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026 
Your imprisonment Shall not be long ; 
I will deliver you, or elfe lie for you. Shakefpeare. 
To be in a bad State.—The generality of mankind lie 
pecking at one another, till one by one they are all torn 
to pieces. L'Eflrange's Fables. —To be in a helplefs or ex¬ 
posed State.—To lee a hated perfon fuperior, and to lie 
under the anguiSh of a di fad vantage, is far enough from 
diversion. Collier. —To coniiSt.—He that thinks that di- 
verfion may not lie in hard labour, forgets the early riling 
and hard riding of huntfmen. Locke. —To be in the power; 
to.belong to.—Do’lt thou endeavour, as much as in thee 
lies, to preferve the lives of all men ? Duppa's Rules for 
Devotion. 
Mars is the warrior’s god ; in him it lies 
On whom he favours to confer the prize. Dryden. 
To be valid in a court of judicature : as, An aflion lietk 
againft one.—To colt : as, It lies me in more money. 
To Lie at. To importune ; to teaSe. 
To Lie by. To relt; to remain Still; 
Ev’ry thing that heard him play, 
Ev’n the billows of the fea, 
Hung their heads, and then lay by ; 
In fweet mulic is l'uch art, 
Killing care, and grief of heart, 
Fall afleep, or hearing die. Shakefpeare’'s Henry VIII. 
To Lie down. To reft ; to go into a Slate of repofe.— 
The leopard Shall lie down with the kid. Ifaiak, xi. 6.—To 
fink into the grave.—His bones are full of the Sin of his 
youth, which Shall lie down with him in the duft. Job, xx. 11. 
To Lie in. To be in childbed.—Hyfterical affections 
are contracted by accidents in lying in. Arbuthnot on Diet. 
When Florimel design’d to lie privately in ; 
She chofe with fuch prudence her pangs to conceal, 
That her nurfe, nay her midwife, fcarce heard her once 
fqueal. Prior. 
To I.ie under. To be fubjeCt to ; to be oppreffed by.— 
A generous perfon will lie under a great difadvantage. 
Smalridge's Sermons. —Europe lay then under a deep lethargy, 
and was no otherwife to be relcued but by one that would 
cry mightily. Alterbury. 
To Lie upon. To become the matter of obligation or 
duty.—Thefe are not places merely of favour, the charge 
of fouls lies upon them ; the greatest account whereof will 
be required at their hands. Bacon. 
To Lie with. To converfe in bed: 
Pardon me, BafTanio, 
.For by this ring Site lay with me. Shakefpeare. 
It may be obferved of this word in general, that it 
commonly implies Something of SluggiShnels, inaCtion, or 
iteadinefs, applied to perfons; and Some gravity or per¬ 
manency of condition, applied to things. 
LIEBAU 7 , a town of Silefia, in the principality of 
Schweidnitz, on the river Schwartbach : twenty-two miles 
Louth of Schweidnitz, and thirty north-welt of Glatz. 
LIEBAU', or Lie'be, or Libo'wa, a town of Moravia, 
in the circle of Prerau : thirteen miles north of Prerau, 
and fourteen north-eall of Olmutz. Lat. 49. 38. N. Ion. 
17.28. E. 
LIE'BE. See Loeau. 
LIE'BEFELD, a town of PruSTia, in Oberland : four 
milesfouth-fouth-weft of Deutfch Eylau. 
LIE'BENAU, a town of Germany, in the county of 
Hoya, fituated on the Aue : feven miles fouth-weft of 
Nienburg. 
LIE'BENAU, a town of the duchy of Stiria : three 
miles fouth-eaft of Gratz. 
LIE'BENAU, a town of Silefia, in the principality of 
Glogau : five miles north-welt of Schwibufin, and forty- 
eight weft-north-weSt of Glogau. Lat. 52. 25. N. Ion. 
15. 56. E. 
LIE'BENAU, a town of Silefia, in the principality of 
Neille ; three miles north of Patfchkau, 
L I E 
LIE'BENAU, a town of the principality of KclTe, on 
the Diinel : twenty miles north-weft of CaSfel, and twen- 
ty-feven weft of Gottingen. Lat. 51.30. N. Ion. 9.22. E. 
LIE'BENGRUND, a town of Saxony, in the circle of 
Neultadt: fourteen ..miles fo.uth of Neultadt.- Lat. 50. 
30. N. Ion. 11.41. E. 
LIE'BENOW, a town of the New Mark of Branden¬ 
burg four miles eaft-fouth-eaft of Reitz. 
