will appear, that Nares' conjecture MD. 4, 1. jewel for gimmal is superfluous. Ghost, dead person. bHf. 3, 2. Kin to the hebr. chai, life, and the pers. Gahs, good spirits, (Jzeds), of the day's parts. Gin, snare to catch birds, trap. TN. 2, 5. M. to Ghost, to haunt as a ghost. AC. 2, 6. 4, 2. bHf. 3, 1. cHf. 1, 4. Contracted, as it Gib, gib cat, male cat. An expression exactly seems, from engine, like genius and ingenium. analogous to that of a Jack ass, the one being to Gin, to begin. M. 1, 2. Anglos. gynnan. formerly called Gib, or Gilbert, in old French Ginevra, king Arthur's false consort LL. 4, 1. Tibert. Tib was also a common name for a cat. Ginger, a sort of spice very current in Shk's aHd. 1, 2. H. 3, 4. Douce's Ill. of Sh. I, 415. times. ald. 2, 1. WT. 4, 2. MM. 4, 3. MV. to Gibber, to gab, gabble, babble, jabber, 3, 1. Gr. zingiberis. S. Douce's Ill. of Sh. I, gabber, gibe, jape. H. 1, 1. Alltogether rela- 142. tions, as varieties of the gr. chaō, chainō, engl. Gingerly, softly, heedfully, carefully. TG. 1, 2. to yawn, jawn, chaun, to open the mouth, Kin to the germ. zimperlich, zipperlich, zappcalled also gab. The consonants being but later precipitates of earlier aspirations, their change must be the greater and the more licentious in a mixt and hybridous language chiefly, that fluctuates between various assonances of words and ideas. Gibe, jest, mockery, scorn. MW. 3, 3. 4, 5. H. 5, 1. O. 4, 1. Giber, mocker, jeerer. Co. 2, 1. S. to gibber. Gig, turning top. LL. 4, 3. 5, 1. Kin to the gr kio, kikys, kikō, kichō, the engl. quick, etc. Giglet, giglot, gigle, wanton wench, drab, strumpet. MM. 5, 1. aHf. 5, 1. Cy. 3, 1. An assonance of the anglos. gagol, gaegl, lascivious, the engl. to giggle, gr. kichlizō, kichliskō, germ. kichern, the subst. giggle for mistress. S. Gifford's Ben Jons. III, 124. to Gild, to cover with foliated gold. MV. 2, 6. KJ. 2, 2; to pay, bHd. 4, 4., where the pun with gild and guilt: See also He. 2. ch. Rb. 2, 1. Gold was popularly styled red; hence to gild with blood a common phrase in the sixteenth century. M. 2, 2. Gilt, gilded, drunk. T. 5, 1. by a jocular allusion to the grand elixir of alchymists as stone. bHd. 3, 2. TA. 2, 2. or as aurum potabile bHd. 4, 4. AC. 1,5. AW. 5, 2. JC. 1, 3. Gilded puddle AC. 1, 4. puddles of urine, where there is formed a film, which reflects all the prismatic colours and very principally yellow and other tinges of a golden hue. Gill, abridged for Gillet, from Julietta. RJ. 2,4. as Gillian CE. 3, 1. from Juliana. Gilt, gold, gilding. Rb. 2, 1. cHf. 2, 2. Gimmal, or gemmow is in general all what is mechanically artificial, and nicely or curiously formed machinery, mechanical work or performance; whence aHf. 1, 2. some odd gimmals or device are joined, and He. 4, 2. g. bit is a curious bit. Of course gimmal and gimmer, or gimcrack, or curious contrivance or machinery are the same word-for and r notoriously. are changed not seldom-. The notion of double ring here intruded by an odd etymology must therefore be wholly abandoned. For the word is an assonance of the gr. keimelion, as well, meaning a curious, precious and therefore kept up thing, as of the german verb zimmern, kin to the gr. demein, the engl. timber, that is to - work curiously in mechanics. Even by gim, gimmy, pretty, spruce, neat, it assonates the gr. komos, kompsos, komo, the engl. gimp, scot jimp, jemmy, the lat, comptus, comtus, of whom the general notion is the same. So it lich. Gipsy, gipsey, giptian, Egyptian. AC. 4, 10. to Gird, to cut, or lash with wit, to reproach, fob, jeer. bhd. 1, 2. Co. 1, 1. Gird, a cut, sarcasm, stroke of satire. TS. 5, 2 aHf. 3, 1. Nares derives it from the sax. gyrd, virga, switch, germ. Gerte. Gifford's Ben Jons. III, 385. deems it a mere