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Show M A MA tion upon the drier and flefhy parts, changes int Harwey a marcid fever He on his own fith pours the nobleft-oil .D':)'({Lfl Ma'RCOUR. 7./. [marcor, Lat.] Leannefs the ftate of withering ; wafte of flefh the exolution and languor enfuin the extenuatio the a&tion of venery in fome an wiarcour in others, it much abridgeth our days Brown's Vulgar Errours A marcour is either imperfect, tending to leffer withering, which is curable; or perfet, tha is, an entire wafting of the body, excluding al Harwey means of cure MarEe. % /. [mape, Saxon. 1. The female of a horfe Dryden 2. [From mara, the name of a {pirit imagined by the nations of the north t torment fleepers.] A kind of torpor o ftagnation, which feems to prefs the ftomach with a weight; the night hag his merry queen by night Beftrides young folks that lie upright In elder times the mare that hight Drayton Which plagues them out of meafure Mufhrooms caufe the incubus, or the mare i Bacow's Natural Hiffory Ma'RESCHAL. n. f. [marefchal, French derived by Funius from mare, the femal of an horfe.] A chief commander o an army O William, may thy arms advance That he may lofe Dinant next year And fo be marefchal of France Prior Ma'RGARITE. . f. [margarita, Latin A pearl marguerite, French, Silver is the fecond metal, and fignifies purity among the planets it holdeth with luna, amon precious ftones with the margarite or pearl Peacham on Blazoning An herb Ma'RGARITES. 7. /. [bellis. Ainfworth MAaRrGE N k n_/: [margo French. 3. The border; th the verge Latin; marge brink He drew his flaming fword the edge and firuc At him fo fiercely, that the upper marg ©Of his fevenfold fhield away it took. Fairy Quecn Never finc Met weon hill, in dale, foreft, or mead Ot on the beached margent of the fea. Shakefpeare An airy crowd came rufhing where he ftood Which fill'd the margin of the fatal floode Dryden 2. The edge ofa page left blank, or fille with a fhort note As much love in rhime As would be cramm'd up in a fheet of pape Writ on both fides the leaf, margent and all Shake[peare Reconcile thofe two places, which both you an the margins of our Bibles acknowledge to be parallel Hammond He knows in law, nor text, nor margent. Swift 3. The edge of a wound or fore All the advantage to be gathered from it is onl from the evennefs of its margin, the purpofe wil be as fully anfwered by keeping that under only Sharp's Surgery Ma'RGINAL from margin. the margin adj [marginal Placed Oft, when heaven's burning eye the fields invades T fro f a g / # man. many ; i marifpes veforts title of fovereignty in Gerits original import, keepe o t o f 7 Ma'r e o v o k lc f 7 Ma'r A yello flower French or written o fea and rivers, in marif The fen and quagraire {o marifb by kind Are to be drained Belong . ing to the fea The king was defirous that the ordinances o England and France, touching marine affairs, migh Haywward be reduced into one form an othe marin bodies, are found lodged in all forts of ftone Woodward No longer Circe could her flame difguifc Gaith But to the fuppliant God marine xeplies Mar1'NE. 2. f. [la marine, French. 1. Sea-affairs If any one retains a wife that has been takeni in the mind, and fince Chriftian chafity, a8 wel as marital affe€tion, eafily induces a belief theresf Ayl@?}. this law is not obferved It has been determined by fome unpolite profeflors of the law, thata hufband may exercifehis marital authority fo far, as to give his wife modeArt of Tormenting rate correction MA RITATED adj MA 'RITIME as di Queen that marire who miftakin bem his fhip fraught with common pebbles fro them for precious ftones, brough A difcourfed of a maritimal voyage, and thegil naval 2. Relating to the fea At the parliament at Oxford his youth, and want of experienc in maritim fervice " Waar play' Chapman's Iliad The mu}m;uring billows Ercoco, and the lefs maritime king Monbaza and Quiloa ) ],WM: Neptune upbraided them with their fupidity ignorance that a maritine town fhould neglect th patronage of him .who was the god of mjfij} Marx z. /. [marc, Welfh; meanc, Sax. mercke, Dutch ; margue, lj‘rcn?h 1. A token by which any thing i know‘s_ Once was proclaimed througheut :.