerlefs kinfman Shake[peare's Macbeth., T ITERATE w a Do child, go to iz grandam, .chil: Give grandam kingdom, and i#s grandam wil I could haye looked on him without the help o admiration, though' the catalogue of his endowment rat or moufe, ‘but lives under the earth Addifon Whether the charmer finner /¢, or faint 7 1f folly grows romantick Pope wit lanv [stero, Lat. is farther improved by the frequent Meratlon an repetition ITI'NERANT Hammond ad). [itiverant, Fr.] Wan dering; not fettled Tt fhould be my care to fweeten and mellow th voices of itinerant tradelmen as alfo toaccommodat their cries to their refpective wares, Addifon's Speti.ITiNERARY. 7, /. [itineraire, Fr. itinerg rium, Lat. A book of travels The clergy are fufficiently reproached, in mof itineraries, for the univeifal poverty one meets wit in this plentiful kingdom Addiforron Italy Iv1'NERARY. ad). (itineraire, ¥t itinerarius Lat.] Travelling; done on a journey done during frequent change of place He did make a progies from Lincoln to- th northern parts, tholgh it was rather an itinerar circuit of juttice than a progrefs. Bacon's Henry V11 Itse'Lr, pronoun. it and felf.] The neutra reciprocal pronoun applied to things Who then fhall blanr clean.sh data import.tsv out README His pefter'd fenfes, to recoil and ftart Whe b all that is within him does condemn Itfelf for being there Shakefpeare's Macbeth. Borrowing of foreigners, in i1/¢/f; makes not th kingdom rich or poor . " Locke Ju'stLaNT. adji [jubilans, Latin.] Utterin fongs of triumpl{ The planets lift'ning ftood While the bright pomp afcended jubilant Milton, JuBILATION. . /. [jubilation, ¥r. jubilatiss. Lat.] "The att of declaring triamph T Tof,rep.eat; to utter again; to inculcat Ju'B1LER. # fo [ 7 jubilé, ¥t.e jubilum Give it: up him fro by frequent mention Shake[peare's King Foban. R JRO We covet to make the pfalms queciq}l' familia Jubiloy Tow Lat.] A publick feftivity 7. 1t is {ometimes ufed "of the firft o unf all thi i th ver cauf ‘wh we'Ftkrar th a 'time of rejoicing; - a feafon of juy fecond perfon, fometimes of more. This " Plalms oftener than any other .part.of Scriptur mod of {peech, though ufed by goo authors, and fupporte the French barbarifm by the i// befides @ o has yet an appearance o together .with their minifter " alone to read them " doth Shakefps Macbeth 1y *Tis 1; that made thy widows. Shakefp. Coriolanus ITCH #. [zicha, Saxon. Pope. " Bacon's Henry V There be two kinds of refle@ions of founds; the fmall puftules filled with a thinferum and raifed, as microfcopes have difcovered on It is cured by fulphur Th Shak Lord will fmite thee with the fcab and wit 2. The {enfation of uneafinefs i which is eafed by rubbing Afhes burnt 1l know 'tis virtue wherein' th wel reverberated by fire, afte been draw out b iterare Brown Locke for he thinks them knaves When univer al homage Umbra pays Pope ToIrcu. v,z [from the noun. 1. Tq fecl that uneafinefs in the fkin whic is removed by rubbing A troublefomne itching of the part was occafione by want of tranfpiration Wifeman's Surgery My right eye itches ; fome good luck is near Prhaps my Amaryllis may appear Dryden UreraNT Water being adj, [iteraus, Lat. bein near farther off mak Repeating a cusren echo bu they make,an jreyant echo. " Bacon's Natural £iffory Irera''rioN. n. [ [iteration, Fr. iteratio Lat.] Repetition;, recital over again. o Trat tir'd with feratio As true as fteel, as plantage to the moon My thufband! ; Q Ay, 'twas he thatitold me firf My hufband. & What needs this iteration, woman I fay, thy hufband Shakefp clean.sh data import.tsv out README Iterations ave commonly lofs of time Shukefp L Othells but ther ‘it hath aspecuiiar property: t engage the receiver to perfever in all piety , The new or unexpe@ed fucundities, which: prefen ""themfelves, will