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Show SI SI Obiolete place; clafs; rank He fighed decply in his fpiri¢, and faith, Wh doth this generation feck after a fign ] fetch my life and bein Shakefpeare's Othells | From men of royal fiege Your fum of part Mar. viii. 12 For the oppreflion of the poor, for the fighing o Did not together pluck fuch envy from him iy the needy, will I arife As did that one, and that in my regar [ feges French.] Stool Tt entereth not the veins, but taketh leaye of th ermeant parts, as the mouths of the meferaicks and accompanieth the inconvertible portion unt Brown's Vulgar Errours the figg; ? The nymph too longs to be alone Leaves all the {wains, and Jfighs for one 70 S1GH. @. a Not in ufe gy S1EGE. w. a. [ fieger, Fr. from th A word not no ' noun.] To befiege in fe Him he had fong oppreft with tort Fairy Queen And falt imprifoned in feged fort Ages to come, and men unborn Shall blefs her name, and Jfigh her fate SiGu. . /. [from the verb. Prior A violen is feparated from bran, or fine powde from coarfe; a boulter ; a fearce Shake[peare heart Sidney Love is a fmoke rais'd with the fume of fighs Being purg'd, a fire fparkling in lovers eyes. Shak Whata figh is there ! The heart is forely charg'd LDl do-Fll do-Tlk do- -+ Shakefp. Macketb Shakefpeare Falls now into my ears as profitlef % As waterin a_fieve In a fieve Dl thither fail clean.sh data import.tsv out README And, like a rat without a tail a flewe An innocent foun /o ftopping the holes and prefently fel L'Efrange If life funk through you like a leaky ficwe Accufe yourfelf you liv'd not while you might Dryden 95 SIFT. @.a. [yirzan, Saxon; fiflen Dutch. 1.-To feparate by a ficve In the fifting of fuch favour, all that came ou towid not be expected to be pure meal, but mui have a mixture of padar and bran Watton i 2, To feparate; to part When yellow fands are fifted from below The glitt'ring billows give a golden thow. Dryden 4 3» To examine ; to try We have fifted your objetions againt thofe pre eminences royal All which the wi - ‘draw, by fifiing th fyllable, is no mor *_eem tointimate, tha Hooker of Calvin could from thenc very utmoft fentence an than that certain fpeeche all Chriftian churches ough t0 have their elderthips Hocker I fear me, if thy thoughts were fifted clean.sh data import.tsv out README . The king thy fovereign isinot quite exemp From envious malice of thy fivelling heart Shakefpeare's Henry V1 As nearas T could ff him on that argument Opportunity T here have ha Shakefpeare To try thee, /if# thee, and confefs have found the Proof againft all temptation, as a roc Of adamant Miiton's Paradife Regained Cne would think that every member, who em vbT&Ceg with vehemence the principles of either o thefepartics, had thoroughly fifted and examine them, and was fecretly convinced of their prefer ence to thefe he rejeéts Addifon SURTER. 2. /. [from fi2.]. He who fifts ch'was ufed by the Saxons for victory g S_'géfr_f, famous for victory; Sigward Viftorious prelerver; Sigard, conquer Ing temper an almof i th fenfe are Nicocles, Nicomyachus fam Ni Cander, Vi€tor, Viforinus, Vincentius Gibfon g £0816H, 0, 7, [y1can, picezzan, Saxon fi‘fbfffl, Dutch. To emit the breat - audibly, a5 in grief, s',;;%";guthebmaid 1 married; never ma A Mtir reath Shakefpeare's Coriolaniss To fhake 11 made 3 foft and dull-eyed fool lament; to mourn Full often has my heart fwoln with keeping m Jighs imprifoned; full often have the tears I drov back from mine eyes turned back to drown m o Hai Thy counfe Prior and audible emiffion of the breath whic has been long retainéd, as in fadnefs firained upon a hoop, by which flowe T Dryden law & SigvE. #. fo [from / Pfa/r;z Xile § Happier he Who feeks not pleafare through neceflity Than fuch as once on flipp'ry thrones were plac'd And, chafing, fizh to think themfclves are chas'd Shake[peare's Hamlet Of the unworthieft Sficge $. 170 e head, relent, and figh, ani yicl . To Chriftian interceflors. Shake Merch. of Venice Laughing, if loud, ends in a deep figh and al pleafures have a fting in the tail, though they carr beauty on the face Taylor In Venus® temple, on the fides were fee Ifluing fighs, that fmok'd along the wall. Dryden SIGHT. . /. [geyi8e, Saxon ; ficht, geJichty Dutch. 