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Show limited genius relation a l f P Sawif s l t Whatev 4 Prc. u. g Som there are love no me Some that are mad a gaping P'g Al That for her thirty fuc ;a But that it wanted room It might have been a pigmy's tomb Prenora'rionN Shakefp if they behold a cat The flefh-m o lamb, rabbit, and c An oblong m 74 inodding beam or pig of lead May hurt the very ableft head Pope To far "4ulp P1G. @. a. [from the noun. row ; to bring pigs in fom ® bred in cots-or a {fmall houfe laces called dovecote TPhis fellow picks up wit as pizeons peas. Shake[p A turtle dove and a young pigeon. Genefisy XVa G that the pigeon had loft a piece of he the next openingof the rocks rowin might, they pafled fafe, only the en Raleigh was bruifed Perceivin tail, throug shyiz with all thei « of their poo W0k . Fix'd.in the ma, the feather'd weapon ftands Dryden The fearful pigeon flutters in her bands Seathe cupola of St. Paul's covered with bot Addifon fexes, like the outfide of a pigeon-houfe 4 ¢* pitel ol preter part. pafl clean.sh data import.tsv out README fhe is caftin tim ceeded And by my wretched lover's fide me pight. Spenfer Stay yet, you vile abominable tents Trail your fteel pike n. / [pigmentum Shake[peare Latin. againft the enemy A lance he bore with iron pike and the comparative diaphaneity o white bodies Boyle P GMY. 7. /. [ pigmie, French; fygmeeus {mall nation / Latin; Ty G- Th® one half woul 3. Bgmy be writte wit Heylyn €y appear as pigmics Vj/h.en cranes invade, his little fword and fhici Dryden's Juwenal ,;{l'ég'"! "takes s f\:g:lcbks of a more exalted tafte, may difgauties in. the ancient poetry, as ma u Le reveng thi wit our pikes 4 turners tween whic faftened an tw iro Pi'kEp adj [piqué French. an accumulation to flo thrift what expence by th from. him metallic matter no how i' th lodge therein as well as tha which lies only in an undigefted and confufe pil V 3 Any thin burned heape togethe I'll bear your logs the while Wo pr Sha I'll carry't to the pile be to the bioody city, I will even n pile for fire great In Alexander' Exzckiely xxiv. g the Indian philofophers, time when weary of living, lay down upon their f ulicral pile v,'i‘t!]out any vifible concern Collier be thing to be turned 1 Hard wood, prepared for the lathe vit they pitch between the pikes a firm foundation Does he rake this together Shakefpeare By the water pafling through the frone. to it perpendicular intervals, was brought thither all th Tuffer {prig A heap Seem come rakes; for I fpeak this in hsnger for bread not for revenge Amon to mak To. his own portion hig ere w groun That is the way to lay the city flat And bury all which yet diftinétly range In heaps and piles of ruin S What piles of wealth hath he accumulate a pitc in hufbandry them up h(_:ndfl)mc to drie A pike to pik a y Of fo low a fature, that in relation to the other 2 Hudib fork A rake for to rake up the fitches that lie fabled to be devoured by the cranes them‘-e_any thing mean or inconfider able: it thoul ufe for pelliccia; ltalian planks Kaol If the ground be hollow or weak, he ftre it by driving in piles The foundation of the church of Harlem is fupported by wooden piles, as the houfes in Amfterda are Lock Locke Hayward thruft, the other ftrike pylece g The bridge the Turks before broke, by. p ing up of certain-pilss, and taking away o of th pike againft the right foot, the other breaf of fkins filh like a herring much cavght i th fuc left, the one en a garmen who ren PiLE. n. [ [pile; French; py/e, Dratch. 1. A ftrong piece of wocd driven in Shakefpeare's Coriolarus with their buckler in th by Funius Cornwall He wanted pikes to fet before his archers. Shak They clofed, and locked fhoulder to thoulder their pikes they ftrained in both hands and there Paint; colour to be laid on any body Confider ahout the opacity of the corpufcles o Nac.:k pigments 2. Pope hav the fcabbard «S‘b::‘(x.