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Show VS coft Wherefore do ye fpend money for that yv]*.lch i IJaiab, v. 2 not bread 3. To beftow for any purpofe :"often wit upen When we can intreat an hour to ferve Would ffend it in fome words upon that bufinefs any mention to him-of the propofe opinion 4 Boyle To effufe Cowar dog Moft fpend their mouths, when what they feem t threate Shake[peare's Henry V Runs far before them 5. T'o {quander ; to lavifh The whole of our refle€tions terminate in this what courfe we are to take to pafs our time ; fom er Wake fpend, their eftates to g8t, and otht 6. To pafs to fuffer to pafs away. In thofe paftoral paftimes a great many day were fpenty. to follow their flying predeceffors. Sidn They [pend their days in wealth, and In a moFob, xxi. 13 ment go down to the grave He [pends his life with his wife, and rememberet neither father nor mother 1 Efdras, iv. 21 Say, for you faw us, ye immortal lights' Wonder'd at us from above Cowley When he was of riper years, for his farthe accomplithment, he fpent a confiderable part of hi Pope 7. To walte; to wear out; to exhauf force Th of Let not your recreations be lavifh Jpenders o your time; but healthful, fhort, and apt to refref Taylor 2. A prodigal 5 a lavifher Bithop Morton told the commiffioners, wh were tolevy the benevolence, if they met with an that were {paring, to tell them that they muft need have, becaufe they laid up; and if they were fpenders, they muft needs have, becaufe it was feed i Bac. Hen. VIIL their port and manner of living SPe'NDTHRIFT. 7 /. { [pend and thrift. A prodigal ; a lavifher Bitter cold weather ftarved both the bird and th L'Efirange Jpendthrift Some fawning ufurer does fee With prefent fums th' unwary [pendthrift's need Dryden Moft men, like fpendthrift heirs, judge a littl wave afcende an defcended til thei Burnet's Theory of the Earth They bend their bows, they whirl their fling around He:ups of fpent arrows fall, and firew the ground Dryden The winds are rais'd, the ftorm blows high Be it your care, my friends, to keep it u In its full fury, and dire&t it right Till it has fpent itfelf on Cato's head Add. Cato 8. To fatigue ; to harafs. Nothing but only the hopé of fpoil did reliev them, having fcarce clothes to cover their nakedthei bodies [gent wit long labour an thirft Knolles's Hiftory of the Turks Or come your fhipping in our ports to lay Spent and difabled in fo long a way Dirydi Zn Our walls are thinly mann'd, our beft men flain The reft, an heartlefs number, [pent with watching And harafs'd out with duty Dryden Sore fpent with toil, fome with defpair opprefs'd Leap'd headlong from the heights ; the flames confum'd the reft Dryden's Zineid Thou oft haft feen m Wreftling with vice and fafion; now thou fec'ft m Spent, overpower'd, defpairing of fucc efs 1. To make expence dddifon's Cato Henceforth your tongue muft fpend at leffer rate Than in its flames to wrap a nation's fate. Dryd He fpends as a perfon who knows that he muf come to a reckoning South 2. To prove in the ufe Butter fpent as if it came from the richer foil 3. To be loft or wafted Temple _ The found fpendeth,-and is diffipated in the ope air; but in fuch concaves it is conferved and contracted Baco On mountains, it may be, many dews fall, tha Jpend before they come to the valleys 4. To be employed to any ufe Locke in hand better than a great deal to come The fon, bred infloth,becomes a [pendthrift, & pro *fligate, and goes eut of the world a beggar Savift ‘SPE'RABLE. adj. [ /perabilis, Latin.] Suc as may be hoped Not in ufe caft it away, if it be found but a blad We ma [ jperme, Fr. fperma, Lat. n. SPERM Seed ; that by which the fpecies is continued Some creatures bring forth many young one a burthen, and fome but one : this ma by the quantity of fperm required violence being fpenz by degrees, they fettled at laft nefs, an SrE'NDER. 2./. [from fpend. 