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Show S H His panegyrick is mad u of half a doze cut off' fro /bmis, Jike a {choolboy's theme, beaten general to Swift picks u fignifie SHRE'WDNESs, 7./i [from fhrewd. 1. Sly cunning; archnefs Therededeof hem vor hungera thoufand and mo And yat nolde the ferewen to none pes go Robert of Glouccfber Be metrry, be merry, my wife has all For women are fhrewws both fhort and tall Shakefpeare's Henry 1V By this reckoning he is more fbreww than fhe Her garboiles, which not wanted prewdnefs o policy too, did you too much difquiet Shake[p The neighbours round admire hi rezvdnefs For fongs of loyalty and lewdnefs Savift 2. Mifchievoufefs ; petulance SHRE'WISH. adj. [from fbrew. Havin the qualities of a fhrew; froward ; petulantly clamorous Shakefpeare A man had got a fbreew to his wife, and ther L'Effrange could be no quiet in tne houfe for her Her fallow cheeks her envious mind did thew clean.sh data import.tsv out README And ev'ry feature fpoke aloud the forew. Dryden Every one of them, who is a jhrew in domeftick life, 1s now become a fcold in politicks Ang-:lo, you muft excufe us My wife is Jbreavifb, when 1 keep not hours SHRE'WISHLY. adv. [ from fhrewifp. | Pe Addifon's Freebolder tulantly; peevifhly ; clamorouily ; frowardly 1. Having the qualities of a fhrew ; malicious; troublefome; mifchievous H Shakelpeare more artfu Addifon Corruption proceeds from employing thofe wh have the charaéter of fbrewwd worldly men, inftea of fuch as have had aliberal education, and traine up in virtue Addifon % Bad; ill betokening Scarce any man pafics t a likin of fin i others, but by firft pratifing it himfelf ;.and con fequently we ma take -if for a Sfprew indica tion, and fign, whereby to judge of thofe who hav fintied with too much caution, to fuffer the worl t charge fins directly upon their converfation U South 4 P_aunful ; pinching ; dangerous chievous mif Every of this number That haye endur'd Brezod nights and days wit us Shall fhare the good of our returned fortune Shakefpeare W_hen 2 man thinks he has a fervant, h{]find & traitor. that eats his, bread, and is readier o d M a mifchief, and a fbrewod turn, than an ope #dverfary South No enemy is fo defpicable but he may d a bod a fbrewd turn L'Efirange Sar L WDLY. adv. [from /fbreav . 1 Ml{c}uevoufly 5 deftrutively This pratice hath moft fbrewdly paft upon thee A7 4 Shakefpeare Jxford, }H§ youth, and want of experienc 4 hl'mme fervnFe, had fomewhat been Shrewdl Uched, even before the flujces of popular libert Were fet open 2,y ie})l(augu,flx . Wotton It'is ufed commonly. o it mifchief, or in ironical ex reflion obftinat "an fchifmatica ar lik t ,3""‘ tbem,r.d"s/,"rewd{y hurt, forfooth, by bein thin Shak I'am a right maid for my cowardice Let her not ftrike me Shakefpeare SHRE'WMOUSE. 7. /.' [ycpeapa, Saxon. A moufe of which the bite is generall {uppofed venomous, and to which vulga be put into the firft as being a defperate heretick; but if any ma dhould profefs to believe thefe things, and yet allo himfelf in any known wickednefs, fuch a on | fhould be put into bedlam Tillotfon A fpiteful faying gratifie fo many little paffions that it-meets with a good reception ; and the ma who utters it is looked upon as a fhrewvd fatirift woul I have no gift in fbrewifbnefs It was a fbrewwd faying of the old monk, tha two kind of prifons would ferve for-all offenders an inquifition and a bedlam : if any man fhoul deny the being of a God, and the immortality o the foul, fuch a one fhoul on SHRE'WISHNESs. 7. /i [from sbreavifb. The qualities of a fhrew ; frowardnefs petulance; clamoroufnefs "That till the fathe rids his hands of her Malicioufly fly ; cunning than good very SPreaifbly his mother's milk were fcarce out of him Her eldeft fifter is fo curft and fbrewod Your love muft live a maid fpeak tradition affigns fuch malignity, that th is faid to lame the foot over which fh runs. I am informed that all thefe report are calumnious and tha her fee and teeth are equally harmlefs ‘wit thofe of any other little moufe Ou anceftors however looked on her wit fuch terrour, that they are fuppofed t have given her name to a fcolding woman