OCR Text |
Show Ke'rnrrworr herb n. / [ ferofularia A 5. [Tnmufick. Coarfe ftuff Taffata phrafes, filken terms precife I do forfwear them; and I here proteft of its own nature In ruffet yeas, and honeft erfey noes Shakefpeare ftock on on leg kerfzy boot-hofe on the other The fame wool one ma felts it into' a hat, anpihe weaves it into cloth, and another into 4erfey or ferge II»Z./L' Thy kerfey doublet fpreading wide Gay Kest. The preter tenfe of ca ufed in Scotland It is ftil Only that noife heav'n's rolting circles &e/2 Kre'strer, 2 Fairfax A little kind of baftar hawk Hanmer His keffrel kind A pleafing vein of glory, vain did find. Fairy 2 Kites and 4¢/fre/s have a refemblance with hawks Kercu rel. A heavy fhip ; asa bomb kezch And lighten'd all the river with a blaze 7+ Key cold was a proverbial expreflion, no Shakefp. Henry VIIL The fire thus form'd; fhe fets the kettle on Like burnifh'd gold the little {ecther thone. Dryden KEe'TTLEDRUM. 7. /. [kettle and dram. drum of which the head is fpread over The kettledrum and trumpet thus bray ou Shake[peare's Hamlet KEY. . /. [ceex, Saxon. I. An inftrument formed with cavities correfpondent to the wards of "a lock, b which. the bolt of a lock is pufhed forward or backward If a man were porter of hell gate, he fhould hav old turning the 4ey Sbakefpeare's Macbeth Fortune that arrant whore Ne'er turns the ey to th' poor Shakefp. K. Lear ‘The glorious ftandard laft to heav'n they {pread With Peter's £eys ennobled and his crown. Zaizfax Yet fome there be, that by due fieps afpir ‘To. lay their juft hands on that golden /ey That opes the palace of eternity Confcience is its ow of its ow nature, tha own breaft He came "The longin counfellor Milton the fol mafte fecrets; and it is the privilege of ou every man {hould keep the /ey of hi South and knocking thrice, without dela lady heard, and turn'd the ¢y, . Diy 2. An inftrument by which fomethin {crewed or turned Hide the Zey of the jack i Swift 3. An explanation of any thing difficult An emblem without a /ey to't, is no more tha a tale of a tub L' Eftrange Thefe notions, in the writings of the ancient darkly delivered, receive a clearer light when compared with this theory, which reprefents every thin plainly, and is a £ey to their thoughts Burnet's Theery of the Earth Thofe who are accuftomed to reafon have got th true key of books Locke 4. The parts of a mufical inftrument whic are ftruck with the fingers Pamela Joves to handle the fjpinnet keys Pale afhes of the houfe of Lancaftet and touch th Pam Before my foot falutes you with a Aick. Dryd. Fuv Ki'cker. 7 /. [from kick.] One who ftrike with his foot Kr'exsuaw. n. £ [This word is fuppofed I think with truth, to be only a corrup tion of quelyue chofe, fomething; ye Milton {eems to have underftood it otherwife ; f@_r he writes it Zick/boe, as if h thoughi t ufed in contempt of dancing. 1. Something uncommon; fantaftical ; fomething ridiculous Shall we need the monfieurs of Paris to take ou youth into their flight cuftodies, and fend them ove back again transformed into mimicks, apes, an kickfhoes . Some pigeoanj si ,t of mytton, and any prett little tiny kick/bawvs Shakefp. Henry 1V In wit, as well as war, they give us vigour Crefly was loft by 4ick/baws and foup-meagre Fenton Kr'cksy-wicksey. # /. [from ki an aince.] A made word in ridicule an H keyhole lodging Sportin "Ilooked in at the keyhole, and faw a well-mad The key look here I lock it Moft certain Prior The mid If you will add a key/forre and chaptrels to the arch let the breadth of the-upper pait of the key/fore b the height of the arch Moxon Kisz. #' f. [from #kerb, a cut, German Skinner ; from kibawe, Welth, Mixn e, a chap in th If *twere a kibe, 'twould put me to my flipper Sba,(‘{ff The'toe of the peafant comes fo near the hee of our courtier, that it galls his £ide Shakefpeare One boafted of the cure, calling them a few &ides Wifenan Ki'sep. adj. [from kibe. kibes: as, #ibed heels 7o KICK. @, a. [kaucher Lat. Troubled wit German calco To ftrike with the foot He myft endure and digeft all affronts, adore th foot-that 4icks him, and kifs the hand that firike him South It anger'd Turenne once upon a day To fee a footman &ick'd that took his pay Pope Another, whofe fon had employments at court valued not, now and then,‘a kickizg or a caning 7o KICK. @. Swift 'To beat the foot in ange or contempt Wherefore kick ye at my facrifice, which I hav commanded x Sam. ii. 29 Jethurun waxed fat and Ricked Deut, xxxii. x5 The doctrines of the holy Scriptures are terribl enemie make t the wicke men an thi is tha whic £ick againft religion, and fpurn at th doctrines of that holy book Kick. #. /. [from the verb, the foot Milton So 4ids and whelps their fires and dams exprefs is in this pocket An ulcerated chilblain heel caufed by the cold Wotton the lion ramp'd, and in his pa Dandled the kid Zatler Ke'ysToNE. 