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Show ST S T' Al thefe together in one heap were thrown Like ¢arcafes of beafts in butcher's fall M 4o The feat of a dignified clergyma " the choir th chapte fuch canon a flall in the choir an i 1 w Wy x to aflign unt place in th vide Ayliffes Parergon chapter - Tokeep in a ftall or ftable ¢ femgfy mor properly Spenfer's Paf Every one muft every day fuftain The load of one beaft, the moft fag an clean.sh data import.tsv out README Of all the falifed, to the woers fealt Stallfed oxen, and crammed fowls, ar eaffd in their livers Arbuthnot o ing t thei 4 the helio Suc the {feed; a chimilla Worton Shak bef Chapman often difAliments Eftallion, French ; /fal 1‘"{3; Italian ; Salbeng2, Dutch Funiu thinks ic derived from yealan, to leap. A horfe kept for mares The prefent defe@s are breeding without choic of fallions in thape or fize Temple . 1f fleet Dragon's progeny at laf Prove jaded, and in frequent matches caft No favour for the fallion we retain And 1o refpect for the degen'rate ftrain Dryden " .,STA'LL}JVORN. adj. [ ffall and worn.] Lon ‘& keptin the flable. But it is probabl a miftake for Salworth Saxon, ftout [ reapelpend His flallworn frced the champio STAMINA. 5, /. [Latin. ftout beftrode Shake[peare 1. The firft principles of any thing #2. The folids of a human body 3. [In botany.] Thofe little fine threads o Capillaments which grow up within th flowers of plants, encompafling round th ftyle, and on which the apices grow a Clr extremities 4 Aflight fort of ftuff STAMI'NEOUS adj [ famineus e Confifiing of threads Latin. % Stamineous fowers are fo far 4 imperfec L. 11 7 merer Saxon whof Dutch: T fameren What titles had they had, if nature had no Strove hard to thruft the worft deferving firft And flamp'd the noble mark of elderfhi What an unfpeakable happinefs would it be to man engaged in the purfuit of knowledge, if h had but a power of flamping bis beft fentiment Watts upon his memory in indelible charaters t 5. To make by imprefling a mark {peak with un If two pennyweight of filver, marked w:th. acer tain imprefiion, fhall here in England be equivalen to three pennyweight marked with another impreflion, they will not fail to flamp pieces of tha Sometimes to her news of myfelf to tei fafhion, and quickly carry away your filvers Locke I go about; but then js all my bef Wry words, and flamnt'ring, or elfe doltith dumb Say then, can this but of enchantment come narrow-mouth' or none at all that thow mightf to muc Did call my father, was I know not wher Shakefpeare's Cymbeline When I was flampt at once Shakefpeare Which ffammering tongues and ftagg'ring feet produce Dryden Cornelius hoped he would come to fammer lik Demofthenes Arbuthnot's Martinus Scriblerus Your hearers would rather you thould be lef correct, than perpetually fammering of the worft folecifms in rhetorick which is on Saift STA'MMERER. 7. /. [from ffammer. who fpeaks with hefitation On A flamperer cannot with moderation hope for th gift of tongues, or a peafant to become learned a Origen Taylor Zo STAMP. v. a. [ fampen, Dutch; fampers Danifh. ftrike by prefling the foot haftil downwards If Arcite thus deplor His fuff'rings, Palemon yet fuffers more He frets, he fumes, he frares, he ffamps the ground The hollow tow'r with clamours rings around Dryden z. To pound; to beat as in a mortar I took the calf you had made, burnt it wit fire, and flamped and ground it very fmall Deut. ix. 21 Some apothecaries, upon ffamping of coloquintida, have been put into a great {couring by the vapour only Bacon 3. [effamper ‘We are baftards all And that moft venerable man, which Sidney She ffammers ; oh what grace in lifping lies If fhe fays nothing, to be fure fhe's wife. Dryden Lagean juice 1. T 6. To mint ; to form ; to coin as wine comes out of bottle, eithe French ¢ftampar, Span. mark or figure fampare Italian 'To imprefs with fom Height of place is intended only to flamp th endowments of a private condition with luftre an autherity South Roave's Am!;:!w'us Stepm Upon their bafer metal difficulty pour cut- of thy mouth us with thofe facul'txc our minds are endowed with, he hath not left himLocke felf without witnefs hefitation ; to utter words wit I would thou couldft fammer given us no 'mlngtc ideas o yet, baving furnifhe ing «. 