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Show S‘ SH He lions are hirfute, and have great manes 5 th Bacen Jbesare fmooth, like cats Stand it in Judah's chronicles confeft That David's fon, by impious paffion mov'd, Smote a fpe flave, and murder'd what he lov'd Prior SHEAF. 7. /. fheaves, plural. [yceap, Sax Jehoof, Dutch. 1. A bundle of ftalks of corn bound together, that the ears may dry Thefe be the fbeawes that honour's harveft bears The feed, thy valiant aéts ; the world the field Fairfax He beheld a field Part arable and tilth; whereon were fbeawe New reap'd : the other part theep-walks and folds Milton The reaper fills his greedy hands And binds the golden fbeawes in brittle bands Dryden 2. Any bundle or collettion held together She vanifh'd The fbeaf of arrows fhook and rattled in the cafe Dryden In the knowledge of bodies, we muft glean wha we can ; fince we cannot, from a difcovery of thei real eflences, grafp at a time whole /beawves, and i bundles comprehend the nature of whole fpecies Locke 70 SuEAL w. a Tothell Thou art a fbealed peafecod Zo SuEAR See SmaLE Shak. King Lear preter. fbore, or fheared pail. jbora [yceanan ycypen part Saxon This word is more frequently writte JPeer, but fbeer cannot analogically for Jhore or fborn : [bear, fbore, fborn ; as tear tore, torn. 1. To clip or cut by interception betwee two blades moving on a rivet So many days, my ewes have been with young So many weeks, ere the poor fools will yean So many months, ere I fhall fbeer the fleecce. Shak Laban went to fbeer his theep Gen. xxxi. 1 ‘When wool is new fhorn, they fet pails of wate by in the fame room to increafe its weight Bacon's Natural Hiffory To lay my head, and hollow pledg Of all my ftrength, in the lafcivious la Of a deceitful concubine, who fhore me Like a tame wether, all my precious fleece. Milton The fame ill tafte of fenfe would ferve to joi Dog foxes in the yoke, and /beer the {wine. Dryd May'ft thou henceforth fiveetly fleep Shear, fwains, oh fbear your fofteft theep To fwell his couch Gay O'er the congenial duft enjoin'd to Sbea The graceful cuil, and drop the tender tear. Pope 2. To cut by interception The fharp and toothed edge of the nether cha ftrikes into a canal cut into the bone of the upper and the toothe protuberance of the upper into canal in the nether: by which means he ecafil Jpeers the grafs whereon he feeds Grew 7o SuEaR. @. 7 [In navigation. make an indireét courfe SuEAR. )z /. [from theverb. Iti Suears. § dom ufed in the fingular is found once in Dryden. 1. An inftrument to cut, confifting o T felbu tw blades moving on a pin, between whic the thing cut 1s intercepted. Shears ar a larger, and feiffars a {maller, inftrument of the fame kind. Pope ufes fbear for feiffars Alas ! thought Philoclea to herfelf, your fbeer come too late to clip the bird's wings that alread is flown away Sidney Why do you bend fuch folemn brows on me "Think you I bear the fbears of deftiny Have 1 commandment on the pulfe of life Shakefpeare The fate SH prepar'd their tharpen' fbeers. Dryd HE When the flefcc is {hborn Then their defencelefs limbs the brambles tear Short of their wool, and naked from the fbecr preferves them fharp for rapin only when he leaps at the pr z. [In philofophy. particles Dryden That people live and die, I knew from thefe impediments of employing the fbeers, for want of a mint, upo foreign gold, by clipping it into half-crowns Savift Fate urg'd the fbears, and cut the fylph in twain But airy fubftance foon unites again Pope Beneath the jbears they felt no lafting fmart They loft but flecces, while I loft a heart. Gay tharp falts When theep is one fhear, they will have tw broad teeth before; when two Jfpear, four; whe three, fix; when four, cight: and, after that, thei Mertimer 3. Any thing in the form of the blades o Two fharp-wing'd fheer Decked with divers plumes, like painted jays Were fixed at his back to cut his airy ways Spenfer 7. /. [rceand, Saxon. A frag ment It is now commonly writte Jpard, and applied only to fragments o earthen ware In the burfting of it, not a_fherd to take fire fro the hearth, or to take water out of the pit Ifaiab, xxX. 14 SHE'ARER. #. /. [from fbear.] One tha clips with thears ; particularly one tha 1t were to be wifhed that the whole navy throughout were heatbed as fome are Raleigh SHEATHWI'NGED. adj. [ fbeathand wing.