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2 definitions found
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Cry
,
v. t.
1.
To
utter
loudly
;
to
call
out
;
to
shout
;
to
sound
abroad
;
to
declare
publicly
.
All
,
all
,
cry
shame
against
ye
,
yet
I
'
ll
speak
.
--
Shak
.
The
man
. . .
ran
on,
crying
,
Life
!
life
!
Eternal
life!
--
Bunyan
.
2.
To
cause
to
do
something
,
or
bring
to
some
state
,
by
crying
or
weeping
;
as
,
to
cry
one's
self
to
sleep
.
3.
To
make
oral
and
public
proclamation
of
;
to
declare
publicly
;
to
notify
or
advertise
by
outcry
,
especially
things
lost
or
found
,
goods
to
be
sold
,
ets
.;
as
,
to
cry
goods
,
etc
.
Love
is
lost
,
and
thus
she
cries
him
.
--
Crashaw
.
4.
Hence
,
to
publish
the
banns
of
,
as
for
marriage
.
I
should
not
be
surprised
if
they
were
cried
in
church
next
Sabbath
.
--
Judd
.
To cry aim
.
See
under
Aim
.
To cry down
,
to
decry
;
to
depreciate
;
to
dispraise
;
to
condemn
.
Men
of
dissolute
lives
cry down
religion
,
because
they
would
not
be
under
the
restraints
of
it
.
--
Tillotson
.
To cry out
,
to
proclaim
;
to
shout
.
“Your
gesture
cries
it
out
.”
--
Shak
.
To cry quits
,
to
propose
,
or
declare
,
the
abandonment
of
a
contest
.
To cry up
,
to
enhance
the
value
or
reputation
of
by
public
and
noisy
praise
;
to
extol
;
to
laud
publicly
or
urgently
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Down
,
adv.
1.
In
the
direction
of
gravity
or
toward
the
center
of
the
earth
;
toward
or
in
a
lower
place
or
position
;
below
; --
the
opposite
of
up
.
2.
Hence
,
in
many
derived
uses
,
as
:
(a)
From
a
higher
to
a
lower
position
,
literally
or
figuratively
;
in
a
descending
direction
;
from
the
top
of
an
ascent
;
from
an
upright
position
;
to
the
ground
or
floor
;
to
or
into
a
lower
or
an
inferior
condition
;
as
,
into
a
state
of
humility
,
disgrace
,
misery
,
and
the
like
;
into
a
state
of
rest
; --
used
with
verbs
indicating
motion
.
It
will
be
rain
to-night
.
Let
it
come
down
.
--
Shak
.
I
sit
me
down
beside
the
hazel
grove
.
--
Tennyson
.
And
that
drags
down
his
life
.
--
Tennyson
.
There
is
not
a
more
melancholy
object
in
the
learned
world
than
a
man
who
has
written
himself
down
.
--
Addison
.
The
French
. . .
shone
down
[
i
.
e
.,
outshone
]
the
English
.
--
Shak
.
(b)
In
a
low
or
the
lowest
position
,
literally
or
figuratively
;
at
the
bottom
of
a
descent
;
below
the
horizon
;
on
the
ground
;
in
a
condition
of
humility
,
dejection
,
misery
,
and
the
like
;
in
a
state
of
quiet
.
I
was
down
and
out
of
breath
.
--
Shak
.
The
moon
is
down
;
I
have
not
heard
the
clock
.
--
Shak
.
He
that
is
down
needs
fear
no
fall
.
--
Bunyan
.
3.
From
a
remoter
or
higher
antiquity
.
Venerable
men
!
you
have
come
down
to
us
from
a
former
generation
.
--
D
.
Webster
.
4.
From
a
greater
to
a
less
bulk
,
or
from
a
thinner
to
a
thicker
consistence
;
as
,
to
boil
down
in
cookery
,
or
in
making
decoctions
.
Note:
☞
Down
is
sometimes
used
elliptically
,
standing
for
go
down
,
come
down
,
tear
down
,
take
down
,
put
down
,
haul
down
,
pay
down
,
and
the
like
,
especially
in
command
or
exclamation
.
Down
,
therefore
,
and
beg
mercy
of
the
duke
.
--
Shak
.
If
he
be
hungry
more
than
wanton
,
bread
alone
will
down
.
--
Locke
.
Down
is
also
used
intensively
;
as
,
to
be
loaded
down
;
to
fall
down
;
to
hang
down
;
to
drop
down
;
to
pay
down
.
The
temple
of
Her
è
at
Argos
was
burnt
down
.
--
Jowett
(Thucyd.).
Down
,
as
well
as
up
,
is
sometimes
used
in
a
conventional
sense
;
as
,
down
East
.
Persons
in
London
say
down
to
Scotland
,
etc
.,
and
those
in
the
provinces
,
up
to
London
.
--
Stormonth
.
Down helm
Naut.
,
an
order
to
the
helmsman
to
put
the
helm
to
leeward
.
Down on
or
Down upon
(
joined
with
a
verb
indicating
motion
,
as
go
,
come
,
pounce
),
to
attack
,
implying
the
idea
of
threatening
power
.
Come
down
upon
us
with
a
mighty
power
.
--
Shak
.
--
Down with
,
take
down
,
throw
down
,
put
down
; --
used
in
energetic
command
,
often
by
people
aroused
in
crowds
,
referring
to
people
,
laws
,
buildings
,
etc
.;
as
,
down with
the
king
!
“
Down
with
the
palace
;
fire
it.”
--
Dryden
.
To be down on
,
to
dislike
and
treat
harshly
. [
Slang
, U.S.]
To cry down
.
See
under
Cry
,
v. t.
To cut down
.
See
under
Cut
,
v. t.
Up and down
,
with
rising
and
falling
motion
;
to
and
fro
;
hither
and
thither
;
everywhere
.
“Let
them
wander
up
and
down
.”
--
Ps
.
lix
. 15.
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