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Show VE VE 4. Permitted ; allowed fi No more of talk where God, or angel-gueft With man, as with his frlcnq, familiar us' To fit indulgent, and yvxth l.nm partak_ Venial difcourfe unblam'd \ VENIALNESS. 7. / Stat 4 And yet it irks me the poor dappled fool Shou'd have their round haunches gor'd, Shakefp We have a hot werifor pafty to dinner. Shakefp In the records of Ireland, no mention is mad of any park, tho' there be vert and wenifon withi T ghisland " VE'NOM. 2. /. [wvenin, French. © He fheds his wenom on the plants below .. 6 ‘i Skakefp. Coriolanus g, Malignant 3 mifchievous hardly exceed the went of that number Pope's Letters 70 VENT. @, a. [wenter, French the noun ; Sventare, Italian. Brown This falfity was broached by Cochleus, a #omous Writer; one carelefs of truth or falfehood Addifon Ve'NomousLy. adv. [ from venomous. Poifonoufly; mifchievoufly; malignantIy His unkindnefs That ftripp'd her from his benedition, turn'd he To foreign cafualties ;-thefe things fting hi So vetonioufly, that burning fthame decains hi From his Cordelia Shake[peare's King Lear His praife of foes is wenomoufly nice 9t9uch'd, it turns a virtue to a vice Dryden VE'Nomouswess, 1. /; [from wenomous. - Poifonoufnefs ; malignity VENT. . /. [fente, French. 1. Afmall aperture ; a hole 3 a fpi acle paflage at which any thing 1s let o t On her breaf There_ 192 went of blood, and fomethin b o The like is on her arm Shake[p. Ant. and Cleop They at once their reed Pu.t fort'b, and to a narrow went app y' ith niceft touch Miltor's Paradife Loft ave near the bung-hole a little went-hole ftopped with a fpile Mortimer's Hufbandry Scarce any countrie that are muc annoye With Car.tbquakes, that have not on of thefe fier vents, d"gorging that fire whereby it gai s an exit any drink, be no Hunger broke ftone walls; that the gods fen no Corn for the ric They wented thei When men ar they might wen that way Had ic been wented and impofed in fome of th moft learned ages, it migh 4 then with fom pre Pope of fecrecy to publici k no In clofe, low, and dirty alleys, the air is penn' up, and obftruéted fro bein wentilated by th winds Harvey Miners, by perflations with large bellows, lettin down tubes, and finking new fhafts, give free paffage to the air, which wentilates and cools th mines Wosdward 2. To winnow ; to fan 3. To examine ; to difcufs i Nor is the right of the party, rior the judicia procefs in right of that party, {o far perempted but that the fame may be begun again, and wentil lated de novo Ayliffe VENTILA"TION 7. /. [wentilatio, Latin from wventilate. 1. The a&t of fanning; the flate of bein fanued The foil, worn with too frequent culture, muf lie fallow, till it has recraited its exhaufted falts and again enriched itfelf by the wentilations of th air Addifon 2. Vent utterance Not in ufe his thoughts, he would break out into bitter eruptions Wotton's Buckingbam 3. Refrigeration Procure the bloo a free courfe, wentilation an tranfpiration by fuitable and ecphraétic purges Harweye VENTILATOR. 7. [ [from wentilate. An inftrument contrived by Dr. Hale t fupply clofe places with frefh air VE'NTRICLE culus, Latin. n. /. [wentricule, Fr, wentri 1. The ftomach Revoke thy doom Or, whilft T can went clamour from my throat 1"l tell thee thou doft evil Shakefp. King Lear 2. Any {mall cavity in an animal body particularly thofe of the heart To emit ; to pour out 5. To publifh Their feators did greatly enrich their inventions, by wenting the ftolen treafures of divine Jet ters, altered by profane additions, and difguifed b poetical conve:fions Raleigh 6. To fell ; to let go to fale This profitable merchandize not rifing to a pro portionable enhancement with other lefs beneficia commodities, they impute to the owners not wezz ing and venturing the fame Careq Therefore did thofe nations went fuch fpice fweet gums and pearls, as their own countij yielded Raleigh To VENT @. n in the air VE'NTALL 'To fnuff as, he wentet Spenfer 7. /. [from wantail, French That part of the helmet made to lift up VENTA'NNA. n. /. [Span.] A window What after pafs' Was far from the wentanna, where I fate But you were near, and can the truth relate. Dryd VU NT R 7,/i [Latin: 1. Any cavity of the body, chiefly applie to the head, breaft and abdomen, whicl Sawift iffued at the went w. a. [ventils, Lat. tence of reafon, have been faid to be the iny e tio of fome crafty ftatefman Stephens A has iffue B a fon, and € a daughter, by on wventer 5§ and D a fon by another wenter If purchafes