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Show NO NO Iam young, anovice in the trade /1 Th An Bu An I trave d u r p t ' i a p u v l fool o want the foothing arts that.catch the fair caught myfelf lie ftruggling in the fnare fheI love, or laughs at all my pain men _I but not yet take tioner 7. The ftate of a novice; the tim which the rudiments are learned i fhe migh Some conceiv Latin. New not yet b certain =5 fom He planteth an afh, and the rain doth If. Yo are to honour, improve of God and of virtue Whe 3 o ifp it Ve 14 Wrifbed up in the words of faith o encreaf food fuftenance eat'ft an drink'ft fecking fro no gluttonous delight ar exhaufte b wha Milton is called a and grow lean and thin by a defeé o , occafioned by an inordinate {corbutic heat Blackmore Suftentation fuppl of thing them need that as in the one plac fo they ma Nou'rsLinG. z./. The creatur nuriling Nou RITURE. #.[. [mourriture this was afterwards contralte ture. Education; inftitution in th nurfed Spenfer French to zur Thither the great magician Merlin came As was his ufe, oftimes to vifit m For he had charge my difcipline to frame And tutors rouriture to overfee Spenfer Shak 7o NO'USEL. @. a. [ The fame, I believe with nuzzel, and both in their origi nal import corrupted from zzrfle. nurfe up Bal friar an knavit fhaveling T fough t noufel/ the common people in ignorance, left bein once acquainted with the truth of things, the fuch effectua X. 14 mT}'xou {hallt be a good minifter of Jefus Chrift o other learn to feek the nourifbment of their fouls Hooker ¥oung perfons ‘was his more chofen defire Fell § qm'gxas‘ hired foldiers, and nourifbed war con 4. To train, or educate i ment grows unfit to be affimi He inftruétet Out of ufe 2 Mac or received ful means to end all controverfy Haooker In Dothing them, we nourifp,'gaintt our fenat he cockle of rebellion Shakefpeare Yet_to nourifb and advance the early virtue o tinually w'xr.h the Jews limb atrophy What madnefs was it with fuch proofs to sourif wer ftrength tho Th That no:;rg])r me a maid Chapman Pharaoh's daughter took him up, and nourifbe him for her own fon syl T ther give fuppor Due zourifbment Whiltt T in Ireland nouxifb a mighty band their contentions, whe o 7. [. [nouriffement, Fr. i th Paradife Loft Milton' thenc to adorn it with good works to foment to a frui Pleafe to taft which our zourifber hath caus' the In wha 2. To fupport; to maintain 3> To encourage comforte By temperance taught and to make it as holy and heavenly as you can Law i an z. Nutrition; fupport of ftrength to nourifp it with the lov Him will I follow, and this houfe forg Th lated, or the central heat grows too feeble to aflimilate it, the motion ends in confufion, putrefa&ion, and death Newton's Opticks perfe&t th T will &irup in England fome black ftorm for it nutriment fpirit that is within you ¢ you are to prepare it fo the kingdom of heaven t growt hon:fon's Sumuter an partl is a great mourifber they ufe to refrefh their bodies Thro' her nourifl'd powers enlarg'd by thee She fprings aloft the co great mourifbe whic orde © mutrio, Latin. aliment of any kind herewith Suf Bacon 1. Tha [nourrir, French by food fro Nou'RiSHMENT and fuch abominable words a 1. To encreafe or fuppor mixe The earth to yield of th @. a i Thefe bounties no chriftian ear can endure to hear Shakefpeare The boy, who fcarce has paid his entrance down To his proud pedant, or declin'd a moun. Dryden 2o NOU'RISH nourifh tree A noun is the name of a thing, whether fubftance, mode or relation, which in fpeech is ufe to fignify the fame when there is occafion to affir or deny any thing about it, or to exprefs any relation it has to any other thing Clarke Thou haft men about thee, that ufually talk o gai Ruth is a ver grammar a verb a and a good remedy in confumptions Bacon Bran and fwine's dung laid up together to rot head. Sec Th Novr Spenfer Nort Novip. Ne would ; would not. Spen/er 2 %% Noun. #. [. [noun, old French; nomen Laun. The name of any thing i a noun an chyl Mille war Browwn crow T age be affrighted to hear ferpent fpeak ftrength Sleep, chief nourifber in life's feaft. Shakefpeare A reftorer of thy life, and a nourifber of thine ol >eech, and be that only man was priv ing in the mwity of the creation and unexperienc of all things, might no o Nou'risHER. 