OCR Text |
Show i il © ST 1. To few ; to work with a needle on an thing 2. 'To join ; to unite, generally with fom degree of clumfinefs or inaccuracy Having flirched together thefe animadverfion touching architeture and their ornaments. #otton 3. 7o Stitc #p 'To mend what wa rent Itis in your hand as well to fitch up his lif again, as it was before to rent it Sidney I with a ncedle and thread flizched up the arter and the wound Wifcman's Surgery Fo StiTCcH. w. 2. To pra&ife needlework StiTcH. # [ [from the verb. 1. A pafsof the needle and thread throug any thing 2. [from yeician, Saxon.] A fharp lancinating pain If you defire the fpleen, and will laugh yourfel into fitches, follow me; yend gull Malvolio i turned heathen, a very renegado Shakefpeare's Taelfth Night A fimple bloody fputation of the lungs is differenced from a pleurify, which is ever painful, an attended with a firch Harwey on Confumptions 3. A link of yarn in knitting There fell twenty fitches in his ftocking Wotteux In Chapman it feems to mea or ridges furrow Many men at plow he made, and drave earth her and there Andturn'd up fitches orderly Chapman's Iiads 5. In the following line, allufion is mad to a knit ftock A fritch-fall'n cheek, that hangs below the jaw Such wrinkles as a fkilful hand would dra mile Sti'ray n / Camo Ainfworth Ilandick ; reid My imaginations are as fou As Vulcan's flithy Shakefpeare's Hamlet w. a [fuppofed of the fam original with feaw. 1, To ftuff up clofe You would admire, if yo their thips 2. To make hot or fultry faw them five it i Sandys's Fourney His chamber was commonly ffived with friend or fuitors of one kind or other Watton St1'ver. #. /. [Dutch.] A Dutch coi about the value of a halfpenny Stoar. 7 /i A fmall ftinking animal Sto'can. . /i [Irith; fochk, Erfe.] A attendant ; a wallet-boy ; one wha run at a horfeman's foot ; a horfeboy in ufe No He holdeth himfelf a gentleman, and fcornet to work, which he faith is the life of a peafant but thenceforth becometh an horfeboy or a foca to fome kern, inuring himfelf to his fword, an the gentlemanly trade of ftealing Spenfer Srocca'do n rapier, Italian. [ floccato, from Stoceo, A thruft with the ra PlCr You ftand on diftance, your pafles, foccados, an I know not what STOCK n / eftoc, French. earth, and th ffock die in the ground ob, xiv. 8 z. The trunk into which a graft is inferted The cion over-ruleth the flock quite; and th Stock is paflive only, and giveth aliment but n Bacon motion to the graft As fruits ungrateful to the planter's care The fureft virtues thus from paflions thoot ‘Wild nature's vigour working at the root Pope apof That they kept thy truth fo pure of old Whe all our fathers worfhipp'd flocks and ftones Milton Forget not Why all this fury ? 'What's the matter That oaks muft come from Thrace to dance Muft ftupid flocks be taught to flatter And is there no fuch wood in France 4. A man proverbially ftupid Prior tyranny is this, my heart to thrall my tongue with proud reftraint to tie neither I may fpeak nor think atall Spenfer a ftupid flock in filence die While we admir This virtue and this moral difcipline Shaksfpeare Let's be no ftoicks, nor no ffocks What And ek Tha But lik 5. The handle of any thing 6. A fupport ofa fhip while it is building Freth fupplies of fhips And fuch as fitted fince the fight had been Or new from flocks were fall'n into the road. Dryd 7. [ focco, a rapier, Italian. ftoccado A thruft; To fee thee here, to fee thee there; to fee the pafs thy punéto, thy flock, thy reverfe. - Shaksfp Shak. M. Wiwes of Wind|or [yroc, Saxon ; JStock, Dat 1. The tra ‘th bod o pla t 9. A race a lineage a family Say what flock he {prings ofi =-The noble houfe of Marcius. Shak. Coriclanus His early virtues to that ancient floc Gave as much honour as from thence he took Waller The like fhall fin All prophecy, that of the royal foc all might be fupplied, g fhe oy o en crow a pear'd, he had o d relie?: ;;z o Wbich to prevent, fhe fil incre 2s'd her fioré- Laid up, a Lok d fpar'd, that fhe might give the m ore, ) t:'d "1‘ Dy Anndd withwi hBoenneeactohmmoonne lJrawock beethseirliye, All is the ftate's, the fiat provides lgff:llf dl'm fun Prodigal me Feel not their own flock watting. Ben Fonf. Catal Let the exportation of home commodities b more in value than the importation of foreign, f the