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Show W H W y l t e a l e a h w t w i l t Hi There is a project on foot for tranfporting ou b u n g l o a e b t n D t a beft wheaten t Jaw to take off' yearly fo many tun of the ftraw hats Swift Waea TEAR. 7. /. [ocuanthe, Latin. {mall bird very delicate What cook would lofe her time in picking larks avbeatears, and other fmall birds Waea'TrLUM #. / trampling upon others, come at length to be tram Pope And from the banquet take the bowls away Saift pled upon themfelves to flatter; to perfuade by kind words ¥ Zo WHEEL 3 Savift WHEEL. 7. /. [hpeol, Sax. awie/, Dutch hivel, Ilandick. 1. A circular body that turns round upo an axis Carnality within raifes all the combuftions without: this is the great whee/ to which the cloc owes its motion Decay of Picty ‘Where never yet did pr The bufy morning's curious eye The avbeels of thy bold coach pafs quick and free And all 's an open road to thee Cowwley The gafping charioteer beneath the awbec Of his gwn car Dryden Fortune fits ail breathlefs, and admires to fee A fate fo weighty, that it ftops her whee/. Dryden Some watches are made with four wheels. Locke A whecl-plough is one of the eafieft draughts His rage, and plies him with redoubled ftrokes Wheels as he awbheels clean.sh data import.tsv out README Dryden Half thefe draw off, and coaft the fout With ftricteft watch 5 thefe other wwbeel the north Our circuit meets full weft : as flame they part Half awbheeling to the fhield, half to the fpear Let go thy hold when a great ewbee/ runs down hill, left it break thy neck with following it Shakefpeare's King Lear An aze The turning wbeel before the palace fays Pope Upon a whecl of fire. Shakefpeare's King Lear For all the torments of her wwhee May you as many pleafurcs fhare Waller His examination is like that which is made b the rack and awheel Addifon 5. The inftrument of {pinning Verfe fweetens care, however rude the found All at her work the village maiden fings Nor, as fhe turns the giddy zwbee/ around 'Rcvolves'the fad viciflitudes of things 6. Rotation ; revolution Giffard . Look not too long upon thefe turning wheels o viciffitude, left we become giddy Bacon According to the ‘common viciffitude and awpee of things the proud and the infolent, after lop Wheln'd under feas Addifon Difcharge the load of earth that lies on you like one of the mountains under which the poet fay the giants and men of the earth are whelmed Pope Deplor The whelming billow and the faithlefs oar or bury it Whelm fome things over them, and keep the there Mortimer WuerLr. 7o WrEEL Milton Her motions, as the great firt Mover's han Firfk evbeels their courfe Carr The lion's whelp fhall be to himfelf unknown Shakefpeare Thofe unlickt bear wwbelps Donse bottle in a awbhbeelbarro upo 4. A young man roug ground, but not filled full, but leave fome air. Bac King Pippins did in wheelbarrows abound WHEE'LER. 7 /. [from wheel. of wheels Afte loca names A make 7 the moft have been derive as Potter,Smith, Brafier,Wheeler from occupations Camden Wright Hinds exercife the pointed ftec On the hard rock, and give a whecly for Philips To the expeéted grinder Wueeze, . n. [hpeoron To breathe with noife Saxon. The conftriction of the trachza ftreightens th paflage of the air, and produces the wbeexing in th Floyer afthma It is eafy to run into ridicule the beft defcriplaughof u tions, when once a man is in the hum ing, till he evbeezes at his own dull jeft. Dryden The fawning dog runs mad ; the wheexing fwin Dryden's Virgil With coughs is choak'd Prepare balfamick cups, to wheezing lungs Medicinal, and fhort-breath'd Wheezing afthma loth to ftir Phili Sawif WaELK. 7 /. [See To WELK. 1. An inequality ; a protuberance His face is all bubuckles, and avbelks, and knobs and flames of fire Shakefpeare's Henry V Slave, I will ftrike your foul out with my foot Let me but find you again with fuch a face You awhelp + Ben Fonfor's Cataline That awkward awbelp, with his money bags would have made his entrance. Addifon'sGuardian WrsLer «w. n. To bring young Applied to beafts, generally beafts o prey And graves have yawn'd. . Shakefp. Fulius Cfar In their palaces Where luxury late reign'd, fea-monfters whelp' being goo Mortimer WaEE'LY. adj. [from awheel.] Circular fuitable to rotation In contempt Shakefpeare A lionefs hath ewhelped in the fireets WHEE'LWRIGHT. 