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Show Yo X 1 do defire tolcarn, Sir; and I hope, if you hav At the beginning of words, iscomac af o to ufe me for your turn, you fhall find m ermonly taken, though I thin yare Sh ke pe re a nan conf fo roneoufly | Ya'rELY. adv. [from yare. Dexter the end, and when it follows a confonant is a vowel, and has the {found of z. Tt i oufly Yarw. 2./ [geapn, Saxon. woollen thread fometimes pre fixed as an increafing fyllable to preterites and paflive participles of verbs It feems borrowed from ge, the Saxo augmentym of the preterite. It is fometimes put. before prefent tenfes, but think erroneoufly Yacut. z /. [a Dutch word.] A {mal thip for carrying paffengers Yarp. #. /. [zeand, Saxon. 1. Inclofed ground adjoining to an houfe One of the lions leaped down into a neighbour' yardy where, nothing regarding the crowing of th Brown's Pulgar Errours cocks, he eat them vp Xanthus one day fent ZEfop into the yard, an Dryd A peer, a counfellor, and a judge, are not to b meafured by the common yard, but by the.pole o Bacon The arms, fpread crofs in a ftraight line, an meafured from one end of the long finger on on to that of th mad other a meafure equa a fathom to the ftature, and is name An aquedué Half o Then hoift their yards a-trip, and all their fail Letifall to court the wind Dryden - meafure of a yard thing mor i natur can giv i What affinity bhas thinking wit N0 more than ther is betwee Yardwand fuch attributes: a fyllogif Yare, adj. [geanpe, Sax.] Ready terous ; eager and Collier dex Yare, yare, good Iros, quick.~-Methinks I hear f‘\ntony call as i by fumes Shakefpeare's Henry V Shakefpeare's Autony and Cleopatras wide The gathes c f h. o u z y d l d o That b fuch ftore of mendicant friars, a church in that re fpedt moft happys t g n o m t n h t w r v *Fis now t Whe churchyard yason Shake[peare' H:zv;;:fsz h u m n n z y t i t u l' Now wi \ z . S . l c ‘ h ' o r f e t For fwallowing up th d u v d h b t a w t Je thall caft u ' u p l a t e Like vomit from his Hookero Y awn. # /. [from:the verb: 1. Ofcitation Thee, Paridely.the mark'd thee there Stretch'd on the rack of a too eafy chair And heard thy everlafting yaevn:.confef The pains and penalties of idlenefs Gape Pope hiatus Hence to the borders of the marfhthey go That mingles with the baleful ftreams below And fometimes with a mighty yazoz, 'tis faid Opens a difmal paffage to the dead Who, pale with fear, the rending carth furvey And fartle at the fudden flaih of day Addifin Sleepy e Ya‘'wNinG. adj. [from yown. flumbering Ere to black Hecate's fommon The fhavd-born beetle, with his drowfy hums Hath rung night's yazuning peal, there fhal Shakefpeare's Macberls A deed of dreadful note part. for cad Yciap Clothed Her fight did ravifh, but her grace in fpeech Her words yc/ad with wifdom's majefty Make me from wond'ring fall to weeping joys bhakebbear Sha éfpeare YcrLe pED. [the participle paflive of clepe to call; clepan, Saxon ; with the increafing particle y, which was ufed i the old Englifh, in the preterites and participles, from the Saxon:ge.] Called termed; named But come, thou goddefs fairand free,In heav'n ye/ep'd Euphrofyne And by men heart-eafing mirth Th Ypra‘D Ye S /.'/Z.i‘:.'/([."/ defir b yawning The chiefeft-thingat.which lay-reformers yasos is, that the clergy may, through conformit condition, be poor as the apoftles were. In wh one circumftance if they imagine fo g feftion, they muft think. that church which hat 2 Spare me but one fmall portion of the twine And let the fifters cat below your line The reft among the rubbifh may they fweep Or add it to the yarn of fome old mifer's heap . Toope no than different degrees of dimenfions The fates but only fpia the coarfer clue The fineft of the wool is left for you Bacon o well At length fhool oft himfelf, and afk'd the dame And afking yawn'd, for what intent fhe came Dryden To whom the yewning pilot, falt afleep de u er ac tr th tru t bi Me didft tho Dryden The failors fhip their oars, and ceafe to row 3. To~- expref ought to be-moft encouTemple In yawoning, the inner parchment of the ear i Whesr a man yazicth, he cannot hea extended A breeze from fhore began to blow the revelution High fhe rear'd her arm, and with bher fceptr ftrucl The yaawning cliff : from its difparted heigh Adown the mount the guthing torrent ran. Prier It may be ufeful for the reeling of yarn. Wilkins The lazy yawning drone 3. The fupports of the fails Al of all other Delivering o'er to executors pal veys water from Mount St. Francis to Spoletto .from the foundation of the loweftarch to the top Addifon 15 two hundred and thirty yards Ya'Rowanv try, whic raged The fad-eyed juftice, with his furly hum that con 7 f; [pard and avand. arn is a commodity very proper to this coun opened involuntaril {leepinefs older on Time ofa Gothick ftruéture You would be another Penclope; yet they fay all the yarn fhe fpun in Ulyfles's abfence did bu fill Ithaca full of moths Shakefpeare's Coriolanus The web of our life is of a mingled yarn, goo and ill together ; our virtues would be proud, if ou faults whipt them not; and our crimes would defpair, if they were not cherifhed by our virtues Shakefpeare 1. To gape ; to ofcitate ; to have the mout that, wiz. from the end of the long finger of eithe arm, fo fpread, to the middle of the breaft, is wit us called a yard Spun wool To YARR. @.n. [from the found; hirrio, Lat.] To growl or fnarl like a dog Ainfworth Y A"RROW. 7. /- [millefolium, Lat.] A plant Yawr. z /o A little veflel belonging t a thip, for convenience of pafling t and from it 7o YAWN. w@. n [zeonan, Saxon. - 2, [gend, Saxon.] A meafure of three feet han Down fell the beauteous youth 5 the yawning woun Guih'd out a purple ftream Dryden Dryden L'Efrange bade him look well about him His wanton kids, with budding horns prepar'd fpecial grace fkilfully Shatkefp. Antorny and Cleopatra the #. ¥ was much ufed by the Saxons whencey 1is found for 7 in the old Englifh writers Miltoni The fword pierc'd his tender fide Swell with the touches of thofe flower-foft hands That yarely frame the office words derived from the Greek, to expref Fight harmlefs battles in his homely yard Yawning receiv'd them whole, and on them clostd The filken tackle ufed at the end of words, and wheneve two #is would come together; and i ¥ is, in old Englith Hell at laf 'Th old preterite of To dread r Spenf nominative plural of #box ¥e are they which juftify yourfelves Luke Yes nith adv [ea, or gea German xvi 1 Saxon ; ja, Da and Dutch. 1. Yes. A particle of affirmation; ing, it is {0, or, 1s-15{0 mean4 a |