| OCR Text |
Show w t o r p t e q @ion of the moon, w o m t e g h i i w e o e g t i ‘e a t h i _ fc !: I' i d t a being moft ftrongly att a a l i b i t t f p o r p the reft; and th t c t a f r t a t e g h f a tracted, i t i t w t ' a r f t "oppofite rifes o o f t o t i o l f reat oce o t a c r l t n a a n k r caft to weft, and f n a a c b n o _ r c e t o the continents, f a a f o r n i b e a o f and fo mak Locke rivers Com Asin the tides of peopl . flirring winds to mak peoplc did light upo 2. Neat Before my eyes will trip the ¢idy lafs two ringleaders Bacons Henry V1 Choufands of men and women, tied together i chu‘ms as faft as their horfes 2 Flows from th' exhilarating fount g, TipE. @. a. [fro ' drive with the ftream 3 "Torn from the naked poop, are tided bac By the wild waves, and rudely thrown afhore Melantius, ftay Yo Atide _ of goods be paid, and the fhips unloadBailey Tr'vewatTer. #. [ [tide and wait. An officer who watches the landing o goods at the cuftomhoufe Employments will be in the hands of Englithmen; nothing left for Irifhmen but vicarages an tidewaiters places &Swift 1o Neatly; rea 11y readinefs Tr'vings. n Neatnels [ziban, Saxon, fo hap penyto betides tidende, Iflandick.] News an account of {fomething that has happened ; incidents related When her eyes fhe on the dwarf had fet SA}?d faw the figns that deadly ridings fpake e fell to ground for farrowful regret Spenfer 1 fhall make my mafter glad with thefe tidings Shakefpeare They wi Great numbers of each nation to receive With joy, the tidings brought from heav'n Milr °;;'"3, thy looks fpeak fomewhat of importce What tidings doft thou bring ? methinks I fe nufual gladnefs fparkling in thy eyes Addifon s szrer;effcngcr of thefe glad ridings, by who etearx: lof mercy was propofed and ratified al Son of his bofom Rogers TLDY[. adj. (tidt, Iflan ick. L Slfa onable f weather be fajre ang tidie, thy grai have m promife ; and m hafty wor Reftrains my tongue, but ties not up my fword Waller Honour and good-natuve may tie vp his hands but as thefe would be very much ftrengthened b reafon and -principle, fo without them they are onl Bailey on board of merchant-fhips till the dut Locke 5!"&‘5]}78{17'0 < waiteror cuftomhoufe officer, whowatche Tr'vixess, u. /. [from #idy to join fo as no Death, that hath ta'en her hence to make me wail Ties up my tongue, and will not let me fpeak TI'DEGATE. 2. /. [tide and gate.] A gat through which the tide paffes into a ba To hold ; to faften eafily to be parted g five Philips it r 4. To hinder; to obftru&t: with #p inten When from his dint the foe fill backward fhrunk . Wading within the Oufe, he dealt his blows And fent them, rolling, to the ziding Humber Tl(;?liLY.ad"U. [from #:dy. Burnet principles 9o Tipt. w. n. To pour a flood; to b agitated by the tide ed to complicate the whole chain that ties them to firft felf-eviden D/‘)'u]t‘fl Tr'pesMan. n. [ [tide and man The intermediate ideas #ie the extremes {o firml together, and the probability is fo clear, that affen neceflarily follows it Locke Certain theorems refolve propofitions which depend on them, and are as firmly made out fro thence, as if the mind went afrefh over every link o . Their images, the relicks of the wreck fon To knit In bond of virtuous love together tied Together ferv'd they, and together died. Fairfax T Kanolles's Hiftory to loofe it Philips noun. th enforced to ru We do not tie this knot with an intention t puzzle the argument; but the harder it is tied, w fhall feel the pleafure more fenfibly when we com Dryden Or violate with dreams thy peaceful reft Continual rid were, by the cruel Turks Addifon inftinéts 5 T oblige to conftrain to reftrain to confine Although they profefs they agree with us touching a prefcript form of prayer to be ufed in th church, they have declared that it fhall not be prefcribed as a thing whereunto they will e their miHooker nifters It is the cowifh terrour of his fpirit That dares not undertake; he'll not feel wrong Which tie him to an anfwer.. Shake/p. King Lear Cannot God make any of the appropriate att of worfhip to become due only to himfelf? canno Stilling flect he tie us to perform them to him They tie themfelves fo ftrictly to unity of