1828 dictionary Noah Webster's 1828 American Dictionary 1828 webster
Noah Webster's 1828 American Dictionary
1828 american dictionary
 
1828 dictionary online

Results
1828 dictionary(13) Words.

Found In
Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(198) Words.

achievement
admiration
adventure
adventurer
adventuresome
adventuresomeness
adventurous
adventurously
amazonian
assurance
assure
assured
attempt
audacious
audaciously
audacity
audience
bald
bass-relief
becoming
blade
bold
bold-face
bold-faced
bolden
boldly
boldness
bounce
bow
brassy
brave
brazen-faced
brazenly
broad
cape
champion
chivalrous
confidence
confident
countenance
courage
courageous
courageously
courageousness
crank
crave
dare
daring
daringly
daringness
daunted
daunting
dauntless
diastaltic
dogmatist
dogmatize
dogmatizer
dreadless
dreadlessness
effrontery
embolden
emboldened
emboldening
embrave
encourage
encouraged
endeavor
enterprise
enterpriser
enterprising
erect
eruption
exhort
face
fail
fearfulness
fearless
fearlessly
fearlessness
feat
flourish
flourished
foolhardy
forswear
forward
forwardness
freedom
front
generous
giant
glaring
gordian
hard
hardihood
hardily
hardiness
hardy
haughty
heroic
high-spirited
hoiden
humboldite
imagination
imbolden
imboldening
impaste
impudent
impugn
independent
intrepid
intrepidity
make
malapert
manful
manfully
manfulness
manliness
mannish
masculine
masculineness
mighty
modest
modestly
modesty
mouth
navigator
notion
outbid
permissive
pert
pertly
pertness
precipitant
precipitous
presence
presuming
presumptuous
presumptuously
presumptuousness
prompt
prostitute
provident
reach
recommend
relief
remiss
repress
reprover
resolute
resolutely
resolve
restraint
robertsman
roister
roisterer
roundly
roundness
ruffian-like
saucily
sauciness
saucy
scamble
scambler
scamblingly
sex
sheeny
sot
specter
spur
state
stout
stoutly
stoutness
strenuous
strenuously
tall
temerariously
temerity
timid
timidity
timorously
umboldilite
unacquainted
unadventurous
unassuming
unbashful
unbridled
undauntedly
undauntedness
unhardy
upon
venturesome
venturesomely
venturous
venturously
venturousness
virago
wooden



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B  ›  bold
B  ›  bold
1828 Definition

BOLD, a.

1. Daring; courageous; brave; intrepid; fearless; applied to men or other animals; as, bold as a lion.

2. Requiring courage in the execution; executed with spirit or boldness; planned with courage and spirit; as a bold enterprise.

3. Confident; not timorous.

We were bold in our God to speak to you. 1 Thess.2.

4. In an ill sense, rude, forward, impudent.

5. Licentious; showing great liberty of fiction or expression; as, the figures of an author are bold.

6. Standing out to view; striking to the eye; as bold figures in painting, sculpture and architecture.

7. Steep; abrupt; prominent; as a bold shore, which enters the water almost perpendicularly, so that ships can approach near to land without danger.

Where the bold cape its warning forehead rears.

To make bold, to take freedoms; a common, but not a correct phrase. To be bold is better.

BOLD, v.t. To make daring. [Not used.]

1913 Definition
Bold (bold)
a.(b1913 webster dictionaryld)
Bold
[OE. bald, bold, AS. bald, beald; akin to Icel. ballr, OHG. bald, MHG. balt, D. boud, Goth. balþei boldness, It. baldo. In Ger. there remains only bald, adv. soon. Cf. <
  1. Forward to meet danger; venturesome; daring; not timorous or shrinking from risk; brave; courageous.

    Throngs of knights and barons bold.
    Milton.

  2. Exhibiting or requiring spirit and contempt of danger; planned with courage; daring; vigorous.
    "The bold design leased highly." Milton.
  3. In a bad sense, too forward; taking undue liberties; over assuming or confident; lacking proper modesty or restraint; rude; impudent.

    Thou art too wild, too rude and bold of voice.
    Shak.

  4. Somewhat overstepping usual bounds, or conventional rules, as in art, literature, etc.; taking liberties in composition or expression; as, the figures of an author are bold.
    "Bold tales." Waller.

    The cathedral church is a very bold work.
    Addison.

  5. Standing prominently out to view; markedly conspicuous; striking the eye; in high relief.

    Shadows in painting . . . make the figure bolder.
    Dryden.

  6. Steep; abrupt; prominent.

    Where the bold cape its warning forehead rears.
    Trumbull.

    Bold eagle, (Zoöl.) an Australian eagle (Aquila audax), which destroys lambs and even the kangaroo. -- To make bold, to take liberties or the liberty; to venture.

    Syn. -- Courageous; daring; brave; intrepid; fearless; dauntless; valiant; manful; audacious; stouthearted; high-spirited; adventurous; confident; strenuous; forward; impudent.

  7. To make bold or daring.
    [Obs.] Shak.
  8. To be or become bold.
    [Obs.]

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
They choose men, not because they are just men, men of religion and integrity, but solely for the sake of supporting a party. This is a fruitful source of public evils. But as surely as there is a God in heaven, who exercises a moral government over the affairs of this world, so certainly will the neglect of the divine command, in the choice of rulers, be followed by bad laws and as bad administration; by laws unjust or partial, by corruption, tyranny, impunity of crimes, waste of public money, and a thousand other evils. Men may desire and adopt a new form of government; they may amend old forms, repair breaches and punish violators of the constitution; but there is, there can be no effectual remedy, but obedience to the divine law.
 Value of the Bible (unpublished manuscript) :: 1834 




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