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Show L3 LAD + The dogs by the river Nilus® fide being thirfty lap haftily as they run along the fhore Digby They had foups ferved up in broad difhes, an fo the fox fell to Japping himfelf, and bade hi gueft heartily welcome L' Eftrange frones of .chymifts in imitation being eafily deted- 1 6 ed by an ordinary lapidift LAPIS. n. /. [Latin. La'eis Lazuli maftication and deglutition, in man, by licking; i the dog and cat kind by lapping Ray on Creation Tolick up For all the ref They'll take fuggeftion, as a cat Zaps milk Shak bellowing ftill Both men and dogs came and /apt their fill yet they tore the hide Chapman's I./ia{{ La'ppoc. #n. /. [lap and dog.] A littl dog, fondled by ladies in the lap One of them made his court to the /ap-dog t Collier improve his intereft with the lady Thefe, if the laws did that exchange afford Would fave their /ap-dog fooner than their lord Diyden Lap-dogs give themfelves the roufing thake Pope And fleeplefs lovers juft at twelve awake La'prer, 2. /i [from Jap. 1. One who wraps up They may be lappers of linen, and bailiffs of th manor beftow by whole /apfulls on poor credulous]g'lrls Locke La'picipE.z./. [lapicida, Lat.] A ftonecutter Dia La'piparY. #n. f. [lapidaire, Fr. On who deals in ftones or gems As a cock was turning up a dunghil, he efpied diamond: 'Well (fays he), this fparkling fooller now to a lapidary would have been the making o him; but, as to any ufe of mine, abarley-corn ha been worth forty on't L Eftrange Of all the many forts of the gem kind reckone up by the /apidaries, there are not above three o four that are original Woodward's Nat. Hiftory FoLAP1DATE. v!a. [Japids, Latin.] T itone ; to kill by ftoning D) Larpipa'rion. . [. [lapidatio, Lat. lapidation, Fr. A ftoning Lari'veous. adj. [lapidens, Lat.] Stony of the nature of ftone There might fall down into the /apideons matter before it was concreted into a ftone, fome fmal toad, which might remain there imprifoned, til the matter about it were condenfed Ray Laripe'scence. #. /. [lapidefeo, Latin. Stony concretion Of lapis ceratites, or cornu foffile, in fubterrancous cavities, there are many to be found in Ger many, which are but the Japidefcencies faétive mutations of hard bodies and putreBrown Laripe'sCENT. adj. [lapidefeens, Latin. Growing or turning to ftone Larvipirica'TiON. #. [ [lapidification French.] The aét of forming ftones Induration or "/apidification of fubftances mor foft is another degree of condenfation Bacon Larioi'rick. adj. [lapidifigue, French. Forming ftones The atoms of the lapidifick, as well as falin principle, being regular regular ftones do concu in producin Grew La'pivist. n /. [from lapides, Latin. A dealer in ftones or gems Hardnefs bodies bein wherei fom ftones exceed all othe exalted to that degree, that art i vain endeavours to counterfeit ity the factitious Voor. 11 Swift 2. One who laps or licks La'eppeT. 2, /. [diminutive of /ap,] Th parts of a head-drefs that hang loofe How naturally do you apply your hand other's Jappets, and ruffles, and mantuas LAPSE. n. /. [lapfus, Lat. 1. Flow fall; glide to eac Sawift fmooth courfe Round 1 fa Hill, dale, and fhady woods, and funny plains La'eruL. n. /. [lap and full.] As muc as can be contained in the lap One found a wild vine, and gathered thereof wil gourds his Japful, and thred them into the pot o pottage 2 Kings ‘Will four per cent. increafe the number of lenders? if it will not, then all the plenty of mone thefe conjurers beftow upon us, is but like the gol and filver which old women believe other conjurer A flone debted for their beautiful ultra-marine colour, whic is only a calcination of /apis lazuli Hill Upon a bul ‘Two horrid lyons rampt, and feiz'd, and tugg'd off Ray The /apis lazuli, or azure ftone, isa copper ore very compact and hard, fo as to take a hig polith, and is worked into a great varicty of toys It is found in detached lumps, of an elegant blu colour, variegated with clouds of white, and vein of a fhining gold colour: to it the painters are in The tongue ferves not only for tafting, but fo ZoLar.w.a i A And liquid /apfe of murm'ring ftreams Milton Notions of the mind are preferved in the memory notwithftanding /apfe of time 2 Petty error; {mal offence; little faylt miftake Hale fligh Thefe are petty errors and minor /apfes, not confiderably injurious unto truth Th weaknef Browwn's Pulg. Er of human underftandin all wil confefs; yet the confidence of moft pracically dif owns it; and it is eafier to perfuade them of i from others /apfes than their own Glanville This fcripture may be ufefully applied as caution to guard againft thofe /apfes and failings, t which our infirmities daily expofe us Rogers It hath been my conftant bufinefs to