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Show N 5 I TIE 2.4 fmall degree s a {mal quantity feems a loofe term, but is ufed b 2. Proverbially, a preat number She feem'd, when fhe prefented wa to fight His fice was a thought longer than the exa Sidney snetrians would allow the Not one of all the thoufand but was lock'd 00Rer A needle pierced through a globe of cork, cu away by degrees, will fwim under water, yet no My giddinefs feized me ; and though T now totSavift ‘ter, yet I think Iam a thoughe better 4. Promoting meditation mufing t Pope 4. Anxious; folicitous And thoughtful forefight, and tormenting care Dryden The French hugonots are many thoufand wit- neffes to the contrary; and I with they deferve the thoufandrh part of the good treatment they hav received See fettled reafon on the judgment-feat doubt an fear Prior TrOUGHTFULLY. adv. [from thoughtful.] With thought or confideration with folicitude THOUGHTFULNESS, . /. [from thoughs ful 1. Deep meditation TaowL It is fomething peculiarly fhocking to fee gra hairs without remorfe for the paft, and thoughtief of the future ng;rs 3 Stupid ; dull His goodly fabrick fills the eye - And feems defign'd for thoughtlefs majeft Thoughtlefs as monarch oaks that fhade the plain Sawift's Mifcellanies HOUBAND, gdj. or n. / dwyfend, Dutch. ["Supend o | About three thoufand years ago, navigatio o g}f‘;'"fld for remote yoyages was greater than a Bacon Which is inferib'd the fecond, thould be mine Dryden THRA'SHER, 2 /. [fro who thrathes corn threfber' T toil fweat baker' th an b t i counted into the bread we eat: the labour of thof employed about the utenfils muft all be charged Locke THRA'SHINGFLOOR area o A #. / which corn is beaten In vain the hinds the tArefbing-floor prepare Diyden And exercife their flails in empty air Delve of convenient depth your tbrefbing-floo With temper'd clay, then fill and face it o'er Diryden Taraso'vicaL. adi. [from Thrafp, boafter in old comedy.] Doaftful ; bragging humou Hi is lofty his: couri aviour vainy ridiculous }‘. cal TurAVE perembptory 7. f. [Spap, Saxon. OQut of pfe A herd; a drove 2 ThLe number of two dozen. how derived THREAD. z. ./ [Spzd, Saxon 1 Her men tool land firft brought forth Ulyfies, bed, and al "That richly furnitht it; he @ill in rbral Chapman Of all-fubduing flecpe And laid about him, till his nof Tudib From thrall of ring and corcd brolee loofe On Not barely the plowman's pains, the reaper's an I know I'm one of Nat Yet to the leaft and vilefk t That we may fo fuffice - An thrafp. Our foldiers, like a lazy thrafber with a flail Fell gently down, as if they ftruck their friends Shakefpeare But fith fhe will the conqueft challenge need Let her accept me as her faithful rhrall Spenfer Look gracious on thy proftrate thrall Shakef The two delinguent Sax 1. The number of ten hundred Than that Philippick fatally divine Sidney . To labour ; to dradge I rather would be Mevius, thre/b for rhime Like his, the fcorn and fcandal of the times No thralls like them that inward bondage have Tr;o UGHTLESSNESS. . /. [from thought¢.] Want of thought; abfence o Or do him mightier fexvi thought By right of war, whate'er hi HO'UGHTSISCIKC.K. adj.adj. [t[h1/ ought and fick.] 2. Bondage; ftate of flavery or confinec Uneafy with reflection ment Shakefpeare's Hamlet 70 TarasH. TrrRALL. 7/ [Bpzl, Saxon. 1. A flave ; one who is in the power o another Not much in ufe Garth Is t/:«:ugbg/iclz at the act thofe of any wit like a Barbarian flave Shakefpeare's Tmilus and Creffida n./. A piece of timber by whic That were the flaves of drink, and tbralls of fl to drub Thou fcurvy valiant afs! thou art here but t thrafb Trojans, and thou art bought and fold amon Sandys under the Turkith tbraldom He fhall rule, and the in thraldon: live. Dryden They tell us we are all born flaves; life an thrald:m we entered into together, and can neve be quit of the one till we part with the other. Locke in reftlefs hurries thoughtlefsly they liv At fubftance oftof; unmov'd, fo A fhadows grieve v Heav'n'si face doth glo ith trj@ful vifage 5 and, as 'gainft the doom 2. To bedt' That he would labour my delivery -Why fo he doth, when he delivers yo From this earth's thraldom to the joys of heay'n