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Show SH f i i f a t i w b i t y. A u d m a e u i t a t cilit in contempt Motk of our fine young ladies retain in their fer To emit ; to dart or thruft forth Denbam 4. To be emitted Beware the fecret fadke that fboots a fting. Dryd The laft had a ftar upon 1ts breaft, which /po forth pointed beams of a peculiar luftre Addifon Fir'd by the torch of noon to tenfold rage ‘Th' infuriate hill forth fbots the pillar'd flame T homfon 1 ferved my miftrefs in that capa fiv o th wa fh befor numbe 7. f maker. an [ fho One whofe trade is to make fhoes A cobler orl/bacmaker ma with th little faul find fom a tie their fhoes Madam, I do, as is my duty Honour the fhadow of your fboctye clean.sh data import.tsv out README 8uoc. 7 /. [from fock. cuffion non Watts The rib SHOETYE. 7. /. [ fboe and zye. pand with which wome ha Apelle a latchet of a fhoe tha painted, when the whole figure is fuc " put an Apelles could paint Hudibras Violen con .Another's diving bow he did adore ‘Which, with a fbog, cafts all the hair before. Dryd He will rather have the primitive man to be pro duced in a kind of digefting balneum, where all th :2, ‘heavier lees may fubfide, and a due 2quilibrium b maintained, not difturbed by any fuch rude an violent /bogs that would ruffle and break all the lit Bentley ~ tle ftamina of the embryofi Ssoc. w. a. To fhake; to agitat by fudden interrupred impulfes After it is wafhed, they put the remnant into wooden dith, the which they foftly /bog to and fr in the water, until the earthy fubitance be flitte away. Carew Sdone The preterite of /bize All his father in him fbore Milton e SHQQK. The preterite, and in poetry par ticiple paffive, of fake Taxallan, Jbock by Montezuma' pow'rs Has, to refift his forces, call'd in ours Dryden To SHOOT. w. 4. preterite J fbot 5 partl(:lpl.e Jbot or fbotten. [ycebtan, Sax. 1. Todifcharge any thing fo as to make i flywith fpeed or violenge Ligh Sboot_s far into the bofom of dim nigh A ghmrr.lcring dawn Milton 2 To difcharga e from a bow or gun Thl OWe you much, and, like a witlefs youth at whichTowe is loft; but if you pleaf 'é;]q[baot an arrow that felf wa T:}f:dyfim did fboot the firft, T do not doub i oth Shakefpeare i m\frth.erous fhaft that's fpo ath not yet lighted ; and our fafeft wa $ 10 avoid the aim Shakefpeare 'An% }'r‘:)mp Obf winning graces waited till i alllen about ber/}m darts of defir . 4 €yes to with her &ill in fight Milton 3 Tohlet off: ufed of the inftrument € men fbort frong fhoots with their bows Abbot The Wo ends of a bow fhot off, fly from one anMe. o Boyle Which 1,0 00w not heartsfhould make examples To £ >h‘k€ a warning-piece, muft be fhot off 4T "f&'t tthe reft from crimes "')t fike with any thing fhot Dryden fibne::in hand fhall touch the mount, but he fhal e or fhot through 5o I twenty years Buo'EMAKER 6 fiftence of a fyrup, and fet into a cool place, th effential falt will /oot upon the fides of the veficls Arbuthnot on Aliments vice fupernumerary and infignificant fellows, whic ingo f ca l o m c a s e f i w li uf the Spettator Borns 1 have been an arrant jl»m'ng-born for above thef fhod. Though fhe had many who made their applications to her, I always thought myfelf the bef Spettator thoe in her fhop Exprefled juices of plants, boiled into tlie con Tell like a tall old oak how learning fhoot To heav'n her branches, and to hell her roots That gently warm The univerfe, and to each inward par With gentle penetration, though unfeen Shoots invifible virtue ev'n to the decp city abov SH SH' Exodus, xix. 1 onem}t New parts, as a vegetable lheirq the trees exalt themfelves, neither fboo t9p among the thick bou hs Ezck, %xXie 14 A i swacg}:::cgg sm"f\‘-ard groweth up and fhooterh ou oL, 1 Mark, ivs 32 "Phere fbot a ftreaming lamp along the fky Which on the winged lightning feem'd to fiy Drydes Tell them that the rays of light fboor from th Milton Ye, who pluck the flow'rs 7. To pufh fuddenly a bolt or lock So we fay, to fboo I have laughed fometimes when 1 have refleCted on thofe men who have fhor themfelve into the world; fome bolting out upon the ftag with vaft applaufe; and fome hiffed off, quittin it with difgrace Dryden The liquid air his moving pinions wound And in the moment fboor him on the ground. Dr 8. To pufh forward They that fee me fboot out the lip, they fhake th head Plaims g. To fit to each other by planing workman's term Straight lines in joiners language are called joint; thatis, two pieces of wood, that are fhot that is, planed, or elfe pared with a paring chuflel 10. To pafs through with {wiftnefs Moxon Thus haying faid, fhe finks beneath the groun With furious hafte, and fboots the Stygian found Dryden 70 SuooT. wv. 2 1. To perform the a& of fhooting, or emitting a miffile weapon The archers have forely grieved him, and fbst a Genefis him When he has fbot his beft, he is fure that non Temple ever did fboot better A fhining harveft either hoft difplays And fhoots againft the fun with equal rays Dr When you fboot, and fhut one eye You cannot think he would den To lend the other friendly aid Or wink, as coward and afraid Prior 2. 