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Show SH SH 2. To make to totter or tremble ‘The rapid wheels fbake heav'n's bafis Milton Let France acknowledge that her fhaken thron Was once fupported, Sir, by you alone. Rofcommon Like leaves faluted by the wind firmnefs SHAKE. . /. [from the verb. 1. Concuflion {uffered *Tis a thin web, which yoifonous fancies make But the great foldier's honour was compos' Of thicker ftuft, which could endure a fhake & To drive from refolution ; to deprefs to make afraid Several of his countrymen probably lived withi the fbak Be not foon /baken in mind, or troubled, as tha confifting of many kind fbates of the hand Milton SHA'KER. 7 /. [from shake. or thing that fhakes Go, then fignifies t Till he unfeam'd him from the nape to th' chops Shakefpeare Nor can it be fafe to a king to tarry among the And your fair fhew fhall fuck away their fouls Leaving them but the fpales and hufks of men Shakefpeare King Charles SHALL. verd defe?. [yceal, Sax. is origi To rid himfeloff ; t nally I owwe, or I ought free from ; to diveft of woir Waller ¥ had fpaken off the leffer and more barking creatures Stilling fleet Can T want courage for fo brave a deed T've fbook it off: my foul is free from fear. Dryden Here we are free from the formalities of cufto and refpect: we may /bake off the haughty imper giv Collicr At fight of thee my heart fbakes off its forrows Addifon the fbaking of a fpear 3. Tho Milton I comman the it is permitted thee to love 5. He Saart hwve. It will be that he m f comforts lowe to love Mzke our eyes flow with joy, hearts dance wit with fear an Sbak«fl:mrc of muft love? Willit be permitted to the Thy fight, which fhoul and fbek fenf [in poetry or folemn di&ion] it will b that thou muft love 4« SHALT thou love? Will it be that t o body Rill weep SHAL to love 3. To tremble ; to be unable to keep th Conftrains the forrow to /ball an" emphatica love ; it is commanded him that fe Jove It is a mind, tlmt/},m// remain Daf] oI one way of removing, this difmal appre henfion, is, to convince him that Chrig death and the benefits thereof, either do, ory if he per form the condition required of him, Jha l certainj belong to him Hanfmond': Fundamentajs s it permitted hi 7- The plural perfons follow the fignifi cation of the fingulars SHALLOO'N. 7 /i A flight woollen fiuff In blue fballoon thall Hannibal be clad And Scipio trail an Irifh purple plaid SHA'LLOP. n. [ [chaloupe, Fr. boat Swift A fmal You were refolved, after your arrivalinto Orgg noque, to pafs to the mine ; and, to that end, yo defired to have Sir John Fearne's fpallop: Tdono allow of that courfe, becaufe yé cannot land f fecretly but that fome Isdians on the river fid may difcover you, who giving knowledge of you paflage to the Spaniards, you may be cut off be fore you can recover your boat Our hero fe In a fmall fballsp, fortune in his debt Raleigh Walle SHa'LLOW. adj. [This word is probabl compounded of /poal and low. 1. Not deep; having the bottom at n great diftance from the furface or edge I ha bee drowned, bu that the fhore wa fhelvy and /ballozw5 a death that I abhor. Shakefp. Merry Wives of Windfire That inundation, though it were fpallow, ha a long continuance, whereby they of the vale, tha were not drowned, perithed for want of food Bacon The like opinion he hefd of Meotis Palus, tha by the floods of Tanais, and earth brought down thereby, it grew obfervably ballower in his dayss and would in procefs of time become a firm land Browwn's Vulgar Errourse I am made a fhallow forded ftream Seen to the bottom : all my clearnefs fcorn'd And all my faults expos'd. Dryden's Af/forL@ Shallow brooks, that flow'd fo clear The bottom did the top appear Dryden In fhallowo furrows vines fecurely grow. Dryde 2. Not intellectually deep; mot profaund not ver knowin o trifling; futile; filly wife empty T'll fhew my mind According to my fballew fimple ficill. Shakefpearc This is a very fPallozo montfter Afraid of him? A very fbalicav monter, The man 1' th> moon! A moft poor credulous Shakepeare monfter The king was neither fo fballcw nor fo ill ad vertifed as not to perceive the intention oft tl}fl French king, for the invefting himfelf of Bri Bacon's Henry Vil taigne Uncertain and unfettled he remains Deep vers'd in books, and fhallewv in himfelf love? Will it be that I muft love Fob, xlia 29 Under his burning wheel Thie ftedfaR empyrean fhok throughout Al but the throne itfelf of God manner 2. SuarL Ilowe? Will it be permitte me to love? Will you permit me t he laugheth a 2. To totter fam muft love ; I am refolved to love o SHAKE. v, 2 1. 