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One of the hidden glories of Victorian engineering is proper drains. Isolating a city’s effluent and shipping it away in underground sewers has probably saved more lives than any medical procedure except vaccination.
This new-comer was a man who in any company would have seemed striking.[…]Indeed, all his features were in large mold, like the man himself, as though he had come from a day when skin garments made the proper garb of men.
2014, Paul Chrystal, Tea: A Very British Beverage:
The Nippy became a national icon, symbolic of the girl next door, always approachable and proper; […]
those higher and peculiar attributeswhich constitute our proper humanity
(usually postpositive) In the strict sense; within the strict definition or core (of a specified place, taxonomic order, idea, etc).
1893, Annual of the Universal Medical Sciences:
These are divided into two great families, the vipers proper (Viperidae) and the pit-vipers (Crotalidae).
1976, Eu-Yang Kwang, The political reconstruction of China, page 165:
Siberia, though it stands outside the territorial confines of Russia proper, constitutes an essentially component part […]. Outer Mongolia, [so called] to distinguish it from Inner Mongolia, which lies nearer to China proper, revolted and declared its independence.
2004, Stress, the Brain and Depression, page 24:
Hence, this border is still blurred, raising the question whether traumatic life events induce sadness/distress – which is self-evident – or depression proper and, secondly, whether sadness/distress is a precursor or pacemaker of depression.
every country, and more than that, every private place, hath his proper remedies growing in it, particular almost to the domineering and most frequent maladies of it.
Each animal has its proper pleasure, and the proper pleasure of man is connected with reason.
(heraldry) Portrayed in natural or usual coloration, as opposed to conventional tinctures.
(mathematics) Being strictly part of some other thing (not necessarily explicitly mentioned, but of definitional importance), and not being the thing itself.
The same tyme was Moses borne, and was a propper[translating ἀστεῖος(asteîos)] childe in the sight of God, which was norisshed up in his fathers housse thre monethes.
Though unusual in the Dublin area he knew that it was not by any means unknown for desperadoes who had next to nothing to live on to be abroad waylaying and generally terrorising peaceable pedestrians by placing a pistol at their head in some secluded spot outside the city proper[…].
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'I thought it was the American Associated Press.' 'Oh, they are on the track, are they?' 'They to-day, and the Times yesterday. Oh, they are buzzing round proper.'
1956, Anthony Burgess, Time for a Tiger (The Malayan Trilogy), published 1972, page 202:
“Christmas Eve,” said Nabby Adams. “I used to pump the bloody organ for the carols, proper pissed usually.”
1957, Ray Lawler, Summer of the Seventeenth Doll, Sydney: Fontana Books, published 1974, page 32:
The kid towelled him up proper.
1964, Saint Andrew Society (Glasgow, Scotland), The Scots magazine: Volume 82
1 When an adjective is applied predicatively to something definite, the corresponding "indefinite" form is used. 2 The "indefinite" superlatives may not be used attributively.
1 The indefinite superlative forms are only used in the predicative. 2 Dated or archaic. 3 Only used, optionally, to refer to things whose natural gender is masculine.