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Show LA LA In confideration of the Jaxity of their eyes, the Wifeman's Surgery are fubjet to relapfe 5. Opennefs not clofenefs Hold a piece of paper clofe by the flame of candle, and by little and little remove it further off and there is upon the paper fome part of that whic I fee in the candle, and it grows fill lefs and lef as I remove; fo that if I would truft my fenfe, thould believe it as very a body upon the paper as i the candle, though infeebled by the /axity of th Dighy on Bodies channel in which it flows La'xnsss. #. /. Laxity; not teafion; no precifion ; not coftivenefs For the free paffage of the found into the ear, i is requifite that the tympanum be tenfe, and har ftretched ; otherwife the /axnefs of that membran Holder will certainly dead and damp the found T.av. Preterite of Jye 0! would the quarrel /ay upon our heads. Shak H was familiarly acquainted with him at fuc time as he /ay embafiador at Conftantinople, Knolles When Ahab had heard thofe words, he fafted and /ay in fackcloth 1 Kings 1 try'd whatever in the Godhead /ay He rode to rouze the prey xxis 27 Dryden ‘That thaded by the fern in harbour /zy Dryden's Knight's Tale And thence diflodged Leaving Rome, in my way to Sienna, I/ay th firft night at a village in the territories of the ancien Addifon Veii How could he have the retirednefs of the cloifter to perform all thofe ats of devotion in, when th burthen of the reformation /zy upon his fhoulders Francis Atterbury The prefbyterians argued, That if the Pretende fhould invade thofe parts where the numbers an eftates of the diffenters chiefly /zy, they would fi {till Sawift 9o LAY. @. a. [lecgan Dutch. Saxon leggen Thi 1. To place ; to put; to repofite word being correlative to #e, involve commonly immobility or extenfion; punithment /zi4, is a punifhment tha <canmnot be fhaken off; in immobility is included weight One houfe /aid t another, implies extenfion He Jaid his robe from him Fonah They have /zid their fivords under their heads Eckiel Soft on the flow'ry herb I found me /zid. Milton He {acrificing /lai "The entrails on the wood DMilton 2. 'T'o place along Seck not to be judge, being not able to tak away iniquity, left at any time thou fear the perfo of the mighty, and /ay a tumbling-block in the wa of thy uprightnefs Eccluf A ftone was laid on the mouth of the den, Danicl 3. To beat down corn or grafs Another ill accident is /zying of corn with grea rains in harveft Bacon's Natural Hiftory Let no theep there play Nor frifking kids the flowery meadows /ay May 4. Tokeep from rifing; to fettle; to fll Tllufe th® advantage of my power And /zy the fummer's duft with thowets of blood Shake[peare It was a fandy foil, and the way had been ful of duft; but an hour or two before a refrefhin fragrant fhower of rain had /zid the duft Ray 5. To fix deep; to difpofe regularly either of thefe notions may be conceive from the following examples ; but regularity {eems rather implied; fo w fay, to /ay bricks ; to /ay planks Schifmaticks outlaws V or criminal perfons ar not fit to /zy the foundation of a new colony Bacon I./ay the deep foundations of a wall And Enos, nam'd from me, the city call, Dryden u f o t u i l p i l c t a Men will b t a t f l f m d u r p dations of knowled r r f o t d u f o t y / u r way 1 have p Locke 6. To put to place i p h e t a a h t i r f Then he o t t l r v t : fi h n k i t m t t b by aga f C n l F e a p e a S i of e n f h la Till us death /a a c r b u { b ar w o l m a ri T Donne They fhall /ay hands on the fick, and recover Mark They, who fo ftate a queftion, do no more bu feparate and difentangle the parts of: it, one froz* another, and /zy them, when fo difentangled, i Locke their due order We to thy name our annual rites will pay Pope's Statius And on thy altars facrifices /ay 7. To bury tointer David fell on fleep, and was /aid unto his f'fx.thers Aéts, xiiie 36 and faw corruption 8. To ftation or place privily Fofb. viii 2 Pfalms The wicked have Jzid a fnare for me no wait O wicke dwelling of the righteous 9. To fpread on a furface man againf th Prov. xxive 15 Watts 10. To paint to enamel The pitures drawn in our minds are /aid in fad ing colours; and, if not fometimes refiefhed, vanif Lacke and difappear 11. To put into any ftate of quiet They bragged, that they doubted not but t abufe, and /ey aflecp, the queen and council o Bacon England 12. Tocalm Friends to fiill ; to quiet; toallay loud tumults are not /ai Withhalf the eafinefs that they are rais'd. B. Fonfon Thus pafs'd the night fo foul, till morning fai Came forth with pilgrim fleps in amice grey ‘Who with her radiant finger {till'd the roa Of thunder, chas'd the clouds, and /zid the winds Milton After a tempeft, when the winds are /zid The calm fea wonders at the wrecks it made Waller I fear'd I fhould have foun A tempeft in your foul, and came to /ay it. Denban Atonce the wind was /zid, the whifp'ring foun Was dumb, a rifing earthquake rock'd the ground Dryden 13. To prohibit a {pirit to walk The hufband found no charm to lay the devil i a petticoat but the rattling of a bladder with bean in it L'Eftrange 14. To fet on the table Hof. xi. 4 I Jaid meat unto thems 15. 