OCR Text |
Show SHTI 2. Affault on a fortified place " k 30 .Commotion ; fedition mou tumult cla buitle Whilft I in Ireland nourith a mighty band 1 will fir up in England fome black fform Shat Her fifte Began to fcold and raife up fuc a florm That mortal ears might hardly endure the din . R Affli&ion ; calamity ; diftrefs Shak :;/]/L'a Fe Pope 5.Violence; vehemence; tumultuous force As oft as we are delivered from thofe either im minent or prefent calamities, againft the ffor ‘"N an f all inftantly craved favour fro tempeft whereow above, let it be a queftion what we fhould rende unto Go for his bleflings univerfally fenfibly Hooker and extraordinarily beftowed . T0 STORM. @. a. [from the noun.] To attack by open force From ploughs and harrows fent to feck renown They fight in fields, and fform the thaken town Dryden . There the brazen tow'r was fform'd of old, Pope When Jove defcended in almighty gold HE gy STOR M. . 7 1. To raife tempefts 8o mow his bluftering blaft each coaft doth fcoure Spenfer 2. To rage ; to fume; to be loudly angry Mlton's Paradife Lof? As mock'd they fforin When you return, the mafter florms, the lad Savift feolds While thus they rail, and fcold, and fform Savift -t paffes but for common form STO'RMY. adj. [from florm. g, Tempeftuous smizk ( e 3 dim Bellowing clouds burft with a fformy found And with an armed winter ftrew the ground Addifon The tender apples, from their parents ren By flormy thocks, muit not neglected lies Philips 2. Violent ; paflionate Joria, Italian ; irogia. 1. Hiftory ; account of things paft The fable of the dividing of the world betwee the three fons of Saturn, arofe from the true for of the dividing of the earth between the three breRaleigh thren, the fons of Noah Thee I have heard relating what was don Ere my remembrance : now hear me relat My flory, which perhaps thou haft not heard Milton The four great monarchies make the fubjeét o ancient flory, and are related by the Greek an Temple Latin authors Matters of {fac, concerning times, places, perfons, a&ions, which depend upon fory, and the re lation of others e thefe things are not capabl o being proved by fuch fcientifical principles. #ilk Governments that once made fuch a noife, a « . founded upon the decpeft counfels and the frongef force, yet by fome flight mifcarriage, which let i fuin upon them, are now fo utterly extiné, tha nothing remains of them but a name j nor are thet the leaft traces of them to be found, but only i Sory South 2, Smal tale ; petty narrative accoun ofa fingle incident Avoid enormous heights of {even ffories, and th contrary fault of low diftended fronts Wotton Sonnets. or elegies to Chlori Might raife a houfe about two florics A lyrick ode would flate; a catc Would tile ; an epigram would thatch 7o StorY . a 1 To be in pain or forrow 2 For Sfunned after, rather than ffory him in his own hearing Shake[peare's Cymbeline *T'is not vain or fabulou What the fage poets, taught by th' heav'nly mufe Storied of old in high immortal verfe Of dire chimeras and enchanted ifles And rifted rocks whofe entrance leads to hell 2. Aftonifhment 3. Hour ; time'; feafon Stour. 7. f. [ ffur, Runick An hell with heavy four bow'r Love, that long fince has to thy mighty powr Per force fubdued my poor captived heart And raging now therein with reltlefs ffoavre 3. An idle or trifling tale; a petty fic Sgenfer tyrannize in every weaker part Dof Th giant ftruck fo mainly mercilefs That could have overthrown'a ftonny tower And, were not heav'nly grace that him did blefs He had been pouldered all as thin as flower But he was wary of that deadly florvre Spenfer STOUT adj. [ ftout, Dutch ; ffolz, proud Germa : ffauntan, Gothick, is to ftrike. 1. Strong ; lufty valiant When I was young I do remember how my father faid A floutcr champion never handled fword STO'RYTELLER. 