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Show MA MA [zemaad adj MAD matto Saxon Unto a madb Ttalian. 1. Difordered in the mind; broken i the underftanding; diftracted ; deliriou without a fever Ma'pcap. . f. o taking the cap to the caps p by way o th lea dp ‘m wh gu pl ' tim th -Ti Shakefpeare blind mo n n fo i le me ma ic mu Thi wit the t me ma ' hel hav i ug th Fo ma me wif ma wil i ms fe i me I a wild hotbrained fellow We muft bind our paffions in chains alone mad to mak furious T all madefaéiion there is.required an. imbibi T tion T to en Ma'pHOUSE rious to be fu WOrm A carth He that eagerly purfues any, thing than a madman .H. frenzy Ma'pNEss M i DBERAINED wind hotheaded [mad and .brain.Al Difordere i a madman' hands or takes a\;n Seutb . /. [from mad. \_"u'h‘,', woman Philips } adj tie L'Efirange 1. Diftraltion ; lofs of underftanding pertarbation of the faculties Mudam, once more you look and move a queen Ma‘pBRAIN wh is no bette };‘as {word, loves his perfon while he difarms hi ye have great caufe of plaint 2 Efdr. xvio 71 fpozting A‘I‘,t't"??,‘?'i' M=zrE the your hufband is in his old :lupe adv A [mad and wert. It is derived. from th Saxon mej, famous, great, noted: f @lmere is all famous ; 2thelmere, famon Gibfon's Candsn for nobility 7o MA'FFLE Ma'FFLER ftammerer Macazi'Ne fro th @.n #./ To ftammer Ainfaorth [fro 2. Arabic the verb.] o HAinfavorth [magazine, French a ire machfan fure. 1. A ftorehoufe, commonly an arfena or armoury, or repofitory of provir fions If it fhould appear fit to beftow fhipping i thofe harbours, it fhall be very needful that ther be a magazine of all neceffary provifions and am\ Raleigh's Effays munitions Plain heroick magritude of mind Pilton Their armories and magazines contemns Seme o'ex the publick magezines piefide Aud fome are fent new forage:to provide. Dryden Ufeful-arms in magazines we place; Al mng‘nfin order, "and difpos'd with grace P His head was o well ftored a #agazin, thi nothing could be propoted which hé was not maflé 'J‘}.‘_ey thall be like madmen, {paring none, but {til Ma‘pam. #. J. [ma dame, Freach, m The term of compliment ufe dame. I in addrefs to ladies of every degree was anciently {poken as in French with the accent upon the Paft fyllable Cextes, madam 7./ Ma'pworT herb Withou Ma'pman. az. /. [mad and man. man deprived of his underftanding Ainfworth of the Englith; more proper for fonnets, madr ga'/'s, and elegies, than heroick poetry. Dryden ; He wav'd a torch aloft, and madly vain i So,ught godlike worthip from a fervile train. Dryd Dyyden Saxon. Anow Ainfworth M Their tongue is light and trifling in comparifon Latin. #. fo [mad and hoyje. Ma'pry. adv. [from mad. underftanding; furioufly The madding wheel #. /. [maBu The huddling brook to hear his madrigal there > Why, fays he, the mad folks abroad are to many for us, and {o they have maftered all the fobe L'Eftrange pr:(/lplf.:, and cooped them up here Of brazen chariots rag'd; dire was the noif Milton's Paradife Loff Of confli&ts She, mixing with a‘thron Of madding matrons, bears the bride along Map His artful ftrains haveoft delay' A fellow in a madboufe being afked how he cam ‘Have overlaid him, for they cou'd rot conquer Dryden be mad 7. f. [bubo. Bacor degf Birds fing melodious madrigs!s houfe where madmen are cured or confined This mads me, that perhaps ignoble hand 'T Ma'pEFY. . a. [madefio To moiften ; to make wet MA'DGEHOWLET O villain ! cried out Zelmane, madded with findSidney ing an unlooked-for rival This will witnefs outwardly As ftrongly as the conftience does within To the madding of her lord. - Shake[p. Cymbdline . 