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Show .1 LO With mirth and laughter let old wrinkles come ¢ the footmen coming into the kitchen; and t prove it true, throw a ladleful of broth on one o And let my JZiwer rather heat with wine Than my heart cool with mortifying groans two of their /iweries Savift Skakglpeare. | 6. A particular drefs; a garb worn as Reafon and refpec toke o conf quen o an thing Make Jiwers pale, and luftihood dejected. Shake/p Of fair Urania, fairer than a gree Li'vercoLouRr. adj. [liver and colour. Proudly bedeck'd in April's liwery Sidney Dark red Miftake me not for my complexion The uppermoft ftratum is of gravel; then cla of various colours, purple, blue, red, liwercolour To whom I am a neighbour and near bred. Shake/ Woodward At once came forth whatever creeps the ground The fhadow'd livery of the burning fun LI'VERGROWN. adj. [liver and grown. Having a great liver Infeét, or worm: thofe wav'd their limber fan For wings, and fmalleft lineaments exact In all the /iweries deck'd of fummer's pride I enquired what other cafualties were moft lik the rickets Li'vErWORT lichen. #. [f [live an Graunt avort A plant That fort of /iwerwort which is ufed to cur the bite of mad dogs, grows on commons, an open heaths, where the grafs is fhort, on declivities, and on the fides of pits This {pread on the furface of the ground, and, when in perfection, is of an afh colour; but, as it grows old it alters, and becomes of a dark colour Miller Li'very. n. f. [from livrer, French. 1. The att of giving or taking pofieflion You do wrongfully feize Hereford's right Call in his letters patents that he hat By his attorneys general to fu His livery, and deny his offered homage Shakef 2 Li'vErYMAN. 2. /. [livery and man. 1. One who wears a livery ; a fervan of an inferior kind The witnefifes made oath, that they had hear fome of the /iwerymen frequently railing at thei miftrefs Arbutbrot 2. [I black and blue It was a ‘peftilent fever, not feated in the vein or humours rate liwering forth their nightly food ; fo in great houfes the /iver tha is faid to be ferved up for all night is, thei evenin allowanc drink: an fo liwery is alfo called the upper weed which a fervin man wears; fo called, I fuppofe, for that it wa delivered and taken from him at pleafure: fo it i apparent that, by the word /iwery, is there mean horfe meat, like as by the coigny is underftoo man's meat. Some fay it is derived of coin, for tha they ufed in their coignies not only to take mea but money ; but I rather think it is derived of th Irifh, the which is a common ufe amongft landiords of the Irifh to have a common fpendin upon their tenants, who being commonly bu tenants at will, they ufed to take of them wha vi€tuals they lift; for of vi€tuals they were won tomake a fmall reckoning Spenfer on Ireland 5. The cloaths given to fervants livid. text of /iwery coats affordeth 1think Hooker it is our way Tf we will keep in favour with the king To be her men and wear her /ivery Shakefpeare Yet do our hearts wear Timon's /ivery Shakefs Timon of Atbens That fee I by our faces Ev'ry lady cloath'd in white And crown'd with oak and laurel ev'ry knight Are fervants to theleaf, by /iveries know Of innocence Dryden's Flower and Leaf Arbuthnot nefs or /iwidity of the countenance Li'viNG. participial adj 1. Vigorous as, a ffving faith aftive z. Being in motion ; havin ral energy, or principle o the liwing green, the kivin Li'ving. n. /. [from Jlive. 1. Support; maintenance which one lives fome natuaion: as {prings fortun o The Arcadians fought ‘as in unknown place having no fuccour but in their hands; the Helots as in their own place, fighting for their livings Sidney wives, and children but fh All they did caft in of their abundance of her want did caft in all that fhe had, even all he Mark living 2. Power of continuing life There is no /iwing without trufting fome bod or other, in fome cafes L'Eftrange Sidney forfake this argument, for that it hath, thoug nothing elfe, yet the name of fcripture, to giv it fome kind of countenance more than the pre Difcoloration, as by a blow The figns ofa tendency to fuch a ftate, are dark My mind for weeds your virtue's ivery wears Perhaps they are by fo much the more loth t of the blood no Bacon blifs Dryden a bruifing blow the fnow.Dryd Livi‘piry. n. [. [lividité, French; fro the word ftabling, as to keep horfes at liwery ; th or de for that there followed no carbuncles no purple or /iwid fpots, the maf being tainted Upon my /iwid lips beftow a kif O envy not the dead, they feel no They beat their breafts with man Till they turn'd liwid, and corrup 3. The writ by which poffeflion is obtained 4. The ftate of being kept at a certai is derived of liwerin of fom LI'VID adj [lividus, Latin