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Show L A LA out chufe for myfelf, and have ever fince languifbe under the difpleafure of an inexorable father nc n a nk /a r v b c n t well tied a nc o b p c b ai o n p o a taini Addifors Speciator Let Leonora. confider, that, at the very tim in which fhe /anguifbes for the lofs of l)er‘decc&fc t b bu fs gr a r c e u o p t ea Moif Too rank and too luxuriant in‘their growth Let not my land fo large a promife boaft Left the /azk ears intlengeh of frem be loft. Dr)_'dm Now, now my bearded harveft gilds the plain lover, thereare perfons juft perifhing in a fhipwreck Addifon's Spectator 4. Tolook with foftnefs or tendernefs What poems think you foft, and to be redd - With languifbing regards, and bending head'? Dryd appearance Then forth he walks Beneath the trembling /angzifb of her beam Thomfon's Spring With foften'd foul La'NcuissiNGLY 1. Weakly ; feebly SRS ing. Leav adv, [from languifh withdfeeble foftnefs ‘and to tune theircown ¢dull rhimes itr fuc kno 2. Softnefs of mien La'NGuor. z. /[ [langnor, Lating languenr Hrencha]sa 1. Faintnefls; wearifomenefs Thathe my captive /zzguor thould redeem For thefe, thefe tribunes S/Ifflb' in the duft I writ My heart's deep languor, and my foul's fad teass N Shakelpeare 2. Liftleflnefs ; inattention Academical. difputation ‘gives vigotr and brifknefs: to the mind thus exercifed, and rclieves th languor of privaté fludy and meditation Watts's: Improvement of the Mind 3. Softnefs ; laxity 4. [In phyfick. Languor and laflitude fignifies a faintnefs, whic may arife from-want ot decay of. fpirits, throug indigeftion, or too much® exercife; or from 'd additional weight of fluids, from a diminution o Ruincy fecretion by the common difcharges La'Ncuorous. adj. [languoreux, French. " Tedious; melancholy Not in ufe Dearlady, how fhall I declare thy cafe Viiom late I left in Janguorous conferaint ? - Spenfer T LiaAlNIATE. % @y [Janio Latin. 1 tearin pieces.;.tosend ; to lacerate 1, a'N181CE. n. fid Jawificium, Lat. len manufaé&ure, Wool9l Ihe moth breedeth upon cloth and ether 7ani‘frees, efpecially if they be laid up dankith and wet Bacon La'Ni1cErQuUS. adj. [laniger, Lat.] Bearing wool ifor a candle S190 g God 'fhall be'my hope guide, 'my /antborn to my- feet LANK. adj. Tancke, Dutch. ;i . Can from the /ap of Egypt's widow pluc The ne'er-luft-wearied Antony Shakefpeare Heav'n]s almighty fir Melts on the bofom of his love, and pour _ Himfelf into her /zp in fruitful fhow'rs Crafbaw. Men'expeét that religion'fhould coft them no pains, ‘and ‘that happinefs fhould" drop ‘into ' thei laps. 2 Tillotforr He firuggles into breath, and cries for aid Then, helplefs, in his mother's /zp is laid He creeps, he'walks, and ifluing into man Grudges their life from whence his own began Retchlefs of laws, affeéts to rule alone Anxious to reign, .and reftlefs on the throne Dryd ToLar. . a. [from the noun. 'r.T'o wrap or twift round any thing e hath a long tail, which, as he defcends fro a tree, he /aps round about the boughs, to kee himfelf from falling Grew's Mufeum About the paper, whofe two halves were painte with red and blue, and which was fiff like thi hath the pre-eminence, the ere@ion and inftitutio of this kingdom b\ o Bacon's Atlantis oI5 O thievdth niglit, i Why fhould'ft thou, but for fome felonious end Jnthy dark Janthorn. thus clofe up.the ftar That nature hung in heav'n,-and fill'd their lamp With evetlating oil <B Milton dslik a dar lantborp to hi whic turn it that bears it, but look black and difmal in another'shand Gov. of the Torgue Judge what a ridiculous' thing it were, that th continued fhadow of ‘the earth fhould be broken' b i fudden miraculoas efuptions.ofilight, to prevent th art of thelanterninmakers . More's B iine Dialogues Our ideas ¢fucceed one another in our minds not muchlunlike the images in the infide of a Janthorny turned round by the heat of a candle Locke 2. A lighthoufe; a light hung out t guide fhips Caprea, where the Janthorn fix'd on hig Shines like a moon through the benighted fky While "by-its"beams the wary failor fteers Addifon La'NTEI RN jays A term ufed of a thi as if 4 candle were born ing in the mouth migh light . Bein ver tran{mit th luck in a pair of long lanthorn Jawvs, hewrung his face into a hideous grimace zlfld{fatl's Speciator pafteboard, I lapped feveral times a flender thread o very black filk 2 LNeavton To involve in any thing As through the flow'ring foreft rath fhe fled In her rude hairs fweet