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Show TR Z'X'I‘b: come to terms of accommodation You, Mafter Pean Saift gratuitous entertainments mak concer a gren 'I}zie p\‘etend Dryden country hi profefiions fal Dryden Mo {' TREATABLE. adj. [traitable, Fr. derate ; not violent A yirtuous min this world wit fhoul a kin o rather wifh to depar treatabl diflolution rather t than be fuddenly cut off in a moment e c H a a e c a f be taken tha The heats or the colds of feafons are lefs treatabl Temple than with us TREATISE Dif 7. /. [tradatus, Lat. courfe; written tractate Would at a difmal treatife rouze, and fti Shakefpeare As life were in't Befides the rules given in this zreatife to mak a perfet judgment of good pictures, there is required a long converfation with the, beft picces Dryden's Dufrefnoy TREATMENT. 7. /. [traitement, French. - Ufage; manner of ufing good or bad Scarce an humour or charater which they hav ‘not ufed ; all comes wafted to us: and were the to entertain this age, they could not now mak - {fuch plenteous treatment Dryden Accept fuch treatment as a {wain affords. Pope TRE‘ATY. 7. f. [traité, French. 1. Negotiation; a& of treating She began a treaty to procure - And ftablifh terms betwixt both their requeits Spenfer He calt by treaty and by train ,'k‘ clean.sh data import.tsv out README Her to perfuade Spenfor :z A compact of accommodation relatin " to public affairs A peace was concluded, being rather a bargai than a treaty Bacon's Henry V11 Echion the et fall the guiltle(s weapon from his hand And with the reft a peaceful treaty makes Addifon's Ovid ¢ 3 [For entreaty. Supplication ; peti tion; folicitation [ ‘g 1 muf Tothe young man fend humble treaties, dog ,fs :TAfl:l palter in the thift of lownefs Shakefpeare ‘}‘Eaffifi. adj. [#riple, Fr. triplus, triplex Threefold triple T Some I fee - =03t twofold balls and sreble fceptres carry. Shak Who ca His head's huge ¢ oors unlock, whofe jaws wit grea And drgadful teeth in ¢reble ranks are fet ? Sandys nfinié‘lsol:‘ahc{c ferv'd butto bring fort flmangb G}?Q S, grac'e, and mercy.fhc‘wr T Y him feducd; bgt on himfel com"fiofl,‘wrath, and vengeance pour'd Milton A lofty tow'r, TREBLE Creech 7. 'To become threefold d f a ',Wlth.lrc./)k wall Dryden's Ancid TRE A fharp found #reble. Thric and make wooden payments Dryd. Zn Hope, by the ancients, was drawn in the for of a fweet and beautiful child ftanding upon tiptoes and a frefoil or three-leaved grafs in her hand Peacham on Drawing TREE. 7. /. [¢rie, Iflandick 5 #ree, Dan. 1. A large vegetable, rifing with one wood ftem to a confiderable height Some fow trefoil or rye-grafs with their clover Mortimer TREILLAGE Trees and fhrubs, of our native growth in England, are diftinguithed by Ray 1. Such as hav their flowers disjointed and remote from the fruit a garden Ther as, the walnu this kind are the Scotch firs, male and female the pine, the common alder tree, and the birc 3. Bacciferous; as, the juniper and ye tree trees 4. Lanigerous ones ; as, the black, white and trembling poplar, willows, and oficrs of al 5. Such as bear their feeds, having an imkinds perfe& flower, in leafy membranes ; as, the horf 6. Such as have their fruits and f bean contiguous 3 of thefe fome are pomi + apples and pears: and fome bacciferous; as, tn 1, th forb or fervice tree, the white or ha wild rofe, fweet brier, currants, the great bilberr Pruniferous ones, whof bufh, honeyfuckle, ivy foft wit a fton buck‘thoz‘n, the berry-bearing heath, the bramble and fpindle tree or prickwood. Such as have thei fruit dry,when ripe; as, the bladder nut tree, th box tree, the common elm and afh, the maple, th gaule or fweet willow, common heath dyers wood, furze or gorfe, the lime tre¢ Sometime we fee a cloud that' 1.11‘:)()121 Miller dragonifh A forked mountain, or blve promontor Trevoux are as man kinds of gardening as o poetry : makers of flower-gardens are epigrammatifts and fonneteers 5 contrivers of bowers, grottos treillages, and cafcades, are romance writers Spectator TRELLIS. n. /. [French. Is a firuGtur of iron, wood, or ofier, the parts crofli n each other like a lattice 7o TRE‘MBLE « Trewoux n. [trembler, Fr. tremo Latin. 