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Show My lietle daughter /ieth at the point of death A blow The rod of Herme To fleep could mortal eye-/ids fix He turned upon me as round as a chafed boar And drive departed fouls to Styx That rod was juft a type of Sid's Lick. #. /. [from the verb. rough ufage. A low word Dryden and gave me a /ick acrofs the face [liccepa, a glutton adj L1 CKERISH Lickerous. § Saxon. Thisfeems to b the proper way of fpelling the word which has no affinity with Ziguour, bu with Jite. 1. Nice in the choice of food Voluptuous men facrifice all fubftantial fatisfacL'Efrange tions ta a Jiguorifh palate 2. Eager; greedy to f{wallow; eager no with hunger but guft Tt is never tongue-tied, where fit commendation, whereof womankind is fo Zickerifb, is offére Sidney unto it Strephon, fond boy, delighted, did not kno That it was love that fhin'd in fhining maid But Jick'rous, poifon'd, fain to her weuld go Sidney Certain rare manufecripts, fought in the moft remote parts by Erpenius, the mott excellent linguift had been left to his widow, and were upon fale t the jefuits, Ziguorifb chapmen of all fuch ware Wotton In vain he profter'd all his goods to fav His body, deftin'd to that living grave "The /iguorifb hag rejets the pelf with {corn And nothing but the man would ferve her turn Locke. 3. Nice; delicate; tempting the appetite This fenfe I doubt Would'ft thou feek again to trap me her With Zickerifb baits, fit to enfnare a brute Milton Liguorice root is long and flender, externally o a dufky reddith brown, but within of a fine yellow, full of juice, and of a tafte fweeter tha fugar; it grows wild in many parts of France The infpiffate Ttaly, Spain, and Germany an thi o Holland roo is brough fro th firf to us fro of whic Spai place i the name of Spanifh juice Hill's Materia Medica obtaine A beadle tha LI'CTOR. n. /. [Latin. attended the confuls to apprehend o punifh criminals Saucy /iftor Will catch at us like firumpets Shakefpeare Proconfuls to their province Hafting or on return in robes of ftate [plio, Saxon /lied, German. i. A cover; any thing that fhuts dow over a veflel ; any ftopple that cover the mouth, but not enters it Hope fo clof inftead of flying off with the reft, ftuc to the /id of the cup, that it was fhu down upon her Addifon 2. The membrane that, when we {lee or wink, is drawn over the eye Do not for ever with thy veiled /ids Seek for thy noble father in the duft. Shakefpeare Our eyes have /ids, our ears ftill ope we keep Dawvies That eye dropp'd fenfe diftinét and clear As any mufe's tongue could fpeak ‘When from its /id a pearly tea clean.sh data import.tsv out README Ran trickling down her beautcous check Lix. n. /. [lie, French.] Any thing impregnated with fome other body ; as {foap or falt Chamber-/ie breeds fleas like a loach. - Shake/p All liquid things concoéted by heat become yelPeacham on Drawing low; as lye, wort, &c Lie. z. /. [lige, Saxon. 1. A criminal falfehood Thou lieft, abhorred tyrant with my fivor Il prove the Zie thou fpeak'tt. Shakefpeare's Mach A lye is properly an outward fignification o fomething contrary to, or at leaft befide, the inward fenfe of the mind; fo that when one thin is fignified or exprefled, and the fame thing no Soutk meant or intended, that is properly a /ye Truth is the obje& of our underftanding, as goo is of our willl; and the underftanding can no mor be delighted with a /ye, than the will can chufe a apparent evil Dryden When I hear my neighbour fpeak that which i not true Thi and I f..y to him i not true o idea; for it implies bot fpeech, and my reproac {peaker the falfehood of th and cenfure of th Watts's Logick z. A charge of falfehood: to giwe the /e is a formulary phrafe In earth as quiet as thy father's fkull. Shakefpeare It is a contradiétion to fuppofe, that whole nations of men fhould unanimoufly giwe the Zie t what, by the moft invincible evidence, every on Licke of them knew to be true Men will give their own experience the /ie, rather than admit of any thing difagreeing with thef Locke tenets 3. A fition This fenfe is ludicrous The cock and fox, the fool and knave imply The truth is moral, though the tale a /ie. Dryden Zo Lis. w. n [leogan Saxon Prior /licgen Dutchg 1. To utter criminal falfehood 1 know not where he lodges; and for me tc devife a lodging, and fay, He lies here, or he lie were to /ie in mine own throat Shake[peare If a foul /ye unto his neighbour in that whic was delivered him to keep, he fhall reftore tha Lev Fob, xxxiv. 