OCR Text |
Show SO membrance ; memeory The intelleual faculty is a goodly field, capa Re [French. ». / SO'UVENANCE A French wor Jow'd And girded on, may cover round 7o SowL pulle «w.a b [from fow dogs Shakefpeare 1 fowv my law in you, and it fhall bring fruit i 2 Efdr Many plants which grow in the hotter countrics being fet in the colder, will, being fown of feed late in the {pring, come up, and abide moft part of Bacon. To fow'a jangling noife of words unknown Milton Since then they ftand fecurld by being join'd >Twere worthy a king's head to fow diyifion And feeds of jealoufy, to loofe thofe bonds. Rowe A goodly country, naturally beautified with rofes Heylyn Jown with peafe An hundred and fifty of their beds, fozon togeGuZiwer ther, made up the breadth and length warts, weareth the cerrofive Spaap n away rubbed o which fhewet [ fella terre, Lat. it i Bacon A kin of mineral Englith talc, of which the coarfer fort is calle plaifter; the finer, fpaad, earth-flax, or falamanWoaodward der's hair Srace. n. f. [ fpatium, Latin. 1. Room ; Jocal extenfion Pure Jpace is capable neither of refiftance no Locke Space and motion can never be aétually infinite they have a power only and a capacity of being increafed without end: fo that no fpace can be affigaed fo vaft, but ftill a larger may be imagined no motion {o fwift or languid, but a.greater velocity or flownefs may ftill be conceived Bent/ey 2. ‘Any quantity of place 1 would not be the villain that thou think'f For the whole fpace that's in'the tyrant's grafp And, the rich eaft to boot Shakefpeare's Macbeth There was but two ways to efcape; the on through the woods, about ten miles [pace to Walpo Kaolle In fuch a great ruin, where the fragments ar He fhail give the rain of thy feed, that thou fhal great and hard, it is not poflible they fhould be f Jow the ground withal Haiaby %%%+ 2. adjufted in their fall, but thatithey would lie hol Shakefpeare And all the ocean make my fpacisus grave Wome and cowards on the lagnd may lie The fea's a tomb that s proper for the brave, Dry S pA'C10USLY. ady. [from fpacious.] E tenfively 7. f. [from fpaciois S PA'CIOUSNESS Roominefs ; wide extenfion S PA'DDLE. 7 /. [diminutive of jpade.] little {pade i in wai dd fp wi e mo tr de Other the mornings and evenings for them Mortimer's Hufeandry S PADE. . /. [rpad,Sax. fpade; Ifandic and Datch. 1. The inftrument of digging upy b e tur n r e t o ai t Tak tha hi b n d a f o e a f t digging wit Bacon Many learned me Lacke bodies or points Oh undiftinguifh'd fpace of woman's wit! .Shak This which yields or fills all fpace Milton ( Merab with [pacious beauty fills the fight But too much awechaftis'd the bold delight. Cowle Like an Englith gen'ral will I die diggeth » Space is the relation of diftance between any tw motion narrow And yet feem cold Shakefpeare ears Wide; extenfive ; roomy The former buildings, which were but mean contented them not: fpacious and ample churche Horker they erected throughout every city Convey your pleafures in a_fpacious plenty Born to afli® my Marcia's family And fow diffenfion in the hearts of brothers Addifon's Cato 3. 'To impregnate or flock with feed no | Sown. The participle of /ow. It is ufe barbaroufly by Swift for feaved As incorrupted nature did them foww. Fairy Quecn From Ireland come I with my firength And reap the harveft which that rafcal fow'd Prov. vi. 14 tiofus, Lat. He'll go and fowv/ the porter of Rome gates by th Save in that il where all good things did grow And freely fprung out of the fruitful groun continually, he fozveth difcord SPA'CIOUS. adj. [ fpacieux, French; fja 'To pull by th tle will not touch ; the milk of which Forwardnefs is in his heart: he devifeth mifchie A [pace, till firmer thoughts reftrain'd excefs. M €ars Like was not to be found z. 