Part 83 (2/2)
5 To nify in narration, especially from a principle of ostentation, S
6 To flatter, to coax
_Baillie_
S Prov ”Ye first burn me, and then _blaw_ me”
7 To _blaw_ in one's _lug_, to cajole or flatter a person, so as to be able to guide him at will, S
_Nicol Burne_
_To blow in the ear_, id O E
Su G _blaas-a_, to instil evil counsel Teut _oor-blaesen_, not only signifies, in aureannire in aurem; but is rendered, blandiri
8 To huff a hts _I blaw_, or _blow you_, I take this man, S
Su G _blaas-a_, to blow, is used in this very sense _Blaasa bort en bricka i damspel_, Seren
9 To _blaw appin_ locks or bolts, and to loose fetters, by ical power ascribed to the breath, S
_Satan's Invisible World_
10 _To blaw out_ on one, to reproach him
_Wallace_
BLAW, _s_
1 A blast, a gust, S Rudd
_Gawan and Gol_
2 The sound emitted by a wind instrument
3 A falsehood, a lie told froreit blaws_, S
B
_Ramsay_
BLAW, _s_ A pull, a draught; a cant ter topers, S
_Ferguson_