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Show Y B Yo Fell enoug a firf them, to ferve L them for many year ing fuch a proportion for every yea ~»‘ From thefe Philippinz are brought coftly i yea, an Al th promifes o Go whic that is, are verified an yea ar A gold too. Abbot's Defeription of the impo s th yea; and confirmed, which is meant by amen Hammend into an immutability They durft abid Tehovah thund'ring cut of Sion, thron' Between the cherubim ; yea, often plac' Milton Within his fanctuary itfelf their fhrines Notwithftanding this great proximity of man t yea, and notwithftanding the obfervation ‘himf;el made in all ages, we ftill remain ignorant of man Hale things concerning ourfelves 92 YEAD, ' or YEDBE w. # preterite 2 yode [ This word {feems to have been corruptl formed from gzeod, the Saxon preterit of gan.] To go; to march. Obfolete They wander at will and ftay at pleafure And to their folds yeade at their own leifure Spenfer Then bad the knight this lady yede aloof An to an hill herfelf withdraw afide TFrom whence fhe might behold that battle's proof And eke be fafe from danger far defery'd. Spenfer Yet for fhe yode thereat half aghaft And Kiddy the door fparred after her faft. Spenfer That fame mighty man of God Tha bloud red billows like a walle front On cither fide difparted with his rod Till that his army dry-foot through them yod 70 YeEaN @ bring young [eaman z Saxon. This I fcarcely drag along Who yeaning on the rocks has left her young Ewes yean the polled lamb with the leaft danger [from yean. Mortimer Th Year. n /. [gean, Saxon. 1. If one by the word year mean twelv months of thirty days each, 7. e. thre hundred and fixty days ; another inten a folar year, of three hundred fixty-fiv days; and a third meana lunar year, o twelve lunar months, 7. e. three hundred fifty-four days, there will be a grea variation and error in their account o things, unlefs they are well apprized o atts's Logick each other's meaning See the minutes, how they run compleat How many make the hour fu Flow many hours bring about the da Ho mumble-news YE'ARLING year old adj. [from year. Being A yearling bullock to thy name fhall fmoke Untam'd, unconfcious of the galling yoke. Pope Ye"arry. adj. [ from year. Annual happening every year; lafting a year ‘I'he yearly courfe that brings this day about Shall never fee it but a holiday Shak. K. Fobn Why the changing oak fhould fhe e yearly honour f)f his ftately head o feen iifh'd yew is e i Unchang'd his branch, and permanent his green j Prior adv YEe'arLY Annually once a year He that outlives this day, and fees old age Will yearly on the vigil fealt his neighbours An fay, to-morrow is Saint Crifpian Shakefpeare's Henry V For numerous bleflings yearly thower'd And property with plenty crown'd For freedom ftill maintain'd alive For thefe, and more, accept our pious praife @w.n [eannan, Saxon. T feel great internal uneafinefs. In Spenfe it is fometimes earn. It is by Spenfe ufed for defire, or the pain of longing it now implies tendernefs or pity He defpis'd to tread in due degree All the yeanlings which were ftreak'd and pie Shakefpeare Should fall as Jacob's hire many days will finifh How many years a mortal man may live. S/f»ui'efp With the yea Seafons return, but not to me ret 1rn or msorn Day, or the fweet approach of Milton but the addition of one ma Though we fuppof for every thoufand years, yet long before this tim there thould have been a greater number than ther Wilkins could be fands in the earth The do&os, upon occafion, calculating his ex 7o Yearw But chaff'd, and foam'd, with courage fierce an ftern And to be eas'd of that bafe burden fill did yearn Spenfer Make the libbard fter Leave roaring, when in rage he for revenge di yearn Spenfer Though peeping clofe into the thick Migh fee the moving of fome quick But were it fairy, fiend, or {nake My courage earned it to wake And mantully thereat fhot S[‘."Ii/&." Shak. Henry V And we miuft yearn therefore Jofeph made hafte; for his bowels did year upon his brother: and he fought where to weep Gen. xliii. 