‘/j)s;zn Beat you the drum that it fpeak mournfully When1 diffuaded him from: his intent P GMENT. bayonet confirme o Pluck your fword out of his gilcher by the e Hale whic t meanin a clok 1. A furred gown orcafe5 any thing line with far Hanmer A long lance ufe 2. [Pique, French. by the foot foldicrs, to keep off th horfe i fignifie Sax. pellice, French pellis, Latin. her {fpawn The pike the tyrant of the floods whic fkins ders pilly In a pond into which were put feveral fith an two pikes, upon drawing it fome years afterward s grown to there were left no fith, but th prodigious fize, having devoured the other fith an And mockle mat to the hufband did yicld. Spenfer Then brought fhe me into this defart vaft # _ Yfound him pight to do it thi he heir numerous {pawn pilche coat o Walton's dngler but touches her not "Fhus proudly pight upon our Phrygian plains. Shat th al Not in ufe Whilom had been the king of the field rea March ove Pope Pr'LcHER. z. [. [Warburton {ays we fhoul onc i hover melte th an eggs o An hideous rock is pight Of mighty Magnes ftone, whofe craggy clift Depending from on high, dreadful to fight Over the waves his rugged arms doth lifts Spenfer The body big and mightily pight .+ Thoroughly rooted and wondrous height Clap four flices of pilafter on't Thatlaid with bits of ruftic makes a front and his manner of breeding is thus; he and a fhe pike will ufually go together out of a river into fome ditch o creek, and there the fpawner cafts he PBitched ; placed ; fixed ; deter mined left they imitate the piles or piers of bridges. #otton. Built like a temple, where pilafters roun Milton Were fet The curtain rifes, and a pew frontifpiece i feen, joined to- the great pilaflers each fide of th ftage Drydei as the weather proves colder or warmer Shakzfpeare's Hamlet an Pilafters muft not be too tall and {lender, lef they refemble pillars; nor too dwarfith and grofs Cleavel bu later or fomewha bruary ~£166IN, . /. In the northern provinces 1 29P1GHT breed h fith bol Diz fifth part of its thicknefs year, and his time of breeding or fpawning is ufually about the end of Fe 1 am pigeonliver'd, and lack gal a {mall vefel A fquare column fometro, Italian. times infulated, but oftener fet withi a wall, and only fhewing a fourth or 1. The luce or pike is the tyrant of th frefh waters : Sir Francis Bacon obferve the pike to be the longeft lived of an frefh water fith, and yet he compute it to be not ufually above forty years and others think it to be not abov ten years: he is a folitary, melancholy " Mild; foft; gentle To make opprefiion bitter Piva'sTER. 2. /. [ palaftre, French; tila/ PIKE. n. f. [ picque, French; his {nou Skinner and Funius. being tharp A eronFo0T. 7. J. [geramium. PM Ainfaorth herb 21'GEONLIVERED. adj. [ pigeonand liver. To me it is as plain as a pikeflaff, from wha mixture it is, that this daughter filently lowers Tatler t'other fteals a kind look Where is the Stoick can his wrath appeafe To fee his country fick of Pym's difeafe an Th [pikeand ffaff. wooden pole of a pike Picwi'pceon. #z. /. This word is ufe by Drayton as the name of a fairy, an is a kind of cant word for any thin petty or fmall To fuch pigwidgeon myrmidons as they of the Turls Kwnolles's Hiflor n f Pr'kesTaFF place wer of pikeme fquadron grea the enemy gainf Hudibras By Scotch invafion to be made a pre with a pike foldier arme Thre man. an [pit zn. f Pi'keman An eart Shine upon me but benignl With that one, and that other pigfucy Sawift. " To bake one loaf, or keep one dove in Latin. improperly I believe This building was defign'd a model " Or of a pigesn-houfe or oven n. /. [ pignora ‘Why then I fuck my teeth, and catechif Shak fp. King Fobn My piked man of countries Pi'esnEeY. #. /. [p1za, Saxon, a girl. It i A word of endearment to-a girl ufed by Butler for the eye of a woman A fow Y/ GEON. n. /. | pigeon, French. Saift T with my long nails will dig thee pignats. Shak not why, fow metal, and a pointed beard nut iron, or ore, is. called, I kno Garth The alt of pledging PirleNvuT. #./i [pig and zut. I acuminated; ending in a point Shakefpeare,. it is uled of a man wit efcape the comprehenfion of us pigmies ofa mot o r p f i o t o n to par . Dut P P2I P1 The wife, and counfellor or prieft rafping Prepare and light his fun'ral fire DMoxon And cheertul on the pi/e expire Sharp;| 4+ An edifice ; a building Prior Ta |