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Show his bed after different fathions, that h feel every little change, who is not t maid always to lay all things in print, an Locke on Education in warm ZoTuck. v. #n. Tocontraé. A bad word An ulcer difcharging a nafty thin ichor, th edges tuck in, and growing fkinned and hard, giv Sharp's Surgery it the name of a callous ulcer Tu'cker. 7./. A {mall piece of line that fhades the breaft of women A female ornament by fome called a zucker, an being a flip of fine line by others the neck-piece or muflin, ufed to ru in a fmal kin of rufil round the uppermoft verge of the ftays Tv'ckETsoNANCE the tucket mufick A # / ancien inftrument o Let the trumpets foun ‘The tucketfonance and the note to mount Shakefpeare's Henry V Tvu'EL. 7. f. {tuyean, French. The anus Skinner Tu'espay. z /. [cuerdag, Saxon; zuy _Saxon, is Mars. The third day of th week TUEFT. n. f. [tuffe, French. 1. A number of threads or ribbands flowery leaves, or any f{mall bodie joined together Upo fweet brier a fin Let me ftrip thee of thy sufy coat Spread thy ambrofial ftores Thomfen's Summer 7o Tvc No moré tug one anothe felves; receiv comb, a ruft of feathers, or a natural little plume erefted like 2 pinnacle on the top of the head Addifor's Spectator 2. A clufter; a plump Going a little afide into the wood, where man times before fhe delighted to walk, her eyes wer faluted with a tuf? of trees fo clofe fet together, a with the fhade the moon gave through it, it migh breed a fearful kind of devotion to look upon it Sidney My houfe is at the tuft of olives hard by. Shak An ifland li Girt with th' unmeafur'd fea; and is fo nie That in the midft I faw the fmoke arife Through tufts of trees Chapman With high woods the hills were crown'd With zufrs the valleys, and each fountain fid With borders *long the rivers. Miltos's Par. Lo Under a t#ft of fhade, that on.a gree Stood whifp'ring foft, by 2 freth fouritain fid They fat them down 9o TurT @. 2 T Milton's Paradife Loft adorn with a tuft A doubtful word, not authorifed by an competent writer Sit beneath the fhad Of folemn oaks, that z«ft the fwelling mounts ‘Thrown graceful round Thomfon Tyurra'FrETY. 7. [0 [from tufred an taffety.] A villous kind of filk His cloaths were ftrange, tho' coarfe, and black tho' bare Sleevelefs his jerkin was, and it had bee Velvet; but it was now, fo much ground was feen Become tuffiaffity Donne Tu'rrED. adj. [from t4/t. tufts or clufters Growing i There does a fable clou Turn forth her filver lining on the night And caft a gleam over this rufted grove Milton lon continue to draw thus, nor moil your Prife equal ; conquefts crown ye both : the lifts t others lzave Chapman's liiad Thefe two mafiy pillar With horrible confufion to and fr He tugg'd, he fhook, till down they came, and dre Upon the heads of all that fat beneat The whole roofafter them, with burft of thunder Milten Take pains the genuine meaning to explore There {weat, there ftrain, z4g the laborious oar Rofcommon 2. To pull to pluck I mean to tug it, and to cuff you foundly Shakefpeare's Henry V1 There leaving him to his repofe Secur'd from the purfuit of foes And wanting nothing but a fong And a well tun'd theorbo hun Upon a bough, to eafe the pai v. n 1. To pull to draw The meaner fort will tzg luftily at one oar Sandys There is tugging and pulling this way and tha way More Thus galley-flaves rzg willing at their oar Content to work in proipect of the fhore But would not work at all, if not conftrain'd before Dyyden We have been tugging a great while againt th ftream, and hav almoft weathere our point ftretch or two more will do the work 5 but if, inftead of that, we flacken our arms and drop ou oars, we fhall be hurrie whence we fet out 2. To labour back to the plac fro Addifon on the War to contend to ftruggle Caft your good counfel Upon his pafiion; let myfelf and fortun Tug for the time to come. Shakefp. Winter's Tale His face is black and full of blood His hands abroad difplay'd, as one that grafp And rugg'd for life Shakefpeare's Henry V1 They long wreftled and ftrenuoufly tugged fo their liberty, with a no lefs magnanimous tha conftant pertinacy Howe Go now with fome daring drug Bait thy difeafz, and while they tug Tho Spend the dear treafure of thy life Crafbazo Tuc. n /. [from the verb. Pull performed with the utmoft effort Th Vaf by the feet he dre trembling daftard ruin walls Tu'cerr com n at the tug he fails along, rent fro [from tug. tugs or pulls hard th fmokin Dryden On tha Tur'rion. u. /. [tuitio ; from tueor, Lat. Guardianfhip ; fuperintendent care care ofa guardian or tutor A folly for a man of wifdom to put himfelf under the tuition of a beaft Sidney They forcibly endeavour to caft the churches under my care and tuition, into the moulds the have fathioned to their defigns BULIP. iz /; [tulipe, Fr. tul pa A flower L:f The properties of a good tulip are, 1 have a tall flem. 2. The flox\{,er lh'ou d gmf?i?!ug fi leaves, three within, and three without th former being larger than the latter. 