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Show o LT E 2. He that injures tranquillity ; he tha caufes perturbation of mind To Disvo'vcs. v. a. [dis and wouch.] T Foes to my reft, and my fweet fleep s diffurbers o Drsguie Tdis and zzzr;z.]fj T turn off5 toturn afide Not in ufe He glad was to difturn that furious ftrea Of war on us, that elfe had fwallow'd theme D n DIS‘VALUA'TION. # fo [ dis and « #ion.] Difgrace; diminution of repatation What\ ca be mor to the difvaluatio of th ‘5:0\\'?}' of the Spaniard, than that eleven thoufan Englith fhould have marche countries into the heart of hi Bacon Zo Disva'rue. v. @ [disand wvalue.] T undervalue ; to fet a low price upon H er reputation was difwalue In leyity Shakefpeare's Meafure for Meafure The very fame prid which prompts a man t waun and overvalue what h incline him to contem is, does as forcibl and difzvsw what he has Gv.?z';:rm:xcntaf th Tonguc To Disve'Lor. @. a. [developer, French. T'o uncover Dig Disu's1oN. 2. [ [dis and union. 1. Separation ; disjun@ion Reit is moft oppofite to motion, the immediat caufe of difunion GlandWle's Scepfis _ Difunion of the corporeal principles, and th wital, caufeth death Greaw's Cofmologia Sacra Let not peace be made before the difunion o France and Spain. Addifor's State of the War The ftrength of it will join itfelf to France, an grow the clofer to it by its difunion from the reft Addifon on the War 2. Breach of concord Zo DisuN1‘TE. v. a. [dis and unite. 1. To feparate; to divide 2. To part friends or allies To DisuN1'TE. w. z. [4is and unite. fall gfunder to become feparate T While every particular member of the public ‘provides folely for itfelf, the feveral joints of th body politick do feparate and difunite, and fo become unable to fupport the whole South Disv'N1ry. 2 /0 [dis and unity. of atual feparation A ftat _ Difunity is the natural property of matter, whic is nothing elfe but an infinite congeries of phyfica monads Dore Disv'sace. n [ [dis and #fage. gradual ceflation of ufe or cuftom 'Th ‘They cut off prefently fuch things as might b extinguifhed without danger, leaving the reft to b abolithed by difufuge through tra of time. Hooker Prsv'se. . /. [dis and ufe. 3. Ceflation of ufe; defuetude; want o practice ‘The difufe of the tonzue is the only effe@ual remedy againft thefe Addifon's Guardian. C_efi'atxon. of cuffom "That obligation ugon the lands.did not prefcribe Mo Disu'se. v, a. [dis and ufe. . To ceafe to make ufe of *Tis law, though cuftom now diverts, the courf : As pature's inflitute is yet in force Unca_ncclé'd, thoug}l. d{'/ii:s'd Dryden's Fables Priam in arms difus'd invefts his limbs decay'd Dryden peem Drra'rioN. n /. [ditatus, Latin. att of enriching A Donne Being young, I framed to the har Many an Englith ditty lovely well 'Th The Syrian damfels to lament his fate In am'rous ditties, all a fummer's day Temper'd to th' oaten flute Rough fatyrs danc'd Miltons They will be fighing and finging under thy in exorable windows lamentable disties, and call thee cruel Diva'n in a fenfe of diflike Forth ruth'd in hafte the great confulting peers, Rais'd from the dark divam, and with like jo Milteny Congratulant approach'd him in diBacon Swift to the queen the herald Medon ran Who heard the confult of the dire divar Pope's Oti)fley as they were, were altogethe 70 DIVA'RICATE. «w. n. [ divaricatus, To be parted into two; to beLatin. Knolles 4. Ditch is ufed, in compofition, of an thing worthlefs, or thrown away 1nt ditches come bifid The partitions are ftrained acrofs: one of them T Brought forth in a ditch adj. Dirra'~Nper. 7 /. Th . /. [divaricatio, Lat] Divarica'rion a diwarication of the way,. till they fee which band One wh - Rays their mafters will take 2. Divifion of opinions sr v d l a o p a o t u d a a a k t T ~ Swvift tien fame with pep perwort It is gencrally brought over dry from the Levant Miller plainl fpecified yBrofzun‘s Vulgar Errourss r t w d u i a n l v n 1. To f he tv d } T am not y o p l : i ; m f a n . c e diveth, having his e ei 1 o t e g i n th hisis backbac , he fces th Wild; enthufiConwley the-curfe i n x S n p i [ # w 7 wildnefs an Pindar does new words and figures rol Down his impetuous ditbyrambick tide at ft l wi s e f m i th r f b i n r Dog Dituyra'MBICK. 