OCR Text |
Show Our authors writ Whether in profe, or verfe, tis all the fame The profe is fuftian, and the numbers /ame. Dryd Shrive but their title, and their moneys poize A laird and twenty pence pronounc'd with noife ‘When conftru'd but for a plain yeoman go And a good fober two-pence, and well fo. Cleaveland /[ [xde- Lafry. 1. The people, as diftinguifhed fro 3. Imperfe& Shrubs are formed into fundry (h.lpe by moulding them within, and cutting them without; bu they are but /ame things, bunb too fmall to kee figure Bacon th Swift, who could neither fiy nor hide Came fneaking to the chariot fid clergy humbl clerg i humble /aity too, fince humility is a virtue tha Saift cqul‘lv adorns every {tation of life The ftate of a layman Th mor 1ake lame ufual caufe of this deprivation is mere Jaity, or want of holy orders Laxe. 5. /. [lac, Fr. lacus, Lat. 1. A large diffufion of inland water And bounding banks for winding rivers makes Dryden 2. Small plafh of water prifingly beautiful 2 the Saviour of the world 3 Which of our tender Jambkins takeft keep. Spenf. Pafl La'MENESs. 2. /. [from lame. 1. The ftate of a cripple; lofs or inabilit of limbs Imperte&tion; weaknefs If ‘the ftory move, or the attor help th of it with his performance, either of thefe are fufficient to effect a prefent liking. Dry. Span. Fryar Brogwn I ftitch'd up the wound, and let him blood in th arm, advifing a lambative, to be taken as neceflit {hould require Wijeman's Surgery Lamss-woor. z. /. [lamb and avool.] Al mixed with the pulp of roafted apples A cup of lambs-waol r‘m* drank to him there Song ofl/)( King ‘and the Miller V about LAME'NT T La'MBATIVE. 2. /. A medicine taken b licking with the tongue Lflt Diyd Weakly ; unfteadily ; poorly Clean as young /ambkins, or the goofe's down And like the goldfinch in her Sunday gown. Gay In affeétions both of lungs and weazon, phyficians make ufe of fyrups, and /ambative medicines Playin This bi:"uop, to malke out the difparity betwee the heathen @ # l_/(lifl(};.u)‘ lamenter, Fr.] To mourn grxeve5 to exprefs forrow Stilling flee 1 Lvir to wail With expreflion 2 Lampor'pav. #n. / [3dusd% and Having the form of the letter lamda or Sharp's Saxon' Jam Who reproves the Jame, muft gouprights - Dapiel A greyhound, of a moufe colcur of one leg Arbuthnaot a /‘[l] Pope belongs to a lady Moo 1 Hobbunq ; not {mooth: alludingta'th feetofa verle great move th Si t Our fortune on the fea is out of breath An finks moft lamentably Shak. Ant. and Clecp ¢'t lawful that T invocate thy ghoft T'o hear the Jamentations of poor Anne Shakefpeare's Richard I11 His fons buried him, and all Ifracl made grea 7 for him 1 Mac. ii. 10 VTER. 7. f. [fro who mourns or laments lament.] - H Such a cnmplaint good company muft pity, whether they think the /Jzmenter ill or not LaA'"MENTINE co o #./ manatee Spcctatox A fith called a feawhich is near twent feet long, the head refembling that of cow an tw fhort feet, with whic creeps on the fhallows and rocks te g food; but has no fins the fleth is Cov‘- eaten n. / Baiiey [Lat. Thin plate; cu another adj. [fromlamina g ent coloure K the.Jaminate La'mmas to rai fel anothrer worl /!" . to As you are weary of t Reft you, while I lamen One.