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Show DE 1. 'To prefs or thruft down prebend, is deprived, or depofed fro 2. To let fall; to let down The fame thing I have tried by letting a glob moving it, to make the angle of a juft magnitude Neavton to fink Others deprefs their own minds, defpond at th firt difficulty, and conclude that the making an progrefs in knowledge is above their capacities Locke If w confide how ofte or law by other weight abov Wotton 2. The finking or falling in of a furface they have their ow degree of roughnefs, confifting of little protuberances and depreffions; and confequently fuch inequalities may fuffice to give bodies different colours or black, o His bleffed countenance Milton The ghofts rejected, are th® unhappy cre Dryden Depriv'd of fepulchres and fun'ral due 3. To releafe ; to free from 4. To put out of an office Derrtu. z /. [from deep, of dicp, Dutch. 1. Deepnefs ; the meafure of any thin from the {urface downwards Wifeman 5. The a& of humbling ; abafement is the bringing it into lower and mor fimple terms by divifion Di& DerrEession ofa Star [with aftronomers is the diftance of a ftar from the horizo below, and 1s meafured by the arch o paflin 1. Hethat keeps or prefles down 2. An oppreflor DerrEe'ssor. [Inanatomy.] A term give to {everal mufcles of the body, whof adtion is to deprefs the parts to whic they adhere DePr1IMENT. adj. [from deprimens, of deprimo, Lat.] An epithet applied to on of the ftraight mufcles that move th globe or ball of the eye, its ufe being t pull it downwards of all oppofit an antagonift mufcles is effected partly by the natura pofture of the body and the eye, which is the caf of the zttollent and depriment mufcles Derbam z. /. [from de and pri watio, Lat. 1. The a& of depriving, or taking awa from 2. The ftate of lofing Fools whofe end is deftrution, and eternal deBentley privation of being Deprivariew [inlaw] is when a clergyman, as a bifhop, parfon, vicar, o blood as one of the principal and conftant ufes o refpiration z. Th 2. T purge I produce quality to free from fome noxioy plant o fuc imperfeftio could not fo wafh out or depure, but that the fam defection hath had continuance in the very generation and nature of mankind Raleigh Derura'rion. n [ [deputation, Fr. 1. The aét of deputing, or fending awa with a {pecial commiffion 2. Vicegerency; the poffeflion of any commiffion given Cut me off' the head Of all the fav'rites that the abfent kin Dryd 7o DEPUTE fend wit Clarend Abftrufenefs; obfcurity [diepen w. a To deepen, or make deeper ZoDEPU CELATE a tu ut de o f Fr é u e [ / 2 Y U " D Lat. 1 a t o r c v n n t e l 1 t o f i m c i e f b t appoi govern or ad inftead of another e vi th a g t c ‘ ; o n m d t f c e e H gerent and deputy of A ImigI;htaky { oGod. quankind Dutch. Dié h r e o u t p d a d m i hi He was vouch n n t e l lo a o t e c t o r and vic h u S the world [depuceler, Fr. To deflour; to bereave of virginity Di& Deru'Lsion. n, /. [depulfio, Lat.] A beating or thrufting away Deru'Lsory. adj. [from depulfus, Lat. D:é Putting away ; averting a f 2. Any one tha Jo other e t o f n Prefbyters, abf & : k u q d o t b c e p t i f churchez, mi,ght b oo e l m h a r b d d e f e t i who n n c d b a t a d A man hath a b 70 DE'PURATE. @. a. [depurer, Fr. fro To purify; to cleanfe depurgo, Lat. e i o l a i j f n i f a place; but wher . , p d h n _ n l t t a g are, as it were to free any thing from its impurities . e f h b e t f c e e he Chemiftry enabling us to depurate bodies, and i forr.w meafure to analize them, and take afunde their heterogeneous parts, in many chemical experiments we may, better than in others, know wha manner of bodies we employ Boyle See thy matter 2 Safi the king to hear And Linus thig deputed by the ref The heroes welcome and their thanks exprefs'd Rofeommat A bifhop, by deputing a prieft or chaplain to adminifter the facraments, may remove him Ayliffe's Parergot Denpam in the depth of winter DerrH of a Squadron or Battalion, is th number of men in the file. Milir. Di&z faid unto him o e depu ma n i ther bu righ an goo ar And in the depth of winter, in the night You plough the raging feas to coafts unknown in the moft abftrufe tract of fchool divinity Addifon's Whig Examiner T a {pecial commiffion; to