Shakefpeare This country, in-a great part defolate, groanet Bryd Ray Out of your clover well dried in the fun, afte the ficlk threfbing, get what feed you can. Mortin He fwore with fobs Tro'UGHTLESSLY. adv. [from thought. Without thought ; carelefly ; ftupidly Wit ning or threfbing How far am I inferior to thee in the ftate of th mind ! and yet knowI that all the heavens canno bring me to fuch rhraldom Sidney And thrafp it out, and winnow it by day. Dryden This is to preferve the ends of the bones fro an incalefcency, which they being hard bodies woul contraét from a fwift motion ; fuch as that of run ing Ainfworth THRA'LDOM, 7. /. [from thrall.] Slavery fervitude 2. Anxiety; folicitude TrO'vGHTLESS. adj. [from thought. 1. Airy ; gay; diffipated 2. Negligent ; carelefs Ang fpread in folemn ftate fupinely reign Here be oxen for burnt facrifice, and threfbin 2 Samuel, xxiv. 22 inftruments for wood In the fun your golden grain difplay oars are kept in their places when row While the nervous fibres preferve their due tenfion and firmnefs, and the f{pifits are tranfmitte tothem from the brain, endowed with due ftrength fwiftnes, and vivacity, and fuffered to attend thei duty, without the avocations of rhoughrfulnefs an intenfe contemplation, the concoction of the meat is well performed Blackmore Firfk thrajh the corn, then after burn the ftraw Shakefpeare Gideon threfbed wheat to hide it. Fud. viii. 13 Their volumes fwell beyond the thoufandth page In aweful pomp, and melancholy fate - Around ‘her crowd diftruft, an but zbrafb is agreeable to etymology the affairs of love, it may be faid of him, tha Cupid hath clapt him o> th> fhoulder, but I'l warrant him heart whole. - Shakefp. As you like it Such is the poet's lot: what luckier fat Does on the works of grave hiftorians wait More time they fpend, in greater toils engage War, horrid war, your thoughtful walks invades And fteel now glitters in the mufes' thades To TurASH. @. a. [Oapycan, Saxon derfchen, Dutch. 1. To beat corn to free it from the chaff "This is written varioufly thrafb or threft He that will divide a minute into a thoufan parts, and break but a part of a thoufandth part i Phillips favourabl Scottifh dialett; we fay rather rbrotele Tro'usANDTH. adj. [from thoufand.] Th hundredth ten times told; the ordinal o a thoufand: proverbially, very numerous . Thoughtful of gain, I all the live-long da Confume 1n meditation deep /. The windpipe of dn THrAPPLE. 7 They ftill retain 4t in th animal Addifon's Spectator ‘Hm\: rtany thoufands pronounce boldly on the aff:afrs of the publick, whom God nor men never qualified for fuch judgment Watts Brown 2, Attentive; careful The author of nature is not thrallid to'the Jaw Dinniiond of nature a thoufand occafions for generofity and compaffio Jight to fink under the furface, the water may b Donne Dryden Though he regulates himfelf by juftice, he find fink unto the bottom if the cork be a rhought to On thefe he mus'd within his tboughtfu/ mind And then refolv'd what Faunus had divin'd. Dryd For fo ill thralls not them, but they tame ill And make her do much good againft her will Where thou fhalt find thy famous pedig ee Drawn from the root of fome old Tufcan tre And thou, a thoufand off, a fool of long deg ee ug ht the better, becaufe they Y are ourSown half aathothou full ough THO ‘UGHTFUL;: adj7. [thA O an 2 1. Coflteqlpla}txve 3 full of refle€tion; ful of meditation The bad with bad, a fpider with a toad Dryd Search the herald's roll at the leaf -mznu:itefi'\vnh fpirits of wine Statefmen purge vice with vice, and may cozrod Spenfer For harb~our at a thoufand doors they nofk'{, {fi?{ our'own be but equal, the law of common inus to thin Let me be a'flave t* atchicve the maid Whofe fudden fight hath #hra/l"dmywounded eye Shakefpetre So fair, and thoufand, thotfand times mor fai ood writers dulgence allowet TH th draed Dutch.] 1. A fmall line ; a fmall twift - the rudi ment of cloth Let not Bardolph's vital #£read be cu Fit of penny cord and vile reproach s flende i Shak vhread of dyed filk looke of rednefs, yet when numre brought together, thei THarALL, @. a, Spenfer. [fro To enflave ; to bring intc th noun. power of another. Qut of uic me never {o L .B g:,' .7'_' |