| OCR Text |
Show ST $'TH i gro'cxine. n /i [ The original wor pri flock c whe foc b t feem fon for the legs guage The folemn feaft of Ceres how w4s neat When long white linen ffoles the matrons wear Stock, in the old lan the plural focken mad STOLE whic take The like corruption has happened t chick, chicken,y chickens,] The coverin StoLi'prTY Fr. Thef By the loyalty of that town he procured fhoes Clarendon sckings, and money for his foldiers Unlefs we fhould expect that nature fthould mak for cloathing as the wool of fheep More againft Atbeifm Hefpent halfa day to look for his odd focking " when he had them both upon a leg. clean.sh data import.tsv out README L'Efrange At am'rous Flavio is the ffocking thrown Dryden And tips you the freeman a wink Hard 4+ [ flomachus temper Sto‘cxrock. 7. /. [ fockand Jock.] Loc fixed in wood His portance terrible, and ftature tall Some of the chiefeft laity profeffed with greate fromach their judgments, that fuch a'difcipline wa little better than popifh tyranny difguifed under new form The flocks hinder his legs from obeying the de s 3 Wooden work upon which fhips ar o built $tocksTi'LL, a;lj. [ ffock and fill.] Mo- W fize faould be left defencelefs No "Our preachers- ftand Sockfiill in the pulpit, an | will not fo much as move a finger to fet off the bef Sroxe Jftoak fee t W SroLE. n. f com Addifon fro th Gibfon's Camden. [ fola, Lat.] courage but fomack tha make peopl break rather than they will bend L'Eftrange Thisfort of icrying proceeding from pride; obftinacy, and flomach, the will, where the fault lies muft be bent Lacke fpoken man 1A long veft. Overall a.blgck/lple {he di ithrow, - As.one that inly mourned Ifa. iii. 2 Thou marry'ft every yea The lyrick lark and the grave whifpering dove The fparrow that negleéts his life for love The houfehold bird with the red fomacher. Donnea STo'MacHFUL. adj. [ flomachofus, Latin ; Somach and full. Sullen; ftubborn A flomachful boy, put to {chool, the whole worl could notbring to pronounce the firft letter. L' Efir Obitinate or ffomachful crying {hould not be permitted, becaufe it is another way of encouragin thofe paflions which 'tis our bufinefs to fubdue A penfer and 2 marvellous fairwas difcontented that one fhould b placed before him in. honour, whofe fuperior h thought himfelf in defert, becaufe through env and flomach prone wnto contradi&ion Hooker Locke STO'MACHFULNESS Jul. #. [, [from fomach- Stubbornnefs ; {ullennefs ; obfti Stoma'curcaL. ) adj. [ fomachique, Fr. Stoma'cHICK Relating to the ftomach; pertaining to the ftomach An hypochondriack confumption is an extenuation occafioned by an infaréion and obftru&io of the flomachick veflel through melanchol hu 7. [ [from fomach. mours Harwey By a catarrh the ffomachical ferment is vitiated Floyer Stoma'cuick medicine for the ftomach Sto'MacHLESs. adj. [from fomach an lefs.] Being without appetite Sto'MacuoUs adj. [ from flomach. Stout ; angry; fullen; obftinate. Obfolete That ftranger knight in prefence came And goodly falved them; but nought agai Him anfwered, as courtefy became But with ftern looks, and flomachous difdain Gave figns of grudge and difcontentment vain L'Eftrange ~ Saxon yzocce; fignifying the ftock or 6. Pride; haughtinefs Arius, a fubtile-witte (/ "body of a tree Inftead of a flomacher, a girding of fackcloths, It fruck in the camel's ffomach, that bulls thoul be armed with horns, and that a creature of hi tionlefs as logs . fermon Hooker They plainly faw, that when flomach doth ftriv with wit, the'matth'is not equal Haooker Whereby' the ‘ape in wond'rous flomach wox Strongly encourag'd by the crafty fox Spenfer That nobles thould fuch fomachs bear Imyfelf fight not once in forty year. Shak. Hen V1 termination of his mind, if it would transfer hi . body to another place Locke Jg{ Butler 5. Sullennefs ; refentment ; ftubbornnefs . Matrimony is cxpreffed by a young man ftand,10g, his legs being faft in a pair of ffocks. Peacham Golden quoifs and flomachers For my lads to give their dears. Shak. Wint. Tale Inftead of trumpet and of drum Shakefp. King Lea and full of ire STo'MACHER. . /. [from flomach.] A ornamental covering worn by women o the breaft And not'upon your maid Shake[peare's Twwo Gentlemen of Verona Shakefpeare from tything to tything, Sock .punithed, and imprifoned Spenfer That makes the warrior's fomach come in their ways In rage deaf as the fea, hafty as fire. Shakefpeare Is 't near dinner time I would it were That you might kill your ffomach on your meat ! Fetch forth the ffock # . As I have life and honour, there fhall he fit til noon Tom is whip High flsmach'd are-they both nacy Stern was his look, and full of fomach vain gular. See Stocking. L Prifon for the legs are difordere STo'MACHED. adj. [from flomach.] Fille with paflions of refentment Anger; violence o To be fo call'd, and who fo did him call . 