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Show DU DW Du'TirULNESS, 7 fi [from dutiful. 2. Covered or fcattered with.duft Even Drudgery-himfelf .As at the car he fweats, or dufly hew The palace {tone, looks gay. ~Thomfor's Sumsmer Dvu'rcuess. n. /. [duckeffe, French. 1. The lady of a duke ‘ Kept drofs for dutcheffés, the world fhall know it, and a poet Pope tory which gives title to a duke, or ha a duke for its fovereign Different ftates border on it; the kingdo migh hav and the canto o o purpofes : with zo I know thee well; a ferviceable villain As duteous to the vices of thy miftrefs As badnefs would defire Shakefp. King Lear Every beaft, more duteous at her call Than at Circean call the herd difguis'd Milon 3. Enjoined by duty ; enforced by the relation of one to another. This fenfe i not now ufed clean.sh data import.tsv out README With mine own tongue deny my facred right With mine own breath releafe all duteons ties Dv'rirvr. adj. [duty and full. 1. Obedient Shake[peare fubmiffive to natural or le gal {uperiours ; reverent She died in an extreme old age, without pain under the care of the moft dutiful fon that I hav ever known or heard of Swift to Pope 2. Expreflive of refpet ; giving token o reverence refpetful 5 reverential And made an humble chaplet for the king Swift T 70 DwarF. . 4. [from the noun. hinder from growing to the natura bulk; to leflen; to make little It is reported that a good ftrong canvas, fprea over a tree grafted low, foon after it putteth forth will dwarf it; and make it fpread Bacon's Natural Hifory The whole fex is in a manner dwarfed, an fhrunk into a race of beauties, that fecems almof Addifon another fpecies 2. A&s or forbearances required by religion or morality. In this fenfe it has plural Good my lord Return thofe duties back, as are right fit Obey you, love you, and moft honour you Dwa'rFisu All our dut in all our dut remember tha for the doin is fet down in our prayers, becauf we beg the Divine afliftance; an you are bound to do all thofe duties of which you have prayed for th Divine affiftance Taylor's Dewotion 3. Obedienc rents or fubmiffio governours du to pa fhal fpeak have drea Becaufe I am fo dwwarfifh and fo low The king doth fmile at; and is well prepar' To whip this dwarfifb war, thefe pigmy arms From out the circle of his territories Shakefpeare's King Fobtte A thicket clofe befide the grove there ftood, With briars and bramblés choak'd, and dwarfif ‘When pow'r to flatt'ry bows? To plainnefs honou Is bound, when majefty to folly falls God 4. of reverence or refpeét Deécay of Picty ‘W othe foun mofs Fairy Queen The regiment did duty there punétually Clayendon as Galb fuppe wit him ufed to give every foldier upon duty an aureus Arbutbnot on Coins 6. The bufinefs of war ; fervice The night came and fevered them being tired with the duty of the day Dryden impoft ; cuftom toll All the wines make their way through fevera duties and taxes, before they reach the port Addifon Such fhekels as they now fhew, were the ol ones in which duty was to. be paid by their law Arbuthnot on Coins They, but now who feem' In bignefs to furpafs earth's giant fons Now lefs than fmalleft-dwarfs, in narrow roo Throng numberlefs Mifton's Paradife Lof 2. Any animal or plant below its natusral bulk adv Dwa'rrisaness [ fro dwarfifp. n. [, [from dwarfifb. Minutenefs of ftature ; littlenefs *T'is no wonder that fcience hath not outgrow the davarfifbrefs of its priftine ftature, and that.th intelle€ual world is fuch a microcofm Glanville's Scepfis 7o DwavuLE. @w.a. [bpelian, Saxon, t wander; daaelen, Dutch.] 'To be delirious : a provincial wor all partie Clarendon See how the madmen bleed ! Behold the gain With which their mafter, love, rewards their pains For feven long years, on duty ev'ry day Lo! their obedience, and their monarch's pay 7. Tax fhould have loft oaks and cedars, and th tall and lofty fons of the foreft, and hav nothing but dwarfifb fhrubs, and creepin Bentley and defpicable mufhrooms Dwa'rFrisaLy 5. The bufinefs of a foldier on guard Otho, as ofte Dryder wood Like a dwarf They both atone Did duty to their lady as became Shakefpeare This unheard faucinefs, and'boyifh troops t Shakefpeare's King Lear God's party will appear fmall, and the king' not- greater ; it being not