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Show WH One while we thought hira innocent For fo Apollo, with unweeting hand Whiloms did flay his dearly loved mate a w o e i w e t r w i l i t e 3 gaindys 3 t Digly the mus'd Milton o How couldft thou look for other, but that Go to herfel That fill a female gamefer's pate To WHI'MPER ehink it worth their zwhile to live above the allure Arterbury papers, 'tis no Boie a({‘zf :f"rHILE [hpl](‘; per.] 'This word feems to mean diftorte with crying SSWHILLEsT. Wa This fignior Junio's giant dwarf, Dan Cupid Regent of love-rhimes, lord of folded arms Th"anointcd fovercign of fighs and groans. Shak Pity was all the fault that was in me Shakefp. Henry VI What we have, we prize not to the wort Whiles we enjoy it5 but being tacke and loft be palliated All the ridiculous an & 2. As long as Uloyour memory 3 you will fenfibly expericnc a graduakimprovement, while you take care not t experimen of this miniftratio So now, as health or temper changes In larger compafs Alma ranges This day below, the next above Prior As light or folid zwbimfies move What Ifpeak, my fair Chloe, and what I write fhow The difference there is betwixt nature and art 1 court others in verfe, butI love thee in profe And they have my whimfies, but thou haft m Prior heart 2 Cor. ix " the gofpel Can he imagine that God fends forth an irre figible frength againft fome fins, whilf in other a power of repelling his grace Decay of Piety All hearts fhail bend, and ev'ry voic In loud applauding fhouts rejoice 5 FWhile all his gracious afpeét praife Addifon And crowds grow loyal as they gaze He fits attentive to his own applaufe While wits and templars ev'ry fentence raife . And wonder with a foolifh face of praife Jo Wr1Lg. v. 7 [from the noun. loiter Oranges in whbimfey-boards went xound Pope mind, that I could not impute it to melancholy 'T Th? extravagance of poetr Is at a lofs for figures to expref Men's folly, whinfies, and inconftancy A little while ago fore. Spectator 1n another circamfance I am particular, or, a my neighbours call me, whimfical : as my garde invites into it all ¢he birds, Ido not fuffer an Addifon one to deftroy their nefts ere while Not 1n ufe 6 That curfed wight from whom I *fcap'd whilere A man of hell, that calls himflf Defpair. Spen/ Let us be jocund : will you troul the catc You taught me but awhile-¢cre Shakefpeare Thofe armies, that ewhile-er Affrighted all the woild, by him ftruck dead wit Drayton " fear Herc Jies Hobbinol, our thepherd awpilere. Ral He who, withiall heav'in's heraldry, wwbiler Wain Wai'Lom adv once.on & time. old [hpilom, Saxon, that is Formerly ;5 once Not in ufe o Where now the ftudious lawyers bave thei bowers 'I:pere whilom wont the Templar knights abide Till they decayed through-pride In northern clime a val'rous knigh Spenfer [chwyn, Welth; genifia fpiFurze Latin. gorfe With awbins or with furzes thy hovel renew Tuffer Plants that have pricklesin their leaf are bolly Bacon __ juniper, whin-buih, and thiftle T 781 | ©. WHINE Dutc [-'.',:)}720, WClfll- in low murmurs noife nately [panian, Saxon to moa to mak meanl Hudibras avee ]{1men a plaintiv and cifemi Then if we awhing, look pale And tell our tale IMen are in pai For us again So neither {peaking doth becom The lover's {tate, nor being dumb Sucklinge He made a viler noife than fwin In windy weather, when they wbine. HudibrasoSome, under fheep's cloathing, had the properl, ho an in zo l co th is th ve wo ties o South's Sermatise as well as bite and devout T was not born fo bafe to flatter crowds And move your pity by a whining tale Dryden's Don Sebaftian Laughing at their whining may perhaps be th Lockeoproper method Life was given for noble purpofes; and therefore it muft not be facrificed to a quarrel, no Collicr whined away in love Upon a general mourning, mercers and woollendrapers would in four-and-twenty hours raife thei cloths and filks to above a double price; and, i the mourning continued long, come whizing wit that they were ready to to the coutt petition Savift {rarve the wood, where the hound wit bu coming thei /in l u c i wer Sidney y c: li i a c n c a aubinin At his nurie's tear y o € v u y a a ' a r a He wwbin' u a o r C p e a S a hi a h u b g p Tha The im e came t Shake[py Macbeth 100KS and affected whiness o Fordomur b gr an e tu po a o t v d od m f wi of So#tha maces Thy hateful whize of wo Breaks in upon my forrows, and diftract My jarring fenfes with thy beggar's cry Rowwe's Fane Shore To War'nNy. v. n. [binnio, Latin ; from the found.] To make a noife like horfe or colt Wer'NyarD. 