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Show Y 0 YT after all a yiclded yefterday to your fight, and dnoof {no ther idea of white from another parcel of fno you fee to-day, and put them together in you mind, they run into one, and the idea of whitenef Locke is not at all increafed 5. To allow Hosker the danc to mak n ¢ room to my lady be yeven fhall be a grace the fourth place reign with the reft in heaven z. /. [1p, Saxon Yew Life is but air That yields a paftage to the whiftling fword 7. To emit Spenfe Thi yw, Welfh He gathered up his fect into the bed, and yie/de 8. To refign ; to give up: fometimes wit fore planted in church-yards a particle, as up or ower e -He not yielding over to old age his country delights, efpecially of hawking, was, at that time following a mexlin, brought to fee this injury offere Sidney unto us Thus I have yielded up into your han The circle of my glory. Shakefpeare's King Fobn Milton She to realities yie/ds all her thows >Tis the pride of manwhich is the {pring of thi evil, and an unwillingnefs to yie/d up theirow Watts opinions Sliver'd in the moon's eclipfe Shak. Macbeth He drew And almoft join'd the horns of the tough yew D):ydcfl The diftinguifth'd yezv is ever feen Unchang'd his branch, and permanent his green Prior YEWEN. adj. [from yew. wood of yew Made of th His @iff arms to ftretch with exghen bow And manly legs &ill pafiing to and fro Hubberd's Tale & Yex. @. n forth yield unto the her ftrength Genefis, ive 12 et e ett e e abo tel he mines at Carthagena yic/de the Romans per diom to the value of twenty-fiv houfand drachims, cight hundred and feven pound itlings a pence Arbuthnot et Heylyn z. To produce in general He makes milch kine yie/d blood fubftance of a animal Shaksfpeare fed even wit acefcent fubftances, yie/d by fire nothing but alkaiine falts 2. To afford ; to exhibit hilocle would need 70 YIELD @. # 1. To give up the conteft ; to {ubmit He yrelds not in his fall But fighting dies, and dying kills withal All is not loft : immortal hate And courage never to fubmit or yield Daniel Milton If the infpiring and expiring organ of any anima be ftopt, it fuddenly yie/ds to nature, and dies Walton's Angler There he faw the fainting Grecians yie/d And here the trembling Trojans quit the field Dryden Purfued by fierce Achilles 2. To comply with any perfon, or motiv prefen age f ful have her glove, 2nd no witheut fo mighty a lour as that face coul yie Sdney of tongue and wealk of brain, behold we yie/d to the ftrea Hooker thereof I fee a yielding in the looks of France Mark, how they whifper Shakefp. Kine Fobn This fupernatural foliciting, if ill Why hath it given me earncft of fuccefs If good, why do 1 yie/d to that fuggeftion 'hofe horrid image doth upfix my haix With her much fair fpeech fhe caufed him t Prowverbs reld The Jews have agreed to defire thee that tho wouldft bring down Paul; but do not thou yie/ unto them Aé¥s, xxiil 21 They fhew thie world that they are not of yielding temper, which will be wronged or baffled Kettleell 3. To comply with things required or enforced we yield that there is a Go is almightyand juft, it canno s and that ¢ b after this life ended, he ad mini voided by fters Juftic men Hatkewyj)) . To give place, as inferiourin ex cel enc or any other quality The thiftle fprings, to which the lily yields Pope Yie'LDER yields 2 / [from yield] " One Wh Briars and thorns at their apparel fnatch fome hats ; from Yielders all thing catch Shakefpeare Some guard thefe traitors to the block of death "Lreafon's true bed, and yielder up of breath Shakefpeare's Herny 1V Squb Jugum 7. /- [zeoc, Saxon' jock, Dutch Latin 3 joug, French. 1. The bandage placed on the neck o draught oxen Bring a red heifer, wherein is no blemifh, an upon which never came goke Numb Xixe A yearling bullock to thy name fhall fmoke Untam'd, unconfcious of the galling yoke Pope 2. A mark of fervitude; flavery Our country finks beneath the yoke Shakefpeare's Macheth It weeps, it bleeds In bands of iron fetter'd you fhall be An eafier yoke than what you put on me Dryden's Aurengzebe 3. A chain alink ; a bond This yoke of marriage from us both remove Wihere two are bound to draw, though neither love Drgden 4 It is .ufe@ i A couple; two; apair the plural with the fingular termination Thofe tha our wives, ar His lands accufe him in his intent towasd a yoke