despisable
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Middle English despisable, from Old French.
Adjective
[edit]despisable (comparative more despisable, superlative most despisable)
- (archaic) Worthy to be despised.
- c. 1530, uncredited translator, The Dialoges of Creatures Moralysed, Dialogue 110,[1]
- And forasmoche as we be so Noble of owr natyf kynde / let vs pursewe such beastis as be vyle & despisable.
- 1641, Manasseh ben Israel, To His Highnesse the Lord Protector of the Common-wealth […] in behalfe of the Jewish Nation[2], London, page 5:
- the Jewish Nation, though scattered through the whole World, are not therefore a despisable people, but as a Plant worthy to be planted in the whole world
- 1741, Samuel Richardson, Letters Written To and For Particular Friends: on the Most Important Occasions[3], London: C. Rivington, Letter 146, p. 203:
- […] Meekness, Condescension, Forbearance, are so far from being despisable Qualities in our Sex, that they are the Glory of it.
- 1821, James Fenimore Cooper, The Spy, London: G. and W.B. Whittaker, 1822, Volume 1, Chapter 11, p. 297,[4]
- “but now he is nothing more than despisable, or what’s the same thing, a pedlar without house, pack, or money.”
- c. 1530, uncredited translator, The Dialoges of Creatures Moralysed, Dialogue 110,[1]