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(26) Words.

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Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(290) Words.

abodance
abundance
according
affluence
affluently
aidance
allemand
ampleness
amplitude
antistrophe
apollinarian
ascitans
assiduous
assiduously
atone
attendance
aurora
ball
ballet
barefoot
bellyful
besort
blunder
boree
bransle
brawl
bridestake
butcher
canary
caperer
castanet
cellarer
cellarist
cherish
chiming
choler
chorus
cinque-pace
clover-grass
concent
concert
concordance
concordist
conduct
consentaneousness
consignee
consist
contra-dance
copiousness
copy
corant
cornucopia
cotillon
counter-dance
country
courant
couranto
cow
cripple
dance
dandled
delighted
depreciate
designfulness
dilatory
direction
discordance
discordancy
dispense
divertisement
drift
duct
ducture
easy
ebony
enrich
equipage
escaping
exact
excess
exsude
exuberancy
exuberant
exuberate
exundation
fairy
faith
fandango
fecundity
fertile
fertility
figure
fill
filled
fleshiness
fletz
flood
flow
floweriness
flowingly
fluency
flush
foison
foot
footing
forbiddance
formality
fountain-tree
freely
frisk
frisker
fruitful
fruitfulness
full
fullness
funambulatory
funambulist
fund
galliard
gambol
gather
gavot
glut
good
guidance
harmoniously
harmony
hay
heel
importation
inconsonance
inconsonancy
incorrectly
incorrectness
indefatigable
influx
interlude
inundate
inundation
jig
join
kickshoe
lackey
lavolta
lawfully
lead
leading
leading-strings
leadman
leafage
load
luxuriant
luxuriate
luxuriously
maidmarian
mantle
manuduction
matachin
may-pole
meet
melancholy
melody
minstrel
minuet
misguidance
mockery
morisk
morris-dance
morris-dancer
mummer
music
mystical
nappiness
nomad
non
non-attendance
non-regardance
notify
opulently
orchestra
overcharge
overflowingly
overmuchness
overstock
overstore
parallel
pare
partner
passy-measure
pavan
pimento
pipe
plenteous
plenteously
plenteousness
plentifulness
plenty
plurisy
positive
positively
pour
poy
prodigally
produce
profusely
profuseness
profusion
protection
pulverulence
punctuality
pyrrhic
quadrille
quarrel
raise
redundancy
reel
rein
remiss
repast
replenish
replenishing
result
rich
riches
richly
richness
riddance
rigadoon
righteously
rightfulness
rime
ringlet
rope-dancer
ruffle
rule
rusher
saraband
scantiness
seneschal
service
shackle
skipper
socket
sprightly
steam
store
stream
streaming
stretch
strike
subpena
suit
sumptuous
superabundance
superfluity
superfluous
swim
tamborin
tardiness
teek
teem
tendance
tendment
timbrel
tragedy
treasure
treasury
tripping
trippingly
tripudiation
true
truth
turn
uberty
unattended
unison
unisonance
unprolific
verbiage
verboseness
victuals
wait
waiter
waiting
waltz
wander
watch
wealth
witless
yieldance



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D  ›  dance
D  ›  dance
1828 Definition

D'ANCE, v.i.

1. Primarily, to leap or spring; hence, to leap or move with measured steps, regulated by a tune, sung or played on a musical instrument; to leap or step with graceful motions of the body, corresponding with the sound of the voice or an instrument.

There is a time to mourn, and a time to dance.
Eccles. iii

2. To leap and frisk about; to move nimbly or up and down.

To dance attendance, to wait with obsequiousness; to strive to please and gain favor by assiduous attentions and officious civilities; as, to dance attendance at court.

D'ANCE, v.t. To make to dance; to move up and down, or back and forth; to dandle; as, to dance a child on the knee.

D'ANCE, n.

1. In general sense, a leaping and frisking about. Appropriately, a leaping or stepping with motions of the body adjusted to the measure of a tune, particularly by two or more in concert. A lively brisk exercise or amusement, in which the movements of the persons are regulated by art, in figure, and by the sound of instruments, in measure.

2. A tune by which dancing is regulated, as the minuet, the waltz, the cotillon, &c.
1913 Definition
Dance (dance)
v. i.(dåns)
Dance
[imp. *** p. p. Danced (?)] p. pr. *** vb. n. Dancing.] [F. danser, fr. OHG. dans&omacr]n to draw; akin to dinsan to draw, Goth. apinsan, and prob. from the same roo
  1. To move with measured steps, or to a musical accompaniment; to go through, either alone or in company with others, with a regulated succession of movements, (commonly) to the sound of music; to trip or leap rhythmically.

    Jack shall pipe and Gill shall dance. Wither.

    Good shepherd, what fair swain is this
    Which dances with your daughter?
    Shak.

  2. To move nimbly or merrily; to express pleasure by motion; to caper; to frisk; to skip about.

    Then, 'tis time to dance off. Thackeray.

    More dances my rapt heart
    Than when I first my wedded mistress saw.
    Shak.

    Shadows in the glassy waters dance. Byron.

    Where rivulets dance their wayward round. Wordsworth.

    To dance on a rope, or To dance on nothing, to be hanged.

  3. To cause to dance, or move nimbly or merrily about, or up and down; to dandle.

    To dance our ringlets to the whistling wind. Shak.

    Thy grandsire loved thee well;
    Many a time he danced thee on his knee.
    Shak.

    To dance attendance, to come and go obsequiously; to be or remain in waiting, at the beck and call of another, with a view to please or gain favor.

    A man of his place, and so near our favor,
    To dance attendance on their lordships' pleasure.
    Shak.

  4. The leaping, tripping, or measured stepping of one who dances; an amusement, in which the movements of the persons are regulated by art, in figures and in accord with music.
  5. A tune by which dancing is regulated, as the minuet, the waltz, the cotillon, etc.

    * The word dance was used ironically, by the older writers, of many proceedings besides dancing.

    Of remedies of love she knew parchance
    For of that art she couth the olde dance.
    Chaucer.

    Dance of Death (Art), an allegorical representation of the power of death over all, -- the old, the young, the high, and the low, being led by a dancing skeleton. -- Morris dance. See Morris. -- To lead one a dance, to cause one to go through a series of movements or experiences as if guided by a partner in a dance not understood.


1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
In correcting public evils, great reliance is placed on schools.… But schools no more make statesmen than human learning makes christians. Literature & scientific attainments have never prevented the corruption of government. Knowledge derived from experience & from the evils of bad measures may produce a change of measures to correct a particular evil. But learning & sciences have no material effect in subduing ambition & selfishness, reconciling parties or subjecting private interest to the influence of a ruling preference of public good.
 On Suffrage ::  




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1828 dictionary
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