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Show RI RI And make my feated heart knock at my ribs Againtt the ufe of nature! Shakefteare's Macbetk Now fportive youth Carol incondite rhyrims with fuiting notes £nd quaver inhatmonious Philips He open'd my left fide, and too From thence a 7ib, with cordial fpirits war 4. A word of found to anfwer to anothe And life blood ftreaming frefh word o Young Number or {enfe the teeth of all rdim an reafon tha they wer Ohakefpeare 70 RHYME @. # ;. To agree in found Th Hoifts fails, and flies On verfifier; a poet in contempt Scall'd rbimers will ballad us out o' tune. Shak it was made penal to the Englith, to permit th Irith to graze upon their lands, to entertain an of thei minftrels rhimers, or news-tellers and thicker they are; at which end they have round head, which, being covered with a cartilaze is received into the finus in the bodies of the vertebrz¢ the ribs, thus articulated, make an acut angle wit the lower vertebrze in wit; Buckingham fays, 'tis an ill fort of wit which has nothing more to fupport it than bare lay-conveifation an Ri'eaxp feve uppe ar called true 7ibs " cartilaginous ends are recejved into the finus of th fternum ¢ the five lower are called falfe 7ibs, becauf they are fofter and fhorter, of which only the firf 15 joined to the extremity of the flernum, the cartilaginous extremities of the reft being tied to on another, and thereby leaving a greater fpace for th dilatation of the ftomach and intralls: the laft o thefe fhort ribs is fhorter than ail the reft: iti not tied to them bu fometime to th obliquus defcendens Why do Iyield to that fuggeftion Whofe horrid image doth unfix my hair mufculu Kuincy Savift u. f [rubande, ruban, French A filet of filk written r7ox. a narro which is worn for ornament Quaint in green we fhe fhall be loof With ribbands pendent, Harin artery becaufe thei when once they were out of fea This word is fometime of filk enrob'd *bout her head See | in the lifts they wait the trum Some love device is wrought on ev'ry (word And ev'ry riband bears fome myftick word Ri"8BED. adj t 7 Granville [from 77. Furnithed with ribs Was 1 by rocks cngender'd 5 740°d with feel Such tortures to refit or o feel wit 28 ,Marke protuberant line'sa%w" Ri‘EBON. 7. /. See Rrzanp { Zo RY'BROAST. @, 2. [#ib an r a beat foundly, A burlefque w ,f IT Tha't done, he rifes, humbly bow And gives thanks for t e princely blo\'vs De;m;ts not mealy proud and boafting, Of his m gnificent ribroafling I have been pinched in fleth and yyelf ribyl"d unn der my former mafters ; bu I'm in now‘fomé and all Ri'sworrT 2. /. [ #lantago. L Efrarg Ap{;\a:f" Ric. z./. Ric denot s 2 powerfal, rich, or valiant man: as in thefe eres of 1 Hilperice potens, [; interpres barbarys ad Adjutor fortis hoc quoque nomen habys So Alfricis altogether ftrong; Zthelric nobly firong or powerful: to the fum fenfe as Polycrates Crato, Plutar Gibfor's Camdy Rick. #./ [oryza, Latin. One ofth efculent grains: it hath its grains dif pofed into a panicle, which are almo of an oval figure, and are covered with thick hufk, fomewhat like barley: thi grain is cultivated in moft of the Eafler countries HMiller Rice is the focd of two thirds of mankind; iti kindly to human conftitutions, proper for the con fumptive and thof fubject to hzmorrhages Arbutbut If the fouff get out of the fnuffers, it may fil into a dith of rice milk Swif RICH. adj. [riche, French; ricco, Italian nica, Sax. abounding in wealth 1. Wealthy abounding in money or poffefiions opulent oppofed to poor I am as rich in having fuch a jewel As twenty feas, if all their fand were pearl Shakefpeare Th rich fhall not give more, and the poor5 Exedus lefs A thief bent to unhoard the caf Milte Of fome rich burgher Rich was his foul, though his attire was poor As heay'n had cloath'd his- own embaffador Dryden Several nations of the Americans are richin lan'd L": and poor in all the comforts of life He may look upon the rich as bencf'aé.'tofs: have beautified the profpect all around him. Secd 2. Valuable; ettimable; precious; fplen Shakolpeare A ribband did the braided treffes bind The reft was loofe Dryden's bt's Tale their extremities which are faftened to the fternum are cartilaginous, and the cartilages make an obtuf angle with the bony part of the #ibs; this angl clean.sh data import.tsv out README refpets the head: the cartilages are harder i women than in men, that they may better bear th weight