1828 dictionary Noah Webster's 1828 American Dictionary 1828 webster
Noah Webster's 1828 American Dictionary
1828 american dictionary
 
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1828 dictionary(5) Words.

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1828 dictionary(287) Words.

abhorrent
absconding
accusation
administer
administration
advocate
aggrieve
alderman
ambulant
ample
anger
antibasilican
antiphrasis
areopagus
assessor
assizes
assumpsit
astrea
asylum
attemper
attorney
authority
avenge
avoid
back
backwards
bar
basilic
bed
bench
bottom
bribe
bull
bureau
business
call
candid
cardinal
cause
certiorari
chair
chancellor
chancery
chapiter
chicane
civil
client
college
common
commutative
complain
complaint
condescend
condescension
condignity
confession
conscience
conscientiousness
consideration
consistent
consistory
constable
coroner
correct
correcting
correction
correctly
correctness
county
court
court-day
cowardice
cruelty
cry
decussated
demand
deponent
derive
determination
dicast
difference
dignity
discuss
disease
dishonesty
dispense
displeasure
distribute
distribution
distributive
divan
double-quarrel
due
duteous
dutiful
duty
emblem
equally
equitable
equitableness
equity
erroneous
error
esquire
ever
evil
exact
exacting
exaction
exactly
exactor
excessive
execute
execution
exemplary
exody
extent
eyre
favor
fleece
for
get
gratuitous
greencloth
gross
hall
hardship
honest
honesty
illustriously
immorality
impannel
impartiality
imply
indifferently
infliction
iniquity
injuriously
injury
injustice
inquisition
invert
judgment
judicatory
judicature
judicially
judiciary
juise
juridical
juridically
jurisdiction
jurisprudence
just
justice
justiceable
justicer
justiceship
justiciar
justify
justly
justness
law
lawsuit
liability
licentiate
lieu
lord
magistrate
magnanimity
marshalsea
mercy
minor
mittimus
moral
morality
morally
nisiprius
novel
obnoxious
office
officiate
ordinary
palace-court
palatine
partial
partiality
patience
perfection
perjure
pervert
pest
pleader
porte
precognition
presume
pretor
probity
promise
propretor
prosecute
prostrate
puisne
punitive
quarter
quorum
rapacity
reason
recognizance
rectitude
refine
regard
relax
remonstrance
remunerative
reseize
resolution
respect
respecter
restraint
retributory
revenge
reward
right
righted
righten
righteous
righteously
righteousness
righter
rightful
rightfully
rightfulness
righting
rightly
rigorous
seat
sedition
senator
seneschal
session
set-off
severe
side
sound
square
squire
statute
straight
stubborn
sue
suffer
suit
supporter
sword
sword-bearer
syndic
tally
temper
term
the
thief-catcher
thief-taker
threefold
tribunal
trust
truth
tyrannize
tyranny
unfairness
unjust
unlimited
unredressed
unrighteousness
uprightness
vare
vary
vengeance
verger
wager
waif
warrant
warrantable
way
weakly
writ
wrong
wrongfully



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J  ›  justice
J  ›  justice
1828 Definition

JUST'ICE, n. [L. justitia, from justus, just.]

1. The virtue which consists in giving to every one what is his due; practical conformity to the laws and to principles of rectitude in the dealings of men with each other; honesty; integrity in commerce or mutual intercourse. Justice is distributive or commutative. Distributive justice belongs to magistrates or rulers, and consists in distributing to every man that right or equity which the laws and the principles of equity require; or in deciding controversies according to the laws and to principles of equity. Commutative justice consists in fair dealing in trade and mutual intercourse between man and man.

2. Impartiality; equal distribution of right in expressing opinions; fair representation of facts respecting merit or demerit. In criticisms, narrations, history or discourse, it is a duty to do justice to every man, whether friend or foe.

3. Equity; agreeableness to right; as, he proved the justice of his claim. This should, in strictness, be justness.

4. Vindictive retribution; merited punishment. Sooner or later, justice overtakes the criminal.

5. Right; application of equity. His arm will do him justice.

6. [Low L. justiciarius.] A person commissioned to hold courts, or to try and decide controversies and administer justice to individuals; as the Chief Justice of the king's bench, or of the common pleas, in England; the Chief Justice of the supreme court in the United States, &c. and justices of the peace.

JUST'ICE, v.t. To administer justice. [Little used.]

1913 Definition
Justice (justice)
n.(?)
Jus"tice
[F., fr. L. justitia, fr. justus just. See Just, a.]

  1. The quality of being just; conformity to the principles of righteousness and rectitude in all things; strict performance of moral obligations; practical conformity to human or divine law; integrity in the dealings of men with each other; rectitude; equity; uprightness.

    Justice and judgment are the haditation of thy throne. Ps. ixxxix. 11.

    The king-becoming graces,
    As justice, verity, temperance, stableness, . . .
    I have no relish of them.
    Shak.

  2. Conformity to truth and reality in expressing opinions and in conduct; fair representation of facts respecting merit or demerit; honesty; fidelity; impartiality; as, the justice of a description or of a judgment; historical justice.
  3. The rendering to every one his due or right; just treatment; requital of desert; merited reward or punishment; that which is due to one's conduct or motives.

    This even-handed justice
    Commends the ingredients of our poisoned chalice
    To our own lips.
    Shak.

  4. Agreeableness to right; equity; justness; as, the justice of a claim.

  5. A person duly commissioned to hold courts, or to try and decide controversies and administer justice.

    * This title is given to the judges of the common law courts in England and in the United States, and extends to judicial officers and magistrates of every grade.

    Bed of justice. See under Bed. - - Chief justice. See in the Vocabulary. -- Justice of the peace (Law), a judicial officer or subordinate magistrate appointed for the conservation of the peace in a specified district, with other incidental powers specified in his commission. In the United States a justice of the peace has jurisdiction to adjudicate certain minor cases, commit offenders, etc.

    Syn. -- Equity; law; right; rectitude; honesty; integrity; uprightness; fairness; impartiality. -- Justice, Equity, Law. Justice and equity are the same; but human laws, though designed to secure justice, are of necessity imperfect, and hence what is strictly legal is at times far from being equitable or just. Here a court of equity comes in to redress the grievances. It does so, as distinguished from courts of law; and as the latter are often styled courts of justice, some have fancied that there is in this case a conflict between justice and equity. The real conflict is against the working of the law; this a court of equity brings into accordance with the claims of justice. It would be an unfortunate use of language which should lead any one to imagine he might have justice on his side while practicing iniquity (inequity).

    Justice, Rectitude. Rectitude, in its widest sense, is one of the most comprehensive words in our language, denoting absolute conformity to the rule of right in principle and practice. Justice refers more especially to the carrying out of law, and has been considered by moralists as of three kinds: (1) Commutative justice, which gives every man his own property, including things pledged by promise. (2) Distributive justice, which gives every man his exact deserts. (3) General justice, which carries out all the ends of law, though not in every case through the precise channels of commutative or distributive justice; as we see often done by a parent or a ruler in his dealings with those who are subject to his control.

  6. To administer justice to.
    [Obs.] Bacon.

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
Discipline our youth in early life in sound maxims of moral, political, and religious duties.
  




Monte J. Shaffer is a fourth-year Ph.D. student and job market candidate (2011) in the Department of Marketing at Washington State University. Monte is currently working on his marketing dissertation in Entrepreneurial Innovations. Prior to joining Washington State University, Monte received a Bachelor in Mathematics / MBA in Marketing from Brigham Young University (BYU) in Provo, UT.




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