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Show MA oA70 Ma e x. "Twas then old foldiers cover'd o'er with {cars WIhe marks of Pyrrhus, or the Punick wa I'hought all paft fervices rewarded w { to their fhare at leaft two At prefent there are f ubterraneous fire; for th Men mar they mifs Addi divorc an evidenc ind fcope Stow borderet calle f as a place of Carexv's Surwve fs 1an For I muf Any thing at which a mifiille weapon 1 directed her The evidence of a horfe's age of thirteen A fu French. and fourpence mak a mancus w can Here are marriage vows for figning Dryden rks that cannot write Lorenzo fign'd the bargain with hismark. Youn ken, DutchDutch; w.a. [mersrken Saxon ; marquer, French. 2 » MARK. can ZEon meapmeayn fPorno and appointed place gain and our tim Wifd. xv. 12 take one for another Will it no That which was once the index to point out al of the worl virtues, does nov v mar t out that par Yorav of 1 iety Deca of where leaft of them refides "3. To note; to take notice S 1 Alas, poor country fhrieks, that rend th [peare' ]E/ll'«l '{/,y‘ em which caufe divifions contrary to th rich ye have learned, and a id them et da Rom i G heed to regard as valid or im " portant Now {wear and cal to witnef tTeav'n, hell, and earth, I mark it not from on That brcathes beneach fuch camplicated guilt Smith MA'RKET-PLACE 7. / [market an place.] Place where the market is held Th king, thinking he had put up his fword, be caufe of the noife, never took leifure to hear his anfwer, but made him prifoner, meaning the nex morning to put him to death in the marketplace The gates he order'd all to be unbarr'd f‘l‘d'flcj And from the marketplace to draw the guard Dryden Behold the marketplace with poor o'erfpread The man of Rofs divides the weekly bread Pope MA'RKET-PRICE. | 7. /. [market and pric Ma'rkeT-RATE. orrate.] The pric at which any thing is carrently fold Money governs the world, and the marketprice i the meafure of the worth of men as well as of fithes L' Eftranges Te that wants a veflel, rather than lofe his ma ket will not ftick to have it at the markerrate Loc C Ma'rRkET-TOWN. #./. A town that ha the privilege of a ftated market; not village Nothing doth fooner caufe civility in any coun With another yeat's continuance of the war there will hardly be money left in this kingdom t turn the common smarkets, or pay rents Temple 3¢ fure to turn the penny Rate price Dryden's Perfius [marché "Twas then old foldiers, cover'd o'er with fcars all paft fervices rewarded well Their country's frugal bounty; fo of ol ‘Was blood and life at alow market fold 7o Ma'RkET Dryden @w. n. Fo deal at a market to buy or fell ; to make bargains MARKET-BELL. 7./. [market and bell. The bell to give notice that trade ma begin in the market Enter, go in, the marketbell is rang. Shakefpeare Ma'RKET-CROSS. 7.f. [market and crofs. A crofs fet up where the market is held Thefe things you have articulated Proclaim'd at marketcroffes, read in churches To face the garment of rebellio Sh peare's Henry IV Fool that I was, I thought imperial Rome Like Mantua, where on marketdays we come, Dryder's Virgi And thither drive our lambs He ordered all the Lucquefe to be feized tha were found on a marketday in one of his frontie towns Addifon on Italy MA RKET-FOLKS. 7. /. [market and folks. People that come to the market Poor marketfolks that come to fell their corn Shakef MA'RKET-MAN 7. f ing ofte thither will lear civil manner [market and man. One who goes to the market to fell o buy Be wary how you place your words Talk like the vulgar fort of marketmen That come to gather money for their corn. Shakef The marketman thould aét as if his mafter' whole eftate ought to be applied to that fetvant' Sawift bufinefs MAa'RKET-MAID. . J. [market and maid. A woman that goes to buy or fell of th MA'RKETABLE. adj. [from market. 