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Show SH SH SHIFT. 2. /. [from the verb. 1. Expedient found or ufed with dificulty ; difficult means Sh redoublin her blows drav t an to no other shift tha war The very fame fhilling ma twent the ftrange g back violence a hefitating T'll find a thoufan ifts to get away Shakefpeare's King Fobn This perfeét artifice and accuracy might hav been omitted, and yet they have made fbift to mov up and down in the water More's Antidote againft Arbeifm Not any boaft of ikill, but extreme fhif How to regain my fever'd company Compell'd me to awake the courteous echo To give me anfwer from her mofly couch Milr A fafhionable hypocrify fhall be called good manners, fo we make a fhift fomewhat to legitimat th abufe L'Eftrange Thofe little animals provide themfelves wit wheat; but they can make /bift without it. 4 d becauf ai it kee Jfbone3 fometimes 7 Soined, I hawe fbined [reman, Saxon ; Jehijnen, Dutch. 1. To have bright refplendence; to glitter; to gliften ; to gleam To-day the French All clinquant, all in gold, like heathen gods Shone down the Englith ; and to-morro Made Britain India : ev'ry man that foo Shew'd like a mine Shake[peare True paradife inclos'd with Spining rock. Milt We can difmifs thee ere the morning fbine. Milt Fair daughter, blow away thefe mifts and clouds And let thy eyes fbine forth in their full luftre Denbam As long as wit, by whetting itfelf, is a le t fin outany /bift, be it never fo flight, w ereby t efcape out of the hands of prefent c ntradiétion they are never at a ftand Hooker Of themfelves, for the moft part, the are f cautious and wily headed, efpeciall being men o fo fmall experience and praétice in l w matters that you would wonder whence they b rrow fuc fubtilities and fly fhifts Spenfer Here you fee your commiflion; thi is you duty, thefe are your difcouragement : never fec for fhifts and evafions from worldl affliétions this is your reward, if you perfor it; this you doom, if you decline it South. The fun fbines when he fees it When the fweet wind did gently kifs the trees And they did make no noife Shakefpeare's Merchant of Venice How bright and goodly fbines the moon The moon ! the fun : it is not moonlight now Shakefpeare Clear pools greatly comfort the eyes, when th {un is overcaft, or whe 3. To be glofly the moon Jhineth Bacon They are waxen fat, they fbine Fer. v. 28 Fifh with their fins and fbining {cales Milton. The colour and JPining of bodies is nothing bu the different arrangement and refra@ion of the minute parts Locke. Mi{ton - SHI'FTLESS, ad). [from fbift.] Wa tin expedients ; wanting means to act o live 4. To be gay ; to be {plendid And fitting high 5. To be beautiful 7+ 'T'o be propitious The Lord make his fac gracious Fairy Queen, Once brightet fbin'd this child of hea and air It is no : 6. Te be eminent or confpicuous their jflil.'ing, which probably from cil) ingus, whic ounce Siw_ifrf Jhine ponutbethrse, g vi, 5 8. 'T'o give light real or figurative The light of righteoufnef hathnotfl:ined unto ~ us, and the fun of righteoufnefs rofe n t upon us Wildom Celeftial ligh v, 6 Shine inward, and the mind throug a h l her powe Trradiate Miltos SHINE. 2. /. [from the verb. 1. Fair weather Be it fair or foul, or rain or Jhine Drydey He will accuftom himfelf to heat an cold, an Jeine and rain; all which if a man's bod will not endure, it will ferve him to very little p rpofe Locke, Brightnefs; {plendour5 luftre, Itis word, though not unanalogical, yetun graceful, and little ufed He that has inured his eyes to that divine fplen dour which refults from the beauty of holinefs, i not dazzled with the glittering fbine of gold, an confiders it as a vein'of the fame earth he treads 2 oin Decay of Piety Say, in what mortal foil thou deign'ft to grow Fair op'ning to fome court's propitious fbine Or deep with diamonds in the flaming mine Sui'NEss Pope . [ [from fby.] Unwillingnef to be trattable or familiar An incurable fbinefs is the vice of Irifh horfes and is hardly ever feen in Flanders, becaufe th winter forces the breeders there to houfe and handle their colts Temple They weré famous for their juffice in commerce, but extreme fbinefs to ftrangers: they expofed their goods wit them, and then retired SHI'NGLE . /. [ fehindel, German. thin board to cover houfes Th the price marked upo Arbuthnat beft to cleave, is the moft ufeful for pales laths, /bingles, and wainfcot SHI'NGLES. 