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Show DE EIO Dexov'Ncer. n /. [from denonnce.] On that declares fome menace Here comes the fad denouncer of my fate To toll the mournful knell of feparation. Dryden T denmudate ha h brances, he is unqualified Denupa'rion, # himfelf of all imum to a wiolent end, without th f ult. o any reafonable creature; 2 ifa hofa thould ftrike his keeper, 'a;ldkfo him; if a man, in dr7iv a2 caca r endeavouring to redify fomethingrt, an it, fhould fall fo as ¢ € cart-whe o‘u els, b runping over him, fhould. pref dea:ith ; if one fhould be felling an giving warning t whengthe %ree was n2ear fallliingg, e (o Iozl to themfelves, and any of they th Decay of Picty [from denudate. The at of firipping, or making naked DENSE. adj [denfus, Latin. ~Clofe ; o Denvu'DE. . a. [denudo, Latin. 'T compatt; approaching to {olidity ; havftrip ; to make naked ; to diveft ing {mall interftices between the conftituent particles No denude ourfelf of all force to defend us. Clarendon If in fummer-time you denude a vine-branch o The caufe of cold is the denfity of the body for all denfe bodies are colder than moft other bo its leaves, the grapes will never come to maturity Ray on the Creation The eye, with the fkin of the eye-lid, is deSharp's Surgery nuded, to fhew the mufcle dies, as metals, ftone, glafs; and they are longer i heating than fofter bodies Bacon In the air the higher you go, the lefs it is comprefied, and confequently the lefs denfe it is; an o the upper part is exceedingly thinner than th lower part which we breathe Locke 90 De'NsHIRE clamatio they fhall die i thofe denunciation Midft of thef ing the warnin lafting durance Dre'NstTY. 7.[ [denfitas, Latin.] Clofenefs ; compatnefs ; clofe adhefion, o near approach, of parts Nezvton The air within the veflels being of a lefs denfity the outwar and air would prefs their fides together DE'NTAL. adj. [dentalis, Latin. 1. Belonging or relating to the teeth 2. [In grammar.] Pronounced principall De'Ntav. 70 DENY'. @. a. [denier, French ; denego Latin. 1. To contradict : oppofed to afirm 2. T DENTELLL n. /. [Italian.] Modillons The modillons Spectatory N° 4135 DenTicura'rion. n [ [ denticulatus Latin.] ‘The ftate of being fet wit imall teeth, or prominencies refemblin obtain a cauftick nature ¢ moik of them, fo ordere and powdered, make excellent dentifrices Grew's Mufzum To DENTI'SE a. [denteler, French. ‘T'o have the teeth renewed Not in ufe The old countefs of Defmond, who lived ti]l th was feven fcore, did dentife twice or thrice, caftin her old teeth, and others coming in their place Bacon Dewrr'rron. n [ [dentitio, Latin. v. The act of breeding the teeth 2, The time at which children's teeth ar bred 70 DENU'DATE T divett v. a. [denuds, Latin. to flrip to lay naked I laughe faying not T2 DEO'PPILATE. . a, [4e and oppi Latin. t Deorrira'TION. 7. /. [from deappilase Th paflages 5. T renounce difregard t to trea as foreign or not belonging to one The beft fign and fruit of denying ourfelves, i Spratt mercy to others When St. Paul fays, If in this life only we hav hope in Chrift, we are of all men moft miferable he confiders Chriftians as denying themfelves in th pleafures of this world, for the fake of Chrift Atterbury 7 w. a. [deobftruo DEOBSTRUCT Latin.] To clear from impediments to free from fuch things as hinder a paf{age Deobftruent purgative apozem ‘We have an enumeration of the feveral ads o worfhip required to be performed to images, vi proceflions, genuflettions, thurifications, and defculations | Stilling flec 7o Dera'INT. w. a. [depeint, French. 1. To piture; to - defcribe by colours to paint; to fhew by a painted refemblance He did unwilling worfhip to the fain That on his fhield depainted he did fee 2. To defcribe ope means the animal paffages b De‘ovaxp. n. /. [Deo dandum, Latin. Z0 DEPA'RT pacifying his wrath, in cafe of any mis fortune, by which any Chriftian come When the people departed away, Sufannah wei into her garden Sufan, vii fo he departe He faid unto him, go in peace 2 Kings, v+ 1 from him a little way t w e h l p f t o f k i q e r p d The if d h i b t r d a joy fear and gre P les word Mat. xxviil He, wh ich hath no ftomach to this‘fight Let him depart; his pafiport fhall be madc Shakefpeare fe ou a dz t e e p t w e a p a f o Barba Krollese of that bay e o a u t l u c m a l o t And coild n f i r p d o f f k n k o No No look, no laft adieu 2. To defift from a prattice 3 d h a b r J o n He cleaved unto the-f s n K m r e e t arted no To be loft; to perifh vi abod fil t a a a e The good depar 2 Efd. 1il . n. [depart, Fregch. 