1. One who fpends der, and difcharge it of fo much as is vain and no [perable Bacon How oft unwearied have we [pert the nights Till the Ledzan ftars, fo fam'd for love time in travelling wine are fo often cut, that their fap Jpendeth int Bagon the grapes you If you would grant the time. Shakzfpeare's Macb Eleutherius, perceiving that he was unwilling t Jpend any more time upon the debate, thought no Bacon There have been cups and an image of Jupite ptinciples of generat made of wild vines ; for thevines that they ufe fo titions of the womb whic ma a be caufe or by the par fever the fperm Bacon There is required to the preparation of the [per of animals a great apparatus of veffels, many fecretions, concoctions) refle€tions, and circulations Ray SPERMACE'TI n./. [Lat. pronounced parmafitty Corruptedl A particular fort of whale affords the oil whenc this is made; and that is very improperly caile Jperma, becaufe it is only the oil which comes fro the head of which it can be made. It is change from what it is naturally, the oil" itfelf being ver brow and rank Th peculia property of it is to fhoot into flakes, not much unlike the chryftallization of falts; but in this ftate tis yellow, an has a certain ranknefs, from which it is freed b fqueezing it between warm metalline plates : a length it becomes perfectly pure, inodorous, flaky {mooth, white, and in fome meafure tranfparent Ruincy SPERMA'TICAL. ) adj. [ /permatique, Fr SPERMA'TICK from jperm. 1. Seminal confifting of feed The primordials of the worl nical, but f]xr;{zutim/ or vital Metal an fyndr are not mechaMore's Dialogues ineteors rude fhapes have n need of any particular principle of life, or fpermatical form, diftin& from the reft or motion of th particles of the matter More z. Belongin fperm to the fperm containin The moifture of the body, which did before irrigate the parts, is drawn down to the fpermatica veffels Two differen tim} : there is i veflels, wherei blood is by man ed into {perm Bacon fexes muf both a grea the mor digeftion concur.to their generaapparatus of fpermatic fpirituous part of th and circulations exaltRay on the Creation ToSPE'RMATIZE. v, n. [from Jperm. yield feed T Ariftotle affirming that women do not fpermatize, and confer a receptacle, rather than eflentia fexes in mankind SPERMATOCE L dedu&xvgty nsf[fo o7 21 (1l/?rb L0 AN A rupture caufed by theggomr;%fi LA fhe {eminal veflels, an the {feme 1ng into the fcrotum 2 SPERMO'LOGIST. 2 /; [ome ONTy B w o gathers or treats of fgrcfd ."y 7o SPERSE. v, 4, [ fperfus, Lat] T perfe; to featter, A word 1ot n 2. To beflow, as expence'; to expend, a fit to mak S P SIP SP ufe The wrathful wind 1ch blows cold florms,burft ong flade That fperft thofe clouds,,and in inoffifg?;i; This dreadful thape was vanifhed t nought, § He making fpeedy way through erfed air And through the world ‘of waters v{fi]efafl;'? To Morpheus' houfe dot haftily repair, F. ZoSPET. v. a. [Spet in Scotlandi perabundance of water: as, that tide frefh was a high /per.] Tobri u abundantly (ompai al Myfterious dame That ne'er art call'd but when the dragon womhOf Stygian darknefs fpets herthickeft gloom And makes one blot of all the air Stop' thy cloudy ebon chair Mitm fj [ypepan;-Saxon 70 SPEW. «. a aen, Dutch. 1. 'To vomit ; to ejet from the flomach A fwordfith fmall him from the reft did funder That in his throat him pricking foftly unde His wide abyfs, him forced forth to few That all the fea did roar like heaven's thunder And all the waves were ftain'd with filthy hue Sp 2. To eje; to caft forth Whe earth with flime and mud is coverd or Or hollow places fgew their wat'ry ftore Dryden's Gerrgicks When yellow fands are fifted from below The glitt'ring billows give a golden fhow And when the fouler bottom fpezos the black The Stygian dye the tainted waters take. Diyde 3. To eje& with loathing Keep my ftatutes, and commit not any of thle abominations, that the land fpew not yououts Lew, xviiis 2 Contentious fuits ought to be fi:ma{ out& Bacon's Effigt the furfeit of courts T% Sriw. w. n To vomit; to eafe ftomach He could have hauld i The drunkards, and the roifes of the in f o e fl l o f e t a t w clean.sh data import.tsv out README e t b Bu u y o h o n f o t e f t Than i Ben Sre'wy. adj. [from fpew.] Wet ; fogg r w a c i o A p t f ar e n w w i i l v The lowe e t e f t n hat the Mammer:Hflflfld S Zo SPHA'CEL 5 2 t w c f a medical Latin gren The long retention of matte To mo‘ rtiff ] 3 ¥. 7% S {uffer th paslnetel celatesthebrait gangrene tO'Th i rous rendered v ¢ into a canc celate, and the reft degenera Sharp's SWET cer m anen ./ba(l]ll', 5 1 nfi: Spua'ceLus. m/ [0 stificati A gangren Fr. 7 § 1t~;1|s the g%o celus SPHER |