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Show (TEIT P To TurrLL, w, w r S th o n m T e a p e a S rdon m To Pa‘fbrh‘t and four times happy thof ! Y That under Iliian an wawalsll Wiy oy o bebefoforere ththeieir parent i D')ydy'd!d." o Tarip. v. @ [t his is corrupted fro T 'roxbread; in French enfiler. through a narrow paflage {lid i h h o t l n r z m th Some thri Pope Some hang upon the pendents of her ear THRIET. n /. [from thrive. 1. Profit5 gain ; riches gotten ; ftate o Plgfpf:;xrzgout with all his clowns, horft upo ug th a d ifh fur f an s jad car fuc o non e wif ft thr wer tha i with myfelf Sidney my friends or fubjeéts ever to thrive You fome perm}x than other d ills with ills, each worf Sha ft thr ' doe th t de dre the x\dfcx:::llc Had I but the mean .‘,I‘o hold a rival place with one of tl}em I have a mind prefages me fuch sbrift That1 thould be fortunate. Shak. Merch. of Venice Should the poor be flatter'd *Noj let the candied tongue lick abfurd pomp | JAnd crook the pregnant hinges of the knee Shak. Hamlet Where thrift may follow' fawning . Parfimony ; frugality ; good hufbandry The reft unable to ferve any longer, or willin " to fall tothrift, prove very good hufbands Spenfer on Ireland Out of the prefent fparing and untimely ¢hrif? there grow many future inconveniences and conti nual charge in repairing and re-edifying fuch imRaleigh perfe& flight-buiit vefiels Thus heaven, though all-fufficient, fhows a thrif In his economy, and bounds his gift Dryden . A plant BRIFTILY. adv. [from thrifty. gally; parfimonioufly Fru Cromartie after fourfcore went to his country houfe to live tbriftily, and fave up money to fpen at London Saoift THRIFTINESS. 7./. [from thrifiy.] Fru- gality;- hufbandry Ifany other place you have Spenfer Some are cenfured for keeping their own, wlho tenderne(s how to get honeitly teacheth t fpen fhfcreetly} whereas fuch need no great thrifringf in prefer'\'mg their own, who affume more Iibert +Inexadting from others Wotton 4 ' THRI'F7 TLESS. adj.. [from thrif . fafe; extravagant Pro They.in idle pomp and wanton pla C(_mfumcd had their goods and thriftlefs hou s And thrown themfelves into thefe heavy ftowers 'L‘)!‘/é‘l' He fhall fpend mine honour with his flxfzzn{c Astbrifilefs fons their fcraping fathers® gold, S ak 1;\&1 FTY. adj - [from thrifr. L Frugal {paring ; not profufe ; notlavi h ' Thm':gh fome men do, as do the would Let thrifty do, as do they thould Tu fe Nature never lend e fmalleft feruple of her excellence H\lt like 2 thrifty goddefs the det r i e Herfelf the glory of a creditor Nanks and ufe Shakefpeare iLeC& he fhould. negle his fudie of fa young heir, the tbrifty goddefs 0ulc;r young mafter fhould be {poil'd Sawift Of{iv?xrincigxl;i l;leat}}l\as fo Lnuch outh and vigour 1% netrate ; to drill : 'l'lwc. cruel word her tender heart f thrill'd That fudden cold did run through e ery vein Ami ftormy horrour all her fenfe fitl' With dying fit, that down fhe fell for p in He picrced through his chaffed chef Savift Lhave five hundreq rown T?"fl"lfiy bire I fay'd ynde your fa;h,cr Sprung the rank weed creafe Diligenc Spenf Perfona bending his fwor gether, tha 7o THRILL He ha father left Milton end 1. To have the quality of piercing With that one of his thrillant darts he threw Headed with ire and vengeable defpite Spenfer Shakefpeare's Henry IV. H 3 @. . pret. throve, and fome profper ; to gro any thing defired rich Shak Seldom a thriving man turns his land int money to make the greater advantage Lscke The thriven calves in meads their food forfake And render their fweet fouls before the plenteou rack Drydew's Virgil A little hope--Dbut I have none On air the poor camelions thrive Deny'd ev'athat, my love cap live cu the THROAT T bre u amon mu de :t the Englithmen, whe become kcein, are made more fit fo cur thii Stenfo trumpeter that wa made prifoner, whe th were about tu cu s throaty, fays, Why 7. [threa an pipe. throw up. 1. To heave ; to beat; to rife as the breaf with forrow or diftrefs Here may his head live on my threbbing brea® Skakefpeare My heart throbs to know one thing 1all Banquo's iffue ever reign Shakefp. Mach >Twas the clafh of fivord Is fo caft down : my troubled hear and funk amidft its forrows It throbs with fear, and akes at every found. Addif Tow that warm'd me ! How my 7br0bbing hear Leapt to the image of my father's joy Whe you thould firain.me in your folding arms- Swmith 2. To beat ; to palpitate In the depending orifice there wa o th a rbrobbin arterial blood, as.in an aneurifm, the bloo being choaked in by the contufed fleth Wifeman's Surgery Trros. 