| OCR Text |
Show NO NO Before her gates, hill wolves and lions lay being at the northfide of his chamber, is at Libert d m th m t f u d u u r v he t w Whi heart th to revea thu glorious tongu Chapman nolr death could ]rmglht diver Pow'r, difgrace Daniel Simois nor Xanthus fhall be wanting theve e y D a p a m a i l fh e i h A A n 4. Noris in poetry ufed in the firlt branc for neither Milton Ot the fierce pains not feel But how perplext, alas ! is human fate 1 whom nor avarice, mor pleafures move PVulfb Yet muft mylf be made a flave to love (?Ui‘ th NOSE Northern north This fhall be your north border from the great fe Numbers, xxxiv. 7 te mount Hor NorTHEA'sT Dutch. [noordeaft 7. / John Cabot, a Venetian, the father of Sebaftia Cabot, in behalf of Henry the Seventh of England from th Cape of Florida in the fouth, to Newfoundlan Heyl 2nd Terra d'Laborador in the north The inferiour fea towards the foutheaft, th 2. The end of any thing The lungs are as bellows, the afpera arteria i the nofe of the bellows. Holder's Elements of Speech 3. Scent 4. Zo lead by the Nose 'T force: as a bear by his ring blindly NoRTHERLY adj. [from morth. foutherly winds chufe well his referendaries, elfe he may be /ed b the nofe Bacoy That fome occult defign doth li In bloody cynar¢tomachy Is plain enough to him that knows How faints /ead brothers by the nofe Hudibras This is the method of all popular thams, whe the multitude are to be led by the nofes into a fool' paradife L' Eftrange Bein commonl efteemed the caufes of cold and warm weather are really the effe€ts of the cold or warmth of th Derban atmofphere adj. [from morth. Bein in the north .4 Proud northern lord, Clifford of Cumberland " If we ere a red-ho wir Skakefpeare it cool, an unti hang it up with wax and untwifted filk, where th lower en whic coole nex that is the northern point the carth doth reft NorTusta'R. #. /. [nort The poleftar; the lodeftar If her breat wer an Brown flar. adj to fmell 1. To fcent DVofe him as you go up the fairs as terrible as her termina tions, there were no living near her, fhe would infeét to the northftar Shake[peare No'RrawarD To thruf? one's NosE into the affairs o others 'To be meddling with othe people's matters; to be a bufy body 6. Zo put one's Nose out of joint T put one out in the affections of another 7o Nose. @v. a. [from the noun. No'RTHERN [worth and peand S'axon.] Being towards the north No'rTuwWARD. | adw. [north and peand Shake/p In fuits which a ‘man doth not underftand, i is good to refer them to fome friend, but let hi towards the north The northerly an drag b To lea Tho' authority be a ftubborn bear Yet he is oft /ed by the nofz with gold by three differen Arbuthnot fide, were commande fagacity We are not offended with a dog for a better naf than his mafter Collier on Enwvy Tonian towards the fouth, and the Adriatick on th northea nations which i Dead to inflition, to themfelves are dead And liberty plucks juftice by the nofe Shakefp There can be no reafon given why a vifag fomewhat longer, or a mofe flatter, could not hav confifted with fuch a foul Locke Poetry takes me up fo entirely, that I fcarce fe what pafies under my nofe Pope's Letiers The point betw<en the north and eaft difcovered all the north-eaft coafts hereof #./. [nceye, noja, Saxon. Qur-decrees th i Brown Down witli the nofe Take the bridge quitc awa Of him that, his particular to forefend Smells from the gen'ral weal. Shakefpeare's Timon NVofe of Turks and Tartars lips Sbakefpeare Shake[peare bein th the organ of fcent, and the emunétor of the brain T' invade the frozen waggon of the north. Dryden adj unt that is northaveft 1. The prominence on the face The tyrannous breathing of the =orzh NorTH expofet un The clouds were fled Driven by a keen northwind Milton When the fierce northwind, with his airy force Rears up the Baltick to a foaming fury. - Warts Shake[peare Shakes all our buds from blowing Fierce Boreas iffues fort h may remai NORTH\\-'I ND. 7. /. [north and awind. ‘The wind that blows from the north More unconftant than the wind ; who wooe Ev'n now the frozen bofom of the »orzh And being anger'd puffs away fram thence Turning his face to the dew dropping fouth until evening fummer fetting dian | fu 2. To face Shake[peare to oppofe 7o Nose. @. » 'To look big; to blafter Adult'rous Arithon ‘Gives his potent regiment to a trul That nofes it againft us Shakefpeare NO'SEBLEED. 