-pity'd 1irh wv.a T ». [Thi bea ap {OJ"A:l) W' Ju verb. v Lu.flLulz.", t. ‘Sorrow audibly exp grief nttere , l _(ere o 'l O..nCuC, uidTo Basley, T krnow not-on v'hx: a be derived from a c on thi from /a/' 1,'../ wor obliged, at -‘bc time t\f m..fx on the r-- of : \um..l, .J' i 1ga mm to the a In One laugh'd a Lat fro t lamentatio 5 0 i ufed of fuch bodies whofe contes ture difcovers mch a dif ‘-{. ion as that of pl th 1. Crippled . difab]cd in the limbs yod vouchfafe him to bemoan The courfe of the longitudinal finus down throug the middle of it, makes it advifeable to trepan at th [laam, lama lamentably ex coat laid ove La'MinaTED Ye fhall weep and Jamen joice Jeremia men and wome TolLamMEeE NT N LAME. adj Dutch. in itfelf lamentable So as to caufe foi LAMINA The has been unruly where we And umnm.)s were blown down ¢ and, Lamentin S heard i' th' ai ir, ftrange fcre Fro And Tambent dulnefs 1)' tyed 1r»unj his face. ' Dr lamdysidal future of forrow cudgel Dryd "or at leaft upo or token prefled by the old prince princes to compaflion His brows thiek fogs, inftead of glories, "u(: lower part of the os parictale [from lamentable. mournfully mor A lambent flame arofe, which gently. fprea f adv tions "!‘dmfi‘ over without harm his brows, nnd on his temple flies to this /zmentabls re fuge From young ITdlns hea Aroun and them 'T'O"-:. #.f. [lamentatio, Lat. yreflion of orlo,yv ; audible grief Let blindnefs, Jamenefs come; are legs and eye Of equal value to fo great a prize ? Dryden's Fu Digby to chu' Lamencfs kept me at home La'MBATIVE. adj. [from lambo, to lick. Taken by licking pitiful; defpicable 3. Piufully 5 defpicably ZE you fearcely know 'tis fhe Dryler 3. Miferable, in a ludicrous or low fenfe The matte Look not ev'ry lineam i Some will be So lam "y drawn to u.a)./,J T'he vi€tors to their veflels bea And hear behind I 1d groans, a through a micro b fweeteft mufic tune is th A Jamentabl woful mind [from lame. ,,' A forrowtul ; expreffing forrow 2. Mournful Jmherhh withouta ful 1 orc"mp ethmon uf a" [h" part A littl Hubberd's Tale. thou god of fhepherds all ad). /aw/m; adv >Twixt them both they not a Jambkin left And when lambs fail'd, the old fheeps lives they reft LA"MBENT when viewe Lat m the beft The lamentable change Sk kel , The worft returns to laughter LA'MENTABLY or (.r,hut Ihofe m‘mled b'w\me mllr\:\ and, ]m\mz yielde lamb Pan Co 1. Like a cripple; without natural forc nd play ? Pope 2./. [from lamb. LA"MENTABLE. adj. [lamentabilis lamentable, Fr. from lament. Derbam LLA"MELY Thou Lamb of God that takeft away the fins o the world, have mercy upon us. - Common Prayer La'mBkin To add to your laments Wherewith you now bedew king Henry's hearfe Shake[p I muft inform you of a difmal fight g are fcope I''m young ; but fometh You may deferve of him through me, and wifdom \t lamo To offer up a weak, poor, i Macbeth T appeafe an angry god. ~ Sh The Jamb thy riot dooms to Nud to-day Typically to cripple The Jamellated antennz of fome infeéts are fur harfh. Itis mwe of cochineal. Dryde LAMB. #. /. [lamé, Gothick and S;xxon. 1. The young of a i"ecp he thy knowledgé wouldhe LA"MELLATED. adj. [lamella, Lat. vered wnl) filins or ancs A middle colour, betwixt ultramarin and vermilion, yet it israther {weet tha Hm uzviff ‘he fon and hei Affronted once a cock of noble kind And either Zam'd his legs, or ftruck him blind. Dryd If you happen to let the child fall, and /ame it never confefs Savift sonvHe 1dd> the running {prings and ftanding /akes 3 2. Expreflion of forrow l never heard of fuch another encounter, whic lames report to follow it, and undoes defcription t do it Shakefpeare Ayliffe's Parer Dryd Of one diftrefs'd, and maftiffs mingled cries "To be lamented; caufing forrow And offer'd many a Jame excufe He never meant the leaft abufz o LA'vI E. @, a. [{rom the adjeflive. a an one a very goo unfatisfaétory The loud /aments arif L Th Lamn. n. [ [plapopb, Saxon. lord of a manor in the Scottifh dialeét A LA LA L'A R l"] made m:‘ oil anda w |