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With blunderbusses, taught to ride,
Like pocket-pistols, by his side,

In girdle stuck, he seem'd to be

BLUNT, v.
BLUNT, adj.
BLUNTING, n.
BLUNTISHNESS.
BLUNTNESS.
BLUNTLY.

A little moving, armory.-Churchill. The Ghost, b. iv. Blunt is blon-ed, blond, blont or blunt: i. e. stopped in its decreasing progress towards a point or edge: the past part. of the A. S. Blinnan, to blin, to stop, (See Tooke.) To deaden, to dull, to render obtuse; to have or cause to have no edge, point, sharpness; no polish, no keenness; no politeness. Hence the adj.

Unpolished, coarse, rude.

He that doeth wickedlye, although he professe God in his
wordes, yet he doeth not (for all that) see God truely for
he is sene with moste purely scowred eies of faith, which
are blurred with the darkness of vices.
Udal. Third Epistle of John.

I wyll help to rid her, from the oppression of her adver-
sarie, not for any good mynde that I beare her, but leste she
wil els at length come againe, and being so many times
shaken of, will with her raillyng sette a greate blurre on
myne honeste and good name.-Id. Luke, c. 18.

Wonder they moreover at Sergius, who, by report, was three and twentie times wounded in sundry foughten fields, whose noble and glorious praises Catlline, the last of that race, blurred with the blots of everlasting dishonour. Holland. Ammianus, p. 265. This all riseth from some unmortified lust or other, which either leaves a deep blur upon their evidences for they cannot read them-Hopkins. Works, p. 756.

To blunt forth, (Sir T. More,) to utter bluntly, heaven, or else raiseth a thick mist before their eyes that rudely.

Then cometh undevotion, thurgh which a man is so blont, as saith Seint Barnard, and hath swiche langour in his soule, that he may neyther rede ne singe in holy chirche. Chaucer. The Persones Tale. Howbeit if thou can find no proper meane to breake the tale, than excepte thy bare authoritie suffice to commaund silence, it were paradventure good rather to keepe a good silence thyself, than blunt forth rudely, and preyte them to anger, which shal happely therefore not let to talke on, but speake much the more, lest thei should seme to leue at thy commaundment.-Sir T. More. Workes, p. 76.

But he that bluntly runnes on head,

And seeth not what the race shall be,

Is like to bring a fool to bed;

And thus ye get no more of me.

Vncer. Auctors. The old Louer to a Young Gentlewoman. The said cape is on the top of it blunt-pointed, and also toward the sea it endeth in a point, wherefore wee named it The pointed Cape.--Hackluyt, Voyages, vol. iii. p. 204.

Not impediments or bluntings, but rather as whetstones, to set an edge on our desires after higher and more permanent beauty.—Bp. Taylor. Artificial Handsomeness, p. 73. For in regard to the multitude of elements, and bluntness of angles, it is furthest off from direct and right lines. Holland. Plutarch, p. 368. -Fathers are Won by degrees, not bluntly as our masters Or wronged friends are.

Frank.

Ford. The Witch of Edmonton, Act i. sc. 1.

The faculties of their souls, and the members of their bodies, that before were instruments of sin unto righteousness, are, it may be, blunted and become unserviceable; this maim of nature is far from regenerating grace, that doth not disable a man from the service of sin, but only sets him free from it.-Hopkins. Works, p. 475.

Now push we on, disdain we now to fear,

A thousand wounds let every bosom bear,

Till the keen sword be blunt, be broke the pointed spear.
Rowe. Lucan. Pharsalia, b. vi.

Soon as the father saw the rosy morn,
And the moon shining with a blunter horn,
He bid the nimble Hours without delay,
Bring forth the steeds.-Addison. Ovid. Metam. b. ii.

His [Noy] apprehension (as 'tis said) was quick and clear, his judgment methodical and solid, his memory strong, his curiosity deep and searching, his temper patient and cautious, all tempered with an honest bluntishness, far from court insinuation.- Wood. Athene Oxon.

For what the bark is to the growing tree,
To human mind, that, patience seems to be;
They hold the principles of growth together,
And blunt the force of accident, and weather.

Byrom. An Epistle to his Sister.
The shrewd
Contriver who first sweated at the forge,
And forc'd the blunt and yet unbloodied steel
To a keen edge, and made it bright for war.

Couper. Task, b. v.

Why really, Academicus, the main Of all that Rusticus, so bluntly plain, Has here been saying, though it seem so hard, Hints truth enough to put you on your guard. Byrom. A Dialogue. Good Jarvis, make no apologies for this honest bluntness. Fidelity, like yours, is the best excuse for every freedom. Goldsmith. Good Natur'd Man. BLUR, v. Blare, blore, and blurr, have proBLUR, n. bably the same origin. (See BLARE, and BLORE.) Blurr may perhaps derive its usage from the Dut. Blære, (see BLADDER,) a pustule, or blain, or spot. See BLURT.

But concerning innate principles, I desire these men to
say, whether they can or cannot, by education and custom,
be blurr'd and blotted out.
Locke. On Hum. Underst. b. i. c. 3. § 20.

We have not been drawn and trussed, in order that we
may be filled, like stuffed birds in a museum, with chaff and
rags and paltry blurred shreds of paper about the rights of
man.-Burke. On the French Revolution.

BLURT, n.
BLURT, v.

Formed upon the past part. of
Blurr; blurred, blurr'd, blurt.
To throw out a blurr; to throw out rudely,
hastily, inconsiderately; without consideration or
reflection.

That name to which every knee bows, both of things in
heaven, and things on earth, and things under the earth,
whether they be angels or devils, requires from you more
respect and honour than to be idly blurted out with every
rash and foolish expression.-Hopkins. Works, p. 118.

Polyperchon, who had the government of the king's per-
son, meaning to give Cassander a slampant and blurt, sent
letters patent unto the people at Athens, declaring how the
young king did restore unto them their popular state again.
North. Plutarch, p. 633.

And yet the truth may lose its grace,
If blurted to a person's face;
Especially if what you speak
Should crimson o'er the glowing cheek.

BLUSH, v.
BLUSH, n.
BLU'SHET.

BLU'SHFUL.

BLU'SHING.

BLU'SHLESS.

BLU'SHY.

Lloyd. The Nightingale, &c. Dut. Blosen, blose, perhaps from Blæsen, flare, spirare; and SO connected with blossom, bloom; (qqv.) applied, consequentially,to

The colours of flowers blossoming or blooming.

To redden, to be or cause to be red, or rosy; blooming with redness or rosiness; to shame or ashame.