7./. [nofe and bleed5 milNo'RTrwarDs Sax.] Towards th lefolium. A kind of herb nerth | No'secay. . /. [no/eand gay.] A pofie Miflike me not for my complexion a bunch of flowers Tl}e thadow'd livery of the burnifh'd fun Bring me the faireft creature nortbavard born Where Pheebus' fire fcarce thaws the icicles . And prove whofe blood is reddeft Sbake[peare GOmg northward, aloof,2s long-as they bad an doubt of being purfued, at laft they .croffed th ‘ocean to Spain Bacon Nortbqvard-bcyorid-the mountains we will go here rocks lie"cover'd with eternal fnow Dryden A clofe prifoner in a:room, twenty foot-{quare She hath four and twenty nofegays for the thearers Shake[peare Ariel fough The clofe recefles of the virgin's thought As on the nofegay in her breaft reclin'd He watch'd th' ideas rifing in her mind Pope Get you gone in the country to drefs up nofegay for a holy-day Mangled Myrmidons Nofelefs, and handlefs, hackt and chipt, com Locke The bathing places, that the Th #. /. [nopd, Saxon. NORTH point oppofite to the fun in the meri % not walk twent NorTHWE'sT #. /. [#orth and awef?. The point between the north znd weit Ben Fonfon. Nor did they not perceive their evil plight foot fouthward foot nerthward Idle nymph, I pray thee, b Madeft, and not follow me 1 nor love myfelf, zor thee ¥ to walk twent invade That wolfe, #or lion, would one ma NO Arbuthnot's Hiftory of Fobn Ball No'seLess. adj. [from nofe.] Wantin a nofe; deprived of the nofe him ¢ Shakefpearz Noso'vacy. #./. [soos and 2éys,. trine of difzafes Nosoror'rick. [vwoo; and zoéw. ducing difeafes DocPro The qualities of the air are mofspoctick 5 that is £ o LAroutPior have a power of producing dif No'sesMART turtium. No'striL #. /. [nofe a Jmart 5 naf The herb crefles n. f. [nofe and Eypl Saxon. a hole The cavity in the nofe Turn then my frefheft reputation t A favour that may ftrike the dulleft nsftril. Shakefp.Stinks which the moflrils ftraight abhor, are no the mo# pernicious He form'd thee Bacon's Natural Hiffory Adam, and in thy nofril breath' The breath of life Miltos The fecondary action fubfifteth in concomitdnc with the other; fo the noffrils are ufeful both fo refpiration and fmelling, but the principal ufe i {melling Broaun Thefe ripe fruits recreate the noffri/s with thei aromatic fcent More's Divine Dialogues NO'STRUM. =». /. [Lat. A medicin not yet made publick, but remainin in fome fingle hand. Very extraordinary an one of his noffrums, le it be writ upon his monument, Hic jacet auéo bujus argumenti ; for no body ever ufed it before Stilling fleet What drop or noffrum can this plague remove Pope Nort. adv [ne aule Sax. ziet, Dutch. 1. The particle of negation or refufal If thou be the world's great parent How falls it then that with thy furious fervou Thou doft affli¢t as well the 7ot deferver As him that doth thy lovely hefts defpife? Spenfer His countenance likes me note Shak. King Lear The man held his peace, to wit, whether th Lord had made his journey profperous or not. Ge The queftion is, may I do it, or may I 7ot do it Sanderfon He is invulnerable, T #ot Miiton Let each man do as to his fancy feems I wait ot I, 'till you have better dreams. Dryden This objection hinders zot but that the heroi attion enterprifed for the Chriftian caufe, and executed happily, may be as well executed now as i was of old Diyden Grammar being to teach men 7ot to fpeak, bu to fpeak correétly : where rhetoric is #ot neceffary grammar may be fpared Locke on Education This day, be bread and peace my lot All elfe beneath the fu Thou know'#t if beft beftow'd or oz . And let thy will be done. Pope's Univerfal Prayer z. The firft member of a negative fentence, followed by #or or #either I was not in fafety, neither had 1 reft Nt for price nor reward Fob Ifaiah I will for this affli¢ but zo 3. A word of exception the /feed of David for ever Kings 4. A word of prohibition, or deprecation Stand in awe, and fin not Plalms Forfake me not, O Lord ; O my God, be #o¢ fa from me Plalms 5. It denotes ceflation or extin&tion N more Thine eyes are upon me, and I am mot. Fob, vii NO'TABLE adj [notable, Fr notabilis Latin. 1. Remarkable; memorable; obfervable it is now {carcely ufed, but in irony The fuccefs of thofe wars was too notable t be unknown to your ears; which, it feems, al warthy fame hath glory to come unto Cc Sidney Th |