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Show DI ~ The means ufed to this purpofe are partly didaéfical, and partly protreptical; demonftrating th truth of the gofpel, and then urging the profeffors of thofe truths to be ftedfaft in the faith, an Ward on Infidelity to beware of infidelity Di'pappER, 7 /. [from Zip.] A bird tha dives inte the water Dipasca'vick. adj. [Sdaorarin®-] Preceptive; didadtick ; giving precepts i fome art 1 found it neceflary to form fome ftory, and giv a kind of body to the poem : under what fpecies i may be comprehended DI whether didajcalick or he roick, I leave to the judgment of the criticks. Prior 7o D1'DDER. . a. [diddern, Teut. zittern Germ.] To quake with cold ; to fhiver Skinner A provincial word The fecond perfon of the prete Dipst See Dibp tenfe of 4o Oh laft and beft of Scots! who didff maintai Thy country's freedom from a foreign reign. Dryd that within the bladder draw fo as to hinder th Boyle diduction of its fides 7o DIE. w. a. [beag Saxon, a colour. To tinge ; to colour ; to ftain So much of death her thought Had entertain'd, as died her cheeks with pale Milton All white, a virgin faint fhe fought the fkies For marriage, though it fullies not, it dies. Dryd Dik. 2. /. [from the verb.] Colour ; tincture ; ftain ; hue acquired It will help me nothin ‘To plead mine innocence; for that die is on me ‘Which makes my whit'ft part black aShake[peare's Henry VIII ‘We have dainty works-of feathers of wonderfu + luftre, excellent dics, and many Bacor's New Atlantis Daiknefs we fee emerges into light And fhining funs defcend te fable night Ev'n heav'n-itfelf receives another die When wearied animals in {lumbers li Of midnight eafe; another, when the gre Of morn preludes the fplendor of the day. Dryd It is furprifing to fee the images of the min ftamped upon the afpeét; to fee the cheeks tak ‘the die of ithe paflions, and appear in all the colours of thought Collier of the Afpest 7o Die. w. n. [deabian, Sax. 1. To lofe life; to expire; to pafs int another ftate of exiftence Thou doft kill me with thy falfehood ; .2nd i - .grieves me not to die, but it grieves me. that tho i art the murtherer Sidney Nor did the third his conquefts long furvive . \Dying ere fcarce he had begun to live. Addif. Ov Oh let me live my own and die o too To live and die is all I have to do 2, 'To perifh by violence or difeafe Denbam The dira only ferved to confirm him in his firf opinion, that it was his deftiny to die in the enfuing combat Dryden Talk not of lifeor ranfom, he replies Patroclus dead, whoever meets me, dies They often come into the world clear, and wit the appearance of found bodies; which, notwith The great, the good Patroclus is no more He, far thy better, was foredoom'd to dje Pope's Homer 3. It has 4y before an inftrament of death Their young men fhall die by the fword fons and daughters fball die &y famine thei Ferem Well has thy fortune turn'd the dis for thee, Dryd 3. Any cubick body At firft fhe fartles, then fhe ftands amaz'd Dik. #. /. plur. dies coinage 5. For commonly before a privative, an of before a pofitive caufe: gthefe prepofitions are not always truly diftinguifhed At laft with terror the from thence doth fly Young creatures have learned fpelling of word by having them pafted uponlittle flat tablets or dies Watts An fhuns it ftill, altho' for thivft the die Hipparchus being paffionatel fond of his ow wife, who was enamoured of Bathyllus, leaped an Di'er. n. /. [from die.] One who follow the trade of dying ; one who dies clothes Addifon died of his fall The fleece, that has been by the dier {tain'd Waller Never again its native whitenefs gain'd 6. To be punifhed with death If I die for it, as no lefs is threatened me There were fome of very low rank and profeflion th who acquired greateftates : coblers, djers, and (hoe makers gaye publick fhows to the people Arbuthnot on Coins king my old mafter muft be relieved Shakefpeare's King Lear ‘What is the love of our neighbour ?- ~-~The valuing him as the image of God, one fo Hammond whom Chrift dicd Ho now A and he became as 1 Samuel ftone 9. [In theology.] To perifh everlaftingly So long as God fhalllive, fo long fhall the damne Hakewill an Providence die 10. To languifh with pleafure or tendernefs. To founds of heav'nly harps the dies away Pope And melts in vifions of eternal day 11. To vanith This battle fares like to the morning's war ‘When dying clouds contend with growing light Shakelpeare The fmaller; ffains and' blemithes may die awa and difappear, amidft the brightnefs that furround them; but a blot of a deeper nature cafts a thad on ail the other beauties, and darkens the whol Addifon's Spectator charaler 12. [In the ftyle of lovers. with affeGtion To languif The young men acknowledged, in love-letters Tatler that they died for Rebecca 13. To wither, as a vegetable Except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone; butiif it die it bringet forth much fruit Fobn 14. To grow vapid, as liquor Dik. . /. pl. dice. [d¢, Fr. dis, Welfh. 