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Show T« T W - qhe fiery orbs above and the zqvinned ftone Upon th Trwi Seri nait ©. Ho [cpman Saxon tion of an eye 70 TWI'NKLE is from rwizn Milton To unite itfelf 7y TWINE. V. 7 clean.sh data import.tsv out README 1. To convolve itfelf; to wrap itfelf clofel ~about Let wreaths of triumph now my temples sawine Thevictor cried, the glorious prize is mine ! Pope and tavine She chieritht with her fong Chapman - Twine, # /. [from the verb. 7 1 A twifted thread [ r t v r Twr'nkLine, /- 1. A fparkling intermitting light 2. A motion of the eye Suddenly, with twinkle of her eye The damfel broke his mifintended dart Spenler I come, I come ; the leaft ravinile had brough me to thee Shields Welcome joy and feaft Braid your locks with rofy iww ne 10pping odours, dropping wine ing tha 3. To wreath; to wind fomething round about revin Philips charged into t} 1e nof rils of the lion ;Iig there t2inged him t ll he made him tear imfelf, and_ fo maf ered him 10 pinch; to tweak L'Efi"‘"" paft his fenf Tl}:::r:w $ 10 way topred ce him ;hencc : layfi:zg g hx‘m by th' ears a d nofe & on of heayy blows #. /. [from the verb "+ Short fudden fhar pain Hudibras a rainbow; whe the,acto gilds' the Twi'NLING. 7. /. [diminative of tawin. A twinlamb ; a Jamb of two brought a a birth Zawinlings increale bring Tuffer's Hufbandry F'wi'NNER. 2. /. [from twin. of twins A breede Ewes yeerley by twinning rich maifters do make "he lambe of fuch twinners for breeders go take Tuffer 7o TWiRL. v. a. [from whirl. To tur round ;to move by a quick rotation Wool and raw filk by moifture incorporate wit other thread 5 efpeciall if there be a little wreath t or rzviff i Pope encircle b There are pillars of fmoke rawiffed about wit wreaths of flame Burnet's Theory of the Earth 4. To form ; to weave If thou doft love fair Hero, cherith it And thou fhalt have her : was t not to this en That thou began'ft to sawif o fine a fory?® Shak 5. To unite by intertexture of parts 6 All know how prodiga Of thy great foul thou art, longing to twif Bays with that ivy which fo early k Thy youthful temples Waller 'To unite ; to infinuate Whe avarice twiffs itfelf, not only wit pratice of mgn all things for the no longer with his refleition, they vanifh in twinkling Dryden The a&ion, paffion, and manners of fo man perfons in a picture, are to be difcerned in twinkling of an eye, if the fight could travel ov fo many different objes all at once Dryden Milton twinge, Dam(h, 1. To torment with fudde ort pain The gna L and arms, an . It can pourvey in fzvinkling of an eye Spenfer Thefe falfe beauties of the ftage are no more laft v 3 Bmbrace; agt of convolving itfelf round Everlafting hat ,jl € Vine to 1vy bears, but with a 'rou Twmc fteeds to writhe Either double it into a pyramidical into a ferpentine form but the de@rines of the when ecclefiaftick chief feems fatal meet Not Typhon huge ending in fnaky rzvine Milton € 2 man i 2. To contort Moncy can thy wants at will fupply Nor all the gods befid Longer dare abide To reprove difcontent, the ancients feigned, tha in hell ftood a man zwiffing a rope of hay; an ftiil he twifted on, fuffering an ~afs to ecat up al that was finithed Taylor Would Clotho wath her hands in milk And twift our thread with gold and filk Would the in friendfhip, peace and plenty Spin out our years to four times twenty And fhould we both in this conditio Have conquer'd love, and worfe ambition Elfe thefe two paffions by the wa May chance to fhew us fcurvy play Prior The taflk were harder to fecure my ow Againft the power of thofe already known For well you rwwift the fecret chains that bin With-gentle force the captivated mind Lyttelion Dryden's Don Sebafian 3. A fhort {pace, fuch as is taken up by motion of the eye zavirl That ever fpider tawiffed from her wom Willftrangle thee Shakefpeare L'Eftra Twi'NKLE th And if thou want'ft a cord, the {fmalleft threa Dryden As though he beckon'd and call'd back his foul Donne heteroftropha Do but defpair we value in th His eyes will tawinkle, and his tongue will roll 2. Twift; convolution goo 3. To play irregularly which her vaunteth mof of foft filken twine Spenfer hung threat'ning o'er his head {lender rzvine of thread. Dryd : \Clafps the tall elm all th a 7o TWIST. v. a. [zecpiran, Sax. rwiffen Dutch. 