OCR Text |
Show Latin. 1. Torments judicially infliéted ; pain b which guilt is punifhed, or confeflion ex 2. To throw with violence Back do I zgfs thefe treafons to thy head. Shak Vulcanos difcharge forth with the fire not onl torted Hecat Then led me trembling through thofe dire abodes And taught the rortures of th' avenging gods Dryden metallick and mineral matter, but huge ftones toffing them up to a very great height in the air Woodward's Natural Hiflory 3. To lift with a fudden and violent motion 2. Pain ; anguifh ; pang be wit Behold how they ffs their torches on high Dryden How they point to the Perfian abodes the dead Than on the zorture of the mind to li In reftlefs extafy 7o To'RTURE Tofs up their heads ¢)ofpeare to excruciate ; to torment Still muft I cherith the dear, fad remembrance At once to zorture and to pleafe my foul Addifor's Cato The bow tsrtureth the ftring continually, an thereby holdeth it in a continual trepidation Bacor's Natural Hiftory To'RTURER. 7. /. [from torture. torture He wh I play the torturer by fmall and fmall To lengthen out the worft that muft be fpoken Shakefpeare When king Edward the fecond was amongft hi torturers, the more to difgrace. his face, they fhave him, and wathed him with cold water; the kin faid, Well, yetI will have warm water; and fo the abundance of tears Bacon's Apophbthegms To'rRviTY. 2. /. [torvitas, 2 Lat. Sournefs ; {everity of countenance No ufed To xvous. adj. [torwus, Lat. Sour o afpe& ; ftern ; fever a Irif wor fignifyin 7o Toss Dire was the zoffing ! deep the groans ! defpai Tended the fick, bufieft from couch to couch Milton Galen tells us ofa woman patient of his who he found very weak in bed, continually #¢/ing an To tofs and fling advance his intere And griev'd that a rory thould liv To'Toss. w. a. [taffen, Dutch ; taffer, Fr Cz(fm///r/z to make a noife t T?/Z')z, Ger Stinner: perhap 20 us, a word ufe have any thin ®Ocvoar fro by thofe who woul throw to them Pret toffed or toff 5 part. pafl. toffed or toft. 1. To throw with the hand, as ball a lay W!Lil this fhe feem' Shakefpeare To Toss up. 'T'o throw a coin into th air, and wager on what fide it fhall fall any pleafure could be foun Toss. #./. [from the verb. i. The act of tofling Siker thy head very tottic is So on thy corbe fhoulder it leans amiffe to play, and, as in fport Dryd Brampf To ToucH "afto 2. To handl violence touching a certain iron with his foot, draw up Travels Browwn' Heidi nor has it any thing like a fling faftened to it, t 2. An affe@ted manner of raifing the head Hi His {word-knot this, his cravat that defigned Dryden There is hardly a polite fentence in the followin dialogues which doth not require fome fuitable tof 3. To reach with any thing, fo as that thlf rea thin th betwee be no ipac v and the thing brought to 1t var us modes from various fathers follow One taught the z9fs,and one the new French wallow the head I'o'sseL #./ See TasserL Sflu'é/? Ficat cach lower corper a handful of hops wit {lightly, without effort o dra 1 ther bridg th o middl In th fennnle th tha artifice fuc wit bridge mad difcovering any force approaching may; by °"h)c Addifon Er. teye Nothing but body can be touch'd or {aucl'; Crecch at Don Livios is perfeétly round add force to the #ofs @. a, [toucker Dutch. 1. To perceive by the fenfe of feeling ifcus that is to be feen in the hand of th o T1fs°d to her love in prefence of the court To TTERY. ) adj. [from totter.] Shaking unfteady o rin of thofe words is ufed Spenfer's Pafloral o toffing up £ v twenty thoufand pound 7o Tose. v. n. [of the fame original wit zeafe.] 