of his difcarded men, Sbak busndred yoke of oxen till'd, Drydin A yoke of mule Shakefpeare's King Lear The wildernefs yie/deth food for them Foby xxiv Ajl th They laugh, as if to them T had quitted all Milton At random yielded up to their mifrule Confidering thi No country, for the bignefs of it, can be bette tered, or yidd faiver fruits Knolles PO\VCr e ‘When thou tilleft the ground, it fhall not hence Yex. n /. The hiccough Yre'rE. adv. [Vprene, Saxon.] Together Zo YIELD. @, a. [gelban, Saxon, to pay. 1. To produce ; to give in return for cultivation or labour upon the walls, great rewards, if they would yie/ up the city, and fometimes threatened them as faft ithz and Ce other part of th?s poet s y,d%tod Tell me in what more happy field The enemies fometimes offered unto the foldiers 'To have the hiccough Spenfer 9. To furrender ¢ fometimes with up A At do afterward become hollow bell-fhaped berries which are full of juicey and include feeds fomewhat like acorns, having, as it were, a little cup t Miller ach The fhooter cugks the broad-leay'd fycamore The barren plantane, and the walnut found' The myrrhe, that her foul fin doth fill deplore Alder, the owner of all waterifh ground.. Fairfax lips of yeaw e ettt are produced at remote diftances on the fame tree and are barren; but the embryos, whic et et room Genefis, xlix. 33 up the ghoft To concede 5 to admit; to 4lo Some fleeves To find the empty, vaft, and wand'ving air Shake[peare's Richard 11 ufed for bows, and there it hath amentaceous flowers, which confit o many apices, for the moft part fhaped likea muth to expire yield, . ; The fighht of Achilles and Cyg s and the fra etwixt the La Often did I firiv To yield the ghoft 5 but fill the envious floo Kept in my foul, and would not let it fort is often written eugh ; but the former orthography is at once nearer to the foun end the derivation, See Evcn.] A tre of tough wood Dryd. Don Sebaflian And clofes when 'tis gone R An 6. To permit ; to grant If much converf 1,h?c fatiate, to-fhort abfence I coul I Go that unt 1 yield it jufty faid Adam, and fubmit. AZilron 1 that have not only yiclded, but challenged th undoubted truth of the propofition, can make n Hammond queftion of its corollaries for given nts not a fourth grac to concede to deny Yield thee, {o well thou baft this day purvey'd Milton tion of thiags far removed; and as yer but onl heard of, eadeth with real and aftual fruition o YEVEN 4 I the praif Hope beginning here, with a trembling expecta that which no tongue can exprefs 4. 'T'o give, as claimed of right fometimes with a5 before it Hitherto If you take the idea of white, which one parce S yot to th hitgifte not teo rafhly believe the confefhion s, nor yez the evidence againft them; fo the witches themfelves are imaginative, and peopl are credulous, and ready to impute accidents an Bacon natural operations to witchcraf Nor yer amidft this joy and biighteft mor Was abfent, after all his mifchief done The prince of darknefs. Milt, Paradife' Regained ault muft no T!-crc_muld be no fecure p ace, except e I;g cedemonians yic/ded to thof tlm}gs, Whic granted, it would be no lo Berin thei poyer t hurt the Athenians The mind of man defireth cver more to kno the truth, accerding to thie moft infallible certaint Huyoker which the nature of things can yie/d A kind of emphatica Toua WVE S 2S outgoes a yok of oxen, f\r'he fet to work at the fame time; for mulesare fivifter Broomee To Yok, w. a. [from the noun. 1. To bind by a yoke to a carriage "This Stetes promifed to doy if he alone ponc yoke together two brazen-Roofed bulls, 3{"*: plow 'ing the ground, fow dragons teethe. y L Efl""'g o d o u t b l s Four milk-whit Wer of burnifi'd gold ca hi dr t ' yo .) D}j‘dfl r h o a t w l u c e i j T 2 My nam Be yok'd with his that did betray the beft. Shatefp Caffits, you are yoked witl;)a lamb c Ji r be n fl t a g a i r That c r f C n l F e a p e a S k y t n b a t L i Seek n e E e y D Our fair Lavinia 3. To enflave ; to {fubdue Phefe are the arm necks u i l b r u y z With which he yok Sbakelpearé Razeth your Sitics 4. To reftrain Me to confine e t r u c b t n mat Bacon g i r m i k y b t a t fingle lif k y t e e G o r b l t Xerses y w h g i b n p e l H Ove M The words and promifes, that yore Hudibras broke The conquerer, areq uickl Atree nus L [carp 7 Yo KE-ELM, #. J [carpinits; Ainfuorth Yo'kE |