At the first blush; on the first complexion or appearance; at the first look.

Amphyon blusht as red

as any glowing flame:
And Orpheus durst not show his face
but hide his head for shame.

Turberville. The Louer that compared his Mistresse, &c.
Hearyng their inditement red how trayterously they had
spoken against the kynges Majestie his crowne and dignitie,
they neither blushed nor bashed.-Hall. Hen. VIII. an. 27.
This beast had II. hornes like the lambe at a blush, but
all counterfet & fals in very deede, for he spake as did the
dragon, the hornes of Christ, are his high kingdom in the
world.-Bale. Image, pt. ii.

Here's a light crimson, there a deeper one,
A maidens blush, here purples, there a white,
Then all commingled for our more delight.
Henry Peacham. Ellis, vol. ii.

If yet thine eyes (Great Henry) may endure
These tainted lines, drawn with a hand impure,
(Which fain would blush, but fear keeps blushes back,
And therefore suted in despairing black)
Let me for love's sake their acceptance crave.
Drayton. Rosamond to Henry II.
Hereupon the brigantine oppressed with famine, came to
an anker at the mouth of the riuer of May, when at the fust
blush we thought they had beene shippes come from France;
which gaue vs occasion of great ioy.
Hackluyt. Voyages, vol. iii. p. 336.

To spot, to smear, to blot; to mark with any but the ears, and the parts behind them. spot, smear, or stain; to disfigure, to deface.

In anger, the eyes wax red; and in blushing, not the eyes,
Bacon. Natural History, § 872.

Chaste Lidia, the favours are so great

On me by you conferr'd, that to entreat
The least addition to them, in true sense
May argue me of blushless impudence.

Massinger. Duke of Florence, Act iv. sc. 1.

And now to kill hime, know you that affect to be the onely minions of Phebus, I am not so blushlessly ambitious as to hope to gaine any the least supreme eminencie amonge you.-Marston. Parasistaster. To my equall Reader. Go to, little blushet, for this, anan, You'le steale forth a laugh in the shade of your fan. B. Jonson. Entertainments.

We find also, that blossoms of trees that are white, are commonly inodorate; as cherries, peares, plumbs; whereas those of apples, crabs, almonds, and peaches, are blushy, and smell sweet.-Bacon. Nat. Hist. § 507.

He that walketh uprightly is secure as to his honour and credit. He doth not blush at what he is doing, nor doth reproach himself for what he hath done.

Barrow, vol. i. Ser. 5.
Her name was Womanhood. On one side of her sat
Shamefacedness, with blushes rising in her cheeks, and her
eyes fixed upon the ground.-Tatler, No. 194.
While from his ardent look, the turning spring
Averts her blushful face; and earth and skies,
All smiling, to his hot dominion leaves.

The pride of every grove I chose,
The violet sweet, and lily fair,
The dappled pink, and blushing rose,

Thomson. Summer

To deck my charming Cloe's hair.-Prior. The Garland I envy not Arabia's odours, whilst that of this fresh blusher charms my sense; and I find my nose and eyes s ravishingly entertained here, that the bee extracts les sweetness out of flowers.-Boyle. Occas. Reflec. s. 5. Ref. 4 He would stroke

The head of modest and ingenuous worth,
That blush'd at its own praise; and press the youth
Close to his side that pleas'd him.-Couper. Task, b. ii.
When now the setting sun more fiercely burn'd,
Blue vapours rose along the mazy rills,
And light's last blushes ting'd the distant hills.
Lyttelton. Uncertainty, Ecl. 1
By yon gracious moon,
That rising saw the deed, and instant hid
Her blushing face in twilight's dusky veil,
The flight was parricide.-Mason. Caractacus.
Vice now, secure, her blushless front shall raise,
And all her triumph be thro' Britain borne ;
Whose worthless sons from guilt shall purchase praise,
Nor dread the hand that pointed them to scorn.
Dodsley. On the Death of Mr. Por

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Bote blostrede forth as bestes.-Piers Plouhman, p. 119

And I sodainly astonyed, there entered into the place the I was lodged, a ladie semelich and moste goodly to my sig that euer to forne appeared to any creature, and truly in t blustering of her looke, shee yaue gladnes and comfor sodainly to all my wittes, and right so she doeth to eu wight, that commeth in her presence.

Chaucer. Test. of Lo He bloweth and blustereth out at last his abhomina blasphemy against the blessed sacramentes of Christ. Sir T. More. Workes, p. 3 Home runneth he with open cry, that he cannot ha justice in England, and you streight believe; and thereup

cometh these often blusters.

Burnet. Records, pt. ii. b. i. No.

He is lyke to a prouydent and circumspect buylder, t buildeth his house not for a vaine braggue or shewe one nor to serue hym for a short whyle and no longer: but f firmenesse and stedfastenesse to stande and endure with perishynge agaynste any bloustreous storme or tempeste come.-Udal. Luke, c. 6.

Indeed it is the speech of the devil, but it is likewis the hearts of men, when they storm and bluster at the d culties of salvation and narrowness of the way, and sta ness of the gate.-Hopkins. Works, p. 739.

Pilots and masters of ships have many devices and mea to escape a blusterous and violent wind when it is aloft, when the same is allaied and down, there is no man ab raise and set it up againe.-Holland. Plutarch, p. 576.

When I am angry, he cries prithee my dear be es when I chide one of my servants, prithee child, do bluster.-Spectator, No. 211.

Terms are the blasterers in conversation, that with hennatural mirth, and a torrent of noise, domineer a pic assemblies-Tatler, No. 153.

Aar heroes are generally lovers, their swelling and My upon the stage very much recommends them to the part of their audience.-Spectator, No. 11.

Your ministerial directors blustered like tragick tyrants
-Burke. On American Taxation.

-now all ended-and my comrades gone,

Pay what becomes of mother's only son?
Alpeful blade !—in town i'll fix my station,
And try to make a blaster in the nation.

Cradock. Epilogue. She Stoops to Conquer. BOARA.S. Bar; Ger. Eber; Dut. BASH.Beer. Becanus-beer a baeren (to edici ait, quod plurimos foetus gignit. Wachter and Skinner agree that it may be from the Lat Aper. But see BEAR.

Beer, may be formed thus,-Bay-er, baer, bár, (ounced bar,) boar; and the animal so ed from its noise. See, also, BRUTe.

He vemde, i. e. foamed] and grunte, and stond agen, as jt were a strong bor. R. Gloucester, p. 208.

And o honte hardiliche. to hares and to foxes

To bores and to bockes. that breketh adoune menne begges. Piers Plouhman, p. 129.

