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Show DA bA He may vow never to return to thofé fing whic fyear their works 3 and, next, that you are not f " arranta critick as to damn them without hearing like the reft Pope he hath had fuch experience of, for the eroptinef and damningnefs of them, and fo think himfelf complete penitent Hammond A'MNABLE. adj. [from damn. 1. Deferving damnation ; juftly doome Dawme. adj. [dampe; Dutch. 1. Moift ; inclining to wet pletely dry ; foggy to never-ending punifhment It gives him occafion of labouring with greate earneftne(s elfewhere, to entangle unwary mind DAMP Swift Wholefom, and cool, and mild ; but with black ai cious Accomtpanied O thou damaable fellow! did not I pluck. the by the nofe for thy fpeeches Shakefpeare's Meafure for Meafure 2 thof He that hath been affrighted with the fears o hell, or remembers how often he hath been fpare from an horrible damnation, will not be ready t ftrangle his brother for a trifle Taylor's Werthy Comnmunicant Dryden ful ; deteftable ; abhorred; abominable 7o Damp ot in the legion Of horrid hell can come'a devil more damn' Let not the royal bed of Denmark b A couch for luxury and damned inceft To brand the fpotlefs virtue of my princ Rozve Damni'rrc. adj. [from damnify:] Procur rock they mean to avoid 3. To weaken; to abate ing-lofs; mifchievots difcourage v: a, [trom damnifico, La = Ufury dulls and damps all induftries, improvements, and new inventions, wherein mone woul be ftirring, if it were not for this {lug Bacon Unlefs an age too late, or col Climate, or years, damp my intended win Deprefs'd Milton 2. "To hurt ; to impair When now he faw himfelf fo fiefhly rear As if late fight had nought him damnified Da'mMPisaNESS: 7. /. [frem damp.] Tendency to wetnefs ; fogginefs 3 moilture He was difinay'd, and *gan his fate to fear I to hebetate; t 4. To hebetate; to abate motion; to difcourage ; to dull He, who has fuffered the damage, has a righ to demand in his own name, and he alone ca remit, fatisfaCtion: the damnified perfon has th power of appropriating the goods or fervice of th offender, by right of felf-prefervation Locke V Savifz A foft body dampeth the found much more tha a hard Bacon I, To endamage; t8 injure ; to caufe lof to any Queen # J [from darzyz;zéz%ig. Tendency to procure damnation t fuch purfuits, if they could once refleé, that i fuch courfe they will be fure to run upon the ver With falfehoods of moft bafe and damn'd contriv Da'mninewEss to chill and, like the hand-writing on the wall, damps al his jollity Arterbury It would be enough to damp their warmth i Dare no Fair to dejeét Dread of death hangs over the mere natural man Shakefpeare [from the roun. The very lofs of one pleafure is enough to dam the relifh of another L'Eftrange But, oh ! what damned minutes tells he o'er ‘Who doats, yet doubts ; fufpects, yet frrongly loves [ F v.a 2. To deprefs dull Shakefpeare's Hamlet A{/d.':/:fl 1. To wet ; to moiften ; to make humid Shakefpeare's Macbeth foggihefs Nor need they fear the danpmefs of the fk Should flag their wings, and hinder them to fly *Fwa only water throw on fails too ary I"vj‘e/ By ftacks they often have very great lofs, by fh Da'mry. adj. [fro gloomy; forrowful Mortimer damp. Dejefted The lords did difpel dampy thoughts, which th remembrance of his uncle might raife, by applyin him with exercifes and difports Hayward Da'mser. n. [ [damoeifelle, French. 1. A young gentlewoman; a young wo man of diftinétion: now only ufed i verie Kneeling, I my fervant's fmiles implore And one mad damfel dares difpute my pow're Prier 2. An attendant of the better rank With her train of damfels the was gosfi In fhady walks, the fcorching heat to fhun. Dryd 4. A wench ; a country lafs The clowns are whoremafiers, and the damfel Gay Da'mson, n: /. [corruptly from damaj cene.]