¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Dyspathy
1. dislike [n DYSPATHIES]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Dyspathy
Literary usage of Dyspathy
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Letters of Robert Browning and Elizabeth Barrett Barrett: With Portraits by Robert Browning, Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1899)
"Then I will confess to you that all my life long I have had a rather strange
sympathy and dyspathy—the sympathy having concerned the genus //'// (as ..."
2. Letters of Samuel Taylor Coleridge by Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1895)
"Then come the human frailties, the dread of giving pain, or exciting suspicions
of alteration and dyspathy, in -short, the almost inevitable insincerities ..."
3. The Later Nineteenth Century by George Saintsbury (1907)
"But the whole is akin to it in spirit, being always the personal utterance, and
in most cases the personal utterance in strong sympathy or dyspathy with the ..."
4. Letters of Samuel Taylor Coleridge by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Ernest Hartley Coleridge (1895)
"Then come the human frailties, the dread of giving pain, or exciting suspicions
of alteration and dyspathy, in short, the almost inevitable insincerities ..."
5. Letters, Conversations, and Recollections of S. T. Coleridge by Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1836)
"All this is, I own, sad weakness, but I am weary of dyspathy. In this last sentence
may be read the whole secret of the writer's latter days. ..."