of their breafts: the 7ibs are of two forts th Dryden of being choaked by riba/dry or prophanenefs the 7:6s have eac vein The ribaldry of the low charaters is different ;5 the rceve, miller, and cook are diftinguithed from each other Dryden In the fame antique loom thefe fcenes wer wrought Embellifh'd with good morals and juft thought Tiue nature in her nobleft light you fee ‘ Ere yet debauch'd by modern gallantr To trifling jefts and fulfom ribaldry. Granwille. _( Lf the outward profeffion of refigion were once i practice among men in office, the clerzy would fe their duty and intereft in qualifying themielves fo a fmall canal or finus, which runs along their under fides, in which lies a nerve Shakefpeare Cowley afferts, that obfcenity has no plac faced ribaldry unfcal,cable, and rs:l:: mm Opimius guage RuY'THMICAL adj. [5Suwides rythsique, French 5 from rhyme or rhythm. Harmonical ; having one found proportioned to another RIB. #. /. [pibbe, Saxon. 1. A bone in the body Of thefe there are twenty-four in number, wjz twelve on each fide the twelve vertebre of th back; they are fegments of a circle; they gro flat and broad, as they appreach the fternum but the ncarer they are to the vertebrze, the rounde Spenfer Ri'sarory. n. /. [from ribald; ribaudie old French. Mean, lewd, brutal lanMr Hil'pric Barbarians a ftout helper t rm Pope Dawies on Ireland Rbymer come on, and do the worft you can 1 fear not you, nor yet a better man Dryden Milton's rhime is conftrained at an age, whe the paflion of love makes every man a sbimer though not a poet Dryden 1 {peak of thofe who are only rbimflers Dennis With rock ribhed an Fortunatus The bufy day Wak'd by the lark, has rous'd the riba/d crows And dreaming night will hide our joys no longer Shake[p Ne'er one f{prig of laurel grac'd thefe ribbalds From flathing Bentley down to pidling Tibbalds Pope rhymes a "The breeze upon hez, like2 cow in June Who rhym'd for hire, and patroniz'd for pride make Drayton To fpoil her dainty corfe fo fair and fheen Your ribauld nag of Egypt wh creeptn That lewd ribbald, with vile luft advanced Laid fir@ bis filthy hands on virgin clean There march'd the bard and biockhead, fide b Ruy'MsTER. fcarc wretch Thefe fellows of infinite tongue, that can rhim themielves into ladies favours, they do always reaion themfelves out again Shake[peare [from rhyme. rib 3. Any prominence running in lines the ftalks of a leaf 2. To make verfes #. / fhips with fhatter' from the feas And, it they rbim'd and rattled, all was weil. Dry Ruy'MER Any piece of timber or other matte which ftrengthens the fide RI'BALD. 7. /. [ribauld, French; ribaldo Italian,] A loofe, rough, mean, bruta Kz was too warm on picking work to dwell But fagotted his notions as they fell fide Dryden I fhould not 1ce the fandy hour glafs run But I thould think of fhallows and of flats And fee my viealthy Andrew docl'd in fand Vailing her high top lower than her ribs To kifs her burial Shakefpeare I was promis'd on a time Yo have reafon for my rhyme But from that time unto this feafon d neither rbyme nor reafon Stoernfer ‘h guiltinefs of my mind drove the grofinef of the foppery into a received belief, in defpight o As Neptune's park In harden'd oak his heart did hide And ribs of iron arsn'd his fide Is thy ambition fiweating for a rhyme RuyYME or reajon Milton Sure he, who firft the pafiage try'd What wife meaiisto ga'n it ha®t thou chofe Kunew, fame and fortune both are miade of profe ‘Thou unambitious fool, at this late time R.1 did; fumptuoeus Earth, in her rich attire Miltan Confummate lovely fmil'd aa e i r h i ' d e m w a l Matilda neyer ve i c h nothing pleafes her in drefs, but that s L t e.cye rich and beautiful t 3. Ilaving any ingredients or qua lities108 great quantity or degree So we th' Arabian coait do kno At diftance, when the fpices blow Ry the rich odour taught to fkeer Though neither day n}nrlfhbl‘ JP";:"); Weller «\:.h.{}‘! 5 life be fhort, it fhall be g E.zlclfxl;xcixh:tc ihal'l be rich in fome great aé}ll::u: Like a clos'd fan, nor firetches wide its veins But as the feafons in their civele run Opes its ribh'd furface to the neaver fun Gay I ; ; f ro h t f a e i f c r a Sauce Hung on each bough a fingle leaf appears Which fhrivell'd in its inf remains 2. Inclofed as the body by ribs Remembe The nai'ral brav'ry of your ifle, which fand {. Pertile; fruitful There are, who fondly fuvdio t -n Rich forcign moid on their ii Induee 5 Abundant |