- A fmall black plumtc See DaMASCENE My wife defir'd fome damfins And made me climb with danger of my life. Skak Daw #. /. [from dominus, as now den i Spanith ; an from o Italian downa ming. ] 'The old term .of honour fe 1 kno men, as we now fay Mafer not that it was ever ufed in profe an imagine it to have been rather of ladi~crous import Dan Chaucer well of Englifh 6ndefiled. Donglafs Thi whimpled whining purblind waywar boy An eternal ftate he knows and confeffes tha he has made no provifion for, that he is undon for ever: a profpe€t enough to caft a damp ove his fprightlieft hours Rogers This commendable refentment againft me, ftrike a damp upon that fpirit in all ranks and corporations of men Swift Da'mnarory. adj. [from damnatorius. _ Containing a fentence of condemnatio Da'mnED. part. adj. [from damn.] Hate ¥ Da'MNIFY tin. I ftand biek in thy pre Say you confented not to Sancho's death aneces thu A fecret damp of grief comes o'er my thoughts And mollify damnation with a phrafe [from damp.] Moiftare with child Ev'n now; whil {ence Now mince the fin _ But barely not forbade it th Adam, by this from the cold fudden dam Recov'ring, and his fcatter'd fpirits return'd T'o Michael thus his humble words addrefs'd Milton His name ftruck every where fo great a damp As Archimedes through the Roman camp. Rojc fion from divine mercy ; condemnatio fro 3. Dejetion; depreflion of {pirit; clou of the mind DamnNa'TiON: #.fi [from damn.] Exclu vapour exhale are called damps: thefe fcldom happen but in th funymer-time; when, the hotter the weather is, th more frequent are the damps Weodavard ‘The more fweets they beftowed upon them, th more damnably their conferves frunk Dennis In evils to top Macbeth A noxiou mineral exhalations in {ubtercaneous cavernsy whic 2. It is indecently ufed in 4 ludicrou fenfe; odioufly; hatefully b Convey'd a glimmering and malignant light A breathing-place to draw the damps away Dryden A twilight of an intercepted day The heat of the fun, in the hotter feafons, penetrating the exterior parts of the earth, excites thof South's Sermons to eternal punithment rift there was, whic Milton from the mountain' earth who hold the fundamentals of faith may den Chrift damnably, in refpect of thofe confequence that arife from them with damps and dreadiul gloom heigh Da'MNABLY. adv. [from damnable. i. In fuch a manner as to incur etérna punifhment ; fo as to be excluded fro mercy will, propofe the queftion, whethe not now, as ere man fell Night low and ludicrous {enfe ; odious § perni W . / 1. Fog ; moift air ; moifture ufed in 2, It is fometimes indecentl All thefe and more came flocking, but with look Downcaft and damp: yet fuch whereifi appear' DMilton Obfcure fome glimpfe of joy As he does riot reckon every fchifm of a damn#ble nature, fo he is far from clofing with the ne I Da'mpnessn. dampnefs of the ground, which rots and fpoils it 2.. Dejefted 5 funk ;. deprefled Shakefps Meafure for. Meafure . opinion of thofe who make it no crime not ¢om She faid no morc: the trembling Trojans hear O'erfpread with a damp fweat and holy fear, Dryd with the fnares of his damrable opinion. - Hooker He's a creature unprepar'd, unmeet for death And to tranfport him in the mind he i Were damnable DA It hath been ufed by fome with great fuccef to make their walls thick; and to put a lay o chalk between the bricks; to take away all demp- ifbrigfs Bacon "This fignor Junio's giant dwarf, dan Cupid. Shak Dick, if this ftory pleafeth thee Pray thank dan Pope, who told it me Prior's Alma 70 DANCE.: «. n: [ danfer, Fr. dangar Span. as fome think from zanza, Arabick, a dance; as Funius, who loves t from Greek, thinks, from doderiv maice] To move in meafure ; to mov with fteps correfpondent to.the found o inftruments What fay you to young Mr. Fenton ? He capers he dances, he has eyes of youth, he writes verfes Shakc[peare To Dawce Attendance. v. n. "To wai " with fupplenefs and obfequioufnefs Men are fooner weary to dance attendance at th gates of foreign lords, than to tarry the good lei Raleigh's Ejjass fure of their own magiftrates It upbraids you To let your fdather's friend, fur thres long months Thus dasice attendznce for a word of audience Diryden 7o DancE w. a To make to dance t putinto a lively motion Thy grandfire lov'd thee well Many a time-he danc'd thee on his knee. Shaksfs That I fee thee h Thou nokle thing! ‘m Than when I firf Beftride M In- peftile vapdur dancet the principal fpirits DA?‘S CEs a f. [from, the verb. of one cr many in concert, re mufick Ou danc roun of cuit a peare's ML T Herne the huater. g |