OCR Text |
Show NI I1 Ni'p1n6.adj. [from ni'S,Saxon, vilenefs. Niding an old Englit wor falfe-hearted bafe-minded fignifying abjelt cowar o nidget Care fat Incenfe and #nidorous fmells, fuch as of facrifices were thought to intoxicate thc brain, and to dif pofe men to devotion; which they may do by Kind of contriftation of the fpirits, and partly alf Bacon by heating and exalting them The figns of the funétions of the ftomachtbein de hd\Cd, are cmd"t ons with the tafte of the alior feetid, refembling the taft n:‘:w. acid ‘,// uthnot egaS f rotte I\IDO"O STTY 2. /- [flom nidorous.] Eructation with the tafte of undigefted roaftmeat Th k 3 d i # r t o c fity is, by vomitin an Floyer on the Humours Th NipvLa T10N. zn. /i {nidulor, Lat. time of remaining in the neft Th of this popular practic groun migh b the common opinion concerning the virtue prognoftic of halcyons, the natural regard they hav unto the winds, and they unto them again, mor efpecially remarking in the time of their nidulati 1, and bringing forth their young Brown [niece, niepce # / Nigce French; nep The daughter of a brothe tis, Latin, or fifter About our ifle he builds a wall Waller NI'GGARD. #. /. [#inggr, Iflandick. A mifer; a curmudgeon ; a fordid, avaricious parfimonious fellow Then let thy bed be turned from fine gravel t weeds or mud Let fome unjuft miggards mak Sidney weres to {poil thy beauty Shakefpeare Be not a niggard of yourfpeech Serve him as a grudging mafter Asa penvnious niggard of his wealth Be niggards of advice on no pretence For the worft avarice is that of fenfe Pope adj Ni‘cearp 1 Milton Sordid ; avaricious 2. Sparing ; wary Shakefpeare's Hamlet To \1 GGARD, @.a. [from the. noun. I'o ftint; to fupply fparingly The d«'op of night is crept upon our talk And nature muft ()Ley neceffity Which we will #iggard with a littlc reft Shakefp Ni1'GGarDIsH. ar& [from niggard.] Having fome difpofition to avarice Ni1'cGarDpLINESS. 7. /. [from niggardly. Avarice; fordid parfimony Nzco'arzi/sz: is' not goo rofity, profufion hufbandry, nor geneAddifon's Spectator Ni'cearvry. adj. [from niggard. 1. Avaricious; fordidly parfimonious © e ¢/ Where the owner of the houfe will be bountiful it is not for the fteward to be #i 'wnM/ Hall {zlfl/v of his opLove a penutious god, very portunities, muift be watched like a ‘hard- !.m't 2 Dryden treafurer Why are w Wh g ou f niggardly to ftop at one fifth do we not raife it one full moiety, and double mrme Locke Providence not siggardly but wife H"" lavithly beftows,.and there denies ML eac Ni‘cearpLy momoufly adv Sparingly I have long loved her opportunities to meet her other' virtue we.ma parfi Avarice [fro All preparations as would make on prep great diftance from A Ni1GHTBRA'WLER n ‘death maintains his dread tyrannic fway Garth NigH. adv 1. Not at a great diftance, either in tim rife. Gran difturbance raife O btbrawwler Shakefpeare's Othells Ni‘Gurcar zn cap wor in bed rabblement [nigh an cap. or in undrefs houted an clap thei chop . future hends, and threw up their fwwiy right-caps. Shake reat mountains have a perception of the dif pofition of the air to f.(:mpcfis fooner than the vailey below ; 5 and therefore t)c) fayin Wales tain hills have their #ight-caps on when cer they mea mif chief Bacor' Naotural Hiftory How did the humbled fwain detef Philips iiv 27 To a place near His prickly beard, and hairy breaft His night-cap border'd round with lace Efther Could give no foftnefs to his face Ev'n to my mouth, of that fame fruit held part Which he had pluck'd Milton's Paradife Lof I will defer that anxious thought And death, by fear, fhall not be #igher brought Sawift [zight and croaw Ni'caTcrOW. 