Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • verb Present participle of discrown.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • He had imagination enough and intelligence enough to perceive that they are the most pestilent of all the enemies of mankind, the sombre hierarchs of misology, who take away the keys of knowledge, thrusting truth down to the second place, and discrowning sovereign reason to be the serving drudge of superstition or social usage.

    Voltaire 2007

  • But so long as it is the living, organic nation governing itself, no mere multiplication of functions, no straightforward increase of powers, are a discrowning of the people.

    The Arena Volume 4, No. 20, July, 1891 Various 1888

  • Lady Henry's fault, no doubt; but Wilfrid Bury, uneasily aware every now and then of the dumb tumult that was raging in the breast of the haughty being beside him, felt the pathos of this slow discrowning, and was inclined, once more, rather to be sorry for the older woman than to admire the younger.

    Lady Rose's Daughter Humphry Ward 1885

  • The bitter lines of his "portrait" rung in her ears -- blackening and discrowning her in her own eyes.

    The Marriage of William Ashe Humphry Ward 1885

  • They abdicate the moment they see that any desire their discrowning.

    Wisdom, Wit, and Pathos of Ouida Selected from the Works of Ouida 1839-1908 Ouida 1873

  • To make certain however that he was alone in the place, ere he secured himself from intrusion, he ran up the stair, gave a glance at the doors as he ran, and reached the top just as Upstill in fierce discrowning pride was heaving the first capstone from between two battlements.

    St. George and St. Michael George MacDonald 1864

  • The Lord knew all the history of love and loss; beheld throughout the universe the winged Love discrowning the skeleton Fear.

    Hope of the Gospel George MacDonald 1864

  • To make certain however that he was alone in the place, ere he secured himself from intrusion, he ran up the stair, gave a glance at the doors as he ran, and reached the top just as Upstill in fierce discrowning pride was heaving the first capstone from between two battlements.

    St. George and St. Michael Volume III George MacDonald 1864

  • Thus saying, she took the jewelled flower out of her hair; and it struck me as the act of a queen, when worsted in a combat, discrowning herself, as if she found a sort of relief in abasing all her pride.

    The Blithedale Romance Nathaniel Hawthorne 1834

  • Presidency, that the heads of the King and Queen of France had rolled into the guillotine basket, that the allied armies had been driven back from the Rhine; and then what has proved to be of more importance than all the victories of the armies or the discrowning of kings that a Yankee schoolmaster, named Whitney, had invented a machine for picking seed out of cotton; and every old lady paused in the musical whir of her spinning-wheel to listen to the astounding intelligence, not more than three months old, that in the old country a man named Arkwright was spinning yarn by water power, and more incredible still a preacher, named Cartwright, was weaving cloth by wood and iron instead of human muscle.

    History of the University of North Carolina. Volume I: From its Beginning to the Death of President Swain, 1789-1868 Kemp Plummer 1907

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