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

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1828 dictionary(212) Words.

abscission
abuse
abuser
adorn
adverb
alphabet
altiloquence
ambilogy
amphibology
answer
antilogy
antiphrasis
apologetical
apologue
apophasis
apostrophy
articulate
barbarity
barbarously
bbarbarism
beseem
bewray
blandiloquence
blandishment
blunt
boast
boldness
bounce
but
cant
catalepsy
choleric
civil
compact
compass
consolatory
consonant
coy
crank
cue
decadal
decade
decadence
decadency
decagon
decagram
decagyn
decagynian
decahedral
decahedron
decaliter
decalogist
decalogue
decorator
decorous
deep
dialect
dialogism
digression
discourse
disjoint
dumb
dumbly
dumbness
duplicity
dysphony
elocution
enallage
enlargement
epilogue
equivocation
eulogize
eulogy
expression
facundity
fair-spoken
figurative
flare
flippancy
flippant
flippantly
flippantness
floweriness
fluency
fluent
formal
frankness
gallicism
give
graceful
grammar
hack
hang
harangue
head
hesitant
hesitation
hibernicism
honey-mouthed
honey-tongued
hortatory
host
humor
hyperbole
idiom
idiotism
impediment
improper
inarticulate
inflammatory
insult
interlocution
invective
irony
irreligious
language
latinism
letter
liberty
lief
lingo
lip
lot
man
mature
mildness
mimical
modulate
monologue
morose
mouth
musket
mute
negatively
noise
obloquy
obmutescence
oration
organ
orientalism
parse
part
phonology
phrase
pithy
plainness
prolix
proverbial
prude
pseudology
pureness
rapidity
reach
readiness
recitative
remit
romanize
rude
run
say
scandal
scandalousness
send
sermocination
sermocinator
session
silence
silently
slanderous
slip
slow
smoothness
spare
spatter
speak
speakable
speaker
speech
speech-maker
speechless
speechlessness
spouting
squib
stammering
standard
strain
substantive
sum
survey
tell
temperate
tenor
touch
tract
transition
trippingly
tropist
tropology
tumultuous
tung
tungless
unbecoming
uncourtly
until
verb
vest
volubility
voluble
whether
whisper
word
would



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S  ›  speech
S  ›  speech
1828 Definition

SPEECH, n.

1. The faculty of uttering articulate sounds or words, as in human beings; the faculty of expressing thoughts by words or articulate sounds. Speech was given to man by his Creator for the noblest purposes.

2. Language; words as expressing ideas. The acts of God to human ears cannot without process of speech be told.

3. A particular language, as distinct form others. Ps. 19.

4. That which is spoken; words uttered in connection and expressing thoughts. You smile at my speech.

5. Talk; mention; common saying. The duke did of me demand, what was the speech among the londoners concerning the French journey.

6. Formal discourse in public; oration; harangue. The member has made his first speech in the legislature.

7. Any declaration of thoughts. I, with leave of speech implor'd, repli'd.

SPEECH, v.i. To make a speech; to harangue. [Little used.]

1913 Definition
Speech (speech)
n.(?)
Speech
[OE. speche, AS. sp(?)c, spr(?), fr. specan, sprecan, to speak; akin to D. spraak speech, OHG. spr1913 webster dictionaryhha, G. sprache, Sw. spr(?)k, Dan. sprog. See Spe
  1. The faculty of uttering articulate sounds or words; the faculty of expressing thoughts by words or articulate sounds; the power of speaking.

    There is none comparable to the variety of instructive expressions by speech, wherewith man alone is endowed for the communication of his thoughts. Holder.

  2. he act of speaking; that which is spoken; words, as expressing ideas; language; conversation.

    * Speech is voice modulated by the throat, tongue, lips, etc., the modulation being accomplished by changing the form of the cavity of the mouth and nose through the action of muscles which move their walls.

    O goode God! how gentle and how kind
    Ye seemed by your speech and your visage
    The day that maked was our marriage.
    Chaucer.

    The acts of God . . . to human ears
    Can nort without process of speech be told.
    Milton.

  3. A particular language, as distinct from others; a tongue; a dialect.

    People of a strange speech and of an hard language. Ezek. iii. 6.

  4. Talk; mention; common saying.

    The duke . . . did of me demand
    What was the speech among the Londoners
    Concerning the French journey.
    Shak.

  5. formal discourse in public; oration; harangue.

    The constant design of these orators, in all their speeches, was to drive some one particular point. Swift.

  6. ny declaration of thoughts.

    I. with leave of speech implored, . . . replied. Milton.

    Syn. Harangue; language; address; oration. See Harangue, and Language.

  7. To make a speech] to harangue.
    [R.]

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
When a citizen gives his suffrage to a man of known immorality he abuses his trust; he sacrifices not only his own interest, but that of his neighbor; he betrays the interest of his country.
  




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