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Show mor than enough. It is ufed to augment th fignification of an adjetive or adver to a vicious degree His will #c0 ftrong to bend, too proud to fearn Comuley Groundlefs prejudices and weaknefles of confcience, sinftcad of tendernefs, miflead foo man hap otherwife obfolete It is fometimes doubled to increafe it emphafis; but this reduplication alway {eems harfh, and is therefore laid afide Oh, that this t05 o0 folid fieth woul Sometimes it would be full, and then ‘Oh ! teo ts0 foon decreafe again Suck/ing Sce what a fcourge is laid upon your hate And 1, for winking at your difcords too Have loft a brace of kinfmen Shake[peare's Romeo and Fulict Let on my cup no wars be found Let thofe incite to quarrels oo Oldbam arriving to fuch a difpofition of mind a fhall mak a ma take pleafure in other men's fins is evident from the text, and from experience to Let thof eyes that vie The daring crime, behold the vengeance too. Pope Fe Took. the preterite, and fometime participle paflive, of take Thy foldiers All levied in my name, have in my th 2. Tafte ; palate The prieft's fervant came while the flefh was i feething, with a fleth hook of three reerh I mad whofe feet an inch an teeth abou The riders would leap them over my hand; an one of the emperor's huntfmen, upon a larg {zol, Tool Sawift Pope's Statius Saxon. the In mulberries the fap is towards the bark only into which if you cut a Iittle, it will come forth but if you pierce it deeper with a roo/, it will b dry Bacon They found in many of their mines more gol than earth; a metal, which the Americans no regarding, greedily exchanged for hammers, knives axes, and the like:¢ools of iron Heylyn Arm'd with fuch gard'ning too/s as art, yet rude GuiltleSs of fire had form d Th ancient Milten's Par. Loft had fome fecret to harde edpesof theirseols th Addifon a being in number fixteen, were abou an half broad, and the intervals of th two inches wide Neéavton's Opticks catch upo correfponden o fbew the TEsTH 7o TooTH thoug that they wer Sbakefpmre To threaten w. a. [from rooth. 1. To furnith with teeth to indent Then faws were tooth'd, and founding axes made b you clog the not oiled wil hardl with never fo muc weight; but apply alittle oil, they whirl about ver fwiftly with the tenth part of the force Ray 5. TooTn and nail. With one's utmof violence; with every means of attack o defence A lion and bear were at tooth and nail whic fhould carry off a fawn L2 Eftrange Th point hooked down like that of an eagle and both the edges roothed, as in the Indian crow Grew's Mufewm Get a pair of tongs like a fmith's tongs, ftronger and toothed at the end Mortimer's Hufbandry 2. To lock in each other It is commo two inche to footh in the ftretching courf with the ftretcher only Moxon's Meckanical Exercifess st r Toorna'cu. #. f. [tooth and ach.] Pain in the teeth There never yet was the philofophe That could endure the roothach patiently However at their cafe they talk'd like gods. Shak He that fleeps feels not the toothach Shakefpeare's Cymbeline I have the toothach ‘What, figh for the toothach Which is but an humour or a worm. Shakefpeare One was grown defperate with the toothach Temple ToOTHDRAWER. 7. /. [tooth and drow. One whofe bufinefs is to extrac painfu teeth Nature with Scots, as teothdrazvers hath dealt Wh ufe to ftring their teeth upon their belt Cleaveland When the teeth are to be diflocated, a fosth Wifeman's Surgery drazver is confulted adj [fro rooth Havin To'oTHLESS. adj. [from footh.] Wantin teeth ; deprived of teeth Deep-dinted wrinkles on her cheek fl.ledra\vs Sunk are her eyes, and toothlefs are her jaws Dryden They are fed with flefh minced fmall, havin not only a fharp head and fnout, but a narrow an teothlefs fnout To'orHPICK To OTHPICKER ‘Raj #. /. [tooth and pick An inftrument b which the teeth are cleanfed from an N thing fticking between them In open oppofition I will fetch you a toothpicker from the farth Shakefp. Much ado about Igafbmg inch of Afia meis {hip' o worfhi m a thpic #oozhpic hi an H The a&tion lie In his true nature, and we ourfelyes compell'd courl thi i whereof Preferve my woods place fom i foun b l har wil hold, ther enough to make a foothpicks Howe 6. 