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Show L ELI Nilus fettle whic unto a fir degree b Brown's Vulgar Errours land They efteemed this natural melancholick acidit n r f d e f o n h e l Of deareft v g f d i a p h l f e t O fee th r l . W n l b t o p Of heav'n our joy, f h i r f a d o i r f t l A Jine feldom h nx M c f x f o f f in length, abo The chub eats waterifh, and the flefh of him i eo a & r d t 3. A thread e rations Waltow's Angler not firm, /imp, and taftelefs 2. It is ufed in fome provinces Scotland, for lmber, flexile T Saxon. Zo Limp. @. n. [limpen halt; to walk lamely ‘We as by /ine upon the ocean go and i Son of fixteen e e a n / e t t w u Viétori e i p e t m t a e t f t They mak Waller Shakefpeare How fa The fubftance of my praife doth wrong' this fhado In underprifing it; fo far this fhado Shake[peare Doth /imp behind the fubftance When Plutus, with his riches, is fent fro Dz;}'defl Prior A kind of thell-fifh Ainfaworth Ly'mrip. adj. [limpide, French ; limpidus Clear Latin. tranfparent pure The fprings which were clear, frefh, and Limpid become thick and turbid, and impregnated wit fulphur as long as the earthquake lafts. Woodward The brook that purls alon The vocal grove, now fretting o'er a rock Gently diffus'd into a /impid plaine Thomfor's Sum Li'MP1DNESS. #. /; [tfrom Jimpid.] Clearnefs; purity LyYvmpiNGLY. adv. [from lmp.] In lame halting manner Li'my. adj. [from Jime. 1. Vifcous ; glutinous Striving more, the mor Himfelf he tied, and wrap . InJimy fnares the {ubti 2. Containing lime A huma bee burie fkull covere i fom /lim in laces ftron his winges twai Spenfer loops among wit the fkin, havin wa foil turned into a kind of leather 75 Lin. @. n. [ablinnan tanned o Greaw's Mufwum Saxon. T yield ; to give over Unto his foe he came Refolv'd in mind all fuddenly to win Or foon to lofe before he once would /in. Fairy Li'NcHPIN. 7./ A iron pinthatkeep the wheel on the axle-tree Dik . /. [from /lingo, Latin. Li'sctus Medicine licked up by the tongue 'The lim Lir'npEN. z 7. [Lino, Sazon. tree See Lrume Dryden Hard box, and /inden of afofter grain Two neighb'ting trees, with walls encompafs' round One a hard oak, a fofter /inden one Ling n. f Dryden [linca, Latin. Cleaveland 6. Delineation ; fketch You have generous thoughts turned to fuch fpeculations : but this is not enough towards the raifing fuch buildings as I have drawn you here the /ine th of, unlef diredio Even the planets, upon this principle, muft gravitate no more towards the fun: fo that they woul not revolve in curve /ires, but fly away in direct tan gonts, till they ftnick yoin1 other planets into perfons as were agreeable to his charadter, fo Pope whom the /ine was drawn Now fnatch an hour that favours thy defigns Dryden Unite thy forces, and attack their /ines the planets and thl center Obferve degree, priority Bentley 5. To cover with fomething foft Son of fixteen Pluck the /iz'd crutch from thy old limping fire Shakepeare 6. To double Eating the air, on promife of fupply. Shakefpeare My brother Mortimer doth fti About his title, and hath fent for yo Shakefpeare's Henry IV To /ine his enterprife The two armies were affigned to the leading o Equator Whe experience and valour applie to animal Thus froms the Tyrian paftures /in'd with Jov He bore Europa, and ftill keeps his love. ~ Creech LiI'NEAGE. #. ). [linage, French.] Race progeny; family, afcending or defcending Both the /ineage and the certain fir From which I {prung, from me are hidden yet Spenfer Jofeph was of the houfe and Jineage of David Luke, iis 4 The Tirfan cometh forth with all his generatio or /ineage, the' males before him, and the females following him; and if there be a mother from whofe body the whole /izeage is defcended, there is Bacon traverfe where fhe fitteth the fun below the /ine defcends Then one long night continued darknefs joins Men of mighty fame Creech And from th' immortal gods their Zneage came or de D/jdz‘fl {cending No longer thall the widow'd land bemoa He chid the fifter When firft they put the name of king upon me And bade them fpeak to him ; then prophet-like Skakef They hail'd him father to a /ize of kings A broken /ireage, and a