The hors hede that we bryng here,

Bekeeth a pace with owte pere,

Tibe this day to bye vg dere.

A berry a sonerayne beste

Adaptable in eury feste

So te thys bord be to moste & leste.

Thor hede we bryng wt song

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of hym that thus sprang

Of a vagine to redresse all wrong.

A Christmas Caroll Ritson on Warton.

The wide are out of the wod hath roted it up, and the beasts of the folde haue deuoured it. Bible, 1551. Psalm 80.

yet no man think it a light sin to keep open the whereby the wild boar (of barbarism] enters the yard, and whereby God is deprived of the honour Se ti hás name.—Spelman. English Works, p. 18 Peas found out the bore-speare and chasing staffe. Holland. Plinie, b. vii. c. 56.

Reg. Wherefore to Douer?

G. Because I would not see thy cruell nailes

Pake out his poore old eyes: nor thy fierce sister,

Of gold ther is a borde, & tretels there bi [trestles]
Of siluer, other vesselle gilte fulle richeli.

R. Brunne, p. 152.
And bad shippe hym a shup. of shides and of bordes.
Piers Plouhman, p. 177.

As a beggere bordles. by myself upon the grounde.

Id. p. 237. And sche seide, yhis lord, for whelpis eten of the crummes that fallen down fro the boord of her lordis.

Wiclif. Matt. c. 15.

BOARD. See ABORD and BOURD.

BOAST, v.
BOAST, n.

BO'ASTER.

BOASTFULL.

BO'ASTING.
BOA'STINGLY.
BO'ASTIVE.
Bo'ASTLESS.

The origin of this very common word was unknown to our Etymologists. It is, probably, from the Fr. Bosse; which Cotgrave explains swollen, risen, puffed up. Eng. Boss; (qv.)

and Dut. Bosse, umbo, tumulus; as the boss of a shield.

And Skinner observes that umbo and tumulus are merely things, (quasi extumescentes et inflate;) as it were

Now stood the lordes squier atte borde,
That carf his mete, and herde, word by word
Of all this thing, of all which I haue you sayd.
Chaucer. The Sompnoures Tale, v. 7824. swelling or tumid, and puffed out.

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But as the mouse, once caught in crafty trap,
May bounce and beate against the boorden wall,
Till shee haue brought hir head in such mishap,
That doune to death her fainting lymbes must fall.
Gascoigne. Adventures of Jeronimi.
And the sayde Barlo set me to boorde in a skynners
house that dwelled besyde the house of the Englishe nacion.
Hall. Hen. VII.
Sir Thomas Kneuet whiche was ready to haue borded the
greate ship of Depe, saw that the souereigne had missed
the carick.-Id. Hen. VIII. an. 4.

Which the Turkes perceiuing, made the more haste to come aboard the shippe: which ere they could doe, many a Turke bought it deerely with the losse of their liues, yet was all in vaine, and boorded they were, where they found so hote a skirmish, that it had beene better they had not medled with the feast.-Hackluyt. Voyages, vol. ii. p. 131.

He answered, that when he beheld the boorde whereupon Darius was wont to eate employed to so base an vse, he could not beholde it withoute great greife.

Brende. Quintus Curtius, fol. 109.

But [we] received very heavie newes of the death of John
Drake, our captain's brother, and another young man called
Richard Allen, which were both slaine at one time, as they

La anointed flesh, sticke boarish phangs.
Shakespeare. Lear, Act iii. sc. 7. attempted the boording of a frigate within two dayes after

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our departing from them.-Sir F. Drake Revived, p. 45.

Where I, both weeds and wealthy couerings keepe,
For all my guests; nor shall fame euer say,
The deare sonne of the man Vlysses, lay
All night a ship boord here.

Chapman. Homer. Odysses, b. iii.

The English man defended himself with incredible bravery, and beat off the French, after having been boarded three or four times.-Spectator, No. 350.

The two captains, with some others, took their boat and
row'd to land, and by their courteous carriage, soon pre-
vail'd on the native to return with them on board, where

they cloathed him, and gave him victuals, wine, and several
little toys or utensils, which won the simple creature's heart.
Oldys. Life of Ralegh.

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Chaucer. Of Dido Queene of Carthage.

He might for byrth haue boasted noble race Yet were his manners meke and always milde, Who gaue a gesse by gazing on his face, And iudgde thereby, might quickly be beguilde. Gascoigne. Epitaph upon Capt. Bourcher. Though Jierome wer a great prater & boaster of virginitie, yet was he no virgine, but may be suspected of yl rule we yōge wome, for his to moche familiarite we the as apeareth by his epistles.-Bale. Apology, p. 13. Pref.

BOARD, BOARDER BOARDING Tooke agrees. See BROAD. To board is to cover with boards, as a floor, a r&c. to go or get on board a ship, and consequentially to force a way on board; also to be or se to be at the same board or table, and conseentially to take meals at the same board; to at the board, to supply the board with pro-ataan himself for the base intention which he has since

Bord, the noun, is the common word for table

May every god his friendly aid afford,
Pan guard thy flock, and Ceres bless thy board.
Prior. To Mrs. E. Singer.
The wickedest of all men living, the abandon'd Decius,
had opportunities of frequently seeing and entertaining me
house where mix'd company boarded, and where he

brought to pass.-Tatler, No. 45.

gr old writers. Bordles, i. e. boardless, is used went, at seventeen, on board the ship in which prince

When war was declared against the Dutch, he [Sheffield]

P. Plouhman; without a board or table.
Boarding-house; a house where a board or

ole is kept.

Board-wages; wages to supply the board or

Rupert and the Duke of Albemarle sailed, with the com-
mand of the fleet.-Johnson. Life of Sheffield.

Bard is also applied to those who sit at the religious truths, that unconquerable activity, patience, and

ard or table: as the Board of Control, &c.

A be sey that thys Lof, thys traytor sat there,
Este bym vp fram the bord, in gret wraththe y nou,
Aeate thys Lof by the top, fram the borde hym drou,
A forled hym vnder hym myd honde and myd fote.

R.

Gloucester, p. 277.

Itave God if it were so I strangle of this brede.
&pute a morselle in his mouth with that ilk worde,
Bder the kyng & tham alle he strangled at the borde.

R. Brunne, p. 55.

They do not appear (if we may judge from their letters
to the board) to have possessed that peculiar sort of talents
and qualifications, that facility and address in conveying
perseverance, which the instruction of dull and uncultivated
minds requires.-Porteus. Civilisation of Negroe Slaves.
Nor does the boarded hovel better guard
The well-stack'd pile of riven logs and roots
From his pernicious force. Cowper. Task, b. iv.

