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Show T v. a. [from right. Zo T1'GHTEN Tivvr. prep. [z, Saxon.] To the time of Unhappy flave, and pupil to a bell Unhappy i/ the laft, the kind releafing knell Cowvley ftraiten ; to make clofe TI'GHTER A rib tighten. [fro 2. / band or itriug by which women ftraite their clothes Woods and rocks had ear To rapture, ti// the favage clamour drown'd Milton Both harp and voice The unity of place we neither find in Ariftotle 7 /. [from tight. The bones are inflexible; which arifes from th greatnefs of the number of corpufcles that compof Horace, or any who bave written of it, #i// in ou age the French poets firt made it a precept of th Dryden ftage Meditate fo long #// you make fome aét o Taylor prayer to God, or glorification of him To this firange pitch their high affertions tlew Tili Nature's felf fcarce look'd on them as two Woodward on Foffils The femal n. [tik Swedith zeke,. Dutch tique, Fr. 1. The loufe of dogs or.fheep See Tick Lice and rikes are bred by the {weat clofe kept and fomewhat arefied by the hair. Bac. Nat. Hiff 2. It is in Shake/peare the name of a dog in which fenfe it is ufed in Scotland [from #ij% Runick Avaunt a little dog. you curs Hound or fyaniel, brache or lym Or bobtail zike, or trundle tail. Shakefp. King Lear TILE. 7. /. [wigle, Saxon; tege/, Dutch tuile, Fr. tegola, Italian. 'Thin plate of baked clay ufed to cover houfes The roof is all #i/e, or lead, or ftone Bacon's Natural Hiftory Earth turned into brick ferveth for building a ftone doth ; and the like of #i/e. Bacon's Phyfic. Rem In at the win_ow he climbs, or o'er the #iles Milton Worfe than all the clatt'ring tiles, and worf Than thoufand padders was the poet's curfe. Dryd Tile pins mad of oak or fir they driv int holes made in the plain #iles, to hang them upon thei lathing Moxon 9o TiLE. @. a. [from the noun. 1. To cover with tiles Sonnets or elegies to Chlori Might raife a houfe above two ftories A lyric ode would fiate; a catc Wou'd #ile5 an epigram wou'd thatch Swift's Mifcellanies 2. To cover as tiles The rafters of my body, bone Being fill with you, the'mufcle, finew and vein Which #ile this houfe, will come again Donne Tr'LER. n [. [tuilier, Fr. from tile.] On whofe trade is to cover houfes with tiles A Flemith tiler, falling from the top of a hout upon a Spaniard, killed him ; the next of the bloo profecuted his death; and when he was offered pe cuniary recempence, nothing would ferve him bu Jex talionis: whereupon the judge faid to him, h ihould go up to the top of the houfe, and then fai down upon the tiler Bacon's Apophthegms T1LiNG. 2 /. [from tile. vered with tiles 'The roof co went upon the houfe-top, an let hi down through the #iling with his couch before Jefus TiLL Goddefs, fpread thy reign #i// Ifis' elders reel Luke, v, 19 # /. A money box in a fhop 7 Tivr a Saxon ; tenlen [tyhan To cultivate; to hufband Dutch. commonly ufed of the hufbandry of th plow This paradifeI give thee, count it thine Send him from the garden forth, to #i/ The ground whence he was taken Miltor's Paradife Loft The hufbandman tilleth the ground, is employe in an honeft bufinefs that is neceflary in life, an very capable of being made an acceptable fervic Law unto God T1'LLABLE. adj. [from #:/]. for the plow Arable ; fi The tillable fields are fo hilly, that the oxe can hardly take fure footing Carew's Surwey of Cornwall T1LLAGE. #. f [from ¢i/].] Hufbandry the a& or practice of plowing or cultare Tillage will enable the kingdom for corn for th Bacon natives, and to fpare for exportation A fweaty reaper from his tillage brough Firft-fruits, the green ear, and the yellow fheaf Miiton Incite them to improve the tillage of their counth to recove ba an foil t Savift th remed Milton wafte Bid the laborious hind Whof Negleé Tha whethe of tha harden'd hands did long in ti//age toil the promis'd harveft of the foil Dryden there was tillage, Mofes intimates; bu beftowed on all, or only upon fome part earth, as alfo what fort of ti/lage that was Woodward is not exprefled T1'LLER #. /. [from #/l. 1. Hufbandman ; ploughman They bring in fea-fand partly after their nearnef to the places, and partly by the good hufbandry o the ‘tiller Carew Abel was a keeper of fheep, but Cain was a tille Genefisy iv. 2 of the ground Th wor tha gnaw th gueft ripenin fruit fa Canker or locuft hurtful to infef The blade; while hufks elude the tiller's care And eminence of want diftinguifhes the year Prior 2. The rudder ofa boat 3. 