1. Perception by the eye; the fenfe o feeing If bees go forth right to a place, they muf Bacon needs have fight O lofs of fight, of thee I moft complain Blind among enemies, O worfe than chains Dungeon, or beggary, decrepit age ! Milt. Agonif? Milton Things invifible to mortal fight >Tis fill the fame, although their airy fhap All but a quick poetick fight efcape Denban My eyes are fomewhat dimith grown For nature, always in the right To your decays adapts my fizht view 2. Ope a fitnatio Sawift in which no thing obftruts the eye Undaunted Hotfpu Brings on his army, eager unto fight inftrument of feeing From the depth of hell they lift their fight And at a diftance fee fuperior light Daniel /Eneas caft his wond'ring eyes around And all the Tyrrhene army had in fight Stretch'd on the fpacious plain from left to right Dryden I met Brutidius in a mortal fright He s dipt for certain, and plays leatt in fight Dryden's fuvenal 3. A& of feeing or beholding; view Nine things to fight required are The pow'r to fee, the light, the vifible thing Being not too fmall, too thin, too nigh, too far Clear fpace, and time, the form diftint to bring Dawies Mine eye purfued him ftill, but under fhad Milton's Paradife Lof Loft fight of him What form of death could him aftright unconcern'd, with fedfaft fight Could view the furges mounting fteep And montfters rolling in the deep Dryden's Horace Dryden 6. Aperture pervious to the eye, or othe point fixed to guide the eye: as, ti fights of@ quadrant Their armed ftaves in charge, their beaversdown Their eyes of fire fparkling through fights of tteel Shakefpeare 7. Spetacle; fhow; thing to be feen Thus are my eyes ftill captive to one fight Thus all my thoughtsare flaves to one thaught ftill Sidney Them feem'd they never faw a fight fo fai Of fowls fo lovely, that they fure did dee Spenfer Them heavenly born Not an ey But is a-weary of thy common fight Save mine, which hath defir'd to fee thee more Shakefpeare Mofes faid, I will turn afide and fee this grea Exodus, iiis 3 Jfight, why the bufh is not burnt 1 took a felucca at Naples to carry me to Rome that I might not run over the fame fights a fecon Addifon time Not proud Olympus yields a nobler fight Though gods afiembled grace his tow'ring height what more humbl Tha mountains offer here Where, in their bleflings, all thofe gods appear Pope Before you pafs th' imaginary fight Of lords, and earls, and dukes, and garter'd knights While the fpread fan o'erfhades your clofing eyes Then give one flirt, and ail the vifion flies. Pope S1"GHTED. adj. [from fight.] Seeing in Itis ufed only i particular manner compofition, as quickfighted, fhortfighted As they might, to avoid the weather, pull th joints of the coach up clofe, fo they might pu each end down, and remain as difcovered and ope Sidney JSighted as on horfeback The king was very quick fighted tn difcernin difficulties, and raifing objetions, and very flo Clarendon in maftering them Si'caTruLNEss. z. [ [from fight an Sull.] Perfpicuity ; clearnefs of figh Not in ufe But fill, although we fail of perfe rightfulnefs Seek we to tame thefe childifh fuperfluities Let us not wink, though void of purcft fightfulnc/s S'GHTLESs And plac'd the fame before the king in fight Wh 5. Eye adj. [from fight. v. Wanting fight ; blind Th Sidney latent traéts, the giddy heights explore Of all who blindly cresp or fightlefs foar. = Pope 2. Not fightly; offenfive to the eye pleafing to look at un- Full of unpleafing blots and fight/efs ftains Patch'd with foul moles, and eye-offending marks Shakefpeare Pleafin Si'curTLY. adj. [from fight. to the eye ; ftriking to the view It lies as fightly on the back of him As great Alcides thews upon an afs Shakefpeare's King Fobn Their having two eyes and two ears fo placed is more fightly and ufeful More's Antidote againft Atheifm A great many brave fightly horfes were brough out and only one plain nag that made fport L' Effrange We have thirty members, the moft jightly o all her majefty's fubjefts; we elected a prefiden by his height Add:[on Having little knowledge of the circurnftances L m, Lat. ] Sealal ;; fig figgill 3 [/;5 " A of thofe St. Paul.writ to, it is not ftrange that gsx QXL "R nature wh the whi us t ale many things lie conc pow'rs inferna th raif t Sorcerie firf a ftoo unde lette were ¢dncerned in ‘th hours planetar i fram' figil An Locke Sight 4. Notice ; knowledge It was writ as a piivate letter to a perfon o piety, upon an aflurance that it fhould never com Wake to any one's fight but her own Sien n..[. [figne, Fr Diryden's Knight's Tale Signam 1. A token ot any thing any thing is fhown Lat. that by whic Sign |