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Show O ‘ t t r t f o o t @ p e t e Yf we confi Rogers n m g a t u v g n l l o a [from aworld. adj Wo'rLOLY nc i f l i t t n t l r r l 1. Sec tradiftin@ion to the life to- come " He is divinely bent to meditation And in no worldly fuits would he be moved To draw him from his holy exercife Shake[peare's Richard 111 Haft thou not aworldly pleafur at command Shakefpeare t p i t i n c i f r c o u The forti h ca e p t i w z r r t e i no c e roic, and which are commonly the effects of inteDryden reft, pride, and wvorldly honour Compare the happinefs of men and beafts n e a n y a l / o e o f l f r i a t h far Amrbmy As to worldly affairs, which my friends though fo heavy upon me, they are moft of them of ou own making, and fall away as foon as we kno Law ourfelves ¢. Bent upon this world ; not attentive t a future ftate The Worldl Il practife how to live fecure Milton's Paradife Lafi? belonging to th 3. Human ; common world Many years it hath continued, ftanding by n other wwor/dly mean put that one only hand whic Hooker erected it Times and places are approved witneffes o Raleigh's Hiftory of the Warld aorldly aiors Wo'rLDLY. adv. [from aworld. ‘relation to the prefent life Wit Raleigh liveth Subverting aworldly ftrong and eworldly wif Milton's Paradife Loff By fimply meck This cannot be done, if my will be wworldly o South's Sermons voluptuoufly difpofed is worldly bent Therefore of the two gifts in my difpofe Think ere you fpeak, I grant you leave to choofe WORM #. / [pynm Saxon Dryden avorm 1. A fmall harmlefs ferpent that lives i the earth Both the prince Thy broken faith hath made a prey to worms Shake[peare Help me into fome houfe Or I fhall faint! A plague o' both your houfes They have made wworms meat of me. Shakefpeare Though «wworms devour me, though 1 turn t mold Yet in my flefh™I fhall his face behold 1 from my marble monument fhall rif with thefe eyes Sandys's Par At once came forth whatever creeps the ground Milton Infe& or worm 2. ‘A poifonous ferpent The mortal worm 3. Animal bred in the body Shake[peare _ Phyficians obferve thefe wworms engendered within the body of man Harwey on Confumptions 4. The animal that fpins filk ; filkworm Thou oweft the worm no filk, the fheep no wool Shakefpeare 5. Grubs that gnaw wood and furniture or turne round ; any thing fpiral The threads of fcrews, when bigger than ca be made in fcrew-plates, are called 2worms Th length of ‘a avorm begins at the onc end of th fpindlesiand ends at the other; the breadth of th avorm is contained between any two grooves on th fpindle; the depth of the zworm is cut into th diameter of the fpindle, wiz. the.depth betwee the outfide of the wworm, and the bottom of th groove DMoxon 70 WorM. @. z. [from the noun. T work {lowly, fecretly, and gradually When debates and fretting jealouf and work within you more and more Did wor Your colour faded Herbert Fo WorM. v, a 1. To drive by flow an means fecre perhaps as by a ferew They find themfelves qwormed out of all power by a new fpawn of independents, fprung from you own bowels Savift 2. 'To deprive a dog of fomething, nobod faid to prevent him, nobody knows why from running mad Every one that keepeth a dog, fhould have hi Mortimer wormed Wo'RMEATEN. [worm and eaten. 1. Gnawed by worms An *Tis no awkward claim Pick'd from the aworm-holes of long-vanifh'd days Nor from the duft of old oblivion rak'd Shakefpeare's Henry V 6. Something tormenting The 2worm of confcience ftill begnaw thy foul Shakefpeare The chains of darknefs, an8 th' undying worm. Milron The greateft part of mankind are given up t labour, whofe lives are aworn out only in the pro worthlefs mad in books fome in long parchmen fcrolls That were all quormeatcs, and full of canker holes Spenfer Things among the Greeks, which antiquity ha worn out of knowledge, were called ogygia; whic we call @ormeaten, or of defaced date Raleigh's Hiffory of the World Thine's like gwormeaten trunks cloath'd in feal' fkin Or grave, that's duft without, and ftink within Wo rMwo00D. 7 /. [from its virtue to kil worms in the body ; perhaps properl aormawwort Wormawood hath an indeterminate ftalk, branching out iito many fmall fhoots, with fpikes o naked flowers hanging downward; the leaves ar Of this plant there are thirtyhoary and bitter two f{pecies, one of