metathesis of gride, viz thrust, blow, metaphorically a smart stroke of wit, taunt, reproachful retort. Girdle. There is no discretion below the girdle, a proverb alluded to KL. 4, 6. by the words But to the g. do the gods inherit, beneath is all the fiends. cf. H. 2, 2. On fortunes cap we are not etc. Another proverb: If he be angry, let him turn the buckle of his girdle, or in Ireland turn his brogues, that is prepare himself for combat by turning the girdle behind, and to obtain redress, is alluded to MA. 5, 1. By Gis, Gisse, Jyse, Jis by Jesus! an oath. H. 4, 5. Gist, gest, lodging or stage for rest in a progress or journey, chiefly of the king, written in a scroll and containing also the time of staying at each place, WT. I, 2. The fr. word gite. to Give off, to cease, leave off, to diminish, relent. AC. 4, 3. Given, endowed. bHf. 3, 1. JC. 1, 2. aHd. 3, 3. MM. 2, 1. Gives, gyres, fetters for feet. MM. 4, 2. alld. 4, 2. Cy. 5, 4. RJ. 2, 2. H. 4, 7. From the gr. kyphōn, originally a crooked, courbed wood for shackling, from kybō, kypō, kyphō, kyptō. to Give, gyve, to fetter. O. 2, 1. to Glance, to allude, give a hint of. MD. 2, 2. Kin to the gr. laō, glaussō, engl. gloss, to varnish over, of course to polish, forbish, make sleek, even, also in a metaphorical sense, assonant in to glose, wh.s.; leios, germ. gleissen; engl. glad, sax. glaed, glad, germ. glatt, icel. gladr, gladvaer. to Glare, to look with piercing eyes, to stare at. KL. 3, 6. H. 3, 4. Kin to flare, by the gr. laō (s. to glance), and the lowsax. glaren, glören, to glow like coals, whence angloren, anglotzen (gr. glaussein), glarogig, metath. grallogig, answering to the homerical glaukops. Of the same root is to Glass, to euclose in a glass. LL. 2, 1. Gleam, a beam of light, corrected by Voss MD. 5, 1. for beam, or stream. The lineage extends itself farther to glow, glimmer, gleen, glimpse (gr. lampō, lampsō) glisten, gloss. leusso), germ. glühen, glimmen, sax. leoman, lioman, geleoman, radiare, coruscare, lucere, lat. lumen, flamma. S. Horne Tooke Div. of P. II, 373. Gleeful, joyful, mirthful, merry. TɅn. 2, 3. The primitive word glee is used by Chaucer and in Tristan 2. 7. 10. 13 for music, so that it is from the sax. gligg, glie, gle, kin to the gr. kaleō, klazō, klangō, germ. klingen, Klang, engl. gleek, transferred to mirth, and joy. There assonates however also the gr. gelaō, to laugh. Gleek, jest, scoff. aHf. 3, 2. From the sax.glig, ludibrium, jest. S. gleeful. To give the gleek, to pass a jest upon, to make appear ridiculous. RJ. 4, 5. Douce's Ill. of Sh. I, 192. to Gleek, to jest, scoff at. MD. 3, 1. He. 5, 1, where gleek and gall, wh. s. The nearest etymon of this word in this meaning is the gr. glaux, owl, as mocking bird in mythology. Gleek, a game at cards, played by three persons with 44 cards, each hand having 12, and 8 being left for the stock. Gleek were 8 cards of a sort, as 8 aces, 8 kings etc. from the germ. gleich. To this and the double meaning of scoffing is alluded Rb. 4, 5. to Glew, or glue, to join with a viscous cement, to join, unite. cHf. 2, 6. 5, 2. KJ. 3, 4. From the fr. glu, kin to cleave, germ. kleben. to Glib, or lib, to geld, castrate. WT. 2, 1. Probably from the gr. kolobun, to mutilate, whence the engl. collop, wh. s. reducible therefore to leō, lepō, to make thin, hollow, smooth, sleek, even, plain, slippery, to glib TC. 4, 5. gr. leios, lat. laevis. Hence Glib, pliant, flexible. TA. 1, 1. where it is joined with slippery. KL. 1, 1. where glib and oily art to speak. to Gloom, to be dark, tenebrous, to look gloomy, melancholy, sullen. RJ. 5, 3. S. gleam. to Glose, gloze, to interpret or put construction upon any thing, to expound, comment upon, to prate. Rb. 2, 1; to fawn, flatter by speaking. TC. 2, 2. Kin