7 /. [wheel and wright. A maker of wheel carriages It is a tough wood, and all heart for the avheelavrights In contempt The young awhelp of Talbot's raging broo Did fleth his puny fword in Frenchmen's blood Mjlton's Paradife Loff WHEE'LBARROW. 7. fi [wheel and barrow.] A carriage driven forward o one wheel buolpar 2. The young of any beaft of prey 3. A fon Heav'n rowl' [awelp, Dutch They call'd us, for our fiercenefs, Englifh dogs Now, like their wheips, we crying runaway. Shak Whelps come to their growth within three quarters of a year Bacon's Natural Hiffory Whelps are blind nine days, and then begin t fee, as generally believed; but, as we have elfewhere declared, it is rare that their eye-lids ope until the twelfth day Browan @. 2. To put into a rotator motion ; to make to whirl round n. Ilandick; Awalp, Swedifh. 1. The young ofa dog; a puppy Pope Muft wwheel on the earth, devouring where it rolls Gay z. 'To throw upon fomething fo as to cove Thunde 4. An infirument on which criminals ar tortured Let'them pull all about mine ears, prefent m Death on the awheel, or at wild horfes heels. Shak Thou art a fopl in blifs, but I am boun Plung'd in the deep for ever let me lie Milt draws a radiant circle o'er the fkies of mountains bury'd deep. AMi/t So the fad offence deferves 6. To roll forward 3. A carriage that runs upon wheels Through the proud ftreet fhe moves the public Under the weigh Now fmoothly fteers through air his rapid flight Then awbeeling down the fteep of heav'n he flies Mortimer 2. A circular body They faw them whelm'd, and all their confidenc Knolles He at hand provoke Pope Till Phillis all her trinkets pawn'd This pink is my prize, or ocean whelzz them all Shake[peare On thofe curfed engines triple ro to have viciflitudes to water his horfe ex not to b fomethin wit Grievous mifchiefe which a wicked fa in deadly pain Had wrought, and many whe/m' Torevolve ; to have a rotatory motion Continually whesling about, he kept them in f ftrait, that no man could, without great danger, g A laughing, toying, wbheedling, whimp'ring the Shall make him amble on a goffip's meffage. Rove The world has never been prepared for thef cove Spenfer Spie Held me in chace, that I was forc'd to cwhee Three or four miles about. Shake[peare's Coriolanus You, my Myrmidons Mark what I fay, attend me where I cwheel. Sha Locke ohnny wheedled, threaten'd, fawn'd Milton [from the noun, Iflandick. Saxon thrown off; to bury 5. To fetch a compafs A fox ftood licking of his lips at the cock, an L' Eftrange qubeedling him to get him down His fir From Mars's forge fent to Minerva's fchools To learn the unlucky art of wwbeedling fools. Dryd He that firft brought the word tham, or whcedle in ufe, put together, as he thought fit, idcas h cufes 1. T The moon carried about the earth always thew the fame face to us, not once wheeling upon he ow cent r Bentley 4. To turn For which they pay the necromancers. Hudibras trifles by prefaces, ewbeedled or troubled wit @. 7 ailma The courfe of juftice wheel'd about And left thee buta very prey to time. Shake[peare And men with their own keys unriddle To make them to themfelves give anfwers it ftand for [See WeaL. @. a. [aphilpan 2. A puftule 75 WueLM 1. To move on wheels 2. To turn on an axis His bus'nefs was to pump and awheed/e mad a track approachin He throws his flight in many an airy wheel Ainfworth Locke {feems to mention it as writers To entice by foft words cant word. South 7+ A compafs about to circularity A fort of plum g WHEE'DLE. . a. [Of this word I ca find no etymology, though ufed by goo W H Milton's Paradife Loff And ftabled In a bitch ready to whelp we found four puppies Boyle WueN. adv. [whan, Gothick; hpznne Sax! wanneer, Dutch. 1 At the time that Divers curious men judged that one Theodofiu thould fucceed, when indeed Theodofius did Camden One who died fevera fondnef age ago and benevolence for hi raife a fecret in our minds quben we read his ftory 2. At what time? interrogatively Addifos When was it fhe laft walk'd ? -Since his majefty went into the field Sbak(f;‘eare‘s Macbeth If there's a pow'r above us And that there is all nature cries alou Through all her works, he muft delight in virtue And that which he delights in muf But wbhen @ or where be happy Ad(;'é;‘}yg 3. Which time I was adopted heir by his confent Since awhben, his oath is broke 3 Shakefps Henry V1 4. Afte |