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Show LE He removed to Cuma ; and by the way was en tertaine at the houfe of one Tychius, a leather dreffer LeaTHER-MOUTHED Pope adj [leather an mouth. By a leather-mouthed fithy T mean fuch as hav their teeth in their throat ; as, the chub or cheven Le'aTnErY adj [fro Walton's Angler learher. Re fembling leather Wormius calls this cruft a Zeathery fkin LE‘ATHERN. adj. [from leather. of leather Greaw Mad I faw her hand ; fhe has a Zatherr hand A free-ftone colour'd hand: I verily did thin ‘That her old gloves were on Shakefpeare The wretched animal heav'd forth fuch groans That their difcharge did ftretch his Jeathern coa Almoft to burfting Shakefpeare's As you like it In filken or in leathern purfe retai A fplendid thilling Philips LE'ATHERSELLER.27./. [leatherand foller. He who deals in leather, and vends it Leave. #. /. [lepe, Saxon ; from lypan to grant. 1. Grant of liberty 8 permifiion allow ance By your Jeave, Ireneus, notwithftanding all thi your careful forefight, methinks I fee an evil lur unefpied Spenfer ‘When him his deareft Una did behold Difdaining life, defiring leawe to dye Spenfer I make bold to prefs upon you ~-You're welcome; give us /eave, drawer Shakefpeare The day Of Sylla's fway, when the free fword took lav To a& all that it would Ben Fonfon's Catiline Thrice happy fnake ! that in her ileev May boldly creep; we dare not giv Our thoughts fo unconfin'd a /eawe Waller No friend has /eawe to bear away the dead. Dryd Offended that we fought without his /eawe He takes this time his fecret hate to fhew. Dryden One thing more I crave Jeawe to offer about fyllogifm, before I leave it Locke I muft have /eawe to be grateful to any who ferve me, let him be never {o obnoxious to any party nor did the tory party put me to the hardfhip o afking this leave Pope 2. Farewel; adieu. In this fenfe Jeave i permiffion to depart Take /eave and part, for you muft part forthwith Shakefpeare Evils that take Jeawe On their departure, moft of all thew evil. Shakefp There is further compliment of /eawe taking between France and him Shakefpeare's King Lear Here my father comes A double blefling is a double grace Occafion fmiles upon a fecond leave Shakefpeare But, my dear nothings, take your /eawe No longer muft you me deceive Suckling Many ftars may be vifible in our hemifphere, tha are not {o at prefent; and many fthall take /eawve o our horizon, and appear unto fouthern habitations Brown o Leave. «. a. pret. I left; I hawe left [Of the derivation of this word the etymologifts give no fatisfactory account. ¥. To quit; to forfake A man fhall Zeawe his father and his mother, an eleaye to his wife Gena 11 2 If they love lees, and./eave the lufty wine Envy them not their palates with the fwine Ben Fonfon 2. To defert to abandon He that is of an unthankful mind, will Zeawe hi 1 uw g in danger that delivered him 3. T depart from withou Ecclufs xxix. 17 action 1 Jeft things as I found them as LE . When they were departed from him, they /f? hi 1n great difeafes great deal of judgment, by Tucca and Varlus, 2 it feems to contradiét a part in the fixth ZEneid Addifon on Italy 2 Chron. XX1ve 25 4. T'o have remaining at death 70 LEAVE There be of them that have /eft a name behin them Eccluf. xliv. 8 5. Not to deprive of Taylor 6. To fuffer to remain If it be done withou hendeth lefs that whic it leaweth a fufpicion, a is exprefled Thefe things muft b coveries in future ages An 2. Yo Leave off 3. ToLeave of They encamped againft them, and deftroyed th increafe of the earth, and /eft no fuftenance fo Ifracl Fudg. vi. 4 He fhall eat the fruit of thy cattle; which alf thall not /eawe thee either corn, wine, or oil Deut. xxviii. 43 Vaftius gave ftriét commandment, that they fhoul leawe behind them unneceffary baggage Knolles 7 LEAVEN Al 13. To ceafe to do; to defift from t 15. 