'To germinate ; to increafe in vegetabl growth Such trees as love the fun do not willingly defcend far into the earth; and therefore they ar Bacon commonly trees that fboor up much Onions, as they hang, will fboot forth Bacon The tree at once both upward fhoots And juft as much grows downward to the roots Cleaveland The monarch oak, the patriarch of the trees Shoots rifing up, and fpreads by flow degrees. Dryd Nor will the wither'd ftock be green again But the wild olive fbosts, and fhades the ungratefu Dryden plain New creatures rife A moving mafs at firft, and fhort of thighs Till fhooting out with legs, and imp'd with wings Dryden The corn laid up by ants would fbost unde ground, if they did not bite oft' all the buds; an Addifor therefore it will produce nothing A wild where weeds and flow'rs promifcuous /boot Pope Or garden tempting with forbidden fruit 3. To form itfelf into any fhape If the menftruum be overcharged, metals wil Bacon Jboot into cryftals Although exhaled, and placed in cold confervatories, it will cryftallize and fbost into glacious boBrown dies That rude mafs will /oot itfelf into fevera forms, till it make an habitable world : the ftead hand of providence being the invifible guide‘of al its motions Burnet's Theory fun to our eart at th rate of one hundred an cighty thoufand miles in the fecond of a minute Watts they ftand aghaft at fuch talk The grand ztherial bo Shoots up immente Thomfon 5. To protuberate ; to jet out The land did fboot out with a very great promontory, bending that way Abbot's Defeription of the World This valley of the Tirol lies inclofed on all fide by the Alps, though its dominions fboor out int feveral branches among the breaks of ‘the mounAddifon on Italy tains 6. To pafs as an arrow Thy words fpost thro' my heart Melt my refolves, and turn me all to love Addif 7. To become any thing by fudden growth Materials dark and crude Of fpiritous fiery fpume, till touch' Witn heaven's ray, and temper'd, they fpoot fort So beauteous, opening to the ambient light, A Let me but live to fhadow this young plan From blites and ftorms : he'll foon fbiot up a here Dryden 8. To move fwiftly along A fbosting ftar in autumn thwarts the night Milto Where Tigris at the foot of Paradif Into a gulf fbot underground, tilil par Rofe up a fountain by the tree of life Milton At firft the flutters, but at length fhe {pring To fmoother flight, and fboors upon her wings Dryden The brokea air loud whiftling as fhe flies She ftops and liftens, and fboots forth again And guides her pinions by her young ones cries Dryden Heaven's imperious queen fhof down from high At her approach the brazen hinges fly Dryden The gates are forc'd She downward glides Lights in Fleet-ditch, and fboots beneath the tides Gay Where the mob gathers, fwiftly fboot along Gay Nor idly mingle in the noify throng Not half fo fwiftly fboots along in ai Pope The gliding lightning 9. To feel a quick glancing pain Suoor. n. /. [from the verb. 1. The a& or imprefion of any thin emitted from a diftance The Turkif infomuch as th two inches thic wood, hath bee of wood of eigh bow giveth a very forcible fboot arrow hath pierced a fteel targe ; but the arrow, if headed wit known to pierce through a piec Bacon inches thick z. The a of ftriking, or endeavouring t ftrike, with a miflive weapon difcharge by any inftrument The noife of thy crofs-bo Will fcare the herd, and fo my ffost is loft. Shak But come the bow; now mercy goes to kill And fhooting well is then accounted ill Thus will I fave my creditin the fboor Not wounding, pity would not let me do t." Shak As a country-fellow was making a fboor at pigeon, he trod upon a { 3. [ fehenten Dutch. from the main ftock at bit him. L Branche Ef iffuin They will fot come juft on the tops where the were cut, but out of thofe /boots which were waterBacon boughs I fawsthem under a green mantling wiae Plucking ripe clufters from the tender fBiors. Mils Prun |