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Show s Q Yet countenanc fo fake feeme h That takes a bafting for a blemith more honourable than fcars Hudibras Or fkin to tatters rent in wars His mufe js ruftick, and perhaps too plai The men of fgueamifh tafte to entertain. Southern It is rare to fee a man at once fgweamifp and voSouth racious There is no occafion to oppofe the ancients an the moderns, or to be Jqueamifp on either fide. H that wifely conduéts his mind in the purfuit o knowledge, will gather what lights he can fro Locke either Th thorough-pace muf laug the [gueamifbnef/s of his confcience, and read i another lecture South Upon their principles they may revive the worthip of the hoft of heavenj; it is but conquering little fgueamifbnefs of ftomach Stilling fleet To adminifter this dofe, fifty thoufand opera 7 SQUEEZE. v. 4. [cpiran Saxon ; ys gwa/gu, Welh. 1. To prefs SquiLt. 7. f French. 1. A plant to crufh between two bodies It is applied to the fgucexing or prefling of thing downwards, as in the prefles for printing. #ilkins The finking of the earth would make a convulfion of the air, and that crack muft fo fhak or [gueeze the atmofphere, as to bring down al the remaining vapours Burnet He reap'd the produét of his labour'd ground 2. To opprefs ; to cruth ; to harafs by exto be cruthe L'Efirange preflion' Com ‘preflure A fubtile artift ftands with wond'rous bag That bears imprifon'd winds, of gentler for Than thofe that erft Laertes' fon enclos'd Peaceful they fleep ; but let the tuneful [Zuees Of lab'ring clbow rouze them, out they fl Melodious, and with fpritely accents charm. Philips SqueLcH. 7. /. Heavy fall crous word A low ludi tore the earth which he had fay' From fquelch of knight, and form'd and rav'd Hudibras SQUIRE See Esquire.] 1. A gentleman next in rank to a knight He will maintain you like a gentlewoman~Ay that I will, come cut and long tail under the degrea Shakepeare of a [guire The reft are princes, barons, knights, fpuirs And gentlemen of blood Skakefpeare's HemrV. 2. An attendant on a noble warriour form he took, Anchifes' fguire Old Butes opés 3. An attendant at court 1 could as well be brought Return with he To knee his throne, and fguire-like penfion beg earlier than in the earth itfelf. Bacon's Nat. Hift *Twill down like oxymel of fguills. Rofcomman The felf-fame atom Can, in the truffle, furnifh out a feaft And naufeate, in the fcaly fgui/l, the tafte. Garth To keep bafe life a-foot. Shake[peare's King Lur SQUIU'RREL. 7. f [efeurueil, Fr. foiurss Lat.] A fmall animal that lives inwoods, remarkable for leaping from tree totreé One chanc'd to find 2 nut In th' end of which a hole was cut Which lay upon a hazel-root There fcatter'd by a [quirrel Which out the kernel gotten had When quoth this fay, Dear queen, be glad is fo called fro 'To prate; o let fy n down and rti [qu t giv f ar Yo 1 had chofen Zo SQUIRT. @. # Low cant. Bacon chattering, that the world would.ay In a fguinancy there is danger of fuffocation Wifeman a jack-pudding for a prime minifter He with bis fguin-fire coul i Where an equal poife of hope and fear And gladly banith fguin: fufpicion Milton S Whole troopse « - fgkg an tch {cr t His weapong are, a.pi L befpatter ;;f"'? 'léz;‘ ]'rf]r a of t fqui wit th::l Wate "O_ N n Bac r wat e dun medicine i look not in a dire& line of vifion Some can fguint when they will; and childre fet upon a table, with.a candle behind them, bot eyes will move outwards, to fee the light, and f induce [guinting Bacon another over againft it Pope To SQUINT. w.a 1. To form the eye to oblique vifion This is the foul Flibertigibbet; he gives the we and the pin, fzuints the eye, and makes the hairlip Shake[peare ftream. quic 2. A {mal Zo SquiNT. w. 7. To look obliquely; t Not-a period of this epiftle but fguints toward r Ejimfi‘* ver th o [f f Squir a r f 1. An inftrument by whicha qui is ejected. SQUINT. adj. [ fquinte, Dutch, oblique tranfverfe.] Looking obliquely ; looking not direély; looking fufpicioufly Does arbitrate the event, my nature i That Tincline to hope rather than fear along Ufed for [quinancies and. inflammations of th throat, it feemeth to have a mollifying and leni fying virtue Draytins T'll fet you fafe from perils hl: t ul'ez‘l an' hate all mor fh Rog Si fellows to fguirt kennel water upon him aj:;yl;;if o ety rta unc [o w R U S 7 am ftr qui in ou o th T logy. th Grew