7. fo [ dithyrambus Latin. 1. A fong in honour of Bacchus; in whic anciently, and new. among the Italians the diftraction of ebriety is imitated enthufiafm Dirayra™BiCK aftick throat, whereinto it is at laft inferted, and s there diwaricated, after the fame manner as the fper-Grewe matick vefiels 1. Partition into two Finger of birth-ftrangled babe Shakefp. Macketh Ditch-debiwer'd by a drab. You merit new employments daily Our thatcher, ditcher, gard'ner, baily A flender pipe is produced. forward towards the adj. [ditch and de- Dr'rcuer. 2. /. [from ditch. digs ditches To/.divi'de into two 1 have employed my time, befides ditching, in fiSaift nifhing my travels liwer. . a. Zo DivA‘RICATE make a ditch DITCH-DELIVERED ‘vodwvards ones Shakefpeare Zo DivcH. w. n. [from the noun. divaricates into two, and another inta feveral fmall Poor Tom, when the foul fiend rages, eats cowdung for fallets, fwallows the old rat, and the ditch . /. [an Arabick or Turkil z. Any council aflembled: ufed commonl 3. The moat with which a fortrefs is furrounded dog. Diryden word, 1. The council of the Oriental princes about London, man dry, and eafy to be paffed over Miltony Mean while the rural dittics were not mute 2. Any long narrow receptacle of water ufed fometimes of a {mall river in contempt The ditches, fuc §hg Strike the melodious harp, fhrill timbrels ring And to the warbling lute foft dittics fing, Sardys His annual wound in Lebanon, allur' Some afked for manors, others for acres tha lay convenient for them; that he would pull dow his fences, and level his ditches Arbuthnot's Hiftory of Fobn Bull Sudden the dizches fwell, the meadows fwim T homfon vers ditches and low ground Hotjer, g And gave the tongue a helpful otnament DITCH. #. /. [owc, Saxon; diiks Erfe. 1. A trench cut in the ground, ufually between fields there were feen Apoemyy a perfect temper whatfoever is there troub ed Thofe eaftern worfhippers/intended rather homage than ditasion3 the blefied virgin cornes.in th Hallc Contemplations form of poverty In the great plague to the {piritual faculties of our fouls, is,by a nat'i& puiffance and eflicacy, greatly available t bring t No bird but did her fhrill notes fwectly fing n No fong but did contain a lovely dit. ;Fairy Que uten Miltgy being franied in duc fort, and carried rom the ea Obfolete a tune the very harmony of Touy A ditty ; Duatch. [ dicht Although we lay altogether a ide the confider tion of ditty or matter 2. To difaccuftorn: with fromior 703 more D1t TANY. .[, [diamnus, Latin,}Dittanty hath been renowned, for many ages, upo properly from the account of its fovereign qualities in medicines Difufe me from the queafy pai Qf being belov'd and loving, ~ be fung ; a fong Drayton's Nyuphid or come into difuf, but by fifty confecutive vears, | 2+ ANy poem: written wit Arbuthnot DI'TTY. n. f. [dicht ‘Which when they heard, there was not on toads that had tails three inches long The beaft they then divide, and difunit ‘The ribs and limbs Pope's 0dyffey She ran away alone Dit. a. / Well knows to #ill the wild winds iéfii‘i‘ fif roar A word not in ufe But hafted after to be gone As fhe had been difwvitted He, with his foft pipe, and fmooth i Every letter he hath writ hath difwouch d_ anoShatkifpeare ther | Diswi'rren. adj. [dis and avit.] Deprived of the wits; mad; difiracted Di'TTiED. adj. [from ditty. ad ;n S c f m t t a deftroy the credit of 5 to contradict Shake[peare eat it when they are fhot with darts More's Antidote again t ,fibaf Dryder's ricid " Two deep enemies Virgll reports of ditteny, that the Wil éfl 3 $1e thall his troops for fighting fields prepard Difus'd to toils and triumphs of the war e i e g i g o a d i f t l Around our, p d v d a b t a r f And, like a wi ecrec c s t a } ; b ‘ o } w r t e g The lefs an n r V a f e t o fou t Abhor to diive ben e d b v l o e f That the air in the hlood-v a t o t t has a communicat jon w h o think, feems plain, from t o a a b t man- creatures being able d of much lefs upo a n v d i i greater den b g a c t insy, provided the tops of mount made gradually Arbutbit 2 T |