'The horfe that goes in the thill perl Pro PHIUDER 4. A till5 a {mall drawer Search her cabinet, and thou fhalt fin TI:L LYFALLY not T confanguineous a not f Shakefp. Tawelfih ;Vi }'l; blooS{? ti/{yq)al_/ey, lady ) Tillyfally, Sir John, never tell me ; yom-gan cient {waggerer comes not in my doors T1r'LmaN. a. [ [#l] and man. TV One.ywho tills; an hufbandman Make ] adv Gil hufband and hufwife their coffers to i1 T TILT. n. /. [zylo, Saxon. 1. A tent; any fupport of covering ove head The roof of linne Intended for a fhelter But the rain made an af Of tilt and canvas And the fnow which you know is a melter, Diyp 2. The cover of a boat Itis a fmall veffel, like in proportion to a Gravef end #i/t-boat Sandys The rowing crew To tempt a fare, clothe all their #i/ts in blue. Gay 3. A military game at which the combat ants run. againft each other with lance on horfeback His ftudy is his ti/t-yard, and his love T'o till, and keep, and of the fruit to eat. Milton Each tiller there with love epiftleslin'd They break up counters, doors and tills And leave the empty chefts in view Pope try Mofs growe:h chiefly upon ridges of houfes tile or thatched Bacon's Natural Hiftory The Coley of the tigrefs, that feveral fpots rif Addifon A 2. To the degree that them, and the firmnefs and #ighrrefs of their union in her fkin when the is angry nent Good fhepherd, good tilman, good Jack and goo 1. To the time when 1. Clofenefs; not loofenefs TikE Milton conjunction TiLL faid was rejected as trifling or imper i Sbaluj})eare's Henr The earth ti// then was defext Sail like my pinnace to thefe golden fhores. Shak Handleyour pruning-knife with dexterity: tigh Iy, 1 lay, go tightly to your bufinefs; you have cof Dryden me much Itis reporte Miiton ##// now 'To that time then TrL Huld, firrah, bear you thefe letters tightly 2. Neatnefs Ti'orEss. n. /. [from #ger. of the tiger 'To the prefent time TiLyL now Pleafure not know TicuarrLy. adv. [from tight. 1. Clofely ; not loofely 2. Neatly; not idly Ti'GHTNESS X A Dry. Fuv A word ufed for Triryvarrey. § merly when any thin Are brazen images of canonized faints Shake[peare's Henry IV He talks as familiarly of John of Gaunt, a if he had been fworn brother to him ; and he neve faw him but once in the zi/t-yard, and then h broke his head Shakefpeare's Henry IV Images reprefenting the forms of Hercules Apollo, and Diana, he placed in the #i/t-yard a Conftantinople Knolles The fpoufals of Hippolite the queen ‘What tilts and tourneys at the feaft were feen Dryden In tilts and tournaments the valiant ftrov By glorious deeds to purchafe Emma's love. Prior 4. A thruft His majefty feldom difmiffed the foreigner till h had entertained him with the flaughter of two o three of his liege fubjects, whom he very dextroufl put to death with the ti/t of his lance Addifons Freebolder 5. Inclination forward ; as, the veflel is tilt, when it is inclined that the liquo ma run out 7o TivT. . . [from the noun. 1. To cover like a tilt of a boat Ajax interpos' His fevenfold {hield, and fcreen'd Laertes' fon When the infulting Trojans urg'd him for With tilted {pears 2. To point as in tilts Now horrid flaughter reigns Sons againft fathers #i/¢ the fatal lance Carelefs of duty, and their native ground Diftain with kindred blood 3. [Zillen, Dutch. Philips Philps 'To tarn up {o as t run out; as, the barrel is rilted; tha is, leaned forward To: T LLTS D 1. 'To run in tilts or tournaments To defcribe races and games Or tilting furniture, emblazon'd thields. ~ Milton 2. To fight with rapiers bu e t a n e e b al Friend s { e b r h o a o i l t Swords out a o 'i f{ Ot e a p e a S d In oppofition blo i t f o o o g t w t Scow'rin t p t i i l # f u f Now w g r a h n k u c e l ; b b e r a ‘Where 'ti d ; e p b e t a t r f e d l To fright th li qu o r[ o % m w f It iis not yet the fathio ' r t s to tilt |