VERGE. 126 VERGE. + b. A rod or wand put in a person's hand when taking the oath of fealty to the lord on being admitted as a tenant, and delivered back on the giving up of the tenancy. Also in jihr. teuaut by the z*trge. Oh. 1607 J. NoRDES Sunt. Dial, ni, 101 Tenants of Itase tenure, are they that hold by verge at the will of the Lord. x6«8 Coke Oh Litt. 61 'jenantrsj by the Verge are in the same nature as tenants by copy of Court roll. 1651 tr. A*/VcA/ii'fC
I VERGE. abyss. i7«o Ghav Lcl. to Ulinrlon j2 June, You 5ee him [i, e. Sterne] often tottering on the verge of laughter. 1817 Jas. Mill Brit. India II. w. viii. 276 The fortunes of Hyder tottered on the verge of a precipice. 1849 Sir I. Graham in Parker Life \ Lett. (1907) II. iv. 86 He is now tottering on the verge of the grave. 1861 Sir G. Trevelyan Horace at Athem iii. (1862) 39 We still consume. .Veal that is tottering on the verge of beef. b. The margin of ^ river or the sea. Also without const. 1606 SvLVEsTFR Du Harias It. iv, Tropheis 1157 The flowry Verge that iongst ail Jordan lies. 1614 Gorges Lucanx, 26 Where the Tarbellians bound at large A calmetl sea, with croolced varge. 1634 Capt. Smith i''irginia iv, II I Vpon the verge of the Riuer there are hue houses. 1814 Scott Ld. 0/ Isles v. vii, The leaders unge Their followers to the ocean verge. 185s Macaulav Hist. Eng. xii. III. ,65 There, at length, on the verge of the ocean,.. the imperi.-i'l race turned desperately to bay. 1878 Susan Phillips On Seaboard 81 What do they [sc. ships] bring to us? who.. Sport by the verge and gather rosy shells, fis- 1843 Neale Hymns/or Sick 23 And when I tread the utmost verge Do Thou divide the flood. o, poet. The horizon. 182a BvRON Heav. f, Earth I. iii. Their brazen-colour'd edges streak The verge where brighter morns were wont to break. 1847 Tennvsom Princ. vii. 23 She.. sees a great black cloud ., Blot out the slope of sea from verge to shore, 16, With a and pi, A limit or bound ; a limiting or bounding belt or strip. Somewhat rare. 1660 H. .More .\tyst. Gadl. i. 16 Within the narrow verges of this mortal life. 16*7 Milton P. L. \i. 877 Serve they as a flourie verge to binde The fluid skirts of that same watrie Cloud? 1790 Trans. Sac. Arts VIII. 6 A lerge, six yards broad, on two sides, is tilled with a variety of Forest.trees. 1851 Meredith Death of Winter 19 He melts between the border sheen And leaps the tlowery verges. 1852 Wiggins Embanking 136 Such pasturable verges or gr.issy fringes as have already been subject to acts of ownership. b. spec. A narrow grass edging separating a flower border, etc., from a gravel walk. 1738 Chambers Cycl. s.v. Grass-flot, The Quarters, or Verges, are to be prepared with. .Earth to lay the Turf on. 1731 Miller Carrf. Diet., Verge. .'m Gardening, .is generally understood to be a Slip of Grass which joyns to Gravel Walks, and divides them from the Borders in the Parterre Garden. 1858 Glenny Card. Everyday Bk. 71/1 The verges of green turf, so apt to encroach upon the gravel, walks and inwurdly upon the beds. attrib. and Comb. iSaa LouooN Encycl. Card. 5 617 Verge- Shears. .areasmaller variety, in which the blades are joined to the handles by kneed shanks, to lessen stooping in the operator. They are chiefly used for trimming the sides of box-edgings [ed. 1824 adds and grass-verges]. i88z Garden 28 Jan. 65/1 Verge cutting and levelling of turf. 17. The brink or border ^something towards which there is progress or tendency (from without) the point at which something begins. Usually iii the phrases on or to the verge of. Various types of context are illustrated by the different groups of quotations. ia) i6oa .Marston Aiit. t, Met. Induct., I will.. ding his spirit to the verge of hell. 1718 Pope [liadxw 14 His senses wandering to the verge of death. 1740 Smollett Regie, iv. ii. But let us seize him on the verge of bliss. 1791 Cowper llicui V. 787 Sheer into his bone He pierced him, but . .Jove Him rescued even on the verge of fate. i8ao Scott' Abbot xiii, Her maternal fondness for her grandson . . carried almost to the verge of dotage. 184s J. PAdie Exp. Jonah v. 88 He seems to have been driven to the very verge of despair. a i8S9 Macaulay Hist. Eng. xxiii. (i86i) V. 5 Spencer. . was more than once brought to the verge of ruin by his violent temper. 1884 L'pool Mercury 22 Oct. 5/4 He was jealous and volatile to the verge of insanity. (*) .'754 Johnson Let. to Chesterfield 7 Feb., I have been pushing on my work . . and have brought it, at last,to the verge of publication. 177a Shrubsole & Denne Hist. Rochester 35 The nation seemed on the verge of a civil war. 1848 W. H. Kelly tr. L. Blanc's Hist. Ten V. I. 599 A generous city, driven to the verge of revolt. 1851 Robertson Serm. .Ser. II. xi. (1864I 145 Such men tread, .on the very verge of a confession. 1866 G. Macdonald Ann, Q. Neigkb. xxiv, I had driven Catherine Weir to the verge of suicide. fc) 1793 Smeaton Edystone L. § 121, 1 was now upon the verge of the proper se.^son for action. 