| OCR Text |
Show WA neither of fo bright a blue, nor fo hard, as the ori breakfaft milk, milk- pottage, watergruel The aliment ought to be flender, as watergruc Arbuthnot on Diet acidulated wvaterinefs Wa'TeRr1sH. adj. [from avater. 1. Refembling water Where The wateraith of Jamaica, growing on dry hill can-be expected from the vateri/b matter wha but a Engine Hale's Origin of Mankind 2./. [from avarerifp. humours refembles the tartar of ou or ewaterifbnefs, which is like the fero fity of our blood Quickfilver Floyer body Wa'TERLEAF. 7. /o A plant. ~ Miller WATERLILLY. 7. /i [mymphea, Latin. Wa'TERMAN ferryman a boatman Haying blocked up the paffage to Greenwich they ordered the awatermen to let fall their oar more gently Dryden Bubbles of air working upward from the ver branches as th the big lip, and wat'ry eye As o%r a brook, to fee fair Portia It hat Prior Jo WavE. @. a. [from the noun. 1 1. To raife into inequalities of furface He had a thoufand nofes Horns welk'd and waw'd like the enridged fea Shake[peare Dryden And wat'ry defarts Shakefpeare 2 ‘7o WA'TTLE tawigs. ] 5 iF water, watching the motion of any frog, or water iller A hurdle Ainfworth @ a [ pazelas Saxon tfind with twigs to for by platting twigs one within another Might we but hea The folded flocks penn'd in their wwattled cotes Or found of paftoral reed with oaten ftops. Milt A plough was found in a very deep bog, and hedge wattled ftanding Mortimer's Hufbandry. Addifor . m a fl i t a v m r t f 3. To w me Som never conceiv the motion o ho c. kn o f o a z l o f l b the eart ai th i d bo o f e é r d perpendicularl Broqcn' above I/u[g‘ar Errours o f w b c r d t 4. To motion of any thing Look with what courreousda&lon un gr ov re mo t yo It wawe dek"f}"g." But do not go with it 5. [gugfver FEr. Skinner.] to quit ; to depart from refolve H becoming his martial fpirit More's Antidate againft Atheifm me to approach the place where fat below the cock's bill A ra WaTerviOLET, n [ [hottonia, Latin. hand, direGe German. Skinner. 1. The barbs, or loofe red flefh, that hang A fpeciesof wa Waterr0'CKET, #. [ [eruca aguatica. A fpecies of watercrefles He beckoned to me, and, by the wawing of hi 7 /. [from avaghelen, to thake or aattles, at his mouth, which is under his nof or chops Walton The cock's comb and <vattles are an ornamen ! Df_y:di?{ High o'er his head Dryden's Indian Emperor Perhaps youll fay #. f. [ mentha aquatica. Walton They wav'd their fiery fwords, and in the air Milton Made horrid circles ZEneas waw'd his fatal fwor That the attrated zat'ry vapours rif From lakes and feas, and fill the lower fkies Blackmore Wa'tTLE 2. 'To move loofely Thofe few efcap' Famine and anguith will at laft confume Wand'ring that war'ry defart. Milt. Parad. Loft Betwixt us and you wide oceans flow o to fluftu grounded, no way refolved, what to think, fpeak or write, more than oply that, becaufe they hav taken it upon them, they muft be oppofite. Heskers If he did not care whether he had their lov or no, he wawed indifferently betwixt doing the Shakefpeare's Coriolatus neither good nor harm To ftop the foreign fpirits; but they come Dryden There be land-rats and water-rats. Shake[peare The pike is bold, and lies near the top of th A plant Lighted above the capitol, and no It evawes unto use Ben Fonfor's Catiline 5. Confifting of water tercrefles, which fee rat, or moufe A bloody arm it is, that holds a pin The at'ry kingdom is no ba cucumbe WA'TERRAT. 2. [i [mus aquaticus. that makes holes in banks 2. To be moved as a fignal They wave in and out, mo way fufficientl The loach is of the fhape of an eel, and has beard of wwattles like a barbel Walton The barbel is fo called, by reafon of his barb 7 / He laces on, and wears the waving creft, Dryden Philips On the brims her fire, thewvat'ry god Roll'd from a filver urn bis cryftal Acod Forth flowed fret A gufhing river of black gory blood That drowned all the land whereon he ftood The fiream thereof would drive a watermill. Spenf Corn ground by windmills, ereéted on hills, o in the plains where the watermills frood Mortimer's Hufbandry Waterra'pisH force 4. Relating to the water Wa'TERMILL. z. /. Mill turned by water A plant lik th Deform'd by winds, and dafh'd by rain melon, and is diftinguithed from othe cucurbitaceous plants, by its leaf deepl cut and jagged, and by its producin uneatable fruit Miller Wa'TERMINT hat in Tell me the rifing frorm is nigh >Tis then thou art yon angry main Men and beaft ‘Were borne above the tops of trees that gre trailin pen an heterogeneous mixture ufe, as fom Whe Wa'terMaRK. 