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Show UNIO 1fI blufh It is to fee a nobleman want mannets. Shakefpeare "The nobleman is he, whofe noble min Is fill'd with inborn worth U No'ceNT. adj. [nocens, Latin. The earl of Devonfhir Dryden's Wife of Bath blood of York mity That my ability may undergo Shak: )Es are's Winter's Tale And noblenefs impofe True noblencf Learn him forbearance from fo foul a wrong between God an given himfelf full of honefty Taylor Miltow's Paradif Build in her lovelieft There is not only a congruity herein between th noblenefs of the faculty and the object, but alfo th faculty is enriched and advanced by the worth o Hale. the object You have not only been' careful of my fortune which was the effe¢t of your noblencfs, but yo have been folicitous of my reputation, which i Dryden _ that of your kindnefs 2. Splendour of defcent; luftre of pediG Ee ARE No'BLEss. n. f. [nobleffe, French. This word is not now ufe 1, Nobility 1n any fenfe Fair branch of noblefs, flower of chivalry That with your worth the world amazed make b}m.r'{fi r ., 2. Dignity ; greatnefs Thou whofe 70b/efs keeps'one ftature ftill And one true pofture, tho' befieg'd with ill Ben Fonfon 3 Noblemen colle@tively . o Let us hatte to hear it Av And eall the zoblefs to the audience. « Shake[peare I kno no reato w flioul giv that advan tage to the commonalty of England to be foremof in braye aéions, which the noblefs of France woul never fuffer in their peafants Dryden No'sLy. adv. [from noble. 1. Of ancient and {plendid extraction Only a fecond laurel did ador His collegue Catulus But Marius won the glory of the day Dryden 2. Greatly ; iliuftrioufly; magnanimoufly " Did he not ftraight the two delinquents tear That were the flaves of drink and thralls of fleep Was not that nobly done Shake[peare's Macbuth . This fate be could have fcap'd, but would no lof Honour for life ; but rather mobly chof Death from their fears, than fafety from his own Denkam 3- Grandly; fplendidly an emperor's athes have been o mbly lodged, as i the midk of his metropolis, and on the top o No'sopy Addifon on Italy 2. /. [#0and body. ~No one not any one P This is the tune of our catch plaid by the pic tire of mobedy Shakefpeare's Tempeft It feli to Coke's turn, for whom mobody cared to be made the facrifice;; and he was out of hi effice ar Clarendon If in compan ntbod fecond yo yo offer fomnethin o Whe your -ow the date o 7 Nock «w T plac upo th Then tooke he up his bo nocke his fhaft, the groun future griefe did grow NocTa'mMmBULO Latin. 7. / On whenc [no an Nations obey my word Lat. The nof#idial day, the lunar periodic month the folar year, are natural and univerfal eac to ansther an and fero. Dis Bringing night Nocri'vacaxrt. adj. [nofivagus Wandering in the night zofis z. /. [fro Lat. Dis Latin. An account of what pafles by night [ have got a parcel of vifions and other mifcellanies in my #oéfuary, which I fhall fend to enric your papers Addifon . /. [nofurne A Fr. nofturnus office of devotion perform th for a jeft laughter Yyou may condemn their tafle, and appeal to bette Judgrpen.ts_; but in the mean time you make Yery indifferent figure, Savifels Mifcollany relique being convenientl church-door th vigil ar placed befor to b celebrate an the noffurn and th mattins for the honour of th liques are faints whofe the reStilling fleet tha high before them Nightly Lat.] [no&urnus ad; NOCTU'RNAL From gilded roofs depending lamps difpla that emulate the day Noéturnal beams Dryden I beg leave to make you a prefent of a dream which may ferve to lull your readers till fuch tim o youtfel «oa fhal gratif aoctr rnal difcoverics Noctu RNAL. 7#. / which obfervation th publi with an Addifon An inflrument b are made in th and wait my #od And life or death depend on my decrec Priore 2. A quick declination Like a drunken failor on a maft Ready with every zod to tumble dow Into the fatal bowels of the deep Shake[peare 3. The motion of the head in drowfinefs Every drowfy nod fhakes their doctrine wh but in and difficult to b Holder [wo adj NocTI'FEROUS Lat. to corre¢t them when they do amifs. Locke on Ed. A mighty king I am, an earthly God who