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Show NI A N E cry'd up in one age, which are decryed an ties; for the moft fevere cenfor cannot but b pleafed Dryden If a fon fhould frike his father, not only th mag Jeated in another Brown Old age, with filent pace, comes creeping on Naufeates the praife, which in her youth fthe won And hates the mufe by which fhe was undone Diyden The patient zaufeates and loaths wholefome foods Black Thofe heads, as fromachs, are not fure the beft ‘Which zaufeate all, and nothing can digeft. Pepe 2 T ftrike with difguf He let g o his hold and turned from her, as i he wer ated, then gave her a lafh with hi tail Savift Navu'szous. adj. [from naufea, Latin nayfée, French. Loathfome ; difguftful ; regarded with abhorrence Thofe trifles wherein children take delight age rétires Denbam Food of a wholefome juice is pleafant to the taft and agreeable to the ftomach, *till hunger and thirf ppeafed, an then it begins to be lefs plea ad at laft even naufeous and loathfome Ray thread-bare piirafes will often make you g of your way to find and apply them, and ar ous to rational hearers Savift adw [fro Loathfomely; difguftfully naufeous. Nau'seousLy This, though cunningly concealed, as well knowing hew maufeoufly that drug weuld go down in lawful monarchy, which was prefcribed for a rebellious commonwealth, yet they always kept i referve Diyden Their fatire's praife So naufecufly and {o unlike they paint Garth Nav'seousnEess. #. /. [from naufeous. Loathfomenefs ; quality of raifing difguft "The naufeonfnefs of fuch company difgufts a reafonable man, when he fees he can hardly approac greatnefs but as a moated caftle ; he muft firft paf through the mud and filth with which it is encompaffed Dryden's Aurengzebe Nav'ricavr. ) adj. [nauticus, Lat. Nav'rick taining to failors Per He elegantly fhewed by whom he was drawn which depainted the nautical compafs with awu magnes au magnd Cam NAUTILUS. . /. [Latin; nantile, Fr. A fhell fith furnithed wit analagous to oars and a fail fomethin Learn of the little nautilus to fail Spread the thin oar and catch the driving gale Pope Na'vy. ». /. [from navis, Latin. aflembl of thips, commonl A fhips o war ; a fleet On the weftern coaft rideth a puiffant nawy Shakefp. Rich. T11 Levy money, and return the fame to the treafurer of the nawy for his majefty's ufe. Clarendsn The narrow feas can {carce their #7zwvy bear Drydea Or crowded vefiels can their foldiers hold [na, Saxon, or ze aye. Nay. adv 1. No an adverb of negation Difputes in wrangling fpend the day ‘Whilft one fays only yea, and t'other nay. Denbam 2. Not only fo, bu amplification yea ma goo exampl is abfent h whe an alway more word o profits by his endeavour zay memory; fo goo whe dead author by hi in thei Ben Fonfor's Difcovery {iile He catechize the children in his chamber, giv ing liberty zay invitation to as man as would come and hear t Fell This is then the allay of> Ovid's writings, whic is fufficiently recompenfed by his other excellencies5 nay Vox II thi very fault js not withou Wor of refufal 4 They ha ing Romans now do the \ten us openly uncondemned, beand have caft us into prifon; an thruft us out privily P nay verily but let them come themfelves and fe ch us out Aétsy xvi. 37 The fox made feveral excufes, but the ftor would not be faid zay ; fo that at laft he promife him to come L'l‘.)'fr,mgx He that will not when he may ‘When he would he fhall have nay 1. Th And from thofe gaieties our youth require ou 3 lived, would be put to the fword, nay the place itfelf would be raze Addifin's Spectato Na'yworp Grow naufeous to the young man'sappetite To exercife their minds |} is- whole family would be root S inhabitants of the place where h criminal - bu out, zay, th its beau Prov #. /. [#ay and word. fid of denial Not in ufe th fayin nay ifa's flood th This child wa being excluded ou the fpeci¢s of man, barely by his fhape Near. adv 1. Almoft Whofe fame by every tongue is for her mineral hurl'd Near from the mid-day's point thro'out the wefter world 2 You would believe my faying Howe'er you lean to th' nayword. Shak. Wint. Tale 3. A watchword Not in ufe I have fpoke with her