7 /. [awater and mark. "The utmoft limit of the rife of the flood A plant which is a moft crude and auater 3. Wet; abounding with water. are obferved always to rife in the fame places Addifon on Italy The aaterman forlorn, along the fhore Penfive reclines upon his ufelefs oar Gay 7./ I may fin Your warlike enfigns wawing in the wind. Dryd Meffapus® hel With wat'ry turneps have debas'd. their wines. bottom of the lake, the ewatermen told us that the WarterME'LON heated Nearen Zo WavVE.. wi.z: [from the noun. 1. To play loofely ; to:float We 'll ufe this unwholefome humidity, this 3. To be in' an unfettled flate grofs, quatery pumpion er wa t at Shakefpeare's Merry, Wives of Windfor. | Walton's Angler On th' utmoft margin of the watermark Addifon 2. Taftelefs; infipid; vapid; {piritlefs bull-rufhes #. [. [water and man. little fmoothed in polifhing with putty Arbuthnot on Aliments. k Let them lie dry twelve months to kill the water-weeds, as waterlillies an free from veins, and theirfides be accurately plan and well polifhed, without thofe numberlefs'wwves, or curls, which ufually arife from fand-holes Bacon with gunpowder The bile, by its faponaceous quality, mixet the oily and wwatery parts of the aliment together iller A plant water an Wa'TerY. adj. [from awater. 1. Thin ; liquid; like water A pendulous fliminefs anfwers a pituitous ftate whic for mine invente of cheir gardens, as well as wateraworks Thinnefs ; refemblance of water acerbity Luxuriant on the evawe-worn bank he la Stretch'd forth, and pantini g the funnyray.P;P, often fail in the performance Wilkins's Mathematical Magick The French took from the Italians the firft plan Some parts of the earth grow moorifh or wa or a Now hiffing waters the quench'd guns reftore And weary aawes withdrawing from the fié[ Are lull'd, and pant upon the filent fhore, Dyyd The avave behind impels the wave before, P@ Wa'TERWORK. 7. f. [water and awork. Play of fountains; artificial fpouts of 2. Unevennefs; inequality. water; any hydraulick performance Thus it happens, if the glafs of the prifmsb vork 2. Moi#t ; boggy WA'TERISHNESS Amidft thefe toils fucceeds the balmy nizy}::'.m or fap, as gives new life to the droughty travelle Derbam's Phyfico-Theology or hunter infipid manhood, and a ftupid old infancy? Dryd terifb, others dry no water is to be met with, it pieces two or three yards long end to the mouth, affords f innocent, and refrefhing water in the woods, wher trunk, if cut int and held by eithe plentifully a limpid Arbuthnot are only phlegm the principle The wawes that rife would drown the }ilg;ffl? }(:irl,; But at thy check they flee, and when they hean Thy thund'ring voice, they poft to do thy will A plant and turgidit of the eyes "T'he fhore, that o'er his wawe-worn bafs bow'd [water and awith. 7. / Wa'rerWITH an apoplexy are dulnefs weaknefs qualities Linfeworth Wa‘TERHEN. 7. /i [from avater and hen A coot ; a waterfowl fulica, Latin. WATERINESS. 7. /. [from awerery.] Humidity; moifture night-mares face ; billow; water driven into jpe WaTerwi'LLOW. 7. /i [from awater an A plant willew 5 lyfimackia, Latin. Locke forerunners o Woodward ental and flummery, are very fit to make for children Th wague, French, 1. Water raifed above the level o the fur and i Waterjappbire is the occidental fapphire Food made withoatmeal boiled in water WAVE. #. /. [p=ze, Saxon ; waegh, Dy 7 /i A fort of ftone WaTERSA'PPHIRE , WATERGRU'EL. 7. /. [awater and gruel. Fo WA WA | no to wvaw To- put 0 L his way :P‘;)na reafon, that if he fhould but once, by "cf i o af fl t" h :e ie be m en hi verfion, mak t ho wi liv e ne danger, he fhoul Wotton's Life of the Duke of B"‘I""Zvll':;' D ‘ bel ou n fo ts pl Thefe, wavin pig th v' fe pr an de ce de go Som t e e p t f i a p 6 ynt tné gre mor i a yo o I have wawed the fubjeé o i a p e n c t t l f m g ref D, i o eculiarly yours 8 Since fhe her intereft for the nations "‘;v,d? D o pat th kin th fav wh I The |