2. /i [key and ffone. dle ftone of an arch Leaping like wanton 4ids in pleafant fpring Fairy Queen There was a herd of goats with their yonng ones upon which fight fir Richard Graham tells, he woul fnap one of the £ids, and carry him clofe to thei fhut that, and 'twill out at th her in one room unfeen Kip. z /. [kid, Danifh. 1. The young of a goat Shakefp man I kee wears his honour in a box Hanmer That hugs his kick(y-wickfey here at home Spendisg his manly marrow in her arms. Shakefp Make doors faft upon a woman's wit, and it wil out at the cafement Milton 2z, A difh fo changed by the cookery that i can {carcely be known Shakefp Kr'yace. #. /. [from key.] Money pai for lying at the key, or quay Ainfw Kr'vyHoLE. #. f. [key and hole.] -~ The perforation in the door or lock throug which the key isput. The keplole is that lefc As he drains his draughts of Rhenith down quick Quick, with yout anfwey difdain of a wife Poorkey cold figure of a holy king KE'TTLE. 2. /. [cezl, Saxon; fetel, Dutch. A veffel in which liquor is boiled. I the kitchen the name of poz is given t the boiler that grows narrower toward the top, and of estle to that which grow wider 'In authors they are confounded The triumph of his pledge Dryden out of ufe That fuch a Zezch can with his very bul Take up the rays o' th' beneficial fun body of brafs is joine Harris What, ate you dumb A key of fire ran along the fhore I wonde And keep it from the earth relation t 6. [Kaye, Dutch; guai, French.] A an raifed perpendicular for the eafe of ladin and unlading fhips Bacon n./. [from caicchio, Ttalian, a bar wit Hippolita, T woo'd thee with my fword And won thy love doing thee injuries' But T will wed thee in another ey With pomp, with triumph, and with revelling Shakefp But fpeak you with a fad brow? Or do you pla the flouting Jack Come, in what key fhall a ma take you to go in the fong Shakefp Not know my voice! Oh, time's extremity Haft thou {o crack'd and fplitted my poor tongu In fev'n (hort years, that here my only fo Knows not my feeble 4ey of untun'd cares Shakefpeare ;md Shakefp Drew Cic'ly's eye afide bu the flat or fharp third, whic with it Henceforth my wooing mind fhall be expref a line Is a certain tone whereto every compofition, whether.long or fhort ought to be fitted; and this key is fai to be either flat or fharp, not in refpe@ Ainfaw Kr'rsey. 2. /. [karfaye, Dutch; carifée, Br. His lackey wit KI KI Tillotfon A blow wit 2 And fo the great I meafur'd by the lefs. = Dryden [From cidwlen, Welfh, a faggot. bundle of heath or furze Zo Xip. v. a. [from the noun. To brin forth kids Ki'ppERr. 7. /. An engroffer of corn t enhance its price A, i;zfcwortb 70 KIDNA'P @. a. [fro #4ind, Dutch, child, and #zp.] To fteal children; t fteal human beings Kipna'rrer., # /. [from kdnap.] On who fteals human beings; a manftealer The man compounded with the merchant, upo condition that he might have his child again; for h had fmelt it out, thatthe merchant himfelf was th kidnapper Thefe people ly L' Effvange in wait for our children, an may be confidered as a kind of Aidnappers withi the law Speciator KI'DNEY. 7 f. [Etymology unknown. 1. Thefe are tw in number, one on ea_c fide: they have the fame figure as kidneybeans : their length is four or fiv fingers thei breadt three and thei thicknefs two: the right is under th liver, and the left under the fpleen. Th ufe of the kidneys is to feparate the urin from the blood, which, by the motion o the heart and arteries, is thruft jnto th emulgent branches, which carry it to th little glands, by which the ferofity, bein feparated, is received by the orifice of th little tubes, which go from the glands t the pelvis, and from thence it runs by th ureters into the bladder Quincy A youth laboured under a complication of z'iifeafes from his mefentery and éidneys Wifeman's Surg 2, Sort Yoot K:E |