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Show carrytale, fome pleafeman, fome fligh zany Some mumbyle-news ; told our intents before. Shak Here ftood he in the dark Mumbling of wicked charms, conj'ring the moo Som Hale and indefi 3. A great number, loofel 1t is a fault in a maultitude of preachers, that the utterly neglect method in their harangues 4. A crowd or throng; the vulgar He the vaft hiffing multitede admives #atts Addifon han hand ¢ No, this m Spaniels civilly deligh In mumbling of the game they dare not bite wil The maultitudinous tongue, let them not lic Shakefpeare The {weet that is their poifon [multivagus MuLTI'VAGANT. ) adj Lat.] That wanMvurTi'vacous Dis ders or ftrays much abroad Muvusti'vious. adj. [multus and wia Lat.] Having many ways; manifold Diz Mvuito'cuLar. adj. [multus and oculus Lat.] Having more eyes than two Mv'mmER thers Grave mummers is made a Mortimer Philips ‘With bowls of fat'ning mum The clam'rous crowd is hufh'd with mugs o T0o Mu'MBLE. w. n. [mompelen, Dutch mutio, Lat. 1. To fpeak inwardly; to gramble; t mutter; to {peak with imperfect foun or articulation Asone then in a dream, whofe drier brai Ts toft with: troubled fights, and fancies weake _ He mumbled foft, but would not all his filenc Spenfer break Peace, you mumbling fool Utter your gravity o'er a goflip's bowl Shakefp A wrinkled hag, with age grown double Picking dry fticks, and mumbling to herfelf. Otway 2. To chew to bite foftly to eat wit the lips clofe The man Mumbling t Might lang The prickle who laugh'd but once to fee an af make the grofs-grain'd thiftles pafs again to fee a jury cha Dryden of unpalateable law Fo Mu'MBLE. 2. a atus, Tranquillus Fenton The platonical hypothefis of a mundare foul wil Glanwille's Scepfi relieve us a he ve co ft tu n w i The atom earth, being once feparate in the mandane (i me ha ica th i b G d w t o n v coul fr m pr fe th in c n e e h v affe&tions medicinal ufe unis the dried flet myrrh and fpice from fuch mum ove till the juices are exhaled, and the embalming matter has penetrated Hill's Mat. Med The fil Was dy'd in mummy, which the fkilfu Conferv'd of maidens hearts, Shakefpeare's Othello. Bentley's Scrra of things Mvuxbpa‘rioN n. [mundus, Latin. The a& of cleanfing Munxpa"TorY. adj. [from mundus, Lat Having the power to cleanfe ma ca o it k n / Mu'nxpick or femimetal found in tin mines vials, or fuffered to dry : the firft kind is brough in large pieces, of a friable texture, light an {pungy, of a blackith brown colour, and often blac and clammy on the furface; it is of a ftrong bu not agreeable fmell : the fecond, in its liquid ftate is a thick, opake, and vifcous fluid, of a blackif and a ftrong, but not difagreeable fmell : in its indurated ftate it is a dry, folid fubftance, of a fin thining black colour and clofe texture, eafil broken, and of a good fmell: this fort is extremely dear, and the firft fort fo cheap, that w are not to imagine it to be the ancient Egyptia mummy What our druggifts are fupplied with i the fleth of any bodies the Jews can get, who fil them with the common bitumen fo plentiful i that part of the world, and adding aloes, and fom other cheap-ingredients, fend them to be baked i a Gibfon's Camden &c Muxpa'NE. adj. [mundanus, Lat.] Be longing to the world mies when newly prepared, or when affected by grea heat, or by damps: this is fometimes of a liquid fometimes of a folid form, as it is preferved i Pope import : Irenzus, Hefychius, Lenis, Pacatus, Se mum, by Bochart from the Arabick. 1. A dead body preferved by the Egyptian art of embalming We have two f{ubftances fo der the name of mummy: on of human bodies embalmed wit the other is the liquor runnin On breach of the peace, mundbrech: fo Eadmundi happy peace; A thelmund, noble peace; Almund all peace ; with which thefe are much of the fame Mvu'yvMy. 2. /. [mumie, French; mumia Latin; derived by Sal/mafius from amo Al munch. Mund is peace, from which our lawyers cill Bacon's Natural Hiftory Your father Difdain'd the mummery of foreign ftrollers Dryden's Don Sebaffan that munches Munb. 7. / and triumphs of the world, half { ftately as candle-light that's broken loofe, ang #z. /. [fro Mvu'~cHER This open day-light doth not fhew the mafque and mummeries To chew eagerly b munching upon the melons Wotton And forrows only real be your good dry oats. Shakefp. Midf. Night's Drean. It is the fon of a mar Pope's Dunciad {ee Mouxcy Say, fweet love, what thou defir'ft toeat -Truly, a peck of provender; I could mus 7o Muncu. v. 2 great mouthfuls Here mirth's but mummery the river Elbeys is a ftore Fill all tun'd equal fend a general hum is {fometimes written mommery Hudibras mum wife written to mounch Mvu'MMERY. #. /. [momerie, Fr.] Malking; frolick in mafks; foolery. Thi Sedulous and: ftou 7o MuxcH. . 