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Show ¥o MarL A @. a. [from the noun. Pa pe ' an edi y' the zea l a u n h b v l o n b t a t I Wi W ma L ro o - pu dings many a meal, Hug £ r w m n f g i r m o Thy pur He bit t'nc‘ dart, and wreneh'd the wooq a Shakefpeare Th poi ftil o bur e i o i f the marrsy |ay d t v lfi' h u w n k c e The F e a d f t o S t i W R A a t n i p c e a t w n a e B o g i r m t T manure with marl Improvements by marling, liming, and draining have been fince money was at five and fix per cent /d he thould not marry her himfelf Sandy land marled v ill bear good peafe. Mo 9 Tfro LAro Som wmar mariine T ©. afaften the fails with marline. Zinfaworrh MARL Ma'rRrine #» / [meapn d Skinzer. #. / A {mall piec God, pleaf gins whof tunities I propof In marriag libert Becauf Ther Thithe Tho Fr boiled int it is fubaftringent, grate Quincy -ful to the ftomach Marmora'TION. 7.fi [marmor, Latin. Dig Incruftation with marble MAarRMOREAN. adj. [marmoreus, Latin. Dig Made of marble Ma'rRMOSET. #./. [marmoufet, French., A {mall monkey I will inftruét thee ho To fnare the nimble marmozet Shakefpe Tempeft MARMOT MARMO'TTO. { ™ /- [Ttalian. "The marmotto or mus alpinus as big or bigge than a rabbit, which abfconds all winter, doth liv upon its own fat Ray Ma'RQUETRY. #. J. [marqueterie, Fr. Chequered work ; work inlaid with variegation Ma'rQuis. n. f. [marquis, French 5 marchio Latin ; margrave, German. 1. In England one of the fecond order o nobility, next in rank to a duke Non ma is a certain number of ranks aliowed to dukes marguiffis, and earls, which they muft not exceed Peacham on Drawing 2. Marquis is wled by Shake/peare for marchionefs, [marquife, French. You fhall hav Two. noble partners with you: the old duchef Of Norfolk, and the lady marguefs Dorfet. Shakefp Ms'rRQUISATE. 7. /. [marquifat, French. The feigniory of a marquis You be indeed makers manners within the realm Ma RRIAGE gium On wh or marrers, of all men Afcham's Schoolnafper 2. /. [mariage, Fr. marita low Latin from maritus. a& of uniting 2 ma life an With theef or his zzarroav for fear of ill end, Tuflr woma Th fo The marriage with his brother's wif Has crept too near his confcience Skake[peare to live and die Upo and begged of Jupiter to give him a pair °fh0ms. parent tak the S‘zofifi home 2. Capable of union Her dow'r, th' adopted clufters, to ador His barren leaves Ma'rRRr1ED. adj. [from marry. Jugal ; connubial Ma'rrowraT A kind of pea [fro marrey,] MA'RRY+w. a. [marier, Br. may tor , Lat. 1. To join a man and woman, as perfoim. Milton ing the rite Wha him fhal th curat controu S ) withIn it: the back bone hath one kind of marrozw fxnd other bones of the body have another: th Jaw-bones have no marreg feyered, but a littl Bu'{(‘)l me that he fhall zarry the couple himfelf . Gay's What d'ye call 2. To difpofe of in marriage there was no third way, he had made him fo gre2 Bao 3. To take for hufband or wife You'd think it=ftrange if I fhould marry her Shakefpear As a mothe fhal mee fh him as a wife married of a virgin Zo Ma'rry @. 7 him and reciz Ecclufoxvz. enter into the f v T to marry with Nan Page after that difficult wa removed marry, and eftablifh the Trojans That from his loins no hopeful branch may {pring fpr Virgil concludes with the death of ‘Turnus; fi Con and al Let them marry to whom they think beft Numbe xxxyis 6 MaARrsH, Mars All the bones of the body which have any confiderable thicknefs have either a large cavity, o they are fpongious, and full of little cells: i both the one and the other there is an oleaginou fubftance, called mariow, contained in proper veficles or membranes, like the fat: in the large bones this fine oil, by the gentle heat of the body is exhaled through the pores of its fmall bladders and enters fome narrow paffages, which lead t fome fine canals excavated in the fubftance of th bone, that the marrozv may fupple the fibres of th bones, and render them lefs apt to break. Ruinc bones Thou haft no fpeculation in thofe eyes Which thou doft glare with. Shakefpeare's Macky Skakefpear M ."