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Show i{.‘r in dialeit onl differin rod an red "Ar;‘,(? Eubulu for counfel an v My \afnpOCK O ruddock F"r.fl doth betra 1t tor co " the red breaft \W'DIANCE. YA DraNcY. Latin. . /. [radiare Sparkling luftre; glitter Bythe facred radiance of the fun ‘n *h,.. By all the operations of the orbs Shakefpeare Here I difclaim all my paternal care Whether there be not too high an apprehenfio Ty "[ abov natura it radiancy i no withou juf refembl th doubt; -however it be granted a very {plendid gem and whof glance fparkle ma fomewha 1"[4/‘gd Brown' Of firc The So ¢y Girt with omnipotence, with radiance crown' Milton Of majefty divine A glory furpafiing the fun in its greateft radiancy -[)‘Il"ll:f{ Shin\ADIANT. adj. [radians, Lat. ing; brightly fparkling; emitting rays ' There was a fun of gold radiant upon the top and before, a fmall cherub of gold with wings difBacon g played Mark what radiant ftate fhe {preads *libe by In circle round her fhining throne 160w Shooting her beams like filver threads Milton's Arcades This, this is fhe alone Virtue could fe By her own radian Were in the flat fe 1 fee the warlik to do what virtue woul light, though fun and moo Milton funk hoft of heaven Radiant in glittring arms and beamy pride Milton Go forth to fuccour truth below T ToRA'DIATE. @. n. [radio, Lat. emit rays; to fhine ; to fparkle Though with wit and parts their poffeffors coul never engage God to fend forth his light and hi truth¢ yet now that revelation hath difclofed them and that he hath been pleafed to make the radiate in his word, men may recolle¢t thofe fcattered divine beams, and kindling with them th topicks proper to warm our affeétions, enflame hol zeal Boyle Light radiates from luminous bodies direétly t our eyes, and thus we fe€ the fun or 2 flame; o it is refle¢ted from other bodies - Raprcaviry gination Adorn 1. Beamy luftre; emiffion of rays W hav perfpeiv houfes wher we mak Your radiaticn can all clouds fubdue But one; °tis beft light to contemplate you 2. Emiffion from a center every way Doanne Ssund paralleleth in many things with the light ¢ aflfl radiation of things vifible. Bacon's Nat. Hift ‘RA'DICAL. 24;. [radical, French ; fro radix, Latin 1. Primitive; original The differences, which are fecondary, and pro ceed from thefe radical differences, are, plants ar all figurate and determinate, which inanimate bodie are not Bacon Such a radical truth, that Go is, {pringing u Ngethe}r with the effence of the foul and previou to all other thoughts, is not pretended to by relig'on ch‘/r_y four foot long, woul have made a fine raffic Arbuthnot on Coins Rarr. # /. [probably from ratis, Lat. A frame or float made by laying piece of timber crofs each other ‘Where is that fo Shatcfp That floated with thee on the fatal raft Fell the timber of yon lofty grove Pope and build the rifing thip And formn a raft RA'FTER. n. /. [nepzcen, Saxon ; rafrer Dutch; corrupted, fays Funius, fro roof tree.] 'The fecondary timbers o the houfe; the timbers which are let int the great beam of differen wheat nel forms thus i th feed o there licth obfeurely the feminality of darBrowil's Vulgar Errours Ra‘picarvry. adv. [from radical. ginally; primitively It is no eaf matte to determin Ori the point o death in infets, who have not their vitalities 7adically confined unto one part. Brown's Vulg. Err Thefe great orbs thus radically bright Primitive founts, and origins of ligh Enliven worlds deny'd to human fight Prior. Ra'precar~ess. z /. [fromradical.] Th ftate of being radical 70 RA'DICATE radix, Lat. and firmly @. a [radicatus fro To root ; to plant deepl Meditation wil tranfient gleam o folutions of good fiftence in the foul Nor have we le radicate thefe feeds, fix th light and warmth, confirm reand give them a durable conHammond fall our pen upon difcourage ment of unbelief, from radicated beliefs, and point Brown of high prefcription 1f the objeét ftays not on: the fenfe, it make not impreflion enough to be remembered; but i it be repeated there, it leaves plenty enough o thofe images behind it, to ftrengthen the knowledge of the obje¢t: in which radicated knowledge nee if . th memor confift of referving thofe atom ther woul be n in the brain Glanwille's Defence Rapica'rionN. z. /. [radication, French from radicate. The a& of taking roo and fixing deep They that were to plant a church, were to dea with men of various inclinations, and of differen