D is a dental articulation, formed by placing the end of the tongue against the gum just above the upper teeth. It is nearly allied to T, but is not so close a letter, or rather it does not interrupt the voice so suddenly as T, and in forming the articulation, there is a lingual and nasal sound, which has induced some writers to rank D among the lingual letters. It has but one sound, as in do, din, bad; and is never quiescent in English words, except in a rapid utterance of such words as handkerchief. NWAD D.2
As a numeral, D represents five hundred, and when a dash or stroke is placed over it, thus D, it denotes five thousand. NWAD D.3
As an abbreviation, D stands for Doctor; as M.D. Doctor of Medicine; D.T. Doctor of Theology, or S.T.D. Doctor of Sacred Theology; D.D. Doctor of Divinity, or dono dedit. NWAD D.4
1. To strike gently with the hand; to slap; to box. NWAD DAB.2
2. To strike gently with some soft or moist substance; as, to dab a sore with lint. NWAD DAB.3
1. A gentle blow with the hand. NWAD DAB.5
2. A small lump or mass of any thing soft or moist. NWAD DAB.6
3. Something moist or slimy thrown on one. NWAD DAB.7
4. In law language, an expert man. [See Dabster.] NWAD DAB.8
5. A small flat fish, of the genus Pleuronectes, of a dark brown color. NWAD DAB.9
1. To play in water; to dip the hands, throw water and splash about; to play in mud and water. NWAD DABBLE.3
2. To do any thing in a slight or superficial manner; to tamper; to touch here and there. NWAD DABBLE.4
You have, I think, been dabbling with the text. Atterbury. NWAD DABBLE.5
3. To meddle; to dip into a concern. NWAD DABBLE.6
1. One who plays in water or mud. NWAD DABBLER.2
2. One who dips slightly into any thing; one who meddles, without going to the bottom; a superficial meddler; as a dabbler in politics. NWAD DABBLER.3
1. Various; variegated. NWAD DAEDAL.2
2. Skilful. NWAD DAEDAL.3
1. a loose end, as of locks of wool; called also dag-locks. NWAD DAG.4
2. A leather latchet. NWAD DAG.5
1. To daggle. NWAD DAG.7
2. To cut into slips. NWAD DAG.8
1. A short sword; a poniard. NWAD DAGGER.2
2. In fencing schools, a blunt blade of iron with a basket hilt, used for defense. NWAD DAGGER.3
3. With printers, and obelisk, or obelus, a mark of reference in the form of a dagger. NWAD DAGGER.4
Give us this day our daily bread. [Lord’s Prayer] NWAD DAILY.2
1. Nicely; elegantly; as a hat daintily made. NWAD DAINTILY.2
2. Nicely; fastidiously; with nice regard to what is well tasted; as, to eat daintily. NWAD DAINTILY.3
3. Deliciously; as, to fare daintily. NWAD DAINTILY.4
4. Ceremoniously; scrupulously. NWAD DAINTILY.5
1. Delicacy; softness; elegance; nicety; as the daintiness of the limbs. NWAD DAINTINESS.2
2. Delicacy; deliciousness; applied to food; as the daintiness of provisions. NWAD DAINTINESS.3
3. Nicety in taste; squeamishness; fastidiousness; as the daintiness of the taste. NWAD DAINTINESS.4
4. Ceremoniousness; scrupulousness; nice attention to manners. NWAD DAINTINESS.5
1. Nice; pleasing to the palate; of exquisite taste; delicious; as dainty food. NWAD DAINTY.2
2. Delicate; of acute sensibility; nice in selecting what is tender and good; squeamish; soft; luxurious; as a dainty taste or palate; a dainty people. NWAD DAINTY.3
3. Scrupulous in manners; ceremonious. NWAD DAINTY.4
4. Elegant; tender; soft; pure; neat; effeminately beautiful; as dainty hands or limbs. NWAD DAINTY.5
5. Nice; affectedly fine; as a dainty speaker. NWAD DAINTY.6
1. Something nice and delicate to the taste; that which is exquisitely delicious; a delicacy. NWAD DAINTY.8
Be not desirous of dainties, for they are deceitful meat. Proverbs 23:3 NWAD DAINTY.9
2. A term of fondness. NWAD DAINTY.10
Why, that’s my dainty. Shak. NWAD DAINTY.11
1. Milk, and all that concerns it, on a farm; or the business of managing milk, and of making butter and cheese. The whole establishment respecting milk, in a family, or on a farm. NWAD DAIRY.2
