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Show WI hey {pring together out, and fwiftly bea The flying youth through clouds and yielding air win er eaf th tri out Tpe wis Wi; And leave the breezes of the morn behind. _4ddif q, WINK ken Doft thou not thin But that Iwoul It raged fo al wink Not writ And for my fou In my opinion yet thou fee'ft not well Shakefpeare's Henry V1 Her evink each bold attempt forbids Sidney The ftockjobber thus from'Change- alley goesdown And tips you the freeman a win Let me have but your vote to ferve for the town 11l ink and couch; no man their fports muft eye Shake[peare His falfe cunnin Taught him to face me out of his acquaintance And grew a twenty years removed thing While one would avink Shakefp. Tavelfth Night And here is a guinea to drink WI'NKER winks led his\ pow'rs to death Proper to madmen thei Shakefpeare's Henry 1V In defpite of all this, he runs foolifhly int hard wvin h f beca mere ruin an fi hi and rufhes violently like a horfe into the 1( and full eye Wi'NvER While Hermes pip'd and fung, and told his tale The keeper's winking eyes began to fail And drowfy flumber on the lids to creep Whether the wwinner laughs or no, the lofer wil complain; and rather than quarrel with his ow {kill, will do it at the dice Templ WI'NNING not to fee Dwell in her }ooks WI'NNING i w w pare 7 "This ancient moral Shakefpeare's Tempeft At every wink of an eye fome new grace will b Shakefpeare b‘n_ Siace I receiv'd command to do this bufinefs Y have not flept one wink Shakefp. Cymbeline The fu prologues com gamefter, that ftake fo that if he lofe Wi'Nnow @ [-pmbpan Saxon evanno, Lat. 1. To feparate by means of the wind to part the grain from the chaff Were our royal faith martyrs in love We fhall be winnozw'd with o rough a wind That even our corn fhall feem as light as chaff And good from bad find no partition Shakefpeare's He In the fun your golden grain difplay But lonely walking by a winking light Sobb'd, wept, and groan'd, and beat his wither' You doing thus To the perpetual wink for ay might pu Addifon Addifor's Freeholder The fullen tyrant flept not all the night Wink. n [ [from the verb. 1 A& of clofing the eye a writer to a butterin Iv then with quick fa Milton's Paradife Loft To fift; to examine fin {}_ml yo an thought thi wel Winno *T'is light as chaff ¢chat flies before the wind, Dryd r p t 4 Bitter torture thal Winnow the truth from falfehood H WI'NTER. #. f/. [pmncep, Saxon; awin ter, Danifh, German, and Dutch.] Th col feafon of the year h Thoug wer ftep alread int the awinte of his age, he found himfelf warm in thofe defires which were in his fon far more excufable Sidnzy After fummer evermor fucceed The barren awinter with his nipping cold Shake[peare's Henry V A woman's ftory at a wiznter's fire. Shak. Macb He hath bought a pair of caft lips.of Diana: nun of winter' fifterhood kiffes not more religioufly; the very ice of chaftity is in them Q V an The two b Of endlefs aw poles complai rpetual rain Dryden Lieft thou afleep beneath thofe hills of fnow Stretc out thy lazy limbs; awake, awake And ainter from thy furry mantle (hake D):y{!‘ Suppofe our poet was your foe before Yet now the bus'nefs of the field is o'er *Tis time to le your civil wars alone When troops are into zvi H tha ters gone. Dryd makes no refle@ions on what he reads only loads his mind with a rhapfody of tales, fiti awinter-nights for the entertainment of others Locke Stern winter {miles on that aufpicious clime Th fields are florid with unfading prime Pope To define winter, I confider firfk wherein it.agrees with fummer, {pring, autumn, and I find the are all feafons of the year the year is a genus: the therefore a feafon o I obferve wherein i differs from thefe, and that is in the fhortnefs of the days; therefore this may be called its fpecia nature, or difference: then, by joining tiefe together, I make a definition Winter is that feafon of theyear wherein the days are fhorteft atts's Logick To Wi1'NTER. . pafs the winter fromr the noun.] T The fowis fhall fummer upon them, and al the beafts of the eartlr thall einter upon them Ifa. xviii. 