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Show LA any /andlord together Shak tenged f [Jand an fudden tranflation of propert by the death of a rich man ia lan undation Apprehenfion an of the affections of Kent all other places, looked like a /andfiood, that migh Clarendon roll they Knew not how far LA'~D-FORCES [land and force. 7., / Warlike powers not naval foldiers tha ferve on land of truth We behold in France the greateft Jand-forces tha have ever been'known under any chriftian prince #. /. [land and bolder. On Money as in his hands that pays the labourer and /Jandbolder3 and if this man want money, the manuLacke fa@ure is not made, and {0 the trade is loft to none but /dnd-jebbers homi new funds La'NDGRAVE. 7. f count, German. dominion LA'NDING La'NDING-PLACE Witte ants o 11' rat ] fort i Swift title o A Germa n. /). [{rom /and. "T'he top of ftairs Let the ftairs to the.upper rooms be upon a, fair open newel, and a fairlanding-place at the top. Bac. The landing-place is the uppermoft ftep of pair of ftairs, viz. the floor of the room you afcen Moxon upon There is a ftair-cafe that ftrangers are generall carried to fee, where the eafinefs of the afcent, th clean.sh data import.tsv out README difpofition of the lights, and the convenient /anding Addifor on Italy are admirably well contrived What the Romans cailed veftibulum was no par of the houfe, but the court and landing-place beArbutbnot on Coins tween it and the ftreet La'~xpLapy. z. /. [lend and lady. #. A woman who has tenants holding fro her 2. The miftrefs of an inn If a folder drinks his pint, an offers paymen in Wood's half-pence, the /and/ady may be unde Swvift fome difficulty La'~prEss. adj. [from Jand. property3 without fortune Withou Young Fortinbra Hath in the fkirts of Norway, here and there Shark'd up alift of landlefsrefolutes. Shak. Hamlet A Jandlefs knight hath made a landed fgquire SZ.'z{k,J)‘A¢"a re LA'NDLOCKED, adj. [land and Jsck.| Shu in, or enclofed with land There are few natural parts better Jandlocked, an clofed on all fides, than this feems to have been Addifon on Italy La'nprorer. #. /. [land and lopen, Dut. Alandman ; a term of reproach ufed b feamen of thofe who pafs their lives o fhore La'Nprorp. #. [ [/and and lord"' 1. On ha wh own lands or houfes tenants under him, To him that language, though to non Of th' others, as his own was knowh 3. Stile and Ta LAND-WAITER. z. /. [/land and awaiter. An officer of the cuftoms, who is to watc what goods are landed Give a guinea to a knavith Jand-avaiter, and h fhall connive at the'merchant for cheating the quee Sawift's Examiner of ‘an hyndred To They are invincible by reafon of the overpourin mauatains that back the one, and flender fortifica Sandys's Fourney Lawg. a. f. [laen, Dutch ; lana Al flyin Through a'fraicht /are, the'enemy full-hearte Sbakefp. Cymbeline Struck down fome mortally 1 know cach /ane, and every alley green Dingle or buthy dell, of this wild wood Otaway A pack-horfe is driven.conflantly in a narro Locke lape and dirty road 2. A narrow ftreet;, an alley There is no, freet, not many /anes, where ther does not live one that has relation to the church Spratt's Sermons ftanding o me each fide Th earl' fervants- ftood range and 1ade the king a fane o both fides DIl haften to my troops And fire their languid {ouls with Cato's virtue Addiforte 'TEME o sf [fro La'vcuipLy ad | Weakly ; feebly The mentrau Janguid. work'd as Janguidly upon th Boyiz eoral asit did before LA'NGUIDNESS. Weaknefs 2 f [fro Zanguid. feeblenefs; wantof ftrength ToLa'NcuisH langues, Lat. v. #n. [lamguir French ; i. To grow feeble; to pine away ; tolof ftrength Let herlanguif A drop of blood a-da and, being aged Die of this folly Shakefpeare's Cymbelinc ‘We and our fathers do Jangzift of fuch difeafes 2 E/dras What can we expedt, but that her languifbin Decay of Piet_,- His forrows bore him off'; and foftly lai His'Jang«ifb'd limbs upos his homely bed Dr 2. ‘To be no longer vigorous iri motion ; not to be vivid in appearance The troops with hate infpir'd Their darts with clamour at a diftance drive And only keep the languifb'd wathalive Dryden 3. To fink or pine under forrow,.or an flow paffion What man who know What woman is, yea, what fhe cannot chuf But muft be, will his free hours Tanguifb ou For affur'd bondage Bacow's Henry V1 st Q heartlefs fhould end in death Milten And every bofky burn Through a clofe /aze as I purfu'd my journey betwee The third is a fort of language-maffer, who is toinSpete ftruék them in the fileproper for aminifter Saxon. 