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Show 3P ‘ whereof we are capable, even as fo many-fparkles | T \?{‘4!3‘ pefembling the bright fountain from which the Hooker Throughout man'slittle world her beams did {pread Is now become a fparkle, which doth li Ah Dagwies then thy once-lov'd Eloifa fee 94 It will be then na crime to gaze on me \ See from my cheek the tranfient rofes die Bope " See the laft [parkle languifh in my eye W5 SPA'RKLE. v. 7. [from the-noun. "%, To emit fparks 2 » To.iffue in{parks. ( ‘The bold defig Pleas'd highly thofe infernal ftates, and jayMilten \Sparkled in all their eyes . To thine;: to glitter: A hair feen in a microfcope lofes -its former co " lour, and is in-a great meafure pellucid, with a mixture of fome'bright fparkiing colours, {fuch'as appea from the refraction of diamonds. Locke Politulus is a fine young gentleman, who fpark/e in all the-fhining things of drefs and equipage Watts ¢y Torife upyas-wine when poured into glafs.. "PARKLINGLY: adv.-[ from . fparkling. With vivid and twinkling luftre Diamonds - fometimes would look more fparkJingly than they were wonty. and fometimes far mor dull than: ordinary Boyle {2up A'RKLINGNESS. 7. /. [from" fparkling. . Vivid and twinkling luftre TEUS T have obferved a-manifeftly greater clearnef "and fparklingnefs at fome times than at others though I could not refer it to the fuperficial clearnef = or foulnefs of tie ftone Boyle _PA'RROW. 7. /. [ypeanpa, Saxon ; .pafir . Latin.] Admall bird. ‘Difmay'd not this- i Macbeth and Banquo? Yes As fparrowos. eagles, or the hare the lion. Shakefp o there is great probability that a thoufand fpar- rows will fly.awa at the fight of a hawk amon them. PA'RROWHAW «f-[rp,eanha;:oc, Sax. mufket hawk i PARROWGRASS " afparagus. King Were fpatter'd o'er with brains ‘2. Toithrow: out any thing offenfive Addifon His forward voice now is to fpeak well of hi friend.;. . his backward voice is to Jpatter fou {peeches; and to detract Shakefpeare 2. To afperfe ; to defame To.SPA"TTER: ¥. 7. To {pit; to {putter a at any thing naufeou mouth taken int th They fondly thinking to alla With fpattering noife rejected Some report a fea-maid fpazvn''d him Wha Sea'rvra. n. [ [ jpatha, fpathula A-fpattle or {lice Spatula is a and furgeons i dicines together In raifing u " Jpatula, 1 coul SPAVIN inftrument ufed by apothecarie fpreading plaifters or fifring meRQuincy the hairy fcalp' fmooth with m difcover no:fault in the bone Wifepian's Surgery 557 ( Lat. [E/Pfl‘vl'"f, b_renc-}‘ 5 jpavano 7. This difeafe in horfes 15 a bon as-a bone th elbows an i In con practices fuch ' principles as thefe ma Jpawwn, when they are laid out to. the fun, you ma determine. Sawift 70 SPAWN. V. 75"1. To prodice eggs as fith. fith having [pawned before, the fry that goes down hath had about three months -growt under ground, when they are brought up again Mijton SeartrinG Poppy. n. /. [ papaver [pumeum. White behen: a plant which i a fpecies of campion Miller Shakefp 2+ To generate ; to bring forth tempt Th PA'TTERDASHES. 7. /. [ fpatter and dafb. Coverings for the legs by which the we is kept off Tillotfon 7o SpAwWN. @. a. [from the noun. 1.-To produce as fithes do eggs Their appetite with guft, inftead of fruit Chew'd bitter athes, which th' offended tafl Sraw Brown's Trawels 2. To iffue; to proceed In contempt Itis foill a quality, and the mother of fo man ill ones that fpazvn from it, that a child fhould b brought up in the greateft abhorrence of it. Locke. SPa'WNER. 7. /. [from fpawn. imale fith The-barbel, for the prefervatio The fe- "of their feed ! Lrarh'Lh'c‘[/;;zwvcr and the melter, cover their fpaw with fand Walton Zo Seax, v.a. [ fpedo, Lat.] To:caftrat female animals Be dumb, you beggars of the rythming trade ; ' Geld your loofe-wits, and let your mufe be: [pay'd Cleaweland , caufeof the great quantity of fat"apon the inwards Mortimer's Hufbandry The males muft be gelt, and ‘the fows Jpayed " the fpayed they efteem as thé moft profitable, "be 79 SPeAKk. w. n. preterite fpake or fpoke ; gene participle paflive /poken and lame. ones ; one woul been a fpawin an the af [rpecan Sax-. famou for minera waters an mineral water To -Spawr Saxon. nrouth Milton w T n thro [yrpeechan to {pit moifture out of - th He who does on iv'ry tables dine," His marble floors with drunken fpawlings fhine Dryden What mifchicf can the dean have done him That Traulus calls for vengeance on him Arbuthnot PAsMODICK! 