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Show \' NE 2. Novelty Ne'winc. #n. /o [from mew. barm Ne'wiy. adv. [from mew. 1. Frefhly; lately Spenfer Yeft o tha attainders do not interrupt the conveying of title t the crown Bacon er lips were red, and one was thin Compar'd to that was next her chin Some bee had ftung it nezvly Suckling Herubb'd it o'er with zezvly gather'd mint, Dryd 2. In a manner different from the former Such is the power of that fiveet paflion it all fordid bafenefs doth repel And the refined mind doth newwly fathio Into a fairer form Spenfer's Hym»n on Love 3. In a manner not exiiting before Nre'wness, #. /. [from new. recentnefs ; flat of being lately produced Their ftories, if they had been preferved, an what elfe was performed in that newwnefs of th world, there could nothing of more delight hav been left to pofterity Raleigh In thefe difturbances -And nezwnefs of a wav'ring government ‘L avenge them of their former grievances. Daniel When Horace writ his fatyrs, ' the mionarchy o his Caefar was in its mezonefs, and the governmen but juft made eafy to his conquered people _Dryd 2. Novelty ; unacquaintance Words borrowed of antiquity do lend majefty t ftile, they have the authority of years, and out o their intermiffion do win to themfelves a kind o grace like nezongfs Ben Fonfon Neavnefs in great matters, was @ worthy entertainment for a mind; it was an high tafte, fit fo the relith South. 3. Something lately produced There are fome newwneffes of Englifh, tranflate from the ‘beauties of modern tongues, as" well a from the elegancies of the Latin;' and here ‘an there fome old words are fprinkled, which, for thei fignificance and found, deferved not to be antiquated Dryden ‘4. Innovation; late change 5 my friends new flight And happy newonefs that intends old right Want of praétice Shuke/ His device was to come without any device, al in white like a new knight, but fo new"as his sezvnefs thamed moft of the others long ‘excrcife. Sidyey NEWS z. /. without the fingular, unlef it be confidered as fingular joined it wit Milton ha a fingular verb [fro new 5 nouwelles, French. 1. Frefh account of any thing As he was ready to be greatly advanced for fom noble pieces of feryice which he did, he heard zezv «of me Sidney When Rhea heard thefe nezws, the fled from he hufband to her brother Saturn Raleigh Evil siezvs rides faft, while good mews baits Milton With fuch amazement as weak mothers ufe 4And frantick gefture, he receives the nezvs. Waller We talk in ladies chambers love and newvs Now the books Cowley and now the bells 4And now our aét the preacher tells To edify the people Allour divinity is rewws And we have made of equal uf The pulpit and the fteeple Denbanm 'I‘heamazing neaws of Charles at once was fpread At once the general voice declare Dur gracious prince was dead Noral 2, Somethin is n not heard before seavs - fo prey to the ftron They nezwly learned by the king's example Away tributed into their feveral wallss, who bying in thei refpective quotas, and make them acquainted wit the difcourfe of the whole kingdom Speétator I Her breath indeed thofe hands have newvly ftopp™d elpeare 1. Frefhnefs ; latenefs They have sewvesgatherers and intelligencers dif Dryden ‘the wea an poo and ri ich Theie, bleft with health, with bufinefs unpey plext "This life we relith Nexr L' Eflrange 3. Papers. which give an account of th tranfalions of the prefent times As Advertife both in every nezos-paper; and let i not be your fault or mine, if our countrymen wil not take warning Saift News-MonGeRr. 7./ [zews and monger. One that deals in news; one whofé em z. Th a pen e Jl.ffrfv'.. J This ‘was come as a judgment upon him for laying afide his father's will, and turning ftockjobber news-monger people' an bufy body affairs Newr #. / meddling with othe Arbuthnot [epece Saxon New i fuppofed by Skinner to be contra@e froman evet. Eft; {mall lizard : the are {fuppofed to be appropriated fome t the land an fom to the water are-harmlefs gift. Prefent made on the firft day o the year 70 N1"BBLE Want fupplieth itfclf of what is #ext, and man Baro times the zext way Lacon The queen already fa High on a golden bed; her princely guef Was next her fide, .in order fat thereft The zext in place and punifhment were they Who prodigally: throw their fouls away. 2. Neareft in time The good man warn'd us from hi rex 3. Neareft in any gradation If the king himfelf had ftaid at Leondon, or which had been the #cx beft, kept his court a York, and fent the army on their proper errand, hi enemies-had-been {peedily fubdued Clarendon O fortunate yoting man ! at leaft your lay Aire next to his, and'claim the fecond praife. Dryd Finite and infinite, being by the mind looked o as modifications of -expanfion and duration, the zex thing to be confidered, is, how the mind comes b That's a difficulty #ex¢ to impofible Gay @. 