OCR Text |
Show KI KI Prior with lefs defigning ends Who Kindlie entertain their friends ; and count'nance {prightly With good words Strive to treat them all politely = adj. [from kind Ki'nory kind the {ubftantive. 1. Homogeneal ; congeneal the fame nature Go This competency I befeec Swift probably fro kindred ; o I may be able t digeft.into indly juice, that I may grow thereby Hammond Thefe foft fire but with £indly heat Not only enlighten various influence O Milton's Paradife Loft 2. The foregoing fenfe feems to have bee originaily implied by this word; but following writers, inattentive to its etymo Into the main of waters. Shakefp. Merc., of Venice True hope is fwift, and flies with fwallows wings Kings it makes gods, and meaner creatures izgs The king becoming graces As juftice, verity, temp'rance, ftablenefs Bounty, perfev'rance, mercy, lowlinefs Through 4l the living regions do'ft thou move And featter'ft, where thou goeft, the kindly feeds o Dryd love Ye heav'ns, from. high the dewy near pour Pope And in foft filence (hed the £izd/y {how'r BenevoKi'npwess. » /. [from #ind. Ience ; beneficence ; good-will ; favour ove If there be kindnefs, meeknefs, or comfort in he tongue, then is not her hufband like other men Ecclef. xxxvi. 23 Old "Lelius profefles he had an extraordinaty kird zefs for feveral young people. Collier of Friend/bip an .ca inclinatio onl be produce b an experience or opinion of £indnefs to us Rogers's Sermons Ki'~xprEV., @ L [drom &ind; cynpene Saxon. 1. Relation by ‘birth or marriage ; cognation ; confanguinity ; affinity Like her, of equal £izdred to the throne You keep her conquetts, and extend your own fuit 2. Relation old mothy faddle, and the ftirrups of no %iz A dred Shak 3. Relativ I think ther is no ma Had been thy 4ingly feat, and here thy race From all the ends of peopled earth, had com or in arts orarms Ki'nprep. adj Congeneal Denham related; cog nate From Tufcan Coritum he claim'd his birth Bu Fro thenc fro exemp whe after alcende mortal‘car.lh to his kindred fkie A god Kixe. # /. plur. from cow The fame which in a fire the fons obey'd Pope A prince the father of a people made 2. It is taken by Bacoz in the feminine A field T went, amid' the morning dew To milk my kine rich kingdom of *‘Granada from th Bacon 3. A card with the pi¢ture of a king [A contraltion of the Teu KING. 7./ tonic wor cuning OF Cyning, the nam In the primitiv of fovereign dignity tongue it fignifics ftout or valiant, th kings of moft nations being, in the be ginning, chofen by the pecople on acZercount of their valoar and ftrength Stegan. 1. Monarch; fupreme governor of kings The great gin Hath in th tao.ie of his law commanded "I pat thou fhalt do no murder Shake/p, Ricke 111 family arms tha ha viz Garter pre-eminenc Nosroy an cieux of th Claren England is fo idly king'd Her fceptre fo fantaftically borne That fear attends her not. Shakefpeare's Henry V. heart for enterprizes Adam bow'd low ; he, 4izgly, from his ftat Inclin'd not Kinese'viL. 7 /. [king and ewil. Ki'NGCRAFT. 7 /. [king and craft.] Th art of governing. A word commonl nam Sore eyes are frequently a fpecies of the ing fevil and take their beginning from vicious humours in flaming the tunica adnata Wifeman's Surgery Ki'Nvgsuir, 7z, /. [fro monarchy The flower; 'crowfoot Moft learned, reverend fir, into our Aizgdom . Shakefpeare Mofes gave unto them the &izgdom of Sihon, kin of the Amorites, and-the %ingdom of Og, king o xxxii The animal .and vegetable kizngdoms are fo nearl joined, that if you take the loweft of one, and th higheft of the other, there will fcarce be perceive Locke any difference 3. A region; a trat The wat'ry kingdom is no ba To ftop the foreign fpirits; but they come of bird %, fo [halcpon, Shakefpeare A Apecie king. Royalty They defigned and prorofed to me the new-modelling of fovereignty and king /bip, withoutany realit of power, or without any neceffity of fubjection an is properly, according to Gerard, 4izgcob. June is drawn in a mantle of dark grafs green, an upon his head a garland of bents, Aingeups, an maidenhair Peach Fair is the kingcup that in meadow blows Fair is the daify that befide her grows Gay A fcre ulcerated, commonly believed to be cure by the touch ofa king Marrimer Ki'NGFISHER fulous diftemper, in which the glands ar Akind of apple to fee fair Portia - Milton's Paradife Loff