1. To. go away from a place: with fi before the thing left thing given or forfeited to God for th G In roundelay, or fonnet quaint an All" fopes are attenuating and deobfiruent, refolving vifcid fubftances Arbuthnot on Aliments Spetf Such ladies fair would I depain DEeo'BsTRUENT. 7. [ [deodftruens, Lat. A medicine that bhas the power to ret Haruey Droscura'rioN. n. f. [deofculatio, Lat.q The at of kiffing the mouth'of the laéteals, fo as the chyle may hav Arbuthnot on Diet a free paffage into the blood o adj. [from desppilar, A phyfician prefcribed-him a deoppilative an Such as carry off the freces and mucus, deobftruc wvifcidities of whatever obftrufs the vita DEo'PPILATIVE It is a fingular good wound-herb, ufeful fo deobfiructing the pores of the body More's Antidote againft Atbeifm folv obftrutions; t comes effectual in deoppilations. Brown's Vul, B How long can you my blifs and yours deny 2 Dryd It fhall be therefore a witnefs unto you, left yo Fofpe xxiv. 27 deny your God of clearin Though t he groffer };arts be excluded agai;x, ye are the diffoluble parts extratted, whereby it be Ah, charming fair, faid I 4. To abnegate ; to difown a& remova for fh My young bo Hath an afpe& of interceffion, whic Shake[peare Great nature cries-deny not To deobftru&t ; to clear 5 pal fage ; to free from obftructions Genefis 3. To refufe ; not to grant He omits the denticulation of the edges of th bill, or thofe fmall oblique incifions made for th better retention of the prey Grew's Mufeum Is this grey powder a good dentifrice? B. Fonf The fhells of all forts of fhell-fith, being burnt no accufation a was afraid teeth, like thofe of a {aw Denrti'cULATED. adj. [denticulatus, Lat. Set with {mall teeth De'~vTirricE. 7. [ [dens and frico, Lat. A powder made to {cour the teeth contradi€ Sarah denied or dentelli, make a noble ftho by graceful projections Coayel] confefs /. A {fmall fhell-fith Two {mall black and fhining pieces feem, b "the fhape, to have been formed in the fhell of dental Woodward law, as executor in this cafe, to fee th price of thefe diftributed to the poor The denunciator does not make himfelf a part in judgment, as the accufer does. Ay/iffe's Parerg by the agency of the teeth The Hebrews have afligned which letters ar labial, which dental, and which guttural. - Bacon The dental confonants are eafy, therefore le them be next; firft the labial-dentals, as alfo th lingua-dentals Holder of this dreadful event, though occafiop ed by unreafonable, fenfelefs, and deaé creatures : and though this be give God, yet it is forfeited to the kip their fins: did they never rea Ward denunciations, and notwithftandbefore me, I commit myfelf t Congreve Denuncra'ror, z /. [from denuncio Latin. 1. He that proclaims any threat 2. He that lays an information againft an other being of a greater denfity, would expand the {0 as to endanger the life of the animal Arbuthnot on Aliments diftributed to the poor, for an eXpiatio is not confined to the place of the quarrel, but i Bacon left at large Chrift tells the Jews, that, if they believe not Mortimer are to be given to God ; that s, fold an In a denunciation or indiion ofa war, the wa JPiring, becaufe moft ufed or firft invented there of white metals arifeth not from their dexfity alone a publick me of a threat nace Burning of land, or burn-bating, is commonl called denfbiring, that is, Devonfbiring or Denbigh- Whilzx the denfeft of metals, gold, if foliated is tranfparent, and all metals become tran{paren if diffolved in menftruums, or vitrified, the opacit neverthelefs be flain by the fall of th tree ; in thefe cafes the horfe the cayt wheel, cart, and horfes, and the treq Denvuncra'rionN. n. [ [denunciatio, Latin.] The a& of denouncing ; the pro . a. A barbarous ter of hufbandry a treaty can be obtained, unlefs we woul 4o T DAEN |