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Show PI P The luce ot pike is the tyrant of the fieth wa o t r n g b m f d br ar he ters; Pi'ckroorn unlef Walton / n P Any kind of falt l.iquor,~ in whic g W fom an pickerel-aveed calle of a wee not Gofner be miftaken a If a court or country's made a job (,}u drench a pickpocket, and join the mob flef Thou fhall be whipt with wire, and ftew'd i brine Smarting in lingring pickle Some fith are gutted, fplit an vz, Thing kept in pickle 3. Condition; ftate tempt and ridicule wor t wa daw an while the was in that pickle, carry off a fpoon L Efrange Poor Umbra, left in this abandon'd pickZe Swift's Mifcellanies Een fits him down Pi'ckLE, or pightel. »n. /. A {mall parce of land inclofed with a hedge, whic i fome countries is called a pingle. Phillips i#:70.P1'cCKLE. w. a. [from the noun. 1. To preferve in pickle Autumnal cornels next in order ferv'd Dryden In lees of wine well pick/ed and preferv'd They fhall have all, rather than makea war pi The ftraits, the Guiney-trade, the herrings too Nay, to keep friendfhip, they fhall pick/e you. Dryd 2. To feafon or imbue highly with an " thing bad: as, a pickled rogue, or on . 14, confummately villanous «PICKLEHERRING. 7. /. [pickle and berring.] Ajackpudding;a merry-andrew a zany; a buffoon Another branch of pretenders to this art, without horfe or pickleberring, lie fnug in a garret. Spec? The pickleberring found the way to fhake him for upon his whiftling a country jig, this unluck of grimaces wag danced to it with fuch a variet that the countryman could not forbear fmiling, an Addifon's Spectator lgfi the prize Prickrock. #. /. [pick and lock. 1. An inftrument by which lock opened without the key W be a thief too, Sir take him t ar for w . have found upon him, Sir, a ftrange picklock Scipio, having fuc a picklock many years in battering the gate Shakefpeare would fpend f of Carthage Brown .It corrupts faith and juftice, and is the ver picklock that opens the way into all cabinets. L'Ef clean.sh data import.tsv out README Thou raifedft thy voice to defcribe the powerfu B_etty or the artful picklock, or Vulcan fweating a his forge, and ftamping the queen's image on vile Arbuthnot metals ;2. The perfon who picks locks "PI'CKPOCVKET. } n. f [pic and pocker y Prckrurse or purfe.] A thief wh fteals, by putting his hand privatel nto the pocket or purfe I think he is not a pickpurfe nor a horfeftealer It is reafonable his mone t whe fharper Shakefpeare Efquire South is lofin an pickpackets fhoul lay out the fruits of my honeft induftry in a la fmt. Arbuthnot's Hifbory of Fobn Bull chkp?ckets and highwaymen obferve ftrit juftic amgl.lg themfelves. Bentley's Sermons ‘ His fel!ow pickpurfe, watching for a job Fancies his fingers in the cully's fob Savift is ob fellow wh an comes from peddle, for Skinner gives, fo its primitive fignificaticn, to deal in littl thank. does wha h things. tales devis'd c at tabl e; to feed fqueamithly and without ap If he be grea and powerful fpies and pick to perfecute and tyrann South Latin. Your neighbours woul painte togethe th firf of animals thould be got hi weak teeth Bacon He is the very Withers of the city; they hav bought more editions of his works, than woul ferve to lay under all their pies at a lord mayor' Chriftmas Dryden Chufe your materials right the From thence of courfe the figure will arife And elegance adorn the furface of your pies Eat beaf or pie-cruit, if you'd ferious be as can be found wit Locke the printed names to them he own piffure more nourithing to them that hav the teeth, an if that your heart be fo obdurate fhew wer of perfons or things i [piftura, Latin. Piffures and fhapes are but fecondary objetts Bacon and pleafe or difpleafe but in memory Devouring what he faw fo well defign'd Dryden He with an empty picfure fed his mind As foon as he begins to fpell, as many picture ofte walls No man's pie is free From his ambitious finger Vouchfafe me yet your piffure for my love The picture that is hanging in your chamber. Shak Sh withou Shakefp. Henry VIII Mincing of meat in gies faveth the grinding o ventions, not any phyfical thapes Madam of pafte; by Funiu; derived by contration from pafly; if pafties, double Brown as many piZorial in fpaces in maps 1. A refemblanc colours that is, to buil pies, the derivation is eafy from pée, foot; as in fome provinces, an appl pafty is ftill called an apple foot. 1. Any cruft baked with fomething in it Sea horfes are but grotefco delineations, whic 2. f from biezan, to build Lee Prcro''riaL. adj. [from pidor, Latin. A word no Produced by a painter adopted by other writers, but elegan and ufeful Pr'ctuRrE to attend to {fmall parts raAinfworth 1an to the main Pi'ppLER. 