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Show 'WR WR rediefs fre you He took me by the wwriff, and held me hard Shakefpeare The brawn of the arm muft appear full, thadowe¢d on one fide; then fhew the v/iff-bone thereof Peacham The axillary artery, below the cubit, dividet unto two parts; the one running along the radius and pafling by the wriff, or place of the pulfe, i at the fingers fubdivided unto three branches Brown's Pulgar Errours ".1»/'])(',./‘(‘ nts, impetuous rage tranfports ts and avrings the tortur'd foul Rofcommon thou tafte but half the grief ~my foul, thou couldft not talk thu _/7«'4/{,&':.' hands.th knowledg lt vithout all reafon of God' s do¢trine Afchan's Scho NR1T 1. An i re ZI"'/_ Th veale ture readin / been ofte iged to the quick; but were neve v in thanks to thofe by ewhofe en- merchant -adventurer deavour they were freed 2 WRING # hav To writh kel, Dutch. of the fkin o The king is fled to London To call a prefent court of parliament Let us purfue him, ere the writs go forth Dryder Though you, and all your fenfelefs tribe art, or time, or nature bribe Shakefpeare's Henry V1 I folded the zorit up in form of th' other make you look like beauty's queen hold for ever at fifteen bloom of youth can ever blin cracks and wrinkles of your min men of fenfe will pafs your door crowd to Stella's at four{core Savift Subferib'd it, gave the impreffion, plac'd it fafely Th changelin neve The preterite of avrite Whe That in mixt fames the wwrinkled nofe offend. Gay Here ftood 1li-mnature, like an ancient maid Her wrinkled forme.in black and white array'd Pope Sba}cej/'pmr; rated upon the wyit original, if the lands comprifed therein be held Ayliffe Wrirt drawing up th Bacon known For every writ of entry, whereupon a commo recovery is to be fuffered, the queen's fine is to b 2. Rumple of cloth 3. Any roughnefs the noftrils alfo, at the {fame tim upper lip Here fteams afcend Pope 3. A legal inftrument To fee a beggar's brat in riches flow An age of poverty Shake[p. Merchant of Venice Scorn makes us ewrizkl up the nofe, and firetc and lives paft ages o'er Hold up your head, hold up your hand ‘Would it were not my lot to thew y ‘This cruel writ, wherein you ftan Indiéted by the name of Chloe Prior She hath continued a virgin without any vifikle token, or lealt wrinkle, of old age Hoavel's Vocal Forefs It is fill fortune's uf To let the wretched man ou ive his wealth "To view wit hollow eye and wrizkled bro Sappho wwrit By their applaufe the criticks fhew'd their wit Prior Wri'rative A word of Pope's coining, not to be imitated Increafe of years makes men more talkative but lefs ewritative 5 to that degree, that I now writ no letters but of plain how d'ye's Popeto Swift 70 WRITE. w. a. preterite arit or avrote part. pafl. aritten avrit, or arote [prrcan, apprcan, Sax. ad rita, Iflandick ; avrera, a letter, Gothick. 1. To exprefs-by means of letters XU awrite you dow The which fhall point you forth, at every fitting What you muft fay ..',:Y I chofe to wwrite the thing T durfnot fpea To her I lov'd Dri 1 have feen her rife from her bed, take fori paper, fold it, and zvrite upon 't, Sbuk:fi'.Macbeté; Baflanio gave his ring-awa Unto the judge that begg'd it; and his clerk Shakefpeare 2. To play the author 2. A judicial procefs, by which any on 1s fummoned as an offender Give me that glafs, and therein will I read No deeper wrinkles yet! Hath forrow ftruc So many blows upon this face of mine And made no deeper wounds ? Shake[p. Richard I1 That took fome pains in writing, he begz'd mine Of ancient zvrit unlocks the learned ftore Confults the dead 7o Wr1'NKLE. w. a. [prnchan, Saxon. 1. 