2./i [pmnan and ape, togain honour, Saxon. Skinner. I kno not whether this word was ever ufed ferioufly, and therefore perhaps it might be denominated in contempt from whiz, A fword: in con- a tool to cut whins. tempt. He fnatch'd his whinyard up, that fle Hudibras When he was falling oft his fteed 7o WHIP. «. a. [hpeopan, Saxon; awip-pen,. Dutch. 1. To ftrike with any thing toughand flex ible He too The harnefs'd fceds, that fill with horror fhook,And plies them with the lath, and zvhips'em on And, as he wbhips, upbraids ‘em with his fon Addiferis 2. To-few flightly. In half-whipt muflin needles ufelefs lie. Gaye 3. To drive with lathes This unbeard faucinefs, and boyith troops,The king doth fmile at; and is well prepar' To whip this dwarfith wat, thefe pigmy arms From-out the circle of his territories Shakefp. King FobneLet's qobip thefe fragglers o'er the fe;'.s\again Lath hence thefe over-weening rags of France Lhefe samifh'd beggars Siizc ' i w p ed h th c o Tyice an Did ahilom kill his bear in fight And wound a fiddler n. [ nofa Enter'd the world, now: blseds to giveusicafe Milton Swoift avhimfey. [fro adj Wui'MsicAL Freakifh ; capricious ; oddly fanciful [while and ere, or be WaiLt RE. adv Blackmore or a fplenctick wwhimfey is the moft auk - wardly paffed away of any King He fpoke this with fuch a fedate and undifturbe Men guilty this way never have obferved| tha the whiling time, the gathering together, an waiting a'little before dinner Ray) on the Creation tion were true theyglorify God, fos your profeficd fubjection unt he permits me L'Eftrange extravagant fhapes.tha can be imagined, all the fancies and awh.sfies o poets and painters, and Egyptian idolaters, if f be they are confiftent with life and propagation would be now aétually in being if our atheifts no Watts overload it 2. / At this rate a pretended freak or whinfey ma Milton " Ateains her end Dawies fome oppreflion [only another form of Waine. # A [from the verb.] Plaintiv A freak ; a caprice the word whim. noife ; mean or affeéted complaint an odd fancy ; a whim The favourable opinion of men comes often Wrt'MmsEy Shakelpeare Why then we rack the value Repeated, vhile the fedentary eart Whiles by th waywar purblind OY Whiles 1 was prote&or . At the fame time that whining 'I‘h'nsbwbim/;led 1 adj. [Ifuppofe fromavhim Wai'mrLED i Wbl‘jc, Saxon Gex ‘The father by his authority fbould always fto this fort of crying, and filence their whimpering Locke A laughing, toying, wheedling, whimp'ring fh Shall make him amble on agoflip's meflage. Rowve In peals of thunder now fhe roars, and no Saif? She gently wbimpers like a lowing cow hope of .another Iife, woul ments of fenfe What fate bas difpos'd of th worth awhile to tell [wimmeren To cry without any loud noife man. ot il l n c m c r l a u i r p t (God himfelf d th @. 2 a awhining tone an e f f l f d e t i a c e f accent in thei Sawift Such as fine men adopt, and fine men rue. Harte hav peopl The commo He learnt his wwhims and high-flown notions too n f o l T e t o n o ' f w all the wwhile tho ad e e b i a i t al v h That which x V t b h o n i to m c i n c t a r | o Few, withou Whip him c f h g i c h fe y y b Till, like And whine aloud for mercy Shakefp. Antony and Clecpaira ' Allithe fuperfinous whims relate ing t o t o _ i d ; f e t e n c l ho -' f:fbr which thine own conlc_icnce did condemn t}_lc Milton WHIM. 2. /. [This word is derived b Skinner from a thing turning round nor can I find any etymology more proA freak; an odd fancy; bable. caprice 3 an irregular motion of defire a C e i w e p f al d l p f fi 3\ That fed hi m i r v a l w o r p o n g i 1 hope al | ey diikee 2 inqubils, thu AE Yet att thou not inglorious in thy fate l t C ' o n f B ' ' n q t s c a " fl e é A § @"& m c i e f h f m h i g l h r b - c n h o 3 " Moft bighly huge, of (crc-wogd; whxcb the pil H Shakilps Richard Y1X. I pluckt geefe,. play'd truant and whipt top, Iknew not what it was tobe beaten till kacely Sl‘.fz.{‘b:/;beayg If ‘ordered every day to cvbip his top fo long asto make him weary if you promife ithi he will with for his ‘og D asa reward of having ‘zcv/):;p; his top-luftily quite-out B or Whipe cream; unfortified with wine or fenfe ! Froth'd by that flattern mufe, Indiffesence. Harre, 4y L |