manifestedst

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Verb

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manifestedst

  1. (archaic) second-person singular simple past indicative of manifest
    • a. 1656?, Joseph Hall, The Works of the Right Reverend Father in God, Joseph Hall, D.D., Successively Bishop of Exeter and Norwich: Now First Collected. [], volume III (Paraphrase on Hard Texts, from Genesis to Daniel), London: [] C. Whittingham, []; for Williams and Smith, [], published 1808, page 215:
      The Lord shall send the sceptre of thy power, O Saviour, from out of Zion and Jerusalem, where thou first manifestedst thy glory, into all the coasts of the earth; []
    • 1707, Hero Sibersma, translated by John Hofman, The Glory of God Most Brightly Manifested at the Danube, Shining Forth in Like Splendour at Ramellies & Barcelona, and No Less Conspicuous at Turin; in Several Most Signal Victories Obtained by the Confœderates over the Arms of the French King. [], London: [] Thomas Parkhurst, [], and Wm. Marshall, [], and James Benwicke, [], page 81:
      Thou manifeſtedſt Thy Glory at the Danube, and haſt now again made bare Thine Arm at the Dile, and Thy Right-hand at the Po; ſo that the Rivers utter Thy Praiſe, and the Streams of Water Thy Honour: []
    • 1788, [Claude-Étienne] Savary (unknown translator), Letters on Greece; Being a Sequel to Letters on Egypt, and Containing Travels Through Rhodes, Crete, and Other Islands of the Archipelago; with Comparative Remarks on Their Ancient and Present State, and Observations on the Government, Character, and Manners, of the Turks, and Modern Greeks, London: [] G. G. J. and J. Robinson, [], page 267:
      O Lord, who didſt condeſcend to be preſent at the wedding of Cana, where, by changing of water into wine, thou manifeſtedſt thy glory to thy diſciples, ſend now thy holy Spirit on this wine, and bleſs it in thy name.
    • 1791 October 10, James Brandwood, Letters and Extracts of Letters of the Late James Brandwood, (a Minister in the Society of Friends,) of West-Houghton, Formerly of Edgworth, in the County of Lancaster, Manchester: [] Henry Smith, [], for John Bradshaw, [], published 1828, pages 40–41:
      Since we were together at ⸺, I have often remembered thee with no small esteem, particularly for the candour and freedom which thou manifestedst towards me, then a stranger.
    • a. 1796, John Gillies, transl., The New Testament of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ; with Devotional Reflections, London: [] Richard Edwards, [], published 1810, page 323:
      By the miracle thou performedst on this occasion, it is said, thou manifestedst forth thy glory, and thy disciples believed on thee.
    • a. 1802, Alexander Geddes, transl., A New Translation of the Book of Psalms, from the Original Hebrew; with Various Readings and Notes, London: [] for J. Johnson, [], by Richard Taylor and Co., [], published 1807, page 141:
      Thou art a God, working wonders! among the nations thou manifeſtedſt thy power.
    • 1842, J. Stevenson, transl., Translation of the Sanhitá of the Sáma Veda, London: [] the Oriental Translation Fund of Great Britain and Ireland, page 7:
      O Agni, the source of manifold irradiations; O divinity encircled with unsullied splendour, as thou manifestedst thy glory in Bharadwája Rĭshi, so, O possessor of riches, our purifier, ever-young, do thou irradiate me.
    • a. 1847, Thomas Chalmers, edited by William Hanna, Posthumous Works of the Rev. Thomas Chalmers, D.D. LL.D., volume V, [] for Thomas Constable by Sutherland and Knox, Edinburgh. Hamilton, Adams, and Co., London, published 1848, page 45:
      In old times Thou manifestedst Thyself in an extraordinary way, even to those in the humble and domestic walks of life—as to Rachel and Rebekah, whom Thou endowedst with a certain measure of prophetic illumination.