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Show T H Thofe baflard Britons, whom our father p'd 'd thu an bob aten nu-.- (.;é Sb;. d beaten k Let the lightning of this thunderbe t, whic hath been fo fevere 2 punifhment to one, b a terrour to all King Charles My heart does beat As if twere forging thunderlolts for jove Denbam Have in their lan 2 dall heav Levelld f His manl As almof A watchma To fall or ftrike wit @. 7 7, THUMP IP0F Wh A fton nerre, French. Dutc wit through the air, according to any determination, upwards from the earth, !101'1 right line, or in feveral righ i I.n.]es a it were in ferpentine traéls, joined a various angles, and commonly endin with a loud noife or rattling 2. In popula Mujchenbioek an poetic language the _noife, an thunder "1s commonl lightoing the flath ; though thunder i fometimes taken for both (fro 1 do not bid the rhunder bearer thoot Nor tell tales of thee to high-judging Jove. Shak The revenging god *Gainft parricides all the thunder bend Shakefp 5 whic Fulmination Perhaps hath fpent his fhafts, and ceafes no To bellow through the vaft and boundlefs decp Milton 3. Any loud noife or tumultuous violence So fierce he laid ‘about him, and dealt blow On either fide, that neither irail could hol Ne fhield defend the thunder of his throws. Spenfer ‘Here will we face this ftorm of infolence Nor fear the noify thunder; let it roll ‘Then burft, and fpend at once its idle rage. Rowe Lo Tuo'sDER. . 7. [from the noun. I, To make thunder His nature is too noble for the world He would not flatter Neptune for his trident Nor Jove for's power to thunder. Shak. Coriclanus 2. Tomake a loud or terrible noife So foon as fome few notable examples had thundera du ty into the fubjeéts hearts, he foon thew &d no bafenefs of fufpicion Sidney His dreadful name late through all Spain di thunder clean.sh data import.tsv out README And Hercules® two pillars ftanding nea Did make to quake and fear Spenfer His dreadful voice no mor WOl'lld thunder in my ears Milton Like a black fheet the whelming billo fpread Ul o'er the float, and thunder'd on hi head Lo Tav'spER Pope 9. hat by his daughter's blood we muft appea lana' Dryden 2. To publify any denunciation or threat A archdeacon, as being a prelate, m thund Ut an ecclefiaftical cenfure Ayhiffe fSHUNDERBOLT, n. . [thun b l as 1t fignifies an arrow. be, L Ll%htning; the arrows of heaven oul had a thunderbolint mine eye, I can tell wh down © Vor. II Sbakefpeare n [ [thorjgday, Danifh from thor T hor was the fon of Odin yet in fome of the northern parts the worfhipped the Supreme Deity unde his name, attributing the power over al Tuuv'rspay legion denunciatio kindly bir chat bears Jove's thunderclap Onc day did fcorn the fimple f{carabee Proud of his higheft fervice, and good hap When fome dreadful thunderc, ip is nigh The winged fire thoots fwiftly Y through the fky Strikes and confumes ere fcarce it does appear And, by the fudden ill, prevents the fear. Dryden When fuddenly the thundercl 1s heard It took us unprepar'd, and out of guard. Dryde THU'NDERER. #. /. [from thunder. power that thunders Th How dare you, ghofts Accufe the thunderer, whofe bolt you know Sky-planted, batters all rebelling coafts ? Shakefp Had the old Greeks difcover'd your abod le Crete had n't been the cradle of their &od On that {mall ifland they had look'd with {corn And in Great Britain thought the thunderer born Waller When the bold Typheu Forc'd great Jove from his own heav'n to fly Th leffer gods that fhar' his profp'rou ftate All fuffer'd.in the exil'd thunderer's fate Dryden THU'NDEROUS. adj. [from thunder.] Producing thunder Look in and fee each blifsful deity How he before the thurderous throne doth lie THU'NDERSHOWER fhower. A rai thunder Miltor #. /. [thunder an accompanied wit ‘The conceit is long in delivering; and at laft i comes like a thunderfhower, full of fulphur an darknefs, with a terrible crack Stilling Beet In thunderfbowers the winds and clouds are oftentimes contrary to one another, efpecially if hai falls, the fultry weather below direGting the win one way, and the cold above the clouds another Derkam's Phyfico-Theology THU'NDERSTONE. 7. /i [ thunder an Jflone. A ftone fabuloufly fuppofed t be emitted by thunder ; thunderbolt Fear no more the lightnin Nor th' all-dreaded thunderffone flath Shak. Cymbeline 70 THU'NDERST RIKE. @, 4. [thunder an Srrike. 