The ancients talk so frequently of a fixed, stated portion
of provisions assigned to each slave, that we are naturally
led to conclude, that slaves lived almost all single, and re-
ceived that portion as a kind of board-wages.
Hume, Ess. 2. pt. ii.

The Frenche men be covetous.
When they sit at a taverne
There they be stout and stern
Boastful wordes for to crack.

Richard Coeur de Lion. Ellis. Rom.

For yt ye ought to saye: if the Lord wyl, and we lyue, let vs do this or that. But now ye reioyce in your bostynges, all such reioysyng is euill.-Bible, 1551. St. Judas.

For there are perilous times at hande (saith he) by reason of some, that vnder pretence of godlyness, turne true godlyness vp side downe and so prate boastinglye of themselues as thoughe the Christian religion consisted in wordes, and not rather in purenesse of herte. Udal. 2 Tim. Argument.

His auncestours renowned in war and in peace, and [Classicus] himselfe boasted to be descended of enimies to the people of Rome, rather then friends.

Savile. Tacitus. Historie, p. 166.

The prince [the Black Prince] inclyned himselfe to the yerthe, honouryng the kyng his father: this night they thanked God for their good adventure, and made no boost therof, for the kynge wolde that no manne shuld be proude, or make boost, but euery man humbly to thanke God. Berners. Froissart. Cronycle, vol. i. c. 131. Sam. Cam'st thou for this, vain boaster, to survey me, To discant on my strength, and give thy verdit? Come nearer, part not hence so slight inform'd.

Millon. Samson Agonistes.

Is it not then high time that the laws should provide by the most prudent and effectual means to curb these bold and insolent defiers of heaven, who take a pride in being monsters, and boast themselves in the follies and deformities of humane nature?-Tillotson, vol. i. Ser. 3.

But did this boaster threaten, did he pray,
Or by his own example urge their stay?
None, none of these, but ran himselfe away.

Dryden. Ovid. Metam. b. xiii
But to the generous still-improving mind,
That gives the hopeless heart to sing for joy,
Diffusing kind beneficence around,
Boastless, as now descends the silent dew.

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Honest, though poor, (and who shall dare
To disappoint my boasting there ?)
Hardy and resolute, though weak,
The dictates of my heart to speak,
Willing I bend at satire's throne.

Churchill. The Ghost, b. iii.

What art thou, grandeur! with thy flatt'ring train,
Of pompous lies, and boastful promises?
Where are they now, and what's their mighty sum?
All, all are vanish'd!
Jago. Edge-hill, b. ii.

But the right honourable gentleman has chosen to come forward with an uncalled-for declaration; he boastingly tells you, that he has seen, read, digested, compared every thing; and that if he has sinned, he has sinned with his eyes broad open.-Burke. On the Nabob of Arcot's Debts.

The scanty stream

Slow loitering in its channel, seems to vie
With Vaga's depth; but should the sedgy power,
Vain-glorious, empty his penurious urn

O'er the rough rock, how must his fellow stream,
Deride the tinklings of the boastive rill!

You may frequently see one of the large islands sailing along with a lesser joined to it, like a ship with its long boat; or, perhaps, seeming to strive which shall out-swim the other.-Melmoth. Pliny, b. viii. Let. 20.

Amid this fearful trance, a thund'ring sound
He hears, and thrice the hollow decks rebound;
Upstarting from his couch on deck he sprung,
Thrice with shrill note the boatswain's whistle rung:
All hands unmoor!
Falconer. Shipwreck, c. 1.

BOA'TION.

Lat. Boare, boatum; from Bovis, the ancient Latins formed bovare; whence boare. Boatus est Bon Tou Boos,

The roar or bellow of an ox, anv roaring or bellowing.

For who but an intelligent being, what less than an omnipotent, and infinitely wise God could contrive, and make such a fine body, such a medium, so susceptible of every impression, that the sense of hearing hath occasion for, to empower all animals to express their sense and meaning to others; to make known their fears, their wants, their pains

His angle-rod made of a sturdy oak,
His line a cable, which in storms ne'er broke,
His hook he baited with a dragon's tail,
And sat upon a rock, and bobb'd for whale.

King. Upon a Giant's angling.

We shall only instance one of the most useful and in structive, bob-cherry, which teaches at once two noble vir tues, patience and constancy, the first in adhering to the pursuit of one end, the latter in bearing a disappointment. Pope. Martinus Scriblerus

Upon our way from hence we saw a young fellow riding towards us full gallop, with a bob-wig and a black silken ba tied to it.-Spectator, No. 129.

When Tom to Cambridge first was sent,
A plain brown bob he wore;
Read much, and look'd as though he meant

To be a fop no more.-Shenstone. Extent of Cookery. BOBANCE. Fr. Bobancer, to boast. Bo bance, or Bombance; which Menage forms from See BOMBAST

Pompa: perhaps from Bombasin.
Shenstone. Economy.

BOAT. A. S. Bate, Bat; Dut. Boot; BO'ATMAN. Ger. Bot; Sw. Boat; Fr. BaBOATSWAIN. teau; It. Batello. Wachter says, from Ger. Batten, (to beat,) trudere, impellere, to thrust, to dash or drive along. Bat dicitur de Cymba, quia Cymba est alveus trusatilis, qui remis impellitur.

A vessel forced along the water by the beating of the oars.

Boatswain; A. S. Bat-swan; Ger. Batswein; from bat or boat, and swein, a servant; formerly applied to

The rower or manager of the oars.

Botes he toke & barges, the sides togidere knytte,

and sorrows in melancholic tones; their joys and pleasures in more harmonious notes; to send their mind at great distances, in a short time, in loud boations; or to express their thoughts near at hand with a gentle voice, or in secret whispers -Derham. Physico-Theology, b. iv. c. 3.

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Ouer the water that lage [large] is fro bank to bank rauht face, to bob a curtesy; to play at bob-cherry; to

itte.

R. Brunne, p. 241.

So fareth hit by the ryghtful

Thauh he falle he falleth nat, bote as ho full in a bote That ay is saf and sounde, that suteth with ynne the borde. Piers Plouhman, p. 168. Therfor whanne thei hadden rowid as fyve and twenty furlongis, or thritti, thei seen Jhesus walkinge on the see, and to be nygh the boot: and thei dredden.

Wiclif. John, c. 6.

The wisest way, thy boate in waue and wind to giue,
Is neither still the trade of middle streame to try,
Ne (warely shunning wrecke by wether) aye to nie,
To presse upon perillous shore.

