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Show WH Then balmy fleep had charm'd my eyes to reft What time the morn myfterious vifions brings While purer flumbers fpread their golden wings Pope Me fole the daughter of the deep addrefs'd n [ [wharf, Swedith; awerf Wuarr A perpendicular bank o Datch. mole, raifed for the convenience of lading or emptying veflels ; a quay, or key Duller fhouldit thou be than the fat wee hat roots itfelf in eafe on Lethe's wharf Shake[p. Hamlet Wouldit chou not ftir in this {here were not in London ufed fo many wharfs O zeys, for the landing of merchants goods Child on Trad Due WaA'RFAGE. z /. [from wharf. r landing at a wharf z /. [from wharf. WHA'RFINGER On who attends a wharf 7o Wrurr . To pronounce the let ter » with too much force Dis WaaT. pronoun. [hpee, Sax. wat, Dut, 1. That which : pronoun indefinite What you can make her do Le the Shakefp. Winter's Tale fay wbat they will, the will do wha Drayton the lift In thefe cafes= we examine the why,J? the x wwhar L' Efirange and the how of things He's with a {uperftitious fear not aw'd For ewhat befals at home, or what abroad. Dryd 1t can be no more fin to atk what God grants Kettlezvorth A fatire on one of the common ftamp neve meets with that approbation, as awhat is aimed a a perfon whofe merit places him upon an emi neiice Mark ewhbat it is his min tion Addifon aims at in the quef and not what words he exprefies Locke If anything be ftated in a different manner fro Pope to Swift qvbat you like, tell me freely ‘Whatever commodities lic under the greatef difcouragements from England, thofe are wha they are moft induftrious in cultivating Swvift 2. Which part If we rightly eftimate things, wwhat in the purely owin t What time, with hunger pin'd, my abfent mate 8 Roam' the wild ifle in fearch of rural cates. Pqp, 'Whic interrogative. [pronou i nature, and awhkat to labour, w o many ! ianterrogatively What art thou That here in defart haft thy habitance Spenfer What is 't to thee if he negle€t thy urn {Dryden Or without fpices lets thy body burn Whate'er I begg'd, thou like a dotard fpeak'f More than is requifite; and zwhbat of this Why is it mention'd now Dryden W hat one of an hundred of the zealous bigots, i all parties, ever examined the tenets he is fo ftif Locke in When any new thing comes in their way, children afk the common queftion of a ftranger, wha Locke 9. To how great a degree : ufed either interrogatively or indefinitely A I fo much deform'd WWhat partial judges are our love and hate Dryd 10. It 1s fometimes ufed for whatever 4. Which of feveral Comets are rather gazed upon than wifely obferved; thatis, wwhat kind of comet for magnitude, colour, placing in the heaven, or lafting Bacon produceth wwhar kind of effect See avbat natures accompany wwhbat colours ; fo by that you fhall induce colours by producin Bacon thofe natures Shew awhat aliment is proper for that intention and what intention is proper to be purfued in fuc Arbuthnot a conftitution 5. An interje€tion by way of furprife o queftion What ! canft thou not forbear me half an hour ‘Then get thee gone, and dig my grave thyfelf Shakefpeare What if 1 advance an invention of my own, t fupply the defect of our new writers ? Dryd. Fuwv 11. Itis ufed adverbially for partly; i part The enemy having his country wafted, wha by himfelf and what by the foldiers, findeth fucSpenfer cour in no place Thus, what with the war, what with the {weat wbhat with the gallows, and ewhat with poverty, am cuftom fhrunk Shakefpeare The year before, he had {o ufed the matter, tha ahat by force, what by policy, he had taken fro the Chriftians above thirty fmall caftles Knolles's Hiftory of the Turks fo confiderable that they hav treate upo a Temple equal foot with great princes They live a popular life, and then what for bufinefs, pleafures, company, there is fcarce room fo Norris a morning's reflexion If thefe halfpence fhould gain admittance, i no bng fpace of time, what by the clandeftin practices of the coiner, what by his own counterfeits and thofe of others, his limited quantity woul Swift be tripled 12 Wua Ho An interje&ion of call ing What bo! thou genius of theclime, awhat bo Lieft thou afleep beneath thefe hills of fnow Stretch out thy lazy limbs WHATE'VER WaaTS Dryden ) pronouns. [from awha and foever.] Whatfoi 6. Wuar though. What imports it though notwithftanding. An elliptical mode of WHATSOE'VER. ) not now in.ufe {peech 1. Having one nature or another; bein Wekat though a child may be able to read ? There one or another, either generically, {peis no doubt but the meaneft among the people uny ical nume o ally cifi