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Show v B '"Vth\cfl through the phrafe we plainly fee the fenfe We ought to attempt no more than what is i Truth with fuch obvious meanings will difpenfe th{:;ompaf Granvill vein She accepts the hero, and the dam Wraps in her weily and frees from fenfe of fhame & j}\fig;':}i:k the b(%'rowed -m;il of modcfix from the fo feeming Mrs. Page; divulge Page himfel for a fecure and wilful Aceon Shake|peare's Merry Wives of Windfor i S e Knock on my heart 6. Humour 1. Th vein ket the extrem vena, Lat. back again towards the heart, and unit ing their channels as they approach it till at laft they all form three larg veins; the cava defcendens, which bring the blood back from all the part abov the heart; the cawva aftendens, whic brings the blood from all the parts below the heart; and the porza, whic carries the blood to the liver. Th coats of the veins are the fame wit thofe of the' arteries, only the mufcula coat is as thin in all the veins as it i in the capillary arteries; the preflur of the blood againft the fides of th veins being lefs than that againft th fides of the arteries becanfe it moves from a narrow channe t0 a wider. The capillary veins unit with one another, as the capillary arte ries M Horro chil Ran through his veins, and al his joints relax'd Milton 2, Hollow; cavity Found where cafual fir Had wafied Woods, on moun ain, or in vale 10 the weins of earth ~ Milton's Par. Lof 4 (Ii-et t}}e glafs of the prifms b free from weins 'f\h thelr'fides be accurately pla e, and well polh'ed' Without thofe numberlefs w ves or curls Which ufually arife from fand-ho es 3 Coutfe_ of metal in the mi e Newr. Opt e18den2 wein for the filver Part€Ibi Foby xxviii. 1 €1 weins. dige'd up, nor hath thi eart nltt":ls]s unlike, of mineral and frone Milton 5% 10 mep 3s,in ‘foil's, wher fometimes ther én of gold which the owner know not of Swift's Thoughts « ‘:ffincy orturn of the mind or geni>us WS Remtes; and improve my vein, W aller ufual wein Oldbam 107 Streak; variegation : as, the weins o the marble VE‘INED adj [wveineux VE1inY vein 1. Full of veins French fro 2. Streaked ; variegated The rootof an old white thorn will make ver fine boxes and combs, and many of -them are ver finely weined Mortimer' Hufbandry Eftulgent, hence the weiny marble fhines T homfon VELLE 1TY fro welle 7. / [welleité Fr. welleitas Latin. Velleity is the fchool-term ufed to fignify th loweft degree of defire Lock ‘The wifhing of a thing is not properly the wiliing of it; butit is thar which is called by th fchools an imperfe welleity, and imports no mor tha a idle unoperativ complacenc in an defire of the end, without any confideration of th means South 7o VELLICATE T «.a, [wellico, Latin. twitch ; to pluck; to a&k by fimu lation Thofe fmells are all firong, and do pull and we/licate the fenfe Bacon Convulfions arifing from fomething wellicating nerve in its extremity, are not very dangerous LQuincy anIn my weins3 I was a gentleman. Shake[peare Swift 9. Strain 3 quality fiop up the channel, fo that no blood ca Lfreely told you all the wealth I ha ufurer upon the rig L'Eftrange He can open a wein of true and nobie thinking but if blood thould fall back, it muft fil the valves; and they being diftended When I did firgt impart my love to you,\ th 8. Current; continued prodution and of the porta, are {mall membrane or valves; like fo many half thimble repafs them ftruc The wein I have had of running into fpeculations of this kind, upon a greater {cene of tra e ha; coft me this prefent feryice Temple the horizon, excepting thofe of the uteru tion of the blood towards the heart, the are prefled clofe to the fide of the veins currie Dryden 7. Continued difpofition In all the veins perpendiculat t fuck to the fide of the veins, with thei mouths towards the heart In the mo temper Arbut 70 Verrica'rioN. n. /i [wellicatio, Latin. Twitching; ftimulation All purges hav a kind of twitching and wel/i cation, befides the griping, which cometh of wind Bacon There muft'be a particular motion and wellication impreft upon the nerves, elfe the fenfation o heat will not be produced Watts on the Mind VE'LLuM /). [welin, French; -velmzze;z Latin ; rather «witulinum, low Latin. "The fkin of a calf drefled for thie writer The fkull was very thin, yielding to '}*e leaf