7. [ycamen, a ftamfamelen ha himfelf; though he has ffampt no original chardcters on our minds, wherein we may read his be the beta, afarum, and al STA'MMER Go Thoug 3. Such as have thei flower ‘.Iiz'le.'jcn find out Ged flowers adhere to the top or uppermoft o natura STALLION. 7. /. [y/dalwyn, an old Welt s Word: the one is derived from the other but which from which I cannot certainl tell of a deity born with it, and flamped upon it§ or j of fuch adi‘mmci that in the free ufe of itfcl{ it wil fruit immediately contiguous, or adher ftammer 2. To kennel ot STA'LLAGE. n.[ [from fall. 1. Rent paid for a ftall 2 [In old books.] Layftall ; dung; com. Dof ATA'LLFED. adj. [ ffall and fed.] Fed no with grafs, but dry feed an Long may'ft thou live to wail thy children's lofs | Aefs STALL. O 2 iy, To inhabit; to dwell *plig as the ricinus Reedhood, the firft that doth appea In flammel: fearlet is too dear Ben Fonfon Deck'd in thy rights as thou art fa//'d in mine Shakefpeare ( flowers and no fruit, and others wit fruit and no flowers; as hops, hemp Sta'MMEL. 7./o A fpecies of red colour Wecould not fall together in the world f th o te in s o t e n c & r f a i of fra eafy and primary notions which nature flarips i D.'K_?J all men of common fenfe ar Where king Latinus then his oxen ftall'd, Dryden 'To inveft m/: o f bu n v g b ca th o o a r n t n c N the nature of man's mind, which hath this notio tropium triconon fties me here at hom And fee another, as I fee thee now gieite thef conceits I'm nature fprin the reafon of which is, that fro flowers unkept: for call you that keeping, fora gentlema of my birth, that differs not from the ffalling of a ox Shake[peare Nifus the foreft pafs'd ‘And Alban plains, from Alba's name fo call'd 2. [for inftall. an Thefe prodigiou ftinging nettles 2. Such as have thei fruit only a little disjointed from thei For my part, he keeps me raftically at home or, to fpea flower a S n co ' n k th o in ff b ha "Your ho the fame feed fome plants fhall arife wit v. a. [from the noun. 1s now faft falled in his crumenal th Out of mere ambition, you have ma'd There necds no pofitive law or fa‘{)?mp of Go fuch a difobedience uponn fu y y up qui liqui an obobl to y fla flampp a fexes For fuch encheafon, if you go nie Few chimneys reeking you will efpy The fat ox, that won't ligg in the fall fro arms, Newcaftle fhines comPope 4. To fix & mark by imprefling: 1t fuch plants as are faid to be of differen The dignified: clergy, out of mere humility, hay called their thrones by the names of Sralls. Warburton STALL There, famp'd wit plete ftylus and the ftamina; and fuch plant as do bear thefe famincons flowers Ra makes to conftitute a large genus o plants: thefe he divides into fuch as firft, have their fruit or feed totally di The pope creates a canon beyond the number 1imited, and command Here fwells the fhelf with Ogilby the great as to want thofe coloured leaves whic are called petala, and confift only of th And in another corner wide were frow The antique ruins of r.hc Romans fall Spenfe w SeTo 7o Stamp v. n firike the foot fud T denly downward W hat a fool art thou A ramping fool, to brag, to fflamp, and fwear m Upo cold-blooded flave party ! Tho Haft thou not {poke like thunder on my fide JE Shakefpeare The men fhall howl at the noife of the fampin Fere xlviie 3 of the hoofs of his ftrong horfes There is fuch an echo among the old ruins an vaults that, if you flam but a little louder t-ha Addifon ordinary, you hear the found repeated He cannot bear th' aftonithing delight But ftarts, exclaims, and famps, and raves, and dies Dennis They got to the top, which was flat and even and flamping upon it, they found it was hollow Sawift Stamp n [ ¢fampe French; flampa Italian. 1. Any inftrument by which a diftinct an lafting impreflion 1s made Some other nymphs, with colours fain And pencil flow, may Cupid paint And a weak heart in time deftroy She has a ffamp, and prints the boy *Tis gold fo pure It cannot bear the ffamp without allay 2. A mark fet on any thin #aller Dryden ;.impreflion But to the pure refined or The flamp of kings imparts no mor Worth than the metal held before Careww That facred name gives ornament and grace And like his ffamp, makes bafeft metals pafs *Twere folly now a ftately pile to raife To build a playhoufe, while you throw down plays Dryden Ideas are imprinted on the memory; fome by a objeét affeéting the fenfes only; others, that hav more than once offered themfelves, have yet bee littl |