| OCR Text |
Show ¥y¥ VIT I difdaining fcorn'd, and craved death Rather than I would be fo wile efteemed. Shakefp He to-day that fheds his blood with me Shall be my brpther; be he ne'er fo wile Shakefpeare "This day fhall gentle his condition O ye Pegafian nymphs, that, hating wiler tiifgs Delight in lofty bills, and in delicious fprings Drayton The inhabitants account gold but as a wile thing Abbot That finful creature man elected is And in our place the heavens pofiefs he mudt A fpontancous produ€ltion is againft matter o ng without example not only in man falts Bentley eft of weeds bur th 2 Morall impure ; wicked Of new acceptance Milton adj. [from wile; whence revile. Abufive ; feurrilous ; defamatory He granted life to all except to one, who ha ufed wiled {peeches againft king Edward. Hayward V1'LELy. adw. (fro meanly ; thamefully Bafely wile The Volfeians wilely yielded the town Forget my He&or Shake/p How can treated with difhonour Vi'LENEss. n. /. [from wile. 3. Bafenefs ; meannefs ; defpicablenefs Mof innocent and free Drayton. Refle& on the effential wilenefs of matter, an Creech its impotence to conferve its own being Confidering the wilenefs of the clay, I wondered that no tribune of that age durft ever venture t alk the potter, What doft thou make Swifz 2. Moral or intelle@tual bafenefs Prior V1I'L1FLER. 2. /. [from @wilify.] One tha vilifies o VI'L3FY. @.a. [from @vile. 1. To debafe ; to degrade ; to make vile Their maker's imag Forfook theis when themfelves they wilify' To ferve ungovern'd appetite, and too His image whom they ferv'd Milton Tomalin could not abid To !wav his l':)\"creign vilify'd Drayton The difpleafure of their prince, thofe may ex all method t wifify his perfon Addifon Many paffions difpofe us to deprefs and wilify the merit of one rifing in the eftcem of mankind Addifon A vil- lage; a {fmall colle@ion of houfes. Littl an ufe of the manurabl lands in every manor, town, or will Hale. A countr The antient Romans lay the foundations o #heir villas and palaces within the very borders o the fe Addifon At fix hours diftance from Bizantium's walls ‘Where Bofphorus into the Euxine falls dn a gay diftri@, call'd th> Elyfian vale A furnifh'd willa ftands, propos'd for {ale.. Harte All vat poffeffions ; juft the fame the cafe Whether you call them wila, park, or chace. Pape "/I/LI 4)3 '\:E / (‘U!‘Z‘!Jé'r.} French. . imall colleftion of howfes in the country lels than @ town flew Selymes the king Bafenefs; wickednefs gave In the vile habit of a willage flave willage. #. /. [fro | Vi‘LLaGER Pope A 1. Wickednefs of the village 2 An They exercife moft bitter tyrann Upon the parts brought into their bondage with which, as a kind of excrefcence fome trees do abound Quiney The liquor of the ftomach, which with faftin grows fharp, and the quick fenfation of the inwar willows coat of the fromach, feem to be the caufeof the fenfe of hunger As in the hive's wimineous dom Ten thoufand bees enjoy their home Each does her ftudious aétion vary | VI'NCIBLE ad;. [from winco, Latin Conquerable; fuperable He not wincible in fpirit, and well afi:qred tha thortnefs of provifion would in a fhort time dra the feditiou to fhorter limits, drew his fword Hayward Becaufe 'twas abfolutely in my power to hav attende more heedfully ther wa liberty In fh principle, the miftake which influenced the a&lq Norris was wincibl willain. Vi'NcisLENEsS #. /. [from rzfm.ufle. I.iablenefs to be overcome. Dzé}mzmj[' ViNcrure. . f. [vindlura, Lat.] le Ba binding to defame Were virtue by defcent, a noble nam Could never willanize his father's fame But, as'the firft, the laft of all the line Vinoe'MiaL. adj ‘Would, like the fun, ev'n in defcending fhine [windemias Latin. Belonging to a vintage FTE. v. n. [windemia; 12 To VINDE MI Dryden Thefe are the fools, whofe ftolidity can baffl all arguments; whofe glory is in their fhame, i the debafing and willarizing of mankind to th o Ogather the vintag(<]e [fl gd to bee yo ta an e ia de wi No g expiration of this month Bentley ;e BL mm mz :z [r / # N I ' I E n V ar Grape-gathering 1. Bafe; vile; wicked 2. Sorry ; 1n a familiar {enfe thy mother' 175 VI'NDICATE. . a. [windico but chiefly a wil- damous trick of thine eye doth warant me Prior To go and come, to fetch and carry If in thy fmoke it ends, their glories thine But infamy