| OCR Text |
Show SA borders of the leaves cut into fmall fhar ~ fegments, refembling the teeth of a faw z. In {mctry, Jay is often ufed Before Say firft wha Say fort of tool faw ; thatis, they put one of the notchesof th wreft between the firft two teeth on the biade o the faw, and then turn the haudle horizontall abou a littl th upo towards the en notc of the faw ; and that at once turns the firft toot {fomewha fro toward you an th Moxon' you fecon toot Mech fi.\'cr #e fo [ foienr, Fr. from Jasv. "), SAWER One whofe trade 1s to fa hy SA'WVYER timber into boards:or beams Stella Aund wh SaY n. Swift figh'd to lofe a day affay. but up rifes L' Effrange Sample tongu o perty ; but is a term mofi' commsn_x"y given to plant, from an opinion of its medicinal virtues t .('\)L/im)' SA'XIFRAGE, Meadoav. n. f. [ filanum, Lat. A plant by a fample This gentleman having brought that carth t the publick 'fzy mafters, and upon their bein unable to bring it to fufion, or make it fly away he had procured a little of it, and with a peculia flux feparated a third partof pure gold Boyle Saxifrage, quafi faxum frangere, "to break th fone, 1is applicable to any thing having .this pro [Soie Fr. S8ilk Brutus That thou haft prov'd Lucilius' faying true Shak Mofes fled at this /aying, and was a ftranger i Brown's Vulgar Errours Muny are the fayings of the wife Extolling patience as the truelt fortitude. Milton Others try to divert the troubles of other me by pretty and plaufible fayings, fuch as this, tha Sax on; feggen, Dutch. 1. To {peak ; to.utter in words ; to tell Say it out, Diggon, whatever it hight. Spenfer In this flumbry agitation what have you hear Shak her fay Speak unto Solomon ; for he will not /ay the 1 Kings nay Say nothing to any man, but go thy way Mark 2. Toallege by way of argument After all can be fuid againit a thing, this wil ttill be true, that many things poflibly are, whic Tillot we kpow not of In vain thall we attempt to juftify ourfelves as the rich young man in the gofpel did, by appealing to the great duties of the law ; unlefs w can fzy fomewhat more, even that we have bee liberal in our diftributions to the poor. Atterbury 3. To tell in any manner With flying fpeed, and feeming great pretence Came meffenger with letters which his meffag Fairy Queen Jaid 4. To repeat; to rehearfe: as, to /a part; to fay a leflon 5. To pronounce without finging Then fhall be fzid or fung as follows Commo 9o SAY. v. # 1. To{peak; to pronounce relate He fuid moreover I hav they are but light fomewha t to fz 1 Kings hold, a Clarendaon The lion here has taken his right meafures that is to /2y, he has made a true judgment L' Effrange Of fome propofitions it may be difficult to fa whether they affirm or deny ; as when we Jay The facred fun&ion can never be hurt by thei Jayings, if not firft reproached by our doings A /h'l'/lur_y SCAB. . /. [ycxb, Saxon; \[fabbia, Ttalian ; fhabbe, Dutch ; fabies, Latin. 1. An incruftation formed over a fore b dried matter What's the matter, you diffentious rogues That rubbing the poor itch of your opinion Make yourfelves feabs Shake[peare's Coriolanus That free from gouts thou may'ft preferve th care Watts to reftore. m t th Dryden one wethe m mone for thofe that wer lean fhorn, or fcabby, I would be nune of his cuftomer S'w{'fr., \Sca'srovus. adj. [ fabiofisy Lat. Itchy leprous In the fpring feabions eruptions upon the fki Arbuthnot on Air Sca'srous Latin. to foot Shake/peare fzad in Greece thee the loathfom'{ Well faid. Wart, thou art a good feaé: ther .['[c'il/'y 1V One of the ufurers, a head man of the city took it in dudgeon to be ranked, cheek by joul L' Eftrange with a feab of a currier This vap'ring fcab mnft needs devif Sa ift To ape the thunder of the fkies ScA'BBARD. 