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Show DU D U D U Duv'kepowm. . f. [from duke. 1. The feigniory or poffeflions of a duke Mirth ‘and cheerfulnefsare but the due reward } Tp Du'er. w. #. [from the neun] T More's Diwvine Dialogues. of innocency of life comba fingl figh ‘A prefent blefling upon our fafts is neither ofi- He muft at length, poor man! die dully a ginally due from God's juftice, nor becomes du home, when here he might fo fafhionably an Smalridge's Sermons. genteelly have been dwelled or fluxed into anothe ‘There is a refped due to mankind, which fhould world South incline ever the wifeft of ‘men to follow innocen The challenging and fighting with a man i i Watts. cuftoms called duelling Her brother found a wife Where he himfe!f was loft ; Profpero his dukedo In a poor ifle The cardinal never refigned his purple for th profpect of giving an heir'to the dukedom of Tufcany Addifon Locke : 7o Du'eL. @, a. To attack or fight wit Opportunity may be taken to excite, in perfon fingly attending on thofe folemnities, a ‘due fenfe of the 2. Proper; fit; appropriate Duell'd their armies rank'd in proud array Himfelf an army, now unequal matc 3. Exaét ;. without deviation You might fee him come towards me beating the ground in fo due time, as no dancer can ob- At one fpear's length Milton. For dinner favoury fruits 4. Confequent to; occafioned or effected by. Proper, but not ufual Th motio of the oily drops may be in par Boyle Duk. adv. [from the adjeétive.] Exaétly diretly; duly. The courfe is due eaft or due weft .Sbalzefpcare‘: Othello 1. That which belongs to one ; thatwhic may be juftly claimed i mS Wherein I thee endow'd. Shakefpeare's King Lear The duc of honour in no point omit /'W Shakefpeare's Cymibeline I take this garland, not as given by you And by command of heaven's all-powerful king Milton's Paradife Lof? 3. Whatever cuftom or law requires to b done ‘Befrien Of all thy dues be done, and none left out. Milton. Dryden 4. Cuftom ; tribute; exactions In refpeét of the exorbitant dues that are paid s fi'[fifl at mof . name of free. this defervedl retains th Addifon ZoDuk. @. a. [from the noun. To pa as due; perhaps for endowv. It is per"haps only in this fingle paffage. other ports This is the lateft glory of their praife - That I thy enemy due thee withal Shakefpeare DUEL. #. [ [duellum, Latin.] A comba between two ; a fingle fight In many armies, if the matter fhould be tried b _ducl between two champions, the viétory fhouid go -on the one fide; and yet, if it-be tried by the grofs goen the other fide Bacon f‘i Dream not of your figh f d& As of a duel, or the local wound " Of head or heel ' Miltow's Paradife Loft i *Twas 1 '‘that wrong™d you; you my life hav fought i: « Noduel ever was:morejuitly fought s U Faller ToDULCIFY Boyl v. a. [dulcifier, Erdlli fweeten ; to fet free from acidity, faltnefs, or acrimony of any kind A decoltion of wild gourd, or colocynthis though fomewhat qualified, will not from ever hand be dulcjfied into aliment, by an addition o flour or meal Broawsn I drefled him with a pledgit, dipt in a du/cifie tin¢ture of vitriol Wileman's Surgery Spirit of wine dulcifies fpirit of falt; nitre or vi Arbuthnot and Pope A thoufand young ones, which fhe daily fed Sucking upon her poifonous dugs; each on Of fundry fhape, yet all ill-favoured. Fairy Queen They are firft fed and nourifhed with the mil of a ftrange dug Ye hear the foun fackbut fick Raleigh's Hiftory Then fhines the goat, whofe brutifh dugs fupplie The infant Jove, and nurft his growing pride At once I was up brought Fairy Queen As mild and gentle as the cradle-babe Dying with mother's dug between its lips. Shak Dvrcora'rion [from dulcis #. The 2& of fweetening Dvueg. preter. and part. paf. of dig [fro Malt gathereth a fweetnef dulcorare. to the tafte, whic appeareth in the wort: the duleorarion of things i worthy to be tried to the full; for that duleorario importeth a degree to nourifhment: and th making of things inalimental to become alimental may be an experiment of great profit Bacon They had often found medals, and pipes o lead, as they dug among the rubbith. 