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Show WE WE - e f w hiayc this meafure from our dref 2. " ThTaatke wa an i g a i p c f t i e r t i al a t hab m,'and ridiculous ornaments, ag are a real fham Law ‘to the earer Wea'RiNEsS. #. /. [from weary. 1, Laffitude; ftate of being {pent with labour Come, our ftomach Will make what 's homely favoury j gvearinef Can fnore upon the flint, when refty flot Shakefp. Cymbeline Finds the down pillow hard Water-fowls fupply the ewearing/s ot a long fligh Hale by taking water Heaven, when the creature lies proftrate i the weaknefs of fleep and wwearinefs, fpreads th covering of night and darknefs to conceal it South's Sermons. To full bowls each other they provoke At length, with evearine/s and wine opprefs'd They rife from table, and withdraw to reft, Dryd 2, Fatigue caufe of laflitude The more remained out of the wwearine/s and fa. Clarendon tigue of their late mm'chcs. g. Impatience of any thing 4. Tedioufnefs WEARING Clothes It was his bidding Give me my nightly wearing, and adieu Shakefp Wea'risH. adj. [I believe from pezp See WEERISH. Saxon, a quagmire 2. Weak; wathy A garment over rich and wide for many of thei auearifp and ill-difpofed bodies Carew's Survey of Cornwall WearisomEe: odj. [from aweary.] Troublefome; tedious; caufing wearinefs The foul preferreth reft in ignorance befor suearifome labour to know Hooker Thefe high wild hills, and rough uneven ways Draw out our miles, and make them wearifosme Shakefpeare Troops came to the army the day before, harafled with a long and wearifome march. ~ Bacon Coftly I reckon not them alone which charg the purfe, but which are wearifume and importur in fuits Bacon Shrinking up or ftretching out are wearifome pofitions, and fuch as perturb the quiet of thofe parts This muft be our taf In heav'n, this our delight; how wearifom Brown Then life muft to itfelf grow wearifome Denbam Wea'RisoMELY. adv. [from wearifime. Tedioufly; {o as to caufe wearinefs fo are th To curl the waves ; and fure fome little car Should weary nature fo, to make her want repofe Dryden You have already weary'd fortune fo She cannot farther be your friend or foe But fits all breathlefs Dryden It would not be difficult to continue a paper b refuming the fame fubjeéts, and wearying out th reader with the fame thoughts in a different phrafe Addifor's Freeholder z. To make impatient of continuance prefent patience turbulent men opinions of writer different touching Affur, and the beginning of tha great ftate of Afiyria; a controverfy wvearifomel difputed, without any dire& proof or certainty Raleigh 2 The ftate of being eafily tired lightnefs tharp withou - brittlenefs, defizots of good things without new‘ff"'glenefs, diligent in painful things without wwea"fmmff Afcham's Schoolmaffer ToWsa'ry. 2. 4. [from the adjective. L. To tire; to fatigue ; to harafs ; to fub . due by labour Better that the enemy feek us So fhall he wafte his means, aweary his foldiers Doing himfelf offence, Shakefpeare's Fulius Cefar € people labour in the very fire, weary them felves for very yapity Dewy fleep opprefs'd them weary'd Vou. II by any thing irk With blandifh'd parleys, feminine affaults Tongue-batteries, fhe furceas'd not day nor nigh To ftorm me over-watch'd and aeary'd out. Milt WEA'RY t b adj [pepug Saxon tired, Dutch. waeren Fair Phebus gan decline, in hate His wweary waggon to the weftern vale Gentle Warwick Let me embrace thee in my weary arms I, that did never weep, now melt with woe. Shak I am wyeary, yea, my memory is tir'd = Have we no wine here Shakefpeare An old man, broken with the ftorms of ftate Is come to lay his weary bones among ye Give him a'little carth for charity Shakefpeare Let us not be weary in well doing Gal. vi. g Our fwords fo wholly did the fates employ That they at length grew aveary to deftroy Refus'd the work we brought, and out of breath Made forrow and defpair attend for death. Dryden 2. Impatient of the continuanc thing painful or irkfome Hab, ii. 13 Milton. of an The king was as weary of Scotland, as he ha been impatient to go thither, finding all things propofed to him without confideration of his honour o intereft Clarendon My hopes all flat, nature within me feems In all her funétions, weary of herfelf Milton 3. Defirous to difcontinue See the revolution of the times Weary of folid firmnefs, melt itfel Shakefpeare's Henry IV 4. Caufing wearinefs ; tirefome And one fat waiting ever them