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Show D D:R wherehy fmall beer is rendered equal in mifchie H;?.'"t'r;y on Confumptions to ‘t"‘mg Dre'cey. adj. [from dregs. dregs confifiin Containin of dregs feculent muddy Thefe num'rous veins, fuch is the curious frame Receive the pure ipfinnating fream But no corrupt or dreggy pasts admit To form the blood or teed the limbs unfjt Blackmore Ripe grapes being moderately prefied, their juic may " out withou DREGS 7. / muc dregg matter be fqueeze Boyle dreggi Saxon [operten an, Hlandick. th 1. The fediment of liquors ; the lees grounds ; the feculence Fain would we make him author of the wine If for the dregs we could fome other blame. Dawies They often tread deftru¢tion's horrid path Anddrink thedregs of the revenger's wrath. Sandys We from the dregs of life think to receiv What the firft {prightly running could not give Dryden Such run on poets in a raging vein Ev'n to the dregs and fqueezings of the brain Pope 2. Any thing by which purity is corrupted The king by this journey purged a little th dregs and leaven of the northern people, tha were before in no good affetions towards him Bacon 3. Drofs ; fweepings ; refufe Heay'n's fayourite thou, for better fates defign' Than we, the dregs and rubbifh of mankind. Dryd What diffidence we muft be under whethe God will regard our facrifice, when we have nothing to offer him but the dregs and refufe of life the days of loathing and fatiety, and the years i Rogers which we have no pleafure ZoDrE1N. w. 2. [See Dra1n. To emp ty. The fame with dra:in : {pelt differently perhaps by chance She is the fluice of her lady's fecrets: *tis bu fetting her. mill a-going, and I can dyein her o Congrewve them all *Tis drein'd and empticd of its poifon now Southern A cordial draught Zo DRENCH. @. a. [onencan, Saxon. 1. To wath ; to foak; to fteep Qur garments being as they were drenched i the fea, hold notwithftanding their frethnefs an Shakefpeare glofles Fo-day deep thoughts learn with me to drenc In mirth, that after no repenting draws. Milton Now dam the ditches, and the floods reftrain Their moifture has already drench'd the plain Dryden 2. To faturate with drink or moifture : i an iil fenfe In fwinifh flee Their drenched natures lie, as in a death Shakefpeare's Macbeth Too:oft, 2las! has mutual hatred drench' Philips ©Qur {words in native blood 3. To.phyfick by violence If any of your cattle are infeéted, fpeedily le both fick and well blood, and drench them NMortimer's Hufbandry DrencH. #./. [from the verb. 1. A draught; a fwill: by way of abhorrence or contempt Let fuch bethink them, if the fleepy drenc Of that forgetful lake benumb not #ill That in our proper motion we afcend Milton. 2. Phyfick for a brute A drench is a potion or drink prepared for a fic horfe and compofe DR of feveral drugs in a liqui " form Farrier's Did ~ Harry, fays the, how many haft thou kill'd today? Give my roan horfe a drench, {ays he5 an r aftgk anfwers, fourteeny an ho Sbage Hepo 1V Dress. z /. [from the verb. A drench of wine has with fuccefs been US:d 1. Clothes; garment; habit Dreffe laughed at in our forefathers Wardsobe or pi And through a horn the gen'rous juice infus'd D;:}!dzfl tures, when, by the cit ulation of gy vanity they are bro gh 3. Phyfick that muft be given by violence about, we think acco mn Their counfels are more like a drench that muf b mu c wh ug dr th n do be pourc King Charles leifurely drank if I liked it ing Gowernment.of the T A robe obfcene was o'er his fhould A drefs by fates and furies worn alo‘ne.s iy 4. A channel of water DRE'NCHER. 7. /. [from drench. 1. One that dips or fteeps any thing Di ce fo b fi ph e gi th O 2 Pope' Ce‘fe;n i‘_‘rflltms o habi cloth Splen i 2 Full drefs creates dignity augments con{cig,u' nefs, and keeps at diftance an encroacher, Clarifi&- DRENT. participle. Probably corrupte from drenched, to make a proverbia 3. The fkill of adjufting drefs The men of pleafure, drefs, and gallantry, Pope DrEesSER. 7. /[ [from drefs. 1. One employed in putting an the clothe and adorning the perfon of anether, rhyme to brent, or burnt What flames, quoth he, when T the prefent fe In danger rather to be drent than brent ? Fairy 2 7o DRESS. @. a. [drefer, French. 