to gloss (S. to glare, glance and gleam) and the gr. glossa, tongue. Gloss, varnish. aHf. 4, 1. Glove, gauntlet, of a lady worn in the helmet as a favour, was a very honourable token in the times of chivalry, and much of the wearer's success was derived from the virtue of the lady. Rb. 5, 3. It was also a fashion, that by and by fell into the hands of coxcombical and dissolute servants. KL. 3, 4. Sometimes they were token of challenge, He. 4, 1. and of enmity to him from whom it was taken, ib. 4, 7. Gloves were often perfumed. WT. 4, 3. te Glut, to cloy, overfill, swallow. T. 1, 1. aHd. 4, 2. (lat. glutio.) to Gnarl, to snarl. Rb. 1, 3. bHf. 3, 1. Sax. gnyrran, germ. knurren, lat. grunnio, gr. gryzo, germ. grunzen. Gnarled, knotted. MM. 2, 2. Kin by metathesis Goad, sting, pointed stick to prick oxen forward. WT. 1, 2. where it is joined to thorns, nettles, tails of wasps. to Goad, to stimulate, incite. MM. 2, 2. AW. 5, 1. Co. 2, 3. Goal, landmark set up to bound a race; aim, scope. WT. 1,2. AC. 4, 8. From the gr. kaulos, shaft, or stalk. Gobbet, a mouthful, draught, gulp, swallowing. bHf. 4, 1. 5, 2. Kin to gab, gag, wh. s. Goblet, cup for drinking. Rb. 3, 3. bld. 2, 1. From the gr. kypellon. Goblin, fairy; spirit. T. 4, 1. CE. 2, 2. WT. 2, 1. TC. 5, 11. H. 1, 4. 5, 2. The germ. Kobold, from the gr. kobalos, koballos, kōbalos, one of the mates or pheres of Bacchus, a company like the Satyri and Fauni. The idea was individually formed and framed by every people, and accommodated to the language, and vice versa. It implies however the notion of a playful, merry, droll, harmless spirit. S. Douce's Ill. of Sh. I, 892. God 'ild or dild you, corrupt form instead of god yield or give you some advantage. AL. 3, 8. 5, 4. S. M. 1, 6. AC. 4, 2. God before, either god going before, assisting, guiding, favouring, or be fore, viz god may defend, assist, shield by an archaism. He. 1, 2. 3, 6. God's blessing. To go out of god's bl. into the warm sun was a proverbial phrase for quitting a better for a worse situation. Thereat is alluded H. 1, 2. by I am too much in the sun, viz out of God's blessing, unfortunate, unblessed. God's santies, or corruptedly sonties, for god's sancti, or saints, an oath. MV. 2, 2. Gongarian, gipsy, supposed to be a corruption of Hungarian, perhaps to make a more tremendous sound. MW. 1, 3. Douce's Ill. of Sh. I, 57. Good. To do good, to have effect. aHd. 3, 1. – To make good, to justify, maintain, secure. CE. 5, 1. TS. ind. 1. · A-good (at good) seriously, earnestly. TG. 4, 4. Good deed, indeed, in very deed. WT. 1, 2. Good leave, ready assent. AL. 1, 1. A good man, in mercantile style, solid, trusty. MV. 1, 3. Co. 1, 1. Good night, serenade, a species of minor poem of the ballad kind, bld. 3. end. Goose, smoothing or pressing iron of tailors, from its being often roasting. M. 2, 8. Lowsax. goos, bohem. huss, lowgerm. gant, from ant, and, whence the lat. anser, the gr. chen, the germ. Ente. Gooseberry, bHd. 1, 2. corrupted from the nord. groser, grosert, groset, gael. grosaid, sued. krus baer, lat. grossula. Gorbelly, gorbellied, a person bacon fat, fatgut, fat kidney'd, having a large paunch. and. 2, 2. There is also a form of it, gorrel bellied, probably from gore, wh. s., of course kin to the lat. crudelis, as the Germans in this series use grausam, or greulich. Gore, blood. M. 2, 3. He. 4, 6. TA. 3, 5. Oldgerm. Grau, cambr. crau, bohem. krew, lat. cruor, from the gr. krao, aeol. krauō, lat. creo, to curd, kin to crew, crystal. to Gore, to prick, stab, pierce, bore. Rb. 1, 3. TC. 1, 1. 