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Show LA LA ‘We fhould now /ay to our hands to root them up and cannot tell for what the Covenant Oxford Reafons againf To harafs; to attack §5. To Lay zo The great mafter having a careful eye over ever part of the city, went himfelf unto the ftation, whic was then hardly /aid to by the Baffa Muftapha. Knolles Whilt he this, and that, and each man's blow Doth eye, defend, and fhift, being /aid 1o fore Daniel's Civil War Backwards he bears 'T 56. To Lay together bring into one view colle&t t If we /ay all thefe things rogether, and confide the parts, rife, and degrees of his fin, we fhall fin South that it was not for nothing Many people apprehend danger for want of takin the true meafure of things,and /aying matters rightl L Eftrange together My readers will be very well pleafed, to fee f many ufeful hints upon this fubje& /aid together i {o clear and concife a manner 4ddifon's Guardian One feries of confequences will not ferve the turn but many different and oppofite deductions muft b examined, and /aid togetber, before a man can com to make a right judgment of the point in queftion Laocke §7. To Lay under To fubjet to A Roman foul is bent on higher views "To civilize the rude unpolifh'd world And lay it under the reftraint of laws 58. 7o Lay #p or chamber To La up Addifon To confine to the be 'Toflore; to treafure to repofite for future ufe St. Paul did will them of the church of Corinth every man to /ay up fomewhat by him upon th Sunday, till himfelf did come thither, to fend it t the church of Jerufalem for relief of the poor there Hooker Thofe things which at the firft are obfcure an hard, when memory bath /aid them up for a time judgment afterwards growing explaineth them Hooker That which remaineth over, /2y #p to be kep Exod. xvi. 23 until the morning The king muit preferve the revenues of his crow without dimjnution, and /ay »p treafures in ftor againft a time of extremity Bacon The whole was tilled, and the harveft /aid up i feveral granaries Temple 1 will /a2y up your words for you till time fhal Dryden rve This faculty of /aying up, and retaining ideas feveral other animals have to a great degree, as wel 28 man Locke ‘What right, what true, what fit, we juftly call Let this be all my care; for this is all To /ay this harveft p, and hoard with haft ‘What every day will want, and moft, the laft. Pope Fo Lay . 1. 'Fo bring eggs Hens will greedily eat the herb which will mak them /ay the better Meortimer's Hufbandry 2. To contrive; to form a {cheme Which mov'd the king By all the apteft means could be procur'd "To /ay to draw him in by any train Daniel's Civil War 3. To Lay about. 'To firike on all fides to adt with great diligence and vigour. At once he wards and firikes, he takes and pays Now forc'd to yield, now forcing to invade Before, behind, and round about him /ays. Spenfer And /aid about in fight more bufily Than th' Amazonian dame Penthefile Hudibras In the late fuccefsful rebellion, how fudiouil did they /ay abey: them, to caft a flur upon th king f H South in a p } f i to lay a t T 4. o Lay at etpilye thN y Z hi d o g Fierc r f e S t The bladz oft groaned un n ; c a t y l a The fword of him t (22 hold 5. To Lay in for To make overtures o oblique invitation r t f t b e e t 1 h;lve laid in fo a f t i l a where juftice wo {)zydcn an edge 6. ToLay on intermiffion t T His heart laid on, as if it try' Hudibras To force a paffage through his fide Anfiwer, or anfwer not, 'tis all the fame He /ays me on, and makes me bear the blame Dryd 7. o Lay on. 'To at with vehemence ufed of expences My father has made her miftref Shakefpeare Of the feaft, and fhe Jays it on 8. 7o Lay out To take meafures 1 made ftrié enquiry wherever I came South He reach'd the nymph with his harmonious Who all his charms could not incline to ftay Waller On Ceres let him call, and Ceres praif Drjd With uncouth dances, and with country lays Ev'n gods incline their ravifh'd ears And tune their own harmonious fphere Dennis To his immortal /ays N . e2 n t L s c a [ j a Lavy clerical ; regarding or belonging to th people as diftin& from the clergy All this they had by law, and none repin'd The pref rence was but due to Levi's kind But when fome /ay preferment fell by chance " The Gourmands made it their inheritance. Dryden Lay perfons, married or unmarried, being do&or of the civil law, may be chancellors, officials, & and /zi out for intelligence of all places, where the intrails o Woodward the earth were laid open In the Eaft Indies, the general remedy of all fube to the gout, is rubbing with hands till the motion raife a violent heat about the joints: where i was chiefly ufed, no one was ever troubled much Temple or /aid zp by that difeafe 9 L A 9. 