1. To blaft or hurt with lighrning Sidney he rais'd, and as a her Of goats, or tim'rous flock, together throng'd Drove them before him thunderffruzk Milton With the voice divin Nigh thunderfiruck, th' exalted man, to who Such high ateeft was giv'n, a while furvey' With wonder Milton's Paradife Regaine *Tis faid that thunderftruck Enceladu Lies ftretch'd fupine Addifon 2. To aftonith with any thing terrible Feare from our hearts took inieriou th THUyUs adv ['6ur In this manner It canno t< deities ‘ t 'The fifth day of th Saxon. in this wife be that they wh thus judge The knight hi fpeak rhus, fhoul calling, afked wh Hogker he was Who lifting up hi. head, him anfwer'd tbus .\'[i'fr_"(r I returned with fimilar proof en With tokens thus,and t/ us. Sh To be thus is noth But to be fafely zhus S I have finned againft the Lord, and thus and thu have I done Fofrua, vii. 23 The Romans ufed a like wife endzavour, an whiles in a higher, in a wifer ftrain, making con cord a deity; thus feeking peace not by an oath but by prayer Holyday That the principle that fets on work thefe organs, is nothing elfe butthe modification of matte thus or thus pofited, is falfe Fudge Hale Beware, I warn thee yet, to tell thy grief In terms becoming majefty to hear I warn thee zhus, becaufe I know thy tempe Is infolent Dryden's Don Sebaftian Thus in the triumphs of foft peace I reign Dryden All were attentive to the godlike man When from his lofty couch he thus began Dryden's Zneid 2. To this degree ; to this quantity A counfellor of-ft te in Spain faid to his mafter I will tell your majefty tfus much for your com fort, your majefty hath but two enemies; whereo the one: is all the wotld, and the other your ow minifters Bacon Even thus wife, that is, thus peaceable, were ver heathens 5 #hus peaceable among themfelves, thoug without grace ; zbus peaceable by wife nature ver like grace Holyday He faid, Thus far extend, thus far thy bounds. Milton Thus much concerning the firft earth, and it produétion and form Burnet's Theory No man reafonably pretends to know #bus much but he muft pretend to know all things. Tillotfor This you muft do to inherit life; and if yo have come up thus far, firmly perfevere in it Wake 7o Tuwack. @w. a. [Bacaan, Saxon. To "ftrike with fomething blunt an heavy bour t threfh t bang A ludicrous word to bela He fhall not ftay We Il thavack him hence with diftaffs Shakefp Nick fell foul upon John Bull, to fnatch th cudgel he had in his hand, that he might thevac Lewis with it Arbutbnot Thele long fellows, as fightly as they are, fhoul find their jackets well thevacked Arbuthnot Tawack z /. [from the verb. hard blow A heav But Talgol firft with a bard thwac Twice bruis'd his head, and twice his back The very life; to be fo thunderfiraok With fuch a voice eve him. Stillingfieer. week 1 That made all other fowls his thralls to be. Spenf things Tuv'NbercLar, # /0 [thunder and clap. Explofion of thunder The overthrow Were daily thunder'd in our g neral's ear confi nay not able, to behold that power Oracles fever kinglcd wrath greatef I remained as a man thunderftricken, not daring I. To emit with noife and terrour The feverals alts of worthip which were req res ave e precefl ons genus proceflio g to be performed to im ige fle€tions, thurifications, deofculations, and oblations Stillhng fleet He feverely threatens fuch with the thu of excommunication Hakeavill on Providence The thunde Wing'd with red lightning and impetuous rage is th of the ftory of the Chriftia Th velocity dowpw;ml.s enemi eccleliaftical ; ton a very rapi zontally, obliquely Jupiter Pluvius fendine down rain on the fainting army of M arcus Aure'lius, and thund 2 . Thunder. is a matft ‘brxgh_t flame rxfiAn on a fudden, moving thh_ great violence, an i Latin. [thurifer adj Bearing frankincenfe THauRIFICA TION, 2 [ [thuris and Sacio Lat.] The a& of fuming with incenie the a& of burning incenfe ke moft vemarkable piece in Antorine's pil ar hi THU'NDER. 7. /. [Sunden, Sunop, SaxSwedith 5 donder ean omit the Gracchi, who declar Scipios® wort h, thofe thunderbolts of war H. TaURIFEROUS Dryde The per o f Th right, it tlump'd upo paunch, with fuch a force 1 - 1 ? . 1 ! . ‘ y h h beat him o h at midnight t Tuu'MeER. 7. /. [from thump. dunder TH Chapman Hudibras They place feveral pots of rice, with cudgels i Q th |