Emily Dickinson Lexicon
Dictionary: DIS-EAS'ED – DIS-EM-BOD'Y-ING
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DIS-EAS'ED, pp. [or a.; dize'zed.]
Disordered; distempered; sick.
DIS-EAS'ED-NESS, n. [dize'zedness.]
The state of being diseased; a morbid state; sickness. – Burnet.
DIS-EASE'FUL, a. [dize'zeful.]
- Abounding with disease; producing diseases; as, a diseaseful climate.
- Occasioning uneasiness.
DIS-EASE'MENT, n. [dize'zement.]
Uneasiness; inconvenience. – Bacon.
DIS-EAS'ING, ppr.
Disordering; infecting.
DIS-EDG'ED, a. [dis and edge.]
Blunted; made dull. – Shak.
DIS-EM-BARK', v.i.
To land; to debark; to quit a ship for residence or action on shore; as, the light infantry and cavalry disembarked, and marched to meet the enemy.
DIS-EM-BARK', v.t. [dis and embark; Fr. desembarquer.]
To land; to debark; to remove from on board a ship to the land; to put on shore; applied particularly to the landing of troops and military apparatus; as, the general disembarked the troops at sun-rise.
DIS-EM-BARK'ED, pp.
Landed; put on shore.
DIS-EM-BARK'ING, ppr.
Landing; removing from on board a ship to land.
DIS-EM-BARK'MENT, n.
The act of disembarking.
DIS-EM-BAR'RASS, v.t. [dis and embarrass.]
To free from embarrassment or perplexity; to clear; to extricate. – Mason.
DIS-EM-BAR'RASS-ED, pp.
Freed from embarrassment; extricated from difficulty.
DIS-EM-BAR'RASS-ING, ppr.
Freeing from embarrassment or perplexity; extricating.
The act of extricating from perplexity.
DIS-EM-BAY', v.t.
To clear from a bay. – Sherburne.
DIS-EM-BAY'ED, pp.
Cleared from a bay.
DIS-EM-BAY'ING, ppr.
Clearing from a bay.
Deprived of embellishment.
DIS-EM-BIT'TER, v.t. [dis and embitter.]
To free from bitterness; to clear from acrimony; to render sweet or pleasant. – Addison.
DIS-EM-BIT'TER-ED, pp.
Freed from bitterness.
DIS-EM-BO-CHURE, n. [Fr. embouchure, from bouche, mouth.]
The mouth of a river, or discharge of the waters of a river. – Schoolcraft.
DIS-EM-BOD'I-ED, a. [dis and embodied.]
- Divested of the body; as, disembodied spirits or souls.
- Separated; discharged from keeping in a body. – Militia Act, Geo. III.
DIS-EM-BOD'Y, v.t.
- To divest of body; to free from flesh.
- To discharge from military array.
DIS-EM-BOD'Y-ING, ppr.
Divesting of body.