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Show W I WI When you fee my fon, tell him, that his fwor Shakefp wi in the honour that he lofes can neve »in, he meditates the wa Refolv' D0 ; aud betra . , or by f .force to ravit pe P B 4. To obtain compliance to allur to kindnefs o Thy virtue zuan me 3 with virtue preferve me Dot thou love me? Keep me then fill worthy t Sidney be beloved Devilifh Macbet By many of thefe trains hath Jought to wwin me Shakefpeare 5. To gain by play He had given a difagreeable vote in parliament for which reafon not a man would bave fo muc correfpondence with him as to eviz his money Addifon 6. To gain by perfuafion They 2vin great numbers to receiv With joy the tidings brought from heav'n. Milton 7. To gain by courtfhip She 's beautiful, and therefore to be woo'd Shakefp She is a woman, therefore to be zvon No tears, Celia, now fhall zvi My refolv'd heart to return I have fearch'd thy foul within Carew And find nought but pride and {corn That fleod witnefs'd his incontant flame When. thus he fwore, and 2oz the yiclding dame Gay 9o WinN. v. 7 z. To gain the victory Nor is it aught but juft ‘That he, who in debate of truth hath zwon Milton Shoud iz in arms 2. To gain influence or favour You exprefs yourfelf very defirous to zviz upo the judgmen of your mafter and not upon hi Bacon affetions only You have a foftnefs and beneficence winning o Dryden the hearts of others Thy words like mufick every breaft controul Steal thro' the air, and @iz upon the foul 3. To gain ground Pope 4. To be conqueror or gainer at play Shak My mind 's ot on't, you are too hard for me -Sir, I did never win of you before ~But little, Charles Nor fhall not, when my fancy 's on my play Shakefpeare . n [gwingo, Welth. To kick, as impatient of a rider, or of pain I will fit as quiet as a lamb % will not ftir, nor awince, nor fpeak a word, Shak Room, room, for my horfe will ewince If he came within fo many yards of a prince Ben Fonfon The angry beaft did ftraight refen The wrong done to his fundament Began to kick, and fling, and vince As if b' had been befide his fenfe Hudibras A kickin Wi ncEer. a. /. [from avince. beaft WincH. n. [. [guincher, French, totwift. A windlace; fomething held in the han by which a wheel or cylinder is turned DMortimer Put a winch with the wheel Fo Wixcu. v. a. [The fame with awznce or perhaps from guincher, French, t tawiff 5 ainch fignifying {ometimes t To kic writhe or contort the bedy. with impatience; to fhrink from an uneafinefs We who have free foul It touches not, let the gall'd jade zvinch Shakefpeare's Hamlet Our withers ave unwrung Have thefe bones rattled, and this hea So often in thy quarrel bled Nor did Iever winch or grudge it Their confciences are galled; and this malke them wwinch and fling, as if they had fome mettle Tillotfon WI1'NCOPIPE 7 f Thereis a {mall red flower in the {tubble-fields which country people call the wincopipe5 which i it opens in the morning, you may be fure a fai Bacon day will follow WinD. # /. [pind, Saxon; wind, Datch gwynt, Welfh. from the place it is 11, to any other, wit an impetus that is fenfible to us: wherefore it was not ill called by the ancient afwifter courfe of air ; a flowing wave o air ; a flux, effufion, or ftream of air Mufchenbroek He s th fellow is our general rock, the oak, not to be wind thaken Shakefpeare's Coriolanus Love's heralds thould be thought Which ten times fafter glide than the fun beams Driving back fhadows overdow'ring hills Therefore do nimble-pinion'd doves draw love And therefore hath the wwind-fwift Cupid wings Shakefpeare Falmouth lieth farther outin the trade way, an fo offereth a fooner opportunity to wind-drive Carcw thips than Plymouth Wind is nothing but a violent motion of the air produced by its rarefaétion more in one place tha another, by the fun-beams, the attrations of th moon, and the combinations of the earth's moCheyne tions 2. Direétion of the blaft from a particula point ; as eaftward, weftward 1'1l give thee a wind I myfelf have all the other And the very points they blow Hudibras But therc,‘ alas or pixi nautica, confifting of eight winds only, the fou principal, and four collateral; and not long after the people of Bruges and Antwerp perfected tha excellentinvention, adding twenty-four other fubordinate einds or points Heylyn power or act of refpiration long