OCR Text |
Show KN KN K~ac. #./. [knag, a wart, Danifh, ¥t is retained in Scotland.] A hard knot i wood Kwa'cey how the young folks lay their heads together Shakefpeare IfI thought it were not a piece of honefty t adj. [from krnag.] Knotty; fe with hard rough knots Kw~ar. 2 /. [cnap, Welth or a broken piece tuberam<e. prominence acquaint the king withal, I woul a protuberance Saxon a pro A protuberance, a fwellin >Till the fhrewd fool, by thriving too too faft Like Aifop's fox, becomes a prey at laft whereby the heatof the fun is pentin, and the win gathered as in troughs Bacon To Kwar. v. a. [knappen, Dutch 1. To bite; to break fhort He knappeth the fpear in funder. Common Prayer He will Azap the {pears a-pieces with his teeth More 2. [Knaap, Erfe. To ftrike fo as to mak a fharp noife like that of breaking Knap a pair ot tongs fome depth in a veffel of water 2nd you fhall hear the found of the tongs Bacon's Natural Hiftory a fhort fhar mak T v. 1 reduced the {heulders{o foon, that the ftanders 9o KNna'PPLE. @. 7. [from £zap.]| 'To brea off with a fharp quick noife Kxa'psack. 7 f. [from Auappen, to eat. The bag which a foldier carrie back; a bag of provifions on hi "T'he conttitutions of this church fhall not be repealed, "till I fee more religious motives than foldier King Charles carry in their &zapfucks It you are for a merry jaunt, D'll try for once wh ean foot it fartheft: there are hedges in Summer Winter an barp i yo wit your bottl honour to madmen I wit Anapfack m an back: we'l leav and riches to knaves, an trave you a Dryden till we come to the ridge of the world KNa'PWEED. 7 /. [jacea, Latin.] A plant Miller 7 f. [knor German. A har A cake of fcurf lies baking on the ground And prickly ftubs inftead of trees are found Or woods with knots and kzares deform'd and old Headlefs the moft, and hideous to behold Dryden {NA'VE 1. A boy 7. /. [cnapa, Saxon. 2, A fervant Both thefe are obfolete For as the moon the eye doth pleaf ‘With gentle bearns not hurting fight Yet hath fir fun the greater praife Becaufe from him doth come herlight trick or prafiicés We'll revel it as bravely as the beft beads 1. Difhoneft wicked Shake/p 2. -Waggifh; mifchievous Here fhe comes curft and fad Cupid is a kzavifb Jad Sidney He eats and drinks with his domeftick flaves; A verier hind than any of his kzawes Dyyden 3. A petty rafcal; afcoundrel; a difhonef fellow Mot men rather brook their being reputed Azaves than for their honefty be accounte fools ; Azave, i the mean time, paffing for a name of credit. South When both plaintiff and defendant happen to b srafty knaves, there's equity againft both L Effrange An honeft man may take a knave's advice But idiots only may be cozen'd twice See all our fools afpiring to be kzaves Dryden Pope 4. A card with a foldier painted on it For 'twill return, and turn t' account If we are brought in play upon't Or but by cafting £zawes get in What pow'r can hinder us to win Kxa'very z /. [from Zrave. Shakefpeare forefifie Hudibras i, Difhonefty ; tricks ; petty villany which it ferves as a pully th One pafte of flefh on all degrees beftow'd And kneaded up alike with moift'ning blood Dyyden Prometheus, in the kzeading up of the heart, feafoned it with fome furious particlesof the lion Addifor's Spectator knee Prior Prior KNE'ADINGTROUGH 7 [Fread an trongh.] - A trough in which the paft of bread is worked together A Dyyden 2. A kuwee is a piece of timber growin crooked, and {o cut that the trunk an branch make an angle Moxon's Mech. Exer ben th Goneril, hi miftrefs, falutation Shakefpeare foo a yo Matt. xvii. 14 are drefled #Anee/- an fay th Taylor's Guide to Devotion 7 [fuc and tribute. by kneeling Receive from u Knectribute yet unpaid, proftration vile K~e Thy royal fathe Was a moft fainted king: the queen that bore thee and her ungrateful Jove t Genufletion; worfhip or obeifance fhow the leg i 16 lay down, and leaning on her Anees Invok'd the caufe of all her miferies And caft her languithing regards above act of genufletion Kxe'eTRIBUTE #xuee, Dutch. I beg and clafp thy Anees Milton Wearied with length of ways, worn out with toil @, 7. [from dnee.] To perfor Lord's prayer Exodus Bacon. the knitdn A certain man &zeeling down to him, faid, Lord have mercy upon my fon; for he is lunatick cake fhe kzeaded