2. The place, room or house, where milk is set for cream, managed, and converted into butter or cheese. NWAD DAIRY.3
3. Milk-farm. NWAD DAIRY.4
1. Literally, delay; a lingering; appropriately, acts of fondness; interchange of caresses; toying, as males and females; as youthful dalliance. NWAD DALLIANCE.2
2. Conjugal embraces; commerce of the sexes. NWAD DALLIANCE.3
3. Delay. NWAD DALLIANCE.4
1. Literally, to delay; to linger; to wait. Hence. NWAD DALLY.2
2. To trifle; to lose time in idleness and trifles; to amuse one’s self with idle play. NWAD DALLY.3
It is madness to dally any longer. Calamy. NWAD DALLY.4
3. To toy and wanton, as man and woman; to interchange caresses; to fondle. NWAD DALLY.5
4. To sport; to play. NWAD DALLY.6
She dallies with the wind. Shak. NWAD DALLY.7
1. A female parent; used of beasts, particularly of quadrupeds. NWAD DAM.2
2. A human mother, in contempt. NWAD DAM.3
3. A crowned man in the game of draughts. NWAD DAM.4
1. To make a dam, or to stop a stream of water by a bank of earth, or by any other work; to confine or shut in water. It is common to use, after the verb, in, up, or out; as, to dam in, or to dam up, the water, and to dam out is to prevent water from entering. NWAD DAM.7
2. To confine or restrain from escaping; to shut in. NWAD DAM.8
1. Any hurt, injury or harm to one’s estate; any loss of property sustained; any hinderance to the increase of property; or any obstruction to the success of an enterprise. A man suffers damage by the destruction of his corn, by the burning of his house, by the detention of a ship which defeats a profitable voyage, or by the failure of a profitable undertaking. Damage then is any actual loss, or the prevention of profit. It is usually and properly applied to property, but sometimes to reputation and other things which are valuable. But in the latter case, injury is more correctly used. NWAD DAMAGE.2
2. The value of what is lost; the estimated equivalent for detriment or injury sustained; that which is given or adjudged to repair a loss. This is the legal signification of the word. It is the province of a jury to assess damages in trespass. In this sense, the word is generally used in the plural. NWAD DAMAGE.3
1. That may be injured or impaired; susceptible of damage; as damageable goods. NWAD DAMAGEABLE.2
2. Hurtful; pernicious. NWAD DAMAGEABLE.3
1. A particular kind of plum, now pronounced damson, which see. NWAD DAMASCENE.2
2. It may be locally applied to other species of plums. NWAD DAMASCENE.3
1. A silk stuff, having some parts raised above the ground, representing flowers and other figures; originally from Damascus. NWAD DAMASK.2
2. A kind of wrought linen, made in Flanders, in imitation of damask silks. NWAD DAMASK.3
3. Red color, from the damask-rose. NWAD DAMASK.4
Damask-steel, is a fine steel from the Levant, chiefly from Damascus, used for sword and cutlas blades. NWAD DAMASK.5
1. To form flowers on stuffs; also, to variegate; to diversify; as, a bank damasked with flowers. NWAD DAMASK.7
2. To adorn steel-work with figures. [See Damaskeen.] NWAD DAMASK.8
1. To sentence to eternal torments in a future state; to punish in hell. NWAD DAMN.2
2. To condemn; to decide to be wrong or worthy of punishment; to censure; to reprobate. NWAD DAMN.3
He that doubteth is damned if he eat. Romans 14:23. NWAD DAMN.4
3. To condemn; to explode; to decide to be bad, mean, or displeasing, be hissing or any mark of disapprobation; as, to damn a play, or a mean author. NWAD DAMN.5
4. A word used in profaneness; a term of execration. NWAD DAMN.6
1. That may be damned or condemned; deserving damnation; worthy of eternal punishment. More generally, that which subjects or renders liable to damnation. NWAD DAMNABLE.2
As damnable heresies. 2 Peter 2:1. NWAD DAMNABLE.3
2. In a low or ludicrous sense, odious, detestable, or pernicious. NWAD DAMNABLE.4
1. In a manner to incur eternal punishment, or so as to exclude mercy. NWAD DAMNABLY.2
2. In a low sense, odiously; detestably; sometimes, excessively. NWAD DAMNABLY.3