4dd. on Ital DUKE. #./. [duc, French; dux, Latin. One of the higheft order of nobility i a nobleman next t Dv'vrEAD. #. /o [dull and kead. blockhead ; a wretch foolith and ftupid a dolt the royal family The duke of Cornwall, and Regan his dutchefs, will be here with him this night Shakefpears's King Lear This people be fools and dulbeads to all goodnefs5 but fubtle, cunning, and bold in any mifchief Alcham Surrey, and Exeter, muft lof The names of dukes, their titles, dignities And whatfcever profits thereby rife @. a rough medicine; but, being fomewhat dulcorated firft procureth vomiting, and then falivation Wifeman's Surgery ‘With whom, from tender dug of common nourfe Aurmarle pfaltery, dulsimer, and all kinds of mu Daz. iii Turbith mineral, as it is fold in the fhops, is It was a faithlefs fquire that was the fourc Of all my forrow, and of thefe fad tears in ran harp 2. To make lefs acrimonious the breaft, without reproach England flute The ancients, for the dulcorating of fruit, d commend {wine's dung above all other dung. Bar 2. It feems to have been ufed formerly o of the cornet 70 DU'LCORATE Latin. 1. To fweeten Creech legal or caftomary perquifites tues Dvuc.n. /. [deggia, to give fuck, Iflandick. triol have other bad effe@s. - Arbuthnot on Aliments I. A pap; a nipple; a teat: {poken o beafts, or in malice or contempt of hu- Dvu'vcimer. #. [o [dolcimells, Skinner. A mafical inftrument played by firikin man beings the brafs wires with little fticks Of her there bre The key of this infernal pit by dwe They pay the dead his annual dues falt of vitriol, if ‘the calcination have been to faint, is drawn out of the colcothar, the refidue i not earth, but a mixt body, rich in medical vir Shakefpeare der difplayed Dryden Us, thy vow'd priefts, till outmoft en by an exquifite du/cification, does not reduce the remaining body into elementary earth ; for after th no longer contain: I bribed her duenna, was admitted to the'bath, faw her undrefled, and the won 2, Right ; juft title Dryden I felt the ardour of my paffion increafe as th feafon advanced, till in the month of July I coul declared, what fhare of pewer was their due. Sevift T keep And heard a mermaid, on a dolphin's back Uttering fuch dulcet and harmonious breath That the rude fea grew civil at her fong. Shakefp A fabrick hug Rofe like an exhalation, with the foun Of dulcet fymphonies, and voices fweet Milton DUE'NNA. n. /. [Spanith.] An old woman kept to guard a younger No popular affembly ever knew, or propefed, o like ducllifis before thy fight it Thy half o' th'> kingdom thou haft not forgot ‘But as‘my merit and my beauty's due 1 fat upon a promontory one bout with you : he cannot by the duells avoi Thou better know'f Effe&s of courtefy, dues of gratitude melo dious The gentleman will, for his honour's fake, hav From whotn this tyrant holds the due of birth Lives in the Englith court. Shakefpeare's Macbeth Milton 2. Sweet to the ear; harmonious DUE'LLO. n. /. [Italian.] The duel ; th rule of duelling The fon of Duncan %fifl Woants fhe fit veflels pure Of bearing them in field, he threw 'em away And hath no honour loft, our duelliffs {ay. B.Fon/ My dre from thee is'this imperial crown Which, as‘immediate from thy place and blood Shakefpeare Derives itfelf to me They perhaps begin as fingle duellers, but the they foon get their troops about them Decay of Piety Durcirica'rion. #. /. [from duleify. 2. One who profefles to ftudy the rules o The at of {fweetening; the aét of freehonour in fro aci ity fal nef o acr mon ‘Hi bough arm Mun no lik'd fo hi firf In colcothar, the exaéteft calcination, followe d Due. 2 /. [from the adje&ive. She tempers dulcet creams; nor thefe to hol Henceforth let poets, ere allow'd to write To the Propontick and the Hellefpont h combatant Be fearch' Shakefp From fweet kernels prefs'd If the king ends the differences, the cafe wil fall out no worfe than when two duelliffs enter th field, where the worfted party hath his fwor again, without further hurt Suckling ‘Like the Pontick fea Whofe icy current, and compulfive courfe ' Ne'er feels retiring ebb, but keeps due o A fingl Du'errist. . [ [from duel. 1. A fingle combatant due to fome partial folution made by the vinou . {pirit, which may tumble them to and fro The petty rebel, dulbrain'd Buckingham Dvvcer. adj. [duleis, Lat. 1. Sweet to the tafte; lufcious Milton's Agoniftes = / [from duel. { Du'sLLER And Eve within, due at her hour, prepar' " This arm of mine hath chaftis" - To fave himfelf againft a coward arm'd Sidney. ‘ferve better meafure 2. The title or quality of a duke Du'LBrAINED. adj. [dull and brain. Stupid; doltifh; foolith Who fingl Atterbury. vanity of earthly fatisfactions Shakefpeare's Tempeft Du'iia n [Mrsx. kind of adoration Dirial's Cinvi/ War A infériou Paleotu |