place that you never fee in any of their plays a fcen Dryden change in the middle of an aét Not tied to rules of policy, you fin Dryd Revenge lefs fweet than a forgiving mind lefs tied up to a form of words No one feem Locke The mind fhould, by feveral rules, be #zd dow to this, at firft, uneafly tafk; ufe will give it faci Locke lity They have no uneafy expeétations of what is t come, but are ever tied down to the prefent moAtterbury ment A healthy man ought not to # himfelf up t friét rules, nor to abftain from any fort of food i Arbuthnot common ufe 6. It may be obferved of tie, that it ha often the particles #p and down joine to it, which are, for the moft part, littl more than emphatical, and which, whe united with this word, have at leaft con fequentially the fame meaning Tie. 2. /. [from the verb. ¢ fpeedilie carriage, for fear of a raine. Tuffer. | 1. Knot faftening o k y a gr th of e a f h th el re T o fi le le ti a a ca f w k l h e obedien n c B t e f r No foreft, cave, or favage de Holds more pernicious beafts than me Vows, oaths, and contraéts they devife e l F zic re fa ar th u tel A 3. A knot of hair Tie El\c kine to the cart, and bring their calve home from them 1 Samuel, vie 7 s d t i f t y p An t Be bri : {"h‘ou whorfon tidy Bartholomew boar-pig, whe wilt thou leave fighting ? Shakefpeare's Henry IV T1E. @. a. [tian, Tigan, Saxon. ry 1. To bind ;. to faften wit a knot Thou art the ruins of the nobleft man kefpeare d z t i v l That eve The rapid currents driv d t f t Tow But Jet not all the gold which Tagus hides Gay's Paft rony for yatidy ¢7 obligation 2. Bond 3. Tt feems to be here put by miftake o fo thi th(‘rp more rough ready Whenever by yon barley-mow I pafs once up, there want no Stream; courfe k dil k T The well-fwoln ties an equal homage claim And either fhoulder has its fhare of fame. Yousng twer Fr tieire, ol a rank n [ [tiere TiEr A row Dutch. Fornovius, in his choler, difcharged a ticr o great ordnance amongft the thickeft of them Knolles ELERCE [#iers French. tiercier g the third partof a pipe A veflel ho Ber fonfor Go now deny 1.5 tierce Wit, like tierce claret, when 't begins to pali Neglected lies, and 's of no ufe at ail But in its full perfection of d Turns vinegar, and comes again in play z Jo [ fro Tr'erceT Derfet French. tiers A triplet ; three lines T1rr. z. /. [ A low word, I fuppofe withou etymology. 1. Liquor; drink 1, whom griping penury furrounds And hunger, fure attendant upon want fcanty oftals, and {mall acid 7/ Wit Wretched repaft ! my meagre corps fuitain. Phillips 2. A fit of peevifhnefs or fullennefs ; a pet w. 7 Yo TirF rel To be in a pet to qua A low word ol TYrrany. n. f. [tiffer, to drefs up Fr. Skinner.] Very thin filk Th fmoa black a paper of fulphur will no and is commonl ufe by wome nies to whiten tiffaBrown The {haf TicE. 7./. [in architelure. of a column from the aftragal to the caBailey pital Tr'GeR. n [ [tigre, Fr. tigris, Latin. A fierce beait of the leonine kind Whe the blaft of war blows in you ear Then imitate the action of the tiger Stiffen the finews, fumnmon up the blocd Shakefpeare's Henry V Approach thou like the rugged Ruflian bear Th arm'd rhinoceros, or Hyrcanian ziger Take any fhape but that, and my firm nerve Shakefpeare's Macbeth Shall never tremble Has the fteer At whofe ftrong cheft the deadly tiger hangs T homfon's Spring E'er plow'd for him TIGHE 1. Tenfe adj. [dich, Dutch. clofe; not loofe If the centre holes be not very deep, and th pikes fill them not very #ight, the firength of th ftring will alter the centre holes Moxon's Mechanical Exercifes I do not like this running knot, it hold tight5 1 may be ftifled all of a fudden to Arbuthnor's Hiftory of Fobn Bull Every joint was well grooved 3 and the deor di not move on hinges, but up and down like a fath which kept my clofet fo zight that very little wate Savift came in 2. Fre fro flutterin rags lef tha neat A tight maid, ere he for wine can afk Guefles his meaning, and unoils the flatk Drydew's Fuwvenal The girl was a tight clever wenchas any. Arbuth . O Thomas 1'll mak a loving wife 1'1l fpinand card, and keep our children tight. Gay Dreft her agaio genteel and neat Aad rather #ight Qthan great Savift :T |