1. T'o form by complication ; to form b convolution Fairfax The owl fell a moping and twinkling ¥y O friends _Som; one abides within here, that comme d i Theplace to us, and breathes a yoice d vine ~ As fhe fome web wrought, or her fpindle twvise comprife this bein turning from the right hand to the left Waoodward on Foffils z. 'To open and fhut the eye by turns Wil force all nature to fubmit Savift Thedeer ruftles thro' the swining brake, Thomfon Not any damfel - Infkilful knittin A pointed fwor E . Su&ai_n'd but by others telefcopes which have large apertures : for the ray of light which pafs through divers parts of th aperture, tremble each ‘of them apart; and b means of their various, and fometimes contrar tremors, fall at one and the fame time upon different points in the bottom of the eye, . Neorgn clean.sh data import.tsv out README Still to the fea their courfe incline _ Or as philofophers, who fin Some fav'rite fyftem to their mind In ev'ry point to make it fit 4 To turn round irregularly ; t Thefe ftars do not rzvinkle when viewed throug 3. Towind; to make flexures Asiivers, though they ben flat light Friends now faft fworn, who tawine in lov Unfeparable, hall, within this hour On a diffention of a doit, break ou ~ To bittereftenmity Shakefpeare t The tawirl on this is different from that of th Twinkling with fars, they freeze me while the To unite by interpofition of parts @. n. [zpinclian, Saxon. creatures, as the {on doth the light that zzvinkle in the ftars Boyle The ftar of love That teoinkles you to fair Almeyda's bed. Dryden Think you your new French profelytes arc com To ftarve abroad, becaufe they ftarv'd at home Your benefices tavinkled from afar Diyden So weak yourcharms, that, like a winter's nigh Their {ubtile eflfence with the foul of wine Crafbaww fparkle Go Lumps of fugar lofe themfelves, and tewin T 1. Rotation; circular motion 2. Twift; convolution Shakefp Some their forked tails ftretch forth on high And tear the twinkling Rars from trembling fky ' Tain'dy and from her hath no dividual being TwiryL. z /. [from the verb. At firft I.did adore a rewinkling ftar But now I worfhip a‘celeftial fun Shakefpeare. As plays the fun upon the glafiy fiream Tainkling another counterfeited beam So feems this gorgeous beauty Shakefpeare By original lapfe, true libert Is loft, which always with right reafon dwells Not in ufe fll}ne with intermitted light ; to fhin faintly ;' to quiver "Thou fhalt make an hanging of blue, and fin . ywined linen, wrought with needlework e Exodus, xxvi. 36 - or fwin a moment Zo TwirL. w. n. To revolve with a quic motion The mo "That in a tevink fhe won me to het love ' two or more 5. I know not whether thi Some taught with dextrous hand to twir/ the wheel Dodfley She hung about my neck, and kifs on kif She vied fo faft, protefting oath on oath or form one body or fubftance out o See ruddy maids blows and twinges by the ears ? L ER Twink. u. /. [See Twinkre. 2wy Dutch. a pinch ‘can you fawn upon a mafter that give you fo man 1. To twift or complicate {o as to unite 2. A tweak Bor Our fins lay on the king; he muft bear all Shakefpeare ing, as appeateth by the twifting and tawirling abou of fpindles Bacon Dextrous damfels #zvir/ the fprinkling mop. Gay and gives me a twinge for my own fin, though fa fhort of his Dry 3 en gt the fame birth . g, TwiNE . The wickednefs of this old villain ‘fartles me . TwiNBO'RN. adj. [twinand born. T W Z difpute for money D Twist. @, 7. To be contortedL, : to b convolved In anileus, comm guts, is a circumvol the gut within the other Deep in her breaft h thining fword furprife Th' Inach Her twiffin volumes an her r g eyes TwisT. z. /. [from the verb. 1. Any thing made by convolution winding two bodies together Minerva nurs'd hi Within a wiff of twining ofiers laid its breaking firing about th o Addifo 2. A fingle firing of a cord Winding a thi Pope wor hazard by the fretting of the feveral twifi againft one another 3. A cord Moxon's Zli'm'.w:im:'Excny-{.‘s a flring Through thefe labyrinths, not my grov'ling wit But thy filk rwifl, let down from heav'n to me Bid both condut and teach me, how by i To climb to theg Z Herbert Abou |