}, Having hard cafes which are folded oye the wings Some infects fly with four wings, asall vagin pennous or fbeathavinged infeéts, as beetles and dorrs Brown SHEA'THY. adj. [from jbeath. SHEATH [ycxe = / cafes on earwigs backs two wings 7o SHED Ts Suearng This draw breaft but now againf m His fword the other in his bofom Sfheaths My fighs you gave him, and my tears you fbed Dryden Unhappy man ! to break the pious law Of nature, pleading in his children's caufe Th *T'is love of honour Is this her hate to him, her love to me Butin a bull's raw hide they /bearh the right. Dryd The leopard, and all of this kind as goes, keep the claws of his forefeet turned up from the ground and Jbeaibed in the fkin of his toes, whereby h good In thefe lone walls, their days eternal bound Thefe mofs-grown domes with fpiry turrets crown d Where awful arches make a noon-day night And the dim windows fbed a folemn light Thy eyes diffus'd a reconciling ray And gleams of glory brighten'd all the day. Pee 2. To featter ; to let fall Trees that bring forth their leaves late, and cd' them late, are more lafting than thofe that {pro or fbed them betimes their leaves carly Bacon's Natural Hiffory "So the returning year be bleft As his infant months befioy Springing wreaths for William's brow Pri As his fummer's youth (ha.lljbu rir Eternal fiveets around Maria's he.;\d Walier- } 'Tis in my breaft fhe fbeaths her dagger now. Dryd "The left foot naked, when' they march to fight and his country' The conful, not the father, jbeds the bloods Dryd t Denb Night from the plants their fleepy virtue drains And paffing fbeds it on the filent plains. Dryden You feem'd to mourn another lover dead Before tis /beath'd fhall give him peace and reft In his hair one hand he wreaths Matthew, Xxvis 2 Around its entry nodding poppies grow And all cool fimples that fweet reft beftow; fovereign' i Some think one gen'ral foul fills ev'ry brain As the bright fun fbeds light in ev'ry ftar. Davies ¢ V- % [from the noun. inclofe in any cafe pro j gliuf:mg w. a. [fceban, Saxon. for the remiffion of fins [laurus niger.] Ainfworth 1. To inclofe in a fheath or {cabbard i e The painful fervice, .and the drops of bloo Shed for my thanklefs country, are requite But with that furname of Coriolanus Shake Cromwell, I did not think to fbed a tea In all my miferies Shakefpearz For this is my blood which is fbed for many cafe of any thing ; the fcabbard of weapon 70SHEATH 7 / 1. To effufe; to pour out; to fpill "H Swords by the lightning's fubtile force diftill'd And the cold fpeath with ranning metal fill'd. 4dd (from fl‘.fi‘ Browne He went to fight againft the giant in his robe of efts Jhecklaton, which is that kind of gilded leather wit which they ufe to embroider the Irifh jackets s This was Spenfers . ol Rogers The dead knight's fword out his fh fath hedrew With which he cut a lock off all their hair Fairy Queen Doth not each look a flath of lightning feel ‘Which fpares the bady's jbeath, yet melts the fteel Cleaveland and you may draw forth SHE'CKLATON Shakefpeare Saxon. giin) Efuf With a needle put afide the fhort and fhearky clean.sh data import.tsv out README ‘And thove away the worthy bidden gueft. Milton Was he to be led as alamb to the flaughter, patient and refigned as a fheep before her fhearers m Forming* a fheath Than how to fcramble at the fbearers featt SHEA'RWATER fowl Sbakn_'fpeare. 4. To defend the main body by an oy ward covering Of other care they little reck'ning make Thy father was a plaifterer And thou thyfelf a fbearman Arbuthuy, Walter's dagger was not come from Jbeathi g fleeces fheep SHEA'RMAN, n. /. [ fbear and man. that fhears as peafe and beans There was no link to colour Peter's hat Shears in Spenfer Bay[, 3. To fit with a fheath 2. The denomination of the age of theep SHEARD Other fubftances, oppofite to acrim n a c l eq demulcent or mild, becaufe they blunt o fheath thof Prior How happy fhould we be if we had the privileg 4. Wings Toobtund any acri natures .when Jpeathed up or wedg d in a'::,r,m ot'hcrs, in the texture of concrete, and wheneg tricate Or is in hafte to take the Sbears I know, we muft both fortunes try And bear our evils, wet or dry break J lngctrh‘:‘r' Thofe active parts of a body a e of di An hour ago, as well as you And if fate fpins us longer years mouth extendin Suep @. n To let fall its palr.ts a e White oats are apt to fhed moft as,the Mortimers Hufbandr black as they ftand co b t n i S b f p u [ 7 SHED rupted from fhade. 1. A flight temporary covering The firft Aletes born in lowly'. /bed Of pareats bafe, a rofe fprtzf)g from a bnd;‘;‘_ Jfir Thoug h |