His hat, which never vail'd to human pride Walker with rev'rence took, and laid afide The kingapple is preferred before the jenneting As o'er a brook Siducy Ki'very. adv. With an air of royalty with fuperiour dignity Shakefpeare's Richard 11. z. A different clafs or order of beings word.chiefly ufed among naturalifts Low bow'd the reft, he, Aizgly, did but nod Dunciad Then treafon makes me with myfelf a beggar And foI am: then crufhing penur Perfuades me, I was better when a king Nunb I am far better born than is the king More like a king, more 4ingly in my thoughts Shakefp Sometimes am I a king Bafthan of his bearing in it majefty, fuch a 4ingly entertainment, fuch a kingly magnificence, fuch a kingl 2. To make royal; to raife to royalty [king and cup. . 'Th He was not born to live a fubject life, each aio ~ A letter under his own hand was lately fhewed m by fir William Dugdale, kizg at arms Walton / Swift 3. Noble ; auguft; magnificent Phillips |Kt'ncarrrs. # / government, an A watch-cafe to a common 'larum beli ? Shakefp Then thalt thou give me with thy kingly hand What hufband in thy power I will command Shakefpeare a principal officer "a fociety; of whom there are threein number #izgl In loathfome beds, and leay'ft the kingly couc ope th or abolifhed th from a ne 2. Belonging to a king; fuitable to a king Lurk'd in her hand, and mourn'd‘his captive q;een ar Arms either chofe other became free ftate The king unfee 4. Kin kings when they drove out thei Why licft thou with the vil Dryden. | 1. 'The dominion of a king; the territories{ubject to a monarch Gay tyrannica recovere Ki'vepom. #. /. [from king. Ben Sfonfon Hath open'd her eyne The cities of Greece as prince alfo 1s You're welcome To milk the kine E'er the miik-maid fin To rev'rence thee Dryden's State of Innocence In Sparta, a-kingly government, though the peopl were perfectly free, the adminiftration was in th two kings and the ephori Swift Diffufing bleflings, or averting harms the great an Moors Shakefp a"fl Yet this plac *Till common int'reft plac'd the fway in on But the queen's kindred. Shake[peare's Richard HI."} Ki'sccur Nor needs thy jufter title the toul guil Of Eaftern kings, who, to fecure their reign Mauit have their brothers, fons, and kizdred flain O'er France, and all her almoft-4izgly diikedoms known ufed by king Fames fecur There we'll fi Ruling in large and ample empery Thus ftates were form'd; the name of kizg un Then am 1 £ing'd again Dryden Ki'NecLikE I have no relith of them., = Shakefpeare's Macketh 7 K1NG @ 4 [fro th noun. Ever bleit be Cytherea's fhrine |%. To fupply with a king. A word rathe Since thy dear breaft has felt an equal avound ludicrous Since in thy Aizdnefs my defires are crown'd. Priv Lov Bitterns, herons, fea-gulls, ing fifbers, and water rats, are great enemies to fith Mortimer's Hufb patience, courage, fortitude Devotion May's Virgit ad [ rom #ing. Stakdfp- | Ki'neLy 1. Royal; fovereign; monarchical Ferdinand and Ifabella, %izgsof Spain logy, confounded it with kizd g. Bland; mild; foftening Until a £izg be by; and then his ftat Emptics itfelf, as doth an inland broo 'Twas virtue only foment and warm "Temper or nourifh When dew refrefhing on the pafture field The moon beftows, king fifbers play on fhare A fubftitute thines brightly as a kfng Fiz grief fome pity, others blame The fatal caufe all Aind/yfeek obedience . W know ho King Charles fuccefsful the late ufurper was while his army believed hiin real in his zeal againf king /bip; but when they found out the impofture upon his afpiring to the fame himfelf, he was pre fently deferted and oppofed by them, and never abl to crown his ufurped greatnefs with the addition o Sowtb that title which he paffionately thirfted after Ki'NGSPEAR. 7. f Ki'NGSTONE. 7. / [afphodelns,] - A plant [fquatina.] A filh Ainfaworth Ky'nsFoLg. #. f. [4iz and fulk.] Relations thofe who are of the fame family "Thofe lords, fince their firft grants of thofe lands have beftowed them amongft their kizsfolks Spenfer My Ainsfolk have failed, and my familiar iriend forgotten me j-‘ab Ki'ssman. #, f. [kin and mar. of the fame race or family iXe 14 A ma The jury he made to be chofen out of their neareft infmer, and their judges he made of their ow Spenfer fathers Both fair, and bothof royal blood they feem'd Whom Ainfmes to the crown the heralds ,deez}x;;i} Le |