7. / Want Mortim. Hufbandry the fingular [cingulum, Lat. xona morbus, Plinio.] . kind of tetter or herpes that fpreads it {elf round the loins T«"i‘..w‘ ‘ila‘g.;l, S Such are ufed fuccefsfully in eryfipelas gnd/b'm glesy by a flender diet of decoions of farinaceou tables, and copious drinking of cooling liquors i Arbuthnot on Dict did ; luminous Of all th' enamell'd race, whofe I fi 'ry win Waves to the tepid zephyrs of th fpring Or fwims along the fluid atmofphere Sur'trixc. [reylling, Saxon an Erfe ; fehelling, Dutch.] A coin of va ble 1 Sur'ny. adj. [from fine.] Bright; fplen So proud the fbined in her princely fate Looking to heaven, for earth fhe did d fdain For the poor JPiftlefs irrationals, it i a prodigious act of the great Creator's indulge ce, tha they are all ready furnithed with fuch cloth ng Derbam's Phyfico-Theology. Camden's Remains Locke The moon fhines bright : in fuch anight as this "Twas fuch a fbifter, that, if truth w re known Death was half glad wh en he had go him down laft wil Denbam z. To be without clouds 5. A woman's linen SHL'FTER: n./. [from fbifr.] On wh plays tricks ; a man of artifice pound a legac p:‘ Few are qualified to fhin i ny; but j in moft men's power to be ag ee 2 7o SHINE. @. 2. preterite I bone, I hawv e An humble fervant to all uman kind don' Ere he can find your foul 's within. Anonymous Their {words lefs danger carry than their gi ts Romans ufed fo r the fourth par of a forty-eight of ¢ hefefci//ing: made t ei four hundred of thefe pounds w r a king's daught er, as appearet by th We knock; fo one muft kick your fhin artifice; {'cratagem Know ye not Ulyfles® spifts Five of thefe pence mad it To know if any one's at home So true, that he was aukward at a tri k For little fouls on little fbifts rely Dryden of king Alfred mak becoming grac The courtier fmooth, who fo ygears};::%‘f" As when to an houfe we comie of ignorance Bacon Slow to refolve, but in performance q ick th an an fo Addifon' For when a jpin in fight is cropt The knee with one of timber 's propt. Hudibra To fay, where the notions cannot fitly b reconciled, that there wanteth a tetm, is bu a pif they called feilling whe attra&ivfs?nk;]: duced its proper fruits, and digti g i h t age with fbining inftances of virtye and moia‘lvil:;l "procrafti I bruifed my fbin the other day with playing a fword and dagger. Shak. Merry Wines of Windfor The fbin bone, from the knee to the inftep, i made by fhadowing one half of the leg witha fingl fhadow Peacham His leg, then breke Had got a deputy of oak which they know can never -have his all wanc whofe afliftance their prayers feek Hooker twelve pence an aéts o eformation, in its firg e&abufl\meff ' A corrupt reduplica hefitatin ‘fiwed Soften the rigour of h r father's virtyes The Young Su1'Ly. adv. [from /by.] Not familiarly not frankly SHIN. n. /. [ycma, Saxon; [ehien, German. The forepart of the leg by thofe wicked fpifis rious value in different times ref Congreve's Way of the World. and relief at the hands of God, doth, by a fec e contradiétion, withdraw them from endea ourin at anothe ftand fhill-I-fhall-I then: if I fay't, I'll do 't refource an I am fomewhat dainty in making a refolution 2. Indire& expedient ; mean refuge ; laf 4. Evafion; elufory praice days To fand fbill-I-fpall-1, i to continu nating Our herbals are {ufficiently ftored with p ants and we have made a tolerable JPift to r duce the to claffes Baker 3. Fraud twent Cato's fou ines out in ev'ry thin While‘winning mildn fs. an Dwell in her looks, an wit tion of fball I'? The queftion of a ma IfI get down, and do not break my limbs to help themfelves, eve i Suivr-I-suarr-I Sidney of feeking fo particula me at one time pa in the fame hands one hundred days Locke Who, with much pains exerting all his fenfe Can range aright his fbillings, pounds, and pence that time feeming the image of innocency againf The very cufto Pope If there come truth from them As upon thee, Macbeth, their fpeec es shine Why, by the verities on thee made goo May they not be my oracles as well Shakefpeare Her face was veil'd ; yet to my fancied f ght Love, fweetnefs, goodnefs, in her perfon f in' So clear, as in no face with more delight. M fton When Aldeboran was mounted high Above the fpiny Cafliopeia's chair fare.Quet One knocked :at the door, and d iinn wouldFair The nigh Is fhiny, and they fay we fhall embattl By th' fecond hour o' th' morn Shakefpeare's Antony and Cleopatra While from afar we heard the cannons play Like diftant thunder on a biny day For abfent friends we were afham'd to fear. Dryd Suip. [yap, yeyp, Saxon ; fehap, Dutch. terminatio notin quality or ac‘il: a e f a ic of o i df lo jun&; a Ship i {"Lci |