{ RROW. 2. /. [mepg, Saxon; fumerr Erfe; fmergh, Scottifh. pulp of marrow diffufed 2./ And none but he ‘Thus have you fhun'd the marry'd ftate. Dryden marizzv own on your smarrozvbenes, upon your allg ance; and mak.e an acknowledgment of your of fences; for I will have ample fatisfaion Dryden's Spanifp Fra, He hath my good will To wed ber elm Her marriageable arms, and with her bring Would hc_werc: wafted L'Efimngg conjugal ftate They led the vin fhe {pous'd about him twine the liberty to tell him, that he muft eithermam his daughter to Agrippa, or take away his lift Every wedding, one with another, produces fou children, and that is the proportion of childre which' any marriageable man or woman may b prefumed fhall have Graunt I am the father of a young heirefs, whom I begin to look upon as marriageable Speciator When the girls are twelve years old, which i thei this he fell down upon his marrsepy, ‘When Auguftus confulted with Mecznasabo the marriage of his daughter Julia, Mecznas tor MA'RRIAGEABLE. adj. [from marriage. 1. Fit for wedlock ; of age to be married age Ma RROWBONE. 7. /. [bone and marroy,) 1. Bone boiled for the marrow z. In burlefque language, the knee 7 A fpotlefs maid, without the marriage-tie. Dryden marriageabl Thy bones are marronvlefs, thy blood is cold endear affeCtion, could fetter his ficklenefs; but before the marriage-day appointed, he had take to wife Baccha, of whom fhe complained. Sidzey Virgin awake | the marriage-hour is nigh. Pope th h,llfbamé‘t Avaunt Crafhaw they both liv'd but one life on his arms and once lov'd portrait lay Denbame our fatal marriage-bed convey fhalt come into the marriage-chamber Tob. vi. 16 Give me [mari 1,; ' Yet chopping and‘> changing Igca:tx}xlo:vggx?;?;:fl Ma'RROWLESS adj Void of marrow Neither her worthinefs, which in truth was great nor his own fuffering for her, which is wont t wear ermine but princes, and ther Ma'RRER. #./. [from mar. fpoils or hurts any thing whic This grave's the fecond marriage-bed For though the hand of fate qguld forc *T'wixt foul and body a divorce Portuguefe is the pulp of quince a confiftence with fugar o matc Though buying and fellin It could not fever man and wife a quince. Marmalad to patc compar;i;z French. fide the pl_cexfes To thefe whom death again did wed Aboundin [marmalade marmelo God in a higher degree than thofe virpiety is not anfwerable to their opporTaylo that Palamon thall be join'd with beauteous Emily. Dzjz{m his marrow wit by giving great exampl Shakelpeare Mortimer Ma'rRMALET in tne: Addifon's Speétator I by the honour of my marriage-bed After young Arthur claim this land for mine The oak thrives beft on the richeft clay, an will penetrate ftrangely to come at a marly bot Ma'RMALADE. ) #. / 1'0m:: virgin denotes a fellow affociate ; as alfo equa In a late draught of marriage-articles, a lad ftipulated with her hufband, that fhe fhall be a Several others, of different figures, were found part of them in arivulet, the reft in a mar/pit in Woodwward freld tom tha Go in th}r ;n_ar;'.?(‘lg-‘_' Ma'rrR1AGE is often ufed in compofition of iron for faftening ropes together or to open the bolt-rope when the fai is to be fewed in it Bailey Ma'rRipiT. 2. f. [marl and pir. Pi out of which marl is dug Ma'ruy. adj. [from marl. with marl better, pleaf day EBacon of conjugal affcCtion, by preferving t}'mr faxt'{\ unbroken, and by educating children in the r.cm-.o Some the gall'd ropes with dawby marline bind Or fearcloth mafts with ftrong tarpawling coats Dryden married perfons, eve fate of virginity: they Long wreaths of untwifted hemp dippe in pitch, with which the ends of cable are guarded againft friftion Ma'rrinespikE M A M A Mas Makrsu ZBneas migh Dl:)'dvli‘-‘ D»‘fi‘fi\t'y are derived from the Saxo menyc, a fen, or fenny place. 2 / [meppc Gibjfon's Comden. Saxon A fen; a bog; afwamp Marisa. a watry traQ of land In their courfes make that round In meadow an in miarfpes found Of them fo call'd the fayry ground Draytrs | Of which they have the keeping Worms for colour and fhape, alter even as the groun ou of whic the are got as thea worm 2nd the ftag worm W We may foe in more conterminous climates grea variety in the people thereofi; the up-lands 1 Englapd yield ftrong, finewy, hardy men marfb-lands, men of large and high ftature Your low meadows and smarfb-lands you not lay up, till April, except the Spring })e 'vel wet, and your sarfbes very poachy. Mortimer's Hif Marsa-MaLLow. #. /o [a thea, La;i.nfi |