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(112) Words.

Found In
Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(308) Words.

abacus
absentee
adulterateness
adulterating
adventure
adventurous
adverse
affront
air-holder
antagonism
antagonist
antarthritic
antidote
antihypnotic
antihypochondriac
antihysteric
antimaniacal
antinephritic
antipestilential
antiphlogistic
antiscorbutic
antiseptic
appeal
assail
assimulation
authentical
bacule
balance
ballast
ballasted
bank-note
base
battle
belie
belied
brave
brick
bring
brush
caponniere
cashier
casual
check
chirograph
chock
coin
coiner
compensate
conflict
congress
congressive
contra-dance
contra-tenor
contramure
contrapuntist
control
controll
controller
controllment
controlment
cope
correct
correction
corrector
counter
counter-attraction
counter-dance
counter-evidence
counter-influence
counter-motion
counter-movement
counter-natural
counter-negotiatio
counter-opening
counter-petition
counter-revolution
counter-saliant
counter-secure
counter-security
counter-surety
counteract
counteracted
counteracting
counteraction
counterbalance
counterbalanced
counterbalancing
counterbond
counterbuff
counterbuffed
countercast
countercaster
counterchange
counterchanged
countercharm
countercheck
countercurrent
counterdistinction
counterdraw
counterdrawing
counterdrawn
counterfeit
counterfeited
counterfeiter
counterfeitly
counterferment
counterfesance
counterfoil
counterfort
countergage
counterguard
counterlight
countermand
countermanded
countermanding
countermarch
countermark
countermine
countermure
counternoise
counterpace
counterpaled
counterpane
counterpart
counterpassant
counterplea
counterplot
counterplotting
counterpoint
counterpoise
counterpoised
counterpoising
counterpoison
counterpressure
counterproject
counterproof
counterprove
counterroll
counterrolment
counterscarp
counterscuffle
counterseal
countersense
countersign
countersignal
countersigned
countersigning
counterstatute
counterstock
counterstroke
countersway
countertally
countertaste
countertenor
countertide
countertime
counterturn
countervail
countervailed
countervailing
counterview
countervote
counterweigh
counterwheel
counterwind
counterwork
counterwrought
courage
courageous
couter-signature
covert-way
cross
crossed
crossing
defiance
defier
descant
deter
discounter
disguise
disguised
disguising
displeasure
dissimulation
ditch
doublet
duel
efficacy
encounter
encounterer
engage
engaging
esplanade
evolution
excantation
fabian
false
falsehood
falsifiable
falsification
falsified
falsifier
falsify
falsifying
famous
fashion
fatally
feign
feint
fictitious
fictitiously
figurate
fleering
fool
force
forge
forged
forger
forgery
forlorn
formidable
fortitude
genuineness
hardy
harmonize
have
hazard
herculean
hosting
hurtle
hypocrisy
hypocritical
imitate
impunity
indent
indenture
justle
knock
likeness
lunette
magnanimity
meet
meeting
mock
mockery
neutralize
oppose
orvietan
outrigger
pair
personate
personation
pledge
point
prove
provide
pseudo
publish
publisher
put
quarter
rash
ravelin
reaction
real
rebut
rebutting
recheat
refutation
refute
remedy
rencounter
reprehend
resist
resisted
risk
rogue
ruin
run
secrecy
set-off
sham
shawl
shock
shocking
simular
simulate
skirmishing
sophistication
spancounter
spanfarting
spurious
spuriously
spuriousness
stern
torricellian
touch
traverse
true
uncounterfeit
uncountermanded
unfeigned
unreversed
unsophisticated
vacuum
valor
van-foss
vanquish



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C  ›  counter
C  ›  counter
1828 Definition

COUNTER, n. [from count.]

1. A false piece of money or stamped metal, used as means of reckoning; any thing used to keep an account or reckoning, as in games.

2. Money, in contempt.

3. A table or board on which money is counted; a table on which goods in a shop are laid for examination by purchasers. In lieu of this, we sometimes see written the French comptoir, from compter, computo; but counter is the genuine orthography.

4. The name of certain prisons in London.

5. One that counts or reckons; also, an auditor.

6. Encounter. [Not used.]

7. In ships, an arch or vault, whose upper part is terminated by the bottom of the stern. The upper or second counter is above the former, but not vaulted.

Counter of a horse, that part of a horses forehand which lies between the shoulder and under the neck.

COUNTER, adv. [L.]

1. Contrary; in opposition; in an opposite direction; used chiefly with run or go; as, to run counter to the rules of virtue; he went counter to his own interest.

2. The wrong way; contrary to the right course.

3. Contrariwise; in a contrary manner.

4. The face, or at the face. [Not used.]

This word is prefixed to many others, chiefly verbs and nouns, expressing opposition.
1913 Definition
Counter (counter)
adv.
Coun"ter
  1. A prefix meaning contrary, opposite, in opposition; as, counteract, counterbalance, countercheck. See Counter, adv. *** a.
  2. One who counts, or reckons up] a calculator; a reckoner.
  3. A piece of metal, ivory, wood, or bone, used in reckoning, in keeping account of games, etc.

