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Show RU His body fhall be royally interr'd An wY ‘ y civility the lat funeral pomp adorn his hearfe Ro'varty Dryden = / Kinghip [roialté, French. charafte o you rafcal you come with letters againf the king, and take vanity the puppet's part againf the royalty of her fathér L L Shakzfpeare's King Lear = He will lofe his head, ere give confent His mafter's fon, as worfhipfully he terms it S Shall lofe the royalty of England's throne b Shakefpeare Royalty by birth was the {weeteft way of majefty a king and a father compounded into one, bein of a temper like unto God, juftice and mercy Holyday If the 54 either ther ha held their ropalties by this tide muf have been but one {overeign o elfe every father of a family had as good a clai im to royalty as thefe Locke . 2. State of a king I will, alas! be wretched to the great And figh in royalty and griev ' 3. Emblems of royalty. in ftate Prior Wherefore do I afflum Thefe ropalties, and not refufe to reign 9o RoYNE it v, 4 Ailton [rogner, French. gnaw ; to bite Ro‘ynNisH. adj mangy, paltry. rude T Spenfer [ rogneux French Paltry; forry ; mean The roy#ifb clown, at whom fo of Your grace was wont to laugh, is alfo miffing Shake[peare Ro‘yreLeT. #. /. [French. " petty king A little o Caufing the American roytelets to turn all homagers to that king and the crown of England Heylyn 2: To RUB @. a [rbubio Welth German, to wipe. reiben 1. To clean or fmooth any t ing by paffing fomething over it; to fcour; t wipe; to perfricate 2. Totouch fo as to leave fomething o that which touches behind Their firaw-built citadel new r2456°d with balm Milton In narrow clefts, in the momument that ftand over him, catholicks 7z their beads, and {mell hi bones, which they fay have in them a natural per fume, though very like apople@ick balfam; an what would make one fufpeét that they rub th marble with it, it is obferved, that the fcent i fironger in the morning than at night Addifon on Italy 3. To move one body upon another Look, how the rubs her hands -Itis an accuftomed adion wit thus wathing her hands her to fee Skakefpeare's Macketh The government at that time was by kings before whom the people in the moft formal expreflions of duty and reverence ufed to rul thei nofes, or firoke their foreheads The bare 7ubbing of tw Tw bones rubbe produce a fetid fmell Heylyn bodies violently pro duces heat, and often fire Locke hard againft one another Arbutbnot on Aliments 4. To obftruct by collifion "Tis the duke's pleafure Whofe difpofition all the world well kno Will not be r465°d nor ftop'd Shakefpeare 5+ To polifh to retouch The whole bufinefs of our redemption is, to ru over the defaced copy of the creation, to reprin ‘God's image upon the foul 6. To remove by frition a great part of the roughnefs South with of or out A forcible object will rub out the frefheft colour at 2 ftroke, and paint others. Colljer of th Afpect If their minds are well principled with inwar Servants blow the fire with ptiffing cheeks, 4nd whic flicks to the outfide for want of better teaching time and obfervation will 7ub off; butif ill, all th rules in the world will not polith them office" o king Draw RU RU the bathing fheets difplay Dryden Rub the dirty tables with the napkins, for i will fave your wearing out the common rubbers Locke 7. To touch hard He bein rubbe move l The rul;/;er, an who before he was efpied, was afraid, afte perceived, was athamed, now being hardl upon, left both fear and fhame, and wa to anger Sidney 8. 7o Rus down horfe To clean or curr 3. A coarfe file The rough or coarfe file, if large, is called rubbery and takes off the unevennefs which th hammer made in the forging Noxon 4. A game When his fellow beafts are weary grown He'll play the groom, give oats, and rué *em dozvn 9. 7o Ru Dryden zp To excite; to awaken You will find me not to have rubbed up th memory of what fome heretofore in the city did South 10. 7o Rus up 'To polith ; to refrefh 70 Rus. . 