1. To fhake as with fear or cold thiver ; to qua ke ; to fhudder My comj flionate hear Will not pcr'mit my eye to behol The thing, whereat it tre s by furmife in th middle; as, the black thorn or floe tree, the blac and white bullace tree, the black cherry, &ec Bacciferous ones; as, the ftrawberry t weft of Ireland, mifletoe, water elder, large laurel the viburnum or way-faring tree, the dog-berr tree, the fea black thorn, the berry -bearing elder th holly th elder commo berberry the prive of pales to fupportief palliers, making a diftin¢t inclofure of any part o nut tree, the beech, the chefnut and the common oak 2. Coniferous onesj; o an n. /. [French. Treillage is a contextur tree, the haze larg Caniden ‘TrE‘FOI1L. 2, /. [trifolium, Lat.] A plant Miller The feed being fo neceffary for the maintenanc of the feveral fpecies, it is in fome doubly an trebly defended Ray fruit is prett Wooden ; made of wood gold and filver, than drink out of gold and filve The fhicld gave way ; through treble plates it wen 1. Nuciferous ones ALY nfott qf'/ contain : I had rather drink out of ¢reen and pa His jav'lin fent and thefe are Latin Sir Thomas Rookefby being controlled for firf fuffering himfelf to be ferved in ¢reen cups, anfwered, Thefe homely cups pay truly for that the told ; in three-fold number or quantity Of folid brafs, of linnen trebly roll'd [ff"-;::',?r; wite o TREEN. adj Obfolete 'Th The juft proportion of the air percuffed toward the bafenefs or treblenefs of tones, is a great fecre in founds Bacon [fro q/'/{'fl' Dryden Well run greenhood, got betwee Under the fand-bag he was feen Lowting low like a for'fter green He knows his tackle and his trecn. Be At thy well-fharpen'd thumb, from fhore to fhore The trebles fqueak for fear, the bafes roar. Dryd adv their hopes who fancy to inherit An evergreen: the wood is efteemed b Miller turners TREE primrofe. n. /o A plant IT'REENe . old plur. of c #ree "The treble cutteth the air {o tharp, as it returnet too fwift to make the found equal; and therefor a mean or tenor is the fweeteft Bacon The lute ftill trembles underneath thy nail TrE'BLY - branched out thi trac Old captains and diators of their race A plant TREE germander. »./ and 7z¢bles upon him, fo doth his inability to pay it Saift 7./ An Locke vaks are trees By trees of pedigrees, or fame or merit Though plodding heralds through each branch ma . Merch. 'f Ven feebler rays ‘Whoever annually runs out, as the debt double TrE"BLE ftem, and at a goo to branches : thu an - fhrubs Vain ar TRrRE"BLENESS. . /. [from treble. ftate of being treble The time has been, my fell of hai 7 Burnet Trees fhoot up in on earth diftance > trebles, and doubles fix fcore days is a more rational pleafure to this greatnefs f wit Fou but to confider how this zee fprang from a littl feed, how nature fhaped and fed it till it cam 2 t a #rec in fumme covered with green leaves, decked with bloffums or laden with fruit, and cafting a pleafant fhade e due time Spenfer t Eba,r'.‘.fm‘ur«: It is pleafant to look upo E"V:Iv"b\ be Antory and Cleopatrd Baco Who can bid the ¢rec unfix his earth-bound root sbuisac TRE'BLE. @, a. [from the adj &ive triplico, Latin 5 iripler, French. T multiply by three ; to make thrice a much Dry figs and grapes, and }vrmklcd dates were fe n m h i i l v r d g o n k " T e y D t e t m h i h a t i ' g o c L 1 woul t e n a r t e a a v g 5, Somethi canifters t' enlarge the httlc_ treat Shakefpeare' A mufical term or r To with myfel Col p P l b f b ' For one man's freat ~I Dryden's Aneid and trebl a t e f . when recommended by it ier ¢ - to hear reafo b e n t \Wh And mock our eyes with air The fharper or quicker percuflion of air caufet the more #reble found, and the lower or heavier th 2 nm\".f‘uclj apd infight into matter folid brafs 2. Sharp of found o t - This i e a f i d t A parting treaty an With frees upon ', that nod unto the world bafe found 1, An e my f}mt fo The plous Trojan then his jav'lin font O Prior K& 'E?we do no(:gplcafe, at leaft we treat TR Th(. fhield gave way 5 through treb/e plates it wen frequent the great : Inform us, will the emp'ror treat TR t Shak God's And power thou tremblef Shakefp. Henry VI Shew your flaves how cholerick you are And mzake your bondmen tre ible efpeare's. Fulins Cafar Whe h hear He fhook th With terror # An th king h {acred honour fell int fuc Clarendo) n Diryden's Zncid of his head heav'n's fubfiding hill from his fhaken curls ambrofial dews diftil 2 Ye pow'rs revenge your violated altars D‘J'!./L'fl That they who with unhallow'd hands approac Nia ndl - M y tretreno e R w Uu 2. T |