preflure of my finger, as a piece of wellum. Wifeman Vevo'city Lat. n f [welocité, Fr. fvc/ocz{a: Speed ; fwiftnefs ; quick motion Had the welocities of the feveral planets bez greater or lefs than they are now, at the fame diftances from the fun; or had their. diffances fro the fun or the quantity. of the fun' matter, an confequently his attractive power, been gieater o lefs tha they are now with. th fame welocities they would not have revolyed in concentric circles 2. welours, Fr. pile upon it and per others afraid of his wit, fo he had need t Th weirn In the veins ther 15 no pulfe, becaufe the blood is throw into them with a continued fiream, an VE'LVET Cla Bentley's Sermons [weluto, Ital willus Lat Silk with a thort fur o in white welvet all their troop they led With cich an oaken chaplet on his head. Drydeni The different ranging the fuperficial parts of bo Wotton's Architecture o capillary arteries reflete fes, very eccentric an be afraid of others Bacon They among themfelves in pleafant wei Stood fcoffing Milton's Paradife Lof Speak'ft thou in earneft or in jefting wei Addifo are only a continuatio whe I put your grace in min Of what you promis'd me -I am not in the giving wein to-day. Sh k. R.1I1 Certainly he that hath a fatirical wein as h m for thou haft {kill to fin #. /. [weine, French moment ; tim Dryden but moved in hyperbolas, or parabolas, or in elljp fections, but likewife their weins and tim s The ill-natured man expofes thofe failings in hu mannature, which the other would caft a weil over VEIN according to ou Artizans have not only their growth And thro' the wei/ of words thou view'ft the nake mind Dryden T ¥ an inclination is predominant 1f it found folid, or be fill'd with wind of our genius b _Fa\‘zour.abl Pope ; a difguife VE dies, as of welvet, watered filk, we think probably is nothing but the different refraétion of their infenfible parts Locke Ve LVET. ad; 1. Made of velvet ‘L'his was moulded on a porringer A welyet difh 2 Soft ; delicate Shakelp. Taming of the Shrew Through the welvet leaves the wind Al} unfeen, "gan paffage find Shakefpeares Poor deer, quoth he, thou mak'ft a teftamen As worldlings do, giving thy fum of mor To that which had too much Then being aloney Left and abandon'd of his welwer friends "Disright, quoth he: thus mifery doth par The flux of company Shake[peares Such bleflings nature pours O'er-ftock'd mankind enjoy but half her frores In diftant wilds, by huma eyes unfeen She rears her flow'rs, and fpreads her welwet green Youtg Zo VE'LVET w. 7 'To paint velvet Verditare, ground with a weak gum arabic water, is the paleft green that is, but good to welwes upon black in any drapery. Peacham on Drawing VE'LURE. m /. [welours, Br. old word Velvet. A His horfe with one girt, fix times pieced, and woman's crupper of welure, pieced with packthread VE'NAL adj Shake[peare. [wenal, Br wenalis, Lat. 1. Mercenary ; proftitate This verfe be thine, my friend, nor thou refuf This, from no wenal or ungrateful mufe Pope 2. [from wein. Contained in the weins. A. technical word it is unreafonable to affirm, that the cool wena blood fhould be heate fo high in the interval o two pulfes Ray Vena'viry. m /0 [wenalité, Fr. from wenal.] Mercenarinefs ; proftitution VENa'rick. adj. [veraticus, Lat.] Ufed in hunting Vena'rion . /. [venatio, Latin. Th act or. practice of hunting The manner of their wenation we fhall find-to b otherways than by fawin away of trees. Browsn Zo VEND @. a. [wendre, French ; wenda Latin.] To fell;; to offer to fale He had a great parcel of glafles packed up, whic not having the occafion he expeted to wend, an make ufe of, lay by him Boyle VENDE'E. 7. /. [ from wend. whoni any thing is {old On t If a vicar fows his glebe, or if He fells his corn and the wendee cuts it, he muft pay the tithes t the parfon Ayliff VE'NDER. 7. [.. [vendear, Fr. from w A feller Where the confumptio wenders feat themfelves of. commodity is, the Graunt Thofe make the moft noife who have the leaf to fell,.which is:very obfervable in the wender o card-matches Addifon VE'N)DIBLE. Radj. o [wendibilis, Lat.] Saleable ; marketable Silence only is commendabl In aneat's tongue dried, and a maid not This fo profitabl Stakefpeare and wsndible a merchandiz rifeth not to a proportionabl enhancemen other lels beneficial commoditiess wit Carew, Th |