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dengan ncg to
dengan (ncg) to beat, strike , NC 281.
— from A Concise Anglo-Saxon Dictionary For the Use of Students by J. R. Clark (John R. Clark) Hall

Despair not then
Despair not then, faint not at all, be not dejected, but rely on God, call on him an thy trouble, and he will hear thee, he will assist, help, and deliver thee: Draw near to Him, he will draw near to thee,
— from The Anatomy of Melancholy by Robert Burton

Dwyfroneg n the
black, sable; gloomy Duad, n. a blacking; a bay in a building; length of plough land Duch, n. a sigh; a groan Duchan, n. a lampoon; a jeer Duchaniad, n. a lampooning Duchanol, a. lampooning Duchanu, v. to lampoon Duder, n. darkness; gloom Dudew, a. thick black Duedd, n. blackness gloom Dueg, n. melancholy Dug, n. that is over; a duke Duges, n. a duchess Dugiaeth, n. a dukedom Dugiol, a. belonging to a duke Duglais, n. a black stripe Duglwyd, n. the restharrow Dul, n. bang, thump Dulaid, n. a thumping Dulas, a. blackish blue Dulio, v. to bang, to thump Duloew, a. of shining black Dulwyd, n. dusky colour Dulyn, n. black water; melancholy; Dublin Dulys, n. lovage, an herb Dull, n. figure, shape, farm, manner; pattern Dulliad, n. formation Dulliedig, a. formed, modified Dullio, v. to form, to shape Dullnewid, v. to transfigure Dullnewidiad, transfiguration Dullwedd, n. style Duo, v. to blacken; to darken Dur, n. hard matter; steel Duraidd, a. of steely nature Durdeb, n. steeliness; solidity Duren, n. a steel to strike fire Durew, n. a black frost Durf, n. what is dense Durfin, a. dense, close hard Durfing, a. dense; austere Duriad, n. a steeling Durio, v. to steel; to edge Duro, a. of steel; solid, dense Duryn, n. a beak, a snout Durynog, a. beaked, snouted Duw, n. God, the Deity Duwdeb, n. divinity Duwdod, n. Godhead Duwiaeth, n. deism, Godhead Duwies, n. a goddess Duwin, a. of divine nature Duwindeb, n. divine nature Duwineb, n. divinity Duwinydd, n. a theologian, a divine Duwinyddiaeth, theology Duwiol, a. godly, pious Duwiolaeth, n. theocracy Duwioldeb, n. godliness, piety Duwioli, v. to deify Duwioliad, n. deification Dwb, n. mortar, cement Dwbiad, n. a daubing Dwbio, v. to daub, to plaster Dwbiwr, n. plasterer Dwbl, a. twofold, double Dwf, n. what glides; a glider Dwfn, a. deep Dwfr, n. water Dwg, n. a bearing, a carrying Dwgan, n. a trull, a trab Dŵl, n. reason, judgement Dwlw, n. action of the mind Dwll, n. an overspread Dwn, n. a murmur; bass: a. dun, swarthy, dusky Dwnad, n. report, rumour Dwndriad, n. a prating Dwndro, v. to prate, to chat Dwndwr, n. prating, tattle Dwned, v. to express, to say Dwr, n. a fluid; water Dwrd, n. a threat; a chiding Dwrdiad, n. a chiding Dwrdio, v. to chide; to threaten Dwrdiol, a. chiding Dwrdd, n. a rustle, a stir Dwrn, n. a fist; a hand Dws, n. what oozes out Dwsel, n. a faucet, a tap Dwthwn, n. a juncture; day Dwy, n. a cause; rule, order; two Dwyadeiniog, a. having two wings Dwyar, n. stirrups Dwydon, n. a dipthong Dwydalenog, a. bipetalous Dwyeg, n. a milt, a spleen Dwyen, n. the gills Dwyf, n. the self-existent Dwyfasglog, a. bivalve Dwyfawg, n. the betany Dwyfed, a. second Dwyfol, a. divine, godly Dwyfolaeth, n. deification Dwyfolder, n. godliness Dwyfoli, v. to deify Dwyfron, n. the breasts Dwyfroneg, n. the breast-plate Dwylaw, n. the two hand Dwyliw, n. two female parties Dwylofaid, the full of both hands Dwylofi, v. to stroke with hands Dwyn, a. agreeable: v. to bear, to carry; to carry away; to steal Dwyndeb, n. pleasantness Dwynol, a. pleasing, agreeable Dwyr, n. the dawn; orient Dwyrain, n. the east: a. abounding with dawnings Dwyran, n. two shores Dwyre, n. a bursting to light: v. to rise, to view Dwyread, n. a rising up Dwyreain, v. to rise, to view Dwyreiniol, a. oriental Dwyreinwynt, n. east wind Dwyreol, a. ortive, surgent Dwys, a. dense, heavy, grave Dwysder, n. density, gravity Dwysiad, n. condensation Dwysill, n. dissyllable Dwyso, v. to condense Dwysogaeth, n. condensation Dwysol, n. condensing Dwyw, n. producing cause Dwywaith, adv. twice Dy, a pref.
— from A Pocket Dictionary: Welsh-English by William Richards

