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Show LA Duyden Swearing by heaven thing the poets think this no their plays are fo much /arded with it Collier's View of the Stage LA'RDER. #. f. [lardier, old French from Jard.] The room where meat 1 kept or falted This fimilitud is not borrowed of the arde Afecham houfe, but out of the fchool houfe Flefh is ill kept in a room that is not cool whereas in a cool and wet Jarder it will keeplonger Bacon .So have I feen in Jarder dark Of veal a lucid loin Old age Morofe, perverfe in humour, diffiden Dorfet His /arder and his kitchen too obferves And now, left he fhould want hereafter, fi;éves mg On 7. /. [from larder. who has the charge of the larder A bit o LARDON. n. f. [French. bacon LARGE. adj. [large, French; largus Latin. 1. Big Charles II. afked me, What could be the reafon that in mountainous countries the men were com monly larger, and yet the cattle of all forts fmaller Temple Jarge of limbs Great Theron of giant height Dryden Warwick, Leicefter, and Buckingham, bear large boned fheep of the beft fhape and deepef Mortimer {taple 2. Wide extenfive Their former large peopling was an effect o Carew's Survey the countries impoverifhing Let them dwell in the land, and trade therein Gen. xxxiv. 21 for it is Jarge enough for them There he conquered a thoufand miles wide an Abbot's Defcription of the World darge 3. Liberal ; abundant Tho Jarge plentiful fhalt drink of thy fifter's cup deep an Exckicl Vernal funs and fhower /argeft influence Diffufe their warmeft 4. Copious ; diffufive Savift as the puts every one to ftand upon his guard, an 2 I might be very /arge upon the importance an advantages of education, and fay a great many thing Felton o the Clafficks which have been faid before Without reftraint ; with 5. At LarGE out confinement If you divide a cane into two, and one fpeak a the one end, and you lay your ear at the other, i will carry the voice farther than in the air at /arge Bacon Thus incorporeal fpirits to {fmalleft form Reduc'd their fhapes immenfe ; and were at /arge Though without number ftill Milton The children are bred up in their fathers' way or {o plentifully provided for, that they are left a Spratt barge Your zeal becomes importunate T've hitherto permitted it to rav And talk ar large5 but learn to keep it in Xeft it fhould take more freedom than I'll give it Addifon Diffufely; in the full ex 6. 4t Larce tent Difcover more at Jarge what caufe that was Shakefpeare For I am ignorant, and cannot guefs It does not belong to this place to have that poin Watts debated az Jarge LA'RGELY. adv. [from Jarge. 1, Widely; extenfively this nature was that /arum O both wak a man, and of itfelf light a candle for him at an Wilkins fet hour I fee men as lufty and ftrong that eat but tw meals a day, as others, that have fet their ffomachs his old honours lofe like larums to call on the for fou or five Locke 2. Greatnefs; comprehenfion The young AEneas, all at once let down There will be occafion for /argenefs of mind an Cullier of Friendfbip agreeablenefs of temper Stunn'd wit /arum half the town his gidd 3. Extenfion; amplitude Dunciad Lary'NcoToMY. 7. [. [Mdpvyt and réww laryngotomie, French. Am operatio They which would file away moft from the /argenefs of that offer, do in moft fparing terms acknowHooker ledge little lefs th wher fore-par o th larynx i divided to affift refpiration, during larg tumours upon the upper parts; as in ciumfey Quingy La'ry~Nx. 7. f. [agpuyé. The uppe In all defigns begun on earth below Shakefpeare Falls in the promis'd /argencefs Knowing beft the /argenefs of my own heart toand juft contentment King Charles part of the trachea, which lies belo the root of the tongue before th Shall grief contra the /argenefs of that heart pharynx Waller In which nor fear nor anger has a part Man as far tranfcends the beafts in Jargenefs o defire, as dignity of nature and employment Glanwille's Apology Quincy There are thirteen mufcles for the motion o Derbam the five cartilages of the Jarynx Lascr'VIENT If the Jargenefs of a man's heart carry him be adj [lafciviens Latin. Frolickfome ; wantoning yond prudence, we may reckon it illuftrious weakL'Efirange nefs Lasci'vious. adj. [lafcivus, Latin. 