0d)., [/pafimodique, Fr. fro Wh muft he fputter, fpazvl, and flaver it In'vain, againft the people's fav'rite Saift Spawr. . /. '[ppacl,:Saxon. Spittle moifture eje¢ted from the mouth. And when he had fpat on the ground, he-anointe Of fpittle fhe luftration makes Then in the fpazv/ her middle finger dips Aroints the temple, forehead, and the lips. Dryd Gofpel SeAWN. 7. fu [ fpene, [penney Dutch.] 1. The eggs of-fifh or of frogs. d feveral difcrimina tions*of utterance of voice, uied as figns, havin by confent feveral determinate-fignificancios Holdeér Hannah jpakein het heart; only her lips mo d had peti L' Eftrange . /. [from Spazv-in Germany. plac ~ Wounds are fubje¢t to-pain, inflammation, (pafm e A Wifeman's Surgery _Carminative. things.dilute and" relax; becauf Wind occafions a Jpafm.or convulfion i fome part The pavement fwam in blood, the walls aroun fonable All the'maladie ! Of ghattly fpafm, or racking torture, qualm found upon fea-fhells, an the remains of the veficles o thell-fith. Woodw, o Foffits grofs fuperftitions of the Romifh church and court fenfive tioned for another farrier, it might have been rea vu fi ‘v ol n an involuntary - coned traktion of any part fil - ufually fuppofed to p Jfat of fome fort o 1.. To {prinkle with dirt,.or any thing of If it ha able figure; of which fort are the Jparry frize o # 1cicles, called ftalaitae Woodward ®ASMan./. [ fpgfme, Fr. cwdopa.] Co FAT. 7 /. The young thell-fifh A reti culate Rrfiam{mn And quafh'd the ftern Aacides This atheiftical humour was the fpazwn of th That never faw them pace before, the fpai And: fpringhalt reign'd among them. Shakefpearc 3d other minerals, or fuch as are of fome obferv Is eyes Twas not the /pawwn of fuch as thef That dy'd with Punick blood the conquer'd feas @. a. [rpaz, /pit, Saxon. take'it, "In which manner fpar is ufually found herein The preterite of /pir 7o SPA'TTER 2. Any produét or offspring. In contempt f fpar; >RAT Confined to a narrow chamber, he could fpatiat Bentley at large through the whole univerfe God faid, let the waters generat Reptile, with [pawn abundant, living foul! 111.1'/3 Thefe ponds, in fpawning time, abounded w.x[ frogs, and a great deal of.f/')/'rfzun. Ray on Creation rated of the-fanre matter by which th on ; /preken, Dutch. bones or ligaments are nourithed: it is | 1. To "utter articulate founds'; to ‘exptefs at firlt like a tender griftle, but by dethoughts by words. grees comes to hardnefs. Farrier's Dic Sp ak i n no hing eife than a {enfible expreffio S They ve all new legs of the notion of ‘the mi b PA'RRY. adj. [from Jpar.] Confifting o . Jbafm.] Convulive caufeth aftonifhment, or an immoveof the body, caufed by the fixing of th one cogitation, whereby it doth no tranfcur Bacon not far fro Hanmer 7. /0 [ corrupted sfro G Matters of the people Your multiplying /pawn how can he flatte That's thoufand to one good one? Shak. Coriolanus. to range ; to ramble at large that grows on the infide of the hough The female-of th Of heart fick agony [ fpatior, Latin.] excrefcence, or-cruft as har 7 Your.infant peafe to fparrotwgrafs prefer Which to the: fupper you may beft defer. Wonde abletpoftur mind upo + Jpatiate an Italian. Watts o0r. SPA'R HAWK To rove w. A word not-ufed When reafon's lamp, whichy like the fun in fky Under the athes, half extin€ and dead SPA'TIATE ' rife. ‘ 8P SP but her voice was not heard 2 1 Same is 1 To harangue ; to makeé a fpeech: Many of the nobility made themfelves popula by fpeaking in parliament againft thofe thing which wete moft grateful -to his majefly; an which ftill paflfed, notwithftandin diétion -their -contraClarendan Therfites, though the moft prefumptuous Greek Yet durft not for Achilles® armour fpeak. Dryden 3. To talk for-or-againtt ; to difpute. A knave fthould have fome ¢ountenance-at hi friend's requeft An honeft' man; fir, "is able t Jpeak for himfelf, when a knave is not. Shakelpeare's Henry 1V eral and his wife are talking of i peaks for you ftoutly. .- Skakefp. Othells When he had 1 no' powet, He was your enemy 5 ftill/ Your liberties and chat ers 4. ‘To difcourie ; to mak v Shake e Geriblanus mention Were fuch things heve as we do fpeak about . Or have we eaten of the infane root Thet takes the reafon prifoner? S k. King Lear Lot-went out,-and jpake unto his fons in lav Geno xix, 14 Th |