'To fpread ; to propagate Sith for me ye fight, to me this grac Both yield, to ftay your deadly ftrife a fpace Fair Quuz Compaffion quell' " His beft of man, and gave him up to tear as hogs ar So'WTHISTLE. z. /. [ fonchius, Latin.] weed 1. To fcatter in the ground, in order to Soavthiftles though coneys eat, yet fheep and catgrowth ; to propagate by feed When to tur The fruitful foil, and whea to foaw the corn Dryden's Georgicks I fing, Meczenas The proud mother views hel precious brood And happier branches, which the never foeo'd Dryden 4. A {mall time; a while being blende Skizner ; from Sfole ftrap, a rein, Kenner. Hif. the funrmer thort Jpace after their deceafe. Addifen's Frehulfe Mortimer's Hufb together, produce good yeaft See where Norah with the fowins comes. Swifz Gal.vi. 8 life everlafting Sow to yourfelves in righteoufnefs, and reap i you tolerable degree of elegance or exaétnefs, within made of oat Thefe fowvins, that is, flummery tion; but he that fozveth to the {pirit, fhall rea The lives of great men cannot be writ \gtlllxm'afin Hakewill on Providence So''wins. z /. Flommery meal fomewhat foured in order to a harveft 70 Sow. w. a. part. pafl. fown geance "They are [szers of fuits, which make the cour Bacon fwell, and the country pine To fcatter {fee mercy fooner or later they have reafon to expect his,ve: 3. A breeder ; a promoter The one belongeth unto them that feek, th other unto them that have found happinefs : the that pray do but yet fowv, they that give thank Hovker declare they have reaped They that fozv in tears fhall reap in joy Pfalm cxxvi. 5 He that foweth to his flefh, fhall reap corrup ftay till the iniquities of a nation be fylls by Terming Paul and his doétrine a fozver of words a very a babbler or trifler may defer his judgments for ;Mtlin]i?g:l give a people alonger fpace of repentance; ho m 2. A {catterer [/faian, Gothick ; yapan Saxon; fayen, Dutch. ~Go Derban Ainfworth @.n Milton Mat, xiil. 3 A fozver went forth to fow Itis thrown round, as grain by a fkilful fozver Ainfworth 3. An oblong mafs of lead 4. [millepeda, Lat.] An infett; a milleplant Zo SOW fo fhort a fpace, as may be anfwerable to t atly'f diftance betwixt the fulciment and the weightm‘ Wilkins's Mathemat So'wEeRr. z. /. [from fow. 1. He that {prinkles the feed And waft thou fai To hovel thee with fwine, and rogues forlorn In thort and mufty ftvaw ? Shakefpeare's King Lear In a lever the motion can be continyeq o l',lm L'Efrange Saxon a;::l" m;oud Lay vanquifh'd, rolling in the fiery gulp Confounded, though immortal g 'M He fowced me up to the middle in the pond might come /fower Lat. To mortal men, he with his horrid crev 70 SowcEk. @. a. Tothrow into the water See SowsE All white herfelf, and white her thirty young Dryden For which they fcorn and hate them worf Hudibras Than dogs and cats do fozv gelders The fow gelder's horn has fomething mufical i Addifon's Speciator it, but this is feldom heard [cpclamen To join b Some tree, whofe broad fmoseth leaves togethe A fow beneath an oak fhall lie along #. f Nine times the Jpacethat mea ures d Milton 7o Sow. @. a: [for few. needlework There is a competent time and, as it is certai!r)x death is thtlzozgc d?;i"y tis poffible fome fpace before death 13" i Morn new fozv'd the earth with orient pearl Boars have great fangs, fozos much lefs Bacon's Natural Hiflory So'wBRrEAD 3. Quantity of time He fow'd with ftars the heav'n, thick as a field Milton Sow. . /. [yugn, Sax. foeg, fouwe, Dutch. 1. A female pig; the female of a boar | pede Meafuring firft with careful evgg The fpace his fpear could reach, alw;{; fies.'bg 4. To befprinkle Gave wond'rous great countenance to the knight *That of his way he had no Jouwenance Spenfer Nor care of vow''d revenge ypma amongft them hufbandry in the world to foe it with trifles o Hale's Origin of Mankind impertinencies If thou wilt renounce thy mifcreance Life will I grant thee for thy valiance And all thy wrongs will wipe out of my fouwenance Spenfer Jwen, Jwine low, and man it is the wor an ble of great improvement which, with many more, is now happil difufed 2. Perhaps from / @ affirm, that fome ifthme cu r oth 2 have been eat through by the fe Brown by the [pade d ‘ t s r i l f His next advance w e p n d Where, i a c t ' i f ' n c f His furly o t y D k \ b e g { t h His knotty cudgel o f w S c e " f d Here nature neve ade m [‘ di th an pt fc th Betwe 2. A deer three years o o i f S pA'DE T By th' fhoulder of a ram from 'off the rightA ed par t i Which ufuall'y they b Spaprceous adj. e adiceus, Lat] though oaeci¥ {» ?helndd, tw v 1aC ining j Of thofe ¢ fiv Scalige ight red; a o among theme e | Brewn ' EoaD o L , |