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Show 5 ON fufpire, Lat. 2 / Sigh /}g}‘u'rm[a f'ro at of fetching th breath deep Not cuftomary fuits of folemn black Nor windy fufpiration of forc'd breath Shake[peare That can denote me truly In deep [ufpirations we take more large gulphs o air to cool our heart, overcharged with love o More forrow o SusP1'RE. @. un. [ fu/piro, Lat. 1. To figh ; to fetch the breath deep 2. It feems in Shakefpeare to mean only to begin to breathe ; perhaps miftake for refpire Since the birt of Cain, the firft male child To him that did but yefterday fu/pire There was not fuch a gracious creature born To SUSTAI'N. @, a. [ feuftenir Shake[peare French Juftineo, Lat. 1. To bear ; to prop to hold up The largenefs and lightnefs of her wings an More tail fuffzin her without laffitude To crufh the pillars that the pile fuffain Dryden's Zneid 2. 'To fupport ; to keep from finking under evil The admirable curiofity and fingular excellenc of this defign will fiflain the patience, and animate the induftry, of him who fhall undertake it Holder 17 he have no comfortable expeétations of -another life to fuflain him under the evils in thi world, he is of all creatures the moft miferable Tillotfon 3. To maintain; to keep What foo Will he convey up thither to fufai Himfelf and army But it on her, not fhe on it depends For fhe the body doth fuffain and cherifh His fons, who feek the tyrant to fuftain And long for arbitrary lords again He dooms to death, aflerting publick right Dryden's Lneid to endure Can Ceyx then fuffain to leave his wife And unconcern'd forfake the fweets of life ? Dryd Shall Turnus then fuch endlefs toil fu/fai In fighting fields, and conquer towns in vain Dryden The mind ftands colle€ed within herfelf, an Suftains the fhock with all the force which is natural to her; but a heart in love has its foundaAddifon tions fapped 6. To beat without yielding Sachariffa's beauty's win Waller 7. To fuffer ; to bear as inflited If you omi The offer of this time, I cannot promife But that you fhail fuffain more new difgraces With thefe you bear already. Shake/p. Henry VIIL Were itI thought death menac'd would enfu This my attempt, I would fufain alon The worft, and not perfuade thee Milton SusTa1'NABLE. adj. [ fouftenalle, French from fifiain.] 'That may be fuftained SusTai'NER 2. / [from fuffain. 1. One that props; one that fupports 2. One that {uffers ; a fufferer Thyfelf hatt a fuffainer bee Of much afiliction in my cavfe many kinds of food many forts of raiment to clothe our nakednefs Hooker Is then the honour of your daughter of greate moment to her, than to my daughter her's, whof Addifon Juftenance it was 2. Neceflaries of life; viétuals The experiment coft him his life for want o L'Eftrange Juffenance The ancients were inventers of all arts neceffar to life and fuffenance, as plowing and fowing Temple SusTENTA'TION. 7. /. [ fuffentation, Fr from fu/tento, Latin. 1. Support; prefervation from falling Thefe ftreams once raifed above the earth, hav their afcent and fuffentation aloft promoted by th Boyle air A very abftemious animal, by reafon of its frigidity and latitancy in the winter, will long fubfif Brown's Vulg. Err without a vifible fuftentation 3. Maintenance Whe fupport of life there be great thoals of people, which g on to populate of lif without forefeeing mean and fuffentation; it is of neceflity that once in a age they difcharge 2 portion of their people upo Bacon other nations SUSURRA'TION, . /. [from fufurro, Lat. Whifper; foft murmur Sort. I believ SuTk. n f [for fuite. only mifprinted matter Chapman's liad 7o Swa'DDLE, . 4, [ypeban, Saxo 1. To fwathe; to bindrin clo'at}is, gége. rally ufed of binding newborn children, Inv fted by a veil of clouds And fwaddled as new-born in fable fhroyds For thefe a receptacle I defign'd Sandy: Whe How foon doth man decay cloths are taken from a cheft of {weet To fwaddle infants, whofe young breat belongin to the church o I fhall futler b Unto the camp, and profits will accrue Shakefpeare's Henry V Send to the futler's ; there you 're fure to fin The bully match'd with rafcals of his kind. Dryd Su'TuRE. n. f. [ futara, Lat. 1, A manner of fewing or ftitching, particularly of ftitching wounds ‘Wounds, if held in clofe contaét for fome time reunite by