3, 3. KL. 5, 3. Probably kin to the gr. kerō, keraō, karō, keirō, keraizō, to shear, cut, kill, send a ship to the bottom. The verb. bore, sax. geborian, whence Johnson derives it arbitrarily, lay in other series of notions; and perhaps it would not be absurd, to hear assonate the precedent word. to Gorge, to fill the gorge, to feed. KL. 1, 1. TS. 4, 1; to swallow, devour. JC. 5, 1. From the lat. gurges. Gorgeous, pompous, magnificent, stately, splendid. T. 4, 1. aHƒ. 5, 4. KL. 2, 4. Gorget, piece of armour to defend the neck. TC. 1, 3. No doubt originally the gorge, and therefore the same with habergeon, heburgeon, hauberk, germ. Halsberge. to Gormandize, to gluttonize, banket. MV. 2, 5. bHd. 5, 5. In French gourmand, from the lowsax. Körmann, from kören, kiesen, to choose, to taste, gr. geuein. Gorse, goss, furze, the low sort that only grows to Gravel, to cover with gravel (Hh. 1, 1.) or upon wet ground; it has prickles like those on a rosetree, or gooseberrybush. T. 4, 1. Originally furze and gorse seem however to have been the same word. Gospell'd, bound by the gospel, pious, religious. M. 3, 1. Gospel is god's spell, god's letter or word. Gossamer, gossomer, gossamour, properly cotton; light downy matter; the long floating cobwebs seen in fine weather in the air, allhallown-summer. KL. 4, 5. RJ. 2, 6. From the gr. gausapos, lat. gossipium, fr. gossampine. Gossip, relation or sponsor in baptism; familiar acquaintance, chiefly tattling women. TG. 3, 1. CE. 5, 1. MD. 2, 1. MV. 3, 1. WT. 2, 3. Sax. godsibbe, whence Chaucer's godsib, from the sax. syb, sippe, germ. Sippe, kin to the lat. cippus, prosapia, germ. Saft. sand; to make stop, to perplex. AL. 4, 1. Gravel seems a labial form of grail, fr. grêle, transposed from glarea, like the germ. Gries, gr. cheras. Graymalkin, Grimalkin, a fiend supposed to resemble a grey cat. M. 1, 1; a cat. S. Malkin. to Graze, to fret (wh. s.), gall, glance, as a bullet. He. 4, 3. O. 4, 1. In this signification it is kin to the gr. rhaō. s. fret, and add chrauō, grauō, graō, graphō, chrao. In the other of feeding on grass, it is from the latter word, kin to the gr. grastis, krastis, sax. gaers, graes, related to chortos. Cf. Horne Tooke Div. of P. II, 875. Greedy, covetous, eager, desirous. MW. 1, 3. Goth. gredig, ind. gridhne, sax. graedig, germ. Gier, gierig, kin to the gr. kear, ker. Greek, jovial fellow, fond of good living and free potations; whence the proverb as merry as a Greek, corrupted since into grig. TC.1, 2. 4, 4; pander, bawd. TN. 4, 1. Gifford's Ben Jons. III, 261. observes 'That patronymic appellation, like Trojan, Lacedaemonian etc. was merely used as augmentative and must be understood from the context. to Gossip, to act as a gossip, to stand sponsor to any one in giving a name. AW. 1, 1. Goujere, goodjer, goujeer, the french disease, KL. 5, 3. corrupted to good year, like to the ital. malanno, and vice versa; for goujere or goodjer is an exclamation. MA. 1, 3. ¿Hd. 2, 4. MW. 1, 4. It is derived from the fr. gouge, a trull; but that etymology seems not altogether Green, unexperienced, unskilful. KJ. 3, 4. 0. to be questionless, so that one might suspect 2, 1. H. 1, 3; fresh. TC. 2, 8. H. 1, 2. yet a far deeper corruption of some word or Greenly, unskilfully. O. 2, 1. words, like guajac, gout, germ. Gicht, Kopf-Greenness Warburton restores for grossness schur (answering to the french crown. At least of his years Rc. 3, 1. terms like the lowsax. Dumm Jörkenpulver for Green sickness, chlorosis. AC. 3, 2. RJ.3, 5. pulvis gummi guttae, Violenrumor for philo-Greensleeves, an old popular ballad of the nium romanum show evidently the licentiousness of the language. In Government, regularly, according to the time. MD. 5, 1. Gourd, a species of false dice, probably bored internally, with a secret cavity. MW. 1, 3. S. fullam. Gouty, that has the gout (germ. Gicht.) TA. Grace at meat was often said in metre. MM. Grained, rough, wrinkled, chiefly of leather. Gramercy, many thanks, much obliged. MV. to Grapple, to hook. H. 1, 8. to contend, fight, strive. bHf. 1, 1. Kin to the gr. chriō, chripō, chriptō, whence to gripe, germ. geifen, to grasp, grope, lat. rapio, pers, giriften Add gripizo, gripeuo. to Grate, to rub, bruise (wh. s.); to offend, Gratillity, for gratnity. TN. 2, 3. amorous kind. The character of Lady Greensleeves is rather suspicious; for green was a colour assumed by loose women. MW.2, 1. 