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Show Lo A LO an belly on black or brown fpots: his mouth, barbel-like, un‘This fifh is ufually full of eggs o der his nofe fpawn, and is by Gefner, and other phyficians, com- mended for great nourithment, and to be ver grateful both to the palate and ftomach of fick per {ons, and is to be fithed for with a fmall worm, a the bottom, for he feldom rifes above the gravel Walton's Angler a freight; lading 1. A burthen 2. Weight ; preflure Jove lighten'd of its Joa Th® enormous mafs, the labour of a God Pope Like lion mov'd they laid on /oad Chewy Chace And made a cruel fight Milton From my prevailing arm And Mneftheus laid hard Zad upon his helm Dryden How a man can have a quiet and cheerful min under a great burden and /ad of guilt, I know not Ray unlefs he be very ignorant ed himfelf to a loaf a-day With equal force you ma There are thofe than can never fleep withou their /ad, nor enjoy one eafy thought, till the have l2id all their cares to reft with a bottle. Z'E/f The thund'ring god Ev'n he withdrew to reft, and had his/oad. Dryden on what he reads only /oads his mind with a rhapfody of tales, fit i winter nights for the entertainment of others Locke of earth we make /am; and why of that la Shake[peare might they not ftop a beer barrel 3. To charge a gun 7o Loam A mariner having difcharged his gun, and Jad fmea ing it fuddenly again, the powder took fire. Wifem Addifor's Cato wa [more properl ancientl Saxon, to lead. written lode The leading veinin mine The tin lay couched at firft in certain ftrake amongft the rocks, like the-veins in 2 man's body from the depth whereof the main /oad fpreadeth ou his branches, until they approach the open air Carew's Surwey of Cornwall Their manner of working in the lead mines, i to follow the /sad as it lieth. Carew's Surw. of Cor Jead. H wit wh Lo'aper. zn. /. [fro loads Lo'apsman. #z. /. [lbde and man.] H who leads the way; a pilot Lo'apstar. #. /. [more properly as i is in Maundeville, lodefiar, from lzbdan to lead.] The poleftar; the cynofure the leading or guiding ftar She was the ladftar of my life; fhe the bleflin [fro loam marl o clay Th mello [from lam. eart is the beft, between the tw extremes of clay and fand, if it be not Joamy an binding Bacon Auricula feedlings beft like a /amy fand, or light moift earth; yet rich and fhaded Ewelyn 'Loan. z /. [plen, Saxon. Any thin lent; any thing given to another, o condition of return or repayment. The better fuch ancient revenmes fhall be paid the lefs need her majefty afk fubfidies, fifteens and loans Bacon You're on the fret Becaufe, in fo debauch'd and vile an age Thy friend and old acquaintance dares difow Th gold you lent him, and forfwear the loan Dryden v. 2. [from the noun. many things united in perfeGion bot had learne liking and miflik Sidney SPFIJE;'#, How-am I caught with an unwary oath Waller Not to reveal the fecret which I oarh For thee the lion /saths the tafte of blood And roasing hunts his female throngh the wood. - Dryden Now his exalted fpirit Lath Incumbrances of food and cloaths Saift 2. To confider with the difguft of fatiety ‘Loathing the honey'd cakes, Ilong'd for bread Cowley Onr appetite is extingnifhed with the fatisfac tion, and is fucceeded by /cathing and fatiety Rogers i 3. To fee food with diflike Loathing is a fymptom known to attend diforders: the cure muft have regard to th of the fomach caufe 70 LOATHE Ruincys w. 1. To create difguft; to caufe abhorrence Obfolete Where I was wont to feek. the honey bee The grifly toadftool grown.there might I fee And Joatbing paddocks lording on the fame SP'-'"'./" 2. To feel abhorrence or difguft Th fith in the rive the rivee fhall die, an ftink; and the Egyptians fhall /arh to drink of the water Why do T ftay within this hated place Exodus | Where every objeét thocks my latking eyes? Rowvés: Lo'aTHER 7 /. [from Joath. One tha loaths Lo'ATHFUL. adj. [lath and full. 1. Abhorring ; hating Which he did with larhful eyes behold Hubberd's Tale He wculd no more endure ' 2. Abhorred; hated Above the reach of Juarhful finful luf Whofe bafe effet, through cowardly diftruf Of his weak wings, dare not to heaven flic. Spenjer LoaTH. adj. [1a8, Saxon. Unwilling; {Lo aTH NGL difliking; not ready; not inclined Thefe frefh and delightful brooks, how flowl they flide away, as /oth to leave the company of { They with their filthinef Polluted this fame gentle foil long time That their own mpther /ath'd their beaftlinefs. t Marly Dryden