English

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Adjective

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senselesse (comparative more senselesse, superlative most senselesse)

  1. Obsolete spelling of senseless.
    • 1603, Plutarch, “Of Morall Vertue”, in Philemon Holland, transl., The Philosophie, Commonlie Called, The Morals [], London: [] Arnold Hatfield, →OCLC, page 69:
      Novv, to begin vvith Fortitude, they ſay it is the meane betvveen Covvardiſe & raſh Audacitie, [] Clemencie & Mildneſſe, betvveene ſenſeleſſe Indolence and Crueltie: []
    • 1608, Joseph Hall, “Epistle I. To Sr. Robert Darcy. The Estate of a True, but Weake Christian.”, in Epistles [], volume I, London: [] H[umphrey] L[ownes] for Samuel Macham & E[leazar] Edgar [], →OCLC, 2nd decade, page 108:
      [T]he vvorld thruſts it ſelfe betvvixt me and heauen; and, by his darke and indigeſted parts, eclipſeth that light vvhich ſhined to my ſoule. Novv, a ſenſeleſſe dulneſſe ouer-takes mee, and beſots mee; my luſt to deuotion is little, my ioy none at all: Gods face is hid, and I am troubled.
    • 1622, John Downame, “Of ſuch Reaſons as may mooue vs to abhor carnall ſecuritie, and to vſe all meanes either to preuent it, or to be freed from it” (chapter VIII), in A Guide to Godlynesse: or, A Treatise of A Christian Life, page 53:
      [] and contrariwiſe, the more ſenſeleſſe and ſtupid, the more hardly can they be reſtored to their ſpirituall health.