5, 5. Gregory, St, pope Hildebrand. TG. 4, 2. aHd. 5, 8. Grice, greece, greese, grieze, grize, grise, stip, flight of steps. TN. 3, 1. TA. 4, 3. 0. 1, 3. From degrees, by gressus. Grief, sorrow, affliction. T. 1, 2; bodily Griefshot, shot, hit by grief. Co. 5, 1. to Grin, to gnar, grumble. Hƒ. 3, 1. S. to to Grind, to bruise, crush. Co. 3, 2. AC. 3, 5. to Sometimes old writers inadvertantly use the word for grife, or gryphe, the griffin. Gifford's Ben Jons. IV, 61; paw, talon, fist, hand. Hh. 5, 2. M. 3, 1. In Germ. Griff, from greifen, gr. chriō, chriptō, chrimptō. Gripe, to hold with the fingers closed, to seize, close. Rb. 2, 1. ald. 5, 2; to pinch, press, squeeze. Cy.3, 1. Hh. 2, 2. S. to grapple. Grisly, horrible, ghastly. aHf. 1, 4. From the gr. rhissō, rhigeō, phrisso, krisso, to bristle, wh. s., to be rough. Grizzle, grizzled, gray black. AC. 3, 11. H. 1, 2. TN. 5, 1. to Groan, to breathe with a hoarse noise. TA. 3, 2. LL. 4,3. S. to grin, and compare further the gr. krainein, krene, the austr. grainen, lat. grunnire, fr. gronder, pers. gharendieh, rugiens. Groin, parts about the privities. bHd. 2, 4. Kin Gurnet, gurnard, a fish of the piper kind, to the gr. choiras, tumour of the jugular glands. Groom, denotes always attendance, observance, to Grope, to feel for, to touch, fumble. H. ditch. to Grovel, to. creep. bHf. 1, 2. 1, 4. Kin to creep, croop, gr. herpō, serpo, repo, germ. krabbeln. Ground, soil, land. H. 1, 1; air or musical theme, on which variations and divisions (the) descant) are to be made. Rc. 3, 7. Groundling, a spectator in the pit, or the groundstands, ground, where the spectators actually stood on the ground without benches. probably a very bad and vulgar dish, when soused or pickled; hence sous'd gurnet au appellation of contempt. aHd. 4, 1. Gust, sudden, violent blast. aHf.5, 6. bHf. 3, 2. cHf. 3, 1. Co. 1, 6; top, height. TA. 3, 5. Icel. gustr, giostr is cool wind. to Gust, to taste. WT. 1, 2. Kin to the lat. gustus, gustare, gr. geuō, engl. choose, germ. kosten. H. Haberdasher, one who sells small fashionable wares, pedler. Hh. 5, 3. cf. TS. 4, 3. where there is some catalogue; and Walt. Scott's Heart of Midloth. I, 85. where hosiers, glovers, hatters, mercers, milliners and all who dealt in the miscellaneous wares now termed haberdasher's goods.' It is derived from berdash, a kind of necklace, or from the germ. habt ihr das (ridiculously enough!) But there seems rather to lay in the word averium, ware, and the germ. Tasche, budget, bag, likewise as budget, bag and pocket, of course the dental letters related, as the labial ones. So it would be one that has a bag or budget of wares. H. 3, 2. Ben Jonson IV, 366. terms them the to Hack, to cut, chop. The appropriate term understanding gentlemen of the ground. S. Malone's Shaksp. II, 50. to Grub up, to dig up, to root up, to extirpate. to Guard, to ornament with guards or facings. The cHf. 3, 3. Guile, fraud, deceit, treason. aHf. 4, 1. Guiled, treacherous. W. 3, 2. Guileful, deceitful. aHf. 1, 1. Alltogether from the Sas. wiglian, gewiglian, begiglian, to conjure, to divine, to practice cheat, imposture aud enchantments; kin to guilt, wile, gull, Horne Tooke Div. of P. II, 324. Add to those the holl. gylen, the gr. kyklos, circle, magic circle, enchantment. Gules, red fields in heraldry; red. TA. 