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Show SH 6, To defend; to prote 8o Venus from prevailing Greeks did frou "The hope of Rome, and fav'd hi in 2 cloud Waller 7 SarouD. w. 7. L0 harbour fhelter Surve,n, /. [from the verb.] A motio of the fhoulders ufually exprefling diflike or averfion And yet they ramble not to learn the mod to tak Ho Or fproud within thefe limits, I thall kno Milton Eré morrow wake Put on the critick's brow, and fit At Will's, the puny judge of wit A nod, a fbrug, a fcornful fmile With caution us'd, may ferve a while n. fo [from fbrove J L SHRO'VETIDE SuROVETUESDAY. § the preterite. o frive.] The time of contfeflion; th day before Afh-Wednefday or Lent, o ~ which anciently they went to confeflion Sufpects him for a dervife and a fpy of frink Leaving the two friends alone, I fhrunk afide t the banqueting-houfe, where the pictures were Sidney in one great ftem o ‘body, and then at a good diftance from the eart fpread into branches; thus gooiebérries and currants are fbrubs, oaks and cherries are trees Locke ( He came unto a gloomy glade The wicked JSPrunk for fear of him, and all th workers of iniquity were troubled 1 Maccabees SHRU'NKEN Fairy Quecn The humble /brub and buth with frizzled hair opinions, it would leave the minds of a number o men poor fhrunken things, full of melancholy Baceon Milton brufhwood an More Comedy is a reprefentation of common life, i low fubjects; and is a kind of juniper, a fbrub belonging to the fpecies of cedar Dryden 70 SHU'DDER 4y 2. [acantword. Addifon With horror fhudd'ring, on a heap they run, Dryd Spirit, acid, and fuga I love-alas ! I fbudder at the name My blood runs backward, and my fault'ring tongu Sticks at the found Smith Cefar will fhrink to hear the words thou utter'ft Plants appearing weathered, fbrubby 2. Full of fhrubs; buthy Gentle villager What readieft way would bring me to that place Due weft it rifes from this fbrubby point. Milton 3. Confifting of thrubs _ On that cloud-piercing hil . Plinlimmon, the goats their JPrubby browz it Gnaw pendent Philips ~ SHRUFF. 7. /: Drofs ; the refufe of meta tried by the fire Dig To Surve. w. n [ fchricken, Dutch, t ! tgemb!e.] To exprefs horrour or difla tisfaction by motion of the fhoulders o - whole body. Like a fearful deer that looks moft about whe he comes to the beft feed, with a Jbrugging kind o tremor through all her principal parts thefewords . The touch of the cold wate fhe gav Sidney made a prett nd of fbrugging come over her body like th twinkling of the faireft among the fixed ftars Be quick, thou wert bef Sidne - To anfiwer other bufinefs 5 fprugg'ft thou malice Shakefpeare He grins, fmacks, Jerugss and fuch an itch en , - dures ‘ _.A' prentices or fchool-boys, which do kno fome gay fport E\Eroad, yet dare not'ga. Donpe They grin the /hrug They bow, they fnarl, th'ey fcré/tbch, ;hey hug Saift 7o s;{" UG, Tp, a, 'T'o contrad or draw up H fi"./bmgt his fhoulders when you talk of fecuAddifon H foruger hi tyrd yback bac vAs if tlxe fel his fhoulders akc And fbudder in the midft of all his conquefts Addifon and curl - ¢d, are the effects of immoderate wet Mortimer's Hufbandry k Dutch. And fhudd'ring fear Shakefpeare The fright was general ; but the female ban " SuruBBY. adj. [from fbrub. 1. Refembling a fhrub a. [ fchuddren All the other paffions fleet to air As doubtful thoughts, and rath embrac'd defpair mixed To quake with fear, or with averfion Pve livi Amidft thefe woods, gleaning from thornsand fbrub A wretched {uftenance The part. paflive of fbrink She weighing the decaying plight And fbrunken finews, of her chofen knight Would not awhile her forward courfe purfue Fairy Queen If there were taken out of men's minds vai Cover'd with boughs and fhrubs rrom heaven's light All might have beer as wel forubs Harte Surunk. The preterite and part. pafliv SuruB. 2 /. [yepibbe, Saxon. 