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Show w WI Sometime am 'To extricate out When he found himfelf dangeroufly embarked he bethought himfelf of all pofiible ways to difen tangle himfelf and to wind himielf out of the la yo. To WinD #p. To bring to a fmal compafs, as a bottom of thread Without folemnly wwinding #p one argument, an _intimating that he began another, he lets hi " thoughts, which were fully pofiefle Still fix thy eyes intent upon the throng And_, as the pafles open, wind along up. [ufed of a watch. T Shakefpeare d 0 put into. a ftate of renovate continued motion o 'To raife by degrees '33. 7o Wixp up To ftraiten a ftring b 14. 70 Wixp #p turning that on whic it is rolled put in tune. t To put in order fo regular action : from a watch O you kind gods Cure this great breach of his abufed nature Th' untun'd and jarring fenfes O ind u Shakefpeare Of this child changed father The weyrd fifters, hand in hand Pofters of the fea and land Thrice to thine, and thrice to mine And thrice again to make up nine ToWinp Shak. Macketh @. 1. To turn ; to change So fwift your judgments turn and wind You caft our fleeteft wits a mile behind, Dryden 2, To turn ; to be convolved Some plants can fupport themfelves; and fom others creep along the ground, or zwind about othe trees, an canno fuppor themfelves Bacon's Natural Hiftory Stairs of a folid newel fpread only upon one fmal newel, as the feveral folds of fans fpread about thei eentre but thefe becaufe they fometimes wwind and fometimes fly off from that winding, take mor room - up in the ftaircafe 3..'T'o move round Moxaon If aught obftruct thy courfe, yet ftand not fill But wind about till thou hat topp'd the hill Denbam 4. To proceed in flexures It thall not qwind with fuch a deep indent As rob me of {0 rich a bottom here Ever more did wind About bis bofome a moft crafty minde He winds with eaf Shake[peare Chapman Through the pure marble air his oblique way Amongtt innuinerable ftais mnot impreg "Thefe arms of mine fhall be thy windingfbeet My heart, fweet boy, fhall be thy fepulchre For from ray heart thine image ne'er thall go Shake[peare's Henry V1 The great eindingfbeets, that bury all things i oblivion, are deluges and earthquakes Wi'nprass. n f. [awin 1. A handle by which wrapped together roun z. Ahandle by which an With avindlaffés, and with aflays o By indiretions find dire@ions out Wi'NDpLE bryony Wi'npmiLL Bacor's Natural Hiffory Milts Paradife Loft. nill Wilkins ills grind twice the suantity in an ho that watermills do Mortimer's H His fancy has made a giant of a cwindmil he 's now engaging it F. Aite Wi'~pow 1. An aperture in a building by which ai and light are intremitted Being one day at my wwindowv all alone Many ftrange things happened me to fee A fair view her winde aindgalls, and fped with fpavins Shakefpeare's. Taming of the- Shrezw He through a little window caft his f Walicr Though thick:of bars that gave a fcanty But ev'n that glimmering ferv'd him to defer Th' inevitable charms of Emily Diryden When you leave the awindsews open for air, ledv com book fyring thm.u_g injecte bein air o preflio the ftrife and diftention of the imprifoned air ferv too on the windsw-feat tha they ma get ai Swift 2. The frame of glafs or any other materials that cover the aperture t within fhut o fall littl o hel th b ing, ftop and keep clofe the vents by \\'lm.l.\ it was :1d T Wilkins's Mathematical Magick thee I do commen my watchfu] fou Ere I let fall the windows of mine eyes Sjeeping or waking, oh defend me fhill cau‘fly itfel lea aindguns fro Forc' flev A T through the ,}1:) ope p Spenfer yields The town, the river, and the fields Wi'NDGUN. 2. /o [wind and guni] Gu which difcharges the bullet by means o wind comprefled An . /. [vindue, Danifh ner thinks 1t originally awind-deor. Farrier's Ditionary the fafhions, full o pond'rous {lugs cut fwiftl be imprefied from their motion, equivalent to thof or by a hovfe's ftanding on a floping floor, or fro extreme labour and heat, or by blows mtftad a failing chariot might be more conveni- y framed with moveable fails, whofe force ma Ewelyn's Kalendar The windgun is charged by the forcibl #. fi [wind and mill t a windmil [wind and gall. wit A {pin Ainfaworth 5 like Don Quixote Windgalls are foft, yielding, flatulent tumours o bladders, full of corrupt jelly, which grow upo each fide of the fetlock joints, and are fo painfuli hot weather and hard ways, that they- make horfe to halt. They are caufed by violent ftraining infeéte Shak. Ham/e? mill turned by the wind 2. An unexpetted legacy Wi'NDFLOWER, 7 /. The anemone flower horf bias . /. [from o wind. dle Wri'npraLL, n [ [wind and fall. 1. Fruit blown down from the tree Hi and lace. rope or lace i a cylinder thing is turned Thus do we of wifdom and of reach Plants that put forth their fap haftily, have thei bodies not proportionable to their length; an therefore they are avinders and creepers, as ivy an # / Bacon The chafte Penelope having, as fhe thought, lof Ulyfies at fea, employed her time in preparing windingfbeet for Laertes, the father of her bufband Speiator . A plant that twifts itfelf round others Wi'npcaLL art the windings run Wi'NDINGSHEET. 