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Show D W- 4+ To be fufpende wit attentio t hamg upon with care or fondnefs He in great paffion all this while did dwell More bufying his quick eyes her face to view Than his dull ears to hear what fhe did tell Spenfer Th' attentive quee peo Dovelt on his accents Smith's Phed. and Hippol Such was that face, on which I dewe/r with Jjoy Ere Greece affembled ftemm'd the tides to Troy Pope 5. To continue long fpeaking He preach'd thejoys of heav'n, and pains of hell And warn'd the finner with becoming zeal But on eternal mercy lov'd to drvell Dryden's Good Parfon We have develt pretty long on the confideration of fpace and duration Locke Thofe who defend our negotiators, devel/ upo their zeal and patience Savift To DWELL. w. a. "To inhabit. Not ufed I faw and heard ; for we fometime Who dwel/this wild, conftrain'd by want, come fort Totown or village nigh Miltor's Par. Regained Dwe'LLER. ./. [from dwell.] An inhabitant; one that lives in any place The houfes being kept up, did of neceffity enforc 2.daveller5 and the proportion of land for occupa tion being kept up, did of neceflity enforce tha daveller not to be beggar or cottager, but a man o {ome fubftance Bacow's Henry VII Their cries foon waken all the dzvollers near Now murmuring noifes rife in every ftrect. Dryd DweLrine. 2 f [from duwell. 1. Habitation ; place of refidence ; abode ~ His daelling is low in a valley green Under the foot of Rauran moffy hore. Fairy Queen Hazor fhall be a dawelling for dragons, and a de folation for ever Fer. xlix. 33 If he have feveral dwvellings, let him fort the {0, that what he wanteth in the one he may find i the other ¥ ¥ DW Bacon God will deig To vifit oft the davellings of juft men Delighted Milton's Paradife Loft All dwellings elf Ylood overwhelm'd, and them with all their pom Deep under water roll'd; fea cover'd fea Sea without fhore Milton's Paradife Loff The living few, and frequent funerals, the Proclaim'd thy wrath on this forfaken place And now thofe few, who'are return'd again Thy fearching judgments to their dwellings trace Dryden The force of fire afcended firfk on high And took its dawelling in the vaulted fky Dryden's Ovid 2, State of life ; mode of living My duvelling fhall be with the beafts of the field de'e/. Dwe'LL1INGHOUSE 2 /. [from dawe/l an houfe.] - The houfe at which one lives A perfon ought always to be cited at the place g his davellingkoufe, which he has in refpect of hi habitation and ufual refidence; and not at th hotife which he has in refpeét of his eftate, or th place of his birth Ayliffe's Parergon Dwr'LLINGPLACE, #. [ [ dwel place.] The place of refidence an People do often change their dzvellingplaces, an fome muft die, whilft-other fome do grow up int ftrength Spenfer 70 Dwi'NDLE 1. T fhrink . n. [bpman t lof Saxon. bulk little to gro Thy dwindled legs feem crawling to the grave Dryden Proper names, when familiarized in Englith davindle to monofyllables; whereas in other languages they receive a fofter turn, by the addition o a new fyllable Addifon Our drooping days are dwindled down to nought Their period finifh'd ere 'tis well begun. Thomfon 2. To degenerate; to fink *Tis now dwindled down to light frothy ftuff Norris ¥f there have been fuch a gradual diminutio of the generative faculty of the earth, thatit hat dwindled from nobler animals to puny mice an infelts, why was there not the like decay in th production of vegetables Bentley He found the expedted council was dwindlin into a conventicle, a packed aflembly of Italia bifhops, not a freec conventio of fathers Arterbury Religious focieties, though begun with excellent intentions, are faid to have dwwindled int faétious clubs 3. To wear away grow feeble 4. T fall away moulder off to be diminifhe Under Greenvil, there were nl fi e hundreg foot and three hundred horfe l ft; the regt Were dwindled away Clarendyy Dye Dx'rng See Dik The participle of die 1. Expiring ; giving up the ghoft 2. Tinging ; giving a new colour Dy'nastY. 2 /. [dovasehn.] Government fovereignty Some account him fabulous, becaufe h carrie up the Egyptian dynafties before the flood, yea, andlong before the creation Hale's Origin of Mankind Greece was divided into feveral dynaffies, which our author ha princes enumerate under theijr refpectiv Pope Dy'scrasy. #. /. [voreasln.] An up equal mixture of elements in the bloo or mnervous juice; a diftemperature when fome humour or quality abound in the body In this pituitou vomi fions dyferafy of blood, we mug off the pituita, and purge upon intermif. Floyer on the Humogrs Dyse'NTERY fro )i 2. dvoeyregiz. [dyfenterie, French A loofenefs, wherei very ill humours flow off by ftool, and are alfo fometimes attended with blood Difl From an unufual inconftancy of the weather and perpetual changes of the wind from eaft t weft, proceed epidemical dyfenterics. Arbuth. on i Dyspepsy. z [ [Qvomedin. A difficult of digeftion, or bad fermentation in th ftomach or guts D& Dy'sruoxy. n [ [Jvopusie.] A difficult in fpeaking, occafioned by an ill difpoSwift fition of the organs oo Dig to lofe health; t DyspNO'EA. 2./. [Momvoie Weary fev'nnights nine times nine Shall he dwindle Phyficians, with their milky chegy The love-fick maid and dwindling beay r p i W peak and pinc Shake[peare's Macheth. We fee, that fome fmall part of the foot bein injured by a wrench or a blow, the whole leg o thigh thereby lofes its ftrength and nourithment and dwindles away Locke A difficalt of breathing; ftraitnefs of breath Dy' sury. 7 /. [dvosgle.] A difficultyi making urine .‘i Th' It doth end in a dyfentery, pains of the hzmor rhoids, inflammation ‘ T of any of the lower parts diabetes, a continual piffing, or a hot dyfury, difficulty of making water Harugy B Titwe By Tha T | f b | W |