2./ [ fchap, German, Funi _The fheath of a fword adj ¥r. jeabiofa [ fabreux ¥r. faber rugged ; pointed on the{urface Utine, blac {omething fhar blood-veflels: i bedded, this ma and bloody, is occafioned b or feabrous wounding the {mal the ftone is fmuoth and wel not happen Arbuthnot 2. Harth; unmufical Lucretius is feabrous and roug Sca'srousNEss in thefe: h ScA''eWORT [ from fabrous. z. f. [beleniun. A plant Amnfivcorth Scap. #. A kin the fame with /fhad Of roun of fifh Probabl fith there are fprat, barn, fmelts and fcad Carenv SCA'FFOLD. #. [ [efhafaunt, French fehawvot, Dutch5 from fehazven, to thow. 1. Atemporary gallery or ftage raifed eithe for fhows or fpectators Pardo The flat upraifed {pirit, that hath dar' Ou this unworthy feaffuld to bring fort So great an object Shakefpeare' The thron Henry' On banks and feaffo/ds under fky might ftand Milto 2. The gallery raifed for execution of grea malefactors Fortune fmiling at her fortune therein, that Jeaffeld of execution fhould grow a feafold of coronation Sidney 3. Frames of timber ere¢ted on the fide o a building for the workmen Thefe outward beauties are but the props an 5 ‘/E‘y]w"." On which we built our love which now mad perfedt Denban's Sopby Stands without thofe fupports Sylla added three hundred commous to the fenate; then abolifhed the office of tribune, as heing only a feaffold to tyranny, whercof he ha no further ufe Swifl Enter fortune's gate Nor in thy fcabbard fheath that famous blade >Till fettled be thy kingdom and eftate, Fairfax What eyes! how keen their glances! you d well to keep "em veil'd ; they are too tharp to b Dryden's Spanifb Friar z. Ben"Fobnfon Roughnefs; ruggednefs often incident to negligent poverty Sluz,('c_'/l-/mn'c' [ fabienfe A plant Lat. 1. Rough 2. Theitch or mange of horfes 3. A paltry fellow, fonamed from the itc hea . f SCA'BROUS Dryden ScA'BBED. adj, [from fiab. brin the for a whole hundred, without giving me fecurit -And clear from fiabs produc'd by freezing air trufted out o' th'/i‘ubbm‘z/ pierc'' better expunged Prior thou did'ft itch fro ha feeks them, as fome do Chaucerifms, which wer and I had the fcratching of ‘thee, I would mak Prayer to utter Tillotfon We poetick folks, who muft reftrai Our meafur'd fayings in an equal chain Have troubles ntterly unknown to thofe Who let their fancy loofe in rambling profe 1 woul Thucydides:faid of the Athenians, for honourable that which pleafed, and for juft that whic Ylato was no fogj Aés is a tefter for thee unto thee; and fhe faid, fay on The council-table and ftar-chambe profited Midian if evils are long rai were epidemical, from the acidity of the blooc Becaule goat's biood was found an excellen medicine for the ftone, it might be conceived t be able to break a diamond; and fo it came t be ordered that the goats thould be fed on faxifragous herbs, and fuchas are conceived of powe ra fat and well fleeced, and expedt the {ame pric Obfolete SA'YING, 2. /. [from /fay. Expreffion words; opinion {ententiouily delivered I thank thee the quic If the grazier fhoul 5. A kind of woollen ftuff SAXIFRAGOUS. adj. [ faxum and frango Latin.] Diffolvent ot the ftone Tp SAY. @w. a. preter, jaid [yecgan Whe breedin Shakefpeare Fairy Dueer. cabby tetter on their pelts will fick Sidney By rule of knighthood I difdain 3. Tria Difeafed wit zind fome fa Th Her writhled fkin, as rongh as mapple ried So feabby was, that would have Joath'd all wo breathes SA'XIFRAGE. 7. /2 [ faxifrage, ¥r. faxifraga A plant Latin. to break the ftone ScaBeY. adj. [from fiab. {cabs Sinuce thy outfide looks f{o fair and warlike th 'Th quality of being fcabby A little downward to efp The lively clufters of her breafts tha the fabby. (fro . f ScA'BBINESS So good a fay invites the eye An tha€ ea Bacon ftate of being {cabby Pape [from the verb. no fooner faid out his fuy [Fo thol ScA'BBEDNESSS. #. f. [from fiabled. more bleft, who chain'd his coun cunning {nap 2 fruit make To you fuch feabl'd harfh fruit is giv'n, as ra Young foldiers at their exercifings gnaw, Dryden 1. A dpecch ; what one has to fay H bria wich f{cabs 2. Paltry ; forry ; vile ; worthlefs feel you no content tr fay whole virtu Or h The pit-faw is ufed by joiners, when wha they have to do may be as foon done at hom Moxon as [end it to the fawoyers this effect Th DMilton Reflecting on a life well fpent the faw-wref? they fet the teeth of th Wit Covered or difeafe Cu /'/;‘5‘:'4/ cauf Mov'd our grand parents to fall off 7 fo [ faw and awref 1 queftion 3 tell Miller ‘W igaw-wrEsT SIC SC T SCA'¥FOLD 7 4 [fro th furnifh with frames of timber IIOUH. Sca 'I‘ F |