dispiteous
English
Etymology
Variant of despiteous, later reanalysed as dis- + piteous.
Adjective
dispiteous (comparative more dispiteous, superlative most dispiteous)
- (archaic, literary) Not showing mercy or pity.
- c. 1460s, John Hardyng, The Chronicle of Ihon Hardyng in Metre, London: Richard Grafton, 1543, “Rychard the third,”
- […] these .ii. noble princes [wer] by treyterous tiranny taken & depriued of their estate, shortly shut vp in prison & priuely slain & murderd by ye cruell ambicion of their vnnaturall vncle & dispiteous tourmentours […]
- c. 1596, William Shakespeare, “The Life and Death of King Iohn”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, OCLC 606515358, [Act IV, scene i]:
- How now, foolish rheum!
Turning dispiteous torture out of door!
I must be brief, lest resolution drop
Out at mine eyes in tender womanish tears.
- 1851, Thomas Smibert, “The Wallace Wight” in Io Anche! Poems, Chiefly Lyrical, Edinburgh: James Hogg, p. 56,
- O England! when the Wallace Wight was led,
- A fettered wonder, to thy capital,
- How cruel, how dispiteous was his fall!
- 1911, Max Beerbohm, Zuleika Dobson, New York: John Lane, 1912, Chapter 16, p. 252,
- “The unerring owls have hooted. The dispiteous and humorous gods have spoken. […] ”
- 1997, Gretel Ehrlich, Questions of Heaven: The Chinese Journeys of an American Buddhist, Boston: Beacon Press, Chapter 3, pp. 72-73,
- As we began our descent from the mountains, the image of Yi villages threaded together only by footpaths stayed in my mind. Not that they hadn’t been affected by the dispiteous anarchism of the Cultural Revolution, but they lived in relative isolation.
- c. 1460s, John Hardyng, The Chronicle of Ihon Hardyng in Metre, London: Richard Grafton, 1543, “Rychard the third,”
Derived terms
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