70 Leave of. - To forfake 2. To taint He began to leawe off fome of his old acquaint ne Leaves to imbue Priors One wh m Skakelpare The plural of Zeaf Parts fit for the nourithment of man in plant are, feeds, roots, and fruits; for leawes they giveno nourifhment at ail Bacon's Natural Hiftory What is fet down by order and divifion dot demonftrate, that nothing is /ft out or omitted Le'avincs. #. /. [from Jeave.] Remnant; relicks; offal; refufe: it has n fingular Bacon My father has this morning call'd together To this poor hall Milton his little Rema 1gs of Pharfulia Then who can think we'll quit the place who affer Or ftop and light at Chloe's head With fcraps and Zeawings to be fed That we the world's exiftence may conceive Though we one atom ox¢ of matter leave 's Cate Savift Ly'avy. adj. [from leaf] Full of leaves; Blackmore I alway Shakefpeare Let the world rank me in regife A mafter-/eaver, and a fugitive Ben Fonfon Reafon's eftablith'd maxims Floyer Le‘aver. . /. [from lave.] deferts or forfakes 1 am fo fraught with curious Bufinefs, tha 1 Jeawe out ceremony Shakefps Winter's Tale You may partake: T have told 'em who you are w1 fhould be loth to be /ft out, and here too From her cabin'd loop-hole peep We afk, ifi thofe {ubver are eafieft di That cruel fomething unpofleft Corrodes and /eawens all the reft ance, his roaring and bullying about the freets he put on a ferious air Arbutbnot but all is there Befriend till utmoft en Of all thy dues be done, and none /ft out Ere nice morn on the Indian {teep dfink Whafoever eateth /eavened bread, that foul fhai be cut off Breads we have of feveral grains, with divers kindsof leavenings, and feafonings ; fo that fome do extremely move appetites Bacone Addifor's Spectator gleét meats an You muft tarry the leavning In proportion as old age came om, he Zfr off fox t fermente Lew. vie 17 7o Le'avEN, @. #. [from the noun. 1. To ferment by fomething mixed If, upon any occafion, you bid him leawe of the doing of any thing, you muft be fure to carr the point Locke omit . /. [levain, French; levare Many of their propofitions, favour very ftrongly o the old Jeawven of innovations King Charleso Let us return, left my father /eawe caring for th affes, and take thought for us 1 Sam. ix. 5 T Ia. xlv. 2. Any mixture which makes a general change in the mafs: it generally mean fomething that depraves or corrupts tha with which it is mixed ‘Whether Efan were a vaffal, I /zawe the reader t judge Locke out lever arehardly digefted 12. To permit without interpofition Leav Zwy gefted ; and thofe unfermented, by barm or lawven Tillotfon 16. 9 [fro It fhall not be baken with leaven his ow choice, to wifh the greateft good to himfelf h could devife; the fum of all his withes would b this, That there were juft fuch a being as.God is hunting a Latin. 1. Ferment mixed with any body to mak it light; particularly ufed of four dough mixed in a mafs of bread Thou fhalt not glean thy vineyard; thou fhal Jeawe them for the poor and ftranger. Lew xix. 10 forbear @ the two Jeaved gates to refign defit from LEAVE T will loofe the loins of kings, to open before hir That peace thou /eaw'f} to thy imperial line That peace, Oh happy fleade! be ever thine. Dryd T Wrongs do not /eawe off there where they beginy But ftill beget new mifchiefs in their courfe. Daniel Le'aven. edj. [from leaves, of leaf. 1. Furnithed with foliage 2. Made with leaves or folds Steele 10. To bequeath ; to give as inheritance of To ftop An army ftrong.the Jea'd To war on thofe which him had of his realm bereav'd Spenfer's Fairy Quecn This I leave with my reader, as an occafion fo him to confider, how much he may be beholden t experience Locke 14. 70 Leav Rofcommoit French. To levy; to raife: a corrupt word, made, I believe, by Spenfer for a rhime 8. To rejeét ; not to choofe an 'To defift not hold out, /ft off to batter or undermine it wherewith he perceived he little prevailed. Knolles But when you find that vigorous heat abate Leave gff, and for another fummons wait 7. Not to carry away If a wife man were /¢f to himfelf Genefi Grittus, hoping that they in the caftle woul Who thofe are, to whom this right by defcen belongs, he /eawes out of the reach of any one to difcover from his writings Laocke 11. To give up fince this bufinefs fo far fair is done Abbat 9. To fix as a token or remembrance Shakefp Let us not /eawe till all our own be wons - Shakefp He began at the eldeft, and /ft at the youngeft order, the mind compreis fet down; and befides if more might be faid tha Bacon /uf? uncertain to farther dif In all the common incidents of life I am fuperiour, I can take or leave to defift She is my effence, and I /eawe to be IfT be not by her fair influenc Fofter'd, illumin'd, cherifh'd, keptalive They ftill have /Zzfz me the providence of God and all the promifes of the gofpel, and my charity t them too @. 2 1. To ceafe covered with leaves: /eafy is more ufed thought this paffage /eft owt with L Strephen |