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Show 1 ther the fin he is about to acever comes to be pardoned or no, yet, as foon as it is acted, it quite turn the balance, puts his falvation upon the venture South inft him and makes it ten to one od Never confider yourfelves as perfons that are t b.? {een, admired, and courted by men; but aspo 1ers, tha e to fave yourfelves from the vanitie d follie miferable world fe!f.denial | o tion, an by humility de Law An offender ; a criminal Here 's that which is too weak to be neft water, which ne'er left mani'th' Shakefpeare's Timen Over the guilty then the fury fh T he founding whip, and brandithe An the pal ffaner with her fifters Dryden Thither, wher fianers may have reft, I go Where flames refin'd in breafts feraphick glow th charmer funer it or fain it Pope 1f folly grows romantick, I muft paint it SINO'FFERING. . [ [ fin and offering. An expiation or {acrifice for fin The fleth of the bullock fhalt thou burn withou e 15 1 Xis 1 the camp: itisaf N sffering = S1'NoPER or Sinople. n. [, [ ¢ ‘@ pontica A fpecies of earth ; ruddle Latin. RG A's";//%wrri'/; Zo SYNUATE w. a [finuo, Latin. T bend in and out Anothe wa ve the margin, and mor finuated 7Woodw. on Foffils Sivva‘rron. z. /. [from finuate.] A bending in and out The human brain is, in proportion to the body much larger than the brains of b tien te their bodies, and fuller o Jinuatioss Hale's Ori SiNnvo'siTy. 7 f. [from" finucus. quality of being finuous S1'Nvous Lat. adj. [ finueux Fr from fruus Bending in and out Try with what difadvantage the voic ried in an horn, whic is a lin will be car arched; orin ‘trumpet, which is a line vetorted ; or in fome pip that were finuous Bacon Thefe as a line, their long dimenfion drew ¢t euking the ground wit fimuous trace Milton's ‘Paradife Lof? In the difl: Qions of horfes, in the concave o Semuous part o the liver, whereat the gall is ufuall {eated in q , I difcoy er an hellow, long membrano bftance Brown SINUS n. /. |Latin. 1. A bay of the fe land an opening of th Plato fuppofeth his A tlanti into the fea : whether th: think i impofiible t Sfinufes, might have had fuch a Burnet's to bave funk al or no, I do no s of the fea, o ginal seory of the Earth 2. Any fold or opening Zo SIP. @w. a. [yipan, -Saxon ; fippen Dutch. 1. To drink by fmall draughts ; to take at one appofition of the cup to th mouth, no more than the mouth wil contain Soft yielding minds to water glide away And fip with nymphs their clemental tea 1 2. To drink in {fmall quantities ofr oj7e The hairy gown and mofly cell ‘Where T may fit and rightly fpel Of ev'ry ftar that heav'n doth fhew And every herb that fips the dew 3. To drink out of Then fipping, offer'd to the next. Diyden's Ancid Str. n. /. [from the verb.] A fmall draught as much as the mouth will hold Her face o' fir With labour, and the thing fhe took to quench i She would to each one fip Shakefpe Winter's T alea Cne fip of thi Will bathe the drooping fpirits in delight Beyond the blifs of dreams Milton St'PHON. 7. /i [oigoy; fipho, Lat. fiphen Fr.] A pipe through which liquors ar conpveyed efe drain Beneath th' ince Tant weeping of thef ons firetch'd immentfe voirs of harden'd chalk Milton The winged nation o'er the foreft flies Tdien ftooping on the meads and leafy bow'rs They dkim the flaods, and /ip the purple flow'rs Dryden ghty r clay T compacte St'prEr Thomfon's Autumn One that fips [from fp. 7 / S1'pPET. 7. /. [ Jop, fip,feppet. A {mallfop Sir. n. fo [ fire, Fr. feignior Spanifh 5 fenior, Lat. Ital. fenor 1. The word of refpet in compellation Speak o Jir I dave your worft objeétions: ifI blufh It is to fee a nobleman want manners Shakefpeare's Henry VIII But, firs be fudden in the execution Withal obdurate ; do not let him plead Shakefpeare's Richard I11 Sir king Shak This man is better than the man he flew a banquet the ambaffador defired the wife me to deliver every one of them fome fentence or parable, that he might report to his king, which the did: onl wa on filent, whic the ambaffado perceiving, faid to him, Sir, let it not difpleaf you ;5 why do not you fay fomewhat that I ma report? He anfwered, Report to your lord, tha there are that can hold their peace. Bacon's Apoph 2. The title of a knight or baronet. Thi word was anciently fo much held effential, that the Jews in their addreffes exprefled