probable, that thof thould have fenfe of duty to him that had none t little Their dwarfifb pages were As cherubins, all gilt. ~ Shakefpeare's Henry VIIL And are you grown fo high in his efteem or fuperiours ; loy that dut fmall low bulk Belo petty ; defpicable alty ; piety to parents Think'ft tho [from dwarf. adj the natura Shakefpeare. and thank th His daughter Philoclea he found at that tim dutifylly watching by her mother, and Mifo curioufly watching her Sidney He with joyful, nimble wing Flew dutifully back-again fuckle The pain children feel' from any neceflity o nature, it is the duty of parents to relieve. Locke Vou have begot me, bred me, lov'd me Spenfer 4. It is ufed often by botanifts in compofition; as, dwarf-elder, dwarf-honey Luke, xvii. 10 do to the dwarf awhile his needlefs fpear h ave vants : we have done that which was our duty t DWARF. . [ [opeong, Saxon; dwerg trees, blefs the air, and do dutiful reverence t Dutch. every thing fhe thought did accompany her at thei 1 ma belo th commo fiz o men firft meeting Sidney Get you gone, you dwarf Du'rirurry. adv. [from dutiful. You minimus, of hind'ring knot-grafs made 1. Obediently; fubmiffively Shakefpeare Such dawarfs were fome kind of apes Brown 2. Reverently; refpeétfully ~ There would fhe kifs the ground An are commanded you, fay, We are unprofitable fer Dryde 2. Obfequious ; obedient to good or ba ‘When ye thall have done all thofe things whic ‘Great Aurangzebe did duteous care exprefs And durft not pufh too far his great fuccefs Duteous, and hark'ning to the founding brafs Prior Eftftoones difmounted from his courfer brave Du'ry. n. [ [from due. 1. That to which a man is by any natura or legal obligation bound Cowwell A female foftnefs, with a manly mind - A duteous daughter, and a fifter kind ~ In ficknefs patient, and in death refign'd. Dryd ‘Who taughtthe beewith winds and rains to ftrive - To bring her burden to the certain hive And through the liquid fields again to paf The champion ftout Taylor's Rule of Living Holy DurcHY-COURT. #./i A court wherei all matters appertaining to the dutch of Lancafter are decided by the decre Du'rrovus. adj. [from duty. 1. Obedient ; obfequious; refpe@ful t thofe who have natural or legal authority romances Sfulnefs in friends and relatives, to fuffer him to perith without reproof or medicine, rather than t Addifon on Italy fwallowed up his whol Swift of the chancellor of that court 3. An attendant on a lady or knight i 1t is a ftrange kind of civility, and an evil duti 2. A ladly who has the fovereignty of dukedom Du'tcuY. . [ [duché, French.] A terri Bern Franc dutchy Dryden's An feern unmannerly to a great finner L'Efir Saw off the ftock in a fmooth place; and fo dwarf trees, graft them within four fingers of th Mortimer ground 2. Reverence ; refpect The gen'rous god who wit and gold refines And fipens fpirits as he ripens mines the dutchy of Savoy cyooked, and the reft had it in derifion Piety, or dutifulncfs to pareats, was a moft popular virtue among the Romans Shakefpeare's King Lear will be here The duke was to command the army, and th dutchefs, by the favour fhe poffefied, to be nea Saift her majefty Erance In a delicate plantation of trees, all well grown was knotty an fair, and {mooth, one dwar to juit autho 1. Obedience ; ‘fubmiflio rity The duke of Cornwal, and Regan his dutchefs To you gave fenfe, good humour DW mentioned b Funius 7 DWELL «@. preterit dwelt, o dwelled. [ dualla, old Teutonick, is fay, delay 5 duelia, 1landick, to ftay, to ftan 1T, 1. To inhabit to live in a place t refide ; to have an habitation It thy brother that dwelleth by thee be waxe poor, and be fold unto thee, thou thalt not compe him to ferve as a bond-fervant Leve xxv. 39 He fhall davel/ alone, without the camp fhall hi habitation be Lew. xiil. 46 John Haywood and Sir Thomas More, in th parith wherein I was born, dwelt and had pofleffions Peacham Why are you vex'd, lady ? Why do you frown Here dwell no frowns, nor anger ; from thefe gate Sorrow flies far Milton 2, To live in any form of habitation Abraham fojourned in the land of promife as i a firange country, dwel/ing in tabernacles Heb.xi. g 3. To be in any ftate or condition *Tis fafer to be that which we deftroy Than by deflruion drwe/l in doubsful joys Shak |