des nouvelles technologies
Elle a donné naissance aux sites suivants: - www.ftpress.com, le site de la société de presse "maîtresse", qui présente le concept, les produits, l'organisation… et les membres de l'équipe, sous forme de portraits très personnels; - www.internetactu.com, le site d'Internet Actu, consacré à l'actualité d'internet et des nouvelles technologies, créé le 9 septembre 1999 sous cette forme-là (mais successeur de LMB Actu (Le Micro Bulletin Actu), qui se trouvait au sein de la Délégation aux systèmes d'information (DSI) du CNRS (Centre national de la recherche scientifique)); - www.pixelactu.com, le site de Pixel Actu, consacré à l'actualité de l'image numérique, créé le 31 janvier 2000; - www.esanteactu.com, le site de eSanté Actu, consacré à l'actualité de la eSanté, à savoir le croisement de la santé (vue par les professionnels du secteur) et d'internet, lancé le 16 mai 2000; - www.lafontaine.net, le site de Jean de la Fontaine, qui présente l'intégralité de son oeuvre, ainsi que plein de dessins, pastiches, enregistrements, et publie quotidiennement "La fable du jour"; - www.commissairetristan.com, le site des Aventures du Commissaire Tristan, le premier cyberpolar online (gratuit), coproduit par FTPress et
— from Entretiens / Interviews / Entrevistas by Marie Lebert

do not transgress
"I am aware of it already," said Don Quixote; "provided what is commanded and imposed upon the vanquished be things that do not transgress the limits of chivalry."
— from Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra

did not trouble
He did not trouble because she was moved sympathetically in the matter.
— from Sister Carrie: A Novel by Theodore Dreiser

drawing near to
“He is a coward, indeed,” grumbled the host, drawing near to d’Artagnan, and endeavoring by this little flattery to make up matters with the young man, as the heron of the fable did with the snail he had despised the evening before.
— from The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas

did not think
She was fit in every way to become his wife, and the highest families of France did not think that she needed the title of Lady Albemarle to be received with distinction; no lady considered it debasing to sit near her, although she was well known as the mistress of the English lord.
— from The Memoirs of Jacques Casanova de Seingalt, 1725-1798. Complete by Giacomo Casanova

did not take
“Where is the residence part?” asked Carrie, who did not take the tall five-story walls on either hand to be the abodes of families.
— from Sister Carrie: A Novel by Theodore Dreiser

did not travel
The elderly lady did not travel in the same compartment, and they did not notice what became of her on reaching the London terminus.
— from The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins

difficulty not to
He came in looking as though he had the utmost difficulty not to burst out laughing again.
— from Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky

did not trust
They did not trust themselves to fall asleep, because they were afraid of their dreams, that is, of the results due to a slackening of the censorship.
— from A General Introduction to Psychoanalysis by Sigmund Freud

did not take
We now engaged an attendant to show us through the Lady Chapel and the other penetralia, which it did not take him long to accomplish.
— from Passages from the English Notebooks, Volume 2. by Nathaniel Hawthorne

day nor the
[Pg 146] “Not to-morrow, nor the next day, nor the next.”
— from Daddy's Girl by L. T. Meade

Doth not the
42 Doth not the scripture say, That the Messiah cometh of the seed of David, and from the town of Bethlehem, whence David originally was?
— from A Translation of the New Testament from the original Greek Humbly Attempted with a View to Assist the Unlearned with Clearer and More Explicit Views of the Mind of the Spirit in the Scriptures of Truth by Thomas Haweis

day nor the
To get the battery off to-morrow--" "It won't get off to-morrow, nor the next day, nor the next.
— from Kincaid's Battery by George Washington Cable

did not take
As we emptied the bottle we yarned together upon various topics; and by and by he made some casual mention of the Marañon , to which I replied by saying that she had the appearance of being rather a fast vessel, and that I thought it a pity that her skipper did not take a little more pride in her appearance and smarten her up a bit by giving her a lick of paint occasionally.
— from The Cruise of the Thetis: A Tale of the Cuban Insurrection by Harry Collingwood

did not take
The crowd without did not take an active part in the fray, but only looked on.
— from The Strange Story of Rab Ráby by Mór Jókai


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