'To propagate plants by fixing thei twigs in the ground The chief time of /aying gilliflowers is in July when the flowers are gone 16. To wager to ftake Never more thall my torn mind be heal'd Nor tafte the gentle comforts of repofe A dreadful band of gloomy cares furround me An /ay ftron fiege to m diftradted foul ,Pbi/fp: 20. To apply nearly She /ayeth her hand to the fpindle and he hands hold the diftaff Prov. xxxi, 19 It is better to go to the houfe of mourning tha to go to the houfe of feafting ; for that is the end o all men, and the living will /ay it to his heart Ecclef. vii, 2 The peacock /aid it extremely to heart, th being Juno's darling bird, he had not the nightin L'Eftrange gale's voice He that really /ays thefe two things to heart the extreme neceflity that he is in, and the fmal poffibility of help, will never come coldly to a wor Dugpa of that concernment 21. To add ; to conjoin ‘Wo unto them that /ay field to field Ifa. v. 8 wha of difclofure If the "finus lie diftant, /zy it open firft, an Mortimer's Hufbandry But fince you will be mad, and fince you ma Sufpet my courage, ifI fhould not lay The pawn I proffer fhall be full as good Dryden 17. Torepofite any thing cure that apertion before you divide that in ano Wileman 23. Tofcheme; to contrive Every breaft fhe did with fpirit inflame Yet fill freth projets lay'd the grey-ey'd dame Chapman Homer is like his Jupiter, has his terrors, fhak ing Olympus; Virgil, like the fame power in hi benevolence, counfelling with the gods, /aying plan for empires Pope. Do Diego and w have /zid it fo, that befor the rope is well about thy neck, he will break i and cut thee down 24. To charge as a payment A tax /aid upon land feems hard to the landholder, becaufe it is fo much money going out o his pocket 25. Toimpute Locke to charge Preoccupied with wha do, than what you thould do the grain to voice him conful us Shake[peare bloody deed be anfwered us, whofe providenc You rather muf Made you againi Lay the fault o How fhall thi It will be /aid t Shoeuld have kept fhort, reftrain'd, and out of haunt, This mad young man Shakefpeare's Hamlets ‘We need not Jay new matter to his charge. Shak Men groan from out of the city, yet God layeth not folly to them Fob, xxive 12 Let us be glad of this, and all our fear Lay on his providence Paradife Regain'd ‘The writers of thofe times Jay the difgraces an ruins of their country upon the numbers and fiercenefs of thofe favage nations that invaded them Temple r!‘hey lay want of invention to his charge; capital crime Dryden's A neid You reprefented it to the queen as wholly innocent of thofe crimes which were /zid unjuftly t its charge Dryden They /ay the blame on the poor little ones Locke There was eagernefs on both fides; but this i far from laying a blot upon Luther Arterbury 26. To impofe as evil or punifhment The wearieft and moft loathed lif That age, ach, penury, imprifonment Can /ay on nature, is a paradif After the egg lay'd, there is no further growt or nourifhment from the female. Bacon's Nat. Hift A hen miftakes a picce of chalk for an egg fhalt thou /ay upon him ufury Exod. xx. 25 The Lord fhall /ay the fear of you, and the drea 18. To exclude eggs and fits upon it ; fhe is infenfible of an increafebo diminution in the number of thofe the lays. Addifon 19. To apply with violence; as Arbuthuot The fparrow hath found an houfe, and the fiwallow a neft, for herfelf, where fhe may /lay he young Pfal. Ixxxiv. 3 blows The wars have /zid whole countries wafte. Addifon The colouring upon thofe maps fhould be /zid o fo thin, as not to obfcure or conceal any part of th lines 22. To put in a ftate; implying fome Lay thee an ambuth for the city behind thee La Lay fiege ageinft it, and build a fort ‘again Ezek, iy it, -and cafta mount againft it To what we fear of death. Shakefp. Meafs for Meaf Tho fhalt not be to him as an ufurer, neithe of you upon all the fand Deut. xiv 25 . 'Thefe words were not {poken to Adam: neither indeed, was there any grant in them mad t Adam; but a punithment /aid upon Eve Locke z7. To enjoi altion as a duty or a rule of To |