ffock of the kingdom fhall yearly increafe; fo then the balance of trade muft be returned in money or bullion Bacon's Adwice to Villiers A king, againft a ftorm, muft forefee to convenient ffock of treafure Bacon *T'is the place where God promifes and delight to difpenfe larger proportions of his favour, that h may fix a mark of honour on his fanéuary, an recommend it to the fons of men, upon the ffock o their own intereft as well as his own glory. South Some honour of your own acquire Add to that flock, which juftly we beftow Of thofe bleft thades to whom you all things owe Dryden But oftner bring the nation to deca , y, And fweep.the prefent flack an future hope apy o commo den, 5 chout doesslit notiretu e fy Wh rn to g flock of mankind Lok . When we brought it eut, it took fucha tity of air into its lungs, that it fielled almor twice as big as before ; and it was perhaps on ¢hi Jrock of air that it lived a minute longer the e cond time Addif on . Be ready to give, and glad to diftribute, by fet Ty ting apart fomething out of thy fuck for the uf of fom charities ,4"";,,,] Of thofe fars, which our imperfet eye Has doom'd and fix'd to one eternal fky Each, by a native flock of honour great May dart ftrong influence, and diffufe kind hes Prior They had law-fuits; but, though they fpe their income, they never mortgaged the Sck Arbuthnat She has divided part of her eftate amongft them that every one may be charitable out of theirow Slock and edc of the take it in their tumst provide for the poor and fick of the parifh, Low 11. Quantity ftore ; body He propofes to himfeif no {mall flosk of famei future ages, in being the firft who has undertake Arbuthnt this defign 12. A fund eftablithed by the governmeit of which the value rifes and falls by ar tifice or chance An artificial wealth of funds and flocks wasin o the hands of thofe who had been plundering th publick Suwif Statefman and patriot ply alike the flocks Peerefs'and butler fhare alike the box Zo Stock. w. a. [from the noun. 1. To ftore; to fill fufficiently If a man will commit fuch rules to his memorj and fock his min Of David, fo I name this king, fhall rif Milton A fon, the woman's feed Thou haft feen one world begin and end And man, as from a {econd flock, proceed. Ailron To no human ffoc ‘We owe this fierce unkindnefs; but the rock Waller That cloven rock, produc'd thee Thy mother was no goddefs, nor thy ffoc From Dardanusj but in fome horrid rock Perfidious wretch, rough Caucafussthee bred Denbam 10. The principal ; capital ftore already provided Nor do thofe ills on fingle bo igfi:as-cmg‘ On favage flocks inferted, learn to bear 3. Alog Vet )was fhe not profufe bu u f %?d wnfely.manag'd that t'he fl":a'ar:‘'di‘gtfiogi yape. afi His lackey with a linen fock on one leg, and kerfey boot hofe on the other Shakefpeare's Taming of the Shreav hard, Saxon.] An anvil; the iron bod on which the {mith forges his work Yo Sti1ve There is hope of a tree, if cut down, that i will fprout again, though the root wax old in th play the idl Shak. Othello Dryden [anthemis. [ fedie His precious horn, fought of his enemles Strikes in the flock, ne thence can be releas'd, Spen/ Needle Sti'rcHERY. 7. /. [from fitch. work. In contempt Str'rcaworT. n That furious beaf 8. Something made of linen ; a cravat ; clofe neckcloth Anciently a cover fo the legs For an old grandam ape Come lay ‘afide your fitchery houfewife with me this afternoon ST with portions of .fcnpturf an fwerable to all the heads of duty, his «:onft‘»lefl]"e Sout i can never be at a lofs 1, who before with' fhepherds in the grove Sung to my oaten pipe their rural loves = Manur'd the glebe, and ffock'd the fruitful ggn; The world begun to be focked with peapley an human induftry drained thofe uninhabitable gm } }" dc le ;l fu r l b a r v r a n r S 2' a nually flocked wi'th water k o f h a e o f i u l 2. T he cannot ufe k o f t 3. 'To put i ferve the kio Call not your ftocks for me . m dI y t n f w n m o p On whofe e te bt t e f e f r a You fhall do f T ‘, Ki r? m o o r p Againft the gracean e a p e a S g Stocking his meffe #p 4. To SToc To extirpate '.‘Ll'fldj B e c a b h oi { l The wild boar not o Decay of PE S Socks up her roots 7 ST h t . ell the S STO'CKFISH 7. J [. fioc,%ew/: Dried cod STO Latin ] i plank 52 / ey 1 ?:dfiw [feuc , Ml ¥ e gragmb |