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(18) Words.

Found In
Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(350) Words.

accountability
accountable
act
action
administration
advice
after-conduct
all-guiding
alleviate
amenance
amend
an
anxiety
apparent
archbishop
ashamed
ask
assign
atone
bawd
bear
behave
behaved
behaving
behavior
blame
blow-pipe
breed
bribe
caduceus
canal
candidate
carriage
carry
cashier
catechise
caution
censurable
censure
charioteer
circumspection
cluck
coasting-pilot
comment
commit
commodore
communicating
comport
cond
condemn
conduce
conduct
conducted
conducting
conduction
conductitious
conductor
conductress
conduit
conscience
conscientiousness
consideration
consistence
consistency
construction
contrive
convoy
cope
correction
corrective
counsel
counselor
countenance
countermarch
course
credible
criticise
crooked
crookedness
culpable
curator
defect
delight
demean
demerit
demon
deportment
design
deviation
dexterity
dictate
dignified
director
disagreeable
disapprove
discretion
disfavor
disgust
disingenuous
disingenuousness
disorganize
dispatch
do
doings
driver
duct
duplicity
eccentrical
eccentricity
electric
electricity
enfilade
equivocal
error
espionage
evil
example
excuse
exemplar
exhort
exhorted
exody
explicable
expostulate
expostulating
expostulation
fabian
faculty
fallow
fault
fearful
folly
foreman
fur
general
generalship
get
godfather
gorget
govern
government
grief
grievance
grieve
guide
guided
guiding
hand
handed
herald
himself
hold
honestly
honesty
honey-guide
honorableness
hopper
humorist
illness
imitable
impeach
impeaching
impeachment
imperfection
impertinency
improper
impropriety
inconsiderate
indignity
infallibly
inspect
instability
institution
insulate
insulated
insulator
introduce
introduced
introducer
introducing
introduction
investigate
irreconcilable
irregular
irreligious
just
justification
lapse
law
lead
leader
leading
leat
levity
licentious
life
line
look
magnetiferous
maladministration
malpractice
malversation
man
manage
managed
management
manager
managery
managing
manners
match
metal
military
misbehave
misbehavior
miscarriage
misconduct
misconducted
misconducting
misdemeanor
mismanage
mismanaged
mismanagment
misorder
modulation
monitorial
moral
morals
municipal
navigation
non-conducting
non-conduction
non-conductor
non-electric
notice
obedience
observation
onward
order
outbrave
palliating
part
passage
passport
penstock
pharisaism
pipe
polypus
precept
preceptive
precise
prescribe
prescribing
pretext
probity
procedure
proceeding
profession
propriety
prove
proverb
prudery
punctilio
put
rational
reconduct
reconducted
reconducting
rectitude
refine
regard
regulate
repentance
repentant
reprehensible
reproachful
reputable
respecting
right
ringlead
rondeau
rule
ruled
run
safe-conduct
scheme
scrupulous
scrutinize
secretary
self-approving
self-examination
spout
spy
square
staggers
state
stay
steadiness
steddiness
steer
steered
steering
step
stigma
subterfuge
sum
surprise
talk
tamping
temporize
tendency
tergiversation
testimonial
tithingman
transactor
tumultuariness
tumultuous
turn
ultimate
umbrage
unchristian
unexceptionable
unfairness
unguided
uninfluenced
unintroduced
upon
upright
urethra
valiant
varnish
vice
vicious
visitation
vivacious
wade
wafter
wagoner
walking
warily
watch
watchfulness
water-furrow
water-way
way
wear
whichever
whichsoever
wise
zeal



Bible Results
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1828 dictionaryTo be ...
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C  ›  conduct
C  ›  conduct
1828 Definition

CONDUCT, n. [L., to lead. See Duke.]

1. Literally, the act of leading; guidance; command. So Waller has used it.

Conduct of armies is a princes art.

2. The act of convoying, or guarding; guidance or brining along under protection.

3. Guard on the way; convoy; escort.

[These senses are now unusual, though not improper.]