8 33;@ the fame order and number Waters, by whofe falls an MavEeFa'cTION, 7. /. [madefacio, Lat. The a&t of making wet rage go Map. Thanfo Neither hath this man finned, nor his parents but that the woiks of God fhouldbe made manifeft Fobn, ixs 3 Holy writ reprefents St. Paul as making havoc of the church, and perfecuting that way unto th ‘death, and being exceedingly mad againft them Decay of Picty mak rank of verfes, and in that differs from a canzonet which confifts of feveral ftrophes, which returni participle preterite of make Mape any light airy fhor A .madriga/ is a little amorous piece, whic contains a certain number of unequal verfes, no tied to the fcrupunlous regularity of a fonnet o fubtilty of an epigram: it confifts of one fing 'To make mad hollowed like a navel; the leaves are rough, an Wille furround the ftalks in whorles Madder is cultivated. in vaf® quantities in Holland: what the Dutch fend: over for medicina ufe is the root, which. is only dried; but th greateft quantity is ufed by the dyers, who have i Hill fent in coarfe powder Rymer e i é j a t r [ a @ 9 French, from mandra, Latin 5 whencej was written anciently mandriale, It:{}.‘] comes a fruit, compofed of two juicy berries clofel joined together, containing feed for the moft. par that they could be content to eat the bread of civi Baily Ma'priGaL. n. /. [madrigal, Spanifh a;?d expanded at the top ; the flower-cup afterwards be It is the land of graven images, and they ar 3 1 r F s o i e t o mad u The world is running. mad. after- farce, the extremity of bad poetry, or rather the judgment tha Dryden is fallen upon dramatick writing The people are not fo very mad of acorns, bu of the petard when charged, with wh'w A paftoral fong leaf, which is cut into four or five fegments haps better for, before the object of defire furious 'T a cavity fufficient to me' to /be broken down The flower of the madder confifts of one fingl Milton fong 7. /. [madene, Saxon. Ma'ppER it is applied againft a gate, or other thing inten:i: As for a while o'erwhelm'd his raptur'd thought 2. Over-run with any violent or unreape of er af oz wi ir de {onab 4. Enraged @. a 7 / plates, havin the mout Such mad ning draughts of beauty d mi o e or di li re Ex 2 pexfons Mapr1ER Pope T» Ma'ppsN wildnefs of paffion; rag Lok He rav'd with all the madnefs of dcfp;]g-, Charks He roar'd, he beat his breaft, and' tore his n l t u r e d m a t c r v r The had fh ht fli od an e gra ng ftr But fom Pop ma no juf wa an y ug no Was juf doubt Ki Fire in each eye, and papers in each hand Ir ni Sp ' de Dr z fre hi hel ca wh Bu whe The dog-ftar rages, nay 'tis paf mad ;. to ac as mad mo‘fc The power of God fets bounds to. the r o : gi Pe th o e d m t i r f r a the fea All Bedlam or Parnafius is let ou Madmen ought not to be mad and mad demeanou mad. becom ra bee o gin fti th a ag en bea al ' ur r- ov an n rd -g be th int like ma e an fi L' s the hiv He mark'd w. #. [fro Zs Ma'ppEN Taylor's Worthy Communicart His geftures fierc 2. Fury iro Shakef. Henry I And bid it pafs left lik d an s bol an loc the a br the mad fol all the mifchief they can fome lefs in fon") Madyrier, in war, is a thick plank armeq wit Shakefpeare Not a word with him but a jeft s l W o n r a d m t o - l m n Th And his comrades, that daft the world afide Denban ideas together orderly. jumblin That laft is Biron, the merry madcap lord Shakefpeare But they were mad to make thee young He let fall his book u i t And as he ftoop'd aga f c This madbrain'd br "That down fell prieft an Alack, Sir, he is mad Cupid, of thee the poets fung "Thy mother from the fea was fprung Thete are degrees of madnefs as of folly t a h n a a T give my hand o e l f o l f ain vudeiby - Locke of z Of late this word has fignified a milcellaneous pamphlet, from a periodica mifcellany called the Gentleman's Maga: zine, and publifhed under the name o 1S)‘/‘7)(1,'71¢J‘ Urban, by Edward Gave M AGE 7. / [magus Latin. mag cian Spenjer MA'GGOT. #. /. [magrod, Welch; i lepeds, Latin; madu, Saxon. 1. A fmall grub, which'turns into a fly Out of the fides and back of the common catet apain: l}e {o buffets himfelf on the forchead,, tha any madnefs 1 eyen, yet beheld feemed but,tame pillarwehave feen, creep out fmall maggars Ray ow Greatiars Shakefpesrc's Merry #ivgs of BWindlor . Tt leaves a brood of maggots in difguife Garth 2. Whimfey nefs and civility to this diftemper From the fore although the infech Hiesys |