enoug he could no fafety fmd A pack of dog-fifh had him in t e gyiyd 7. Flatulence ; ‘windinefs 8 1t turn Wifdom to folly, as nourithmen to wind, » Mif Miltgn }}r‘x){ th ng infignificant or light as Wing Think noc.with wind of airy threat ¢ awe 9+ Down the Winv A man that had To decay a great venerat found tlg\at the znor:O}?ef;::u to profper him in the world, the more )}'19 \:0 duavn the wind fill L‘Efl,a:n 10 o take or have the Winp T or have the upper hand Leg a king in counci a‘g beware how he opens h own inclinations too much; for elfe counl‘eli will but take the wind of him, inftead of givi free counfel Bmi; To WIND «. a. preter. awound, in P"l' avinded 5 part wound [pmban, Saxon ainden, Dutch s from the noun. 1. To blow ; to found by inflation The fquire *gan nigher to approach And wind his horn under the caftle wall That with tke noife it fhook as it would fall Every Triton's horn is ainding Weicome to the wat'ry plain Ye vig'rous fwains tef Dryden while youth ferments you blood Wisd the fhrill hotn, or fpread the waving net 2. To turn round Pope to twift Nero could touch and time the harp well; bu in government fometimes he ufed to wind the pin too high, and fometimes let them down too low Bacon Angelo, wathing and ainding of linen cloaths; i found out the compafs If my wind were bu prayers,I would repent The figure of a fturdy woman, done by Michae Shakefpeare's Macbeth I' th' thipman's card In the year 1300, one ¥lavio of Malphi, in th 3. Breath . in his houfe 1. Wind is when any tract of air move The worth To fave his life, he leap'd into t'h mat Dryden pain'd realm of Naples Charles, I will play no more to-night Till finding all his artifices va This laft allufion gaul'd the panther more Yet feem'd fhe not to wwinch, though fhrewdl All the quarters that they kno The rabble will in time wwin upon power To WincEe WI to fay m Shake[peare His avind he never took whilft the cup was a his mouth, but juftly obferved the rule of drinkin Hake with one breath The perfume of the flowers, and their virtue feem to cure fhortnefs of wind in purfy old men Temple to agree moft with the orange It ftopp'd at once the paflage of his wind And the free foul to flitting air refign'd. Dryden 4. Air caufed by any aétion On cach fide he Stood pretty dimpled boys, like fmiling Cupids With divers colour'd fans, whofe wwizd did fee To glow the delicate cheeks which they did cool Shakefpeare In an organ,‘from one blaft of wind To many a row of pipes the found-board breathes Milton 5. Breath modulated by an inftrument Where the air is pent, there breath or othe blowing, which carries but a gentle percuffion fuffices to create found; "as in pipes and wind inftruments Bacon Their inftruments were various in their kind Some for the bow, and fome for breathing zwind Dryden 6. Air impregnated with fcent A hare had long efcap'd purfuing hounds By often fhifting into diftant grounds which aét fhe wrings out the water that made th fountain Watten #ind the wood-bine round this arbour. Mk 3. To regulate in motion ; to turn to thi or that direétion He vaulted with fuch eafe into his feat As if an angel dropt down from the clouds To turn and wind a fiery Pegafus And witch the world with noble horfemanthip Shakefpeart In a commonwealt or realm The government is call'd the helm With which, like veffels under fail They 're turn'd and winded by the tail Hfldi& 4. To nofe; to follow by fcent 5. To turn by fhifts or expedients Whence turning of religion's mad The means to turn and wind a trade. Hudibras Mr. Whifto did not care to give more tha fhort, general hints of this famous challenge, an the iffue of it; but he endeavours to wind and tum himfelf every way to evade its force. Waterland 6. 'To introduce by infinuation You have contriv'd to tak From Rome all feafon'd offices, and t‘owm_ Yourfelf into a power cyrannical. Shak. .Cana/ar.fll him In m win out hi fee Edmund frame the bufinefs after your own wifdom Sbakcfiware's King 'L.'fl‘" i in hav the dexteritie Little arts an fuch things into difcourfe Goverre of the Tongue 7. T'o change Were our legiflature vefted in .the Pm'ce'lcamight zvind and turn our conftitution at his fm%&dif hi t governmen ou fhap an fure 8. To entwift; to enfold ; to _encmle Sleep thou, and I will avind thee in fsnlya::f;lfl;"im U : !e e f i r h a l w You know m n m mu fi \ \ m t w v l m To wind abou |