7o Lay upon. 'To importune; to requeft with earneftnefs and inceffantly Obfolete Ayliffe's Parcrgon It might well ftartl e R th fa n a l u /a O La'vyer. 2 /. [from/ay. 1. A ftratum, or row; a bed {pread over another A fayer of rich moul beneath natural earth to nourith the fibres The terreftrial matter is difpofe one bod an about thi Ewelyn into ftrata o layers, placed one upon znother, in like manner a any earthy fediment, fettling down from a flood i Woodward great quantity, will naturally be 2. A {prig of a plant Many trees may be propagated by /ayers : this is All the people Zaid fo earneftly upon him to tak to be performed by flitting the branches a little way and laying them under the mould about halfa foot bear arms more againft the Turks, if he omitte the ground fhould be firft made very light, and, afte they are laid, they fhould have a little water given that war in hand, that they faid they would neve Knolles that occafion Lay. n /. [from the verb. 1. A row a ftratum; a layer in a feries, reckoned upwards one ran A viol fhould have a /ay of wire-ftrings below as clofe to the belly as the lute, and then the ftring of guts mounted upon a bridge as in ordinary viols that the upper ftrings ftrucken might make th lower refound Bacon Upon this they lay a layer of ftone, and upon tha a lay of wood Mortimer's Hufbandry 2. A wager 1t is efteemed an even /ay, whether any man live ten years longer: I fuppofe it is the fame, that on of any ten might die within one year Graunt LA_Y. n./ [ley, leag, Saxon; Zy, Scot tith.] Grafly ground; meadow; groun unplowed, and kept for cattle: mor frequently, and more properly, writ ten ea A tuft of daifies on a flow'ry Ja They faw Dryden's Flowver and Leaf The plowing of Jayes is the firft plowing up o grafs ground for corn Mortimer's Hufbandry Lay.n. /. [lay, French ginally to fignify forro and then to have bee poems written to expref It is faid orior complaint transferred t forrow. It i derived by the French from leflus, Latin a funeral fong; but it is found likewifein the Teutonick diale& : ley, leo's Saxon ; /eey, Danifh.] A fong; a poem It 1s fcarcely ufed but in poetry Fair Soon he flumher'd, fearing not be harmzdfz Queen The whiles with a loud /ay, the thus him fweetly charm'd. Spenfer's Fairy Queen This is a moft majeftick vifion, an Harmonious charming: Zays Shakefpeare Nor then the folemn nightingal Ceas'd warbling, but all night tun'd her foft lays If Jove's wil Milton Have link'd: that amorous power to thy foft ay Now timely fing the next winter, they muft be cut off from the main plants, and planted in the nurfery: fome twift th branch or bare the rind and if it be out of the reach of the ground, they faften a tub or bafket nea the branch good mould which they fill wit and lay the branchin it Miller Tranfplant alfo carnation feedlings, give you lagers frefh earth, and fet them in the fhade for a week Ewvelyne 3. A hen that lays eggs The oldeft are always reckone and the youngeft the beft /ayers the beft fitters Mortinier La'yman. #. /. [lay and man. 1. One of the people diftinét fro th clergy Laymen will neithér admonith one another thema felves, nor fuffer minifters to do it Government of the Tonguee Since a truft muft be, fhe thought it bef To put it out of /aymens pow'r at leaft And for their folemn vows prepar'd a prieft. Dryds Where can be the grievance, that an ecclefiaftica landlord fhould expet a third part value for hi lands his title as antient and as legal as that o a layman, who is feldom guilty of giving fuch bene ficial bargains Savif 2. Animage ufed by painters in.contrivin attitudes . You are to have a Jagman almoft as big as thelife for every figure in particular, befides the natural figure before you Dryden's Dufrefnoye La'ystavr. »./. An heap of dung To the maiden's founding timbrels fung In well attuned notes, a joyous lay them : if they do not comply well in the laying o them down, they muft be pegged down with a hook or two; and if they have taken fufficient root b Mijton Scarce could he footing find in that foul ways For many corfes, like a great lay-ftal Of murdered men, which therein ftrewed lay Spenfers La'zar. a. /. [from Lazarus in the gofpel.] One deformed and naufeous wit filthy and peftilential difeafes. _They ever after in moft wretched cafe Like loathfome /azars, by the Hedges lay Fair Queex T'll be fworn, and {worn upon't, the nevefij!&wd ed any but lazar Shake[peare L |