    The old gods of our own race whose names . . . serve as counters reckon the days of the week.
    E. B. Tylor.

    What comes the wool to? . . . I can not do it without counters.
    Shak.

  4. Money; coin; -- used in contempt.
    [Obs.]

    To lock such rascal counters from his friends.
    Shak.

  5. A prison; either of two prisons formerly in London.

    Anne Aysavugh . . . imprisoned in the Counter.
    Fuller.

  6. A telltale; a contrivance attached to an engine, printing press, or other machine, for the purpose of counting the revolutions or the pulsations.
    Knight.
  7. A table or board on which money is counted and over which business is transacted; a long, narrow table or bench, on which goods are laid for examination by purchasers, or on which they are weighed or measured.
  8. Contrary; in opposition; in an opposite direction; contrariwise; -- used chiefly with run or go.

    Running counter to all the rules of virtue.
    Locks.

  9. In the wrong way; contrary to the right course; as, a hound that runs counter.

    This is counter, you false Danish dogs!
    Shak.

  10. At or against the front or face.
    [R.]

    Which [darts] they never throw counter, but at the back of the flier.
    Sandys.

  11. Contrary; opposite; contrasted; opposed; adverse; antagonistic; as, a counter current; a counter revolution; a counter poison; a counter agent; counter fugue.
    "Innumerable facts attesting the counter principle." I. Taylor.

    Counter approach (Fort.), a trench or work pushed forward from defensive works to meet the approaches of besiegers. See Approach. -- Counter bond (Law), in old practice, a bond to secure one who has given bond for another. -- Counter brace. See Counter brace, in Vocabulary. -- Counter deed (Law), a secret writing which destroys, invalidates, or alters, a public deed. -- Counter distinction, contradistinction. [Obs.] -- Counter drain, a drain at the foot of the embankment of a canal or watercourse, for carrying off the water that may soak through. -- Counter extension (Surg.), the fixation of the upper part of a limb, while extension is practiced on the lower part, as in cases of luxation or fracture. -- Counter fissure (Surg.) Same as Contrafissure. -- Counter indication. (Med.) Same as Contraindication. -- Counter irritant (Med.), an irritant to produce a blister, a pustular eruption, or other irritation in some part of the body, in order to relieve an existing irritation in some other part. "Counter irritants are of as great use in moral as in physical diseases." Macaulay. -- Counter irritation (Med.), the act or the result of applying a counter irritant. -- Counter opening, an aperture or vent on the opposite side, or in a different place. -Counter parole (Mil.), a word in addition to the password, given in time of alarm as a signal. -- Counter plea (Law), a replication to a plea. Cowell. -- Counter pressure, force or pressure that acts in a contrary direction to some other opposing pressure. -- Counter project, a project, scheme, or proposal brought forward in opposition to another, as in the negotiation of a treaty. Swift. -- Counter proof, in engraving, a print taken off from another just printed, which, by being passed through the press, gives a copy in reverse, and of course in the same position as that of plate from which the first was printed, the object being to enable the engraver to inspect the state of the plate. -- Counter revolution, a revolution opposed to a former one, and restoring a former state of things. -- Counter revolutionist, one engaged in, or befriending, a counter revolution. -- Counter round (Mil.), a body of officers whose duty it is to visit and inspect the rounds and sentinels. -- Counter sea (Naut.), a sea running in an opposite direction from the wind. -- Counter sense, opposite meaning. -- Counter signal, a signal to answer or correspond to another. -- Counter signature, the name of a secretary or other officer countersigned to a writing. Tooke. -- Counter slope, an overhanging slope; as, a wall with a counter slope. Mahan. -- Counter statement, a statement made in opposition to, or denial of, another statement. -- Counter surety, a counter bond, or a surety to secure one who has given security. -- Counter tally, a tally corresponding to another. -- Counter tide, contrary tide.

  12. The after part of a vessel's body, from the water line to the stern, -- below and somewhat forward of the stern proper.

  13. Same as Contra. Formerly used to designate any under part which served for contrast to a principal part, but now used as equivalent to counter tenor.
  14. The breast, or that part of a horse between the shoulders and under the neck.
  15. The back leather or heel part of a boot.
  16. An encounter.
    [Obs.]

    With kindly counter under mimic shade.
    Spenser.

  17. To return a blow while receiving one, as in boxing.

    His left hand countered provokingly.
    C. Kingsley.

  18. An exceedingly faint roundish or somewhat oblong nebulous light near the ecliptic and opposite the sun, best seen during September and October, when in the constellations Sagittarius and Pisces. Its cause is not yet understood. Called also Gegenschein.

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
If the citizens neglect their duty and place unprincipled men in office, the government will soon be corrupted; laws will be made not for the public good so much as for the selfish or local purposes.
 History of the United States :: 1832 




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