1. Such as may be fold; fuch for which buyer may be found A plain.fifh, and no doubt marketable French. or evidence. | MA'RkET-DAY. 7. [. [marker and day. received The day on which things are publickl od thofe fleepy tw bough an fold gers y as by a mark Shakefpeare's Antony and Clegpatra better fort Spenfer No, no, the pope's mitre my mafter Sir‘Rége feized, when they would have burnt him' at ou maikettorun Gay Of pepper and Sabzan incenfe take And with poft-hafte thy running market make 3 A marketmaid to Rome, and have prevente 1 he oftentation of our love try than market-torons, by reafon that people repair With fome fine colour When we hav ir very da f his own cham peare's Macbeth 1at they have don't n of things ufeful, they ar For our quiequi t pe 1 vhere there is needs Grew's Cofm naturall 197 Latin. efs with a token pr C mer If, to their fhare, at leaft two acres fell Shakef o. A charaéter made by thofe wh not write their names T [anciendy writte our life a paftime ¢ fo You are com Dryden [marqueur, French, fro A they are o Locke Though cive thee for reward a'thoufand marks of thefe penc th The precious weigh Licence of repri fome think to be all one with a mark, for tha manca and mancufa is tranflated, in ancient books Camdin's Re by marca 3 Upon every writ for debt or pounds or more, a nobl to fort and {o for every hundred marks more a noble. Bacon 4 ded afterwards int fo 2. Purchafe and fale lay a pea within it; and weareth fhorter and fhorte avery year, till at eight years old the tooth is fmooth Bacon's Natural Hiftory Thirt wa will learn civil manners Spenfer F, down on your kn es know yo Heav'n, fafting, for a good man's love tell you friendly in your ear the market, b equal worth the mark of toot as big as you ma At four vears old comet in horfes, which hath a hol mak If one bufhel of wheat and two of barley will, i Denbani i {als [Marc fhilling t ikefpeare For all the people's hate, the prince's curfes French. i concerne Sell when you can, you are not for all markets to fhoot at than Ireland France was a f Dawies and could better reward the £onqueror Be made the mar [ Marque is fo muc and felling It were gpod that the privilege of a market wer AE 1able thermn to thei defence: for ther th fooner caufe civility than man , by reafon the people repairing of Conveniency of notice h i reatys The law Stand like the forfeits in a barber's fhop Shake[peare as mark As much for moc »er eminentiam whe One that puts a mark on any thing One that notes or takes notice Notice taken whic #. / fe never mar mark. ime nort an Virgi -k time th o to tak no as they do alfo of dreams. Bacon's Effays n. [ 1nion The Argonaut :nce pafled int o upon their f Upo not; e when they hit As the confufion of to ation, fo the bein W TT @. 2 tice un with grafs and fhrubs A proof A 2. Current in the market Shakefp The pretorian foldiers arrived to that impudence that after the death of Pertinax they made ope fale of the empire, as if it had been of commor marketable wares The m ble valu commodities ar one for another Decay of Piety of any quantities of tw equal whe the Ma"rRkma will exchang Locke } n. [. [m and man. Ma'rRksman man fkilful to hit mark In fadnefs, coufin, I do love a. woman -I aim'd fo near when I fuppos'd you -A right good ma Whom nothing can procure When the wide world runs bias from his will To writhe his limbs, and thare, not mend the ill Thi is the markfman, {afe and.fure Who ftill is right, and prays to be fo &ill. Herders An ordinary markfman may know certainly whe he: thoots lefs wide at what he aims Dryder MARL #. f. [marl Welfh; me;-g[[ Dutch ; murga, Latin; marle, marne Fl.'cnch 3 in Saxon, mejpig is marrow with an allufive fignification, marle being the fagnefs of the earth. Marl is a kind of clay, which is become fatter of a more enriching quality, by a better fertion an b it havin lai fo deep in.th as not to have fpent or wea It and oily qual by the term # V imple nativ han the boles or cln_\;; not fof to the touch, nor duile whil crumbly betwee in watere th fingers an 7 > beft compoft; as having moft fatnefs the ground too much Bacon Uneafy ftep Over the burning mar/, not like thofe ftep On heaven's azure Milton |