1. A narrow way between hedges ;. A paflag Popr 2. Dull If mortgages were regiftered, Jand-taxes might Lacke reach the lender to pay his proportion tion of the other to Jandward He wand'ring long a wider citcle made And many /anguag'd nations has furvey'd noan.j th Whatever rendars the motion: of the blood /a7guid, difpofeth to an acid. acrimony; what aceele rates the anotion of: the bleod, difpofeth to an' alkaArbuthnot. line acrimony No fpace can be afligned fo vaft, but ftill a large may be imagined.; no motion fo fwift or languid but 1 greater velocity or flownefs may. fill be conceived Bentley Pope laxd. Pope LA'NGUID. adj. [languidus, Latin. 1. Faint; weak; feeble The wat'ry landfeape of the pendant woods [fro Their praife is ftill-the flile is excellent The fenfe, they humbly take upon content LA'NGUET. u. [, [languette, French.] An | thig cot in the form of a tongue As good a poet as you are, you cannot make- fine landfcapes than thofe aboutithe'king's houfe." Addif Oft in her glafs the mufing thepherd fpie LA'NDWARD, ‘adv wards the land for drefs men LA'NGUAGE-MASTER. 7. /. [language an mafter.] One whole profeflion 1s to teach languages ‘2. A pifture, reprefenting an extent o fpace, with the various objedts in it Lawp-TAX. 7. /i [land and tax. laid upon land and houfes as women La'~vcuacepy adj. [fro Having various languages Where the snibbling flocks do fkray Milton Weare like men enteitained. with the view of fpacious /landfecape, where the eye pafles over on pleafing profpect into-another Addifon And abfent trees, that tremble in the floods manner of expreffion And value books Denk i Though his /anguage fhould not be refin'd Rofcommon. It muft not be obfcure and impudent Others £y Janguage all their care exprefs Logke Ruffet 1awns and fallows grey, or inventors o [land and grave He ot from Rdme alone, but Greece Like jefon, brought the golden fleece Whilfk the lawdfcape round.it meafures If your mafter be a minifter of ftate, let him b $hak As mot to know the language T havelividin Milton Of paradife, and Eden's happy;plains Straight mine eye hath caught new pleafures La'NDJOBBER. #. /. [land and job.] On who-buys and {ells lands for other men a I am ot fuch a truant fince my coming That landfcape ! and of pure; mow purer air Milton Meets his approach The furi fcarce uprifen Shot parallel to th' earth his dewy ray Difcovering in wide /andfcape all the eaf as neceflary to trade, may be confidere good my lord, no Latin O Lovely feem' who holds lands 2. The tongue of one nation as difiin from others La‘noscare! m [ [landfchape, Dutch. 1o A region;o the profpect of a country Temple La'NDHOLDER or is quite befides it Helder for communication of thoughts I' th' mid®, an altar, as'the Jand-mark, frood Ruftick, of grafiy fod Wilton The land-méarks by which places in' ‘the churc had'been known, were removed Clarendon Then land-marks limited toeach'his right Dryden For all before was common as the light Though they are not felf-evident principles, ye if they have been made out from them by a war and unqueftionable dedution, they may ferve a land-marksy t6 | fhew what lies in; the dire€t wa I.A'~pFLO®D. #. /. [land and flood.] ' Im but if we c words and fenten La'NpMark. n. /. [land and mark.] An thing fet up to preferve the boundarie of lands jall. We may define language, if we confider it mor materially, to be letters, formi Clarifja Upon our avrival at the inn, my companien fet ed out the jolly Jandlovd, who knew him by hi Addifo whiftle Temple to crying up magna charta A houfe of commons mudt confift, for the mof Addifon's Freebalder patt, of /anded men La NDPFALL 1. Human fpeech con an ‘fat, fleek loo 2. The mafler of an iun 'they grew landed fel white they had none, whe in a lundlord, to lov pleafur "his temant to fee al LA XGUAGE. 7. [. [Jangage, French ; Jin-gua, Latin. of Ireland Spenfer's Stat but difpesfed Xt is a generou Men, ‘whofe living lieth together in one fhire are. commonly counted greater /anded than' thof Bacon whofe livings are difperfed Cromwell's ofhicers, who swyere for levelling land place there fhall be many of the A little hawk La'werer. 2. This regard thall be had, thatin.no place, unde fortune, not in money but in land'; having a real eftate Alandlefs knight makes thee a Janded fquire L. A A Y iow Shakefpeare's Cymbeli |