4, 8. H. 2, 2. from gula, gall. gueule, vocabulum, quo frequenter utuntur feciales nostri ad designandum in armis seu insignibus rubeum colorem. Est autem gula pellis rubricata. Du Fresne. Gulf, stomach, paunch. M. 4, 1. Gr. kolpos. Gunstones, balls of stone, used in heavy for chopping off the spurs of a knight, when he was to be degraded. MW. 2, 1. whence it is to become cheap and vulgar, alluding to the prodigality of James I., in bestowing these honours (cf. Warburton at O. 3, 4). Ibid. 4, 1. he teaches him to hick and to hack in Mrs. Quickly's cant punning with hic, haec seems to mean to make whores, to debauch, and would answer to the german hucken und hocken, or hecken und höckern. Hackney, hired, much used, common. LL. 3, 1. Whether from equus, or from the germ. Höker, is uncertain. let out, to lease. to Hackney, to lend, put, Haggard, a hawk not manned, or trained to to hack. Hair, grain, wh. s., texture, quality of any thing. aHd. 4, 1. M. 4, 1. where the reading air is a glossem. Against the hair, against the grain, contrary to the nature of any thing. MW. 2, 3. TC. 1, 2. Abundance of hair denoted a lack of brains, whence more hair than wit TG. 3, 1. To dye the hairs was customary in Shk's times. MA. 2, 3. False hair was much worn by ladies. MV. 3, 2. S. 68. — A horsehair dropped into corrupted water was believed to become soon an animal. AC. 1, 2. Halberd, an ox or hatchet for striving. CE. 5, 1. From the germ. Hellebarte, from hille, combat, strife, and barte, ax. Halcyon, or king's fisher. It was a currently received opinion, that the body of this bird, hung up, so as to move freely, would always turn its breast to the wind. KL. 2, 2. It was said to breed in the main, during which time ( 129 )* calm does domineer; hence for placid, quiet, peaceful, still. aHf. 1, 2. Half caps, half bows, slight salutations with the cap. TA. 2, 2. Halffaced, showing only half the face, the Halidom, holiness, faith, sanctity, honesty. A hall, a hall, an exclamation commonly used to Hamper, to fetter, entangle, perplex, seduce. Hamstring, senew, or tendon of the hip. Handfast, hold, custody, confinement. WT. Handy dandy, a play, where somewhat is Hardiment, courage, acts of courage. aHd. Hare was called melancholy on account of her burdocks, bordocks, hardokes, hoardocks. The gr. eryngion, the lat. eruca seems to assonate, Harm, malice, wickedness. aHd. 2, 4. Sax. yrmth, iermth, what hurteth, from yrman laedere. Horne Tooke Div. of P. II, 425. Harness, armour. M. 5, 5; horse trappings. TS. 1, 2; instruments of war. aHd. 3, 2. From the fr. harnois, it. arnese, by the sax. ar, iren, engl. iron, cambr. haiarn, kin to the lat. ues ; germ. Harnisch. to Harrow, to break with the harrow. Co. 5, 8; to vex, plunder, torment, confound, perplex. H. 1, 1. 1, 5. AC. 3, 3. In this latter meaning, unless corrupted from harry, yet the same in notion, and kin to harass, from the sax. her¬ gian, gr. arassō; whereas in the originary notion kin to rake, germ. Rechen, provincially Harke, kin to the fr. charrue, the lat. irpices, sirpices, urpices. to Hatch, to engrave, or mark with lines. TC. 1, 8. From the fr, hacher. Hatches, the openings by which they descend Hatchment, escutcheon put upon the wall of ог Haviour, for behaviour. TN. 3, 4. Cy. 3, 4. Haunt, way of venison. AC. 4, 12. MD. 2, 2.. to Haunt, to frequent, to trouble, vex by to Hawk, to spit, to retch in spitting. AL. 5, 3. -- Headsman, executioner, when a person is to be beheaded. AW. 4, 5. Hearse, coffin, bier. bHd. 4, 4. aHf. 1, 1. JC. 3, 2 To the derivation from the middlelat. hercia, hersia, harrow and branched candlestick, or from the sax. hyrscan, ornare, decorare. Horne Tooke Div. of P. II, 823. we add one, from corse, or from the gr. arō, to prepare, fit out, |