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Show T R T R No other noife, nor people's froublous ering ' annoy the walled town are won As fill ther i3" Migh be heard Spenfer As a tall fhip tofled in troublous feas | Whom raging winds threaten to mak the pre S[Jenjcr ‘0f the rough rocks Then, mafters, look to fee a troublous world Shake[peare Only one fuppl " 1n four years troublous and expenfive reign. Daniel In th a ma TRO'VER. 7. /. [traurver,_French. common law, 1s an aftion whic hath againft one that having found an of his goods refufeth to deliver the upon demand Cowel TrouGH. 7. /. [Tn0g, Tnoh, Saxon ; troch Dutch; trou, Danifh ; trang, Hlandick - truogo, Italian.] Any thing hollowed an open longitudinally on the upper fide The bloody boa That fpoil'd your fummer fields and fruitful vines Swills your.warm blood.like wafh, and makes hi trough In your embowel'd bofoms Shakefp. Richard 111 . They had no fhips but big troughs, which the . call canoes Abbot's Defeription of the World . Where there is a good quic fall of rain-water lay a half trough of ftone, of a good length, thre foot deep, with one end upon the high ground - the other upon the low; cover the rrough wit brakes a good thicknefs, and caft fand upon th _ top of the brakes, the Iower end of the troug will run like a fpring of water g Bacon's Natural Hiftory Some log, perhaps, upon the water fwam . An ufelefs drift, which rudely cut within And hollow'd, firft a floating trough became And crofs fome riv'let paflage did begin. Dryden Thatallo is accounted virgin quickfilver, which haying no need to pafs the fire, is' feparated by wate firft in a fieve, and afterwards in a long trough Brown's Trawels The water diffolves the particles of falt mixe " inthe ftone, and is conveyed by long troughs an _canals from the mines to Hall, where it is receive in vaft cifterns, and boiled off ToTROUL Addifon w. 2. [zrollen, to roll, Dutch. 5« See TroLL 1. To move volubly Bred only, and completed, to the taft clean.sh data import.tsv out README Of luftful appetence; to fing, to dance To drefs,-and troul the tongue, and roll the eye D Milton 2. To utter volubly Let us be jocunds - Will vou troul the catc " You taught me while-ere Shake[peare's Tempeft # TrouncE. @. a. [derived by Skinne from tronc or tronfor French a club. Topunith by an indi@ment or information More probable, and like to hol Than hand, or feal, or breaking gold For yvhic.h {o many, that renounc' Their plighted contras, have been trounc'd Hudibras If you talk of peaching, I'll peach firft: I'l " Tréunce you for offerin to corrupt my honefty ‘?R‘O'US? £ Dryder's Spanifb. Friar 7. /. [troufe, ll;;:ench; truzfh Rousers, § Krfe.] Breeches; hofe Sc ROSSERS The leather quilted jack ferves under his fhir mail, and to cover his troufe on horfeback 5 Spenfer on Ireland. o cde unfight_:lmcfé and. pain in the leg m y b 'lf by wearing a laced ftocking5 a laced trouf ; wi Jf 4 L ¥ill do as much for the thigh, Wifeman's Surge y o ROUT, 4, J- [znuhz, Sax. trofa, truta tmttq, Lat, A d‘.'l-‘,.c_?te fpotted fifh, inhabitin g brook #nd quick. fireams s The pond will keep trour and falmon in their feafon ble plight, but not in their reddifh grain Carew Worfe than the anarchy at fea Where fithes on each other prey Where ev'ry trout can make as high ran O'er his inferiours as our tyrants Saift 2. A familiar phrafe for an honeft, or perhaps for a filly fellow Here comes the t7out that muft be caught w t tickling Shakefpeare To 'TROW. v [tpecSian, Saxon; troe Danifh. 1. 'To think ; to imagine ; to conceive. word now difufed, and rarely ufed eve 1n ancient writers but in familiar language What handfomenefs,. troz0 you, can be obferve in that fpeech, which is made one knows not t whom Sidney y Is there any reafonable man, trew you, bu wil Judge it meeter that our ceremonies of Chriftia religion fhould be Popith, than Turkifh or Hea thenifh Hooker To-morrow nex We will for Ireland ; and 'tis time, I trow O rueful day! rueful indeed, I troav Shak Gay 2. To.believe Lend lefs than thou oweft Learn more than thou troweft Shak. King Lear TRrow. interjest. [for I troaw, or trow you. An exclamation of inquiry Well, if you be .not turn'd Turk, there is n more failing by the ftar --What means the fool, trow 2 