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Show TE T L o a bealt ancientl the pa That I be not further redions unto thee, hear u .Even at thy tea? thou hadft thy tyranny. Shak Snows caufe a fruitful year, watering the eart « better than rain ; for the.earth fucks it as out o The goat, how bright amidft her fellow ftars ‘Kind Amalthea, reach'd her scar diften -With milk, thy early food Chief maftery to diffe With long and tedions havock fabled-knights. Milt 3. Slow In zechnical words, or terms of art, they refrai -not from calling the fame fubftance fometimes th fulphur, and fometimes the mercury, of a body Locke TE'CHY adj Peevifh fretful table ; eafily made angry ; froward That what men thought a zedious courfe to run Harte Was finifh'd in the hour it firft begun Te'p1ovsLy.adv Since brevity's the foul of wit And tedioufnefs the limbs and outward flourithes I will be brief Shakefpeare's Hamle 4. Uneafinefs ; tirefomenefs wearying forced we are with very wearinefs, and that often to interrupt them ; which tedicufnefs cannot fall int thofe operations that are in the ftate of blifs whe our union with God is compleat Hooker More than kiffes,. letters' mingle fouls For thus friends abfent fpeak : this eafe controul The tedioufnefs of my life Donne Zo'T'rEM. v. 7. [team, Saxon, offspring. 1. To bring young It the muft reem Create her child of fpleen, that it may live 2. To be pregnant; to engender young Hayve we more fons And wilt thou pluck my fair fon from mine age Shakefpeare When the rifing (pring adorns the mead Teeming buds and cheerful greens appear. Dyyden There are fundamental truths, the bafis upo which a great many others reft: thefe are teemin traths, rich in ftore, with which they furniih th mind, and, like the lights of heaven, give ligh and evidence to other things Locke Te'DDER, or TE'THER. 2. /. [tudder, Dut tindt, a rope, Iflandick. JX. A rope with which a horfe is tied i the field that he may not pafture too wide Teigher, Brfe 3. To be full5 to be charged as a breedin animal 2. Any thing by which one is reftrained We lived joyfully, going abroad within our redder Bacon We fhall have them againft the wall ; we kno "the length of their edder 5 they cannot run fa from us Child W 1. To bring forth; to produce Cannot well fuit with either, but foon prov Tedious alike Milton Pity only on frefh obje&s ftays But with the zedious fight of woes decays. Dryden Ufed of au z nowife injured by us, becaufe it is in their ow TEEN. 7. /. [nan, Saxon # kindle; toney Flem 7 th Sorrow ex 5 'Teonan, Saxon, injuries ]' grief Not in ufe Arrived there barehea knight for dread ang dolef Fry not in heartlefs grief and doleful My heart bleed Spenfe To think o> th> teere that I have turnd you to S Eighty 0dd years of forrow have I feenf tht Sbfl'«'ej}eare. 7o TEEN Saxon. a thing Teens @. a. [from zinan, 10 kindly, To excite ; to provoke to Not in ufe Spenfer z / [fro #ee for ten. Th years reckoned by the termination fzen; as, thirteen, fourteen Our author would excufe thefe youthful fcenes Begotten at his entrance in his reens Some childifh fancies may approve the toy Some like the mufe the more for being a boy Granwills, TreTH the plural of zooth Who can open the doors of his face? his tz are terrible round about 70 TEETH @. 7 Foby xlis 14 [from the noun. T breed teeth; to be at the time of den Whe gum th fymptom of teething appear, th ought to be relaxed by foftening ointment Arbuthnot on Diet Te'cuMENT. 7 [ [tegumentum, Latin] Cover; the outward part. This word i feldom ufed but in anatomy or phyfick Clip and trim thofe tender ftrings in the fafhio of beard, or other hairy teguments Brozon's Vulgar Errourss Proceed by fe@ion, dividing the fkin, and fe parating the teguments Wileman's Surgery In the nutmeg another tegument is the mace b tween the green pericarpium and the hard fhell Ray on the Creations =+, 7o TBH-HE. v. » [a cant word made from the found. To laugh with a lou and more infolent kind of cachinnation to titter Hudibra TeixT earth did not then teem forth its increafe, as formerly, of its own accord, but required culture i W oodward's Natural Hiftory To pour A low word, imagined b Skinner to come from tommen, Danifh to draw out5 to pour 'The Scots retai 1t : as, teem that water out ; hence Swi took this word ou the remainder of the