have aétivity enough to excite th carthieft foul, and raife a {mile from the moft come pofed tempers Jupas Tree.n. f plant Fuda Brown [ filiguafirum, Latin.] tree yields a fine purplifh bright an re bloffum in the Spring, and is increafed by Jayers Mortimer's Hufbandry To Jupa'1ze. w.n [ judaifer,. ¥r. judaizo To conform' tothe manne low Lat. of the Jews Paul judaiz'd with the Jews, was all to all. Sandy 2. JUDGE [juge, ¥r. judex, Lat.] 1. One wh is invefted with authorityt . determin any caufe or queftion real o Shall not the juzdge of all the earth do yight? Gengfis father of the fatherlefs, and a judge of.th Pfalms Milion widows, is God in his holy habitation Thou art judg Of all things made, and judge/# only right 2. One who prefides in a court of judicature My lord Baffanio gave his ring awa Unto the sudge that begg'd it. Shak. Mer: of Venice A fingle voice ; an that not paft me bu By learned approbation of the judge. Shak. H. VIII How dares your pride As in alifted field to fight your caufe Unafk'd the royal grant; nor mazfhal by is no fuch gain of time, as to iterate often the {tat of the queltion ; for it chafeth away many a frivolou fpeech Bacon's Lffays In all thefe refpe@s Lat.] Pleafantnefs; agreeablenefs. perfonal Him with herlov'd fociety. Milton's Paradife Lof? when gen'rous Manly raves All fee 'tis vice, and 72ch of vulgar praife the'echo Adam took ‘no thought Eating his fill ; nor Eve to iterat ler former trefpals fear'd, the more to foot the fkin A certain itch of meddling with other people' matters, puts us upon fhifting L' Eftrange He had @till pedigree in his head, and an itch o being thought a divine king Dryden From fervants company a child is to be kept not by prohibitions, for that will but give him a At half'mankin and the falt thereof hat decoltions Hudibras 3. A conftant teazing defire itch afterit, but by other ways which "i 2. To do over again the izch, whereof thou can'ft not ke healed Dewt. xxviiis 27 As if divinity had catch' The itch on purpofe to be fcratch'd at diftance original is heard diftinctly, and the refletion alf diftin&ly= the other ‘in ‘concurrence, ‘when th found returneth immediately upon the originalyan fo iterateth it not, butamplifiet it Bacon Luit and libert Creep in the minds and marrows of our youths "That 'gainft the ftream of virtue they may ftrive And drown themfelves in riot, itches, blains as-other parts of fcripture ‘h Hooker The king, to keep a decency towards the Frenc king, fent new folemn ambailadors to intimate unt him the decree of his -eftates, and to iterate hi motion that the French would defift from hoftility. 1. A cutancous difeafe extremely contagious, which overfpreads the body wit by a fmall animal minifte refpet we fee how many times one thing lath heen iterated into the beftand wifeft, Hogker. *Tis thefe that early taint the.female foul and not th The town was all a jubilee of feaits Dryden the imperfetions being known t0°Gad, he relieve Jucu'no f [jucundita jucundus ry the fame by often putting them in mind s in which my lord, that bring you wor Macduff is fl(e:q to England inure the peopl » In. the firft age's;Goq gaye laws unto_our fathers and their meimories ferved inftead of book's; whereo Who was't came by - 775 two or three the caufe wherefore w Angels ‘utt'ring joy; heav'n run With jzbilee, and loud hofannas fille T'h' eternal regions Miltan's Paradife Loff Joy was then a mafculine and a fevere thing, th recreation of the judgment, or rejoicing the jubile - Soxth .~ vof reafon. As knightly rites require to try. Dry}d«r'fl ner judg It is not fufficient to imitat nature in every cir cumftance dully = it becomes a painter th take wha is moft beautitul, as being the fovercign judge his ow art Dryden 3. One who has fkill fufficient to decid upon the merit of any thing |