187* Mozley Univ. Sernt. V. (ed. 2) 107 Just before death. .his expressions and signs tipon the verge of that moment awaken our curiosity, (rf) 1837 Whewell Hist. Induct. Sci. (1857) I. 173 [Thisl brings us to the verge of modern astronomy. x86a Sir B. Rrodie Psychol. Imj. II. iv. 138 We are here on the verge of an inquir>- which has perplexed the greatest philosophers. ellipt. i8s9 Meredith R. Fcnerel xxxviii, She touched on delicate verges to the baronet, and he understood her well enough. b. With vbl. sbs. On the verge of, on the very point of (doing something). i8s8 Froude Hist. Eng. III. xiii. 123 He.. reached the town to find . . the commons and the gentlemen on the verge of fighting. 1858 Dickens Lett. (1880) II. 42 We were on (he very verge of granting an. .annuity. 1887 [?Mlss Ingham] Poor Nellie 11888) 91 Twice she was on the verge of telling all. 18. The space within a boundary ; room, scope. .\lso const, to OT for. Chiefly in echoes of quot. 1757. i6go Dkyden Don .Sebastian I. i, Let fortune empty her whole quiver on me, I have a Soul, that like an ample Shield Can take in all : and verge enough for more. 1757 Gray Bard px Give ample room, and verge enough The characters of bell to trace. 1837 Lockhart Scott II, i. 8 The bard., had ample room and verge enough .. for every variety of field sport. 1880 Hawthorne Marb. Faun xxiv. In this vast house . .a great-grandsire and all his descendants might find ample verge. 1877 ' H. A. Pace ' De Qnincry I. xiii. 2S3 When numbers of freebooters found ample verge for their predatory propensities. b. Jig, ,-md in fig. context. 127 1836 Sir W. Hamilton Discuss. (1852) 338 In no other country was there so little verge, far less encouragement, .-il owed to theological speculation. 1863 I). G. Mitchell /l/^/'C- ^ i -/_ J r. -,, . - . . culti act of verging or inclining to or towards some object, etc. 1661 Glanvill Van. Dogm. 233 If by this verge to the otiier extream, I can bring the opinionalive Confident but half the way. i66a _ A1/.1: 6)r;V«/. xiv. 119 Though they have had. .their Verges towards the body and its joys, as well as their Aspires to nobler, .objects. Verge (vSidg), v,^ Also 7 verdge. [f. Vergk sb.x^ 1 1. trails, a. To provide with a specified kind of verge or border ; to edge. Chiefly in passive. Also with about, Obs, 160S J. Rosier in Capt. Smith Virginia (1624) i. 20 An equall plaine . . verged with a greene border of grasse. i6ai Markham Prev. Hunger y This Net shall be verdgd 011 each side with very strong Corde. [Hence in later works.] I6a5— Bk. Hon. ix. x. § 10 Long Mantles.. verdged about witti a small fringe of siluer. 1708 Ne-.u View 0/ London I. loi/i The Figures of a Man and a Woman in Brass, and the Stone verged with Plates of the same. b. To bound or limit by something. rare~^, I7S9 Mills tr. DuhamlCs Husb. i. viii. 20 Sending, .for horse-dung, to manure those very lands which never fail of being verg'd, or bottom'd, by a substance, .more proper for the end they aim at. o. To form the verge or limit of, 1817 Chalmers Astron. Disc. iv. (1830) 132 How to draw the vigorous land-mark which verges the field of legitimate discovery, d. To pass along the verge or edge of; to skirt, 1890 F. Barrett Betw. Life ,5- Death II. xxviii. 179 The chariot can verge the d.iTs all the way. 2. intr. a. To be contiguous or adjacent to ; to lie on the verge of. Const, on or upon, along. 1787 G. White Selbome vii, Forests and wastes . . are of considerable service to neighbourhoods that verge upon them. iSai Clare Vill. Minstr. 1 1. 37 The air was still i The blue mi.st, thinly scatterd round, Verg'd along the distant hill. 1858 Hawthorne Er. f, It. Note-Bks. (1872) I. II The Place de la Concorde. ., verging on which is the Champs Elys^s. b. To border on or upon some state, condition, etc. (Cf. Verge v.^ 3.) i8«s [see Vergencv ']. 1827 Faraday Chem. Manip. vii. (1842) 197 Mercury or zinc require one [sc. a temperature) verging upon, or even surpassing, a red heat. 1853 C. Bkonte Villelte xviii. Your generosity must have verged on extravagance. 1874 H. R. Reynolds John Bapt. v. § 3. 352 Philo, however, verges on allowing the Aoyot to be the centre of the personality of God. Jig. tS4z Tkosysou Gardener's Dau. yt Vague desires . made. .all kinds of thought, That verged upon them, sweeter than the dream [etc.]. 3. To rise up so as to show the edge, rare—^, ',7f*-4« I'hovson IVinteriii Wish'd Spring returns ; and ..I he welcome ,sun, just verging up at first, By small ' degrees extends the swelling curve ! Hence VeTging pp/. a, I 1796 W. H. Marshall (f. England I. 165 Wild Deer I " were found very injurious to the verging crops. Verge (vSjd^), j/.n [ad. L, verg/re to bend, incline, turn, Cf. Converge v., Diverge v.] > 1. inir. Of the sun : To descend toward the horizon ; to sink, or begin to do so. Also transf. \ iSio G. Fletcher Christ's Tr. 11. xxv. Yet when he (the sun] verges, or is hardly ris, She [the moon) the vive image of her absent brother is. i8as Scott Talism. iii. The light was now verging low, yet served the knight still to discern that they two were no longer alone in the forest. 