Uncertaine Auctors. Of the Golden Meane.

Whom as the boat-man first, with eyes vpcast, in comming spied

To walke in silent woods, and how to shore their feete they plied;

He thus began to chafe, and towards them full lowd he
cried.
Phaer. Virgile. Æneidos, b. vi.

Now nearer to the Stygian lake they draw:
Whom from the shore, the surly boatman saw:
Observ'd their passage through the shady wood;
And mark'd their near approaches to the flood.
Then thus he call'd aloud, inflam'd with wrath.

Dryden. Ib.

You shall for the companies profite, and for the good husbanding of the victuals aboord, call upon the boateswaine and other of the company to vse such hookes and other engines as they haue aboord to take fish with. Hackluyt. Voyages, vol. i. p. 273.

But you may intermeddle in the offices of maiors, bayliues, justices of peace, & indeede haue an oare in euery mans boate, and yet nothing hinder your pastoral office. Whitgift. Defence, p. 760.

The swan by his great Maker taught this good,
T' avoid the fury of the falling flood,
His boat-like breast, his wings rais'd for his sail.
And oar-like feet, him nothing to avail
Against the rain.

Drayton. Noah's Flood.

But th' heedful boateman strongly forth did stretch
His brawnie armes, and all his body straine,
That th' vtmost sandy beach they shortly fetch,
Whiles the drad danger does behind remaine.
Spenser. Faerie Queene, b. ii. c. 12.

How would the wits of King Charles's time have laughed to have seen Nicolini exposed to a tempest in robes of ermin, and sailing in an open boat upon a sea of paste-board? Spectator, No. 5.

Full bowls of milk are hung around, From vessels boat-wise form'd, they pour a flood Of milk yet smoking, mix'd with sable blood. Lewis. Thebaid of Statius, b. vi.

bob for grig, when some part of the tackle bobs into the water ;

To something short, cropt, docked; as a bobtail, a bob-wig, ear-bobs.

Whether to bob, to cheat, is so applied from some short, sharp, sudden act or trick, like those of a juggler, admits only of conjecture.

At length to marriage flat he fell,
when wedding day was doon
To play her prancks, and bob the foole
the shrowish wife begon.

Turberville. A Pretie Epigram.

If any manne hapened by longe sitting to slepe, or by any other coûtenance, to shewe hym-selfe to be wery, he was sodeynely bobbed on the face by the seruantes of Nero for that purpose attendynge.

Sir T. Elyot. The Governor, b. i. c. 7.

For Lucius thinking to become a foule,
Became a fool, yea more than that, an asse,
A bobbing blocke, a beating stocke, an owle
Well woondred at in place where he did passe.

He maketh no nobbes,

But with his dialogues
To prove our prelates gods
And laymen very lobbs
Beating them with bobbes.

Gascoigne. David to Berzabe.

Of my purveance

I spake to him, and said him how that he,
If I were widewe, shulde wedden me.
For certainly, I say for no bobance,
Yet was I never without purveance

Of mariage.-Chaucer. Wif of Bathes Prol. v. 26,149.
Now lete we be the werre of Fraunce,
And the Soudan with hys bobaunce,
And turne ayen to fayre Floraunce,
How that sche kam

For to dwelle, throughs Goddes grace and chaunce,
In Jerusalem.

Octouian Imperator, v. 1550. Weber, vol. i
Yèelle ou for sothe, for al huere bobaunce,
Ne for the auowerie of the kyng of Fraunce,
Tuenti score and fyue haden ther mischaunce
By day and eke by nyht.

Ancient Songs. Ritson, p.9. A Ballad against the Frenc

BOBBIN. Fr. "Bobine, a quil for a spinnin wheel; also a skane of gold or silver thread (Cotgrave.) Perhaps, Bombine. See Menage v. BOBINE.

And some of them turned in manner of spindles or bobis as folk spin or twist therewith, yet drawing a troubled a unequall course, and not able to direct and compose t motion straight.-Holland. Plutarch, p. 994.

I'm sure I always lov'd cousin Con's hazle eyes. and h pretty long fingers, that she twists this way and that, o the haspicolls, like a parcel of bobbins.

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To abode, to bode, and to forbode, are used the same manner; viz.

To see or discern, to shew or exhibit some ternal, superficial appearance, sign or token; fr

Skelton. The Image of Ypocrysye. which we infer good or ill.

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Thulke sterre ys selde ys eye, bote yt boddynge be.
R. Gloucester, P
In the ger, that he was ynome, men ysey ywys
The taylede stirre, that gret bodynge ys.-Id. p. 428.
The bode com to the kyng, that soiorned ther in,
That the kyng Suane the toun wild he wyn.
R. Brunne,

On the Wissonday at Burgh in Lyndeseu Com bode to the kyng, & thus gan thei seie, That the duke Siwarde had taken in his balie Id. p. 61. Machog, pe Scottes kyng. -Whan bodword com tham tille To London for to com, whan parlement shuld be, Als custom was wonne, & tak ther his liuere.-Id. p. His spere was of fyn cypres, That bodeth werre, and nothing pees The hed ful sharpe yground. Chaucer. The Rime of Sire Thopas, v. 15 Alexander, who beinge desirous to vndoe the fatal k at Gordium a towne in Phrygia, hearinge that the em of the worlde was boded by an olde prophecie to him coulde vuknitte it, not findinge out the endes of the stri not perceiuinge by what meanes he coulde doo it, d foorth his swoorde, and hewed it in pieces, supplyinge v of skil, with wilful violence.-Hardinge. Jewel, p. 81.

Onward presenteth unto them safetie, victorie, life and
bere the other, I dread to boden what it may import.
Holland. Livivs, p. 270.
Trg. This foolish, dreaming, superstitious girle,
Mates all these bodements.

Shakespeare. Troil. & Cress. Act v. sc. 3.

The strange overflowing of vice and wickedness in our d, and the prodigious increase and impudence of infidelity dimpiety, hath of late years boaded very ill to us, and brought terrible judgments upon this city and nation.

Tillotson, vol. i. Ser. 20.

The maid from that ill omen turn'd her eyes,
And with loud shrieks and clamours rent the skies,

Ser knew what signify'd the boding sign,

But found the powers displeas'd, and fear'd the wrath divine-Dryden. Palamon & Arcite, b. iii.

Jarvis. One who's voice is a passing bell.

Honeywood. Well, well, go, do.