3. Thei bo tom fhould be proportioned to their top their up per part thould be rounded off, and n t terminar in apoint. 4. The leaves when opened tho l neither turn inward nor bend outward, but rathe ftan eret; th flower fhoul be of a middli fize, neither over large nor too fmall, 5 Th ftripes fhould be fmall and regular, arifing q it from the bottom of the flower The chives thoul not be yellow, but of a brown colour. They ar generally divided into three claffes, viz. pracoces o carl flowers medias, or middlin and ferotines, or late flowers Howers The early blo'wing the late ones, but are chiefly valued for appearin {o early in the fpring Miller The tulip opens with the rifing, and fhuts wit the fetting fun Hatewill Why tulips of one colour produce fome of an Tu'LIPTREE 7./ 7o TUMBLE len, Dutch «. 2. [tomber, Fr. tommetombolare, Italian. A tree t. To fall; to come fuddenly and violentl to the ground Though the treafur Of nature's germins tumble all together Anfwer me Shakefpeare To ftand or walk, to rife or rumble As matter and as motion jumble Prior Sifyphus lifts his ftone up the hill; which carried to the top, it immediately rumbles to the bottom 2. T fal Addifm i grea oufly quantitie tumultu When riches come by the courfe of inheritanc and teftaments they come tumbling upon a man Bacots 3. Toroll about I faw at th bottom of one tree a gentlema bound with many garters hand and foot, fo as wel he might zzmble and tofs Sidrey Glo'fter ftumbled, and in falling ftruck m Into the rumbling billows of the main Shakcfpeare's Rickard ITI 4. 'To play tricks by various librations o the body Reform our fenfe, and teach the men ¢' obey to maintain the cruel firire Downwar r other, and, running through all, #ill efcape a blue Browwn's Vulgar Errours His tugg'd ears fuffer'd with a ftrain. Hudibras 70 TuG e not enemies to their fatisfaé'tion tulips are not near f{o fair, nor rife half fo high a Prieft, beware thy beard Edg'd round with mofs and fzfts of matted grafs The male among birds often appears in a creft [Teigan, Teogan, Saxon. in the utmoft exertion Near a living ftream their manfion place Dryden v. a 1. To pull with ftrengt Bacon unlike the beard of that animal More againft Atbeifm A tuft of daifies on a flow'ry lea Drydex the former, g Scuth's Sermops When fo much true life is put i nto them freel talk with them about wha moft delights that they may perceive that thof under whofe ::: tion they are, a Tvu'rry. adj. [from r4ft.] Adorned wit tufts. A word of no authority of divers colours, you thall ever find full of whit Itis notorious for its goatith fmell, and txfts no Milton That, crown'd with tufied trees and fpringing corn Like verdant ifles the fable wafte adorn Pope tuft, or bruth of mof Wworms thofe thatgatt;ml;;stih :W join the civil and ecclefiafti al interefts, fettip 'tl]: latter wholly out of the tuition o 'Midit the defert fruitful fields arife Addifon's Guardian The found o 1f govvern ernment depends u po reliiggiion, ¢ i 'th.e pefillt_nt}al defign o Towers and battlements it fees Bofom'd high in tufted trees Where perhaps fome beauty lie ‘The cynofure of neighbouring eyes 2. To inclofe, by tucking cloaths round Mak may no have hi tuck hi TU TOUR U King Charles They 'll leave their tumbling, if you lead theRVv'le o 70 Tu'MBLE, @. a 1. To turn over ; to throw about by wa of examination Whe it came to the ears of Maximilian, an tumbling it over and over in his thoughts, that h fhould at one blow be defeated of the marr;age his daughter and his own, he loft all patience Bacon's Hemy V. I A man by rumbling bis thoughts, and form"f them into expreffions, gives them a new fermenta tion, which worlks them into a finer body Collier on Pridz They tambled all their little quivers o'e To chufe propitious fhafts 2. To thro The min hid ? foruee _..Je Prior by chance or violence aften fets itfelf on work in fearch ideas ;; though fometimes theyizla idea |