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The Muses' friend (grey-eyed Aurora) yet Held all the meadows in a cooling sweat, The milk-white gossamers not upwards snow'd, Nor was the sharp and useful-steering goad
1707, J Mortimer, The Whole Art of Husbandry; or, The Way of Managing and Improving of Land., London: J H for H Mortlock, and J Robinson, →OCLC:
A Horſe that gains Fleſh in hard Exerciſe, should be ſweated at leaſt twice in ten Days; and he ſhould run near five Miles in Puſhes, that the Sweat may have Time to diſcharge. Those Horſes which are ſweat without Covering, or with a very thin one, should run a long Sweat, as wel call it, and ſtand a conſiderable while afterwards with a thick Blanket or two over them, from Head to Tail; otherwiſe the Sweat will not come out well.
1840, Richard Darvill, A Treatise on the Care, Treatment, and Training of the English Race Horse:
There are some horses so very delicate, and have to run such short lengths, that they may not require a sweat during the whole time of their being in training.
2016, Gerald Hammond, The Language of Horse Racing:
A sweat was, accordingly, a training run for a racehorse: a notice in The London Gazette in 1705 advertises a race for hunters that have not 'been kept in sweats above 12 weeks before the day of Running'.
2021 October 13, Zachary Roberts, “How exactly are 'sweats' ruining Fortnite? Addressing the never ending try-hards vs casual debate”, in Sportskeeda:
Casuals believe that sweats are ruining Fortnite. Sweats think that casuals just need to get better at the game. It's a never-ending debate that will never end, despite what anyone tries to say, but it's worth taking a look at regardless.
There's no way we can win. These guys are sweating so hard.
2022 May 27, Ethan Davison, “Video game developers want fair online games. Some players really don’t.”, in The Washington Post:
With skill-based matchmaking, he wrote, "you have to sweat 100 percent of the time." They contend their audiences want to see them pull off amazing victories, not struggle endlessly against other top players.
2022 September 7, Tom Allett, “At the cutting edge of NR's track work”, in RAIL, number 965, page 40:
"I've predicted it will last 32 years. The last overhaul we will do on it is at 24 years, but we tend to sweat the asset at Network Rail and try and save a bit of money, so I've estimated 32 years."
Over the next few days the cops half-ass questioned a couple of people, including me and Pimp, but they wasn't able to put nothing on us. They sweated Vyreen's husband pretty hard for a while, though.
Sweating is a generally a quiet operation; if the food is whispering, or worse, hissing, the moisture is probably evaporating too rapidly
2007, Patty Elsberry, Matt Bolus, Simply Vanilla: Recipes for Everyday Use, page 93:
Sweat the carrots, onion, celery, leeks, and cabbage in the butter until translucent not allowing them to color in any way.
2009, Bill Neal, Bill Neal's Southern Cooking, page 11:
Reduce heat to low, cover pan, and gently sweat the celery for ten minutes, taking care not to brown it
2011, The Bay Area Homegrown Cookbook:
Sweat the onions and garlic in the oil, stirring occasionally, until they are completely soft (no crunch) but not caramelized.
(transitive,archaic) To remove a portion of (a coin), as by shaking it with others in a bag, so that the friction wears off a small quantity of the metal.
1879, Richard Cobden, On the Probable Fall in the Value of Gold (originally by Michel Chevalier)
The only use of it which is interdicted is to put it in circulation again after having diminished its weight by sweating, or otherwise, because the quantity of metal contains is no longer consistent with its impression.
(intransitive) To suffer a penalty; to smart for one's misdeeds.
A Horſe that gains Fleſh in hard Exerciſe, should be ſweated at leaſt twice in ten Days; and he ſhould run near five Miles in Puſhes, that the Sweat may have Time to diſcharge. Those Horſes which are ſweat without Covering, or with a very thin one, should run a long Sweat, as wel call it, and ſtand a conſiderable while afterwards with a thick Blanket or two over them, from Head to Tail; otherwiſe the Sweat will not come out well.
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