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In the beginning of his empire his manner was to retire himselfe daily into a secret place for one hour, and there doe nothing else but catch flies, and with the sharp point of a bodkin or writing steel pricke the through: in so much, as whe one enquired, whether any bodie were with Cæsar within? Vibivs Crispvs made answer not impertinently, no, not so much as a flie.-Holland. Suetonius, p. 261.

If I had stuck him with my bodkin, and behaved myself like a man, since he won't treat me like a woman, I had, I think, served him right.-Spectator, No. 508.

The poore artificer and householder, which tilleth no land, aboring all the weeke to buie a bushell or two of graine the market date, can there haue none for his monie, beball, but gine aboue the price, to be serued of great odgers, loders, and common carriers of corne doo onlie antities-Harrison. Desc. of England, c. 18.

BODY, v. BODY, n. Bo'died. BO'DILESS. BODILY, adj. BODILY, ad. BO'DY-GUARD.

A word of very various applications. Skinner thinks that, when used as it is in Lincolnshire for the lower part, inferiori corporis parte, it is connected with the Ger. Boden, which, according to Wachter, means fundus, (i. e. bottom,) et quicquid natura pedibus nostris calcandum subjecit. Fr. Beeld, the Dut. have formed Boude, (see BOLD,) and from Bild-en, the Ger. may have formed Bod-en. Body, may be the build; the form, constructure, the consolidated mass.

They wage one poore man or other to become a bodger, and therto get him a licence upon some few forged surmise. Id. Ib.

heartening leveller.

Because it followeth, in the same place, nor will it be a hodor in this, I cannot on it the consequence of this disWhitlock Manners of the English, p. 437. BODICE. Something worn round the body.

And first she wet her cornely cheiks,

And then ber boddice green,

Her silken cordes of twirtle twist,
Well plett with silver sheen.

Hardycanute. Percy. Reliques.

Bat I who live, and have liv'd twentie yeare
Where I may handle silke, as free, and neere,

As any mercer; or the whale-bone man

Then the senate graunted out a decree, that the consul before he departed from the citie, should put up a bill or supplication unto the bodie of the people, that it would please them to elect a dictatour.-Holland. Livivs, p. 629.

Idea is a bodilesse substance, which of itselfe hath no subsistence, but giveth figure and forme unto shapeless matters, and becommeth the very cause that bringeth them into shew and evidence -Holland. Plutarch, p. 666.

Now I give up my shop, and dispose of all my poetical goods at once; I must therefore desire, that the public would please to take them in the gross; and that every body would turn over what he does not like. Prior. Postscript to his Works. The ancient sage, who did so long maintain That bodies die, but souls return again, With all the births and deaths he had in store, Went out Pythagoras, and came no more.

Id. To the Memory of Villiers.

I am mightily surpris'd to see you so good a judge of our nature and circumstances, since you are a mere spirit, and have no knowledge of the bodily part of us.-Taller, No. 15. But how a body so fantastic, trim,

And quaint, in its deportment and attire,
Can lodge an heavenly mind-demands a doubt.

Cowper. Task, b. ii.

As men grew more and more acquainted with the motions and appearances of the heavenly bodies, they became more and more sensible, that the sun, earth, and planets, bear some very peculiar relation to one another. Beattie. On Truth, pt. ii. c. 1. But in reality it arose from very different causes: someown it.-Porteus. Life of Apb. Secker.

It is applied to the body-of a man or other animal, as distinguished from the members; of a tree, as distinguished from the branches; of an guard, &c.; to material things, as distinguished times from bodily pain, which he often felt when he did not army, as distinguished from van-guard, rearfrom immaterial; to the main bulk, (the build,) the greater proportion, the united or collected mass.

That quilts those bodies I have leave to span.
B. Jonson. An Elegie.

Her bodice half way she unlac'd;

About his arms she alily cast

The silken bond, and held him fast.

Prior. Love Disarmed.

To body, or to embody, is to put into bodily, corporeal, material or substantial shape or form. To the eldest he seide first, "dogter ich bidde the Sey me al clene thin herte, how muche thou louest me, Min heye Godes," quoth this mayde, "to witnesse I take echon

Then he [Pope] rose, he was invested in bodice made of canvass, being scarcely able to hold himself erect, till

They were laced.-Johnson. Life of Pope.

That y loue more in myn herte thi leue bodi one Than myn soule and my lif, that in my bodi ys.' R. Gloucester, p. 29. Therfore I sey to you that ye be not besy to youre lyf, what ye schul ete, neither to your bodi, with what ye schul be clothid, whether lyf is not more than mete and the body more than the cloth?-Wiclif. Matthew, c. 6.

BODKIN. Skinner suggests that it may be a

dondakin, a diminutive of body; iness, its slenderness. ; on account of its

Bet on a time Brutus and Cassius,

That ever had of his high estat envie,

Pa prively had made conspiricie

Agus this Julius in sotil wise:

And cast the place, in which he shulde die

With bodekins, as I shal you devise.

At last with bodkins dubd and doust to death;

Therfore I say vnto you: be not carefull for your lyfe, what ye shall eate or what ye shall drinke, nor yet for your body, what ye shal put on. Is not the life more worthe then meate, and the body more of value the raiment.

And all his [Cæsar's] glorie banisht with his breath. Gascoigne. The Fruits of Warre.

Bible, 1551. Ib.

He for despit, and for his tyrannie,
To don the ded bodies a vilanie,
Of alle our lordes, which that ben yslawe,
Hath alle the bodies on a hepe y drawe,
And will not suffren hem by non assent,
Neyther to ben yberied, ne ybrent,
But maketh houndes ete hem in dispite.
Chaucer. The Knightes Tale, v. 944.
Bodily manslaughter is whan thou sleest him with thy
tonge in other maner, as whan thou commandest to sle a
man, or elles yevest conseil to sle a man.
Id. The Persones Tale.

Firste for thy bodyliche kynde,
And for thy woeful soul also,
Thou shalt be hole of both two.-Gower. Con. A. b. ii.

Like to the aged boysteous bodied oke,

The which among the Alpes the northerne windes
Blowyng now from this quarter, now from that,
Betwixt them striue to ouerwhelme with blastes;
The whistlyng ayre among the braunches rores.
Surrey. Virgile. Eneis, b. iv.

It is in the body-politic, as in the natural, those disorders are most dangerous that flow from the head.

The signification of baptism is described of Paule in the 6th of ye Romaines, that as we are plunged bodily into the water. Euen so we are dead & buried with Christ from sinne.-Frith. Workes, p. 23.

BOG, v.
BOG, n.
BO'GGY.

Bo'GLAND.

Bo'GTROTTER.

