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Show o 17 &: Not one woma of two hundre i To La'BoU k. @. n. [laboro do_climb up itnow ; look kow'we lzboir Shake[peare The matter of the ceremonies had wrought, fo Your labourfom You made grea He hath, m Wrung from m 4. To be difeafed with. - [Morbo laborare Not in ufe Latin. La'sra ufed They abound with horfe Df which one want our camp. doth only /abour To this infernal lake the fuy flies #{ere hides her hated head, and frees the /ablrin Dryd fkies Trumpet throne Dryden's Aurengzebe. This exercife will call down the favour of Heave apon ¥ou, to remove thofe afilictions younow.labou under from you labyrinths, fro LAg it, whic .2 To beat Take fhepherd, takea plant of flubborn oak And Jabour him with many a fturdy &roke Dryd A fnare; a gin "The king had.fnared been.in love's ftrong lace I, a loft‘mutton gav your letter toShakefpeare La'ceMaN. n. /. [lace and man.] One wh dealsinlace I met with a nonjuror engage with a Jace man, whether the late French king was moft lik Auguftus Ceefar, or Nero Addiforn's Spectator,. LA'CERABLE. adj. [from Jacerate. as may be torn Suc Since the:lungs are obliged to a perpatual com merce with the air, they muft neceflarily lie open to great damages, becaufe of their thin and /ace rable compofure Har've.y of the fame tree 3+ The fhell 2. The feed /ac There the fond fly entangled, ftruggled long Himfelf to free thereout; but all in vain For ftriving more, the more in /aces firon Himfelf he tied, and wrapt his winges twai In limy fnares,.th Spenfer ; fubtil loops among Sir An old word for a whore. labout inflammable three forts o laqueas, Lat. Mutton her a Jas'd mutton, and the gave me nothing for my wit 1.. A ftring; a cord under thefe difadvantages, and turn on all hands to- fee if there were any thing left which might have to belabour Ay are all the produc LACE. n. /. [/acet, French him, has occafioned mankind to Jabour the point Pope's Effay on Homer Lace 7o LA'CERATE. @ a. [lacero, Latin.} To tear; torend; to feparate by vie Hill Th' artificer and art you might command Diyder's ZEncid Yo tabour arms for Troy An eager defire tc know. fomething concerning the leaft appearance of information L Eftranges 1. The ftick Jac lac Authors leave us uncertain whether this dru belongs to the animal or the vegetable kingdom 2 Mac abridgment Had you requir'd my helpful hand Pgpea curjofity at all, or I'll ace your coat for ye ‘but run ‘int a Dryd Go you, and find me out a.man-that has ne s / gum, but improperly, becaufe it i and not foluble in water We hav and pu 4. To beat; whether from the form which L'Eftrange ufes, or by corraption of Ja/b pot difentangl he coul whenc be made That, /ac'd with bitsof ruftic, makesafront Lac is ufually diftinguifhed by the name of To ufe brevity, and avoid.much labouring of the- 2 ‘net proceede t a fomentatio Look, love, what envious ftreak Do /ace the fevering clouds in yonder Eaft Night's candles are burnt out, and jocund da Shake/,Stands tiptoe on the mifty mountains tops Then clap four flices of pilafter on't Denbam 7o La"BOUR. ¥ 4 1. TFo work at; to move with. difficulty to form with labour; to profecute wit effort that will mak ha 3. To embellifh with variegations I' th' maze and winding /abyrinths o' th' world And feem'd tolabour with th' infpiring God. - Pope to hi Effe Prior Sbakg@wre. Clarendon himfelf My foul is on her journey; do not no Divert, or lead her back, to lofe herfel There lay a log unlighted on the earth When fhe was labouring in throws of birth ¥or th' unborn chief thefatal fiiters came And rais'd it up, and tofs'd it on the flame Dryden's Owvid Here, like fome furious prophet, Pindar rode is to be grante o his accuftomed warinefs and fkill %. To be in child-birth; to be in travail work Sandys 'The ear Wake's Preparation for Death My clamours tea The ear's foft labyrinthy and cleft the air It is but a night-gown in refpe& of yoursy cloth of gold and coats, and /ac'd with filver. Shake/p Donne now out of ufe 2. To adorn with gold or filver textures fewed on A lip. No Hanmer The tender labyrinth of a-maid's foft ear A cant word Thefe glitt'ring fpoils, now made the victor's gain, He to his body fuits ; but fuits in vain Mefiapus® helm he finds among the reft Dryd And Jaces on, and wears the waving creft Like Mrs. Primly's great belly; fhe may /ace it down before, but it burnifhes on her hips. Congrewe When Jenny's ftays are newly /ac'd Priose Fair Alma plays about her waift Words, which would tea _ As founding cymbals aid the lub'ring moon and Herbert. But /ac'd his crefted helm, and ftrode away and dainty trims, wherei Shakef. Cymbeline Jove angry lord, by /abourfome petition Shakefs Hamlet my flowleave There Minotaurs, and ugly treafons lurk thread is coarf on a Jaced fock, by which the weak parts were Wifemane ftrengthened At this, for new replies he did not ftay Suffolk, flay Thou may'ft not wander in that labyrinth and drums fhall fright her from.th Sugar I caufe LA'BYRINTH. 