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Show UN UN 3. To fuftain; to be the bearer of; t 7o Unperua'y. @ a. [under and Ta ftrengthen by fomething Jaid ung':; UNDERLE'AT. #. /. [under and leaf.] {pecies of apple UN T UnpERBEA'R. @. a. [under and bear. 1. To fupport ; to endure What reverence he did throw away on flaves W ooing poor craftfmen with the craft of {miles And patient wnderbearing of his fortune Outof ufe 2. To line; toguard Th Shakefp cloth of gold, fet with pearls, down-fleeves, fidefleeves, amd fkirts round, #nderborne with a bluit Shakefpeare's Much Ado about Nothing tinfel UnpERBEA'RER. 7. /. [under and bearer. In funerals, thofe that fuftain the weigh of the body, diftin& from thofe who ar bearers of ceremony, and only hold u the pall 7o UnpErB1'D. @. a. [ander and &id. To offer for any thing lefs than 1t 1 worth UxpERCLE'RK. 7. /. [uader and clerk. cler fubordinat to the principa clerk @w. 7. [under and db. 1. To a& below one's abilities 2. To do lefs than is requifite Nature much oftener overdoes than underdoes you fhall find twenty eggs with two yolks, for o that hath none Greaw UxperFa'cTION tion.] Subordinat of a faétion 7 /i [under and fac faftion ; {ubdivifio Chriftianity lofes by contefts of underfactions Decay of Piety UxpEeERFE'LLOW. 7. /. [under and felloav. A mean man ; a forry wretch They carried him to a houfe of a principal officer, who with no more civility, though wit much more bufinefs than thofe wuderfellowvs ha fhewed, in captious manner put interrogatories unSidney to him UnDERFILLING. n /. [under and fI. Lower part of an edifice To found our habitation firmly, firt examin the bed of earth upon which we will build, an then the underfillings, or {ubftruétions, as the ancients called-it Wotton's Architeéture To UNDERFO'NG. v.a. [under and pangan Saxon.] To take in hand Obfolete Thou, Menalcas, that by thy treacher Didft underfong my lady to wexe fo light Shouldft well be krnown for fuch thy villainy. Spenf 9o UNDERFU'RNISH. @. a. [under an To {upply with lefs tha Surnifp. enough Can we fuppofe God would underfurnifh man fo the ftate he defigned him, and.not afford him foul large enough to purfue his happinefs Collier on Kindnefs 7o UNDERGI'RD. w. a. [under and gird. T'o bind below to round the bottom When they had taken it vp undergirding the fhip 1. To fuffer 4. To fuftain ; to endure without fainting It rais'd in m An undergoing tomach, to bear u Againft what thould enfue Shakefpeare's Tempeft 5. To pafs through I carried on m enquiries to try whethe they ufed helps Abfsy xxviie 17 w. a. [under and go. to {fuftain ; to endure evil With mind averfe, he rather underaven His people's will, than gave his own confent. Dryd 2. To fupport ; to hazard thi rifing world, when finithed, would continue alway the fame fucceffivel it woul change or wha undergo, by the continued action of the fame caufes Burnet's Theory of the Earth Bread put into the ftomach of a dying man will undergo the alteration that is merely the effec of heat Arbuthnot 6. To be fubjett to Claudio wundergoes my challenge; and either muft fhoytly hear from him, or I will fubfcrib Shake[peare UNDERGRO'UND. 7. /. [4nder and ground. Subterraneous {pace They have promifed to fhew your highnef A fpirit rais'd from depth of underground Shak Wafh'd by ftream You overact, when you thould underdo A little call yourfelf again, and think., Ben Fonfon 7o UNDERGO" Shakefpeare's Hamlet him a coward Coleby, one of his under-fwearers, was trie for robbing the treafury, where he was an wnderSwwift clerk 7o UNDERDO" Their virtues elfe, be they as pure as grace As infinite as man may wndergo Shall, in the general cenfure, take corruptio From that particular fault gown; not like you dutchefs of Milan' Not in ufe poffefs Not in ufe I have mov'd certain Roman To undergo with me an enterpriz Of honourable, dang'rous confequence Shakefp Such they were, who might prefume t" have don Mouch for the king and honour of the ftate Maving the chicfelt aCtions wndergone Daniel's Civil FWar From underground, the liquid ore he drain Into fit molds prepared. = Milton's Paradife Lof UNDERGRO'WTH. 7. /. [under and growih. That which grows under the tall wood So thick entwin'd As one continued brake, the wndergrowt Of fhrubs, and tangling bufhes, had perplex' All path of man, or beaft, that pafs'd that way Milton UnperHA'ND. adv. [under and band. 1. By means not apparent ; fecretly Thefe multiplied petitions of worldly thing prayer have befide