examin whether I could find the fmalleft /apfe in flile o propriety through my whole collection, that I migh _fend it abroad as the moft finithed piece Savift 3. Tranflation of right from one to another In a prefentation to 2 vacant church, ought to prefent within four months, and man within fix, otherwife a deyolution, o right, happens layma clergyJapfe o Ayliffe Zo Larse. v. n. [from the noun. 1. ‘Toglide flowly ; to fall by degrees Thi difpofition to fhorte our words by re trenching the vowels, is nothing elfe but a tendenc to /apfe into the barbarity of thofe northern nation from whom we are defcended, and whofe languages Tabour all under the {ame defeé z. To fail in any thing mit a fault Savift to flip ; to com I have ever verified my friends Of whom he's chief; with all the fize that verit Would without Japfing fuffer Shakefpeare To lapfe in fulnef Is forer than to lie for need; and falthoo Is worfe in kings than beggars. Shakefpeare's Cymb 3. To {lip, as by inadvertency or miftake Homer, in‘his characters of Vulcanand Therfites has /apfed into the burlefque charater, and departe from that ferious air eflential to an epick poem Addifon Let there be no wilful perverfion of another' meaning ; no {udden feizure of a /apfed fyllable t play upon it Watts 4. To lofe the proper time truth, or faith Once more I will rene His lapfed pow'ts; though forfeit, and inthrall' By fin to foul exorbitant defires Milton A fprout of that fig-tree which was to hid the nakednefs of /apfed Adam Decay of Picty All publick forms fuppofe it the moft principal univerfal and daily requifite to the /apfing ftate o human corruption Thefe were looke grea feveritie Decay of Picty on as /apfed perfons, an of penanc wer prefcribe as appears by the canons of Ancyra Stilling flect La'pwine. n. /. [lap and wing. morous bird with long wings Ah them A cla but I think him better than I fay And yet would herein others eyes were worfe Far from her neft the lgpwing cries away My heart prays for him, though my tongue d curfe Shakefpeare And how in fields the lapwing Tereus reigns The warbling nightingale in woods complains. Dryd La'pwork #. [. [lap and work. in whic Wor one part is interchangeabl wrapped over the other A bafket made of porcupine quills: the groun is a pack-thread caul woven, into which, by th Indian women, are wrought, by a kind of lap aork, the quills of porcupines, not fplit, but o the young ones intire; mixed with white and blac in even and indented waves Grew's Myfaun La'rRBOARD. #. / The left-hand fide of a fhip, when you ftan with your face to the head: oppofed to the far board Harris Or when Ulyfles on the larboard thunn' Charybdis, and by the other whirlpool fteerd Milton Tack to the /arboard, and ftand off to fea Vecr ftarboard fea and land Dryden. La'rceny., n. f. [larcin nium, Lat. Petty theft Fr LarcH. n. /. [larix, Lat. A tree latroci Thofe laws would be very unjuft, that fhoul chaftize murder and petty larceny with the fam punifhment Spectator Some botanical criticks tell us, the poets hav not rightl followed the traditions of antiquity i metamorphofing the fifters of Phaéton into poplars who ought to have been turned into /zrch trees clean.sh data import.tsv out README for that it is this kind of tree which fheds a gum and is commonly found on the banks of the Po Addiforn on Itaiy LARD. ». /. [lardum 1., The greafe of fwine Latin; lard Fr. So may thy paftures with their flow'ry feafts As fuddenly as /ord, fat thy lean beafts Dinnre 2. Bacon ; the fleth of {wine By this the boiling kettle had prepar'd And to the table fent the fmozking /ard On which with eager appetite they dine A fav'ry bit, that ferv'd to relith wine Dryde The facrifice they fped Chopp'd off their nervous thighs, and next prepar' T' involve the lean in-cauls Zo LarD. @, a the noun. and men [Jarder with Zzrd Dryden French fro 1. To ftuff with bacon The larded thighs on loaded altars laid No man /ards falt pork.with orange peel Dryden Or garnifhes his lamb with fpitch-cockt eel. King 2. To fatten Now Falftaff fweats to death Myfelf ftood out For which if T be /apfed in this place I fhall pay dear Shakefpeare's Tavelfth Night As an appeal may be deferted by the appellant'slapfing the term of law, fo it may alfo be deferte by a lapfe of the term of a judge Ayliffe 5. To fall by the negligence of one proprietor to another If the archbifhop fhall not fill it up within fi months enfuing, it /ap/es to the king T'o fall from perfe&ion Ayliffe And Jards the lean earth as he walks along Brave foldier, doth heli Lardigg the plain Shat Shakefpeare's Henry V 3. To mix with fomething elfe by wa of improvement An exat command Larded with many feveral forts of reafons Let no alien interpof Shak To /ard c with wit thy hungry Epfom profee Dryd H |