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Show 1I . a mh‘"sb;xon‘ Ty'Ncrass [tendgan, Gothick; cen '[I‘o kindle ; to fet on fire Shakefpeare's Otbello me a tapet admitied W I‘u‘.n our ear celt c S i f l w Thofe fparks more fir i a t W 2 Becaufe Irifh linen will foon turn to iinder f v S r f k t a f e g i i o p;nd w o b 3 et l'( To fefeeel in catching moles fees WU yne. o thakin [tinne, Iflandick. is eithe tinder Atterbur 2. Trouble; diftrefs Spenfer to fet on fire ‘Coals of contention and hot vengeance tin'd. Spen The cloud utling or pufh'd with winds, rude in their fhock ine the flant lightning ; whofe thwart flame driv' down Kipdles the gummy bark of fir Milton The prieft with holy hafids was feen to tin Th cloven wood, ) aad P pour the ruddyY wine, Dry ) [einan, Saxon, 0 fhut. Tine. o. To rage ; to {fmart To fight wit SJ]}H{/; V a colou Yith the fame colour o CNCENT. adi [4ineey;, Lat. hPower to tinge and wal making a tinklin wit Tfaiab ured part genuine that fhine betwee th Pope For fayours cheap and commbn whowould ftrive Yet fcatter'd here and there I fome bebold Who can difcern the tinfel from the gold. Dryden If the man will too curioufly examine the {uperficial tinfel good, he undeceives himfelf to his ow No glitCring tinfe! of May-fai Could with this rod of Sid compare Tr'w~ER On n / [from #z; Tm Spin all your cobwebs o'er the eyes of day The mufe's wing fhall brut adorn wit who works in the tin mines T1'NNY. adj. [from #iz.] Abounding wit tin arm of fea that thruft into the #iun Drayton ftrand TiUNPENNY 7./ certai cuftomar duty anciently paid to the tithingmen Bailey T1'NSEL. #. f. [etincelle, Fr. 1. A kind of fhining cloth Havin A tinfel vail her amber locks did throwd Poge luftre that has no value Hence, you phantaftick poftillers in fong My text defeats your art, *tis Nature's tongue Scorns all her #infoil'd metaphors of ‘pelf Illuftrated by nothing but herfelf Cleaveland She, tinfell'd o'er in robes of varying hues With felf-applaufe her wild creation views Sees momentary monfters rife and fall And with her own fool's colours gilds them all Pope, TinT 2 a colour [teinte, Fr. tinta, Ital.] A dye Whether thy hand ftrike out fome free defign Where life awakes, and dawns at ev'ry line And from the canvas call the mimick face. Pope The virtues of moft men will only blow Like coy auriculas, in Alpine fnow Tranfplant them to the equinoétial line,vigour fickens, and their tints decline. Harte. Though it be allowed that elaborate harmony o colouring, a brilliancy of tints, a foft and gradua tranfition from one to-ancther, prefent not to the eye what an harmonious concert of mufick does t the ear; it muft be remembered, that paintin is not merely a gratification of fight. . Reynolds That ftrove to over what it could not hide. Fairf 7z / Aninfe& ™ Ba TYNvy. adj. [tint, tynd, Danif.] Little ; fmall ; puny. A burlefque word Any pretty little tiny kickthaws. Shak, Hen, 1V When that I was a little. tizy boy Atfoolith thing was but a toy. Shak. Taw. Night But ah! I fear thy little fancy rove On females, and on little Joves Thy pigmy children, and thy tiny fpoufe The baby playthings that adorn thy houfe. Swvift Tie. au /o [tip, tipken, Dutch. end; point; extremity Top ; The rip no jewel needs to wear, The tip is jewel of the ear They touch the beard with the #ip of thei and we it t Bacow's Nataral Hifiory Thrice upon thy fingers tip Thrice upon thy rubied lip M:Fon. All the pleafure dwells upon the #ip of his tongue Saxon. Bacon's Hinry VII Thof you all away 7o Ti'NsEL. v. a. [from the noun. T decorate with cheap ornaments; t Prior The Cornifh men, many of them could for need live under ground, that were tinners Savift Ye tinfel infe€ts, whom a court maintains That counts your beauties only by your ftains Didft thou never po Thy head into a tinman's thop WNorris coft Dryden T1'NMAN. 2 /. [#in and man.] A manufa&urer of tin, or iron tinned over but as for th wand'ring ftream hills luftre falf any thing fhewy and of little value Ti'NworM. D:dfley And his ears tink/ed, and the colour fled 3 cture si y the ti aff. orded, appeared of Zion are haughty With deeper brown the grove was overfpread A fudden horrour feiz'd his giddy head pa t i ap ea m ch lefs enrii ched thihl ;l;z' . itgent propesty tinnio 3. 