7o the Teerr It warms the very ficknefs in my heart That I_flmll live and tell him o bis teeth Thus diddet thou Shakefpcare's Hamlet 4 Dryden parts of To oTHED The edge whereon the teeth are is always mad thicker than the back, becaufe the back follow the edge Moxon I sy though the ferews and teeth be neve fo fmooth, yet if the reafon teeth other bodies move 1. Any inftrumentof manual operation 1 Sam. ii. 13 inftrument in fathion of a comb 4. The prominent part of wheels, by whic Spetlator #. Shakefpeare bones continue t whole life, as apof one rooth whe out Ray on the Creation an When the law fkews her teeth, but dares not bite, And South-Sea {reafures are not brought to light Young, .5 Shak. King Lear infirument particular occafion, the ignorance of the fculptor applied it promifcuoufiy Addifon ‘This zo0k up fome of his hours every day Toovr 9 3. A tine, prong, or blade, of any multifi boys, maids or matrons; for when the though zook, though at firft it reccived its rife from fuch To Cyrrha's temple [203, Saxon What, haft thou got an ulcer in thy mouth Why ftand'ft thou picking Dryden m Dryden Took us unprepar'd The fame device enclofed the athes of men o tock m foot, thoe and all Leaving Polybus, I resk iy wa the teeth of all rhim fairies Thefe are not difhes for thy dainty tooth T ook their difcharge. Skakefpeare's King Lear He is God in his friendfhip as well as in hi nature, and therefore we finful creatures are no tovk upon advantages, nor confumed in our provocations outh's Scrmons Suddenly the thunder-cla courfer The only way is, not to grumble at the lot the muft bear in ffite of their teeth L' Efirange, . And razure of oblivion The teeth alone among th grow in length during a man' pears by the unfightly lengt its oppofite happens to be pulle Locke Pope drove the groffnef Hovel Defert deferves with charaéters of braf A forted refidence againft the zooth of time At is better than letting our trade fall for wan of current pledges, and better 700 than borrowin The guiltinefs of my min a tooting horn Tooth that poifons if it bite South amoney of our neighbours A courtier-and a patriot too fence 2. It was ufed in a contemptuou which I 4o not fully underftand incifiviy or fore tecth of the upper jaw, appear firit and then thofe of the lower jaw: after them com out the canini or eye teeth, and laft of all th molares or grinders: about the feventh year the are thruft out by new teeth, and if thefe recth b loft they never grow againj but fome have fhe their zeerh twice 5 about the one-and-twentieth yea the two laft of the molares {pring up, and they av Quincy called dentes fapientic Avaunt, you curs Be thy mouth or black or white 3. Likewife ; alfo Th withftanding any power of injury or de. The reeth are the hardeft and fmootheft bone of the body; about the feventh or eighth mont they begin to pierce the edge of the jaw : the dente Eclips'd fometimes, that 'twould fo fall ‘Which wine itfelf enough can do threats exprefled by thewing teeth; nop of the foppery into a received belief, i defpigh TooTs. n /. plural zeeth tand, Dutch. Shake[peare Notwithftandi fenfe This writer fhould wea melt "There would appear no hope at all 8. In fpite of the TEETH With bow and bolts on either hand Spe nfer's Paft For birds and buthes tooting Watts 2 for me thou wouldft freeze, and not be able to hea th yfc]r.. Hovker I caft to go a fhooting Long wand'ring up and down the land and roo far influence the weaker part of mankind To infult by nd and foolith neighboy ty fro «whom lie borrowed wherewith to kindle j y might » / [ caft him therewith in the teeth, faying, Were it no %' fro 1. To pry; to peep ; to fearch narrowl and {lily. It is ftill ufed in the provinces Dryden A wife body's part it were no to put out hi fire, becaufe his f per contracte Saxon zotan thi i [Of this word w. e tecth 7. 9o caft in the T ETH ' open exprobration Toperan, fo Anow Or examine. #co long with u way to our horfes lies baclk agaia:#m'! by the houfe, and thien we fhall meet em fuil in t fenfe, I know not the derivation others, too many, otherwifc good men Spratt's Sermons It is to» much to build a do&rine of fo might confequence upon.fo obcure a place of feripture Locke abid Th And fcorn the tools with ftars and garters Saift So often feen carefling Chartres 7o Toor Ev'n to the teeth and forehead of our ults To give in evidence S at th all He 'd choof To talk with wits in dirty fhoes Your father's rough and ftern ridiculous ftorie wh 2. A hireling; a wretc command of another Too. adv. [<o, Saxon. 1. Over and above; overmuch Thef TO T 9 T O |