7 /. [from the verb. beat ; ftroke of palpitation Heave She figh'd from bottom of her wounde And after many bitter throbs did throw Granwille t Zo 'THROB. v, 1. from SeevCiiv, Minfbea and Funius ; formed in imitation of th found, S#inner; perhaps contratted fro For us, his offspring dear? Miltor's Paradife Lof Thofe who have refvlved upon the thyiving for hopes in one > bot- of picty, feldorn embark all t tom Decay of Picty A careful fhepherd not only turns his fock int Dryden 'T'he weafon ; the windpipe THRO'ATWORT. 2. /. [ threat and" avors digitalis, Lat.] A plant If lord Percy thrive not, ere the kin know no middle feafon between their fpring an their fall South Experienc'd age in deep defpair was loft ma'i to the Bi no Ha e an iz roa of any pla in d cet ry id in t ro war on Te eld ie ad ' L ho u I'uro'aTpirE to advance i but with particular advertenc ot every one. Decay of Pi véry nature of fome things all one with them; and the rbroa fhould you kill a man that kills nobody ? ~ L'E/flr The better thou thriueft, the gladderam I. Tuffer a common paifture obferves the thrivin Growth is of th be and to thriwe i the paflages his voic Ca and Of fu ph ro fu T Sail on fmooth feas, and at their port arrive. Sandys O fon! why fit we here, cach other viewin Idly, while Satan, our great author, thrive In other worlds, and happier feat provide He Thef word Difmifs his power, he means tovifit ys.«. = Shakefp It grew amongft bufhes, where commonly pl do not thrive Bacon's Natural Hiftory They by vices thrive ot g gutturals convuls'd hi kill by violence times lefs properly, thrived. part. thriven. [Of this word there is found no fatisfattory etymology : in the norther zo encreafe.] fm 2. Th Addifon Ilandick 7. /' [Enoce; Bnoza, Sax, Lariffa' A faint cold fear thrills through my veins That almoft freezes up the heat of life Shakefp A fudden horror c Ran through each nerve, and #bril'd in ev'ry vein throa Haywar r I Had'moft need of blefin Stuck in my throat 4. To pafs with a tingling fenfation fro The gold I give thee will 1 melt, and Down thy ill-uttering throat Shake[peare,W herefore c % not pronounce, amen In vaults. and prifons; and to thril/ and fhake Ev'n at the crying of our nation's crow Thinking his voice an armed Englithman Shak Art thou not horribly afraid ? Doth not th origina One tha fo well improved that. littl ftock h as he was like to iprove a thriwer in th 1. The forepart of the neck of nutriment and breath To feek fwectfafety out th Law % /. [from thrive. THROAT 3. To feel a fharp tingling fenfation wa ficknefs What thanks can wretched fugitives return V7ho, fcatter'd tbro" the world, in exile mourn Dryde The piteous maiden, careful, comfortlefs Does throw out thrilling thricks, and fhrieking cries Spenfer throv i through 2. To pierce or wound the ear with-a fhar found perhap deligh THRIVINGLY. adv. [from thriving.] a profperous way Taro', contralted by barbarians fro The knight his thrillant {pear agein afiay' In his brafs-plated body to embofs Spenfer 70 THRIVE affeation profpers ; one that grows rich @, blcod ¢Ari/l at it an health an THRIVER almoft won To think her part was done p ride 1efs of finery, are tempers tha muft cither kill all religion in the foul, or be themfelves killed by it; they can no more thrive to Of Cynthia's feat, the aivy region thrilling wa Pope's Effay on Criticifm humility is the way to zhrive i an beauty To his great mafter Shakefpeare's King Lear Nature, that heard fuch 11:1;':'.\! Beneath the hollow roun No an and thriv'd with large in the riches of the underftanding, as well as in‘gold Watts's Logick S/)x'lff;')‘ A fervant, that he bred, thrill'd with remoife Qppns‘d againft the act In the fat age of pleafure, wealth, and eafe With /l:i//:'r:g point of deadly iron b and And lanc'd his lordly heart To fee the rebel thrive, the loyal croft ufe him like a younger chijl no ifty 1135 no more difcretion.ee hufbande‘d charities, that they have thriven and profpered gradually from their infancy down to this very day Atterbury's Sermons To ) piepterce 5 to bore ; to pe diale&t they ufe throdden, to make groaw Which afks fmall pains, but ¢hriftinefs to fave Swedifh. Such a care hath always been taken of the cit . %';?::loble ]ord?lct me intreat of yo [Syphan, Sax, drilla of amplification TH breaft With lips full pale; and faultsing tongue oppreft nle Spenfer Thou |