6 Should I /ye againft my'right 2. To exhibit falfe reprefentation Inform us, will the emp'ror treat Or do the prints and papers /e Zo LIE. @. n. pret. I lay lien [liezan Saift I hawve lain o Saxon ; liggen, Dutch. 1. Toreft horizontally, or with very grea inclination againft fomething elfe 2. To reft; to prefs upon Death Zics on her like a Upon the fweeteft flow'r o Lie heavy on him, earth Laid many a heavy load o 3. T untimely thow'r all the field. Shakefp for h thee Epitaph on Vanbrugh berepofited in the grave All the kings of the nations /ie in glory, ever Ifz. xiv. 18 one in his own houfe I will Zie with my fathers, and thou fhalt carr me out of Egypt place Dryd Lay down again, and clos'd his weary eyes Forlorn he muft, and perfecnte Climb the fteep mountain, in the cavera lie. Prier be laid up or repofited 6. T I have feen where copperas is made, great variet of them, divers of which I have yet /ying by mé Boyle 7. To remain fixed The Spaniards have but one temptation to quarrel with us, the recovering of Jamaica, for that ha Temple ever Jien at thelr nearts 8. To refide If thou doeft well fhalt thou not-be accepted and if thou doeft not well fin Zieth at the door Gene 1ve 7 9. To be placed or fituated to fomething elfe with reipec W ifd Deferts, where there Jay no way Ifl To thofe happy climes that /i Milton Where day never fhuts his eye There /ics our way, and that our paflage home Dryden Envy Jies between beings equal in nature, thoug Collier ‘of Enuvy unequal in circumftances The bufinefs of a tutor, rightly employed, /ze Locke on Educatior out of the road What Zies beyond our pofitive idea towards infinity, Jies in obfcurity, and has the undeterminat Locke confufion of a negative idea 10. To prefs upon afliftively Thy wrath J/ierh hard upon me, and ‘thou haf That it fhall render vengeance and revenge Till thou the /ie giver, and that /ie, ref there That by the moon's miftaken light did rife is falfe, I only convey to him the naked ide which was delivered Liftors and rods the enfigns of their power. Milton Democritus could feed his fpleen, and fhak His fides and fhoulders till he felt 'em ‘ake Though in his country-town no /icors were Dryden's Juwvenal Nor rods, nor ax, nor tribune . / Savift And drive as many fouls to hell That /ie fhall lye fo heavy on my fword Li'ckerisanEess. z. /. [from lickerifb. Nicenefs of palate Li'coriCE. n. f. [sawvwvislas liquoricia A root of fweet tafte Italian. juic The watchful traveller fcatter opium full as well Coul lay thy hands on her, tha Mark 5. To pafs the time of fleep of his error; this is the primary idea: but if fay it is a /ie, the word /ie carries alfo a fecondar In fome provinces they were fo liguorifh afte man's fleth, that they would fuck the blood as i run from the dying man I pray thee come an the may be healed Which o'er a Britith fenate's /id thi Dyryden Lip LIT R LL and bury me in your buryingGen. xlviis 30 4. To be in a ftate of decumbiture How many good young princes would do fo; thei fathers lying fo fick as yours at this time is? Shak Pfalms afflicted me with all thy waves He that commits a fin fhall fin The prefling guilt /iz heavy on his mind Though bribes or favour fhallaffert his caufe. Treecho Shew the power of religion, in abating tha particular anguifh which feems to /ie fo heavy o Addifon Leonora 11. To be troublefome or tedious Suppofe kings, befides the entertainment o luxury, fhould have fpent their time, at leaft wha upo Ja their hands in chemiftry, it canno b denied but princes may pafs their time advantage Temple oufly that way I would recommend the ftudies of knowledge t the female world, that they may not be at a lof how to employ thofe hours that /e upon thei Addifor's Guardian hands 12. To be judicially imputed If he fhould intend his voyage towards my wife I would turn her loofe to him; and what he get more of her tha fharp words, let it Ze on m head Shake[peare 13. To be in any particular ftate If money go before, all ways do /ie open. Shak The highways /e wafte, the wayfaring ma Ifaiabe ceafeth The feventh year thou fhalt let it reft and Zi Exodus ftill Do not think that the knowledge of any particular fubjeét cannot be improved, mierely becaufe i Watts has /ain without improvement 14. To'be in a ftate of concealment Many things in them /e concealed to us, whic they who were concerned underftood at firft fight Locke 15. To be in prifon Your imprifonment fhall not be long Shakefpcare I will deliver you, or elfe /ie for you 16. To bein a bad ftate ‘Why wilt-you Jie pining and pinching yourfelf i fuch a lonefome, ftarving courfe of life L' Efirange's Fables The generality of mankind /e pecking at on ce pi t to al ar e t o b o ti r h ano L' Eftrange's Fables F ar |