7. Jfo [from piddle. 1. One that eats fqueamithly, and without appetite 2. One who is bufy about minute things Pig. z. /. [Thisword is derived by Séiznne not look on you as men But think the nations all turn'd pié#s again fill up empt a tha A flatterer, a p k, and a lyar The bufinefs of a 1 pickthank is the bafeft Picr. n. /. [pifus perfon tite like a lady breeding. Swift's Mifcellani T'o piddl ointments wit 'e officiou [pic generally provoke hi over the innocent and the juft Shak How cam'#t thou in this pickle A phyfician undertakes a woman with his wa teet From ftomac con o th Savift #. / Man drbuthnot wor [Thi n w PI'DDLE little; Mr. Lye thinks the dimingtiv of the Welth érepta, to eat; perhaps i whic is not defired; a whifpering parafite gent; as capers, and moft of the common pick/e prepared with vinegar. 7 Winter If a gentleman . leaves a picktosth cafe on th table after dinner, look upon it as part of you A kep A Thomsfor' fcure in its etymology; Séinner derive it from picciolo, Italian; or petit, Fr b Pr'ckraank as whiting and mackerel. Carew's He inftruts his friends tha r t t e S n f d d u l w r f l c p l the b A third fort of antifcorbuticks are called a hy [pick and to0th. vails Shakef Pope ar inftrumen cleaned i or " #. / Fond man See here thy piczur'd life whic was taken when their father fell in love with her Law 2. [Pica, Latin.] clean.sh data import.tsv out README coloured bird Tuffer The raven croak'd hoarfe on the chimney's top 3. The works of painters 4. Any refemblance or reprefentation And chattering¢ ies in difmal difcords fung. Shakefp Who taught the parrot human notes to try Or with a voice endu'd the chatt'ring pi¢ >Twas witty want Dryden 3. The old popifh fervice book, o called as is fuppofed, from the different colou of the text and rubrick 4 {light expreflion i the meaning Mr. Slender, come we ftay for you. -T'll eat nothing, I thank you, Sir, -By cock and gie, you fhall not chufe, Sir; come come Shakejp. Merry Wives of Windor Pie‘BALD adj [from pie. Of variou colours ; diverfified in colour Skake[peare T have not feen him fo piur'd He who caufed the fpring to be giffured, adde this rhyme for an expofition. Careww's Sur« of Cornzo It was a particoloure Of patch'd and piebald languages They would think themfel patched coat, and yet con Tt is not allowable, what is obfervable of Raphae Utrban; wherein Mary Magdalen is pifured befor to appear abroad in a e and borrowed fhreds They are pleafed to hear of a fichal our Saviour wathing his feet on her knees, whic will not confift with the ftric letter of the tex Brown's Pulgar Errours Love is like the painter, who, being to dra the picture of a friend having a blemith in one eye would picture only the other fide of his face. Souzb hor is ftrayed out of a field near Iflington whole troep that has been engaged in an adventure Peel'd, patch'd z. To reprefent All filled with thefe rueful fpetacles of fo man 1 I, that d tha wretched carcaffes ftarving but hear it from you, and do piffure it in m Spenfer mind, do greatly pity it Cock and pie was Shakefpeare's time, of which I know no Vouchfafe this picure of thy foul to fee Dryden >Tis fo far good, as it refembles thee It fuffices to the unity of any idea, that it b confidered as one reprefentation or piciure, thoug Locke made up of ever fo many particulars 7% Pr'cTuRE. @. a. [from the noun. 1. To paint; to reprefent by painting a parti The pie will difcharge thee for pulling the reft 2. The fcience of painting Quintilian, when he faw any well-expreffed imag of grief either in picture or fculpture, would ufuall Wotton weep If nothing will fatisfy him, but having it unde my hand, that I had no defign to ruin the company of picfure-drawers, I do hereby give it him Stilling fleet magpie King Kirng an ie f ald, linfey-woo thers Grav A L'IELE S mummers others 2o / f{leevelef [[u':'[t‘ fome an fhirt FLCH\.‘IX. o |