'To corrugate ; to contract into furrows more indulgent to the writer's eaf 4. To tell by letter facred emprefs Although in holy @writ not nam'd. Par. Regained He cannot keep his fingers from meddling wit holy evrit More's Divine Dialogues Sacred writ our reafon does exceed Waller His ftory, filled with fo many furprifing incidents, bears fo clofe an analogy with what is delivered in holy evrit, that it is capable of pleafing th moft delicate reader, without giving offence to th moft fcrupulous Addifon's Spectator WrI‘NKLE. 7 /. [prncle, Saxon; avriz Dryden To produce, as an aathor. ‘Lo write the pretty things that you admir Hearts Shaks[peare tongues, figures,. fcribes, bards, poets, canno Think fpeak caft, wrize, fing, numbe His love to Antony Shak. Antony and Clespatra There is not.a more melancholy obje@ in th learned world, than a-man who has written himfel Others famous after known One Mrs, Quickly is in the manner of hi purfe, his laundrefs, his wafher, and his awringer Shakefpeare Our Britifh heaven was all ferene No threatening cloud was nigh Not the leaft wrinkle to deform the fky No fuch convulfive: pangs it will requi e Bagdat rifes out of the ruins-of the old cit of Babylon, fo much fpoken of in holy zurit Knolles's Hiftory of the Turks WRri1'NGER. 2 /. [from awring. On who. {queezes the water out of clothes "F An Th Al An o plajy You are fo good to be fo hard to pleae S/)L‘?lf('r T'o be fo moral, when he fhall endur ‘The like himfelf. Shak. Much ado about Nothing Coul me was it wwrit in the hearts of all mafla nkind When Thi Be fil'd with praifes of divineft wits That her eternize with their heavenly qurits an >Tis all men's office to fpeak patienc To thofe that wwring under the load of forrow But no man's virtue nor fufficienc Adds not a wrinkle to my even brow 3 Live fhe for ever, and her royal place gui‘fil 1. Corrugation or furro the face Cain was fo fully convinced th tevery one ha a right to deftroy fuch a crimina] » thath cries out every one that findeth me fhaj church, as a witnefs, preacheth his mere retruth, by reading publickly the facred fcripthat a fecond kind ef preaching is th of holy <wvrit Hooker Divine Eliza faywward wit n /. [from avrite.] thing written; fcripture fenfe is now chiefly ufed in fpeaking of | 7% WriTE. w. 2 the Bible 1. To perform. the a& of writing To perfecute with extortion Th 2z, To engrave ; to imprefs [wriff and band. The faftening of the fhirt at the hand Lord, how dare thefe men thus wring the ferip([. 7 / Wri'sTBAND To 0 ailtor dif AFON o purpote ;. to turn: to aA wron T'o auringg this fentence, > to wreft therchy Y out o men' The time, the place, the manner owztom. Were all in punéual order plainly gur z Dme;r arm 1CC ngg of the co thefe for his marriage coldly When a man hath take 2 wife and‘}yb no favour in his eyes, then l t him 1::"': h ; fil} of divorcement g David qvrote a letter Euf;mm [pinre, Saxoen,] . Th WRIST. #./ joint by which the hand is joined to th DMilton Hepyr V{;t Milton Vyinkled the face of deluge, as decay'd akefpe Meafure for Meafure Engt irty ('pcs, Thieatening cruel death, conftrain'd the brid T'o «ormng from me, and tell ¢ them, my fecret 2 blowing dry A ke=en north wind Men's evil manners live in brafs, the we wwrite in water Slvakefpeare‘ 2, 'To make rough or uneven That which I muft fpea Mufk cither punith me, not being bellev'd Or wrin "WR down Addyfory 3. To tell in books 1 paft the melancholy flood, With that grim ferryman which poets wurite of Shake[peare's Rickard IIl 4. Tofend letters He awrote for all the Jews concerning their freeL U Efdre dom 5 To call one's felf; to be intitled; o ; ufe the fiyle of About it, and gwrite happy when thou'ft done, mepol' Shakefpeare Let it not your wonder move Lefs your laughter, that I loves Though I now write fifty. years 1 have had, and have, my peers Ben Jorfi Thofe who begun to zvrire themfelves men, bu Fll thought it no thame to learn ea whe ti ide pro in di fe hi te He qwr other bifhops only ufe divind permiffione A)‘lf on it po co fo t e o m c T 6 hencg Chafte moral writing we may learn fro Neglect of which no wit can recompence eed pro ic He fr c wh i nt fo Th That facred ftream, fhould never water wee;;;" They can «urite up to.the b" flf C/ th o /t Ff of the authors WRI'TER . /. [from aurite. g i i w o a et f. One who pr 1y 2. An author and fentences. ruined by juftic qriters:Rau amou as delinquents; and all three fa All thre wer u h . i v l t f b Peaceable times ar e th r t r s f a r not {o proper to furnifh mat Addifor's Freebolders Writers are often mor o g i b an a regar of fame, t hcj;dz]?m' T lt f j d o i e i h b t Would a wwr \ m ' fl ; o k t t i h books w what T W f 1. To |