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Show '\' S STI'PEND. 7. [ [ fipendium Wages; fettled pay Latin, Her kings and tetrarchs, are their tributarie SrirE NDIARY. adj. [ fipendiarius, Lat. Receiving falaries ; performing any fer vice for a ftated price cam His great flipendiary prelate with troop " of evil appointed horfemen not half full Knolles's Hiftor Place re€ors in the remaining chuiches, whic Swift are now ferved only by fizenciary civates One who perform _/h'pzndz'arim, Latin. Fr [/i.:;p('im'/aire 7. / "STIPE'NDIARY any fervice for a lettled payment is calle This whule countr o the kingdo Tunis3 the king whereofis a kind of flipendiar Abbot unto the Turk If thou art becom Which after all its danger and brave toil Deferves no honour from the gods or men. Glowver S & TIC ~SeeSTyPTIC ekt 90 STV PULATE. @. n. [ fipulor, Latin 5 fipuler, French.] To contract; t ‘bargain; to fettle terms The Romans very much negiected their maritime affaixs;- for they flipulated with the Carthaginians to furnifh them with fhips for tranfpor Arbutknot ¢ zngiand.wars GuiieSTrPULA'TION. 2. /. [ Fipulation, French Bargain fvom fHpulare. o T We promife obediently to keep all God's commandments; the hopes given by the gofpel depen on our performance of that fipulation Roger StirvLA'TOR or bargains #. / eoB RS STIR i, Dutch. 1. To move aued One who contratt [yuman Saxon 5 fooren "to flir, but as it was lifted Other fpirit abl Temple Shoot through their traéts, and diftant mufcles fill This fov'reign, by his arbitrary nod Reftrains or fends his minifters abroad Swift and obedient to his high command clean.sh data import.tsv out README They fir a finger, or they lift a han Blackmore 4 Preferve the right of thy place, but fir not queftions of jurifdiction; and rather aflume thy righ in filence than voice it with claims Bacon One judgment in parliament, that cafes of tha Rature ought to" be determined according to th common law, is of greater weight than raany cafe to the contrary wherci th queftio wa no w" . Pirred;; yea, even though it fhould be Jirred, an ~ the contrary affirmed Hale 3. To incite; to inftigate; to animate With him is come the mother quce « An Até firring him to blood and ftrife If you flir thefe daughters hea:t clean.sh data import.tsv out README Againft their father, fool me not fo muc To.bear it tamely Shake[peare's King Lear Neftor next behel The fubtle Pylian orator range up and downe t field Embattelling his men. at armes, and Sirring all t blowes To raife ; to excite Chapma "The foldiers love her brother's memory Am{ for her fake fome mutiny will ffir. Dryden 3. Z08T1R p. To incite ; to animate to inftigate by inflaming the paflions . This,would fecm a dangerou whethe commiffion an feady to fir up all the Liifh in rebellion Spenfer's Ireland Whenfoever the earl fhall die, all thofe lands ar to come unto her majefty; he is like to make foul fir there, though of himfelf of no power, ye through. fupportance of fome others who lie in th Spenfer's Ireland wind He did. make thefe ffirs, grieving that the nam of Chrift was at all brought into thofe parts. 4bbot Being advertifed of fome firs raifed by his un he had any hel or no Clarendon The improving of his own parts and happinef JHirs him up to fo notable a defign More againft Arheifm: Thou with rebel infolence didft dar To own and to proteét that hoary ruffian To fir the factious rabble zp to arms 6. 7o ST1r up natural fons in England, he departed out of Ircla.n Dawies without a blow Raphael, thou hear'ft what fir on eart Satan, from hell *fcap'd through the darkfome gulf Rowe To put in altion; to ex Hath rais'd in Paradife, and how difturb' cite ; to quicken 3. Agitation of thoughts ; conflifting paffion Iaiab, xiv. g ' He did kee The deck, with glove, or hat, or handkerchie Such miith the jocund flute or gamefome pip Stirs up among the 10ofe unletter'd hinds. Milton Still waving, as the ffirs and fits of 's min Could beft exprefs how flow his foul fail'd on in fom conftant bodily lasour Lock ‘The ufe of the paffions is to JSHir up the min and put it upon aétion, to awake the underftan ing, and to entorce the will How fwift his fhip 1. To move one's felf; to go ou place ; to change place of th STIRP. n. /. [ ffirps, Latin. Race Not ufed mily; generation They had the femblance of great bodies behind othe which woul fid of th hill th falfehoo o {hould move from the place where they were, an from whence they were not to ffir Clarendon We acknowledge a man to be mad or melancholy, who fancies himfelf to be glafs, and fo i afraid of firring; or, taking himfelf to be wax dares not let the fun fhine upon him Law to b pafs from ina&ivity to motion fill forme themfelve int