7 As pigeons bill, fo wedlock would be #ibbling Shake[peare They gape at rich revenues which you hold And fain would #ibble at your grandame gold Dryden If you would be #:ibbling, here is a hand to fta your ftomach Dryden's Dou Sebaftian This fifh plunging himfelf in mud, and then lifting up his head a little, cafts out the ftring; whic the little fifhes taking for a worm, and nibbling at it he immediately plucks the 2 To carp at both in together Grew's Mufzum to find fault with Inflead of returning a full anfwer to my book, h manifeftly falls a nibbling at one fingle paffage in it Tillotfon N1'BBLER. z. /. [from #ibble. bites by little at a time NICE adj One tha [neyre, Saxon, foft. nefs ; {fuperfluoufl exa@® It i ofte ufed to exprefs a culpable delicacy text Granvillei 1. Accuratein judgment to minuteexadt Dryden That none could tell whofe turn fhould be th them when h 1. To bite at NEXT. aqj. [nexc, Saxon, by a colloquia change from nepye, ornypre, the fuper1. Neareit in place ; immediately {ucceeding in order The roving trou Greedily fucks in the twining bait And tugs and n7bbles the fallacious meat th year's-gifts, he had his altar of incenfe by him that before they received gifts they might caft little incenfe into the fire;; which all good chriftians refufed to do Stillin ueeft, Scottifh. abou rds, tra 2. To bite as a fith does the bait Shake[peare throne diftributing neaw lative of ne) or'nyp twine Nibbles his nice phlebotomy Cleaveland Had not he better have borne Wat's nibbling o his plants and roots now, than the hunt{iman's eating of him out of houfe and home L'Eftrange Many there are who nibble without leave But none, who are nct born to tafte, furvive IfI be ferved fuch a trick, I'll have my brain taken out and buttered, and give them to a dog fo a new-ycar's-gift When he fat o whic h its en It is the2 rofe that bléeds Brown 7 /. [new, pear, an bejuco And flat meads thatch'd with ffover them to keep Shakefpeare and blind worms do no wrong New-vEaR's-G1FT ¥ the Thy turfy mountains, where live #ibbling theen Whereof thy proud child, acrogant man, is puft Engenders the black toad, and adder blue "The gilded wezot, and eyelefs venom'd worm. Shak pricked filly Ni'eeED. adj. [fromnib.] Having a nib 7o Ni'BBLE. @. a. [from #ib, the bea or mouth. 1. To bite by little at a timey to ea flowly the Come not near our-fairy queen _Shakefpeare Such humidity is obferved in mezvrs and waterlizards, efpecially if -their fkins be perforated o Simple vellers cut the #ib off it, and prefently a fpout o water runs out from it as clear as cryftal Derbam O thou ! whofe. felf-fame mettle Nevt Fr. point of any thing, generally o A tree cal other trees Which oft the ear of greatnefs needs muft hear By fmiling pick-thanks and bafe zezvs-m0 gCrS [niais n./. {neb, Saxon, the face ;- webbe Dutch, the bill. 1. The bill or neck ofa bird. See Nes devis'd m. f Addi ifon's Qvid A nias h and not ab ployment it is to hear and to tell news Th' wawary nymp Jove, when next h and foolith Addifon tale time or turn imme To grant a certain gift Their papers, filled with a different party fpirit divide the people into different {entiments, who generally confider rather the principles than the trut Man At th Yourg diately facceeding to b of the nezvs-writer adv and enfure the naxt Let the ftaivs to the upper rooms be upon a faj apen nerwel, and finely railed in Bacon Tha NI NEX L Rozve Such a man was Argalus as hardly the zicef ey Sidney can find a fpot in Nor be fo zice in tafte myfelf to know Dryden If what I fwallow be a thrufh or no Thus criticks, of lefs judgment than caprice Curious, not knowing, not exa&, but nice offend in arts Form fhort ideas, an As moft in manners, by a love to parts Popeq Our author happy in a judge f #ice Produc'd his play, and begg'd the knight's advice Pope She is {o zice and critical in her judgment, f fenfible of the fmalleft error, that the maid is ofte forced to drefs and undrefs her daughtars three o four times a-day B Lagww 2. 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