Full many a deynt['e] horse had he in stable.
--Chaucer.
Note: Hence the proverb ``dainty maketh dearth,'' i. e.,
rarity makes a thing dear or precious.
2. Delicious to the palate; toothsome.
Dainty bits Make rich the ribs. --Shak.
3. Nice; delicate; elegant, in form, manner, or breeding;
well-formed; neat; tender.
Those dainty limbs which nature lent For gentle
usage and soft delicacy. --Milton.
I would be the girdle. About her dainty, dainty
waist. --Tennyson.
4. Requiring dainties. Hence: Overnice; hard to please;
fastidious; squeamish; scrupulous; ceremonious.
Thew were a fine and dainty people. --Bacon.
And let us not be dainty of leave-taking, But shift
away. --Shak.
{To make dainty}, to assume or affect delicacy or
fastidiousness. [Obs.]
Ah ha, my mistresses! which of you all Will now deny
to dance? She that makes dainty, She, I'll swear,
hath corns. --Shak.
I ne told no deyntee of her love. --Chaucer.
2. That which is delicious or delicate; a delicacy.
That precious nectar may the taste renew Of Eden's
dainties, by our parents lost. --Beau. & Fl.
3. A term of fondness. [Poetic] --B. Jonson.
Usage: These words are here compared as denoting articles of
food. The term delicacy as applied to a nice article
of any kind, and hence to articles of food which are
particularly attractive. Dainty is stronger, and
denotes some exquisite article of cookery. A hotel may
be provided with all the delicacies of the season, and
its table richly covered with dainties.
These delicacies I mean of taste, sight, smell,
herbs, fruits, and flowers, Walks and the melody
of birds. --Milton.
[A table] furnished plenteously with bread, And
dainties, remnants of the last regale. --Cowper.