2. /. [labyrinthus, Liatin. A "miaze ; a place formed with inex tricable windings 5. To be in diftrefs; to be prefled a ftuff, whof eilet holes Forge [Spanith. wear 7o Liace. @. a. [from the noun. 1. To faften with a ftring run throug Word of denial in thy /zbras here Word of denial, froth-and {¢um thou left: ' Shak B. Fonfon I was called to another, who in childbed. /aboure W ifeman of an ulcer in her left hip # / carioufl If haply he the fe& purfues That read and comment upon news He takes up their myfterious face He drinks his coffee without /ace. LA'BOURSOME. adj. [from Jabour.] Mad with great labour and diligence. No ' in ufe Granville 6 Mocking the /ab'rer's toil, returning fill Granwville Is love The ftone that Jabours up the hill Mocking the lab'rer's toil, returning fill threa But trimm'd with curious /ace The ftone that labours up the hill fin round Sir, I am a true Jabourer3 I earn that T eat get that I wear; owe no man hate; envy no man' Shake[peare happinefs Eccluf. xix, 1 {hall not be rich That in the night they may be a guard to us 1. 'To move with difficulty H ment the moft part, only upon light-headed, weak men whofe fatisfaction was not to be/aboured for. Claren A labouring man that is given to drunkennefs o 5. Textures of thread, with gold or filver takes pains in any employ wh 2. On Ornament ing of coftly /aces; and, if they be brought from Bacon, Traly, they are in great efteem The prince cannot fay to the merchant, I hav no need of thee ; nor the merchant to the labourer t i S e t o e n n v h 2. To do work; to take pains Savift Or throw cold water in her face Our Englith dames arc much given to: the wear Each waxing moon fupply'd her wat'ry ftore To fwell thofe tides, which from the line did bea y D e o f i l B t t e f v f i b Thei pr f a e d i c s o r p l i a e Lalou r v d v h f m n m u y a m o s lin t n t b A diets Not balmy fleep to /ab'rers faint with pain Not fhow'rs to larks, or fun-fhine to the bee Pepe Are half fo charming, as thy fight to me Vet hence the poor are cloth'd, the hungry fed Health to himfelf, and to his infants bread Pope The /ab'rer bears Sbalz{[pmwr woven a y t o r b / t ' e f b f T " For your highnefs" good 1 ever Jabour'd Shakefp. Hens VIII More than mine own ‘Who is with him -None but the fool, who labours to out-jef Shakefp. K. Lear His heart-ftruck injuries Let more work be laid upon the men, that the Exod. v 9 may Jabour therein He is fo touch'd with the memory of her benevolence and proteion, that his foul /abours for a Notes on the Ody/ffé expreflion to reprefent it Epaphras faluteth you, always /labouring fervently for you in prayers, that.ye may ftand perfet Cole 1ve 12 Neb. ive 22 _and /abour on the day As a man had a right to all he could employ hi labour upon, fo he had ne temptation to /abour fo Locke - more than he could make ufe of 4 Bacon ""gavalry, but never good ftable foot When 4hall T come te th'-top-of that, fane hill? is love Doll ne'er wag call'd to cut her Jace l n g a e e b n t f m r a f I South's Sermonss | e t a b b e d a f h t a t sen, a o g Latin. v h m y s e u b l a l f k"wo 1. To toil; w a& with painful eftort -Yo Break too toilfome work with the obligation, and ‘i in pangs till "it-bg de-{ O! cut my lace, left my heart cracking, . c e F u r o a [ / 7 dies in Jabour R R La'EO a r o . i e o p e i w O t g r " even travails His heart is in coatintal aboy livered LA lence And my, fons /lacerate and rip up the womb that brought them forth viper-like; Howel's England's Tearse The heat breaks through the water, fo as to lacerate and lift up great bubbles too heavy for th air to buoy up, and canfeth boiling Derbam's Phyfico Theology Here Jacerated friendfhip claims a tear Vanity of Human Wifkes Lacera'Tion. a /. [from lacerate.] Th women act of tearing or rending; the breac Fairfax 3. A plaited ftring, wit faltén their clothes . whic made by tearing. Th |