distempered (1 the orig. sense; cf. prec. word)
1.
inclement
John III. iv. 154
“no d-'d day”
; transf.
All'sW. I. iii. 159
“this d-'d messenger of
wet”
(i.e. the rainbow).
3.
physically
disordered, diseased, ailing
Tw.N. I. v. 97
“a appetite,”
2H4 III. i. 41
“as a body, yet,
d-'d,”
Troil. II. ii. 169,
Sonn. cliii. 12.
4.
mentally or morally
deranged, distracted
Rom. II. iii. 33
“a d-'d head,”
Mac. V. ii. 15
“his d-'d cause.”