The poet DINS the chastity of his mistress into his readers' heads until the readers in self-defence are driven to say, "Sir, did any one doubt it?"
"A History of English Literature Elizabethan Literature"
George Saintsbury
These Man-DINS formed a distinct class of the population, and numbered about five percent of it.
"The Airlords of Han"
Philip Francis Nowlan
But when society daily DINS upon his senses the lesson that not manhood and high thinking and a contented spirit are the most desirable things, whether one is rich or poor, is he to be blamed for having a wrong notion of what will or should satisfy him?
"The Complete Essays of C. D. Warner"
Charles Dudley Warner