'To hear a low quick noife : Alfe we fhould want bath gibe an fatire TRS }fllfbe burft with pure good-nature. Prior Rt wl'ltlhufim.xs of thubarb and faffro tinge th ith a high yellow Arbuthuot on Aliments Fr he grots that echo to the #inkling rills To tinge the chyle's infipid tide 4118oywood,coi [¢inter Prior Z)U/')c' Th Newton Sh‘e]ays fome ufefol bile afide b To im '-h_e eye with that colour, all objets appea tinge ] 7 wit fhinin thin Milton Or blend in beauteous tint the colour'd mafs 2. It feems to have been improperly ufe €, 5023 to tinge piCtures in the bottom o tincian Moves to the mufick of his tinkling bells (i jaundtilcle ege be tinged with any colour, asin th w An 2 The fprightly horf A red powder mixed with a little blue, or ~ blue with a little red, doth not prefently lofe it cc]ou}-; but a white powder mixed with an coA lour is prefently tinged with that colour, an i ; eqi:xally capable of being tinged with any colou wlatfe"er WNewton's Opticks Lat And faintly tinkled on the brazen fhield Dryden's Ereid [#innio Which flutt'ring, feem'd to loiter as it flew Juft, and but barely, to the mark it held vittes, as well as imperfc&tions, are tinged by ¢ ffl']tal}r:.cxtravagance, which makes them particus. . larly his, 10 s Spe pect tor. Addifon tat or dull with a fenfe o Arbuthnot His feeble hand a javelin threw SirRoger is fomething of an humourift; and hi or feelin the fenfatio By Thetis® tinfel flipper'd feet And the fongs of firens fweet Poge or o pleafure wit with ftretched out necks their feet Spenfer %o Tince. 2. a. [tingo, Lat. o 2 Ti'NKLE To fhut b @v The daughter Of Scots and Englith both, that tined on his ftrand tafte a {en Lat. 1. To make a fharp quick noife ; to clink Eden ftain'd with blood of many a ban pregnate or imbu wit May be with learned juftice weigh'd To turn the balance, Otho's hea May be thrown in : and for the mettle The coin raay mend a tinker's kettle Strifeful Atin in their fftubborn min 2 1 i 2 pai Am not T old Sly's fon, by education a cardmaker, and now by prefent profeffion a tinker Shake[peare My copper medals by the poun 7o TiNE. @+ 4. [Tynan, Saxon. panali totally abolifhed Tink The tragical effect Vouchfafe, O thou the mournful't mufe of nin That wont'ft the tragick ftage tjor to diret 1. To kindle; to light . Welth.] To make a tharp thrill noife TI'NKER. 7 [ [from zink, becaufe thei way of proclaiming their trade is t beat a kettle, or becaufe in their wor they make a tinkling noife.] A mende of old brafs In the fouthern parts of England they daftro ar moles by traps that fall on thfm,‘ and fi fines or teeth thm?ugh them. Mortimer's Hu . In funeral complaiats and wailfel tine eitt hare e Zingling Z .« |1, The tooth of a harrow; the {pike of . fork ( quxc Tn a palfy, fometime 2 fllfll Erowwn They fuck pollution through their tingling veins h l w a e e g m H an is an ancient con fenfation of motion The fenfe of thi word is not very well afcertained t t i t p a T as s o l f h a o b e And tin lantern whic 1 '{'hc pale boy fenator yet tingling ftands Th "N Ty'KDERBOX. Bl 7. D/.A [tinde. r and box. pox for holding pmdea f(,@ fation of motion n a p d t t o inflam b py we ufually fay that fome body is talking of us Hakenvill 'l"vhc ears of them that hear it fhall tingle. Bible e n t d r f a k a f Wh 70,1‘1 NGLE. @, n. [tingelen, Dutch. 14 I(} feel a found, or the continuance o 33 a found, in the ears This is perhap rather tinkle Shake[peai rress I%Z thefe fhamelefs paftimes were .thur yout thereby adding, as it were, fire to tinde ( Bif Ie's but a night-gown in refpeét of yours; clot of gold and cuts, underborne with a bluith #infel Strike on the tinder, ho' Giv m /. [tin and 2lafs. muth gwgsa /. [eynone,inflammabl cendne, Saxon :lANn) thing n. eminentl place r f 1o c Ti South She has fifty private amours, which nobody ye knows any thing of but herfelf, and thirty clan deftine marriages, that have not'been touched b he ¢ip of the tongue Addifen I no longer look upon lord Plaufible as ridicu T lous, for admirin pretty etbow a lady' fine #ip of an ea Zo'T'1P. v, a. [from the noun. 1. To top to end an Pope to cover on the end. In his hand a ree Stood wa:,'}ng, ripp'd ‘.v'}t'n'fire: With truncheon ripp'd with iro The warriour to the lifts he led How would the old king fmil ead Hudibras To fee you weigh! the paws, when tipp'd with gold And throw the faaggy fpoils about your fhoulder Addifon anrto's |