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D
dator = giver datum = date, given de = of, from, by, concerning, about dec. (decanus) = dean decanatus = deanery, section of a diocese decanus = deacon decem = ten decembris = of December decessit = he/she died decessit = death decessus = died, death decessus = death decimus = tenth decretum = decree decubuit = he/she died, lay down dedit = he/she gave defectus pectoris =öweak(ness) (in) chestö, probably tuberculosis deflorata = deflowered, no longer a virgin defri uxor = the widower defri vidus = the widow defuit = he/she departed, died defunct-(us,-a,-i)á= deceased, passed away, dead defunctorum = register of the deceased, of the dead (people) defunctus est = he died defungitur = he/she dies, is discharged dei = of God deinde = then, thereafter, next denarius = coin, penny, money denatus = deceased, dead, death denatus est = he died, has died denunciatio = publication of marriage banns denuntiationes = marriage desponsationis = engagement desponsatus = engaged Deus = God dexter = right dft. = defunctorum = both [usually, the parents] are dead dfctae. = defunctae = (noun) dead person [female] dfcti. = defuncti = (noun) dead person [usual male] / the dead [plural] / (noun) things [plural] which are dead and gone dftor. = defunctor = (noun) dead person [plural] dictus = said, stated, known as didymus = twin die(s), (diei) = day (days), on the day, (the) day diem clausit extremem = (died) he/she finished the last day difteria = diphtheria dignus = worthy dimidium = half discessit = he/she died dispensati = dispensation granted dispensatus = ôimpedimentö dispensed (date & record number may be indicated) disponsationis = permission diversitor = ôcontradictionö. [even some kind of a lawyer?] divortium = divorce doageria = dowager docens, docentis = teacher dodum = formerly, recently domi = at home domicella = young lady, servant, nun domicellus = young nobleman, junker, servant, servant in a monastery domiciliatus = landless home owner domicilla = owner of her own house domina = lady dominalis = seigniorial [adjective for seignior = a man of rank (like the estate owner), especially feudal lord] dominica = Sunday dominium = domain dominus = lord, rule, the Lord (Jesus Christ) domus = home, house, family donum = gift dorsaxius = ôdorsaö (back) + ôaxisö (board), so it might be something like ôporterö? dos (dotis) = dowry dta. = defunctae = she [a female] is dead dti. = defuncti = he [a male] is dead duae = two ducatus = duchy ducentesimus = two hundredth ducenti = two hundred ducis = duke, leader dum = while, when, until, as long as duo = two duodecim = twelve duodecimos = twelfth duodevicesimus = eighteenth duodeviginti = eighteen dux (ducis) = duke, leader DISEASES debilitas = weakness (in general), old age debilitas = illness, weakness debilitas senilis = debilitas/ illness, weakness; senilis/ due old age debilitas vitae = debilitas/ illness, weakness; vitae, vita/ life decrepitus = weakness of old age delirium tremens = dts; hallucination due to alcoholism diptheria = an acute infectious disease caused by toxigenic strains of the bacillus corynebacterium diphtheriae, acquired by contact with an infected person or a carrier of the disease. It was usually confined to the upper respiratory tract (throat) and characterized by the formation of a tough membrane (false membrane) attached firmly to the underlying tissue that would bleed if forcibly removed. The disease was occasionally confused with scarlet fever and croup disenteria = dysentery; diarrhea containing blood and mucus, resulting from inflammation of the walls of the GI tract. Because dysentery is such a broad term, it could have been even any infection (flu, etc.). A term given to a number of disorders marked by inflammation of the intestines (especially colon) and attended by pain in the abdomen, by straining to defecate without the ability to do so, and by frequent stools containing blood and mucus. The causative agent may be chemical irritants, bacteria, protozoa, or parasitic worms. Exists 2 specific varieties: (a) amebic dysentery caused by the protozoan entamoeba histolytica; (b) bacillary dysentery caused by bacteria of the genus shigella. Dysentery was one of the most severe scourges of armies in the last centuries dispepsia, dispexia/dyspepsia = indigestion and heartburn. Heart attack symptoms; bad digestion, bad acid indigestion |