and willanage are thine Dryden word, partly my own opinion Arbuthuot ViMmi'NEOUS. adj. [wimineus, Lat.] Mad of twigs Dawies partl Shaggy Vi‘Lrovus. adj. [willgfus, Lat. rough; furry infamy art my fon; I hav Miitort VI'LLL n. /. [Latin. In anatomy, ar the fame as fibres; and in botany, fmal hairs like the grain of plufh or fhag all the reft were but tenants in willanage, and wer Vi'LLanous. adj. [from willain. Dryds Of tame willatick fowl No wretchednefs is like to finful willanage. Spenfer Upon every fuch furrender and grant, there wa but one frecholder, which was the lord himfelf condition of beafts an old tale And nefts in order rang'd Pope [from villain. to degrade In thj Vivva'rick. adj. [willaticus, Lat.] Belonging to villages of thei 1. The ftate of a villain ; bafe fervitude To debafe a crime 'tis more noble to purfue his path Tha armed knights [fre afion Shakefp Evening dragon came Affailant on the perched roofts Of crooked counfels, and dark politicks a engine to effeét it South Such willanies rous'd Horace into wrath extreme feeblenefs, all together fet upon them. Sid O willain ! willain! his very opinion in the letter Abhorred willain! unnatural, detefted, brutifh willain Shakefpear What in the world That names me traitor, wil/zin-like be lies. Shak He was ftabbed to thi§.eart by the hand of willain, upon the mere impious pretence of hi being odious to the parliament Clarendon Calm thinking willains, whom no faith could fix @ No willany, no flagitious altion was ever ye commitied, but a lie was firft or laft the principa 2. A wicked wretch To Vi'LLaNIZE. wicke fenfe it has a plural being in condition of flaves and willains, did render a greater revenue than if they had been mad the king's free fubjeéts Dawies 2. Bafenefs tion is not in his wit, but in his villany The Irith inhabiting the lands fully conquered not fit to be fworn in juries _ He is the prince's jefter; and the commends willanus this tim Like rivers of remorfe and innocence. Sbakej}m 1. One who held by a bafe tenure ufin And he, long traded in it, makes it fee who For willany is not without fuch a rheum VI'LLAGERY. . /. [from willage.] Diftri of villages Fr ,an Truf not thofe cunning waters of his eyes If there are conveniencies of life, which common ufe reaches not, it is not reafon to rejec [wilain as an 5 depravity ; grof bafenef atrocioufnefs Than to repute himfelf a fon of Rom Shake[peare Under fuch hard conditions Vhen once her ey Hath met the virtue of this magick duft I thall appear fome harmlefs willager Whom thrift keeps up about his country geer Milton n. Vit aNY. 7 /. [from willain; Villonnse old French. Brutus had rather be a wi/lager Tho [from willy, Vi'LLanousNEss. z /. [from fvilam‘u';e o'er with wounds which his own fabr Vi'LLANAGE. n 2. 'To defame ; to make contemptible [villa, Latin. ing himiclf \Dryden or rather willains ‘Wath my pale body, or bewail my fate n wvillanoufl ‘Thofe willage-words give us a mean idea of th Seam' Sbak:f P Tempef Thewandering Numidian falfified his fa th Knolles ground We were prevented by a doze Then, wilenefs of mankind €Could none, alas! repeat me good or great Vi'vva feat Th adv Wickedly; bafely to th country «willuges were burnt dow low Latin. Such as the golden world firft faw This book gives an accoun Why they are fo; but, like the wi/lage curs Shakeffeare Bark when their fellows do VI'LLAIN 4. /. [wille, Fr. villa, Lat. 1LLANOUSLY Robin Goodfellow, are you not h That fright the maidens of the willagery 2 Shakefp His wilenefs us fhall never awe But here our fports fhall be ViLL With forcheads willanous low V Locke A bloody corfe, about the walls of Troy ? 4. Philips pect, who would put in praGic Shakgfp them, becaufe every willager doth not know them Depriv'd of funeral rites, and wilely dragg'd We fhal} lofe our time Avr}d al_l be turn'd to barnacles or apcs You have many enemies, that know no inhabitan Reftor'd by thee, wile as 1 am, to plac ¥1'LED The early willage coc Hath twice done falutation to the morn eare to °"a8g€rat any thing deteftable Or pelting willages, fheep coats, and mills Shakelpeare Inforce their charity thing Fairf #ile man, begot of clay, and born of duft 5. It is ufed by Shak Beggars, with roaring voices, from low farms Shak Lat. on }: ta ma t po fu t ti ju T 1 Wher the sefpondent denies any ProRo= |