doubtful throne But boaft her royal progeny's increafe And count the' pledges of her future peace. Addifor This care was infufed by God himfelf, in orde He fends you this moft memorable Zine to afcertai In ev'ry branch truly demonfrative Willing you overlook this pedigree were fweet and affable Baca generanng Milton's Paradifz Lo vage, haughty, parfimonious and unpopular impregnate 7. T Shakefpeare afcendin rather courtiers, an affured to the ftate, than martial menj yet /ine and afiifted with fubordinate commanders of grea equinodlial circle 14. Progeny ; family both of the two generals Eden ftretch'd her /in From Auran eaftward to the royal tow'r 13 to ftrengthen with help ‘Who /in'd himfelf with hope Extenfion ; limit Of great Seleucia Swift Line and new repair our towns of wa With men of courage, and with means defendant Shake(peare Infifture, courfe, proportion, feafon, form 12 divin' 4. To ftrengthen by inner works and place Office and cultom, in all Zine of order by a gentle bow mufqueteers, they were totally difperfed. Clarendin 10. Work thrown up ; trench The heavens themfelves Shakefpeare's Cymbeline Notwithftanding they had /ized fome hedges wit Addifon what ifI do /ine one 3. To guard within In moving /ines thefe few epiftles tel What fate attends the nymph who loves too well Garth 11. Method ; difpofition are about her How well a cully's purfe was /in'd Broome They pierce the broken foe's remoteft /ines for any ch Carew Her wome In the preceding /ine, Ulyfies fpeaks of Nauficaa yet immediately changes the words into the mafcu 9. Rank of foldiers very hig unto a verfe line gender infide: man's purfe, except /ined beyond ordinary, to reach 8. As much as is written from one margi to the other amountet charg Th 7. Contour ; outline Oh lafting as thofe colours may they fhine Free as thy ftroke, yet faultlefs as thy /ine! Pope in th fenfe rather ludicrous wer of all affairs her to receive the mercur By thin an pu z. T He Shake[peare's Henry V Some Jines were noted for a ftern, rigid virtue, fa 1. Longitudinal extenfion A box /ined with pape that might be fpilt of their hands Temple wholly in your hands The inventors meant to turn fuch qualificatior Can fyllogifm fet things right No : majors foon with minors fight Or both in friendly confort join'd The confequence /imps falfe behind 7o LI NE. V. 4. [fiIPPOfed by Funius fro linings being often made o Linum linen. 1. To cover on the infide The myftic figures of her hand He tipples palmeftry, and dine On all her fortune-telling /ines A letter: as, I rea 16. [In the plural. your /Jines 17. Lint or flax Here, while his canting drone-pipe fcan' Bacon Limping death, lafh'd on by fate Dryden Comes up to fhorten half our date The limping {mith obferv'd the fadden'd feaft And hopping here and there put in his word Dryden, The year Ran fmoothly on, produétive of a /in Philys Of wife heroick kings 15. A /ine is one tenth of an inch. Locte in the hand o Long is it fince I faw him favou o /ine thof blurr' nothin hat tim Bu Shake[peare Which then he wore I fhall have good fortune; go to, here's a fimpl Shakefp wives o trifl fmal here' life o Jin Jupiter, he Zmps and goes flowly; but when h ¥ fent by Pluto, he runs, and is {wift of foot 7. / or mark 5. Lineaments face Pluck the lin'd crutch from thy old Jimping five Li'mper ' e g a t n a f f a t fri 4. Th hook An old poor man Who after me hath many a weary fte Shakefpeare's As you like it Dryden n l t a a l m f b a f t p ‘Whof & 3 The queen commanded to be crown'd with vii iha Thc bowl that Belus ws'd, and all thevarian‘ Ie g i t a r h a r b Well fung the Roma Floyer Limr. adj. [limpio, Italian. Notin ufe 1. Vapid; weak A goldenbowl ~2. A flender ftring to be the /imous or flimy feeculent part of the blood " Limp'd in pure love L other Drydin His empire, courage, and his boafted Zire Rofcommon Were ail proy'd moxtal th defcent of th Mefliah and to prove that he was, as the prophets had foretold, of the tribe of Judah, and of the /ireage of David Atterbury LI'NEAL. adj. [linealis, from Linea, Lat. 1. Compofed of lines; delineated When any thing is matbematically demonftrate ! weal, it s much.more mechanically weak; exror eve |