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Show The maids and their mafes Wi'nterLy adi. [avinter and like. Suc! as is fuitable to winter; ofa winQUC At dancing and wakes Had their napkins and pofies try kind news to 't before; if wwinterly, thou need'f Shak. Cymbeline that count'nance (ill Brumal [from ainter. adj Wi'nTrY hyemal ; {uitable to winter faw the Trojan flect difpers'd, diftrefs'd By formy winds and wintry heaven opprefs'd Diryden th Havin [from avize. adj Wi'Ny tafte or gualities of wine the melon whethe an fe will not be more winy an Tane was the damfel ; ‘and without remorf The king condemn'd her, guiltlefs, to the fire Her veil and mantle pluckt they off by force And bound her tender arms in twidted wwire Fairfax Thou fhalt be whipt with awire, and ftew'd i Smarting in ling'ring pickie Shake[peare's Antony and Cleopatra Bacon better tafted Saxon. [pipan @.a Z¢ WIPE WIRE. #. /. [wvirer, Fr. to draw round Metal drawn into flende Skinmer. threads brine mufkmelons amon cucumber Se by rubbing with fomethin t. To cleanf {oft Such a handkerchief Shakefp. Othello See Caflio wipe his beard with Shea gentle tear let fal Erom either eye, and wip'd them with her hair Then wit her veft the woun Denban dries z. To take away by terfion Calumniat for though we avipe awa ftoutly with never fo much care the dirt thrown at us there will be left fome fulliage behind Decay of Piety 3. To flriike off gently "That filverly doth progrefs on thy cheeks. Shakefp Seme natural tears they dropp'd, but @wip'd the foon Milton's Paradife Lof A young man, having fuffered many tortures efcaped with life, and told his fellow Chriftians that the pain of them had been rendered tolerabl by the prefence of an angel, who fteod by him an 2wiped off the tears and {weat Addifon 4. To clear away Macduff, this noble paffion Child of integrity, hath from my fou Wipd the black feruples; reconcil'd my thought To thy good truth and honour {emungo. 'To cheat pext borderin oneupe Shakefp. Macheth to defraud lords commonl anether, as one is fronger encroac or lie #jll i wait to awipe them out of theiy lands Spenfer-on Treland 6. To Wivre our 'T'o'efface Shall'be wip'd onr in the next parliament Shakefpeare's Henry V1 A tho lov'ft me Camillo ozy o decrepid ol age has blotte paft knowledge, and clearl v mind was formerly ftore up all the pafiages fc new one with,'% and @oppe to enter3 or, if ther be fom of the islet ye left open, the imprefiions made are fearce perceived Locke WirE. 7./. [from the verb. i. A& of cleanfing 2. Ablow farcafm a ftroke ajeer a gybe Savift 3. {varellys.] A bird JYTPER, 4,/ [from avipe. Ainfwarth An inftru by whic any thing i ment or perlo wiped qwires, on fpokes o Dryden's Aneid moving through a flexible canal, whenits friction will naturally lengthen an the fides of the canal, according to th Arbatbnat of its axis I have been wrongfully accufed, and my fenf Diyden awiredrazvn into blafphemy REDRAWER 7 /. [wir One who fpins wire Thof wh bav nee and draw. of unmixe filver a gilders and wiredrawvers, muft, befides an cqua weight of filver mixed with other metals, give a overplus to reward the refiner's fkill Locke To Wis. w. a. pret. and part. pafl. avi/ff [aviffen, German; awy/er, Dutch.] T think; to imagine Obfolete Thus proud and fierce Of them poor fouls; an Made them his own befor When Mammon fa Him to entrap unwares unto the heaxts he fep cutting reafon's reins they had it woiff. Sidney his purpofe mift another way he awiff Spenfer This book, advifedly read, and- liligently followed but one year at home, would do a young gentleman more good, I zvifs, than three years trave Aleham's Schoolmafter Thexe be fools alive, I eis Silver'd o'er, and fo was this Shakefpeare Aarry with a king fkil conduét i ;'olm affairs 5 Judiciog *Tis much he dares And to that dauntlefs temper of his m n 'I-{c hath. a wifdsm that doth gvide h s valo; To adt in fafety Shakofpeare's Mack Wifdom and fortune combating together If that the former dare but what itocan, No chance may thake it. Shak. An!.a dCIeapa:m Whe He wift not Thetys in her lap did hid Another yet, a world refervid for you T'o make more great than that he did fubdue Walle Wi'spom. #. /. [ pydom, Saxon; awii/domr, Danifh. 