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Show BE DE The )rcftfl were feiz'd with fullen dif ontent And a deaf murmug through the fguadro s went. Dryden I have alfo found, thata piece‘of dea?, fap thicke than one would eafily imagine, being purpofel | interpofed betwixt my eye, placed.in a room, an the clearer. daylight; was not only fomewhat tranf| parent;-but appeared quite through a lovely red Boyle on Colours To Drar. w..a. To deprive of the powe of hearing ,Hm"mg hath deaf'd our failorsy and if the I‘-110\':' how to hear; there's none know what t Tay 7 To Deav. . ai[declen; Dutchi] 1. To diftribute ; to difpofe to- differen perfons Donne A fwarm of their aerial thapes appears And, flutt'ring round his temples;: deafs-his ears Deal thy bread to the hungry, and bring the poor Diyden that are caft'out to ‘thy houfe De'aren. @ 2 [from deaf,] . T deprive of the power of hearing But Salius enters; and, exclaiming lou For juftice, deafins and difturbs the crowd. Dryden From fhouting men, and horns, and dogs, he fiies Deafe'd and funn'd with their promifcuous cries 2. Obfcurely to the ear D¥'arxess n d my time fo ill I found fuch a deafyefs, that no déclaration fro ToDEAL I I doubt not partially that weep Foes to my reft, and my fweet fleep's difturbers Are they that I would have thee deal upon. Shak 5. 90 Dea 6. 7o Dea Poflibly fome never fo much as doubted of ‘th fafety of their fpiritual cftate; and, if fo, the more réafon Th author, who kne that fuch a defign a this could not be carried on without a great deal o artifice and fophiftry, has puzzled and perplexed hi 3. [Fro the verb 79 deal. Addifen 'The art o praétice of dealing cards How can thz mufe her aid impart Unikill'd in all the terms of art Or in harmonicus numbers pu [deyl, Duteh. "'M'gwiae: Savift Fir-wood, or the wood e 4 ‘The deal, the thufile, and the cut 'To hi¥e to do with Set to praife Suiters are {o diftafte Sauth caufe in be engagedin a great dealy t -doubt of it treat well or ill Such an one deals not fairly by his own mind nor conduékts his own underftanding aright. Locke Fairfas. much th T This {feems a vitions fe "I'hat noble Dudone had while here he livid f by with delays an abufes \ ‘.If 3 'man'wo,ulz‘l have his'cqnfc_ie'nc deal:aea:lfl;"‘ with him, he muft deal fevercly duith that South's Serpye God did not only exercife this pmvii entcr:mt wards® his own peopie, but he dealt thyg alf ', other nations Bu ¥ will deal the more eivil 7'7/[:; with his EI;?: poems, becawfe nothing iil is' fo b{ fpoken of th . dead Yo D wrote to me with the freedom of af:{e ;g dealing plainly @bith me in the matterof my o trifles oP Refleét on the merits of the caufe, as well 2 the men, who have been thus deal country 8. 70 Deavr with o wit hy thel Swif To contend with If the hated me, I thould know what paffion t Sidny wer commande to remain in th to govern the people, eafy to be dul Dryde @, a; [dealbs, Latin. All'feed is" white in viviparous animals; an fuch as have preparing veflels; wherein it receive a manifold dealpation Birown's Vulgar Errours De‘ALER. #. fi [from deal. 1. One that has to do with any thing I find it common with thefe fmall dealers in wi and learning, to give themfelves a title from thei Saift firft adventure 2. A trader or trafficker Where fraud is permitted and connivedat, th honeft dealer is always undone, and the knave get Gulliver's Trass the advantage 3. A perfon who deals the cards Dr'avine. n /. [from deal. 1. Praétice ali thi "Two deep enemies What a deal ¢f cold bufinefs doth a man mifpen the better part of life in! In feattering compliments, and tendering vifits Ben Fonfon ‘The chatrge fome dea/ thee haply honour may hav t Tilkotfon 4. To aét in any manner Shake/p than 'wifz ';1?:1*: Deavsa'rion. n /. [dealbatio, Latin] ‘The a& of bleaching or whitening rendering things white which were not fo before: a word in little ufe if he will deal clearly and - im thdt he will acknowledg ne T'o whiten ; to bleach to'inter to be ‘true. Hogker doibleafe fon. But forrow fAouted at is double death bu | deals his followers 7o DEA'LBATE 3. To behave well or ill in any tranfaction Hooker fitter an wiit I have no God to deaf <bith Sometimes he that deals between manand man raifeth hiscown credit with both, by pretendin greatet intéreft than he hath in either Bacon better a great deal for teachers to fpend time an the after an vene dealy than, for the moit pare, found believers in"th maintenance of truth, apprehending according t "the nature of that evidence which feripture yieldeth Worf Will the awith whilft they ftand in fear Hayward Then you upbraid me 5 1 am pleas'd to fe You 're not fo perfeé;, but can fail like me petty merchants dea' but forparcels. Deca of Piety They buy and fell; they dea/and trafiick. South With the fond maids in.pabmiftry he dea/s They tell the fecret which he fifft reveals Prior they are'in defence of errour more earneft, a grea Who then fhall gui'deP o' Tdan His people2 Who defend country w. 2 2. 