deemed, demed, III, 61, 95: judged. III, 356, 35: condemned.

deen, I, 16, C 18; II, 182 a; 409, 18, 19: done (with no sense in 19).

deerlye (dight), III, 340, 28, 36: expensively (ornamented). III, 356, 16, 31, 35: perhaps, with great cost to the sufferer, possibly, to his hurt; lovingly, out of love, would answer in the first two cases, but not in the third.

deft, III, 145, 3: neat, nice-looking.

degree, III, 323, 58; IV, 258, 20: rank, sort. served him in his ain degree, V, [191], 19; [193], 57: rendered him respect accordant with his rank. wee shall beare no degree, III, 333, 19: shall have no position, standing. (requite, thank, show) in euerye degree, V, [84] f., 9, 14, 27: to the full extent demanded by the occasion.

deid, I, 105, 26; 353, 13: death. See dead.

deighte, IV, 504, 29: dight, furnished, adorned, equipped.

delated, III, 449 a, b; IV, 63 b: accused.

dell, V, [79], 32: deal, bit, whit.

dell, II, 345, 29: we are apparently to understand that it was a dismal dell that brought James into the world (not in itself, but from the melancholy fact of his being born there). Possibly we may understand dell ==dule, affliction. But the piece is spurious, and we need not be nice.