7. /. [ fory and z¢//.] On converfation Affault The faulty fouls from thence brought to his heav'nl cording to the difference of it, any concretion tha can be fuppofed to be naturally and mechanicall made in fuch a fluid, muft have a like firuéture o its feveral parts ; thatis, either be all over ofa imilar gravity, or have the more ponderous parts neare Bentley's Sermons to its bafis he that harrow' Gay a battl reeonan, Saxon, to difturb. incurfion ; tumult Obfolete Milton a hiftorian, in contempt Shakelpeare's Henry V Some captai Stout of his hands Cries, I have fenf And he's a rafca And every fool will fancy he is there Old florytellers too muft pine and die To {ee their antiquated wit laid by Like her, who mifs'd her name in a lampoon And griev'd to find herfelf decay'd fo foon. Dryd Company will be no longer peftered with dull dry, tedious forytellers. Swift's Polite Converfation StovE. n. /. [ ffoo, Iflandick, a fire-place r"cop(l)a, Saxon; effuwve, Fren ; fove Duatch. 1. A hot-houfe; a P place artificially y mad 2 of the land or fleet but of a foldier's wit to ferve my turn, in ftore who pretends to more. Dryden Brave ; bold ; intrepid Pfalm Ixxvi. 5 The ffout-hearted are fpoiled Jc loft the chara&e nanimou man whic of a bold, ffout, and mag he had bee long repute Clarendon to be 3. Obftinate ; pertinacious; refolute; proud ‘The lords all ftand warm Fifhermen who make holes in the ice, to dip u fuch fith with their nets as refort thither for breathing, light on fwallows congealed in clods of 2 flim fubftance, and carrying them home to their flowes the warmth recovereth them to life and flight Careav's Surwey of Cornwall Stoves, which could autumn of cold winter make Fountains in autumn to biing winter back Be '12€ The heat which arifes out of the leffer fpiracle 4. Stroag; fir The fouteft vef StouT. # /. Acant name for firong beer y dro Should but his muf of bread and brings forth nitre and fulphur; fome of which i affixes to the tops and fides of the grottos, whic hind are ufually fo hot as to ferve for natural ffowes o {weating-vaults Weodwvard 2. A place in which fire is made, and b which heat is communicated Addifo uie uwi amazement ffout.] The moft proper place for un&ion is a ffowe not to be met with in an of u Thus we food, as in a ffoand And wet with tears, like dew, the ground Becaufe all the parts of an undifturbed fluid ar of equal gravity, or gradually placed or floried ac i Spenfer 2. To range one under another tale Spenfer If lefs than that I fear The fox his copefmate found To whom complaining his unhappy found thumbs of it being fo big, that no man could graf one of them with both his arms Wilkins Recite them, nor in erring pity fea To wound with fforied griefs the filial ear Pope relate [from the verb. g . '{ mifhap grief 1. Sorrow The Scots retain it to relate How worthy he is, 1 will leave to appear here wh Spenfer z / Stounp Out of ufe He with him far'd fome better chance to find ment erected by the republick of Bern tells us th tion Iflandick. [from the noun. 1. To tell in hiftory Bacon 1 grieved [funde n w StounNp Z Swift '/l'zz/im.m of our own writers be ffoved; and {weet marjoram warm fet Begin and end the bitter baleful flousnd In the road between Bern and Soleurre, 2 monu Jory of ‘an Englithma ter; orange trees, lemon trees, and my In fuch a fatire all would feek a fhare STQRY. 7. /. [yzeen, Sax. ; fforie, Dutch . ( For December, January, and the latter part o November, take fuch things as are g It is floried of the brazen Coloffud, in the iflan of Rhodes, that it was feventy cubits high; th Hoarfe, and all in rage Ifo A floor; a fligh So now he florms with many a fturdy ftoure % My maid left on the table one of her flory books which I found full of firange impertinence, of poo fervants who came to be ladies Savift 7o STOVE. w. a. [from the noun.] To kee warm in a houfe artificially heated Denbam of rooms A brave man ftruggling in the forms of fate i2 Authoris'd by her grandame Shakefp. Macketh "This fcene had fome bold Greek or Britifh bar Beheld of old, what flories had we hear Of fairies, {atyrs, and the nymphs their dames Their feafts, their revels, and their am'rous flames 4. [yeon, place, Saxon. ‘E- is the fafeft flove A woman's flory at a winter's fire Dryden Thi little into the floor, about the middle of it Thefe flaws and ftarts would well becom How by florm the walls were won Orhow the vi€tor fack'd and burnt the town 51 ST If the feafon prove exceeding piercing, in you great houfe kindle fome charcoals; and when the have done finoaking, put them into a hole funk 7 / STou TNESS "{ Strength ; valour 2. Boldnefs fortitude His bathfulnef in y of his virtueand flo Cret th wa fter Sevift Luftily |