'Tobe agitated with a vibratory motion as ‘ftubble th will: but I thall endeavour, crafé Minervd, to fhow the meaning of ball i the future tenfe. 1. I Suavy Jove It will fo be that and make even horrour fmile are counte i but /ball, future, and fhould imperfe The explanation ef fba/l, which foreigners and provincials confound wit will, is not eafy; and the difficulty i increafed by the poets, who fometime HimI referved to be anfiered by himfelf, afte Dart deit the Swedes have fa//, and the Iflander Jkal, in the fame fenfe It has no tenfe befto Lell me, brave friend! what help'd thee f dois with a kind of future fignification; an Courage on thee, to foar fo high The face of war the Saith owe Zo God: thence it became a fign o the futuré tenfe The French ufe ¥rom thefe old arms and legs ¥'d with thee every foot Shakefpeare's Coriolanys How does thy beauty fmoot In Chaucer, th Saithe I fhall to God, mean Be pleas'd that I fbake off thefe names you giv me Antonio never yet was thief or pirate ShakefpsIf I could fbake ¢ff but one feven year Ainent. the guilty at thy will chaftife Behold yon poor and ftarved band who are fhaking hands with their allegiance, unde pretence of laying fafter hold of their religion To fhake off all mortality The perfo SHALE. 7. /. [corrupted, I think, for /e//. A hufk ; the cafe of feeds in filiquou plants With the flav He ne'er fbock bands, nor bid farewel to him facred bard ! what coul Addif He faid5 the fbaker of the earth replies Pope's Odyffey Jein awith, but commonly to take leae of Say the fhadow o Our falutations were very hearty on both fides 7+ Z0 SHAKE hands. This phrafe, fro the action ufed among friends at meet 8. 7o Suaxe off an 4. Motion given and received 2 Thefl. ii. 2 ing and parting, fometime of the earthquake the eclipfe, which are recorded by this author Addifon Shak. Henry VIIL Can by his fraud be fbaken or feduc'd moving power 3. Vibratory motion A fly and conflant knave, not to be fpak'd Shakefp. Cymbeline This refpite fhoc and th be that he muft love The freeholder is the bafis of all other titles this is the fubftantial ftock, without which the are no more than bloffoms, that would fall awa with every fbake of wind Addifon Attur/zwy That he fball receive no benefit fgm chm,:mi{ to love? [in folemn language] Will i Wifdom picks friends; civility plays the reft A toy, fhunn'd cleanly, pafieth with thee beft Herbert by his enemies, they perfecuted his reputation Shakefpeare's WP'J':'- ; ,",:j"-xt Dryden's & 6. SuaLy be love If that thy fame with ev'ry toy be pos'd 2. Impulfe s abfolutei{ball the affirmation whereon al] his defpair is f und;d Shook at the difmal profpect of the war. Dryden's ZEneid to put in danger Not my firm fait He, fhort of fuccours, and in deep defpair When his doérines grew too ftrong to be fhoo Waller 4. To be in terrour; to be deprived o *Tis our firft inten To fhake all cares and bufinefs from our age Conferring them on younger ftrengths, whilft w Unburthen'd crawl towards death Shakefpeare the day of Chrift is at hand See Romulus the great This prince a prieftefs of your blood /Al bea And, like his fire, in arms he fpall a/;)pea:w A fbaking through their limbs they find 4. To throw away ; to drive off The bofom of my confcience Shakefpeare and fhook 5 for why,‘ he ftamp'd As if the vicar meant to cozen him Macbeth is ripe for fbaking, and the powers abov Put on their inftruments Shake[peare The tyrannous breathing of the nort Skatkes all her buds from blowing Skhakefpeare When ye depart, fbake off the duft of your fect Maith. x He looked at his book, and, holding out hi right leg, put it into fuch a quivering motion, tha 1 thought he would have fbaked it off Tatler Hear you this triton of the minnows? M H ~Tremble 3. To throw down by a violent motion 5. To weaken ‘What faid the wench, when he rofe up 3,83111 On would no more wonder to fee the mof Shallozv nation of Europe the moft vain, than find the moft empty fellows in every nation mor th th ref te ~.3. conNoce t deep of found Addifon If a virginal were made with a double ccncav;, th on all th lengt of the virginal and th other at the end of the ftrings, as the harp hatl}, it muft make the found perfeéter, and not fo /Falfow and jarring Bacon i /. [from the adj'e&i've.} Sua'Lrow fhelf; a fand; a flat; a fhoal; aplac 5 p where the water is not deep |