1. Abuth; a fmall tree Trees gemerally fhoot u Swift A third, with myftick /brug and winking eye Tufler At fprovetide to throving to be dreft, or how to lifp abroad To return knowing in the Spanith fbrug. Cleawel ~As Bpaniards talk in dialogue Of heads and fhoulders, nods and fbrugs. Hud If your ftray attendance be yet lodg' Hudibras SHU'FFLE a > 5 B [rypeling Saxon *Tis not ftrange that fucha one fhould believ that things were blindly fhuffled and hutled abou in the world; that the elements were at conftan Woodward ftrife with each other 2. To change the pofition of cards wit £ refpect to each other The motions of fhuffling of cards, or cafting o Bacss dice, are very light We fure in vain the cards condemn Prior Qurfelves both cut and fpuffled them 3. To remove, or introduce, with fom artificial or fraudulent tumult Her mother Now firm for do&or Caius, hath appointe That he thall likewife /ouffle her away Shakefp It was contrived by your cnemics, and fbuffie into the papers that were feized 4. To SuuFrLE of Drydes To get rid of In that fleep of death, what drcams may come Whe we have fhuffled off this mortal coil Mutft give us paute Skakefpearc I can no other anfwer make, but thanks And oft good turn Are fhuffled off with fuch uncurrent pay Shat If any thing hits, we take it to ourfelves; if i mifcarries, we fbuffe it off to our neighbours L'Eftrange If, when a child is queftioned for any thing, h perfitt to fhuffl it off with a falfehood, he muft b chaftifed Locke 5. 70 SuuFFLE #p. To form tumultuoufly or fraudulently The befor fent forth their precepts to convent the a cour of commiffion JPuffle up a fummary proceedin without trial of jury an there ufe t by examination Bacos He fbuffled up a peace with the cedar, in whic the Bumelians were excluded Howel 70 SHU'FFLE. @. 1 1. To throw the cards into a new order A fharper both fpuffles and cuts Cards we pla L'Eftrange A round or two ; when us'd, we throw away Take a freth pack; nor is it worth our grievin Who cuts or fbuffles with our dirty leaving. Grapw a buftle, a tumult. 1. To throw into diforder; to agitate tumultuouily, fo as that one thing take the place of another; to confufe; t throw together tumultuoufly. 2. To play mean tricks ; to pra&ife fraud to evade fair queftions When the heavens /buffle all in one The torrid with the frozen zone Then, fybil, thou and I will greet. Cleaveland From a new /buffling and difpofition of the component particles ofa body, might not nature compofe a body diffoluble in water Boyle In moft things good and evil lie /huffied, an thruft up together in a confufed heap ; and it i doubt eternally, and queftion all things Glanville's Deferce The crab advifed his companion to give ove SPuffling and doubling, and praitife good faith ftudy which muft draw them forth and range them South When lots are fbuffled together in a lap orpitcher what reafon can a man have to prefume, that h fhall draw a white ftone rather than a black South A glimpfe of moonfhine fheath'd with red A fpuffled, fullen, and uncertain light That dances thro' the clouds and fhuts again Childre huma fhoul natur Dryden not lofe the confideration o in the fpufflings of outwar con ditions. The more they have, the bettex humoure I myfelf, leaving the fear of heaven on the lef hand, and hiding mine honour in my necefiity am fain to fbuffe Shakefpeare I have nought to do with that Aufing {e&, tha L'Eftrange To thefe arguments, concerning the novelty o the earth, there are fome fhuffling excufes made Burnet's Theory If a fteward be fuffered to run on, withou bringing him to a reckoning, fuch a fottith forbearance will teach him to fuffley and ftrongl tempt him to be a cheat Soutb Though he durft not dire@ly break his appointment, he made many a fhuffiins excufe Arbuthnot's Hiftory of Febn Bull 3. To ftruggle ; to fhift You life, gor Muft fpuffle for itfelf mafter Shakefpeare's Cymbelinc Locke 4. To move with an irregular gait have from one another's hands, endeavour to pre Mincing poetry *Tis like the forc'd gait of a fhufling nag they fhould be taught to be We fhall in vain, /buffling the little money w vent our wants 5 decay of trade will quickly waft all the remainder Locke Thefe vapours foon, miraculous event Shuffled by chance, and mix'd by accident Shuffled and entangled in their race Blackmore They clafp each other Blackmore it fpeak juft as he would Lave it Atterbury He has fbufffed the two ends of the fentenc together, and, by taking out the middle, make SHU'FFLE #. /. [from the verb. Shak 1. The alt of difordering things, or making them take confufedly the place e each other Is it not a firmer foundation for, contentment to believe that all things were at firt created, an are continually difpofed, for the beft, than that th whole univerfe is mere bungling, nothing efttte for any purpofe, byt all ill»t}wuurcdly cohblad an jumblie |