regula Democracie t Come on t ywrf [ fur Watts This is a col noife 1. Tumult Runick m you hand Sir an earl Shakefteare A perpetual fpring, not found elfewhere but i the Indies only, by reafon of the fun's neighbourhood, the life and flirrer up of nature in a perpetua Raleigh activiry Will it not refleét on thy charaéter, Nic, t turn barreter in thy old days 5 a flirrer up of quar rels betwixt thy neighbouts Arbutbnot It the gentlewoman that attends the general' wife be firring, tell her there 's one Caffio entreat n. f tha 3. An inciter; an inftigator 4. STIRRER #p. Aninciter; an inftigator. If they happen to have ‘any fuperior chara&er they fancy they have a right to talk freely upo Stir giv firver 3..'L'o become the obje& of notice of her a little favour of fpeech to feditio STI'RRER. 7. /. [from fir. 1. One who is in motion ; one who put in motion 2. A rifer in the morning the laft entire confummation of a good habit Addifor's Spectator 4. To rife in the morning loquial and familiar ufe are lefs fubj when there are ffirps of nobles Bacon All nations of might and fame reforted hither of whom we have fome flirps and little tribes wit us at this day Bacorte have no purpofes Spcljcr irps The great Judge ofSall knows every differen degree of human improvement, from thefs wea ye fa Sundry nations got footing in that lund,.of th ich there yet remain divers great families an ‘have been manifeit as foon as the 2. To be in motion ; no Re Chryftal is found fometimes in rocks, and i fome places not much unlike the flirious or fillicidious dependencies of ice. Brown's Pulgar Err No power he had to flir, nex will to rife. Spenfer on th Shake[peare's Cymbeline Sti'r10vUS. adj. [from firia, Lat. fembling icicles Addifon 7o Stir. v. 2 Milton ‘This night the human pair Hell is m vea for chee, to meet thee at th coming 5 it ffirreth up the dead for thee Str'rRrUP. 2 /. [[oigenap, rTpap ;. from Shakefp. Othello battle Welfh. buftle confliGs.of the humours Glanwille After all this fiir about them, they. are good fo nothing. Lillotfon Confider, after fo much fir about genus an {pecies, how. few words we have yet fettled definitions of Locke Silence is ufually worfe than the fierceft an loudeft accufations; fince it procceds from a kin of numbnefs or ftupidity of confcience, and an ab- t cord. An iron hoop fufpended by whic climb th an horfema npap fets. his Neither is his manner of mounting unfeemly though he lack firrups ;. for in his getting up, hi horfe is fili*going, whereby he gaineth way :and Shake/p The great flirs. of the difputing world are but th Saxon foot when he mounts or rides law Tumuituous firs upon this frife enfue. Drayton He bath fpun a fair thread, to make all this fli for fuch a neceflity as no man ever denieds Bp. Bramball Tell, fa'd the foldier, miferable Sir Why all thefe words, this ciamour, and this fir Why do difputes in wrang!ing fpend the day Denham ragan ftrap, i What hallooing and what flir is this to-day Fhef= are my mates, that make their wills thei Have fome-unhappy paffenger in chace Sl)a!zg;b multuous diforder; feditious uproar The vigorous fpirit of Montrofe firred him u fome attempt tu 2. Commotion; publick difturbance ; Having overcome and thruft him out of hi k'mgdom, he firred up the Chriftians and Numidians againft him Knolles to mal South's Sermons make a flir 2 Maccab, xiv. 17 eve'y thing that firs or appeais i 2. To agitate ; to bring into debate Jir them up to valour Sirrings and tendencies of the will, whic to remove from its place - My footI had never yet in five days bee that it fhall not fo much as dare to complain o and able t To flirup vigour in him, employ hi tyrant's vile flipendiary, with grie That valour thus triumphant I behold 1 %n That knows no kindred, no regards, no right ; "The words of Judas were very good People, and nations pay them hourly/}:/;m{x Ben Fonfon St, Paul's zeal was exprefied in preaching withTaylor __out any offerings orfliplmd 0, . folute dominjon obtained by fin over the foul, f The greedy thirft of royal crown Stirr'd Porrex #p to put his brother down. Spenfer All the earth n 5. 5 5 E' therefor tha firrup wa called fo in fcqm,. as i were a ftay to get up; being derived of the old Englith word f3y; which is to get up,.or mount Spenfere hand, and held m Shakefpeare. m Haft thou not kifs' Sirrup His horfe hipped with an old mothy faddle, th firrups of no kindred., Shak. Taming of the Shrew. | M friend, judge not me Thou feeft I judge not thee Between the firrup and the ground Mercy I afk'd, mercy I founds © Camden's Rem At this the knight began to chear up And raifing up himtelf on firrap Cried out, Viftoria STITCH w Sficken, Dutch. Hudibras, a [ ficke Danifh ; »T |