OCR Text |
Show W R Gen. iv y troubl Of thunder, and the fword of Michael Wirought ftill within them The Jews wanted not power and ability to hav racles, had they never been wwronght ens's Sersmions 2. Influenced; prevailed on Had I thought the fight of my poor imag Would thus have zurought you, for the flone i mine Shakefpeare 1°d not have thewed it I ‘tho be on tha b haft ' ny time 9. A&uated And all her fex's cunning, wrosght the king 2. Produced ; caufed All bis good prov'd ill in me Milton And awrought but malice ‘They wuroughe by their faithfulnefs the public Dyryden fafety This zwrought the greateft confufion in the unbelieving Jews, and the greateft convi€ion in th Gentiles, who every where fpeak with atonithmen of thefe truths they met with in this new magaAddifon zine of learning which was opened His too eager lov Has made him bufy to his own deftruttion His threats hav Pyrrhus t 11. Formed He that hath evrought us for the fame thing God The fpirit is ewrozght To dare things high, fet up anend my thought Chapman The two friends had' wwronght themfelves t fuch an habitual tendernefs for the children unde their direétion, that cach of them had the real paf Addifon fion of a father Advantage was taken of the fanguine tempe which fo many fuccefies had wwrought the natio up to Sawift Whatever littlenefs and vanity Is to ke obferve in filver, and whofe work in the minds of women Bar. iii. x8 Eleaza too th e e et e eve it e APt e al ett it is, like the cruelty o butchers, a temper that is zurozght into them b that life which they are taught and accuftomed t lead Laz WNiumbersy xvie 22 wropght jewvels e gold 2 Cor gl‘CCS are unfearchable, are gone down to the grave an i 12. Excited by degrees, produced by de 4. Worked ; laboured Mofe to hav Raleigh burn it wrought this change of mind i Philips's Diftreft Botber They that wwrongh no lefs a breach of peac arought any mine of his, than it is now 2 breac of peace to take a town of his in Guiana, an Rozve Manufattured It had bee ett e m dull brain Vea Shakefprare's Machyp part then my: hand he Wripny No mortal was ever fo much at eachbx:{:fi?? thoe wrung him fomewhere L"F/},; i The tender anguith nature fhoot Through the wrung bofom of the dying man Wex.~ady ‘1 [from awrithe. e Crooked ;. deviating from the right di rection - Somegimes to her news of myfelfto tel I go about, but then is all my bef Say, then, can this but of enchantment come Sidney And pitch'dl his head'into the ready fnare. Dryder ‘10 Milv Wry words, and ftamm'ring, or clfe doltifh dumb Vain Morat, by his own rathnefs wrought Too foon difcover'd his ambitious thought Believ'd me his before I {poke him fair Nor number nor example with him wrozgh To fwerve from truth WMilton Do not I know him ? could his brutal min Be wroxght upon ?icould he be juft or kind ? Dry by her charms oy the body pafiive, yet is it by the goo difpofition thereof repuifed and wurought out, beBacon fore it be formed in a difeafe God's grace, been wrought upon by thefe calls and brought from a prophanc, or worldly," to Chriftian courfe of life, thou art furely in th - higheft degree tied to magnify and praife his goodnefs Duty of Man This Artemif Milton As irfestion from body to body is received ma o the hel He firt cald to me 8. Worsed ; driven m The preter, . an of awring Take an heifer which hath not been wwrough with, and which hath not drawn in the yoke Deut. xxie 3 fa your With things forgot 7. Ufed in labour the world of the falfehood of thefe mi convince -Give me you Wrough Wr/ une. Such another fiel They dreaded worfe than hell: fo much the fea Matte XXVi. 10 a good work upon me wwrongh Agitated ; difturbed, wrought 14 Shake[peare hat fh fo A fhip by fkilful feerfma We ftay upon your leifurem 6. Operated woman th 13. Guided ; managed We ventur'd on fuch dang'rous feas That if we zorought out life, *twas ten to one wreak. 1. Effetted ; performed Wh Milton 5. Gained ; attained wor ol th o might be qurongh Fufil, or graven in metal ter. and part. paff. as it feems, of avork as the Dutch wercken makes gerocht ; or more analogically Wha pre- Th Saxon [pnogd HMilton Celeflial panoply, divinely wrought The Lord faid unto Cain,Why art thou svroth WrovcHT WR 2. Diftorted It is buta kick with thyheels, and a wry mout and Sir Roger will be with thee drbnlbnot, Inftru&ive work whofe ry-mouth'd portraitur Difplay'd the fates her confeffors endure Pope Cutting the zuory neck is never to be pracife but when the diforder is a contration of the maftoideus mufcle Skarp 3. Wrung ; perverted wrefted He manglesand puts a ry fenfe upon protefan WrLters 7o Wry b Atterbury «@.n [from the adjetive.] T contorte and writhed to deviat from the right dire&ion Thefe wvry too.much on the right hand, aferibing to the hcly feripture fuch kind of perfectio Sandys as it cannot have T¢ WrY @. a [fro th adjective. To make to deviate; to diftort. = To what pafs are our minds brought, that fro the right line of virtue are wryed to thefeicrooke thifts WRY'NECK bird X s 4 letter, whish, though found in Saxon words, begins no word in the Englith language Sidney #. f; [torguilla, Latin, |