who Soreaw for her veno they call 70 SHRIEK. v, n. [ jbrieger, Danifh ; fericciolare Italian. lately - wit {cream 'To cry out inarticu anguif o horrour t On top whereof ay dwelt the ghattly owl Shricking-his baleful note Fairy Queen It was the owl that'/brick'd, the fatal belma Which gives the fte good night, Shakefpeare Were I the ghoft that walk'd I'd fbriek, that even your ears fhould rift to hear me Shakefpeare In a dreadful drea I faw my lord fo ne Then foriek'd my SHRIFT. n. /. [remupe, Saxon.] Confeffion made to a prieft. A word out o ufe Off wit Bernardine's head: T'll give a prefent fbrifr And will advife him for a better place, ~ Shakefp My lozd fhall never reft I'll watch him tame, and talk him out His bed fhall feem a fchool, his board a fbrif? Shakefpeare The duke's commands were abfolute Therefore, my lord, addrefs you to your fbrift And be yourfelf; for you muft die this inftant Rowwe SHRIGHT, for fhricked SHRILL. adj. [a wor Spenfer fuppofed to b made per onomatopeeiam, in imitation o the thing exprefled, which indeed i images very happily. Shake[peare HREWD. adj., [contralted from fbrexved. Dryden Four per cent. increafes not the number o lenders 5 "as any man at firft bearing will /brezodl fufpeét it ocke one perverfe or obftinate of either fex rubb'd upon the fore 3. With good guefs an ancientl South vexatious, turbulent wo that this wor they choofe no Yet feem'd fhe not to winch, tho' hreavdly pain'd Lt appears in Robert of Gloucefier man that body whic to be of This laft allufio .. 'SHREW. . /. [ fehreyen, German, to cla ‘ mour. A peevifh, malignant, clamo rous, ipiteful S'H' SH piercing tremulous found Sounding wit o vi brator Thy hounds fhall make thewelkin anfwer them And fetch fbrill echoes from the hollow earth Shake[pears The cock, that is the trumpet to the morn Doth with his lofty and /bril/ founding throa Awake the god of day Shakefpeare's Hamlet Look up a height, the fbrill gorg'd lark fo fa Cannot be feen or heard Shakefp. King Lear Up fprings the lark, /ri/l voic'd dnd loud Thonfon 7o SuriLL @. [fro the adjettive. "Ta pierce the ear with fharp and quic vibrations of {ound The fun of all the world is dim and dark O heavy herfe Break we our pipes that /brill'd as loud as lark O careful verfe Spenfer Hark how the minftrels "gin to fpri/] alou Their merry mufick that refounds from far The pipe, the tabor, and the trembling crowd That well agree withouten breach or jar. Spenfer A fbrilling trampet founded from on high And unto battle bade themfelves addrefs Shak Here no clarion's fbrilling not The mufe's green retreat can pierce The grove, from noify camps remote Is only vocal with my verfe Fenton's Ode to Lord Gogvers: The females round Maids, wives, and matrons, mix a_fbrilling found Pope. SurR1'LLY adv [from fbrill. With a thrill noife SHR1'LLNESs. . /. [from fbrill.] The quality.J of being fhrill i SHRIMEP man L/cm'ztfizpe‘, a wrinkle ferympe, Danifh 1. A {mall cruftaceous vermiculated fifh Of fhell-fith there are wrinkles, fbrimps, crabs Carecwv Hawk and gulls can at a great height fee mice on the earth, and /brimps in the waters pea ‘2. A little wrinkled man Echo'd Dryden's Knig Why did you fbrick out Dryd. Sp Ger- Derbam a dwarf. In COT‘.tCH']pt SHRI1EK. 7. [ [ ferieg, Danifh; fericcio Italian.] An inarticulate cry of anguit or horrour Una hearing evermor 1} fbrieks and groanings, often tor efs garments, and her golden hair pity of his pain Fairy Queen + Time has been, my fenfes would have cool'd To hear a night /brick, and my fell of hai Would at a difmal treatife roufe and fti As life were in't Shakefpeare's Macbeth The corps of Almon and the reft are fhown Shricks, clamours, murmurs, fill, the frighted towns Dryden It cannot be, this wea and writhled fbrim Should ftrike fuch terrour in his enemies Shaks: He hath found Within the ground At laft, no fbrimp Whereon to im His jolly club Ben Fonfons SHRINE. z [ [yan, Saxon; /ferinium, Lat.] A cafe in which fomething facred is-repofited. You living pow'rs, inclos'd in. ftately fhrin Of growin trees yo rural gods, that ‘wiel Your fcepters here, if to your ears divin A voice may come, which troubled fou] doth vield Sidney Al |