4. In a general sense, personal behavior; course of actions; deportment; applicable equally to a good or a bad course of actions; as laudable conduct; detestable conduct. The word seems originally to have been followed with life, actions, affairs, or other term; as the conduct of life; the conduct of actions; that is, the leading along of life or actions.

Young men in the conduct and manage of actions embrace more than they can hold.

What in the conduct of our life appears.

But by custom, conduct alone is now used to express the idea of behavior or course of life and manners.

5. Exact behavior; regular life. [Unusual.]

6. Management; mode of carrying on.

Christianity has humanized the conduct of war.

7. The title of two clergymen appointed to read prayers at Eton College in England.

CONDUCT, v.t.

1. To lead; to bring along; to guide; to accompany and show the way.

And Judah came to Gilgal--to conduct the king over Jordan. 2 Samuel 19.

2. To lead; to direct or point out the way.

The precepts of Christ will conduct us to happiness.

3. To lead; to usher in; to introduce; to attend in civility.

Pray receive them nobly, and conduct them into our presence.

4. To give a direction to; to manage; applied to things; as, the farmer conducts his affairs with prudence.

5. To lead, as a commander; to direct; to govern; to command; as, to conduct an army or a division of troops.

6. With the reciprocal pronoun, to conduct ones self, is to behave. Hence, by a customary omission of the pronoun, to conduct, in an intransitive sense, is to behave; to direct personal actions. [See the Noun.]

7. To escort; to accompany and protect on the way.
1913 Definition
Conduct (conduct)
n.(kn"d1913 webster dictionarykt)
Con"duct
[LL. conductus defense, escort, fr. L. conductus, p. p. of conducere. See Conduce, and cf. Conduit.]
  1. The act or method of conducting; guidance; management.

    Christianity has humanized the conduct of war.
    Paley.

    The conduct of the state, the administration of its affairs.
    Ld. Brougham.

  2. Skillful guidance or management; generalship.

    Conduct of armies is a prince's art.
    Waller.

    Attacked the Spaniards . . . with great impetuosity, but with so little conduct, that his forces were totally routed.
    Robertson.

  3. Convoy; escort; guard; guide.
    [Archaic]

    I will be your conduct.
    B. Jonson.

    In my conduct shall your ladies come.
    Shak.

  4. That which carries or conveys anything; a channel; a conduit; an instrument.
    [Obs.]

    Although thou hast been conduct of my shame.
    Shak.

  5. The manner of guiding or carrying one's self; personal deportment; mode of action; behavior.

    All these difficulties were increased by the conduct of Shrewsbury.
    Macaulay.

    What in the conduct of our life appears
    So well designed, so luckily begun,
    But when we have our wish, we wish undone?
    Dryden.

  6. Plot; action; construction; manner of development.

    The book of Job, in conduct and diction.
    Macaulay.

    Conduct money (Naut.), a portion of a seaman's wages retained till the end of his engagement, and paid over only if his conduct has been satisfactory.

    Syn. -- Behavior; carriage; deportment; demeanor; bearing; management; guidance. See Behavior.

  7. To lead, or guide] to escort; to attend.

    I can conduct you, lady, to a low
    But loyal cottage, where you may be safe.
    Milton.

  8. To lead, as a commander; to direct; to manage; to carry on; as, to conduct the affairs of a kingdom.

    Little skilled in the art of conducting a siege.
    Prescott.

  9. To behave; -- with the reflexive; as, he conducted himself well.
  10. To serve as a medium for conveying; to transmit, as heat, light, electricity, etc.
  11. To direct, as the leader in the performance of a musical composition.
  12. To act as a conductor (as of heat, electricity, etc.); to carry.
  13. To conduct one's self; to behave.
    [U. S.]

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 




In the U.S., the inventor has a "first to invent" claim which is different from other patenting organizations throughout the world who generally utilize "first to file." Debate over this issue, and which model best influences economic development is ongoing. Some are concerned that a change in patent rights may harm the small startup and benefit the incumbents with deeper pockets. You can read more about this topic.




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