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Show TH TS FRR g, THIRST, Vo 11 [®ynyean, Saxon ; der This is not the place for a large r . lh?l'c}S A very great inequal t Dutch- o f i t b t i d o R T':;feel wan fo ipft « wit at};;fi thall notfhunger nor thirft. Ifa. xlix. 10 o their Internal endowment conditions, in #hjs life fcoo 1bi1]h' the 1: 3 a Milton ¥ cy{h-cam for an r f d n m h v v h T 2. or after ino: with fo 2 i xl I d G n v l t f et rf th th]w'gibu hunger 'I‘i'll 2 ma r)glltcou{ and thirfls afte hi it o n w t i f n f e u s e f h ti s r Pu i o t a a t e i :21;,\\611 not be deter re o l f g t e ‘fuit of this confefled, g But furious thirfting thus for gore . .P ;$ 1h t c o p a ' n l fh The fons of m gy THIRST. V. 4. To wan l u u n i i T drink t i f g t t c e f a Untam , n , ‘ o a t w o f g For the kin d o b h f i # a h e f ' e e k He fecks hi Brior Th Tar'rsTINESS. 7 /. [from thir/2. ftate of being thirfty Next they will want a fucl{;xingI qnd }(onl};m a fiery appetite to drink in the lime "thirf Wotton ‘tbq/imefs, adj. ['Surxra.g, Saxor}. TEIRSTY fo " 1. Suffering want of drink ; paine want of drink Thy brother's blood the thirfly earth hath drank "Broach'd with the feely point of Clifford's lance Shake[peare Give mea little water to drink, for Ta thirfly Fudges iv Unworthy was thy fate "To fall beneath a bafe affaflin's {tab s dea Whom all the thirfly inftrumento Rowe Had in the field of battle fought in vain 2 Poflefled with any vehement defire : as lim Blood shiry wisie THIRTE'EN. adj. [peozing, Saxon.] Te and three Speaking at the one end, I heard it return th voice thirteen times Bacon's Natural Hiftory THIRTE'ENTH. adj. [from thirteen ; Bpeo . %e06a, Sax. The third after the tenth If fhe could prove a thirteenth tafk for hi Who twelve achiev'd, the work would me befeem Beaumont's Plyche The thirteenth part difference bringeth the bufinefs but to fuch a pafs, that every woman ma Graunt - havean hufband RURTIETH. adj [from thirty ; Bpreee 0%, Saxon. The tenth thrice told the ordinal of thirty Henry fhall cfpoufe the lady Margaret cre th thirtieth of May next enfuing Shake[peare A thirtieth part of the fun's revolution. ~ Hale More will wonder at fo fhort an age : ,T°'fifld a blank beyond the thirtieth page. Dryden Tarrry adj. [Bprcaig Saxon. Thric ten L have flept fifteen years =Ay, and the time feems thirty unto me Shak The Claudian aqq ueduct ran thirt gh -e miles l y- Tms Pronouun. n Addifon [Bir, Saxon. L Thag which is prefent ; what i mentioned no Bardolph and Nim had more valour than his ye A‘Y Were both hanged 5 and fo would this be, if h u t fteal, Shake[peare Lome alxt?le nearer this way Shake[peare Within this three mile may you fe it coming 3> 3 moving grove Shakefpeare's Macbeth Muft Iendyre all thi 2 Shakef4p. Fulius Cexfar 2 - Jbis fame fall comeort us concerning our toil V. L Gena ve 29 a their externa Calamy's Sermons Let not the Lord be angry, an I will fpeak ye but #his once : peradventure te fhall be foun ther'c.. Gen. xviir. 32 brimmin th Hale amony me an 2. The next future 3 i x E r t w f e t e f i t p T} c) e Tui'THERWARD rI?y this the veflel half her courfe ha run. Dryd The laft paft M I have not wept this forty years but no mother comes afrefh into my eyes Dryden 5. It is often oppofed to thar {\s whe two winds with rival force contend Whil Approach, albe his drowfy den were next. Spenfer Madam, he's gone to ferve the duke of Florence We met him thjtheraward, for thence we came Shakefpeare Pope According as the fmall parts of matter are conneed together after ¢his ¢ or that determinate mannery a body of this or that denomination i proBoyle youn talke South T'his way and that the impatient captives tend And prefling for releafe the mountains rend. Dryd #bis an rha refpet a forme fentence, #Ais relates to the latter, that t the former member See THosE Their judgment in this we may not, and in tha we need not follow Hooker 7+ Sometimes it is oppofed to the orher Confider the argument to writ this, o raign him whic the autho ha to defign the other, before you arDryden With endlefs pain #his man purfue What, if he gain'd, he could not ufe And t'other fondly hopes to fe Prior growing in corn fields The leaves of the thiftle grow alternately on th branches, and