OCR Text |
Show DE DPEN. 7 /. [oen, Saxon. 1. A cavern or hollow running horizon 7o DE'NIGRATE. @. a. [denigro, Lat. tally, or with a fmall obliquity, unde - down perpendicularly They here difperfed, fome in the air, fome o the earth, fome in the watersy fome amongft th minerals, ders, and caves under the earth. Hooker cave of a wild beatt. What, fhall they feck the lion in his dex The tyrant's den, whofe ufe, though loft to fame The cavern, only to her father known By him was to his darling daughter fhown, Dryd *Tis then the fhapelefs bear his den forfakes ' Tn'woods and fields a wild deftruétion makes Dryden 'S i Shak Dent'avr. #z. /i [from deny. 1. Negation ; the contrary to afirmation 2. Negation ; the contrary to confeflion No man more impudent to deny, where proof ' were not manifeft; no man more ready to confefs . with a repenting manner of aggravating his ow evil, where denial would but make the fault fouler Bgco Dryden ment of adherence., We may deny God in all thofe a&s that are capable of being morally good or evil : thofe are th _proper. {cenes, in which we aét our confeflions o ~denials of him South DenteRr. 7. /. [from deny. 1. A contraditor; an'‘opponent; one tha holds the negative of a propofition Virtu mean onl ‘courage or at moft, our duty towards our neighbour, without including the idea of the duty which we owe to God Watts Welth. @w. a. [fro If it was fo fearful when Chrift looked his denicr Pope South 3. A refufer; -one that refufes i It may be I am eftcemed by my denier fufficient - of myfelf to difcharge my duty to God as a prieft though not to men as a prince King Charles DEN1ER. 2. [ [from denarius, Lat It i pronounced as deneer, in two fyllables. A {mall denomination of French money ;- the twelfth part of a fous You will not pay for the glafies you have burft ¢ MNO not a defli{'r Shakefpeare I denounce unto you this day, that ye fhall furel perif Deut He of their wicked ways, Shall them admonifh, dencuncing wrath to com On their impenitence Milon They impofe their wild conje€tures for laws upo others, and demounce war- againft all that receiv the not Decay ofg Piety 2. To threaten by fome outward fign o Predeftination is deftruékive to all that is eftablifhed among men, to all that is moft precious t expreffion He ended frowning and-his look denounc'd Defperate revenge, and battle dangerou To lefs than gods DMilson The fea grew white; the rolling waves from far not do what we know: to be our duty ? And, if we a& not voluntarily, what exercife have we of ou wilis Hammond Like heralds, firft denounce the wat'ry war 3. T Diyd give information againft to de late 5, to accufe publickly 7. /. [denominatio, Latin.] A name given to a thing, whic commonly marks fome principal gqualit of it or monu- remaining in Ireland, a there is of the Scythians 2 | Spenfer's State of Irel The liking or difliking of the people gives th play the denomination of good or bad; but does no Dryden really make or conftitute it fuch Archdeacons ought to propofe parts of the Ne Teftament to be learned by heart by inferior clergymen, and denounce fuch as are negligent Ayliffe's Parergons Dexov'NcEMENT, 7./ [from. denounce. 'Lhe a& of proclaiming any ‘menace' the proclamation of intended evil 3. denunciation Falfe is the reply of Cain upon the dencuncemen Philofophy, the greatiidol of the learned par [denuncio, La 1. To threaten by proclamation patronag Hooker of the heathen world, has divided it into man Harris _-notes a fever Z0. DENOU'NCE «. tin 5 dononcer, French. The commendable purpefe of confecration bein not of every one underftood, they have been conftrued as though: they had fuperftitioufly mean either that thofe places, which were denominate of angels and faints, fhould ferve for the worfhi of fo glorious creatures 5 ‘or elfe thofe gloriou of the Gauls ye to fhew by figns: as, a quick pulfe de 7o DENO'MINATE. «. ‘a. [denomino Latin.] To name ; to give a name to ment that the integer is fuppofed to be divided into 8 parts, or half quarters; an 70 DENO'TE. @. a. [denoto, Latin.] T mark; to be a fign of; to betoken An inflammation confifts of a fanguineou affluxion, or elfe is denominable from other humours, according to the predominancy of melancholy, phlegm, or choler. Brown's Pulg, Errours But is there any tokens denomination you Devwora'rion. n /. [denotatio, Latin. The act of denoting ~ into repentance, what will it be when he fhall look DexomiNa'TION 3 him into deftruétio thew When a fingle broken number or fraction hat for its denominator a number