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Word Meanings - INDIGNIFY - Book Publishers vocabulary database

To treat disdainfully or with indignity; to contemn. Spenser.

Related words: (words related to INDIGNIFY)

  • TREATMENT
    1. The act or manner of treating; management; manipulation; handling; usage; as, unkind treatment; medical treatment. 2. Entertainment; treat. Accept such treatment as a swain affords. Pope.
  • CONTEMNER
    One who contemns; a despiser; a scorner. "Contemners of the gods." South.
  • TREATABLY
    In a treatable manner.
  • TREAT
    To care for medicinally or surgically; to manage in the use of remedies or appliances; as, to treat a disease, a wound, or a patient. 6. To subject to some action; to apply something to; as, to treat a substance with sulphuric acid. Ure.
  • TREATER
    One who treats; one who handles, or discourses on, a subject; also, one who entertains.
  • CONTEMN
    To view or treat with contempt, as mean and despicable; to reject with disdain; to despise; to scorn. Thy pompous delicacies I contemn. Milton. One who contemned divine and human laws. Dryden. Syn. -- To despise; scorn; disdain; spurn;
  • TREATURE
    Treatment. Fabyan.
  • INDIGNITY
    Any action toward another which manifests contempt for him; an offense against personal dignity; unmerited contemptuous treatment; contumely; incivility or injury, accompanied with insult. How might a prince of my great hopes forget So
  • TREATABLE
    Manageable; tractable; hence, moderate; not violent. " A treatable disposition, a strong memory." R. Parr. A kind of treatable dissolution. Hooker. The heats or the colds of seasons are less treatable than with us. Sir W. Temple.
  • TREATISER
    One who writes a treatise.
  • CONTEMNINGLY
    Contemptuously.
  • SPENSERIAN
    Of or pertaining to the English poet Spenser; -- specifically applied to the stanza used in his poem "The Faƫrie Queene."
  • TREATY
    tractatus; cf. L. tractatus a handling, treatment, consultation, 1. The act of treating for the adjustment of differences, as for forming an agreement; negotiation. "By sly and wise treaty." Chaucer. He cast by treaty and by trains Her to persuade.
  • TREATISE
    1. A written composition on a particular subject, in which its principles are discussed or explained; a tract. Chaucer. He published a treatise in which he maintained that a marriage between a member of the Church of England and a dissenter was
  • RETREATFUL
    Furnishing or serving as a retreat. "Our retreatful flood." Chapman.
  • ENTREATY
    1. Treatment; reception; entertainment. B. Jonson. 2. The act of entreating or beseeching; urgent prayer; earnest petition; pressing solicitation. Fair entreaty, and sweet blandishment. Spenser. Syn. -- Solicitation; request; suit; supplication;
  • RETREATMENT
    The act of retreating; specifically, the Hegira. D'Urfey.
  • DISPENSER
    One who, or that which, dispenses; a distributer; as, a dispenser of favors.
  • MALTREATMENT
    Ill treatment; ill usage; abuse.
  • ENTREATFUL
    Full of entreaty. See Intreatful.
  • INTREAT
    See SPENSER
  • MISTREAT
    To treat amiss; to abuse.
  • MISENTREAT
    To treat wrongfully. Grafton.
  • INTREATABLE
    Not to be entreated; inexorable.
  • MALTREAT
    To treat ill; to abuse; to treat roughly.
  • ENTREAT
    1. To treat, or conduct toward; to deal with; to use. Fairly let her be entreated. Shak. I will cause the enemy to entreat thee well. Jer. xv. 11. 2. To treat with, or in respect to, a thing desired; hence, to ask earnestly; to beseech; to petition

 

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