are prickly; and the heads are, fo the moft part, fquamofe and prickly Miller The roots of #hiftles have my hunger fed Two roods of cultur'd barley give me bread A rock my pillow, and green mofs my bed. Harte Hateful docks, rough rhiftles, keckfies, burs Shakefpeare Get you fome carduus benedi@us, and lay it t your heart thou prick'ft her with a thiffle Shak Thorns alfo and thiftles it fhall bring thee forth Milton s I'L[]'a(]':/é I"_‘/} Tough thiftles choak'd the fields, and kill'd th corn And an unthrifty crop of weeds was born. Dryden Rie grafs will kill thifHes Mortimer's Hu/b A plant zhiffle. Miller Over Wide o'er the zbiftly lawn as fwells the breeze A whitening {hower of vegetable dow Amufive floats Thomfors Summer Tur'ruer. adv 1. To that place [8Sen, Saxon. it is oppofed to hizker We 're coming thither Shakefpeare The gods, when they defcended, hithe Fro heav'n did always chufe their way And therefore we may boldly fay That 'tis the way too zhither Cozvley When, like a bridegroom from- the eaft, the fu Sets forth; he thither, whence he came, doth run Denbans There Pheenix and Ulyfles watch the prey And zhither all the wealth of Troy convey. Dryd 2. To that end; to that point THI'THERTO. adv, [thither an that end; {o far ing very goodly footfteps of their journey \r,"ri(/ craard, but not the like of their return, L'Efrange A tuft of daifics on a low'ry la faw, and thitherward they bent their way adv [Bonne Saxon. 1. Then Spenfer 2. 7ho* contracted for though 7o THOLE. w. n. To wait awhile TroNG n. /. [¥pang Ainfw Bpong Saxon. ftrap, or fring of leather The Tufcan kin Laid by the lance, and took him to the fling Thrice whirl'd the thong about his head, and thre The heated lead half melted as it flew. Dryd. Zn The ancient ceftus only confifted of fo man large thongs about the hand, without any lead a the end Addifen The fmiths and armourers on palfreys ride An nails for loofen'd fpears, and thongs for fhield provide Dryden's Kuight's Tale Trora'cick, adj. [ from thorax. longing to the breaft Be The chyle grows grey in the thoracick du& Arbutbnot THO'RAL adj. [from thorus, Lat. Re The punifhment for adultery, according to th fEe smr R [B1yzel, Saxon ; dieftel Dutch; carduus, Lat.] A prickly wee TH1'STLE, golden. n. / Tar'stry. adj. [ fro grown with thiftles Par. Lof n, leay Milton' As thitheravard endcavouring The foclith beafts went to the li lating to the bed ‘What never was, nor ¢'er fhall be --Ther By quick inf'inétive motion, up I fprung Two Now here, now there, the reeling vefie throw 6. Whe D';‘,‘("é!! freezing Boreas and black Eurus Blnw duced Do we not often hear of this or tha hc}r? are not his riches and his lewdnefie of together an Ne would he fuffer fleep once t,"i!/‘:ml.'an The ‘T/).{ Way and that, the wav'ring fail they bend [ thithe adv Towards that place ward. Bl 7/7"'15 ufed for zhis time 4 z0.] T Roman law, was fometimes made by a thoral fepa ration Ayliffe THORN #.f. [thaurns, Gothick; Sopn Saxon doorne Dutch. 1. A prickly tree of feveral kinds Thorns and thiftles fhall it bring forth Gen, 11i. 18 The moft upright is fharper than a thorn hedge Micab, vii. 4 z. A prickle growing on the thorn bufh Flowers of all hue, and without rhor the rofe Milton 3. Any thing troublefome The guilt of empire; all its thorns and care Be only mine - Southern's Spartan Dawme TrO'RNAPPLE. n. /. A plant. Mortimer Tuo'rNBACK. m f. [raia clavata, Lat. A fea-fifh The thornback, when dried, tate niac of fal ammoArbuthnot THORNBUT 7. S- [ rbombu aculeatus Lat. A fort of fea-fith, Ain/zv. whic he diftinguifhes from thornback or turbot A bir Tuo'RNY. adj. [from thern. 1. Full of thorns ; {piny ; rough ; prickly Not windin He wore, fwee The boar' His neck fhoat ivy, nor the glorious bay head ! a thorny diadem. Randolph eye-balls glare with fire up a thickfet tboray woo His briftled back a trench impal'd appears The wifer madmen did for virtue toi A thorny, or at beft a barren foil Dryden They on the bleaky to Of rugge Dryd hills the thormy bramble crop 2, Pricking ; vexatious Drydes No diflike againft the perfo Of our good queen, but the tharp thorny point Of my alleged reafons drive this forward Shak Stiff oppofition, and perplex'd debate And thorry care, and rank and ftinging hate Pi YVoung 3. Difficult |