30 and he enter'd into his chamber When the fair Leucothoe ' fpy'd Tocheck his fteeds impatient Phabus yearn'd Though all the world was in his courfe concern'd Waller Yet for all the yearning pai Y~ have fuffer'd for their loves, in vain I fear they'll prove fo nice and coy To have, and t> hold, and to enjoy. Hudibras our heart doe but: relent To grieve 5 to vex She laments for it, that it woul Yearn your heart to fee it Shakefpea I am not covetous of gold fermentation barm his melts where our eye pities, his bowels years South's Sermons At beholding the miferies of others, they fin fuch yearnings in their bowels, and fuch fenfibl Yeaft and outward means do fail An have no power to: work on ale1 Hudibyas When drays bound high, then never crofs behi';t:;, Where bubbling yeaft is blown by gufts of wind 2 The {fpume o froth G troubled water; foamy' Now the fhip boring the moon with her main maft, and anon fwallowed with yeaff and froth, you'd thruft a cork into a hogthead Shakefpeare's Winter's Taje YEe'sTY. adj. [fromyet. foamy Frothy;{pumy; Though you untie the winds, and let them figh Againft the churches ; though the yeffy wave Confound and {wallow navigation up Shakefpeare''s Machesh Yevk. z /. [from gZealepe, yellow, Saxon.] The yellow part of the egg. I is commonly pronounced, and ofte written, yolk The yolk of the egg conduceth little to thegeneration of the bird, but only to the nourithmen of the fame: for if a chicken be opened, when i is new-hatched, you thall' find much of the yiit Bacon's Natural Hiffiry remaining That a chicken is formed out of the yelk of a egz wit fom ftill opinion antien philofophers, the peopi Brow All the feather'd kin From th® included yo/k, not ambient white, arofe Drydes 75 YELL @. n. To cry,out with horrou and agony Nor the night raven, that ftill dzadly yell rf Sp 'd ea af on u k m es tu vu fl Nor gr Each new morn ne cr a p o n w New widows h Strike heav'n on the face, that it refouids ou /' ye an n l o S t w fe i i A Like fyllables of dolour Shakefpeare's Macbeth Now worfe than e'er he was before r ro do c P po l ye do Poor Puc fo c xb lo }; wh b M e q k w Tha h he n N g o w be trfoneafon! ha Sot me tre Velling monfiers, that with ceafelefs cry i m Surroun f g i l y t Night-@ruck fancy t / Yere Falftaff, he is dead Wher . a Yest. # / [3217c, Saxon. 1. The foam, {pume, or flower of beer i That fmiles his chee , and knows the tric To make m n fhe s difpos'd Told our intent akefps Love's Labour Loff There died alfo Cecile, mother to king Edwar IV. being of extreme ycars, and who had lived t fee three princes of her body crowned, and fou murthered Bacon's Henry V1L Helook'd in years, yetin his years were fee A youthful vigour, and autumnal green. Dryden 7o YEARN Dryden But Anticlus, unable to controul Spoke loud the language of his yearning foul p It yearns me not if men my garments wear Sha In the plural, old age Som € 213" b 4 , :j'_our mf)t‘ncr‘s i}eart)zearm towards you /fc"/r'f nmov'd the mind of Ithacus remain'd Dryden Not numerous are our joys whea life is new And yearly fome are falling of the few Young Ulfed of fheep Yea'~nring. 2 f young of fheep It is often ufed plurally plural termination I fight not once in forty year tleman in hand, and then ftand upon fecurit S/"LL( no means fatisfy Savift g to bear A rafcally, yea, forfooth, knave He accepted a curacy of thir ty pounds a year I am weary ; yea, my memory is tir'd. Shakefp Ray on the Creation A particle by which the fenfe is intende or enforced: not only fo, but more tha {o Joation e Whilft one fays only yea, and t'other nay eommotions raifed in their breafts, a5 the ound them to be not above five Yea, hath God faid, ye fhail not eat of every tr tr in the garden Let your converfation be yea, yea horrour A oy o , i/ ;y r} dx a n With like tim'rous acc c e i g n a g n As when, b b a i a p e a S e t c Is fpread,}nypopfilou e t s o g o n o g t Hence are hear g ? c n g a d o a e Of founding laf es cr e t a f n t a The Trojan ftoo e i a A Other R . b Rend the dark welkin YE'LLOW adj [y Jenave, Dutch of a brigh me to fec :flljl‘}vo'w Only they that c i } [ 1 In Sb d Will be deceiv |