in fee, and dies without iffue, it fhall defcend to the fifter, and not to the brother of th half blood Hale It fanig by late fetting-out, and fome contr to report are called by anatomifts the three wenzers 2. Womb ; mother ull o'r their heads the fwelling ba h rent d all the fyrie men only: wich thefe fhred complainings. Shak. Coriolanu young, and have little elfe to do the overflowings of their fanc Denba Lab'ring ®ill, with endlefs difcontent The queen of heav'n did thas her fury went, Dryd 3. Toutter 1. To fan with wind Boyle To his fecretary Dofor Mafon, whom he Ie lie in a pallet near him, for natural wentilation o Wosdward at the trouble o PPN 3 went5 or, if you take out the went, fta ot to put it jn ' L gdllag 8€ ouout fro 1. To let out at a fmall aperture 2. To let out ; to give way to A pofterity not unlike their majority of mifchievous progenitors; a wesomous and defru@iv progeny Sale but of wool. Temple's Mifcellany He drew off a thoufand copies o a treatife which not one jn threefcore can under tand, ca @y Ve'~om.w. 4. To infe& with venom topoifon; toenvenom . Ve'Nomovus. adj. [from wenom. == 1. Poifonous And wenomous to thy eyes [Pente, Fr. wenditio, Latin, By this war there is no went for any commo li Dryden Thy tears are falter than a younger man's Milton Land-floods are 2 great mprovement of land where a went can be had Mortimer's ‘Hufbandry For the mart, it was aliedged that th went fo Englith cloths would hereby be open i all time of war Hoyward Your eyes, which hitherto have borne in the The fatal balls of murthering bafilitks Look, when he fawns, he bites 5 and, when he bites His wenom tooth will rankle to the death Shakefpeare's Richard 111 Like fome tall tree, the monfter of the wood O'erfhading all that under him would grow Addifon's Cato : Had, like grief, been dew' in tears Without the wenr of words Poifon Beware of yonder dog Emiffion ; paflage 5. Difcharge; means of difcharge Dryden The wenom of fuch looks we fairly hop Have loft their quality Sbak:;/})ear['s Henry V Philips Davies's Hiffory of Ireland He for the feaft prepard In equal portions with the wen'fon thard a-while Drive the big paffion back into his hea t To our wenzon's ftor We added wine, till we could with no more. Chap 7o VE'NTILATE farmer's cades mature The fmother'd fondnefs burns withi h thn moft it fwells and labour for a went T hf: fenfe of honour and defir of fame an writes it as it is {poken ) venon Shall we kill us wenifon Th Having been informed of divers wentiduéts, wifh I had had the good fortune, when I was a Rome, to take notice of thefe organs Now call for went; his Jands exhauft, p r i 24 m{n]g Milton's Paradife Lofp {from wenial. Wotton 3. The a& of opening of being excufable "l } VENISONn. [ [wenaifon, Fr] Gam beatt of chafe; the fleth of deer. Chap o S riety of weather, whereby the particular defign too went before hand Rural repaft; permitting him ‘the‘wh:l VEEI Ve'NTipver Latin. # /o [wentus an A paffage for the wind dutus WhetherI will or not, while I live, my hear beats, and my wentricle digefts what is in it, Halg Know' tho ho blood whic to th hear doth flow Doth from one wentricle to the other g0 Doane The heart being a mufcular part, the fides ar compofed of two orders of fibres running fpirall from bafe to top, contrarily one to the other; an fo being drawn or contraéted tricles, and ftrongl The mixture o lation through th the left wentricle o heart int th fyftem force out the blood Ray blood and chyle, after its circulungs, being brought back int the heart, is drove again by th aorta throug VENTRI'LOQUIST wente conftringe the wex and loguor th whol arteria Arluthpot 7. /; [wentrilogue, Fr Latin. On wh fpeaks in fuch a manner as that th found feems to iffue from his belly VE'NTURE 2. /& [avanture, French. t. A hazard; an undertaking of chanc and danger When he read Thy perfonal wenture in the rebel's fight His wonders and his praifes do conten ‘Which fhould be thine or his Sbn}:ql:b. Macketh For a man to doubt whether there be any he l and thereupon to live fo as if abfolutely there wer none 3 but when he dies to find himfelf confute in the flames, this muft be the height of woe an dif2ppointment, and a bitter conviction of an irra tional wenture and abfurd choice South I, in this wenture, double gains purfue And laid out all my ftock to purchafe you. Dryd When infinite happinefs is put in on fcale againft infinite mifery in the other that comes to the piou man if h if the worf miftakes, b the beft that the wicked can attain to, if he be i 3 th |