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Show M'E" grapes and made wterry, and wen their God Fudg. ix. 27 bevy of jolly, gofliping wenche a difh of pullets L'Effrang MERRY-A'NDREW 7. / buffoon zany ; a jackpudding He would be a ftatefman becaufe he is a buffoon; as if there went no more to the makin of a counfellor than the faculties of a merry-an or tumbler L'Efir The greate portion of th® arterial blood By the clofe ftruéture of the parts withftood Whofe narcow mefbes ftop the grofler flood 7o MEsy catc 7 /. ana an [)m‘;‘r thought.] A forked bone on the body o fowls; fo called becaufe boys and girl pull in play at the two fides, the longef part broken off betokening priority o marriage Lethim not be breaking merr table with my coufin bts under th Echard MESERAICK. #. /i [uecdpaior 5 meferaique French: analogy requires it me/araick.] Belonging to the myfentery It takech leave of the permanent parts at th mouths of the meferaicks and accompanieth th inconvertible po:tion into the fiege Br.awn The moft {ubtile part of the chyle paffech immediately into, th blood by the abforbent veffels o the guts, which difcharge themfelves into the meferaick veins A buthnot VIE‘rsi0ON 2. / [merfio act of finking Mese'ems Jeems Latin. or thrufting over head imperfona 1s now too commo I think a Ainfworth verb or it feems to me : fo methought Th [ this wor te-ufe methinks o ungrammatica it appear an word. to me ; methinks Alas, of ghofts I hear the ghattly cries Yet there, mzfeems, 1 hear her finging loud. Sidney NMefecwd by my fide a royal maid Fler dainty limbs full foftly down did lay. Fairy 2 Te that general fubjetion of the land mefeem that the cuftom or tenure can be no bar nor impeachment Spenfer VIE'SENTERY. 2. / zere, French. ‘Tha guts are convolved [J,s.'sv':s"cml mefen round which th When the chyle paficth through the mefentery itis mixed with the lymph. Arbuthnot on Aliments MESENTE RICK ad) from mefentery. fentery [mefenterique Relatin Fr to the me "They are carried into the glands of the mefentery receiving a fine lymph from the lymphatick dus which dilutes this chylous fluid, and fcours its con taining veflels, which, from the mefenterick glands unite in large channels, and pafs dire€ly into th . Ju common receptacle of the chyle MESH . / [ma@/bfie, Cheyne Dutch mache old Freach: it were therefore bette written, as it 1s commonly pronounced mafh. Th interftic of net fpace between the threads of a net th The drovers hang fquare nets athwart the tide thorough which the fhoal of pilchard pafling, leav marnly behind entangled in the meafbes Carew Such a hare is madnefs the youth, to fkip o'e the mifbes of good counfel the cripple He fpreads his fubtle nets from fight With twinkling glaffes to betra The larks that in the m-fpes light Shakefpeare Dryden Which through the cells of the fine ftrainers fink Thefe all the channel'd fibres ev'ry way T in a net ; to enfnare MEe'ssENGER wh Drayton Reticulated Some build his houfe, but thenc iflue barre ke hi ¢fby bed, but re reft. Careav t in the meff oy Inare, in vain they bea nei wings T Eomfon MEe'svin. #./. [from mefler, French, t mix ; or rather corruptly pronounce for mefcella / e See MasLin. Mixe corn: as, wheat and rye What reafon is there which fhould but induce and therefore much lefs enforce, us to think, tha care of old diffimilitude between the people of Go and the heathen nacions about them was an more the caufe of forbidding them to put on garments of fundry fiuff, than of ch the withal not to fow their fields with m 1f worke for the threther ye mind for to Of wheat and of mcfflin unthrefhed go fave. ¢ M.soLEu'cYs n. / precicus ftone, black white in the middle wit a fireak o Di& Meso'LoGaRITHMS. 7. [4ée6, 20y@ and opidu@. 'The logarithms of th cofines an by Kepler tangents {0 denominate Harris Meso'MELAS. 7. fo [usoopirzca A precious ftone with a black vein partin every colour in the midft MEe'sp1se z. / Bailey [probably mifprinted fo mefprife 5 mefpris, French. Contempt {corn Mammo was much difpleas'd, yet not he chof But bear the rigour of his bold m:[pife And thence him forward led, him further to entice Spen fer MEess. a. / [mes, old French meffo Italian ; mifus, Latin ; mes, Gothic meye, Saxon, a dith.] A dith; a qua tity of food fent to table together Th bounteous hufwife nature Lays her full mefs before you on each buf efpe Tine of Ath Now your traveller He and his toothpick at my worfhip's mefs Shak I had as lief you fhould tell me of /s of por ridge Herbs and other country meffs Which the neat-handed Phillis drefles u(:h_.rfa.