'To alt between two perfons Gentleme "Thisis t5 drive d wholefale tradeywhén all othe When men's affe@ions do framé their opinions tabour in To-weep wit deal or-on to fiave that which is pon of wtheii'} given to them S Shenl deal with It is generally better to deal by fpeach than b letter 5 and by a mian himfelf, than by the mediation of a third Bacon out an adjedtive ; but this is commonly Af'not always, ludicrous or contemptuous indeed, flore of matters to throw about 1. To traffick ; to tranfalt bufinefs trade was formerly joined with different words to limit its meaning ; as, fome dsal, i {fome degree, to fome amount: we no either {ay, a great deal, of a deal with i Addifen 4. To diftribute- the cards A great deql of that which had been, wras no to be removed out of the church FHovker Ther t6 unfold The nightly mallet deals refounding blows. (fay King Charles 2. Quantity ; degree of more or lefs life, bein of' it, in dealing out' theirleftures to th 3. To give gradually other DEAL. . /. [del; Dutchi 1. Part thi Keep me from the vengeance of thy darts ‘Which Niobe's devoted iffue felt ‘When hifling through the fkies the feather'd death were dealt Dryden Pope the bithops could tale place i rather to act than td know, their portion of knowledge is'dealt them accordingly Addifo 2. ToAcatter' you think I had amufe %. Unwillingnefs to hear of mdnkind 1f you.deal out great quantities of ftrong liquo to.theimob, there will be many drunk Watts Thofe who are ‘deaf and dumb, are' dumb b confequence from their deafiefs Holder vThe Dunciad had never been writ, but at hi requeft, and for his deafaefs3 for, had he been abl me bufinef publick of fenfe of founds wit And deals in whiftling air his empty blows. Dryd vantag ¥. Want of the power of hearing; wan to converf His lifted arms-around his head he throws Th Neither can the "Irith, nor ye i lords; think themfelves w'rdn'ggd,ynortll l:féfllzn% -u.zitb And Rome deals out her bleflings and her gold Yickell Had the great men of antiquity been poffeffed o theart of printing, they would have made an ad [from deaf. One withi a brokén truncheon deals his blows Dryden How Spain prepares her banner ‘Addifon Dr'arvy. ado. [from deafi 1. Without {enfe of founds Ifaiahy Wviii. 7 7. To DeAL awith: T6 treat i'""afif"fiifi ner ; to ufe well or ill i aéction g Concerning the dealirgs of men, who _admxrflf‘&r government, and unto whorm the execution of tha law belongeth; they have their judge, who fittet in heaven Hearer What thefe are Whofe own hard dealings teach themito fufpec Shakefpeare ' "The thoughts of others But this wa neither one pope's fault, nor oné prince's deftiny : he muft write a flory of the em pir€, that means to tell of all their dealings in thi Raleighs kind 2, Intercourfe 1t were to. be withed, that men would promote the happinefs of one another, in all their p'l'l‘;]"te that plain-dealing, in denying to deal 7n fuits a within their infli li wh thof amo ngs deal firft, is grown not only honourable, but alfo gra- 1 ence Addifi"' cious Bacon The Scripture forbids even the countenancin 3. Meafure of treatment; mode in which a poor man in his caufeg which is' a' popularwa i one treats another of preventing juftice, thit fome men have dealtin God's gracious dealings with men, 3 re the aid v r p though without that fuccefs which they propofe th i . a t f i c a n l x a an Hammiond to themfelves Aiterbury | piety Among authors, notiz draw upon- themfelve ck; bufinefs f a T 4 more difpleafure than thofe who deal in politica The door-muft needs: die richg he had Ef-"',‘? matters Addifon S""U dealixgs in his way for many years. True logick is not ‘that moify -thing, that-dea/s all in difpute, to which the former ages had debafe ad.vi- 'Arou 5.7] ThT e ad of¢ walk'ingnga Waits's Logick. |i Latin DEAMBULA'TION. u: l{m [degméuéeff? 1 |