1. Lewd ; luftful 4. Widenefs Suppofing that the multitude and /Jargenefs o rivers ought to continue as great as now ; we ca eafily prove, that the extent of the ocean could b Bentley no lefs La'RGESs. #n. f. [largeffe, French. prefent ; a gift ; a bounty thoug which it were but three inches big, yet woul In length and Jargenefs like the dugs of cows. Dryd In what habit will you go along -Not like a woman; for I would preven The loofe encounters of /afcivious men Shakefp He on Ev Began to caft /afciwious eyes; fhe hi As wantonly repaid; in luft they burn Milton Notwithftanding all their talk of reafon an Our coffers with too great a court liberal /argefs, are grown fomewhat light Shakefpeare philofophy, and thofe unanfwerable difficultie which, over their cups, they pretend to have againf chriftianity; perfuade but the covetous man no to me and my fellows : for they give great /argefe to deify his money, the /afcivious man to thro off his lewd amours, and all their giant-like objec An Clarendon that makes a noife a inftrumen A a certain hour LA'RGENESS. #./. [from Jarge. 1. Bignefs; bulk Hoawel have a continual Zzrum bell in his ears They their fill of love, and love's difport o l M l fe th i g a t m e t o e r l Too my people's goo Shake[peare Shatkefpeare She is become formidable to all her neighbours 4. Abundantly; without {paring Thomfon Skippon gave a /arge teftimony under his hand that they had carried themfelves with great civility y D t e t h l i n l f h v How largely g Thofe, who in warmer climes complai war dwellin hufband How far off lie thefe armies -Within a mile and half =Then fhall we hear their /arum, and they ours The ample propofition that hope malkes bulky he the inftant of our encounter How he lives and eats Nor muft Bumaftu in a continual /arum of jealoufy, comes to me i Watts on the Mind From Pheebus' rays they fuffer pain Muft own, that pain is Jargely pai By gen'rous wines beneath the fhade cornute peakin Th London excells any other city in the whol ts ta ab in o e m n o ef ge Ja i he ei world Spratt The more he ftill abounds, the lefs content La'RDERER l w i y e r l r m t e t o t " Where the a s o t m t i i b a n h t o f explain ‘th 3. Liberally; bounteoufly v His /arum bell might Toud and wide be heard When caufe requir'd, but never out of time, Sper/fer e u f d y f o p 2. C He lards with flourifhes his long harangue *Tis fine, fay'ft thou n He affigned two thoufand ducats, for a bount where they come Bacon's New Atlantis A pardon to the captain, and a /argef clean.sh data import.tsv out README Among the foldiers, had appeas'd their fury. Denbant tions againft chriftianity fhall prefentl z. Wanton ; foft The paltry /argefs too feverelywatch'd That no intruding guefts ufurp a fthare Dryden Irus's condition will not admit of /argeffes. .Addif Dis LARK. 2. /. [lapepce, Saxon; ler nith; Javrack, Scottifh. ing bird Da A fmall fing 1t was the /ark, the herald of the morn Shak Look up a height, the fhrill-gorg'd Jark fo fa Cannot be feen or heard Shakefp. King Lear ‘Th' example of the heav'nly /ar# Thy fellow poet, Cowley, mark. Mark how the /ark and linnet fing With rival note They ftrain their warbling throats To welcome in the fpring Cowley Dryden La'rxer. n. /. [from /ark.] A catcher o larks LA:RKSPUR. n. ). [delphinium. Lasci'viousngss The reafon pretended by Auguftus was the /a/ civioufnefs of his Elegies and "his Art of Love Dryden's Preface to Ovid Lascr'viousiy. adv. [from lafcivious. Lewdly; wantonly; loofely LASH. #. /. [The moft probable etymology of this word feems to be that o Skinner, from fehlagen, Dutch, to firike whence fa/b and /afb. 1. ftroke with any thing pliant an tough A plant La'zum. u. £ [from alarum or alarm. 1. Alarm ; noife noting danger . /& [from la/fcivious. Wantonnefs; loofenefs La"RVATED.ad). [larvatus, Lat.] Matked Dig luxurious Grim vifag''d war hath fmooth'd his wrinkl' front And now, inftead of mounting barbed fteeds To fright the fouls of fearful adverfaries He capers nimbly in a lady's chamber To th/e lafcivious pleafing ofa lute Shakefpeare Larcirion. n. f. [largitio, Latin.] Theat of giving vanifh South From hence are heard the groans of ghofts, th pain Of foundin /aj/bes, aand of draggin ging chaichains. Dryd Rous'd by the Jafb of his own ftubborn tail Our lion now will foreign foes affail Dryden 2. Th |