1. To clothe ; to inveift with clothes She hurries all her hand-maids to the tafk Her head alone will twenty dreffers afk Dryden's Fumenal The firft requef He made, was, like his brothers to be dre/s'd And, as his birth requir'd, above the reft. Dryd 2. One employed in regulating, trim ming, or adjufting any thing 2. To clothe pompouily or elegantly. I is ufed with #p and 'ouz to enforce 1t Said he unto the drgffér of his vineyard, Behol thefe three years I come feeking fruit on this flg Look upon .pleafures not upon that fide that i next the fun, or where they look beauteoufly tree, and find none Lii that is, as they come towards you to be enjoyed 3. The bench in a kitchen on which mea 1s dreft or prepared for the table Taylor >Tis burnt, and {o is all the meat What dogs are thefe! Where is the rafcal cook How durft you, villains ! bring it from the dre And ferve it thus to me that love it not Sbak for then they paint and fmile, and drefs themfelve up in tinfel, and glafs gems, and counterfeit ima gery Few admir'd the native red and white Till pocts drefs'd them up to charm the fight A maple drgffer in her hall the had On which full many a flender meal fhe made Dryden When you take down difhes, tip a dozen upo the dreffir Savift's Direétions to the Cook Dryden Lollia Paulina wore, in jewels, when dreffed ont the value of three hundred twenty-two thoufan nine hundred and fixteen pounds thirteen fhilling Arbuthnot and four-pence t Dre'ssinc. 7 /. [from drefs.] The application made to a fore of th The fecond day after we took off the dreffings and found an efchar made by the catheretick 3. To adorn; to deck; to embellifh furnifh Where was a fine roo in th middl houfe, handfomely dreffed up, for the commifiionClarendon ers to fit in Skill is ufed in drefing up power with all th Locke fplendour abfolutenefs can add to it The mind lofes its natural relith of real truth and is reconciled infenfibly to any thing that ca be dreffed up into any faint appearance of it. Locke Wifeman on Tumours DrE'ssiNG-ROOM. 7. /. [drefs and room. The room in which clothes are put on Latin books might be found every day in hi dreffing-room, if it were carefully fearcheds Swift DREsT. part 4. To cover a wound with medicaments Wileman Addifn 5. To curry ; to rub: a term of the ftable Our infirmities are f to drefs and tend horfe help our needs "Three hundred horfes Stood ready, fhining all [from drefs. In flow'ry wreaths the royal virgin dref His bending horns, and kindly clapt his breaft In time of my ficknefs another chirurgeon drefféd ~ her 7o Dr1B. @. a. [contrated from dribble. many, that we are force and affes, that they ma Taylor in high ftables fed and fmocothly dre/s'd Dryden's Aneid To crop ; to cut off ; to defalcate cant word Merchants gains come fhort of half the mart For he who drives their bargains dribs a part Dryden 6. To break or teach a horfe: a term of 7o DRI'BBLE. @. z. [This word feem horfemas thip to have come from drop by fucceflive alA ftee Well moutks i, well manag'd, whic dr:f terations, fuch as ar languages : drop, drip himfelf di His aid in war, his ornament in peace 7. To reftify; to adjuft from thence driwvel and driweller nydm and meliorate the reft 1. To fall in drops Semiluna A dribbling, difficulty, and a momentary fuppreflio For~hxs. fat grandfire fome delicious mefs In feeding high his tutor will furpafs Drydens ma be caufed. by. the ftone's z. Tlo.fall weakly and flowly 9. To trim ; to fit any thing for ready ule Thus the voluptuous youth, bred up to dref of urine thutting up the orifice of the bladder Arbuthnot on Alimentss In Orkney they drefs their leather with roots o tormentil, inftead of bark. Mortimer's Hufbandry 10. 'To prepare vituals for the table. on the furface owe thei Woodward on Feffise D }yd When he drefféth the lamps he fhall burn incenfe Exod. xxx When you drefs your young hops, cut away root or fprigs Mortimer's Hufbazdry procefle form to the dribbling of water that paffed over it 8. To prepare for any purpofe An heir apparent of the gourmand races the Danith drypp. This garden; ftill to tend plant, herb, and flow'r Milton Well muft the ground be digg'd, and bette drefs'd foil to make Dri may indeed be the original word, from Adam ! well may we labour ftill to dref Ne ufual in living dripple, dribble, Believe not that the dribbling dart of lov Shakefpeare Can pierce a complete bofom 3. To flaver as a child or ideot i w d wr t L 4 v . L B 1 T D drops. u f o fu d l t w o l f o c Let th i S ftairs and dnbéible le. iti all t the w ay ys up‘z' DR1'BLET |