Melmoth. Pliny, b. iv. Let. 22.

A. S. Bug-an, to bow; Dut. Boogen, flectere, quia (sc.) prementi cedit; because it gives way to pressure. See Skinner. Applied to

Land, or ground, that bows, yields, gives way to pressure:-marshy, miry, land.

On Wednesday the Indians of the toune hauing hunted a doe, shee tooke soyle & came neer our ship, and putting off with our boat we tooke her, being like vnto our deere in England, not altogether so fat, but very good flesh and good bodied.-Hackluyt. Voyages, vol. ii. p. 695.

I shall rendre my brother into your handes, to do your pleasure with hym, without he woll obey as I woll haue him; so that ye promyse me by the fayth of your body, that ye shall do his person no bodely hurt.

Berners. Froissart. Cronycle, vol. i. c. 67.

The primary ideas we have peculiar to body, as contra

No part or corner man can looke upon,
But there are objects, bid him to be gone
As farre as he can flie, or follow day,
Rather than here so bogg'd in vices stay.

B. Jonson. Underwood. An Epistle to a Friend. Therefore of purpose he sometime brought them one way, other while another way, and at last brought them into a great bog or marish, full of deep holes and ditches, and where they must needs make many turns, and returns before they could get out again, and yet very hardly. North. Plutarch, p. 480.

Chaucer. The Monkes Tale, v. 14,625. distinguished to spirit, are the cohesion of solid, and conse-
quently separable parts, and a power of communicating
motion by impulse.-Locke. Hum. Underst. b. ii. c. 23.
For of all forms, she holds the first degree,
That are to gross material bodies knit;
Yet she herself is bodyless and free;
And, though confin'd, is almost infinite.

He sitteth in fudgement almost euery day. They vse no a tree with the point of an yron bigger then a bodkin. ch, but give vp their supplications written in the leaues Hackluyt. Voyages, vol. ii. p. 260.

Davies. The Immortality of the Soul, s. 4,

This prouince of Amapaix is a very low and a marish ground nere the riuer; and by reason of the red water which issueth out in small branches thorow the fenny and boggy ground, there breed diuers poisonfull wormes and serpents. Hackluyt. Voyages, vol. iii. p. 639.

Every bog hath most certainly a living spring in it. If possibly we could light on the head of that spring, or meet it higher than the place of the bog, and give it a clear passage, the nether bog will vanish.

Boyle. Works, vol. vi. p. 383.

For he that is deeply engaged in vice is like a man laid fast in a bogg, who by a faint and lazy struggling to get out, does but spend his strength to no purpose, and sinks himself the deeper into it.-Tillotson, vol. i. Ser. 28.

Go, conquerors of your male and female foes;
Men without hearts, and women without hose.
Each bring his love a bogland captive home;
Such proper pages will long trains become.

Dryden. Prologue to the Prophetess.
While, at each step, his trembling rider quakes,
Appall'd with thoughts of bog, or cavern'd pit,
Or treach'rous earth, subsiding where they tread,
Tremendous passage to the realms of death!

Jago. Edge-hill, b. iii. For if I have been led into bogs and quagmires, by following an ignis fatuus, what can I do better, than to warn others to beware of it?-Reid. Enquiry, c. 1. s. 8. It's a damn'd long, dark, boggy, dirty, dangerous way. Goldsmith. She Stoops to Conquer.

BO'GGLE, v.
The diminutive of Bog;
Bo'GGLER. (q. d.) to stick in the mud,
Bo'GGLING, n. labouring in vain to disembar-
Bo'GGLISH. rass yourself, (Skinner.)
To stick or stay, as if sunk in a bog; unable,
afraid, unwilling to proceed or advance, and thus-—-—-—-
to hesitate.

Ros. My lord, I do confesse the ring was hers.
Kin. You boggle shrewdly, eury feather starts you.
Is this the man you speake of?

Shakespeare. All's Well that Ends Well, Act. v. sc. 3.

Cleo. Good my lord.

Ant. You haue beene a boggeler euer, But when we in our viciousnesse grow hard. (Oh misery on't) the wise Gods seele our eyes.

Id. Antony & Cleopatra, Act iii. sc. 11. What wise man or woman doth not know, that nothing is more sly, touchy, and bogglish, nothing more violent, rash, and various, than that opinion, prejudice, passion, and superstition of the many or common people?

Bp. Taylor. Artif. Handsomeness, p. 172.

He [Edw. Bagshaw, jun.] fell to the old trade of conventicling and raising sedition, for which being ever and anon troubled, [he] had at length the oaths of allegiance and supremacy tendered to him, but he bogling at them at first, and afterwards denying to take them, was committed prisoner to Newgate.-Wood. Athena Oxon.

'Tis true indeed when a sinner is first tempted to the commission of a more gross and notorious sin, his conscience is apt to boggle and start at it, he doth it with great difficulty and regret.-Tillotson, vol. i. Ser. 10.

In fermentations we do generally see a circulation, or several kinds of boglins, as it were by a mixture of agitations, partly by spiral lines, partly by undulations, not mixt otherwise than in the motion of smoke.

Boyle. Works, vol. vi. p. 426.

BOIL, v. Fr. Bouillir; It. Bollire; Sp. BOIL, n. Bullir; Lat. Bullire; perhaps BOILING. from the Gr. Baλew, to throw, to Bo'ILER. throw forth; (sc.) from the surface. The noun, when applied to an ebullition or ejection from the surface of the skin, is written Bile by Wiclif and Tindall; and the opinion of etymologists, who consider it to be correctly so written, are given under BILE.

To boil is to throw, to cast up or forth, (sc.) some portions of a solid mass above or over the rest; and thus to fluctuate; to effervesce; to agitate or cause to be agitated; to be heated (as water by fire, till it throws itself or is thrown over, (sc.) the vessel.)

Met. to be warm, animated, ardent, eager. Boiler is applied to the person who, and the vessel in which any thing, boils.

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Then boyld my breast with flame and burning wrath,
To reuenge my town vnto such ruin brought:
With worthy peins on her to work my will.

Surrey. Virgile. Enæis, b. ii.

In this year [1542] the teth daie of Marche, there was a maide boiled in Smithfielde for poisonyng diuers honest persons that she had dwelled with in the citee of London. Fabyan. Hen. VIII. an. 1542.

And whan the place was marked in Normandy, and dylygently sought out, the searchers behelde a fearful flutteryng and teryble boylynge in a serten water, an horyble stynkyng smoke arysynge thereof.-Bale. Votaries, pt. ii.