7. / nyéicorax, Lat. A bird that cries i the night Dryden 3. Almoft NiGH. adj i You unlace your reput u)fl And f cnd )uu. rich op inion for the-nam Th when i to tim Mordecai fent letters both nigh and far He drew #igh and to me held Fofbua 7. /. [night and braw er.]" One wh the night with ‘terror they furvey or place, or courfe of events is' ufed of time, it is applie night to fearch out the country of Ifrael dre 2 1,//9,1 Wher underftood; unin There came men in hither to-7ight of the chil Th"" thon Stars diftant, but nig % hand feem'd other world Nigh this recefs or Ot){L('rI (Y g IL is much ufed in compofit.on In thi To-Nicut. adverbially at this night Not ufed Saxon. ()f 1"1'10!'{\1'1(‘ tlm Nature and Nature's works lay hid innight. Pope both for food and lodgi deteft niggardnefs, it i [ny)p o telligibility tith a vice NIGH death night. Dryd State of being no niggard. fordid parfimony The end of the (]ziy of life She clos'd her eyes in everlakin Dryden When learning after the leng Gothick night Fair o'er the weftern world diffus'd her lig € /: followed her, ingrofs' feed every flight occa 2 / day rard way f)tat fion that could but niggar (// give me fight of her Shake[peare's ]Wu 1y Wiuves of Windfor Ni'cGarDNESS Girt in her fanguine gown b night an Obfervant of the { ouls that pafs the do I know your mind, and I will fatisfy it; neither will I do it like a niggardly anfw efer, zrom no farther than thc bounds of the queftion. S ,am The owl fhriek'd at thy birth, an evil fign The night-crow cry'd, a ‘boding lucklefs time he was nigh dead Shake[peare Nr'curpew. 7. f. [#ight and dew.] De 1. Near; not diftant ; not remote : eithe in time or place Moribeww The loud tumult fhews the bat e nighs ' . Prio Now too #igh th' archangel food Milton. He committed thv prote€tion of his fon Afanes t approach ; to advance All things are hufh d, as nature's felf iay dead The mountains feem to md their drowl The little birds in-dreams their fo And fleeping flowers beneath th E'en luft and envy fleep. Dryden Ni‘euTnoe 7 / [7""8'/"{ an do U dflg that hunts in the night deer-ftealers When night-dogs run, allforts of deer are c two of his #igh kinfmen and affuxed friends. Knofles is nig His uncle or uncle's fon, or an kin unto him of his family, may redeem him Lev. Xxve 49 . 7. [from the particle. in the night that wets the groun The figtree putteth out leaves, fummer is nigh 75 N1GH but to our demand Niggard in his reply 4w o wary 2. Allied ¢ ofclv by blood parfimonious One fhe foun With all the gifts of bounteous nature crown'd Of gentle blood ; but one whofe niggard fat Had fet him far below her high eftate. ~ Dryden Moit free of queftion Dire frifiphrmc there keeps the ward Arbuthnot on Coins He was fick #igh unto death My #iece Plantagenet Led in the hand of her kind aunt of Glofter. Shak While he thus his ziece beftows Tiberius was noted for his wiggardly temper he ufed only to give to his attendants their diet 2. Sparing Ni‘porous. mr'/ [nidareux, from anidor. Reflembling the {mell or talte of roafte NI T DRESS to draw near ‘,f Now, day is done, and night is nighing faft 7. / \\o [mom an d at nv'rn t Hubberd Ni‘ceLY. adu. [from #nigh, the adjective.] . Nearly; within a little Ni‘GHTED adj A man born blind, now adult, was taught b his touch to dxiim:;.mh between a cube and a l‘.]m ed of the fame metal, and #ighly of the fame bignefs To let hir m ?i\-fl : Fur r~i I ~"1 1 Locke Ni‘Gun~Ess. z./. [from nigh. prommlt NIGHT. 2. / [nausts ‘Saxon nuit, French. . 'Th time of darknefs fun-ie to {un-rife fleep le the It was great ign'rance Glo'fter' eyes being out i :f\}z. nip NicHTFA'RING. #. fo [night and far the time Aom Travelling in the niOh The duke of Cornwall, and Regan his dutchefs will be here this night.' clean.sh data import.tsv out README Shake //u we's King' Lear In the morning he fhall devou Gencfisy xlix night divide the llxnl et the clouded; black In 1! Nearnefs Gothick Dark [from #night. fleep on Will-a "\H\ leads # O'er hills, ‘and finkin N1GHTFIRE Ifhla fatuus v *Till this fformy #ight be gone And th' eternal morrow, dawn Then the curtains will be drawn And they waken with that li Whofe day fhail never flecp in »ig "Thefe are the pleafure Nicarrry Crafpasv uif. [nzr/t and fly. Srbe Mot that flies in the mont Bob Wh |