flowers themfelves did /zp And flourifhing frefh leaves and bloffoms did enwrap Spenfers The thane of Cawder gan a difmal confli&, = Till that Bellona's bridegroom, Zzpr in proof Confronted him Shakefp. Macleth When we both lay in' the field Frozen almoft to death, how he did /ap me Ev'n in his garments, and did give himfelf All thin' and naked, to the numb cold night Shake[pedre Ever againft eating cares NED Lap me in foft Lydian airs Milton Indulgent fortune does her care employ, . And {miling, broods upon the naked bko Her garment fpreads; and /zps him in the folds And covers with her wings from nightly colds Dryden Here was the repofitery of all the wife contentions for power hetween the nobles and commonss lapt up-fafely in the bofom ‘of a Nero and a Cali gula To Lav S-zui[\‘- w. n T over any tLing The upper wing ends, wher wing of a fly the be Aprea are' opacou /ap over o turned at their ‘hinde tranfparent like th Greav 7o Lar. @, n. [lappian, ‘Saxon j Zappen Dutch. To feed by quick reciprocations of the tongue - Shak Our ftirring als of that king, on of a fociety, which we call Solomon's houfe; th 'nobleft foupidation ‘that ever was, and the lanthor i She bids yo All on the wanton rufhes lay you down And reft your gentle head upon her /zp And fhe will fing the fong that ple'afe:}} you 3 anbas Shakefpeare's Henry IV . A candle lafteth longer in a Janthorn than atlarge Bacan Tuc T'll make my haven in a lady's /ap DMilton. . 1THou azrt-our admiral;. thou beareft the /anthor "in the poopjzbut 3tisisin the-nofe of; thee; . tho art the knight of the: burning lamp vifage Spenfer About him flew by hap Shakefpedre . A tranfparent caf bright fide onl To ifles of fragrance, lily-filver'd vales Dunciad Diffufing languor jn the panting gales Lati . written "Janthorni Vic ; 7 A gentle bee, with his loud trumpet murm'ring 'La'wkness. # /. [from Jazk.}) . Want o Amnnté('cfhé%xcelkn Well hoped I, and fair beginnings had Upon a day, as love lay fveetly flumb'rin And *witch fiveet ladies with my words and looks And gave her to his daughters‘to imbath In:ne€ar'd lavers firew'd with afphodil . My ftay, m Spenfer o Shakefpeare Humility it iexprefles, by~ the ftooping or bending of the head; /anguifbment, when we hangit o Dryden i one fide It feeds each living plant with liquid fap, = And fills, with flow'rs fair Flora's painted Jap. He, 'piteos'of her woes, rearld her /ank head, . terna The fphere of Cupid forty years contains Which T have wafted in long languifbment That feem'd the longer for my greater pains. . Spenfer $5 horizontally" over the knees as one fit down, fo as any thing may lie in it ‘2. Milton {feems to ufe this.word for faint languid of the clothes that is fprea 2. The par Savift plumpnefs [ lanier; French, lannarius 'What's roundly fmooth, or larguifbingly flow. Pope. 'L A" NNER 9 clean.sh data import.tsv out README Latin.] A fpecies of hawk 2. Dully ; tedioufly. Alas | my Dorus, thou feeft .how long and {LA'NSQUENET. 7. . /o [lance and knecht languifbingly the weeks are paft ovex fince our laft i Dutch: S Fis Sidney talking A common foot foldier 1 LA'NGUISHMENT. 7. /. [languiffamment, 2. A'game'at cards French ;. from languifb. Freuch:s la[Janterne %) La"Nrer 1. State of pining v it is by 'miftake ofte By that count which lovers books invent put it into thedith. clean.sh data import.tsv out README Swif?'s Directions to a Footman All in his mother's /ag And nothing left but {kin and bone They juft:keep life and foul together Lat. 1f a joint of meat falls on the ground, take it u gently, wipe it with the /ap of your coat, and the | | Meagre and Jank with fafting grown Pope And the blue languifp of foft Allix's eye. [lanugingfis Lar. n. /. [lz=ppe, Saxon; /lappe, G man. loofe part of a garment, whic 1 . Th may be doubled at pleafure "Thus dreams the wretch, and yainly thus dreams on Till his, /ank purfe declares his money gone. Dryd "Sof La'nGuisH. 2. /. [from the verb. Bayle taining ten times as much adj Downy ; covered with foft hair flendex: not fat ; not plump g b ' g e c t ' c r o t f h o m The c p e a S n i r t e t t w a l Are lank an k a f ' i f o w c f e n W n Nam e n D e r p ' f r t Lank, as an u d a b e g e i c r t t i w d We le fifteen when I took the liberty t abou not ftiffened 'Lanv'erxovs not filled up 1. Loofe The land fhall mourn, and every one that dwellet Hofray ive 3 therein languifb T have been talking with a fuitor here A man that languijbes in your difpleafure Shakefp. Othello I wa T. A Th |