abject
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abject englanniksi
Existing in or sunk to a low condition, position, or state; contemptible, despicable, miserable. (defdate)
(synonyms)
(antonyms)
(RQ:Nashe Pierce Penilesse), they are alwaies mounted but neuer moue.
(RQ:Drayton Poly-Olbion)
(RQ:Milton Paradise Lost)
(RQ:Milton Samson)
(RQ:Fielding Amelia)
(RQ:Macaulay Edinburgh Review), and (w), and (w).
(quote-journal)
(ux)
(RQ:Macaulay History of England)
(RQ:Stevenson Dynamiter)
(RQ:Miller Gardeners Dictionary)
Of a person: down in hope or spirit; showing utter helplessness, hopelessness, or resignation; also, grovelling; ingratiating; servile. (defdate)
(RQ:Shakespeare Taming of the Shrew)
(RQ:Shakespeare Henry 4-2)
(RQ:Browne Religio Medici)
(RQ:Addison Works)
(RQ:Smollett Humphry Clinker)
(RQ:Burke Revolution in France)
(quote-book)|location2=New York, N.Y.|publisher2=(publisher)|Harcourt, Brace and Company|edition2=revised|year2=1931|page2=228|pageurl2=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.225852/page/n240/mode/1up|oclc2=1298800855|passage=We shall not always plant while others reap / The golden increment of bursting fruit, / Not always countenance, abject and mute / That lesser men should hold their brothers cheap; (..)
(RQ:Faulkner Sanctuary)
Marginalized as deviant.
(quote-book)
A person in the lowest and most despicable condition; an oppressed person; an outcast; also, such people as a class. (defdate)
(RQ:Tyndale NT)
(RQ:Shakespeare Richard 3 Q1)
(RQ:Shakespeare Troilus and Cressida) if you giue vvay, / Or hedge aſide from the direct forth right; / Like to an entred Tyde, they all ruſh by, / And leaue you hindmoſt: / Or like a gallant Horſe falne in firſt ranke, / Lye there for pauement to the abiect, neere / Ore-run and trampled on: (..)
(RQ:King James Version)
(RQ:Herbert Temple)
(RQ:Shelley Prometheus Unbound)
(RQ:Scott Devorgoil Auchindrane)
(quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Holdsworth and Ball|year=1832|page=414|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=5EVfAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA414|oclc=2619891|passage=Let us look then to the widely-severed ranks of an Asiatic empire.—There is first its wretched and vilified class, upon which the superincumbent structure of the social system presses so heavily as almost to crush existence; (..) Shall these abjects—these victims—these outcasts, know any thing of pleasure?
To off or out (someone or something); to reject, especially as contemptible or inferior. (defdate)
(RQ:Speed Historie of Great Britaine)|page=848|column=1|para=104|passage=(..) ''Dauid'' durſt not touch ''(w)'', though he vvas abiected by God.
To cast down (someone or something); to abase; to debase; to degrade; to lower; also, to forcibly impose obedience or servitude upon (someone); to subjugate. (defdate)
(RQ:Donne Works)'s humble expressing of himself to (w)?
(l), (l), (l)
Worthy of utmost contempt or disgust; vile; despicable
of the lowest social position
(l)