it in Hebrew characters Sir Horace Vere in the aétive part his brother, was the principa Bacon's War with Spain The court forfakes him, and f Balaami hangs Pape 3. It is fometimes ufed for man 1 hav Ta try your ta adventur' a falf report, whic hat Honour'd with confirmation your great judgmen In the eletion of a fir fo rave. Shake[p. Cymib 4. A title given to the loin of beef, whic one of our kings knighted in a fit o good humour loft hif roaft-beef ffomach, not being able % t touch a fir-loin which was ferved up Addifon And the ftrong table groan Beneath the fmoakin h'd immenf From fide to fide ofon's Autumn It would be ridiculous, indeed, if a fpit, which i ftrong enough to turn a fir-loin of beef, fhould na be able to turn a lark S1RE #. 1. A father g Jire To beget; to produce 70 S1rE. @. a Cowagdrs father-cowards, and bafe things fire th 2iE Shakefpeare Sr'rEN. 7z /. [Latin.] A goddefs fWh e1nt1ccd men 13}: finging, and devoure them ; any miichievous enticer Oh train me > not, fweet mermaid, with t note To drown me in thy fiter's flood of tears Sing, firen, to thyfelf, and I will dote Spread o'er the filver waves thy golden hair And as a bed I'll take thee, and therelie. g1 Sir1'asis 7. [aglecic. An inflam mation of the brain and its membrane through an exceflive heat of the fun Saift [ fire, Fr. fenior, Lat. Ufed in poetry He, but a duke, would have his fon a king And raife his iffue like a loving fire. Shak. H. V1 A virgin is his mother, but his fir The pow'r of the moft High. Milton's Par. Loft And now T leave the true and juft fupport Of legal princes and of honeft courts Find out the peaceful hermitage S1 I3. It is ufed in compofition: a 7% Ste, @, #. To drink a fmall quantity h ? g grac Sherais'd it to her mouth with fobe eat-grand/ire Pope Whethe YT/le)I'cf{z-z'.c., great part'ners in my father's cares Saluted their young king at Hebron crown'd. Prior Whether his hoary fire he fpies While thoufand grateful thoughts arife Or meets his fpoufe's fonder eye Pope's Chorus to Brutus z. It is ufed in common {peech of beafts as, the horfe had a good /ire, but a ba dam SI'RIUS n. / [Latin. The dogftar Di& Stiro'cco. 7 /. [Italian; frus wentus Latin.] The fouth-eaft or Syrian wind Forth rufh the levant and the ponent winds Eurus and Zephyr, with their lateral noife Sirscco and Libecchio St'RrRAH 7. Milten [ fir ba Minfbew. ati compellatio of reproach and infult Go, firrab to my cell Take with you your companions: as you loo To have my parden, trim it handfomely, Shakefpeare's Temgafl Sirrab, There's no room for faith, troth, or h nefty in this bofom of thine Shakefpi Henry I It runs in the blood of your whole race, firrab to hate our family L Effrange Guefs how the goddefs greets her fon Come hither, firrab Priors no, begone Si'roz. % n. /. [Arabick.] The juice o vegetables boiled with fugar Sr'rur. Shall I, whofe ears her mournful words did feize Her words in _firup laid of fweeteft breath Relent Sidflg'- Not poppy, nor mandragora Nor all the drowly firups of the world Shall ever med'cine thee to that fweet fleep Which thou owed'(t yefterday Shakefp. Otbello And firt, behold this cordial julap here That flames and dances in his cryfl'jz‘xl bounds Jyrops mixt WithAkfpirits of balm, > and fragran Milta yre Thofe expreffed juices contain the true effentia of the plant; for if they be boiled into the con fal fiftence of a firup, and fetin a cool place, the efiential falt of the plant will fhoot upon the fides of th Arbmb'mt veflels SI'RUPED. adj. [from firup.] Sweet, lik firup ; bedewed with fveets Yet when there haps a honey fall Well lick the fyrupt leaves And tell the bees that theirs is gall S1'rRUPY. adj. [from firup. firap Draytor Refembling Apples are of a firupy tenacious nature. Jortifiér Sisk. z. /. [contralted from affize.] Yo {aid, if I return'd next fize in Lent I fhould be in remitter of your grace 7 f S1skin - Dente [chloris, LatiJt4A b}fd' greenfinch Si'sTER. 7./ [ypeoyzen, Saxon; =ilffér { Dutch. 1.-A woman born of the fame parent correlative to brother He fiffer began to fcold ' l':: ;_%t th n m T re pe ke Sh fl‘ja my ar; th n ti ru co t I have fai xm :} ab an e t m m ar th r w th t g ;" fii Ch i f m f th o 2. Wom m n : m h r t n m f th one o If a brother or fiffer be naked, 3"_‘1, ace, b food, and you fay unto them, Depa:;. n P?ou i n t h i t n le fi you warmed an ( |