7. /. [wind and fbeer. A fheet in which the dead are enwrapped Swift alfo gather your eindfalls Flexure Nor where the regular confufion ends. Addif. Cato Gather now, if ripe, your winter fruits, as apples, to prev ent their falling by the great winds Thus do go about, about Peace! the charm's wound up Nor fees with how muc To keep troublefome fervants out of the kitchen, leave the winder fticking on the jaclk, to fal # £ [from wind. variety of pleafing fcenes as the courfe of it naturaily led us Addifon on Italy The ways of heaven are dark and intricate Our underftanding traces them in vain Speétator on their heads charity, vir It was the pleafanteft voyagein the world to follow the awindings of this river Inn, through fuch Drayton To tune their notes to that immortal quire. Prior and humbl meander The winder fhows his workmanthip {o rar Asdoth the fleece excel, and mocks her loofer clew As neatly bottom'd up as nature forth it drew Your lute may aind its ftrings but little higher 15. 7o Winp wp Wri'spine Wi'NDER. n. /. [from awind. 1. An infirument or perfon by which an thing is turned round Waller this his mode nefs of much knowledge, iffued this Brereawood on Languages Sound eggs fink, and fuch as are addled fiim as do alfo thofe termed hypenemia, or windeggs Brown's Pulgar Errours Hylas! why fit we mute Now that each bird faluteth the fpring Wind up the flacken'd firings of thy lute Never canft thou want matter to fing. An eg puffinefs tues which rarely cohabit with the fwelling windi principles of life When they could not coolly convince him, the tailed, and called him an heretick: thus theywwoun up his temper to a pitch, and treacheroufly mad ufe of that infirmity Atterbury Fro nated ; an ege that does not contain th Thefe he did {0 wwind up to his purpofe, that the Hayward withdrew from the court 1 o 3. Tumour Milton 2. / ar taken off by incenfion or evaporatio Bacor's Natural Hiftory Yet not for this the aindbound navy weigh'd Slack were their fails, and Neptune difobey' Dryden When I beftir myfelf, it is high fea in his houfe and when I fit ftill, his affairs forfooth are awindbound Addifew's Spectator Is it reafonable that our Englith flect, which ufe to be the terror of the ocean, thould be windbonnd Wi'sDpEGG fpirit fubtile or wind ing; and, generally Wi'NpBounD. adj. [wind and bound. Confined by contrary winds Will not the author of the univerfe, having mad an automaton which can wind up itfelf, feec whe of its aggndinefs by decott Sena lofeth fomewha Pope Out of fuch prifon Dryden G oa ther it hath ftood {till or gone true Is there a tongue, like Delia's o'er her cup Young That runs for ages without winding up 2, Tendency tc gen erate wind Long lab'ring underneath, ere they could zvin Fate feem'd to wind him up for fourf{core years Yet frefhly ran he on ten winters more Till, like a clock worn out with calling time The wheels of weary life at laft ftood fill Floyer on the Humour: with ouz and perchance wind up m watchy or play with fome rich jewel effets of all fermented liquors 6. To be extricated; to be difentangled convolve the {pring I frown the while onConfamptions dinner, and in the mosning. Harve Orifices are prepared for the letting forth of th varified fpirits in ruus, or windinefs, the commo Pop Swift afcending from the azure wave He tock the path that evinded to the cave Locke A windinefs and pufling up of your flomach fl.f'f; Gay has ufed winded n /. [from avindy. 1, Fulnels of wind ;3 flatulence Dryden 5. Wound is commonly the preterite of the mat ter, run in one continued ftrain 11. Zo Win Clarendon byrinth he was in Wi'spinEss 1t was d-rock winding with one afeent. Milton The filver Thames, her own domeftick flood Shall bear her veffels, like a {weeping trai And often wind, as of his miftrels proud With longing eyes to meet her face again. Dryd You that can fearch thofe many-corner'd minds Where woman's crooked fancy turns and wwinds All wound with adders, who with cloven tongue Shakefpeare Do hifs me into madnefs y, 7o Win WI Shakefpeare's Richard 111 I |