der the law had been as able as the priefts themfelves were to offer facrifice: did this make facriHuooker fice of no effect What though none live my innocence to tell 1 know it 3 truth may own a generous pride I clear myfelf, and care for none befide. Dirsden e Waar Cime, What day At the tim when ; on the day when What day the genial angel to our fir Brought her more lovely than Pandora - Mikor a Peateewithout book, as a cop much from what i y does from an ginal I defire noti Swift to make the mo? I{})r}e]fs nothx.ng upon you, {\‘J after perfe€tion in rzc)z-.,‘ uman life, and to afpir cver fate of life you chufe z. Any thing, be it Whe + Law W batfoever our liturgy hatAt will they cut it off "ore than theirs Whatever thin Hooker The feythe of time mows down, devour. 3. The fame, be it this or that Be awhate'er Vitruvius was before Pope 4. All that; the whole that; all particlars that Is thine I tell thee wwhat, corporal, I could tear her. Shak finitely Bemley'; Sermoms petual troubles of his fortunes could not have bee Bacon without fome main errors in his nature L'Efirange What with carrying apples, grapes, and fewel L'Efirange he finds himfelfin a hurry What with the benefit of theirfituation, the ar and parfimony of their people, they have grow 3. Something that is in one's mind inde " bea, 'tacrever g1s read dii ffe p Whether it were the fhortnefs of his forefight the ftrength of his will, or the dazzling of his fufpicions, or what it was, certain it is that the per Locke to be put on the account of labour ever Addifon's Frec No contrivance, no pru yy e NCe Whatfo dev1aFc from his fcheme yey can Wit hout leavi g ys Worf than it found us Atterbyy, Thus whatever fi ucceffiv ati boundeé at one end, an be al| paft an muft com From hence he views with his black-lidded ey Whatfo the heaven in his wide vault contains Spenfer When they come to caft up the profit and lofs abat betwixt force, intereft, or good manners, th adventurer efcapes well if he can but get off thall find ninety-nine parts of a hundred are wholl Holy writ abounds i nts fso f this Naty as much as any other hiftory uwha e infinitely thorotf infinity isit 1 am content to look on; what to fpeak 1 am content to hear WH To forfeit all your goods, lands, tenements Caftles, and whatfoewer, and to b Out of the king's proteétion. Shak. Henry VII is firt in the invention, is laft in th Whatfoeve Hammond execution If thence he *{cape ‘into whatever world. Milton In awhatfocver thape he lurk Il know. Milton Wifely reftoring whetfoewer grac It loft by change of times; ox tongugs, or place Denbam Whate'er the ocean pales, or fky inclips Shakefpeare At once came forth wbhatever creeps Milton WHEAL. 2 /. [See WEaL. A puftule a {mall {welling filled with matter The humour cannot tranfpire, whereupon it corrupts, and raifes little swbeals or blifters Wifeman's Surgery #. / WHEAT [hpeaze, Saxon; aweyde Dutch; ¢riticam, Latin. The graino which bread is chiefly made It hath 2a apetalous flower, difpofed into fpikes each of them confifts of many ftamina, which ar included in a fquamofe flower-cup, having awns th: pointal rifes in the center, which afterwards becomes an oblong feed, convex on one fide, bu furrowed on the other: it is farinaceous, and inclofed by a coat which before was the flower-cup; thefe are produced fingly, and colleted in a clof fpike, heing affixed to an indented axis, The fpecies are, 1. White or red ahkeat, without awn. wheat t Kent calle place fom i whea Re 2 3. White evheat. 4. Read-eared bearded avbeat 6. Grey wheat, and in fom 5. Cone wwheat places duck-bill avkeat and grey pollard, 7 Polo nian cwheat 8. Many-eared qubeat 10. Nake cwbeat barley 9. Summe 31. Long-graine care Whit 13 gwbea rowe Si 12 wheat cultiforts thef al O awns lon wit aubea vated in this country, the cone wheat is chiefly preferved, as it has a larger car and 2 fuller grai than any other: but the feeds of ali fhould be anfam th o fow ar the i fo nua"; changed h whenv -a wel f fucce no wil the farm Diler y count difta fro h brou i fee poo th hurt an zvhea whit th He mildew Leare Kir peare Shake earth th o creatur f Reuben went in the days of aobeat-harv ng_t/is, XXX Auguft thall bear the for of a young ma;z awh o garla hea hi upo afpe a fierc and rie Nex Peactat i \Vl?lc o bra th qube to rice i highly acefcent HArbutbnot 01 Aliments The damfels laughing fly: the giddy CIO""} adow drop a t-fh avhe upo Agdi WuaEA TEN adj. [from avhear. 'g Mad of wheat e Xxi%e themus Of wbhe) aten flour fhalalt t thou make Txo d n o c a i g e Here fummer in her wwhea - Addifot The affize of wheaten bread is in 140112";2'",5;,;; 1 \\- WH |