LIE'BENTHAL, a town of the duchy of Stiria: twelve 
miles fouth-eaft of Gratz. 
LIE'BENTHAL, a town of Bohemia, in the circle of 
Chrudim : thirteen miles ealt of Hohenmaut. 
LIE'BENTHAL, or Lubenthal, a town of Silefia, 
in the principality of Jauer : thirty miles weft of Jauer, 
and forty fouth of Sagan. Lat. 50. 57. N. Ion. 15. 37. E. 
LIE'BENTHAL, a town of Saxony, in the margra- 
vate of MeiSlen : Seven miles fouth-w'ell of Stolpe i. 
LIE'BENVVALD, a town of Brandenburg, in the 
Middle Mark, on the Havel: twenty-four miles north of 
Berlin. Lat. 52. 53. N. Ion. 13. 30. E. 
LIEBENWAR'DA, a town of Saxony : twenty-two 
miles north of Meiflen, and thirty-three north-north-welt 
of Drefden. Lat. 51. 28. N. Ion. 13. 26. E. 
LIE'BENZELL, or Zell, a town of Wurtemberg, on 
the Nagold. Near it are two warm-baths: leventeen 
miles welt of Stuttgart, and thirty-fix ealt-north-eaft of 
Strafburg. Lat. 48. 51. N. Ion. 8. 43. E. 
LIEBERWOLK'WIL'Z, a town of Saxony, in the cir¬ 
cle of Leipzig : four miles louth eaft of Leipzig. 
LIEB'ERKUHN (J. Nathaniel), an eminent anatomist, 
was born at Berlin in 1711. He was probably educated 
at Leyden, where he took the degree of doctor of phyfic. 
He became a member of the college of phyficians in his 
native city, where he purfued the ltudy of anatomy with 
great affiduity and fuccefs. Endowed by nature with a 
very piercing Sight, which is faid to have been fo acute as 
to enable him to See Jupiter’s Satellites with the naked 
eye, he aSfifted it with microfcopes, in the fabrication of 
which he greatly excelled. He was extremely dextrous 
in difleftion, and furpafled all his contemporaries in the art 
of injeftion. Of that kind of preparation which confifts 
of veilels filled with a melted metallic compound, and af¬ 
terwards corroded by an acid, he was the inventor. He 
published two differtations ; 1. De Valvula Coli et Ufu 
Proceflus Vermicularis, 1739, 4to. 2. De Fabrica et Ac- 
tione Villorum Inteltinorum tenuium, 1745, 4to. both 
which are efteemed as curious and accurate pieces. He 
alSo communicated fome papers to the Berlin Academy'of 
Sciences, printed in their Memoirs. He was a member of 
the Royal Societies of London and Berlin, and that of the 
Naturae Curiolbrum. Lieberkuhn died in 1756, leaving 
a very valuable anatomical cabinet, of which the cata¬ 
logue was printed. Halleri Bibl. Anatom. 
LIE'BEROSE, a town of Lulatia: feventeen miles 
weft of Guben, and fixty-four north of Drefden. Lat. 
52. N. Ion. 14 16. E. 
LIE'BETEN, a town of Hungary : Sixty-five miles 
north-north-eaSt of Gran, and twelve eaft of Vienna. 
LIE'BLACH, a river of Swabia, which runs into the 
lake of Conftance a little to the north of Bregentz. 
LIE'BMUHL, a town of PruSTia, in the province of 
Oberland, with a caltle built in the year 1337: Sixty-fix 
miles fouth-fouth-weft of KbnigSberg, and thirty-five 
fouth-fouth-eaft of Elbing. Lat. 53.42. N. Ion. 19.45. E. 
LIE'BO SE'E, a lake of Brandenburg, in the Ucker 
Mark, fituated to the fouth of Dolgen See. 
LIE'BSCHUTZ, a town of Saxony, in the circle of 
Neultadt: two miles fouth of Ziegenbruck. 
LIE'BSTADT, a town of Saxony, in the margravate 
of Meiffen: eight miles fouth-fouth-weft of Pima, and 
fourteen fouth-fouth-weft of Drefden. 
LIE'BSTADT, a town of PruSTia, in the province of 
Oberland, with a caltle, built in the year 1329, which 
fuffered much in the Swedish wars: forty-eight miles 
fouth-fouth-weft of KbnigSberg, and thirty-two iouth-ealt 
of Elbing. Lat. 53. 57. N. Jon. 20. 2, E. 
3 
LIE'CHEN, 