thei direé ufe i a fervice 2. Clandeftinely; with fraudulent fecrecy She underband dealt with the principal men o that country, that they fhould perfuade the king t make Plangus his affociate Sidney They, by their precedents of wit Hudibras It looks as if I had defired him underband t write fo ill againft me; but I have not bribe him to do me this fervice Dryden Such mean revenge, committed underband Has ruin'd many an acre of good land Dryden Wood is ftill working underband to force hi halfpence upon us Savift I'll haften to my Roma To UNDERLY'NE . a. [under and Jine 1. T'o mark with lines below the words z. To influence fecretly By mere chance in appearance, though undey lired with a providence, they had a full fight o the infanta Wotton, U'NDERLING. 7 /. [from under.] An in feriour agent ; a forry, mean fellow Th grea men by ambition dever fatisfied grew fattious; and the underlings, glad indeed t be underlings to them they hated leaft, to preferv the Sidng from fuch they hated moft Hereby the heads of the Septs are made ftronger whom it fhould be a moft fpecial policy to weaken and to fet up and ftrengthen divers of their underSpenfer lings againft them The fault is not in our ftars But in outfelves, that we are underlings Shakefp Q'er all his brethren he fhall reign as king, Yet ev'ry one fhall make him underling. ~ Miltgn They may print this letter, if the underlings a the poft-office take a copy of it. . Pope and Swift 7o UxDERMI'NE. . a. [under and mine. 1. To dig cavities under any thing, {otha it may fall, or be blown up; to fap Though the foundation on a rock were laid The church was undermin'd, and then betray'd., Denbam An injudicious endeavour to exalt Virgil, i much the fame as if one fhould think to raife th fuperftruéture by undermining the foundations Pope's Preface to the lliad whereby the church waderband, through a kind o heavenly fraud, taketh therewith the fouls of men as with certain baits Hyoker T out-faft, out-loiter, and out-fit Can order matters underband "To put all bufinefs to a ftand The underleaf, whofe cyder is beft at two year is a plentiful bfarcr Mortimer's Ha/ba;idr] foldiers 2. To excavate under A vaft rock undermin'd from one end to th other and a highway running through it, as lon Addifon onIraly and as broad as the Mall 3. To injure by clandeftine means Making the king's fword ftrike whom theyhated the king's purfe reward whom they loved; and which is worft of all,/making the royal countenanc Sidney ferve to undermine the royal fovereignty They, knowing Eleanor's afpiring humour Have hir'd me to undermine the dutchefs, Shakefp The father, fecure Ventures his filial virtu Againrwhate'er may tempt, whate'er feduce A Milten Allure or terrify, or undermine The undermining fmile becomes -habn'tuali an t onl 1 atio conver l plaufi hi o drif th flatter one, that he may betray another. DU"I‘," He fhould be warned who are like to uudamin nEd:{ca o Lock him ferv t wh an him UNDERMI'NER 7. /. [from _una'ermme; 1. He that faps; he that digs away th fupports UnpERHA'ND. adj. Secret 3 clandeftine ; 2. A clandeftine enemy Inflame the mutiny, and uaderban Blow up their difcontents. Addifon's Cato {ly The enemies and underminer I had notice of my brother's purpofe, and have by underband means, laboured to diffuade him Shakefpeare I fhould take it as a very great favour from fom of my underband detradtors, if they would break al meafures with me Addifon U~pEr1'VED borrowed Th adj. [from derived. ideas it is bufie about fhoul No be, fome times at leaft, thofe more congenial ones, whic it had in itfelf, underived from the body Locke UNDERLA'BOURER. #. /0 [under and Jabourer.] A fubordinate workman Abou th carriag of one fton the diftance of twenty days journey for Amafis for three year were employed two thoufand chofen men, govern ors, befides many underlabourers Wilking's Mathematical Magick thereof are Romift catholicks When I perceiv'd all fet on enmity Bacon As on my enemies, whekre;;v.er;hfl]nf their 1poily I us'd hoftility, and too Agoi;f Ml[l-d coin thei i To pay my mzierminer The moft experienced difturbers and u7! fi""m of government have always laid their fi in contempt endeavouring to .blow it up Soxth judgment and efteem of the fubjeét j a U'npERM o ki k [This 1 o f e r f f o a o a fuperlative under. 1. Loweft in plac"é Ufing oil of almonds, we drew Up "'fléofl ht wei te gre muc fton rmo und 2. Loweft in ftate or condition. underndfh i t f It happens wel to the l f when a wor thof |