Let Oberon be ne'er fo mad_ fome fimili SQUI'NANCY. n /o [ fquinance, [quinancie Fr. fquinantia, Ital.] An inflammatio in the throat; a quinfey . Shakefp. King Ly /. [contrattion of efpuire cuyer, French Seed or kernels of apples and pears, put into Jfquill, which is like a great onion, will come u Many a public minifter comes empty in; but when he has crammed his guts, he is fain to [guecze I # /. [from the verb. Doft thou fgziny at me Now {eft to rule Afcanius Dryden's Bwid, Knights, fzuires, and fteeds muftenteron thef?gc. head broad and fquat 2. Toforce way through clofe bodies SquerzE I remember thine eyes well enough Not in ufe vered with a cruft, compofed of feveral rings of fmall drops L' Effrange 7o SQu1'ny. w. 7. To look afquint, " cant word tude to the fguill fith, in having along body co like dew, without burfting or cracking the body o the gold Newton's Opt]lcll's What crowds of thefe, impenitently bold In founds and jingling fyllables grown old Still runion: poets, in a raging vein Ev'n to the dregs and fzucezings of the brain. Pope hard before he can get off Should ‘,\;ith a {welling dropfy ftuff thy fkin-lj{yl. [ fquilla, feilla, Lat. [quille The fquill infe A concave fphere of gold filled with water an foldered "up, upon prefling the fphere with grea force, let the water fgueeze through it, and ftan in multitude The timbrel and the [Fuintifers mai Of 1Ifis awe thee ; left the gm{s‘jfor f:n, 2. A fifh 3. An infect 3. To force between clofe bodies Z0 SQUEEZE. W. 2 1. To aét or pafs, in confequence of compreflion a'H over its outfid SQworuid.vrieco. af Sqining, A ap Miller When Florio fpeaks, what virgin could withftand If gentle Damon did not fgueeze her hand? Pope. tortion In a civil war people muft expe and fyueezed toward the burden "This is fuch a falfe and Jquinteged praife Which feeming to look upwards on hi l<'>r ng': Looks down upon my fears It hath a large acrid bulbous root, like an onion the leaves are broad; the flowers are like thofe o ornithogalum, or the ftarry hyacinth: they gro in a long fpike, and come out before the leaves And fgucez'd the combs with goldenliquor crown'd. Dryden None acted mournings forc'd: to thow Or fyuceze his eyes to make the torrent flow. Dryd. Knolles's Hiftsr z. Indiret; oblique; maligngn{ ¢ Turky Afked for-their pafs by every [guib Spenfer That lift at will them to revile or fnib The fguibs, in the common phrafe, are calle Tatler libellers and the peevifhnefs of young children, is but reafonable Savift #" adj. '[fqumt i eye Saift Among the trembling crowd below Criticks on verfe, as [guibs on triumphs wait Proclaim the glory, and angment the ftate. Young 2. Any petty fellow Baco 's HmryVfi. to look upon them v{ho'm he b:h e‘;:;ifned .fPltefully With fguibs and crackers arm'd, to thro tors, confidering the [gueamifbnefs of forae ftomachs reFlere ip fthf fig cte dir gye obl 2 was {o [quinteyed, that Howel's Vocal Foreff Lampoons, like fzuzibs, may makea prefent blaze But time, and thunder, pay refpect to bays Waller Furious he begins his march Drives rattling o'er a brazen arch a [y SQ__UI NTEYED valour to a fguib, or fire of flax, which burns an crackles for a time, but fuddenly extinguifhes faftidioufnefs t and another' up}('m t'l/;?g g‘t?ége"um the The foreft of the fouth compareth the French [from Jqueamifh. politicia crown The armada at Calais, Sir Walter Raleigh wa wont prettily to fay, were fuddenly driven awa with fquibs 5 for it was no more than a ftratage of fire-boats manlefs, and fent upon them Bacon's War with Spain SQuUEA'MISHNESS. #. /. [from fgueamifb. Nicenefs; delicacy rkin began alread Squis. u. /[ [ fchicben, German, to put forward. 'This etymology, though th beft that I have found, is not yery probable. 1. A {mall pipe of paper filled with wildfire. Ufed in fport Sidney princefs Pamela Quoth he, that honour's very [gueamifb SQuEA'MISHLY. adv In a faftidious manner L'Effrange away he fcampers, bawling like mad ST 2. 'To turn the eye obliquely P 8o foon as the poor devilhad recovered the fguelch ver JSqueanifp in refped of the charge he had of th For what' s Q # fo [from_/émrt. SQUI'RTER wattl lies a {quirt e izeb r:i{ t?i; wit i a wer qrrc ‘fgu . Th Arbathiot for they were mad for the lofs To STAB - h : u ] a w g ‘ w 1. To pierce wit n f e : ( p : n i a s Hear the lam e t d m : fl t 1 t Wife t Stabb' b th wounds feh,'-fam ha sbak{f?‘,‘" Porciuf |