1. A fmall cube, marked on its faces wit numbers from one to fix, which game- fters 'throw in play Raleigs riofity of dies, than to maintain life Time may come, when me With angels may participate 5 and fin No inconvenient diet, nor too light fare Mijtor No pait of diet, in any feafon, is o healthful, f natural, and {fo agreeable to the ftomach, as goo and well-ripened fruits Lemple Milk appears to be a proper diet for human bodies where acrimony is to be purged or avoided ; but no where the canals are obftructed, it being void of al faline quality 2 Arbutbnot Food regulated by the rules of medicine, for the prevention or cure of an difeafe 1 commend rather fome diet for certain feafons than frequent ufe of phyfick; for thofe diets alte the body more, and trouble it lefs Bacon I reftrained myfelf to fo regular a diet, as to ea flefh but once a-day, and little at a time, withou falt orvinegar Temple 3. Allowance of provifion For his diet, there was a continual dier given him by the king Fercmiab 7o D1I'ET. @. a. [from the noun. | 1. To feed by the rules of medicine She diets him with fafting every day The {welling of his wounds to mitigare And made him pray both early and eke late Fairy Qucen Shew a while like fearful war To diet rank minds fick of happinefs And purge th' obftru@ions which begin to fto Our very veins of life Shakefpeare's Henry I He was not taken well ; he had not din'd The veins unfill'd, our blood is cold'; and the W powt upo the miorning are anap TO give or to forgive; but when we've fuff' Thefe pipes, and thefe conveyances of blood With wine and feeding, we have fuppler foul Than in our prieftlike fafts ; therefore I'll watch hi Till he be dieted to my requett Shakefp. Coriol I will attend my hufband, be his nurfe Diet his fickn fs; for it is my office. Sbuéq[prér Henceforth my early car Shall tend thee, and the fertile burden eafe Keep a gamefter from the dice, and a good fruden from his book, and it is wonderful provifions for the mouth ; vic They cared for no other delicacy of fare, or cu Of forrieft fancies your companion making Ufing thofe thoughts which fhould indeed have die With them they think on. Shakefpeare's Macbeth If any fovereignty, on account of his property had been vefted in Adam, which in truth ther Locke was not, it would have.died with him Whatever pleafure any man may take in {preading whifpers, he will find greater fatisfaction b letting the fecret die within his own breaft. Spef His heart died within him [dz'a'ta, low Latin ; dlasra tuals my lord, why do you keep alone o 1. Food to come to no 8. To fink; to faint i ftamping his money, makes the difcovery of coun- Savift terfeits more difficult Dawics He in the loaden vineyard dies for thirtt. Addif The ftamp ufed i Such variety of dies made ufe of by Woo And loaths the :.at'ry glafs wherein fhe gaz'd Shakefpeare Shakefpeare's Richard I11 He knows which way the lot and the dic fhal fall, as perfe@ly as if they were already caft. Sourb 2. Hazard ; chance And thou, doft thou, bewail mortality is th' adventure, thine the victory dicd of it, or at leaft have been very infirm Wifeman And I will ftand the hazard of the die . Die then, my friend! what boots it to deplore Thin ftanding, have been infected with difeafe, and hav I have fet my life upon a caft <In vain a fingle Trojan fues for grace But leaft the fons of Priam's hateful race So both to battle fierce arranged are In which his harder fartune was to fal Under my fpear : fuch is the die of war. Fairy 8 14, Of before a difeafe Dipuv'crion. u. fi [didutio, Latin.] Separation by withdrawing one part fro 7. To be loft; to perith the other thing He ought to fhew what kind of ftrings they are which, though ftrongly faftened to the infide of th receiver and fuperficies of the bladder, muft dra as forcibly one as another, in comparifon of thof DI Eftfoons his cruel hand Sir Guyon ftaid Temp'ring the paffion with advifement flow And muft'ring might on enemy difmay'd For th' equal die of war he well did knows Fairy 2 Till, dieted by thee, T grow matur In knowledge as the gods, who all things know W hav live upo expedients Miit of which n ;:)oxdmtry had lefs occafion: we have diered a heaith ody into a confamption, b plying it with phyfic inftead of food P swi 2. To give food to D'm partly led to diet my revenge For that I do fufpeét the lufty Moo Hath leapt into my feat Shakefpeare's Otbells 3« To board; to fupply with diet T |