or 75 not. Neither and not Near #. f. [zef, Hlandick. A fift is retained in Scotland ; an plural zeaves i [ H that paid a bufhel of wheat per acre, woul pay now about twenty-five pounds per annum which would be zear about the yearly value of th land Locke The Caftilian would rather have died in fla er than pajd fuch a fum as he found would go near t ruin him Addijon NEAR Near [Som times it is doubtful whether #e4r be a adjetive or adverb. This city is near to flee unto defires, is left to the purfuit of nearer fatisfa@ions Locke After he has continued bis doubling in hi thoughts, and enlarged his idea as much as h pleafes, he is not one jot nearer the end of fuch ad dition than at firft fetting out ‘Whe its faltnefs, fo convenien its inhabitants for the maintenance o Ray NEAR. prep. [nen, Saxon; zaer, Dutc At no great diflanc and Scottifh. from; clof to nigh no fa It is ufed both of place and time from bled for human crimes With living practice, by example taught Harte 2. Advanced towards the end of an enter prife or difquifition Unlef the ad fomewha elfe t certainly what ceremonies fhall fuch fort that all chuiches know them to be the beft, an that -there may not remain any queft point; we are not a whit the zear have hitherto faid 3. Direct 4 define more ftreigh ght to 1ivE the #e life, To meafur Tow'rd fol The mother of waters, the great deep, hath lof nothing of her ancient bounds. Her motion of ebbing and flowing, of high fprings and dead reaps are as conftant as the changes of the moon Hakewwill on Providence How doth the fea conftantly obferve its ebbs an flows, its fprings and neap-tides, and ftill retai man's Redeeme Whether the hermits of the defart fraugh nzpuz poor.] Low; decrefcent Ufed onl of the tide, and therefore {ometime ufed fubftantively Locke Whether they nearer liv'd to the bleft times is chiefly effeted by fire, wherein and meal, the imperfect metals vaBacon Saxon Gen. xix. 20 Accidents, which however dreadful at a diftance at a nearer view loft much of their terrour Fuil The will, free from the determination of fuc To be tempered in fire adj. [neprlodb adj 1. Not diftant in place, or time 70 Near. @. a. [onclan, Saxon; t kindle. To temper by a gradual an regulated heat Reductio if they fran pour away and was ever near This eagle thall go 7ear, one time or other, t take you for a hare L'Ffiml;;gtv Give me thy #eaf, Monfieur Muftardfeed. Shak 7o NEaL. v. # Fere xila 2 Bacon' th The workmen let it cool by degrees in fuch relentings of fire, as they call their zcaling heats; lef it thould fhiver by a violent fucceeding of air in th room of fire Digly This did happen for want of the glaffes bein gradually cooled or nealed Boyle If you file, engrave, or punch upon your feel neal it firft, becaufe it will make it fofter, an confequently work eafier The common way i to give it a blood red heat in the fire, then let i cool of itfelf Moxon's Mechanical Exercifes 89 of every reftraint, as they will go n#sar to think thei girdles and garters to be bonds and fhackle for ne i His warlike fhield all cover'd clofely was Ne might of mortal eye be ever feen Not made of fteel, nor of enduring brafs. Spenfer far Self-pleafing and humorous minds are fo fenfikl words : as, #ill for ne aill or avill not wnot3 ni an it b 3. Within a little and we have a naywvor ha their mouth Dra yion Not with his trumpet only, but his {pear. Dryden Ne. adv. [Saxon This particle wa formerly of very frequent ufe, bot fingly and by contra@ion in compoun o i He ferv'd great He&or how to know one another. 1 come to her in white and cry mum; fhe cries budget; and by that w know one another Shakefpeare nas for ne ha At hand; not far off Unlef rather in this fenfe an adje&ive Thou art zea their reins. 2. A proverbial reproach; a bye-word IfI do not gull him into a zayword, and mak him a commo recreation, do not think I have-wi enough to lie ftraight in my bed Shakefpeare o s the neareft way A Clofe ; not rambling ; obfervant of fiil or manner of the thing copied i th Ita an R th Caro's Hanniba . al moit two lin his fenfe an, is the zear fonorous o 5. Clofely related If one fhall approach to any that is sear of ki to him |