1. Sapience; the power of judging rightly ; the knowledge of divine and huma to work is goodnefs work is wifdom, an that which perfeéteth his work is power. Hooker As from fenfes reafon's work doth fpring S0 many reafons underftanding gain And many underftandings knowledge bring And by much knowledge rvifdor: we obtain. Dawies Wildom is that which malkes men judge wha ave the beft ends, and what thie beft means to attai them, and gives a man advantage of counfel an diredtion Lemple knowledge Heav'n is for thee too high; be lowly Wile Milton viifes; and from thence the term of Wife carme Since the floods deman For their defcent 2 prone and finking Jand Does not this due deciivity declar Tmpk A aife dire&or's providential care Blackimors The «vifeff and befk men, in all ages, have live up to the religion of their country, when theyfa nothing in it oppoiite to morality Addifin 2. Judicious g prudent; pracically know ‘There were ten virgins ; five of them were wifs and five were foolifh Matthew 1 would have you 2vife unto that which is good and fiinple concerning evil Roms xviv 19 The young and gay declining, Alma flie At nobler game, the mighty and the avife By nature more an eagle than a dove Yourg She impioufly prefers the world to love 3. Skilful ; dexterous Speak unto all that are evife-hearted, whom have filled with the fpirit of wifdom, that they ma Exod. xxviii. 3 make Aaron's garments D we count hi a wvife mian, who is wifei any thing but his own proper profefiion and em ployment, and zvife for every body but himfelt Tillotfor They are wife to do evil, but to do good the have no knowledge in hidde 4+ Skille Fore ive 22 arts: a fenfe fome what ironical There was an cld fat woman even now W.lt me.--Pray, was 't not the 7vife woman of Brain ford Shakefpeare becoming a wife man One eminent in wife deport fpake muc_h- _Ml/n‘ Shakefpeare's Richard 111 for more worlds the Macedonian cried Go hi 1. Sapient ; judging rightly ; having muc 5. Grave #ripling too I wis your grandam had a worfer martch That which movet and that which ord When lettess are in valgar fhapes >Tis ten to one the wit fcape But when in capitals expreft _ Phe dulleft reader fmokes the jeft laid along things Lo fatefmen would you give a wige Yo print it in Italick typ A fiui fmall, b airedraz direétio A. batchielor, a handfom Shakefpeare's Winter's Tale in who fom To Wi REDRAW. . a. [wire and draw. 1. To {pin into wire 2. To draw out into length wife not owr th zeft of thy fervices by leaving me now akeon bound with burnin wheels are hung abroad. This blot, that they objeét againft your houfe 2. Prudence Al the. writings of the ancient Goths \:Z'rf compofed in verfe, which were called runes, o Some roll a mighty ftone W We court fait awifdom, that celefti l maid Milton 3. 'To draw by art or violence Let me wwijpe off this honourable dew operations Greaw's Coj)mlagia O facred folitude ! divine retre t Choice of the prudent, envy o the great By thy pure fiream, or in the w ving fhad Wisk. adj. [pry, Saxon; awiis, Dutch an Danith. And Milton fhe <wipes an As felence is properly that knowled g which ga. lateth to the effences of things {0 avifdom to thei The foldier, that man of iron Whom ribs of horror all environ That's ftrong with zvire inftead of veina In whofe embraces you 're in chains Beawmont and Fletcher And the cherubick hoft, in thoufand quires Touch their immortal harps of golden wvires I'm fure it was your wife's, did T to-da Th Ben Fonfon And the wipers for their nofes 1£ ¢ be fumme " Wi1 WI 1 It muft be a wife Being that is the caufe or.th.‘)( avife effe&s WISE weife lian. Wilkins . /i [piye, Saxon ; auy, Dutch German ; guife, Fr. gui/ ItaManner; way of bemg or adt ing. This word, in the modern dialect is often corrupted into waps This fong fhe fings in moft commanding wife Come, fhepherd's boy, let now thy heart bcqb{bi‘wf o T To make itflf to my leal look 2 flave © Ere we farther pafs, ¥ will devif A pafiport for us both, in fittelt wife On this wifeo v sail blefs Ivacl, Nembs viea3 The lover ftanding in this doleful wifey g A F"‘fif‘ A warrior bold approgched With foam upon thy lips, and f?ark.mg,:‘eye" Thou fayit and doft in fuch outrageous i That mad Oreftes, if he faw the ihow o t th o e d m t s w o t a v f u W Dr)‘dc‘;l "Tis in no wife frange that fuch a 0";'/{2;:0 believe that things were blindly thuiiied Wi ) sBACRE |