8tocks. #./. [commonly without the fin Lat. thofe tha and what one amongft them commonly doth no Sftomach at fuch contradiion, ftorm at repr6of, an hate fuch as would reform them Hoc%r Shake[peare's Henry V Difdain he called was, and dd difdai There are locks for feveral purpofes; as freetdoor-locks, called focklocks 3 chamber-door-locks «alled fpring-locks; and cupboard-locks Moxon's Mechanical Exercifes felf unt perverfe The unufual diftance of time made it fubje to every man's note, that it was an aét againft hi Jflomach, and put upon him by neceffity of ftate Bacon's Henry VII The very trade went againft his ffomach L'Efirange Since nought {o focki/b, hard, and full of rage But mufick for the time doth change his nature Shake[peare 'To be angry Let a man, though never fo juftly, oppoafe him what is 't that takes'from the Let him depart floods Zo STo'macH. w. n He which hath no fomach to this fight The poe Did feign that Orpheus drew trees, ftones, an thofe w0 b Fr. Sfoma 3. Inclination ; liking Let me have but your vote to ferve for the town And here is a guinea to drink Swvift iiwii [effomach quality, an evidence of fome life of grace in th heart; whereas decay of appetite, and the, no manner of flomach, is a moft defperate prognoftick Hammond from 'Change-alley goe adj. [ from flock. Bentley in the body, fo is this hunger in the foul a vita down Sto'ckisH " blockifh him Hall's Contemplations The lion began to fhew his teeth, and to fomac the affront L' Effrange un And takes away the flomach3 fuch the rich That have abundance and enjoy it not Shakefpeare's Henry 1V As appetite or flomach to meatisa fign of healt low wretch who gets money by buyin and felling fhares in the funds The flockjobber thu indocil Will fortune never. come with both hands full But write her fair words till in fouleft letters She cither gives a flomach, and no foo Such are the poor in health: or elfe a feaft live in filth and nafti [ fock and job. in the text Thy flomach, pleafure,and thy golden {leep? Shak Pope Stocking'd with loads of fat town dirt he goes Sro'ckjoBBER. 7 / the fool Tell me mefs, withouta fhoe or focking to theirfect. Sawift ar loved David, and the people applaude him; only Saul ffomacked him, and therefore hate 2. Appetite ; defire of food To STocRING. @w. 4. [from the noun. %k To drefs in ftockings Stupidity ; want of fenfe 1f you 're fick at fea Or flomach qualm'd ‘at land, a dram of thi Will drive away diftemper Shakefp. Cymbeline This filthy fimile, this beaftly line Quite turns my fomach Pope could fhe do better than afford us fo fit material % Jonatha 1. The ventricle in which food is digefted jerkins and flockings grow out of the ground, wha THe families of farmer n.[. [ folidus, Liat. Rolidité STO'MACH. #. / chus, Latin. Sbflk{[[)carg That very night he longs to lie alone Believe not all; or, if you muft believe Stomach not all Shakefp. Antony and Clecpatra Prov. ix. 17 ments to her in yellow fockings, and 'tis a colour fhe ab malignity tractable fools, whofe Jolidity can baffle all argu In his firft approach before:my lady he will com hors. To refent; to remember with anger an Pope Stolen waters are fweet, and bread eaten in fecre is pleafant Lat. [ flomachor @. a 70 Sto'MACH Participle paflive of feal for a fingular, and pronounced focking of the leg The preterite of /feal SToLew {e was a ma Of an unbounded fomach, ever rankin Himfelf with princes, Shakefpeare's Henry VII Dryden A fa&tor ffole a'gem away was ufed for a pair- of focks or cover for the legs. Stocken was in tim ST Spt'fl;/;-‘l‘ Stonbp. 2 [ 1 Poft O [for fand. ftation Obfolete th" other fide, th* afiieged caftle's war Their fteadfaft flonds did mightily maintain. Spenf z. Stop; indifpofition to proceed There be not flonds nor reftivenefs in a man' nature; but the wheels of his mind keep way wit the wheels of his fortune STONE #. / [fains Saxon; /een, Dutch. Bacon's Effays Gothick TTan 1. Stone |