ale into th tankard, and fill the glafs with fmall beer Te'EMER 7. / brings young Saift's DireSions to the Butler [fro teems, And'each hour's joy wreck'd wit a wecl of tepm, Op'ning her fertile womb, teen'd at a birt Innumerous living creatures. Milton's Parad. Lof The deluge wrought fuch a change, that th Tee 7 TE1L tree. n. /. [tilia, Lat.] The fam with linden or lime tree: which fee z¢dioys are i r i4 minute feems a new one Shakefp. Macbe Common mother, tho Whofe womb unmeafurable, and infinite breaft Leems and feeds all. Shakefpeare's Timon of Azbens The carth obey'd ; and firai Bacon Hinfd;uo,f r To fee them take your depofition Lac Te Deum was fung at Saint Paul's after the vic They laugh'd and reb-be'd with derifion What s the neweft grief Shake[p. Henry VIIL The one intenfe, the other ftiil remifs Addifon 7o TEEM. . a The choir With all the choiceft mufick of the kingdom Te'provs. adj. [tedienx, ¥r. tedium, Lat. 1. Wearifome by continuance; troublefome ; irk{ome live ina nation where there is fearce a fingl head that docs not teew with politicks TE DEUM. n./. An hymn of the church fo called from the two firft words of th Latin fhall fee or are we Jike to have Is not my tecing date drunk up with time Mortimer's Hufbandry 2. Brimfu Te EMLESS. adj.g [from teem. ful; not ‘prolifick tition And be a thwart difnatur'd torment to her. Shak ‘Of tedded grafs, and the fun's mellowing beams Rivall'd with artful heats Philips w o perfe€ted in this life, we are not able to perfift Prudent his fall'n heap Colleéting, cherifh'd with the tepid wreath They unto who qualit In thofe very actions whereby we are efpeciall in rows 2. ‘Wearifome by prolixity thers or performances Hooker 3. Prolixity ; length out with the dug ! Shakefpeare's Romieo and Fuliet tory that an which themfelves affign and feltit bitter, pretty fool, to fee itzechy, and fal "Together fung te Deunm them thing can take away the tedioufnefs of prayer, except it be brought to the fame meafure and for As fne is ftubborn-chafte againt all fute. Shakefp When it did tafte the wormwood on the nipple it abroad, they call tedding Dawies 2. Wearifomenefs by prolixity to perfuad prolific Would fain have fled, ne durft ap roaehe:ln':: And in the {weeteft finds a tedionfnzfs In vain we labou a She diftaftes them all within a while -And he s aswechy to be woo'd to wooe The fmell of grain, or tedded grafs, or kine -Or dairy, each rural fight, each rural found. A%/ ‘Hay-makers following the mowers, and caftin Infuc Te'p10USNESS. #. /. [from tedious. 1. Wearifomenefs by continuance I cannot come to Creflid but by Pandar - To lay grafs newly mow [from zedious. a manner as to weary irri Tecro'NicK. adj. [vedoninds.] Pertainin to building Bailey %0 TED. v. a. [ceaban, Saxon, to prepare. fuch infenfible declivity Wit TEEMFUL. adj. [rea r l 1. Pregnan Such wars, fuch wafte, fuch fi Their zeal has left, and'fuc a I:Zml,;}:cgr:fi;;;? But then the road was fmooth and fair to feé nefs; fretfulnefs TE'CHNICAL. adj. [ weywndss technique Fr. Belonging to arts; not in com.mon or popular ufe AbEsy XXV 4 of thy clemency a few words Prior Te'crILY. adv. [from techy.] Peevithly; fretfully; frowardly "Te'cuINEss. z. /. [from rechy.] Peevifh Hooker ling to endure woman the reat Bacon When we perceive that bats have teats, we infer that they fuckle their younglings with milk Brown's Vulgar Errours It more pleas'd my fenfe Than fmell of fweeteft fennel, or the feat Of ewe or goat dropping with milk at even. Wi/ Infants fleep, and are feldom awake but whe Jhunger calls for the teat Locke fpare that labour which they are not wil hands of S On tha A teiltree and an oak have their E‘nbfian.ce them when they caft their leaves Ifaiak, vi. 13 2. / [teinte touch of the pencil Colour French. Glazed colours have a vivacity which can nese be imitated by the moft brilliant colours, bc'cagf( the different reints are {imply laid on, each in it place, one after another D')"{" Ts'LaRY. adj. [tela, a web, Lat.] Spinning webs The piQures of telary fpiders, and their pofitio in the web, is commonly made lateral, and regar ing the horizon; although we fhall _common])' fi it downward, and their heads refpecting the centet Brown's Pulgar Errours TE'LESCOPE . [telefcope, Fr. frhA@I / A long glafs by whic and oworén. diftant objetts are viewed i |