6 Becaufe the haven was not commodious to wwinAéFsy xxvii 70 W1'NTER. ae a in the winter 1 'To feed or manag The cattle generally fold for flaughter within or exportation abroad, had never been handled o aintered at hand-meat Temple Young lean cattle may by their growth pay fo their wintering, and fo be ready to fat next fummer Mortirer WiNTE is often ufed in compofition The king fat in the ewinter-houfe, and ther Fere xxxvie 2. vas a fire burning before him If in November and Decembe called a winter-fallowing they faliow, *ti Mortimer 1 with thyme, fweet marjoter-favoury. Walran's Angler and a li Wi'NTERBEATEN. adj. [winter and beaz. 2. To fan; to beat as with wings 3 Ecclus, v+ 9 Wi'NNOWER. #. /. [from ainnow. who winnows ram And thrafh it out and winnezw it by day Dryden's Virgil Now on the polar winds Winnows the buxom air not int and g every way grac the laft throw, he is fure to be undone 5, To be dim Dryden in one of Congtreve' all his winnings upon every caft Or pardon weaknefs that he never felt Addifon's Cato [from wiz Winnow not with every wind #er in, the more part advifed to d A fimil He knows not how to wink at human frailty breaft 7z / won Rofcommon and with becomin Soften the rigour of her father's virtues ' The king gave him great gifts, and winked a the great fpoil of Bofworth-field, which came almoft wholly to this man's hands Obftinacy cannot be winked at, but muft be fubLaocke dued Cato is ftern, and awful as a god Par. Lof3 Shines out in every thing fhe a&ts or {peaks Thile winning mildnefs and attractive {mile Shake[p. Macbeth Bacon's Henry V1I Let us not write at a loofe rambling rate In hope the world will wirk at all our faults i On her, as queen A pomp of awinning graces waited fill And from about her thot darts of defir Into all eyes, to with her fill in fight Milton's Paradife Lofs Cato's fou t Let not night fee my black and deep defires [from awin. Yet lefs fair Lefs winning foft, lefs amiably mild Prior They be better conten. with one that will win at their faults, than with him that will reprov Whitgifte them 1, for awinking at your difcords too Have loft a brace of kinfmen Shakefpeare's Romeo and Fuliet _The eye awink at the hand participial adj Attraltive; charming Or wink, as coward and ‘afraid to fee Spenfer Than that {fmooth watery image To lend the ¢ other friendly aid 4 To connive tolerate he fetting unto him again, thortly winnet Shakefpeare Till all the watchman was at length afleep. Dryd You cannot think he would den b One wh &o together You precious ainners all ; your exultatio Partake to every one Shake[pe Winter's Tale Bethrew the wwinners, for they play'd me falf the motio When you fhcot, and fhut one eye at [from win. all from the qinner 3. To clofe, and exclude the light gpal 7 / o b whic Send him a fpoon when he wants a knife: <win at the footman to leave him without a plate. Swvift Peachem on Draaving A gamefter, having loft all, borroweth of hi next fellow-gamefter fomewhat to maintain play Shake[peare wins You faw my mafter wwink and laugh upon you Tillot fon If any about them fhould make them thin there is-any difference between being in the dar Lacke and winking, get it out of their minds 2, To hint, or dire& the eyelids ])//‘7: If one beholdeth the light, he vieweth it winkingly, as thofe do that are purblind ; but if an thing that is black, he looketh upon it with a broa patural faculty 5 they are not blind, but they wvink One wh WIUNKINGLY. adw. [from avinking.] Wit the eye almoft clofed Layior The Scripture reprefents wicked men as withou underftanding: not that they are deftitute of th 2. /. [from awink. birth r And, ainking, leap'd into deftruction Saift A fet of nodders, ainkers, and whifperers, whof bufinefs is to ftrangle all others offspring of witi He, with great imagination not lofe her fightfo long? Donne night, thatI could not fleep Temple ! but then I think I cannot fleep a wink Pope 2. A hint given by motion of the eye They're fairies ; he that lpL.\ka: to them {hall die 'To part corn fro w. z chaff I could eclipfe and cloud them with a wink Dutch. Let's fee thine eyes 3 <:L_':1:l' now, now open them To Wi'nNow The beams fo reverend and ftrong 2. 2. [pinczan, Saxon ; aiznc 1. To fhut the eyes WI WI by Cymbeline. Harafle by fevere weather He comparet of th trees year an to th froft to his own win cafe to the {ad feafo und, to- the froze aten flock Spenfe WINTERCHE RRY. 7 /. [alkekenge.] plant The fruit is-about the‘bignef an the flower, whic of a bladder lofed in. the-cup o Lazrpe 1WCy over 1t in for Miller in WinTeErRCI'TRON, 7 f A fort of pear | WI'NTERGREEN. 7,/ [pyrola, Lat.] plant M |