inofculation: to maintai this fitua tion, feveral forts of futures have been invented thofe now chiefly defcribed are the interrupted, th glovers, the quilled, the twifted an turesy but the interrupte the only ufeful ones an the dry fu twifted are almof Sharp's Surgery z. Suture is a particular articulation : th bones of the cranium are joined one t LQuincy another by four futures Aany of our veflels degenerate into ligaments and the futures of the fkull are abolithed in ol Arbutbnot age SWAB. #. [ [ fwabb, Swedifh.] A kin of mop to clean floors 7o SwaB. @, a. [rpebban, Saxon. T clean with a mop. It is now ufed chiefl at fea He made him fab the deck. Shelvock's Voyage Swa'eBER. 7 fi [ fwabber, Dutch. fweeper of the deck Scarce knows the way Thofe clouts are little winding fheets ‘Which do confign and fend them unto death Herberr, / They fwaddled me up in my night-gown ielrt' long pieces of linen, till they had wrapt me i about a hundre yards of fwathe 2. To beat ; to cudgel word Addifon A low ludicrop Swa'ppLE. n /. [from the verb. Cloaths bound round the body I begged them to uncafe me : no, no, fay they; | and upon that carried me to one of their houfes, to bed in all my fwaddles SwA'DDLINGEAND 7. /. [ from fwad- SwaA'DDLINGCLOATH. > dl. Clot SwA'DDLINGCLOUT wrapped roun gt ¢mpl a new-born child <o And her bafe elfin brood there for thee left Sta Such men do changelings call, fo changed by fai ries theft Spenfer That great baby you fee there is-not yet out o his fwaddling-clouts Shake[peare's Hamlet The fwaddlingbands were purple, wrought wit gold Dryden, 70 SWAG. @. . frigan, Saxon ; faveigia Iflandick.] To fink down by its weight to hang heavy They are more apt, in fwagging down, to pierc with their points, than in the jacent pofture, and: Wotton crevice the wall Being a tall fith, and with his fides much com- <. [ prefled, he hath a long fin upon his back, and another anfiering to it on his belly; by which he i the better kept upright, or from fwa ging on hi fides To SWAGE @. a. [fro eafe ; to foften Greaw To afwage. to mitigate Anpt words have pow'r to. favag The tumours of a troubled mind Miltone And are as balm to fefter'd wounds Nor wanting pow'r to mitigate and favage With folemn touches, troubled thoughts, and chaf Anguith, and doubt, and fear from mortal minds Milsae ¥ will love thee Though my diftracted fenfes fhould forfake me I'd find fome intervals, when my poor hear Should favage itelf, and be let loofe to thine Otavay To SWA'GGER. w. n. [ fwadderen, Dut T to make a noife ; ypegan, Saxon. blufter ; to bully to be .turbulentl)&' n l f i a o p l u u l and tum fo r o f d a g a f l b u f Drun l i n v i o t O o a f th one's o tian w t a p e a S {pirit of win y ha wi h fi l o f a t o o g g "Tis th la m t w r g a f a t ca ra i if he be a es |\ a p e a S night W o gg fiz va ){ tc lo a r m o leffer fize 1 T s E W A L The mafter, the fwabber, the boatfwain and I % m lo f hu r w h _ i e af Many fuc e u e l g ‘ e t a g a f a c fi;'itree., drefs, c Dennis emdi0 From thence a fairy thee unweeting reft There as thou flept'ft in tender favaddlingband, opinions, and to k.mafi xntalhbxht();/:n'vi"c,: i"fi and a fwabber the hero of a tragedy V Addifen Lov'd Mall, Meg, and Marrian, and Margery Shakefpear Was any thing wanting to the extravagance o this degenerate agey, but the making a tarpawli j1 Great on the bench, great in the faddle That could as well bind o'er as fwaddle. Hudibras and put m Su'TLER. 7. f. [ foeteler, Dutch ; fudler A man that {ells provifion German. and liquor in a camp Shakefpear That is mortal can fzfain the fuffenance of our bodie Dawies on pain of perpetual difpleafure ‘Which to madnefs doth incline Such a liquor as no brai as fo There are unto one end fundry means Chrift, this we conceive, that they are not of on Hooker Jute neither to entreat for him, or any way fuffain him 5. To bear Scarcely allowing himfelf fit fuffenance of life rather than he would fpend thofe goods for whof Sidney fake only he feemed to joy in life Milton 4. To help ; to relieve ; to aflift They charged 1. Support ; maintenance Touchin Milton My labour will faffain me #. [ [ fouflenance, Fr. Su'sTENANCE 2. Ufe of viftuals. Vain is the force of man SW SW He chuck'd , n o g t o f fe t And fearcely deign' o Butffw.vérgn d lik a lord e Confidsnce |