The spye entered downe into the dykes, where ther was no water, nor none coude abyde there, for it was all a quycke boylyng sande.

Berners. Froissart. Cronycle, vol. i. c. 321.

How happy were those, in very height

Of this great battle that had bravely dy'd!
When as their boiling bosoms, in the fight,
Felt not the sharp steel thorough them to slide.

Drayton. The Battle of Agincourt.

And so the black-guard are pleased with any lease of life (for some 999) especially those o' the boyling-house; they are to have Medeas kettle hung up, that they may souse into it when they will, and come out renew'd like so many strip'd snakes at their pleasure.

B. Jonson. Masques. Mercurie Vindicated.

He can give you favour, when he pleaseth, in the sight of the worst enemies in the world, so as to make them your best friends; and how long soever he may suffer their choler to boil in their breasts, he can keep it from breaking forth either at their hands or tongues.

Beveridge, vol. ii. Ser. 123.
Soap is made up by the soap boilers of oil or grease, and
salt, and water diligently incorporated together.
Boyle. Works, vol. i. p. 500.

The kettle boil'd, and all prepar'd
To give the morning treat,
When Dick, the country beau, appear'd,
And, bowing, took his seat.

Cunningham. The Broken China.

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BOISTEROUS. Dut. Büsen; Ger. Beisen, Bo'ISTEROUSLY. mordere. Beisswind is a BOISTEROUSNESS. keen biting wind; as the BOISTOUS. north wind. The Dut. Bo'ISTEOUSNESS. Büster is furious, raging, Bor'sTOUSLY. turbulent. And from these Boistous and Boisterous may have been formed, and applied to any thing

Turbulent, tempestuous, stormy, violent; to any thing coarse, rude, noisy.

And no man puttith a clout of boistous cloth into an old cloathing, for it doeth awey the fulnesse of the cloth and a worse brekyng is maad.-Wielif. Matthew, c. 9.

I am a boistous man, right thus say I.

Chaucer. The Manciples Tale, v. 17,160.

He on a day in open audience
Ful boistously hath said hire this sentence.

Id. The Clerkes Tale, v. 8666.

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Who takes not pleasure then safely on shore to rest, And see with drede and depe dispayre, how shipmen are distrest?

Vncertaine Auctors. Felicitee of a Minde, &c.

To the house top I climbe And harkning stood I like as when the flame Lightes in the corn, by drift of boisterous winde: The silly herdman all astonnied standes, From the hye rock, while he doth here the sound. Surrey. Virgile. Enæis, b. ii.

- Vp the toure I climbe by staires on hie, And layde mine eare, and still I stood about me round to spy.

And euen as fire in boystrous wind some country ripe of

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Time makes the tender twig

to bousteous tree to grow: It makes the oke to overlooke The slender shrubs bylow.

Turberville. Time Conquereth all Things. One is soft, meeke & gentle, as was Dauid, John, & Peter, an other is boysteous, harde, and vehement, as was Helias, Esay, & Paule.-Bale. Image, pt. ii.

A cruell sorte of false disciples and wicked bretheren arose vp frō among them, all earthly minded to couetusnesse, puffed vp with pride and ambition, inflamed also with anger, spight, & vengeaunce, they boysteously entred among the people, so mutable and fickle as the sea, which chaungeth with euery winde.-Id. Ib.

But whan he cast hys iyes a little from Jesus, and began to looke about him, and to considre the boysteousnes of the winde, the hurling of the waues and his owne feblenes, he was afrayed agayn, and began to sinke downe & be in danger of drowning.-Udal, Matthew, c. 14.

Or when with boist'rous rage the swelling main,
Puft up by mighty winds, does hoarsely roar ;
And beating with his waves the trembling shore,
His sandy girdle scorns, and breaks earth's rampart door
P. Fletcher. The Purple Island, c. 12

For he [David] before had not been us❜d to these,
Nor him at all their boist'rousness can please;
His gorget gall'd his neck, his chin beneath.
And most extremely hinder'd him to breathe.

Drayton. David & Golia
Spread then towards Vulcan's shores thy speedy wing,
Where round his anvils ceaseless hammers ring.
Bid him no more his boisterous bellows ply,
Fill heaven-built Argo sail securely by.

Fawkes. Apollonius Rhodius, b. i

On the contrary he took the fact for granted, and so join in with the cry, and halloo'd it as boisterously as the rest. Sterne. Tristram Shandy, vol. iii. c. 2

Lord Coningsby, Mr. Stanhope, and Mr. Lechmere we the principal interrogators; who, in this examination Prior] of which there is printed an account not unentertai ing, behaved with the boisterousness of men elated by rece authority.-Johnson. Life of Prior.

BO'LARY, adj. Of or pertaining to the speci of clayey earth, called Bol-armoniac. Lat. Bo Armenice, a kind of earth found in Armen (Minshew.)

The magnes carneus is nothing else but a weak, an ina mate kind of loadstone, veined here and there with a f magnetical and ferreous lines; but chiefly consisting o bolary and clammy substance; whereby it adheres hematites, or terra lemnia, unto the lips.

BOLD, v.
BOLD, adj.
BOʻLDEN.

BO'LDHEDE.

BOʻLDLY.

BOLDNESS.

Brown. Vulgar Errours, b. ii. Fr. Baud; It. Baldo; D Boude; A. S. Bald, Byld, byld, audax. A. S. Byldan, build, to confirm, to establish make firm, and sure and fast. consolidate, to strengthen. thus (adds Tooke) a man of confirmed coura i. e. a confirmed heart, is properly said to b builded, built, or bold man, who, in the A is termed byld, bylded, ge-byld, ge-bylded, well as bald. The A. S. words Bold and B i. e. builded, built, are both likewise used in ferently for what we now call a building, ( builden) or strong edifice, (Tooke, ii. 129.) BOLD, infra.

To bold or bolden; is to confirm the courag give additional courage; or as we now say encourage or embolden (qv.)

Bold, the adj., is also applied to the extr of courage, to that which is a daring, audac impudent: as well as to that which is

Fearless, intrepid, dauntless, courageous. that which is

Well, firmly, built; strongly constructed, e in nature or art, as a bold coast; or, in pai or statuary, a bold figure.

Hony & mylk ther ys muche. mony folk & bolde.
This ys the stat of Yrlond, as iche habbe y tolde.
R. Gloucester
Thise kynges nen dred, & alle the world tham kne
For alle ther grete boldehed, the dede git doun tham t
R. Brunne,
Boldely thie camen, & schewed tham to his face
Fell it to gode or grame, thie did tham in his grace
Id.

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