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(3) Words.

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1828 dictionary(378) Words.

abatement
accident
accouter
accoutered
accouterments
acutiator
addition
adoption
advocate
alarm
all-fours
alligator
ammunition
anchor
angelot
annulet
appeal
arendator
argent
argonauta
arm
armature
arme-puissant
armful
armigerous
arming
armipotence
armipotent
armisonous
armistice
armor
armorer
armorial
armory
arms
arms-end
arsenal
assaulted
assumptive
at
attack
backwards
ballet
bandoleers
bear
beat
bee
betake
bewitch
bimbow
blazon
blazonry
bosom
bossage
bright
buckle
burst
cadet
calefacient
camisade
carry
cartridge
caution
cessation
charm
charmed
charmer
charmful
charming
charmless
chief
chivalry
cipher
citadel
clang
clarencieux
clash
clasp
clatter
clime
clip
close
club-law
coat
coat-armor
companion
compass
compliment
conquest
constable
contest
contraband
corporal
corposant
costume
counterpassant
cross
cross-armed
crotch
crown
cuttle
cuttle-fish
dandled
date
dedicate
defender
defensive
despoil
devest
dexter
difference
din
dint
disarm
disarmed
disarming
discharge
disenchant
disenchanted
disenchanting
dishonest
disparage
disproportion
disused
divest
dote
dracunculus
dragoon
eagle
earnest
elbow-chair
embrace
embraced
embracement
embracing
empalement
enarmed
enchant
enchanted
enchanter
enchanting
enchantment
encircle
endure
ensign
entrochite
equip
equipage
equipped
escutcheon
escutcheoned
exercise
expert
farm
farmer
fat
fathom
fathomed
fathoming
fathomless
fatigue
fellow-soldier
fencing
fight
fire
firearms
firecross
firing
flint
fold
force
fragile
furbish
furnish
garter
gendarmery
gentleman
gleamy
glitter
go
goddess
gown
graceful
grasp
grasped
grenadier
gripe
gun
gunsmith
gunsmithery
handful
heave
heavy
helmet
herald
heraldry
heriot
hero
hold
holder
honor
horrent
hug
humorsome
hussar
image
impale
incite
inermous
influence
infold
inimitably
inspect
inspection
inspector
invulnerable
it
janizary
judgment
king
knee
knight
label
labor
laboratory
lay
lever
levy
life
lodge
long
loophole
lunette
luster
machine
magazine
maiden
make
mantling
manual
marshal
matchless
military
ministry
morris-dance
musket
muster
muster-master
naked
nautilus
norroy
on
open
opinion
opportune
palm
pan
panoply
parley
part
patriarchic
pellet
perfect
personal
pervious
pile
pinion
plantation
play
pospolite
possess
practice
praise
predial
prepare
press
prevalent
proof
protect
prove
radiant
ravage
rebatement
rebel
rebellion
rebus
recoil
reduce
reflective
refulgent
relief
repository
review
rhetoric
rise
rub
rude
saddle
salute
saturn
sergeant
sheild
shooting
shotting
sickness
sing
siren
slay
smite
snag
soul
stamp
stand
stretch
studding-sail
stuff
subdue
sublimely
supporter
suspension
swarm
swasher
swing
swinge-buckler
take
talbot
then
throat
timbre
to
top
touch-hole
trail
trailed
train
traitor
tribune
trophy
truce
trumpet
turn
turnpike
unarm
unarmed
unbind
unbrace
underlet
unequal
unromanized
unscutcheoned
unweaponed
up
uplift
valid
vat
vest
vicontiels
victory
vindicate
virago
virtueless
visor
vivid
volley
vouchsafe
wall
war
ward
warder
warm
weapon
weaponed
wheel-animal
wield
win
world
worm
wrestle



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A  ›  arms
A  ›  arms
1828 Definition

'ARMS, n. plu. [L. arma.]

1. Weapons of offense, or armor for defense and protection of the body.

2. War; hostility.

Arms and the man I sing.

To be in arms, to be in a state of hostility, or in a military life.

To arms is a phrase which denotes a taking arms for war or hostility; particularly, a summoning to war.

To take arms, is to arm for attack or defense.

Bred to arms denotes that a person has been educated to the profession of a soldier.

3. The ensigns armorial of a family; consisting of figures and colors borne in shields, banners, &c., as marks of dignity and distinction, and descending from father to son.

4. In law, arms are any thing which a man takes in his hand in anger, to strike or assault another.

5. In botany, one of the seven species of fulcra or props of plants, enumerated by Linne and others. The different species of arms or armor, are prickles, thorns, forks and stings, which seem intended to protect the plants from injury by animals.

Sire arms, are such as may be charged with powder, as cannon, muskets, mortars, &c.

A stand of arms consists of a musket, bayonet, cartridge-box and belt, with a sword. But for common soldiers a sword is not necessary.

In falconry, arms are the legs of a hawk from the thigh to the foot.
1913 Definition
Arms (arms)
n. pl.((?))
Arms
[OE. armes, F. arme, pl. armes, fr. L. arma, pl., arms, orig. fittings, akin to armus shoulder, and E. arm. See Arm, n.]
  1. Instruments or weapons of offense or defense.

    He lays down his arms, but not his wiles.
    Milton.

    Three horses and three goodly suits of arms.
    Tennyson.

  2. The deeds or exploits of war; military service or science.
    "Arms and the man I sing." Dryden.
  3. Anything which a man takes in his hand in anger, to strike or assault another with; an aggressive weapon.
    Cowell. Blackstone.
  4. The ensigns armorial of a family, consisting of figures and colors borne in shields, banners, etc., as marks of dignity and distinction, and descending from father to son.
  5. The legs of a hawk from the thigh to the foot.
    Halliwell.

    Bred to arms, educated to the profession of a soldier. -- In arms, armed for war; in a state of hostility. -- Small arms, portable firearms known as muskets, rifles, carbines, pistols, etc. -- A stand of arms, a complete set for one soldier, as a musket, bayonet, cartridge box and belt; frequently, the musket and bayonet alone. -- To arms! a summons to war or battle. -- Under arms, armed and equipped and in readiness for battle, or for a military parade.

    Arm's end, Arm's length, Arm's reach. See under Arm.


1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
In correcting public evils, great reliance is placed on schools.… But schools no more make statesmen than human learning makes christians. Literature & scientific attainments have never prevented the corruption of government. Knowledge derived from experience & from the evils of bad measures may produce a change of measures to correct a particular evil. But learning & sciences have no material effect in subduing ambition & selfishness, reconciling parties or subjecting private interest to the influence of a ruling preference of public good.
 On Suffrage ::  




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1828 dictionary
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