Shakefpeara TROWEL n. / [truelle, Fr trulla, Lat. - A trowel is a tool to take up the mortar with, and fpread it on the bricks with which alfo they cut the bricks t fuch lengths as they have occafion, an alfo ftop the joints This was dext'rous at his trozvel That was bred to kill a cow well Moxon Saift. z. It is ufed for any coarfe inftrument TrRov-weIGHT. ] 7./ [from Troies, Fr. Trov } A kind of weight b which gold and bread are weighed, confifting of thefe denominations: a poun == 12z ounces ounce = 20 pennyweights ; pennyweight = 24 grains The Englifh phyficians ‘make ufe o troy-aweight after the following manner Grain 2 [Scruple |Drach 6 |Ounc 576a. 28 9 1 The Roman our averdupoi ounce for ou elfewhere 77e no ounce we ha Arbuthnot TRrRU ANT. n /i [truard, old Fr. treuwant Dutch, & wagabord. An idler; on who wanders 1dly about, negleéting hi duty or employment. To play the truan is, in {chools, to ftay from {chool withou leave For my part, I may fpeak it to my fhame I have a truwant been to chivalry from. What keeps you from Wertemberg ~-A truant difpofition, good my lord Shakefpeare's Hamlet He made a bluthing cital of himfelf And chid his truant youth with fuch a grace As if he mafter'd there a double fpirit Of teaching, and of learning inftantly Shakefp Where thou feeft a fingle theep remai In fhades aloof, or couch'd upon the plain Or late to lag behind with zruant pace Revenge the crime To TRU'ANT Dryden [truander to be about a country, French; #ruwanten, ol German.] Toidle at a diftance fro duty ; to loiter; to be lazy *Lis double wrong to truant with your bed And let her read it in thy looks at board. Shakefp Tru aANTSHIP. 2. /. [#rualté, old French from truant : truandife in Chaucer is beggary.] Idlenefs; negligence; neglect of ftudy or bufinefs The mafter fhould not chide with him if th child have done his diligence, and ufed no #ruans Spip Afchan TrUBs 7. [ [tuber, Lat.] A:fort of herb Ainfworth Tru'BTAIL 2./. A fhort fquat woman Ainfworeh TrucE. 2 /. [truga, low Lat. tregua, Ital perfons betwee and fuch as ferve God aright fuperftitiou Hooker They pray in vain to have fin pardoned, whic feek not alfo to prevent fin by prayer, even ever particular fin, by prayer againft all fin, except me ¢an name fome tranfgreffion wherewith we ough to have truce, Heoke All this utter' With gentle breath, calmlook, knees humbly bent Could not mak® #ruce with the unruly fplee Of Tybalt, deaf to peace. Thi Betwix . Me - natura Shake[peare token ferveth for a flag of #ruc ourfelves, and al} our followers Shakefp fhall be lovers of their own felves, withou affe&ion, #ruce breakers 2 Tim. iii. 3 Left the #ruce with treafon thould be mixt *Tis my concern to have the tree betwixt. Dryden Shadwell till death true dulnefs would maintain And in his father's right, and realm's defence Ne'er would have peace.with wit, nor zruce wit fenfe Dryden. 2. Ceflation ; intermiffion ; fhort quiet |Pound left their ounce in Britain Tru'anT, adj. ldle; wanderin bufinefs; lazy; loitering Leagues and truces mad The moft accurate engravings or embofiment feem fuch.rude, bungling, deformed works, as i they had been done with a mattock, or a trowvel Wilkins Providence would only initiate mankind into th knowledge of her treafures, leaving the reft to ou induftry, that we might not live like idle loiterer and truants More Our fhips are laden with the Trojan ftore And you like truants come too late athore Dryden's Aineid 1. A temporary peace; a ceflation of hoftilities Shakefpeare 2 To clothe mine age with angel-like perfection Yet hath Sir Protheus made fair advantage of hi Shakelp. Two Gentlemen of Verona days truie, old French. How thall I anfwer you ~As wit and fartune will -Or as the deftinies decree ---=Well faid, that was laid en-with a #rovel 480 Though myfelf have been an idle truant Omitting the fweet benefit of time Shakefpeare There he may fin Truce.to his reftlefs thoughts, and entertai The irkfome hours Milton Sicknefles, which in the latter years of his lif gave him but fhort and feldom truce Fell TruciDA TION. 7. /. [from trucido, Lat. The a& of killing. o TRUCK. w. n. [troquer,.Fr. truccare Ttal. #rocar, Spanifh; deduced by Sa/ mafiu from TedyE get money. "'T traffick by exchange; to give one commodity for another T |