And Abfalo 4. The middle or height of a feafon elaborate and well-written piece of nonfenfe, tha «. a. [deputer, Fr. power one to tranfact inftead of another Prov. Viiie 2 are greater depths and obfcurities in a Shakefo He looks not below the moon, but hath'defigned the regiment of fublunary affairs into fubBrow: lunary deputations The authority of confcience ftands founded upo Sout its vicegerency and deputation under God When he prepared the heavens I was there when he fet a compafs upon the face of the depth The earl of Newcaftle refcued the city of York from the rebels an harmtul quality, as the waters of the general floo Saift dity DE'PTHEN from j 1. To cleanfe; to free from impurities When he was perfona!l in the Irith war Ther Bugle 70 DEPU'RE. @. a. [depurer, Fr. In poetry the height we know 3. The abyfs ; a gulph of infinite profun 7 cleanfing of a woun In deputation left behind him here And feamen with diffembled depths betray 5 ilm called fulpbur wive; or is of a fadder colour' an after depuration, fuch as we have in magdeleo'ns m, rolls of alighter yellow. Browwn's Vulgar E,m' ‘What hath been hitherto difcourfed, inclines u to look upon the ventilation and depuration of th The falfe tides tkim o'er the cover'd land 7. [o [depreffor, Lat. is either ufed cryd For tho', in nature, depth and heigh Are equally held infinite 2. Deep place ; not a thoal through the ftar, intercepted between th ftar and the horizon Di& Depriva'rion mable parts; and thi Dryd *Tis only infinite below DerrEsstoN of an Eguation [in algebra The exquifite equilibratio Bacosn the deepeft are funk {ix hundred fathoms The left to that unhappy region tends Which to the depth of Tartarus defcends of the bone will either rife, or caft off, by the be DeprE"SSOR they had buildings in many place Bacon higher than the depth of the water We have large and deep caves of feveral depths of the trepan; not doubting but a fmall depreffio or azimuth Brimftone is a mineral body, of fat and infla A minifter, deprived for inconformity, faid, tha if they deprived him, it fhould coft an hundre Bacon men's lives As for men matter Moft happy he Whofe leaft delight fufficeth to depriv Remembrance of all pains which him oppreft. Spen/ confiderably large, it is then at your choice, whether you will enlarge that fiffure, or continue it fo the evacuation of the matter, and forbear the uf vertical circl the defilement of a contrary, wi&inqtrz'i':‘ifm 2. Tohinder ; to debar from: Milton ufe it without of _If the bone be much deprefled, and the fiffur th Neither can any boaft a knowledge 4 Now wretched Qedipus, depriv'd of fight Pope Led a long death in evetlafting night zed or blue, even when moft carefully polifhed. Boy/e Depreffion of the nobility may make a king mor abfolute, but lefs fafe Bacon 2. Pure ; not contaminated the horrid manner in which he had been deprive of him Clarendon in refpeét of them, even f{urfaces, that are fenfibl nefit of nature rities The beams of light are fuch fubtile bodies, that as we fee in marble that appears whit Phillips From his face I thall be hid, depriv' Bricks of a reétangular form, if laid one by another in a level row between fupporters fuftainin the two ends, all the pieces between will neceflaril fink by their own gravity; and much more, i are not exaétly fo in fa 1. To bereave one of a thing; to take i fphere of flefh Glan;;} away from him: with of Derura'rion. n [ [depuratio, Lat) - God hath deprived her of wifdom, neither hat 1 Th a o fe arating the pure from theb 17 xxxix Fob he imparted to her underftanding impure part of any thing He lamented the lofs of an excellent fervant, an DerrE'ssTON. 2. /. [depreffio, Lat. 1. The att of prefling down {fmooth Latin. which is apt to deprefs the mind, with tranfient un they fuffer any depreffio them any matte Zo DEPRI'VE, @. a. [from de and priwo it breaks the gloom expetted gleams of joy, one would take care not t grow too wife for fo great a pleafure of life. .Add Paffion can deprefs or raif The heavenly, as the human mind Prior fo to dejett his preferment Ds'PURATE. adj. [from the verb. 1. Cleanfed; freed from dregs and iy, F reft, and raifing or depreffing the eye, or otherwif 3. To humble DE DIE a a t richt . [In law.] &One 1 o o whofe forfeitur |