livide French.] Difcoloured, as with a blow wardfhip of the tumults, I fhould then fufpe&t m own judgment King Charles I guefs freema So fhort is life, that every peafant ftrives In a farm houfe or field, to have three Zwes. Donne Had the two houfes firft fued out thelr /iwery and once effeCtually redeemed them:felves from th which word ftanding in a company Lives. . /. [the plural of /ife. Releafe from wardfhip What fivery is, we by common ufe in England know well enough, namely, that it is a allowance of horfe meat; as they commonly uf London. . Livelihood For ourfelves we may a living make The ma I fe th worl the can fpin for her liwing o Hubberd wheels whe Shakefpeare Ifaac and his wife, now dig for your life Or fhortly you'll dig for your liwing Denbam Aéors muft reprefent fuch things as they ar capable to perform, and by which both they an the feribbler may get their liwing. Dryden's Duf 4. Benefice of a clergyman Som countr ther fo may do of our minifter offered unto them any love of God by winning foul having the /ivings of th without pains, will, neinor for all the good the to God, be drawn fort from their warm nefts Spenfer The parfon of the parifh preaching againft adulIntereft that waves on party-colour'd wings tery, Mrs. Bull told her hufband, that they woul Turn'd to the fun fhe cafts a thoufand dyes join to have him turned' out of his /iwjsg for ufin And as the turns the colours fall or rife. Dunciad Srbuthnor If your dinner mifcarrics you were teized by| clean.sh data import.tsv out README pefonal refle@ions On others int'reft her gay /iv'ry flings [from Lving. In th In vain do they fcruple to approach the dead who livingly are cadaverous, or fear any outwar pollution, whofe: temper pollutes themfelves Brown's Vulgar Errours LI'VRE. »n. /. [French.] The fum b which the French reckon their money equal nearly to our ten-penee Lix1'viarL. adj. [from lixivium, Latin. 1. Impregnated with falts like a lixivium The fymptoms of the excretion of the bile vi tiated, were a yellowith colour of the fkin, and With fpots of gold and purple, azure, green. Milton Now came ftill evening on, and twilight gre Had in her fober /ivery all things clad Milron and found that /ivergrovn was neareft Li'vincLy. adv living ftate lixivial urine Arbutbnot 2. Obtained by lixivium Helmont conje€tured, that /ixivial falts do no pre-exift in their alcalizate form Boyle Lixt'viaTE. adj [lixivienx, Frenc from /Jixiwium.] Making a lixivium In thefe the falt and l/ixiviated ferofity, wit fome portion of choler, is divided between the gut and the bladder Brown Lixiviate falts, to which pot-afhes belong, b piercing the bodies of vegetabies, difpofe them t part readily with their tin€ture Boyle LIXI'VIUM. »n. /. [Latin.}] Lye; wate impregmated with alkaline falt, produced from the afhes of vegetables; liquor which has the power of extraQion 1 made a Jixivium of fair water and falt of worm wood, and having frozen it with fnow and falt, could not difcern any thing more iike to wormwood than to feveral other plants Boyle Li'zarD n. f. [/ifarde, French lacertus Latin.] An animal refembling a ferpent, with legs added to it There are feveral forts of /izards; fome in Arabia of a cubit long In America they eat lizards it is very probable likewife that they were eaten i Arabia and Judza, fince Mofes ranks them amon the unclean creatures Calmet Thou'rt like a foul mif-fhapen ftigmatick Mark'd by the deftinies to be avoided As venomous toads, or /izards dreadful ftings Shakefpeare Adder's fork, and blind worm's fting Lizard's leg, and owlet's wing. Shakefpeare's Mac Liza'rRpI1TAL. 2./. A plant Li"zarDSTONE. 7. fo [lizard and flone. A kind of ftone L.L.D. [legum doctor. A do&or of th canon and civil laws Lo. interject. [la, Saxon. Look; fee behold It is a word ufed to recal the attention generally to fome obje of fight; fometimes to fomething heard bu¢ not properly ; often to fomethin to be underftood Lo within a ken sur army lies Shakefpeare Now muft the world point at poor Catherine And fay, /o ! there is mad Petruchio's wife. Shak Lo! 1 have a weapon A better never did itfelf fuftai Upon a foldier's thigh Shakefpeare's Otbell Thou did'ft utter I am yours for ever ~Wh / yo now I've fpok to the purpof twice Shake[pear For /o! he fung the world's ftupendous birth Rofcanman Lo! heav'n and earth combin To blaft our bold defign LoacH Th Dryden's Albion n./. [locke, French. loach is a moft dainty fith; he breed feeds in little an lives there upo an ciear fwirt brocks or mlls, an the giavel, and in the fharpe ftreams: he grows not to be above 2 finger long and no thicker than is fuitable to ¢hat length: h is of the fhape of an eel, and has a beard of wattel kike a barbel: he has two éns at his fides, four at hi H belly- |