(/'t Milton Had either of the crimes been cooked to thei palates, they might have changed m¢/es J‘)UL‘J) Fro Gf]'t) him he next receives it thick or thin As pure a mefs almof 7o Mzss w.n MEe'ssace # / as it came in to feed [mefage French. errand an thin othe b tol t Pope To eat committe A to an to a third She doth difpla The gate with pearls and rubies richly dight Through which her words fo wife do make thei way To bear the meffage of her gentle fpright Spenfer May one that is a herald and a prince She is fair, and Skakefpeare fairer than that word Of wond'rous virtues; fometimes from her eye 1 did receive fair fpeechlefs meflages Gently baft thou tol Shakefpeare Thy meffzge, which might elfe in telling wound And in performing end us 7. /. [meflager, Fr. Milton's Paradife Loft On from another to a third; one who bring an account or foretoken of any thing an harbinger a forerunner Came running in, much like a2 man difmaid A meffenger with letters, which his meffage faid Spenfer Yon grey lines That fret the clouds, are meffengers of day Shake[peare Th earl difpatched meffingers one after anothe to the king, with an account of what he heard an believed he faw, and yet thought not fit to fta for an anfwer Clarendon Joy touch'd the meffenger of heav'n; he ftay' Entranc'd, and all the blifsfu haunt furvey'd. Pope MESSI'AH Th #. / [fro th debrew. Anointed ; the Chrift the Saviou of the world oY ; the Prince of peace and public of pofition the magiftrates mad againft Jefus Dryden carries an errand ; one who come Grea [Lezran®. Do a fair mflage to his kingly ears With all their mouths the nerves the fpirits drink ¥orotion and fenfation, fill convey noun. MEe‘suy. adj: [from me/h. of net-work ME RRYTHOUGHT th The flies by chance mefbt in her hair By the bright radiance throw F r clear eyes, rich jewels were They fo like diamonds fhone The firfk who made the experiment was a andrew @. a. [fro Blackmore Let the minifter be low, his intereft inconfiderable, the world will fuffer for his fake; th meffage will ftill find reception according to th dignity of the meflenger South The welcome mfJage made, was foon receiv'd "Twas to be wifh'd and hop'd, but fcarce believ'd th man of Nazareth when he ap peared as the Me MESSFEURS 7/1/679@‘117'. Messm n. / er? Watts [French plura o ger.nleu}en k. 2. /. [mefs and mate. On who eats at the fame table Mu'ssuaGE. u. /. [mefuagium, law Latin formed perhaps from mefnage by mifta vial to be jo ME of the # in court hand tor «, they bei written alike, me/nage from maifon, Fr. The houfe and groun fet apart fo houfehold ufes Mer, the preterite and part. of eer " To junket o make MERRY They trod th into the houfe o A fox *fpy'd making merry ove ME no fet of wel t b grante me the meaning o gentleme with in other countries ca never be wron oppofe minifters of ftate MeTacra‘MMATISM viAn dupen grammati{m in England take it fo fo long as the Addifor's #. / bolder [ud or metagrammatifm an is a diflo lution® of a name into ‘its letters, as its elements and a new connexion of it by a tificial tranfpofition without addition, fubwalion, or change of : 1 letter into different words, making fome perfec fenfe applicable to the perfon named Camden META'BASIS. . f. [Greek. In rhetorick, a figure by which the orato pafles from one thing to another. Di& M:Ta'sora. #. /. [pda€rn. In medicine, a change of time air or difeafe MeTaca'Rrus. n. [ [plaxdpmn. I anatomy, a bone of the arm made u of four bones fingers whic are joined to th The conjunétion is called fynarthrofis the joining of the carpus to the metacar pus Wifen Di& as i s Surgery MEeTACA'RPAL. adj. [from metacarpus. Belonging to the metacarpus Diz It will facilitate the feparation in the joint when you cut the finger from the metacarpal bone Sharp's Surgery ME'TALS. . f Lat. 1. We underftan [metal Fr. metallum by the term meral firm, heavy, and hard fubftance, opake fufible by fire, and concreting agai when cold into a folid body, fuch as i was before, which is malleable unde th |