habits of fin, and degrees of radication of thofe habits; and to each of thefe fome proper applicatio was to be made to cure their fouls Hamnsond Ra‘prcLe n./. [radicule, French fro The rafters of my body, bone Being ftill with you, the mufcle, finew Which tile this houfe, will come again T truft thy honeft offer'd courtefy Which oft is fooner found in lowly fhed With fmoky rafters, than in tap'ftry halls, Mifton On them the Trojans caf his brother Ramefes, the ufe of fhipping was firf brought among the Grecians, who before chat tim knew no other way of crofling their narrow feas but on beams or rafiers tied to one another. Heylyn Fro a Belgian win the Eaft His hoftile breath through the dry rafrers fent The flames impell'd Dryden The roof began to mount aloft Aloft rofe every beam and rafter The heavy wall climb' RA'FTERED. adj with rafters flowly after. Swift's Mifc [fro RAG. #./. [pnacode, torn, Sax. pxxe.. 1. ‘A piece of cloth torn from the reft; tatter Cowls, hoods, and habits, with their wearers toft Miltorn And flutter'd into rags Rags are a great improvement of chalky lan Mortizner 2. Any thing rent and tattered; worn ou clothes : proverbially, mean drefs Father that wea rags accom Their caufes and effelts I thus raff up together Carew RA'FFLE. @.n. [rofler, to fnatch To caft dice for a prize, fo French. every one lays down a ftake Letters from Hampftead give me an account there is a late inftitution there, under the name o Tatler a raffling thop RA‘FFLE. n. /. [rafle, French; from th A fpecies of game or lottery verb. in which many ftake a fmall part of th value of fome fingte thing, in confidera But fathers that bear bags Shakifp They tooke from m King Lear Both coate and cloake, and all things that might b Grace in my habit ; and in place; put o Chapman tatter'd rags Worn like a cloth panies the ulna from the elbow to th wrift 7o Rarr. @.a. To fweep; to huddle to take haftily without diftin&ion tion of a chance to gain it Buil No noon-tide bell invites the country round. Pspe Thef 1. The femi-diameter of a circle whic rafter. No raft'red roofs with dance and tabor found Shall fee their children kind whic Denbam when he fled fro Stones, rafters, pillars, beams By Donaus, king of Egypt Radicle is that part of the feed of a plant, which Ruincy upon its vegetation, bccomes its roat RA'DIUS. u. /. [Latin. and vein Donne Shepherd radix, Lat. Ra'pisH. n. /. [rzdic, Sax. radis, raifort French ; rathanus, Lat.] A root. Miller 7 Torn ; rent Do make their children blind demonftrations of all lights and radiarions, and o of the fore-arm bon 2 all colours Bacon Should I fay 11iv'd darker than were true an precious ftones, three foot broad powe The radiated head of the phenix gives us th _*_meaning of a pafiage in Aufonius Addifon Rabia'rioN. #. /. [radiatio, Latin; ra_ diation, French. Ori made of tw Rarr. part. pafl. of reave or raff. Spenfer Locke " Ra'DiaTED. adj. [radiatus, Lat. ed with rays n. /. [from radical. The toy, brought to Rome in the third triump of Pompey, being a pair of tables for gaming There may be equivecal feeds and hermaphroditical principles, that congain the radicalit an and thus we fee man or a picture without being conWilkins humours hot, an Arbuthnot Serving.to origination E]'I CUTS V 3 and carriet Bacon of gold were feparated it- might be contrived to bur fumed The fun beams render th dry up the radical moifture bird The raddock would '%&, With charitable bill, bring thee all this. = Shake/p the radical moifture If the radical moiftur Gibfon n. / The emiflion of the loofe and adventitions moif Thrafybulu have almoft the fame fenfe " 2. Implanted by nature \ fignify counfel, as Conrad, po\\'cr{ul or fl\-imj,l i "4 counfel; Ethelred, a noble counfellor 5 Redbert \ eminen RA RA RA Gnaw into rags by the devouring moth Sandys Content with poverty, my foul I arm And virtue, though in rags, will keep me warm Dl_b't/m 3. A fragment of drefs He had firft matter feen undreft He took her naked all alone Before one rag of form was on Hudibras Racamu'rrIN. #. /. [from rag and know not whatelfe. A paltry mea fellow I hav led m ragamuffin wher the pepper'd3 there's not three of my hundre fifty left alive; and they are for the town' to beg during life wer an en Shakefpeare's H. ary IV Shall we brook that paltry af And feeble fcoundrel, Hudibra With that more paltry ragamuffin Ralpho, vapouring and huffing Attended with a crew of ragamuffins Hudibras fhe brok int |