confifting of an unit in the firft place towards the left hand, and nothing but cyphers from the unit towards the righ hand, it is then more aptly and rightly called a decimal fration Cocker's Arithmetick Denominator of any proportion, is the quotien arifing from the divifion of the antecedent by th confequent: thus 6 is the denominator of the proportion that 30 hath to's, becaufe 5) 30 (6. Thi is alfo called the exponent of the proportion, o ratio Harris the noun. an thus in &, 8 the denominato whole DeExo'MINABLE, adj. [denomino, Latin. That may be named or denoted prote€tion ber below the line, thewing the natur and quality of the parts which any integer 1s fuppofed to be divided into of fuch parts, :. e. three quarters of th He fummons ftraight his denizens of air The lucid fquadrons round the fails repair of@ Fraftion, is the num the numerator 6 fhews, that you tak human nature, to the ‘two faculties that denominate us men, underftanding and will 3 for wha ufe can we have of ‘our underftandings, if we can 2. A difowner ; one that does not own o acknowledge city freeman; one infranchifed creatures for defence of fuch places By the word Virtue the affirmer intends ou whole duty to God and man, and the denier by th wor th Falfehood is denizen'd, virtue is barbarous. Donne 4. Abjuration ; contrary to acknowledg o Mingled thus, their iflue is‘inceftuous I muft and will have Catherine to my wife. Shak The denial of landing, and hafty warning u denials, weaker than before DENOMINATO Pride, luft, covetize, being fevera To thefe three places, yet all are in all Sidmy e Both the feas of one name fhould have one common denominator Brown's Vulgar Errours To infranchife ; to make free ance, or conceflion Here comes your father; never make denial fre 70 DE‘N1ZEN 3o Refufal ;. the contrary to grant, allow Devomina'ror. 7. /. [from denominate. The giver of a name; the perfon o thing that caufes an appellation A great many plants will hardly, with nurfing be made to produce their feed out of their nativ foil5 but corn, fo neceflary for allpeople, is fitte to grow and to {eed as a free denifon of the world Grew Brown away, troubled us much He, at ev'ry frefh attempt, is repell' The leatt denominative part of time is a minute the greateft integer being a year. Cocker's Arithm and Angles found here, and retained Dawies Thus th® Almighty Sire began: ye gods Natives, or denizens, of bleft abodes From whence thefe murmurs Dryden The negative authority is alfo deniable by reafon clean.sh data import.tsv out README denominable Denizen is a Britifth law term, which the Saxon refufe belief nefydd that whic confers a diftin¢t appellation 2. That which obtains a diftin& appellation. This would be more analogicall DE'NIZEN. 1 #. [ [ from dinafddyn, . man of the city ; or &i- DE'NISON DenDRO'LOGY. 7. /i [d4dpor and Aéy®-. The natural hiftory of trees DENI ABLE: adj. [from deny.] That whic . may be denied'; that to which one ma {h 1. That which gives a name That the mere Irifh were reputed aliens, appear by the charters of denization, which in ‘all age were purchafed by them Dawies Dena'y. #. fo [a word formed betwee deny and #ay.] Denial § refufal Rogers Deno'MINATIVE. adj. [from denominate. Deniza'TioN, . f. [from denizen.] Th at of infranchifing, or making free Gibjor's Camden To her in hafte, give her this jewel : fay . My love can give no place, bide no denay wmination are worn off, or otherwife reduced into very minute: parts Boyle - may fignify either a valley or a wood place ; for the Saxon ben imports both us muft confefs ourfelves to come under that demo In feveral inftances of idenigration, the metal of a local name 3. Den, thé terminatio By fufferin are cafually o ral complexio by an infeétio Southa Al men are finners : the moft righteous amon Thefe are the advenient and artificial ways o denigration, anfwerably whereto may be the natura progrefs Brozon . Was now th' apartment of the'royal dame To blacken ; to make black Epicureans, and the like DeN1GRA'TION. 2. /. [denigratio, Latin. A blackening, or making black Shake[peare And fright him there {e&ts and denominations3 as Stoicks, Peripateticfil fome impreflion from fire, bodic artificially denigrated in their natus thus are charcoals made blac of their own fuffitus Brown's Vulgar Errours Hartfhorn, and other white bodies, will be denigrated by heat; yet camphire would not at al lofe its whitenefs Boyle ground; diftin& from a hole which run 2. Th "DEN DE qf his curfe forgiven. M iniguit is greater tha can b Brogvn Devovu'ncEr |