'To comb wool dance; Meri 3 1°d try i S'r('jf{ Minfhew Young a recling world indeed, my lord Shakefp And I believe will never ftand uprigh As a bowing wall fhall ye be, and as a ttterin Pfalms fence The foes already have poffefs'd the wall Troy nods from high, and zotzers to her fall. Dry is tgfing on the fea There where your argofie Do overpee the petty traffickers To confound his hated coin | parti nd religions join accumulate. ~Iti Tillstfon And quit thy claim to immortality ! Addif. Owid They throw their perfon with a hoyden ai ‘What news, in this our tot#'ring ftate And thou, my fire, not deftin'd by thy birt To turn to duft and mix with common earth How wilt thou #s/s and rave, and long to die Your min o ground Whi t onl Farnaby fall 2, To be tofled truer than fteel to the Hanover line ov to be reftlefs Acrofs:the room, and tofs into the chair Addi This proteftant zealot, this En lifh divine In church and in flate was of principles foun Wa an and enrages our pain a tory in the country th contralted for the other To To'TTER. @. n. [tateren, to ftagger To fhake fo as to threaten Dutch. tumbling from one fide to another, and totally deprived of her reft Harwey lical hierarchy of the charch of England: oppofed to a awhig becaufe it mor T'oTHER As bad the one as fother commniotion Wholly The found interpreters expound this image o God, of natural reafon; which, if it be totaly o moftly defaced, t he right of government doth ceafe Bacon's Holy War The obdurate finner, that hath long hardene his own heart ag ainft God, thereby provokes him totally to withdraw all inward grace from him Hammond, Charity doth not end with this world, but goe along with us into the next, where it will be perfe€ted : but faith and hope fhall then rotally fai the one being changed into-fight, the-other into ' enjoymerit Atterbury's Sermons Adilton to be in violen ./ [totalité, Fr.] Complet fully; completely to tumble over to winch fum ; whole quantity w. z 1. To fling conftitution of the ftate, and the apofto the town To'raLLY. adv. [from rotal. Prim Either to underg Myfelf the total crime; or to accuf My other feif, the partner of my life Milton's Paradife Lo That fcholar fhould come to a better knowledge in the Latin tongue, than moft do that fpen four years in #gffing all the rules of grammar i common {chools Afcham iavage.] One who adheres to the ancien The knight is mor Cowls, hoods, and habits, with their wearers 75 And flutter'd into rags Milton 2. Whole ; not divided Calm region once To'rY. 2. /. [ Acant term, derived, I fup permit my pray'r And with this gift reward my total care For whofe dear fake fo many troubles her did zofs Spenfer That torwous four look produced by anger, an that gay and pleafing countenance accompanyin love Derbamn fro Be grateful to my queen ToTaA'L1TY 6. To keep in play Milta If all the pains that, for thy Britain's fake My paft has took, or future life may tak , She did love the knight of the red crofs Not ufed pof: Her old poffeflion, and extinguit life 5. T'o make reftlefs ; to difquiet of countenance [totus, Lat. tatal, ¥ The getting of treafures by a lying tongue i Proverbs, xxi. 6 a vanity ¢offéd to and fro Things will have their firft or fecond agitation if they be not toffed upon the arguments of counfel they will be #offéd upon the waves of fortune, an be full of inconftancy, doing and undoing Bacon's E [Jays And full of peace, now #4ff and turbulent They fet and rife Left total darknefs thould by night regai and ftretch their wings. I have made feveral voyages upon the fea, ofte been toffed in ftorms Addifon's Spectator ; taimentor adj M'il 1. Whole ; complete ; full 4. To agitate ; to put into violent motion The fcourge inexorable and the terturing hou Milton Call us to penance 3. To keep on the ftretch To'ravr Prior Hipparchus, my enfranchis'd bondman He may a t pleafure whip, or hang, or rorture preterite and part. paff, of tof In a troubled fea of paffion tof So talk too idle buzzing things 1. To punifh with tortures 2. To vex TosT Addifon's Cato He would not {tay @. 2. [from the noun. S/{.‘z. To'sser. #z. /[ [from 2o/s.] On Wfi throws ; one who flings and writhe To'sspoT. 7. /. [#9fi and por] A top and drunkard He toff his arm aloft, and proudly told me Milton you may conveniently lift the bag w(;xjez'» fgly] w}m ortimers Hufbandyy 1 call'd to ftop him, but in vain Shakefpeare's Macbeth Ghafttly fpafm or racking torture a piece of packthread to make a s A fhepherd diverted himfelf with #offing up egg Addifon and catching them again To'RrurE. 2 J+ [torture, French, tortura Bette To T ON TCOS ff I to o threa a with th He brak XV1 udges B fire th touchet when i fpearMm hi wit Ithurie intent Him thu Touch'd lightly 4. To come to ; to attain pre t da foll impiou Thei On herds devoted to the god of day The |