\11 Trelanc that all men fhould mark their cattle with an op feveral sark upon their flanks or butto_cks, fo ‘ if they happened to be ftolen, they {'"Sht 311'1': whofe they were Spenfer an Irée i, In the prefent form of the earth thereare Cel marks and indications of its firft ftate; wit if w compar thof thing tha are reco li; ea; th wha difcov ma w hiftor facre in its firft original s o humi The urine is a lixiviam of the falts in ad "uan The nymphs of the mountains would be drawn upon their heads garlands of honeyfuckles, woodbine, and fweet marjoram Peacham Hayward and found a place upon whic Sought for his bed Ma'rjoraM. n. /. [marjorana, Latin marjolaine, Fr.] A fragrant plant o many kinds; the baftard kind onl grows here The flight was made towards Dalkeith; whic way, by reafon of the marifh, the Englifh horfe wer "I'he friend, the fhores maritima Sawift Ma'r1sH. #./. [marais, French ; mepyc Saxon; maerfche, Dutch. A bog; fen; afwamp; watry ground; a marfh 2 a morafs ; a moor had fomewha 3. Bordering on the fea Glanville His bufy mariners be hates His fhatter'd fails with rigging to reftore Diyden What sariner is not afraid leaft able to purfue Raleigh's Effipi fages and incidents therein the Indies To venture in a fhip decay'd maritime, French. 1. Perforined on the fea ; marine A {eaman ; a f{ailor ourfelves [from maritus, Lat. Dig Having a hafband MaRryrInvaL. | adj. [maritimus, Latn 2. A foldier taken on fhipboard to be employed in defcents upon the land Ma'riNER. 7. [, [from mare, Lat. mari‘The merry mariner unto his wor Soon hearkened, and her painted boat fira Turn'd to the fhore Fairy becaufe repentance does confi Bu of bawdry have both left relations of the ftate of the Indies a that time Arbuthnot oft deceiv he incurs the guilt of the crim been fhrewdly touched Nearchus, who commanded Alexander's fleet and Oneficrates his intendant-general of marire W Tuffer's Hu/bandr] Ma'riTAL. adj. [maritus, Lat. marital Fr.] Pertaining to a hufband; inciden to a hofband MaRrUNE. adj. {marinus, Lat. and unwholefome grounds Bacon's Effage the a& of adultery Why am I ftyl'd a cook, if I'm fo loat "To marinate my fifh, or feafon broth ? King's Cook nier, French. of fome plantations, that they have built along th and then preferve them i thells Moorifh; fenny; bOggy; adj It hath been a great endangering to the hedlt Zo MA'RINATE. @. a. [mariner, French. o lwampy Cleawveland Gay Faix is the marigold, for pottage meet -multitude From the other hil Ma'risH Echoes the fun, and doth unlac Her at his rife Vaf Ris'n from a river, o'exr the marifh glides And gathers ground faft at the labourer's heel The snarigold, whofe courtier's fac oil or vinegar Sandys's P"mjibrafi The cherubim defcended; on the groun Gliding meteorous, as ev'ning mif devoted The marigold hath a radiated difcous flower; th petals of them are, for the moft part, crenated, th feeds crooked and rough ; thofe which are uppermof long, and thofe within fhort; the leaves arc long Miller intire, and for the moft part fucculent Your circle will teach you to draw truly all fpherical bodies. The moft of flowers; as, the rofe an Peacham marigold To falt fith To their fix'd ftation, all in bright array I fuppofe, to the virgin By fubftituting mares, produc'd on earth ‘Whofe wombs conceiv'd a more than mortal birth the ftomach I'V"‘_ (5 adj. [marginatus, Latin MA'RGINATED tha, Lat. A pair of courfers born of heav'nly breed Whom Circe ftole from her celeftial fire Mab Lodronius, carried away with the breaki 420 of the horfemen, was driven into a marifbs wl% u Wher being fore wounded, and faft in the mud he ha 'KM" done the uttermoft His limbs he coucheth in the cooler fhades. Haoker h r w i b a a f a i r m t w t fervation n of your fecond year's review I Mflt‘. iX o p r u y o h r w n f What remarks y By the rank fmell and tafte betrays its Kind Confiderin ther, they turned again to the marifp of J&rdafi. t d u p c e m h L p words than p m i n c a ' r L o whofe fpeech concernin ferve inftead of a marginal glofs *That to your marcid dying herbs aflign'd ‘When they had avenged the blood of tfléffi‘fi e t o t r r t i We cannot bette them body, ‘and the proper mark of the fate&2 ?1 intity of fuch falts; and therefore very Ce'm dication fo th choic from the ftate of urine 2 of diet may be 1 Arbuthnot o8 s A token ; an impreflion But cruel fate, and my more cruel'wf"; To Grecian f{words betray'd my {leeping life Thefe are the monuments of Helen's 1;": V The fhame 1 bear below, the marks 1. ' Dy |