4. [manger, French.] T chew by great mouthfuls. This s like Peel'd, patch'd and pyebald, linfey-woolfey bro Shake[peare The citizens are 7mum, fay not a word. Shake/p mu Addifon mers Shakefpeare Mum then, and no more proceed ‘Well faid, mafter ; mum ! and gaze your fill houfe for the wheat of whic Brunfwick Danith. dinfwa) Mvu'mrer. 7. /. [In cant language.] beggar Muwmes. z. /. [mompelen, Dutch.] Sullep nefs; filent anger Skinmy, - Muwmeps. #. /. ‘The {quinancy. - dinfy I began to fmoke that they were a parcel of #zum But to his fpeach he aunfwered nowhit But ftood ftill mute, as if he had beene dum Ne figne of fence did fhew, ne common wit As one with griefeand anguifhe ove-cum And unto every thing did aunfwere mum. Spenfer upo 2. f. [mumme O To goa begging Jugglers and dancers, anticks, mummers. Milton and mafkers are the fame. Upron. word denoting prohibition to fpeak, o refolution not to {peak; filence; huth In Shenibank 3. [In cant language. If you chance to be pinch'd with the colick, yo make faces like mummers. Shakefpeare's Coriolanus mummer German. z. To talk low and quick perfonated drefs Muwm. interjef. [Of this word the fuppofed original is mentioned in mome: i may be obferved, that when it is pronounced it leaves the lips clofed. Mum Muwm. =z f. [mumme brewed with wheat Like a tame mumping {quirrel with a bell op mafker; one who performs frolicks in Derbam Intruft it under folemn vow Of mum, and filence, and the rofe Let him not pry nor liften Nor frifk about the houf The thriftlefs game With mumming and with mafking all around Hubberd Flies are multocular, having as many eyes as ther me To Mumr. v. a. [mompelen, Dutclfl]"/w 1. To nibble; to bite quick; tO.ch with a continued motion ; On Mu MBLER. 7. /. [from mumble. that fpeaks inarticulately ; a mutterer Mu MBLINGLY. adv. [from mumbling. With inarticulate utterance 7o Mumwm. . a. [mumme, Danith.] T malk; to frolick in difguife At once pluck ou a matk ; whenc Pope The raifing of my rabble is an exploit of confequence; and not to be mumbled up in filence for al Dryden her pertnefs 2. Manifold ufe Dunigy gardene 15 for in the planti ng a n grafti of trees ' Chambers 3. To beat to a Mummy To beat foung 3. To flubber over; to fupprefs ; to utte imperfeQly Thy multitudinons fea incarnardine Shakefpeare's Mach Makjng the green one red Danith fort of wa 2. To mouth gently rathe are perforations in their cornez 2. Mummy is ufed amon He with mumbled pray'rs attones the deity Dryden's Juw Will all great Neptune's ocean wafh this bloo m Old bodies of philofophy appear Shake[peare To ftand 's aufpicious miftrefs MuLTiTUu DINOUS. adj. [from multitude. 1. Having the appearance ofa multitude Clean fro It is firange how long carcafes have Co ti g uncorrupt, as appeareth in the mupy having lafted fome of them three tho:x?asfi ifiy 15 by fpice, like mumlrgntz{::," :ni\;";l:'al Hifyy Sav' 1. To utter with a low inarticulate voice Tt is impoffible that any multitude can be aétuall "infinite, or fo great that there cannot be a greater nitely MU MU MU Whe any metals are in confiderable quantitf thefe bodies lofe the name of marcafites, an called ores: in Cornwal and the Weft the ar ds Wo them mundick fli ':u ma di o fo t th al Befides ftones rally figured MUNDIFICA TION facio, Latin. 7. J Gre [mumfi da Cleanfing any b0 i ac i f o r o m t e o d o s fro i Q e n e c b t to what i d /i it a mund adj MuNDI'FICATIVE Latin. w p t C to eleanfe :w ol pl Wa an e i a i i n m Gall is ver fore-E dicine to clear the eyes of Tobit We incarned with an addition t0 thc'sosflw W ifema tioned mundificative |