ing, loving and Jathing The joift ends, and girders which be in the walls muft be loamed all over, to preferve them from the corroding of the mortar. Moxon's Mechanical Ex. | adj \Lo'amy as i Izban fro Partheni clay 4. To make heavy by fomething appended or annexed Thy dreadful vow, loaden with death, ftill found @. a is forced to kill Laufus, the poe 1. To hate; to look on with abhorrence T the noun. Ainea 7o LoaTHE unéuous, tenacious earth ; marl 2. To encamber; to embarrafs Milton As fome faint pilgrim ftanding on the fhore Firft views the torrent he would venture oer: And then his inn upon the farther ground Loth to wade through, and:/sther to go round Then dipping in his ftaff does trial mak How deep it is; and, fighing, pulls it back. Dry, I'know you fhy to be oblig'd And #ill more Jarb to be oblig'd by me. Southernze Mortimer The pureft treafur Is fpotlefs reputation; ‘that away Men are but gilded /oam ox painted clay. Shaksfp Alexander returneth to duft: ‘the duft is earth To leave this paradife, but fhalt poffef A paradife within thee, happier far "I'o pardon willing, and to punifh /i a mafter-piece of nature LOAM. 2. /. [lim, laam, Saxon; /lirus Latin ; from alwsn, a fen, Funins.] Fat Shakefp Returns the good Andronicus to Rome Your carriages were heavy loaden5 they are a burIfa. xlvie 1 den to the beaft Dagjps fhews him compaflionate, and is Jorb to deftroy fuc Your wine becomes fo limpid, that you ma bottle it with a piece of Joaf fugar in cach bottle t laft, Zaden with honour's {poils Her flow'ry banks unwilling to forfake Then wilt thou not be /ot Whe Digby Lifting up all that proftrate lie, you griev You cannot make the dead again to live.- Waller 2. Any thick mafs into which a body i wrought Shakefp. Meafure for Meafuy, You ftrike with one hand, but you heal with both into more and lefs parts than a lump of lead of th 9o Loap. w. a. preterite, loaded; - par loaden or laden. [J)laban, Saxon. 1. To burden ; to freight fl, From whofe foft fide fhe firft did iffue make She taftes all places, turnsto ev'ry hand, Hayward break a loaf of brea fame bignefs Long doth the ftay, as /ozh to leave the lan tion; and, to give example, the lord Clinton limit 5. As'much drink as one can bear #. / l e a h h a r f y d x f t d a f Eafy it i Ofa cut Lafto fteal a fhive we know. Shake[peare The bread corn in the town fufficed not for fi days: hereupon the foldiers entered into propor 4. Any thing that depreffes Loap That is your part Loar. # /. [from plag or lap, Saxon. 1. A mafs of bread as it is formed by th baker : a loaf is thicker than a cake Far heavier Joad thyfelf expeét to fee In my ftunn'd ears To fpeak fo indireétly, T am lorh I'd fay the truth ; but to accufe him fo frefh broken, and often tinged with a brownifh o reddifh colourj it is very heavy, and confiderabl hard, and its great charaer js that of affellin iron. ‘This ore of iron is found in England, an in_moft other places where there are mines o Hill's Materia Medica that metal The ufe of the hadffone was kept as fecret a Savift any of the other myfteries of the art 3. Weight, or violence of blows He that makes no refle€tion e ' r h e f t r l a t l a n t r M a p a d b r h w h e w When wheat is green Shakefpeare The /oadftone is a peculiar and rich ore of iron found in large maffes, of a deep iron-grey wher encumbrance Wken he heard her anfwers /oth, he kne 5 Some fecret forrow did her heart diftrain, Fujr L o o f d l r p r [ / # E o s Lo a T . a s O L S n lzding-ft r m t i w o o f t magne ners compafs needle is touched to giv it a direttion north and fouth Pope o ]J‘a;,j _6{,"" Of princefs worthy worth e w D e e al t a f d J a t a h Lodeftone t Deigns none to cafe thy lad, and tafte thy fweet Milton Then on his back he laid the precious load And fought his wonted fhelter. Dryd. Nur's Tale Let India boaft her groves, nor envy w The weeping amber, and the balmy tree While by our oaks the precious /oads are born And realms commanded which thefe trees adorn Ne other grace vouchfafed them to tho rf e S f l m o a f a My Helice, the l O happy fair r a e f u n t u y a s a f a l Your eyes ar Whic Fair plant with fruit furcharg'd She thanked them in her difdainful wife e d S o h r f o m o c and yet the recompe That clear majeft #. /. [plabe, Saxon. Loap With lofty eyes, half loth to lock fo low dffir(:S m o r t e o t f e c of min man wit tail, dapple at hi L O .adv [from hath. a faftidious manner Lo'aTuLY. adj. [from loath. Sidney': |, abhorged ; exciting hatred R Hateful : |