7. /. [from nouri/b. perfon or thing that nourifhes before the vow is taken ""WNo'viTY. z. /. [#owitas nefs; novelty growt better converfion into blood, and partly for its mor ready adhefion to all the nourijbable parts Grew 2. Thetime fpent in a religious houfe, b way of trial Ifaiah, xxiiis 4 vegetables there is one part more nourifhin Th This is fo great a mafterpiece in fin, that h muft have pafled his tyrocinium or nowitiate in finning, before he come ta this, be he never fo quic :fl‘c.'/z,{» a proficient youn Nou R1sHABLE. adj. [from nouri/h. ceptive of nourifhment a proba ""NoVI'TIATE. #. /. [noviciat, French. u Fruit trees grow full of mofs, which is caufe partly by the coldnefs of the ground, whereby th _parts zourifh lefs Bacon «. 2. One who has entered a religious houfe nor bring up virgins 70 Nou'risH. @w. n ment Unufual or by which I did tr 1‘)'m.vm:'s Opticks the vow I mourif than another; as grains and roots sourifh more tha their leave Bacon circumftances, by which either the phenomeno ‘- qv {; o s u c p . c r m e e n r b migh @y neither d 5. To promot food Or knows her worth too well, and pays me wit Dryden difdain In thefe experiments I have fet down fuc might more eafily try them them only not woul i tim {mel ou th untrut packed pelf and mafipenny religion o Spenjer 70 NoU'SEL. w. a. [nuzzle, noozle, noofe or nofel; from me/e. 'To entrap; t enfnare 5 as.in a noofe er trap The nuzzle hogs to prevent their digging that is, put a ring in their nofes 'NOW adv [nu, Saxon; nun, German. 1. At this time3 at the time prefent 1 Time ive 6 thei Fhy fervants trade hath been about cattle, fro Gen. xlvi. 34 our youth even until zozv Refer all the ations of this fhort and dy'n life to that ftate which will fhortly begin, bu never have an end; and this will approve itfel to be wifdom at laft, whatever the world ju Till it now Noaw that languages abound with words ftand for fuch combinations, an ufual way of gettin thefe complex ideas, is by the explication of thof Locke terms that ftand for them A patient of mine is now living, in an advance age, that thirty years ago did, at feveral times caft up from the lungs a large quantity of blood Blackmore almoft at the pre 2. A little while ago fent time Now the blood of twenty thoufand me Did triumph in my face, and they are fled. S/ak How frail our paffions They that but sz for honour and for plate Made the fea blufh, with blood refign their hate Waller 3. At one time at another time now mafter up, zoww mifs high, now low No Pc}a' 4. It is fometime a particle of connec tiorn, like the French or, and Lati autem : as, if this be true, he is guilty now this is true, therefore he is guilty Now whatfoever he . did or fuffered, the ean thereof was to open the doors of the kingdom o heaven, which our iniquities had fhut up. Hooker He feeks their hate with greater devotion tha they can render it him Now to affect the malic of the people, is as bad as that which he diflikes to flatter them Shake[peare Then cried they all again, faying; Not this ma but Barabbas ; #zsw Barabhas was a robber. Ste Fohn Natural seafon: perfuades man to love his neighbour, becaufe of fimilitude of kind : becaufe mutual love is neceffary for man's welfare and prefervation, and every one defires another fhould lov him Ao to others to youn it is a maxi of Nature that one d accordin as he would himfelf be don Whitc nts which -are granivorou live moftly upon ants eggs being of a hot nature, are very voraciou there had nee duced for thei The othe efalls men, i b callin evi be an infinite number of infeéts profuftenance Ra grea and undoing mifchief, wh by their being mifreprefented. Noz goed 2 ma is m nte t others in the way of {lander and detraction Helim bethought himfelf, that the firft day o th full moo hand MNo Perfians are i of th mont Tizpa wa nea a it is a received tradition among th that the foul of th a ftate of blifs do roya on th family,:wh firft full moon after their deceafe, pafs through the eafter g the black palace ifor's Guardian- The praife of doing wel Is to the ear as ointment to the fmell Noww if fome flies, perchance, however fmall; Into the alabafter urn fhould fall The odours die The only motives that can be imagined of obedience to laws, are ®ither the value and certaint rewards, or an apprehenfion of juftice and feverit Nazw neither of thefe, exclufive of the other, i the true principle of our obedience to God. Rogers A human body a forming in fuch a fluid in an imaginable pofture; will mever be r this. hydroftatical law There will b thing lighter beneath, an Noww what can make th afcend above the lighte thefe below thofe, againf fomething heavier above heavie ones o the te liar fpeech Ho fhall any ma ys fome diftinguit o |