demiss
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]- demisse (obsolete)
Etymology
[edit]From Latin dēmissus, past participle of dēmittō (“demit”).
Adjective
[edit]demiss (comparative more demiss, superlative most demiss)
- (archaic) Humble, lowly; abject.
- 1595, Barnabe Barnes, A Divine Centurie of Spirituall Sonnets[1], London: John Windet, Sonnet 31:
- Oh that I had whole westerne windes of breath,
My voice and tongue should not bee so remisse:
My notes should not bee so rare and demisse:
- 1660, Samuel Clarke, The Lives of Two and Twenty English Divines, London: Thomas Underhill and John Rothwell, “The Life and Death of Master William Bradshaw,” pp. 45-46,[2]
- […] Master Bradshaw was not a man of much out side, nor forward to put out himself, of a very bashfull and demiss, but not fawning deportment […]