before To call in comers by that needy were and poor Spenfer The wearieft and moft lothed lif imprifonment Can lay on nature, is a paradif Shake[peare "To what we fear of death Put on what zveary negligence you pleafe You and your fellows; I°d have it come to quefShakefpeare tion [perel, Saxon avefel Dutch ; muftela, Latin.] A{mall anima that eats corn and kills m1ce. Ready in gybes, quick-apfwcx;'d As qu:u‘relfoxbnc as the weafel aucy, and bbqkz;fp. Cymbeline A aweafel once made fhift to flin In at a corn-loft through a chink Wea'sanp z / [paren Sgenfer Cut his wezand with thy knife. Shak. Tempeft Matter to be difcharged by expeétoration muf firft pafs into the lungs, then into the afpera arteria, or weafand and fro thenc be coughed up and fpit out by the mouth Wifemar The fhaft that flightly was impref(s'd Now from his heavy fall with weight increas'd Drove through his neck aflapt; he fpurns th And the fouliffues through the weazon's wound Dryder WEA'THER. 7. /. [peben, Saxon. 1. State of the air, refpeiag either col or heat, wet or drinefs Who's there, befides foul weather Saxon Po];.e Th} word is very varioufly written ; but thi orthography is neareft to the origina The windpipe; the paflag word. through which the breath is drawn and emitted ; the larynx Marry Diggon, what fhould him affray To take his own where ever it lay Shakefpeare's King Lear I am far better born than is the king But I muft make fair weather yet a while Tiil Henry be more weak, and I more ftrong Shakefpeare Again the northern winds may fing and plow And fear no haven but from the wearher now Ceavley Men muft content themfelves to travel in al weathers, and through all difficulties. L'Efirange The fu Foretels the change of zveather in the fkies Whene'er through mifts he fhoots his fullen beams Sufpeék a drifling day Diyden 2. The change of the ftate of the air It is a reverend thing to fee an ancient caftle no in decay; how much more to behold an ancien family, which have ftood againft the waves an aveathers of time Bacon 3. Tempeft ; ftorm What gufts of wweather from that gath'ring clou My thoughts prefage Dryden's Virgil ToWea'THER @. a. [from the noun. 1. To expofe to the air He perched on fome branch thereby To weatber him, and his moift wings to dry Spenfer Mugtard-feed gather for being too ripe And weather it wel, yer ye give it a firipe Tz.fir 2. To pafs with difficulty He aveather'd fell Charybdis; but ere lon The fkies were darken'd, and the tempefts ftrong Could they aveather and ftand the fhock of a eternal duration, and yet be at any time fubje& t a diffolution Hale 3. 7o WEATHER a point. To gain a poin againft thewind ; to accomplith againf Their gates to all were open evermor That by the weary way were travelling n / He would have devoured both hidder and fhidder Garth Make mountains level, and the continent That age, ach, penury For had his weafand been a little wider =-One minded like the weather, moft unquietly Muft'ring all her wiles - Wea'risomenEss. 7./ [ from awearifome. eL Wea 1. The quality of tiring _A wit, quick withou what is to be expected by fuc Addifon 3. To fubdue or haraf fome ground I ftay too long by thee, I aweary thee Shakelp. Henry V Should the government be wwearied out of it Into the feas Eternity fo fpent, in wor{lip pai To whom we hate Miltan's Paradife Lo Satiety from all things elfe doth come _As of Nimrod _Sea would be pools without the brufhing air 1. Subdued by fatigue; tired with labour 7./. [from avear. 1. Boggy ; watery WE oppofition We have been tugging a great while againft th ftream, and have almoft queathered our point; ftretch or two more will do the work Addifon 4. 7o WEATHE out 'To endure When we have pafs'd thefe gloomy hours And qweather'd out the form that beats upon us Addifon WEA'THERBEATEN. adj. Harafle {feafoned by hard weather an They perceived an aged man and a young, bot poorly arrayed, extremely eveatherbeaten; the ol man blind, the young man leading him Sidflry She enjoys fure peace for evermore As queatherbeaten {hip arriv'd on happy fhore Sperfer Thrice from the banks of Wye And fandy-bottom'd Severn, have I fen Him bootlefs home, and gveatherbeaten back Shakefpeare's Henry IV I hope, when you know the worft, you will a once leap into the river, and fwim through handfomely, and not weatberbeaten with the divers blaft of irrefolution, ftand fhivering upon the brink A weathsrbeaten veffels hold Gladly the port a Suckling Milton Did |