was the fav'ry meat Died every day fhe liv'd Shakefpeare's Macbeth Scotch fkink is a kind of ftrong nourifhment made of the kzees -and finews of beef long boiled wit And afk of thee forgivenefs Shakefpeare's King Lear Ere I was rifen from the place that fhew' My duty kneeling, came a reeking poft Stew'd in his hatte, half breathing, panting fort Fro Oftener upon her £zees than on her feet RQuincy When thoudo'ft atk me blefling, I'Il Zzeel down No man ever reapt his corn Or from the oven drew his bread of 'the‘mufcles which extend the leg, t To KNEEL Dryden hard in thofe of riper years: it is calle patella or mola. Over it paffes the tendo thereof, by a fine fhadow underneath the joint Peacham on Drawing mifunderftood Ere hinds and bakers yet were born That taught them both to fow and kzead A littl It is {oft in children, but ver T.h.cv ,(‘flet'pd!: muft be fhewn four'd his balmy blood For help from Feav'n n f [knee and pan. Ainfworth. and covered with a fmooth cartilage on it His kingdom o'er his kindred world began 1. The joint of the leg wher joined to the thigh An herb round bpne about two inches broad pretty thick, alittle convex on both fides Thus #Aneaded up with milk the new-made ma Saxon as in-kneed, or out-kreed The country peafant meditates no harm When clad with fkins of beafts to'keep hi w r In winter weather unconcern'd he goes Almofk kzneedeep, through mire in clumfey fhoes K Drydens Kxze'epan Wifdom makes him an ark, where all agree. Donse #. /. [cneop Hav{ng knees Here's yet in the word hereafter, the kzeading the making of the cakes, and the heating of th oven Shakefpeare. It is a lump, where all beafts £7eaded be KNEE odv, [from Fue. Kxe'enoLm. u. /. [aguifelium. Dutch. To beat or mingle any ftuff o fubftance. It is feldom applied in popular language but to the a¢t of makin bread And pride of empire Cor NE'EDGRASS. 7 [f. [gramen genicylatum. An herb . a. [cnzban, Saxon; kueden What then muft I that keep the knave Shakefp 2. Sunk to the knees *Tis foolifh to conceal it at all, and Zrawifb to d it from fricnds Pope's Letters >Till knowledge mifapply'd 'T 1. Rifing to the knees fraudulent Thus to make poor females mad [from the noun. 2. Having joints: as kueed grafs KNe'EpEEP. adj. [knee and deep. and all this 2zaz27y Knalvisu, adj. [from knave. uéa::gfr Go you that banith'd him, a-mil before his ten and kzee the way into his mercy I amber bracelets fupplicate by kneeling ufe Wit buildi To kaee his throne, and fquire-like penfi n beg Shakefpeare Erogs fhall come into thy kneadingtroughs So if my man muft praifes have 7o Kxee. v. 4 KNvED Th a male child houfes, that fhall ftand firm haps of trifling things of more coft tha 7o KNEAD A plant fhips-that are to be toffed ; but not fo Return with her Why, the hot blooded France, that dow'rlef t o . @ur youngeft born: I could as well be bro gh Dryden In th following paffage it feems a general ter for any thing put to an ill ufe, or perMifchievou Kna'visuvy adj [fro knavih, by heard them £7zap in before they knew they wer Wifeman. | 1. Difhoneftly; fraudulently _out K~a'pBoTTLE. 2 fo [ papaver [pumeum.) 2. Waggifhly; mifchievouily K~aRrE knot I hol great politicks of: like to kzeee timber, tha is goo fo Shakefp. Winter's Tale The cunning courtier fhould be {lighted too Who with dull £zawery makes fo much ado You {hall {ee many fine feats fet upon a kzap of | 2 ground, environed with higher hills round about it Z0 Kxap noife doit it the more kzawvery to conceal it cnap Such difpofitions are the fitteft timber \fé'ma)z Herels no Anavery! See, to beguile the ofd folks 7 fo [cnil Welth cnyllan, to ring, Sax. bell rung at a funeral Miltorn a funeral pile The found of 1 would not wifh them to a fairer death And fo his &#el/ is knoll'd Shakefpeare Sea nymphs hourly ring his kzel/ Hark, now I hear them Shakefp. Tfi""f‘fi When he was brought again to th? bar, to hea His 42zell rung out, his judgment, he was ftirr' With fuch an agony, he fweat extremely Shakefpeare Alt thefe motions, which we faw Are but as ice, which crackles ata thaw Or as a lute, which in moift weather ring Her kxel/ alone, by cracking of her ftrings Unhappy flave, and pupil to a bell Which his hours work Donne .as well as hours do'tell Unhappy *till the laft, the kind releafing &ze/l Cn'w.'g? oA |