which, the common worm avoed, grows in the roads ; but it is alfo planted i Great variety of fe gardens for common ufe awormaweods are found in the falt marfhes of England, and fold in the markets for the true Roma awormavoody though they differ greatly Miller She was wean'd ; I had then lai Wormavord to my dug. Shakefp. Romeo and Fuliet Pituitous cacochymia muft be corrected by bits ou Hu th er. Flo win oo ma wo a ters I afk whether one be not invincibly confciou ach wh n ti ce pe ere dif o to himfel tually taftes wormavood, or only thinks on tha favour Wa' rMY. adj Locke [ fro aorm. o Ful worms a r b v h d o f a y v f o c i a Spirits t p e a S n g a d b m o w Already to the a d a o t m d u r p n Yet c m w r d h r e i t u r c r c Or that th o l M d b r w i li e t Or that thy bea i o r e a o f Worn. part. p quite con den fhield His is a ma Locke vifions for living Your cold hypocrify 's, a ftale device aworn-out trick; wouldf be though thou i earneft Cloath thy feign'd zcal in rage, in fire, in fury Addifor Wo'RNIL 2.f In the backs of cows, in the fummer, are mag gots generated whic in Effe w call awornils being firft only a fmall knotin the fkin g l e T oi y P 7o Wo'rRry. @. a. [ popigen; Saxon whence perhaps the word awarray. prey If we, with thrice fuch powers left at home Cannot defend our own doors from the dog Shakefpeare's Henry V Let us be avorried The fury of the tumults might fly fo high as t tear thofe in pieces, whom as yet the quorry an King Charles but played with in their paws >Tis no new thing for the dogs that are to kee the wolves from avorrying the fheep, to be delivere up to the enemy, for fear the fheep thould zworr L' Eftrange the wolves This revives and imitates that inhuman barba rity of the old heathen perfecutors, Wrapping u of wild beafts, that fo the might be worried and torn in pieces by dogs South's Sermons 2. 'To harafs, or perfecute brutally Then embraces his fon-in-law; then again wor ries he his daughter with clipping her Shakefpeare's Winter's Tale old records from antient times deriv'd Som " Dryden by fortune chriftians in the fkin For his verity in love, I do think him as concav as a covered goblet, or a wwormeaten nut. Shakefp 2. Old of a fickly gge, worn out with ftudy, and opprefs' 1. To tear, or mangle, as a beaft tears it Dfi'flflf Dutch ; wermis, Latin. Again intire, and fee hi vermiculated His chamber all was hang'd about with rolls It is a token of a worldly wife man, not to contend in vain againft the nature of times wherein h Since your min 7. Any thin knows what, under his tongue ; which i or diffolute, on that their lord " Shall leave them to enjoy W O WO d r b a d w h ' e t b Guiltlefs in fight; min y D x l h a r f Worn out of fervice, muf t What I now offer, i For want of words, or lack of breath Witnefs when I was aworried with thy peals. Milt It has pleafed Providense at length to, give u righteoufnefs inftead of exaction, aiid hopes of re ligion to a church worried with reformation South's Sermons All his car Was to preferve me from the barbarous rage Which 2iorried him only for being mine. Soutberst I fhall not fufter him to zvorry any man's reputation, nor indeed fall on any perfon whatfoever Let them rail And worry one another at their pleafurc Addifon Roave contrive and invent Madam And qvorry him out, till he gives his confent Savift WorsE. adj. The comparative of bad bad, worfe; worfp. [pny, Saxon.] Mor bad ; more ill Why fhould he fee your faces vozfz liking tha Daniel, ie 10 the children of your fort In happinefs and mifery; the queftion il remains, how men comé often to prefer the zvorf to the better, and to chufe that, which, by thei own confeflion, has made them miferable ? Locke WoRrsE adw In a manner more bad The more one fickens, the zworfe at eafe he is Shakefpeare The Worse x. /. [from the adjettive. 1. The lofs ; not the advantage better not th Was never man, who moft Conquelis atchiev'd But fometimes had the avorfe, and loft by war Spenfer Judah was put to zhe worfe before Ifracl ; an they fled to their tents 2. Something lefs good A man thinks th for makin 2 Kings, Xive 1 whatever are his profeflions, alway wworfe of a woman, whao- forgives h an attempt on her virtue Clarifia 7o WoRrS$E. @.a. [from the adje@tive. To put to difadvantage. This word though analogical enough, is not no ufed 3X ~ Perhap |