189a R Bridges Indolence Poems (1912) 270 The summer day Had verged already on its hot decline, 2. To move in a certain direction (esp. downwards) ; also, to extend or stretch, a 1661 Fuller Horlhies,Somersct{x6(r2) 32 Henceforward the Sun of the Kings cause declined, verging more and more Westward, till at last it set in Cornwal. 173a Pope Ess. Man 1. 59 So Man. .Touches some wheel, or verges to .some goal. 177s S. J. Pratt LiberalOpin, cv. (1783) IV. 6 A tear, .still upon the back of my hand, verging to the very finger that (etc.). Ibid, cxxvi. 149 The higher we climb. the nearer to the gods . . : as we verge towards earth . . we con. volve with the dirt. 1797 Monthly Mag, III. 513/1 Verge not downwards, a precipice lies under the earth. z8aa ' B. Cornwall' Misc. Poems, Halt of Eblis, The pUiars., verged away In long innumerable avenues. 1886 Mrs. HUNCERIORD Lady Branksmere i. Towards this rather dilapidated apartment they always verge when perplexed. Jig. 1780 Cowper Progr. Err. 430 Learning, once the man's exclusive pride. Seems verging fast towards the female side. b. To diverge or deflect ; to run or trickle off. 169a Bentley Boyle Led. 215 The Epicurean theory, of atoms descending down an infinite space . . and verging from the perpendicular no body knows why. 1780 S. J. Pratt Einnia Corbett (ed. 4) II. 74 The tear had verged ofl; possibly woile he was bowing. 3. To incline or tend, to approach or draw near, towards or to some state or condition. Also with advb. complement. (Cf. Verge w.i 2 b.) (
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V(vj), the 22nd letter of the moder
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VACANT NichalHs altar was than yaka
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VACATION. he shall ratifie that wli
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VACUITOtJS. VACUOUS. 1664 PowFR E.x
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VAINGLOBY. o. a 1300 Cursor M. 2693
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VALANCHB. 19 VALEDICTORY. «9 Oct.
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VALENTINIAN. 1851 Meredith Pastoral
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VALI. Gladstone (1904) Walhalla. 56
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VALIDOUS. i7»7 Bailey (vol. II), V
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VALUE. 29 VALUE, hym no^t . . jtg v
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VALVE. 81 VAMOSE. Valvule (vse'lvi?
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VAMPIBABCHY. 33 VAN. soul to ih' ki
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VANDALIAN. Ajf. xli. IV. 146 The ce
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VAWILLA. 37 VANISH. Vanilla (vani-l
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VANITY-FAIRIAN. of the beautiful ar
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VANTAGE. x6ia in Plomer Abstracts f
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VARIABLE. 47 VARIANCE. not variable
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VARIATE. termed * variants ' ; that
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VARIEGATED. of woodlands and of cul
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VARIOLOUS. B. sd, A modified form o
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VARMENT. Varlo, obs. Sc. f. Warlock
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VABY. 1819 R. Phillips in Phil. Mag
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VASECTOMIZED. 59 VASSAL. o. A calyx
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VAST. 1793 Piper 0/ Peebles 14 A va
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VAULT. t=pewsl in lo )>e vavtt. 151
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VAUNCIUa. Par. Pr. 1636 5ef hyt (/>
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VEDA. 71 VEEE. three Things, which
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VEGETABLE. 73 VEGETABLE. Vegetable
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VIOLENT. In later use (f>) tending
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VIS-A-VIS. 1814 Scott If^av. Ixi, W
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VISITED. 255 VISITOR. 185J ^MEDLEY
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VOCALIC. agreed by philosophers and
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VOICE. 281 VOICE. a. With ikCj or w
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VOID. 285 VOID. 13.. Coer de L, 507
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VOL. 6eir this rowm slef. 1599 Jame
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VOLATILITYSHIP. 293 II Volcauello.
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VOYAGE. VOYAGER. jangleres, thy via
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VUIiTURE. is the most large byrde o