deprostrate

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English

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Etymology

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From de-prostrate, with de- as an intensifier.

Adjective

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deprostrate (comparative more deprostrate, superlative most deprostrate)

  1. (Early Modern, obsolete, poetic, rare) Fully prostrate; humble; low.
    • 1610, Giles Fletcher, Christs Victorie, and Triumph in Heauen, and Earth, over, and after death[1], stanza 43, page 13:
      How may weake mortall euer hope to file / His vnsmooth tongue, and his deprostrate stile?
    • 1620 September 10, George Langford, Manassehs Miracvlovs Metamorphosis [][2], published 1621, page 21:
      Hitherto you haue seene Manasses, not with Lots wife, trãsform’d into a pillar of Salt, but with the Poets Niobe, into a weeping and waimenting stone: now shall you see him with an humble and lowly heart, raising his ruined soule, deprest with sinne, deprostrate for sinne; lifting vp his bleared eyes, streaming with teares, swelling for sorrow []
    • c. 1621, Thomas Robinson, edited by H. Oskar Sommer, The Life and Death of Mary Magdalene, published 1899, stanza 10, page 12:
      The nations came to her deprostrate bed

References

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