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(55) Words.

Found In
Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(324) Words.

abjectedness
abominable
abundance
administer
amicable
amicableness
anchor
apeak
apogee
appliable
applicability
applicable
applicableness
apposite
augean
back
bar
barricade
battle
bend
best
birthright
bitter
bitterness
bitts
blade
blame
blockade
blossom
boatswain
break
bridge
bridle
buoy
cable
cable-tier
cabled
cablet
caburns
caitif
canal
capitulate
censure
chafe
check
chistianity
circumpolar
clear
clinch
cockney
combust
come
communicability
communicable
company
compromise
condensation
conduct
confiscable
conflict
connection
constancy
consulate
consulship
contemn
contemning
contemptible
contemptibleness
contrast
convert
cost
council
counsel
course
cry
delicacy
deprive
descend
description
despicable
despicableness
despisable
determine
devil
dirty
disburse
discrepance
discrepancy
disobey
disorder
dispute
disseminate
district
dregs
drove
dwarfish
effectible
effort
emotion
excommunicable
exist
expel
explicable
extricable
faith
fake
false
fascination
fathom
feasible
fermentation
feud
field
fiend
finances
foolish
forfeit
forlorn
freshen
friendly
genus
gift
go
gordian
halser
hawse
hawse-hole
hawser
head
heave
hence
honesty
ignominious
immedicable
impacable
impeccable
impeccancy
impediment
imperfection
implacable
implacableness
impossible
impracticable
impracticableness
inapplicability
inapplicable
incapable
inch
incommunicable
incommunicableness
incorrupted
incurably
indeprecable
inexplainable
inexplicable
inextricable
inextricableness
infeasible
injudicable
insanity
instrument
intricable
irrelevancy
irrelevant
irreverence
irrevocable
irrevocableness
irrevokable
jigger
junk
justifiable
keckle
labyrinth
lay
liberty
lie
lock
love-day
maintainable
manducable
marline
marry
mean
measure
medicable
metagrammatism
mightily
miserabale
mode
moor
moored
mooring
moral
more
multiplicable
neither
net
niding
non-contagiousness
norman
omnipotence
operable
opponent
origin
orlop
otency
other
paltry
paraphrase
part
parting
pay
peace
peccability
peccable
peccant
performable
perspicable
pipe
pitiful
placable
placableness
practicable
practicableness
predicability
predicable
privilege
prognosticable
prohibit
projector
proof
prudent
purchase
put
quadrate
quantity
quarter
rancor
reach
reconcilement
relevancy
relevant
rend
repealable
respectable
rest
revocable
revocableness
ride
ridicule
rope
round
rounding
rouse
rub
sacrificable
say
scent
scholar
scope
seamanship
shabbily
shabby
shrewd
sorriness
spike
spring
steady
steddy
stiff
still
stone
stopper
strive
subsist
substance
surge
suspicable
swamp
swift
swiftness
tackle
temper
tier
transmutation
trifle
trim
trip
tripping
unaccountable
unappeasable
unappliable
unapplicable
unbend
unbent
unfeasible
unforgiving
unison
unmoor
unplacable
unpracticable
unreconcilable
unsinning
unsolvable
untreatable
unwarrantable
veer
vend
veracity
vile
vileness
vindicability
vindicable
visionary
vitrificable
vocable
weather-bit
wise
wonder
worm
wretched
wretchedly
wretchedness
your



Bible Results
Webster
KJV
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C  ›  cable
C  ›  cable
1828 Definition

CABLE, n. cabl. A large strong rope or chain, used to retain a vessel at anchor. It is made usually of hemp or iron, but may be made of other materials. Cables are of different sizes, according to the bulk of the vessel for which they are intended, from three to twenty inches in circumference. A cable is composed of three strands; each strand of three ropes; and each rope of three twists. A ships cable is usually 120 fathom, or 720 feet, in length. Hence the expression, a cables length.

Stream cable is a hawser or rope, smaller than the bower cables, to moor a ship in a place sheltered from wind and heavy seas.

To pay out, or to veer out the cable, is to slacken it that it may run out of the ship.

To serve the cable, is to bind it round with ropes, canvas, &c., to prevent its being worn or galled in the hawse.

To slip the cable, is to let it run out end for end.
1913 Definition
Cable (cable)
n.(k1913 webster dictionary"b'l)
Ca"ble
[F. câble, LL. capulum, caplum, a rope, fr. L. capere to take; cf. D., Dan., *** G. kabel, from the French. See Capable.]
  1. A large, strong rope or chain, of considerable length, used to retain a vessel at anchor, and for other purposes. It is made of hemp, of steel wire, or of iron links.
  2. A rope of steel wire, or copper wire, usually covered with some protecting or insulating substance] as, the cable of a suspension bridge; a telegraphic cable.
  3. A molding, shaft of a column, or any other member of convex, rounded section, made to resemble the spiral twist of a rope; -- called also cable molding.

    Bower cable, the cable belonging to the bower anchor. -- Cable road, a railway on which the cars are moved by a continuously running endless rope operated by a stationary motor. -- Cable's length, the length of a ship's cable. Cables in the merchant service vary in length from 100 to 140 fathoms or more; but as a maritime measure, a cable's length is either 120 fathoms (720 feet), or about 100 fathoms (600 feet, an approximation to one tenth of a nautical mile). -- Cable tier. (a) That part of a vessel where the cables are stowed. (b) A coil of a cable. -- Sheet cable, the cable belonging to the sheet anchor. -- Stream cable, a hawser or rope, smaller than the bower cables, to moor a ship in a place sheltered from wind and heavy seas. -- Submarine cable. See Telegraph. -- To pay out the cable, To veer out the cable, to slacken it, that it may run out of the ship; to let more cable run out of the hawse hole. -- To serve the cable, to bind it round with ropes, canvas, etc., to prevent its being, worn or galled in the hawse, et. -- To slip the cable, to let go the end on board and let it all run out and go overboard, as when there is not time to weigh anchor. Hence, in sailor's use, to die.

  4. To fasten with a cable.
  5. To ornament with cabling. See Cabling.
  6. To telegraph by a submarine cable
    [Recent]

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
It is not only important, but, in a degree necessary, that the people of this country, should have an American Dictionary of the English language; for, although the body of the language is the same as in England, and it is desirable to perpetuate that sameness, yet some differences must exist. Language is the expression of ideas; and if the people of one country cannot preserve an identity of ideas, they cannot retain an identity of language.
  




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