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(28) Words.

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Definitions
1828 dictionary(368) Words.

a
abaft
abscission
abuse
abusion
accubation
actual
addled
adulterate
adulterated
adulterating
adulteration
agistator
agistor
alarum
all
alleluiah
almonry
ancient
anthypnotic
apostemation
aposteme
aristocracy
arpent
artichoke
asa
assizes
attainder
attaint
attainted
attainting
bad
baluster
bedlam
begird
behight
benum
besides
bethlehem
blend
bondage
boson
bowyer
brahmin
bribe
briber
bribery
brogue
bumbailiff
buy
canker
canker-like
cankered
caries
carious
carrion
cartridge
cess
chaste
cherup
child
chuck
communication
confiture
considering
contaminate
cormorant
corn-chandler
corrupt
corrupted
corrupter
corruptibility
corruptible
corruptibleness
corruptibly
corrupting
corruption
corruptive
corruptless
corruptly
corruptness
corruptress
counterpoint
cozen
crown
crucify
debauched
debauchedly
debauchedness
debauchee
debaucher
debauchment
deeply
defame
defile
defiled
defilement
defiler
defraud
degenerate
deluge
demoralization
demoralize
demoralized
demoralizing
deplorably
depravation
deprave
depraved
depravedly
depravedness
depraver
depravity
describe
disable
disdain
disease
draft
eat
election
embrace
embraced
embracer
embracery
embracing
emerods
escape
escheat
evil
expenditure
extravagant
falsifiable
fear
feather-few
fenowed
fester
filth
filthiness
flagelet
flagitious
flesh
foist
forward
futtock
gangrenescent
gift
gillyflower
gipsey
glanders
good
goom
gooseberry
graceless
grease
gross
guilty
harden
hatchment
have
haw
heal
hermogenians
hogshead
hoist
immortal
impoison
impoisoned
impoisoning
imposthume
imputrescible
incorrupt
incorrupted
incorruptibility
incorruptible
incorruptibleness
incorruption
incorruptive
incorruptness
infect
infected
infecting
infection
infectious
ingraft
inheritable
inquination
integrity
jenneting
kiddle
la
leaven
lesser
lief
like
lither
loftily
lustring
malady
manners
maudlin
mettle
misnomer
moralized
morals
mortify
naughtily
naughtiness
never
nincompoop
noxious
noxiousness
nunchion
oaf
ochimy
or
original
orris
otherguise
overleaven
palpably
pamper
passager
passenger
paum
peccant
peon
persecutor
pertilence
perversive
pervert
perverted
perverting
pestilent
pie
platonism
poisoner
poisoning
poisonous
pollute
polluting
pousse
praemunire
pravity
precede
preservative
preserve
prevalency
prevaricate
prithee
profuse
propensity
pure
pursy
putrefy
putrid
putridity
ranch
rancor
range
rather
reap
reciprocal
refinement
reform
reformation
reformer
research
restore
riding
rinse
roast
romansh
rot
rother-nails
rout
sacristan
salleting
samphire
sanctify
sap
savage
sawer
scramble
scringe
seduce
seducible
sedused
sewer
shore
sick
simony
sin
sinfulness
single
sinister
skringe
smatch
sophisticate
sparrow-grass
spital
spittel
spoil
spoiled
spoiler
spoiling
start
stringhalt
stupid
substantive
subversive
subvert
swing
taint
tainted
tainting
tartar
term
tetchy
thum
tickle
tonnage
torrent
transcription
tuffoon
turmalin
twank
twinkling
unattainted
unbribed
uncorrupt
uncorrupted
uncorruptedness
uncorruptible
uncorruptly
uncorruptness
undebauched
undepraved
undone
unfouled
uninfected
unpolluted
unputrefied
unsoundness
unspoiled
unviciated
usquebaugh
venal
venality
vice
viced
viciation
viciosity
vicious
viciously
viciousness
vitals
vitiation
way
weal
welladay
wem
whore
wickedly
wickedness
world
worse
yankee
yelk



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

CORRUPT, v.t. [L., to break.] Literally, to break, separate or dissolve. Hence,

1. To change from a sound to a putrid or putrescent state; to separate the component parts of a body, as by a natural process, which accompanied by a fetid smell.

2. To vitiate or deprave; to change from good to bad.

Evil communications corrupt good manners. 1 Corinthians 15.

3. To waste, spoil or consume.

Lay not up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt. Matthew 6.

4. To defile or pollute. Exodus 32.

5. To entice from good and allure to evil. 2 Corinthians 11.

6. To pervert; to break, disobey or make void. Malachi 2.

7. To pervert or vitiate integrity; to bribe; as, to corrupt a judge.

8. To debase or render impure, by alterations or innovations; as, to corrupt language.

9. To pervert; to falsify; to infect with errors; as, to corrupt the sacred text.

CORRUPT, v.i.

1. To become putrid; to putrefy; to rot. Animal and vegetable substances speedily corrupt in a warm and moist air.

2. To become vitiated; to lose purity.

CORRUPT, a. [L.]

1. Changed from a sound to a putrid state, as by natural decomposition.

2. Spoiled; tainted; vitiated; unsound; as corrupt air, or bread.

3. Depraved; vitiated; tainted with wickedness.

They are corrupt; they have done abominable works. Psalm 14.

The earth was corrupt before God. Genesis 6.

4. Debased; rendered impure; changed to a worse state; as corrupt language.

5. Not genuine; infected with errors or mistakes. The text is corrupt.
1913 Definition
Corrupt (corrupt)
a.(k?r-r?pt")
Cor*rupt`
[L. corruptus, p. p. of corrumpere to corrupt; cor- + rumpere to break. See Rupture.]
  1. Changed from a sound to a putrid state; spoiled; tainted; vitiated; unsound.

    Who with such corrupt and pestilent bread would feed them.
    Knolles.

  2. Changed from a state of uprightness, correctness, truth, etc., to a worse state; vitiated; depraved; debased; perverted; as, corrupt language; corrupt judges.

    At what ease
    Might corrupt minds procure knaves as corrupt
    To swear against you.
    Shak.

  3. Abounding in errors; not genuine or correct; as, the text of the manuscript is corrupt.
  4. To change from a sound to a putrid or putrescent state] to make putrid; to putrefy.
  5. To change from good to bad; to vitiate; to deprave; to pervert; to debase; to defile.

    Evil communications corrupt good manners.
    1. Cor. xv. 33.

  6. To draw aside from the path of rectitude and duty; as, to corrupt a judge by a bribe.

    Heaven is above all yet; there sits a Judge
    That no king can corrupt.
    Shak.

  7. To debase or render impure by alterations or innovations; to falsify; as, to corrupt language; to corrupt the sacred text.

    He that makes an ill use of it [language], though he does not corrupt the fountains of knowledge, . . . yet he stops the pines.
    Locke.

  8. To waste, spoil, or consume; to make worthless.

    Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt.
    Matt. vi. 19.

  9. To become putrid or tainted; to putrefy; to rot.
    Bacon.
  10. To become vitiated; to lose purity or goodness.

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
The Bible is the Chief moral cause of all that is good, and the best corrector of all that is evil, in human society; the best book for regulating the temporal concerns of men, and the only book that can serve as an infallible guide.
  




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