walks in his fleep Nocrti'p1aL. adj. [noftis and dies Comprifing a night and a day No'crurn Children being to be reftrained by the parent only in vicious things; a look or 7sd only ough ambulo no argufhall w motion Arbuth No'cruary Nop. #. /. [from the verb. 1. A quick declination of the head all thei Chapman Refpiration being carried on in fleep, i ment againft its being voluntary Wha fay of noffambules ¢ There are voluntar carried on without thought, to avoid pain commenfurat reconciled Your two predeceflors were_famous for thei dreams and vifions, and contrary to all other authors, never pleafed their readers more than whe they were audding Addifon Hudibras notch An quick mo And the laft'mortal ftroke alone remains Lab'ring in pangs of death, and threat'ning all This way and that fhe nods, confidering where t fall Dryde He climbs the mountain rocks Fird by the nodding verdure of its brow. Thomfon 7ock was out .a wit When a pine is hewn on the pldins Les fz/fes OfF dropt the fympathetick fnout as yo There could not have been a more magnificen defign than that of Trajan's pillar. Where coul fo'exalced a monument The fondament Th Hefhar'd the pride of the triumphal bay 3. To bend downward tion Shakefpeare 4. To be drowfy ed in the night tho' nobly born Caflius muft bend his body If Ceefar carelefly but #od on him will exalt or diminith the force of the other, o correct any ofits nocent qualities.. Watts on the Mind Nock. n./. [mocchia, Italian. 1.. A flit; a nick';"a'notch On the faith of Jove rely nodding to thy fuit he bows the {ky. Dryden 2. To pay a {light bow Hurtful ; mifchievous their fea and moblenefs Greatnefs of mind Bacon's Herry VII Whe Salubrious waters from the nocent brood. = Philips They meditate whether the virtues of ‘the on Shakefpeare He that does as well in privat his' own foul, as in public, hat teftimeny that his purpofes ar noblencfs, and integrity that was rather feared than nocen Nor nocent yet 3 but on the grafly herb Fearlefs unfear'd he flept. - Milton's Paradife Lofs The warm limbec draw Any thin Shakefpeare's Coriolags Fan you into defpair Shake[pearc Cleopatra hath nsdded him to her in th His head, well-ftor'd with fubtile wiles Not yet in horrid fhade, or difmal den And fucha twain can do't. Shakefp. Ant. and Cleo being interefte king's life 2 The noblenefs of lif Is to do this; when fuch a mutual pair Your enemies with nodding of their plumes yet as one, that might be the obje¢t of other plots, remained prifoner in the Tower during th 3. Greatnefs ; worth; dignity ; magnani Let every feeble rumour fhake your hearts 1. Guilty; crimipal 7./. [from noble. NoBLENESS NO NO teach, that the foul is always thinking 4 Locke A flight obeifance Will he give you the nod Shake[peare Since the wifdom of their choice is rather t have my cap than my heart, T will pra&ife th infinuating #od, and be oft to them moft counterfeitly Shakefp #. Jf. [from #nodo. of being knotted, or act of mak Nopa'rion ftat ing knots No'bpERr. 7. /. [fro #od. On who makes nods . A fet of nodders, winkers, and whifperers, whof bufinefs is to ftrangle all other offspring of wit i their birthe Pope. No'ppLE. 7. /i [pnol, Saxon.] in contempt A head Her care fhall b To comb your noddle with a three-legg'd ftool Shake[peare. Let our wines without mixture, or ftain, be al fine Or call up the mafter and brea his dull noddZ My head's not made of brafs As friar Bacon's noddle was He would 'not have it fa that images are to b worfhipp - the contrar l‘ni;{ht‘ ‘I'hat proje@tio th flar of the ftars which include in our horizon al and therefore reaches-t the thirty-eight degree and a half of fouthern latitude, though its centre is the north pole, gives us better view of the heavenly bodies as they appea every night to us; and it may ferve for a noffurral, and fhew the true hour of the night. #arts To NOD. w. 2 seowy, Greek [Of uncertain derivation amuto, Latin; amncidio Welfh. 1. To decline the head with a quick motion, Wh th Impartia Andl Wil ftri Proferpine beho at fo fon If the city' And add'ft-to folemn-nsddles, fol [from naudin e Pai1a A fimpleton ; an idiot No'bpy The w ¢ rac of bawling Sa French. flutterin #od b |