1. To fret ; to make a friGtion Yet feem'd fhe not to winch, tho' threwdly pain'd Dryden 2. To get through difficulties No hunters that the tops of mountaines fcale And rub through woods with toile fecke them all Man lawyers whe C/Ja_pmafl once‘hampered rub of as well as they can L' Eftrange *Tis as much as one can do, to rub through th world, though perpetually a doing L'Eftrange Rus #./. [from the verb. 1. Frication aé of rubbing 2. Inequality of ground motion of a bowl that hinders th obftruion The breath of what I mean to fpea Shall blow each duft, each firaw, each little rz Out of the path, which fhall direétly lea Thy foot to England's throne Shake[peare Now every rub is fmoothed in our way Shake[peare And give your hearts to, when they once perceiv The leatt 745 in your fortunes, fall away Shakefpearc Upon this rus, the Englifh embafladors though fit to demur, and fent to receive dire@ions Hayward He expounds the giddy wonde Of my weary fteps, and unde Spreads a path clear as the day Where no churlifh 745 fays nay Crafbaw He that once fins, like him that flides on ice Goes fwiftly down the flippery ways of vice Though confcience checks him, yet thofe rubs gon o'er He flides on fmoothly and looks back no more All fort of 7ubs will be laid in the way A tion almof prince rub o Dryden Dawvenant hereditary right is to be preferred before elecbecaufe the government is fo difpofed, that i executes itfelf: and upon the death of the adminiftration goes on without an interruption Swift 4. Difficulty ; caufe of uneafinefs T fleep th perchanc to dream rub ay there' Shake[peare Rus-stonE. #. [ [rub and fone. ftone to fcour or fharpen A cradle for barlie, with rub-flone and fand Ru'BBER 7./. [from rub. The afs was to ftand by, to fee two boobies tr their title to him by a rubber of cuffs. L'Eftrange If butchers had but the manners %o go t fharps, gentlemen would be contented wich a rubbe at cuffs Collier on Duclling 5. A whetftone Ainfworth | Ruet'ca~. adj. [rubican, French.] Rabican colour of a horfe is one that i Tza e 1. One that rubs 2. The inftrument with which one rubs forrel o black wit a ligh grey, or white upon the flanks, but f that this grey or white is not predominant there Farrier's Diéz Ru'BEAGE. } n. /. [fromrub : as perhap Ru'BBisu. § meaning, at firft, duft mad by rubbing Rubbage is not ufed. 1. Ruins of a building matter ufed in building fragment o What trath is Rome What rubbifb, and what offal ? when it ferve For the bafe matter to iiluminat So vile 2 thing as Czfar Shakefpeare Such conceits feem too fine among this rubbage ed on rubbifh, is eafily mad winds Shakefpiare Thofe you make friends Wotton A fabrick, though high and beautiful, if found We'll play at bowls -Twill make me think the world is full of sbs And that my fortune runs againft the bias 3. Collifion ; hindrance three bay This laft allufion gaul'd the panther more Becaufe indeed it r#b'd upon the fore a conteft; two games out o the triumph of th Glanwilie's Scepfis When the foundation of a ftate is once loofened the leaft commotion lays the whole in rubbifb L Eftrange Th' Almighty caft a pitying eye He faw the town's one half in rubbifp lie. Dryden Knowledge lying under abundance of rubbifb, hi fcope has been to remove this rubbifb, and to dref up crabbed matter as agreeably as he can Bavenant The enemy hath avoided a battle, and taken furer way to confume us, by letting our courag evaporate againft ftones and rubbifb Swift 2. Confufion ; mingled mafs That noble art of political lying ought not t lie any longer in rubbifh and confufion Arbutbnot's Hiftory of Fobn Bull 3. Any thing vile and worthlefs RurBLE-sTONE 7. / Rubbie-ftones owe their name to their being rubbed and worn by the water, at the latter end of th deluge, departing in hurry and with great precipitation Woodwward Ru'Brcu~op. adj. [rubiconde, French; ru bicundus, Lat. Inclining to rednefs Ru's1eDp ruby adj [fro ruby. Re as Thrice upon thy fingers tip Thrice upon thy rubied lip Angels food, and rwbied ne@ar flow Miltos In pearl, in diamond Milton Rusi'rick. adj Making red and in mafly gold [ruber and facio, Lat. While the feveral fpecies of rays, as the rubifick are by refraltion feparated one from another, the retain thofe motiens proper to each Ru'BIFoRM. adj [ruber, Latin Jorm. Having the form of red Grew an Of thofe rttys, which pafs clofe by the fnow, th rubiform will be the leaft refracted ; and fo come t the eye in the dire€eft lines 7o Ru'iry @. @a N Neavtons Opticks To make red Thi |