1. Sentence or condemnation to everlasting punishment in the future state; or the state of eternal torments. NWAD DAMNATION.2
How can ye escape the damnation of hell. Matthew 23:33 NWAD DAMNATION.3
2. Condemnation. NWAD DAMNATION.4
1. Sentenced to everlasting punishment in a future state; condemned. NWAD DAMNED.2
2. a. Hateful; detestable; abominable; NWAD DAMNED.3
A word chiefly used in profaneness by persons of vulgar manners. NWAD DAMNED.4
1. To cause loss or damage to; to hurt in estate or interest; to injure; to endamage; as, to damnify a man in his goods or estate. NWAD DAMNIFY.2
2. To hurt; to injure; to impair; applied to a person. NWAD DAMNIFY.3
1. Dooming to endless punishment; condemning. NWAD DAMNING.2
2. a. That condemns or exposes to damnation; as a damning sin. NWAD DAMNING.3
1. Moist; humid; being in a state between dry and wet; as a damp cloth; damp air; sometimes, foggy; as, the atmosphere is damp; but it may be damp without visible vapor. NWAD DAMP.2
2. Dejected; sunk; depressed; chilled. NWAD DAMP.3
1. Moist air; humidity; moisture; fog. NWAD DAMP.5
2. Dejection; depression of spirits; chill. We say, to strike a damp, or to cast a damp, on the spirits. NWAD DAMP.6
3. Damps. plu. Noxious exhalations issuing from the earth, and deleterious or fatal to animal life. These are often known to exist in wells, which continue long covered and not used, and in mines and coal-pits; and sometimes they issue from the old lavas of volcanoes. These damps are usually the carbonic acid gas, vulgarly called choke-damp, which instantly suffocates; or some inflammable gas, called fire-damp. NWAD DAMP.7
1. To moisten; to make humid, or moderately wet. NWAD DAMP.9
2. To chill; to deaden; to depress or deject; to abate; as, to damp the spirits; to damp the ardor of passion. NWAD DAMP.10
3. To weaken; to make dull; as, to damp sound. NWAD DAMP.11
4. To check or restrain, as action or vigor; to make languid; to discourage; as, to damp industry. NWAD DAMP.12
1. That which damps or checks; a valve or sliding plate in a furnace to stop or lessen the quantity of air admitted, and thus to regulate the heat or extinguish the fire. NWAD DAMPER.2
2. A part of a piano-forte, by which the sound is deadened. NWAD DAMPER.3
With her train of damsels she was gone. Dryden. NWAD DAMSEL.2
Then Boaz said, whose damsel is this? Ruth 2:5. NWAD DAMSEL.3
This word is rarely used in conversation, or even in prose writings of the present day; but it occurs frequently in the scriptures, and in poetry. NWAD DAMSEL.4
1. Primarily, to leap or spring; hence, to leap or move with measured steps, regulated by a tune, sung or played on a musical instrument; to leap or step with graceful motions of the body, corresponding with the sound of the voice or an instrument. NWAD DANCE.2
There is a time to mourn, and a time to dance. Ecclesiastes 3:4. NWAD DANCE.3
2. To leap and frisk about; to move nimbly or up and down. NWAD DANCE.4
To dance attendance, to wait with obsequiousness; to strive to please and gain favor by assiduous attentions and officious civilities; as, to dance attendance at court. NWAD DANCE.5
1. In general sense, a leaping and frisking about. Appropriately, a leaping or stepping with motions of the body adjusted to the measure of a tune, particularly by two or more in concert. A lively brisk exercise or amusement, in which the movements of the persons are regulated by art, in figure, and by the sound of instruments, in measure. NWAD DANCE.8
2. A tune by which dancing is regulated, as the minuet, the waltz, the cotillon, etc. NWAD DANCE.9
1. To shake or jolt on the knee, as an infant; to move up and down in the hand; literally, to amuse by play. NWAD DANDLE.2
Ye shall be dandled on her knees. Isaiah 66:12. NWAD DANDLE.3
2. To fondle; to amuse; to treat as a child; to toy with. NWAD DANDLE.4
I am ashamed to be dandled thus. Addison. NWAD DANDLE.5
3. To delay; to protract by trifles. NWAD DANDLE.6