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(15) Words.

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Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(231) Words.

a
acquittal
acroatic
advance
age
announce
apostolical
auditory
bail
bailed
bailment
bailor
bar
bed
betray
betrayed
betraying
book
break
cabala
chain
chancellor
chancery
chapiter
charge
chirographer
church
clergy
clinical
cocket
commending
commission
commitment
committed
communicate
communicated
communicating
communication
condole
confide
consign
consignation
consigned
consignee
consigner
consigning
consignment
consignor
contend
counterfoil
counterstock
credit
cup
darkness
delegate
deliver
deliverable
deliverance
delivered
deliverer
delivering
delivery
detinue
devolve
dictate
dictated
dictating
discharge
disenchant
disenchanted
disencumber
disencumbrance
disinthralling
ditch-delivered
donation
earnestly
elegancy
elegant
elegit
elocution
emancipation
emissary
escrow
ethical
etiquet
evidence
exhort
exorcise
expend
express
extend
fast
for
forum
freed
freeing
gestation
give
giving
grace
haak
hearer
hearing
help
his
homily
hostage
intent
intrust
intrusted
intrusting
investiture
issue
juror
keep
keeper
law
lecture
lecturer
lecturing
liberating
liberation
liberator
liberty
light
livery
loan
mainprize
mandamus
masoretic
morality
nonsuit
obstetric
of
offense
openness
oracle
osculatory
ouster
out
over
owe
parturition
pawnee
pay
penitentiary
pennypost
personally
place
post-office
pragmatical
press
privilege
prologize
promissory
pronounce
pronunciation
pulpit-oratory
purim
puritanize
pythian
quitter
raise
ransom
reach
reacher
receit
redeem
redeemed
redeeming
redeliver
redeliverance
redelivered
redelivering
redelivery
redemption
redress
refer
referendary
remember
rescue
rescued
residue
return
returnable
revendicate
rhetorically
rid
riddance
rostrum
sale
salvation
save
sell
sententiously
sentiment
sermon
solution
soul
specially
stipulate
succor
succorer
surety
surrender
surrendered
tally
teach
teller
thanksgiving
there
this
tirade
tradition
traditionary
traditor
traitor
trouble
trover
trusted
uncommunicated
undelivered
unrelieved
unrescued
unvarnished
unwritten
visit
war
will
word
wretchedly



Bible Results
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KJV
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D  ›  deliver
D  ›  deliver
1828 Definition

DELIVER, v.t. [L. Free, disengaged; to free, to peel.]

1. To free; to release, as from restraint; to set at liberty; as, to deliver one from captivity.

2. To rescue, or save.

Deliver me, O my God, from the hand of the wicked. Ps. 71:4.

3. To give, or transfer; to put into anothers hand or power; to commit; to pass from one to another.

Thou shalt deliver Pharoahs cup into his hand. Gen.40:11

So we say, to deliver goods to a carrier; to deliver a letter; to deliver possession of an estate.

4. To surrender; to yield; to give up; to resign; as, to deliver a fortress to an enemy. It is often followed by up; as, to deliver up the city; to deliver up stolen goods.

Th exalted mind

All sense of woe delivers to the wind.

5. To disbuden of a child.

6. To utter; to pronounce; to speak; to send forth in words; as, to deliver a sermon, an address, or an oration.

7. To exert in motion.

To deliver to the wind, to cast away; to reject.

To deliver over, to transfer; to give or pass from one to another; as, to deliver over goods to another.

2. To surrender or resign; to put into anothers power; to commit to the discretion of; to abandon to.

Deliver me not over to the will of my enemies. Ps. 27.

To deliver up, to give up; to surrender.

DELIVER, a. Free; nimble.

1913 Definition
Deliver (deliver)
v. t.(?)
De*liv"er
[imp. *** p. p. Delivered (?)] p. pr. *** vb. n. Delivering.] [F. dé]livrer, LL. deliberare to liberate, give over, fr. L. de + liberare to set free. See Li
  1. To set free from restraint; to set at liberty; to release; to liberate, as from control; to give up; to free; to save; to rescue from evil actual or feared; -- often with from or out of; as, to deliver one from captivity, or from fear of death.

    He that taketh warning shall deliver his soul. Ezek. xxxiii. 5.

    Promise was that I
    Should Israel from Philistian yoke deliver.
    Milton.

  2. To give or transfer; to yield possession or control of; to part with (to); to make over; to commit; to surrender; to resign; -- often with up or over, to or into.

    Thou shalt deliver Pharaoh's cup into his hand. Gen. xl. 13.

    The constables have delivered her over. Shak.

    The exalted mind
    All sense of woe delivers to the wind.
    Pope.

  3. To make over to the knowledge of another; to communicate; to utter; to speak; to impart.

    Till he these words to him deliver might. Spenser.

    Whereof the former delivers the precepts of the art, and the latter the perfection. Bacon.

  4. To give forth in action or exercise; to discharge; as, to deliver a blow; to deliver a broadside, or a ball.

    Shaking his head and delivering some show of tears. Sidney.

    An uninstructed bowler . . . thinks to attain the jack by delivering his bowl straightforward upon it. Sir W. Scott.

  5. To free from, or disburden of, young; to relieve of a child in childbirth; to bring forth; -- often with of.

    She was delivered safe and soon. Gower.

    Tully was long ere he could be delivered of a few verses, and those poor ones. Peacham.

  6. To discover; to show.
    [Poetic]

    I 'll deliver
    Myself your loyal servant.
    Shak.

  7. To deliberate.
    [Obs.] Chaucer.
  8. To admit; to allow to pass.
    [Obs.] Bacon.

    Syn. -- To Deliver, Give Forth, Discharge, Liberate, Pronounce, Utter. Deliver denotes, literally, to set free. Hence the term is extensively applied to cases where a thing is made to pass from a confined state to one of greater freedom or openness. Hence it may, in certain connections, be used as synonymous with any or all of the above-mentioned words, as will be seen from the following examples: One who delivers a package gives it forth; one who delivers a cargo discharges it; one who delivers a captive liberates him; one who delivers a message or a discourse utters or pronounces it; when soldiers deliver their fire, they set it free or give it forth.

  9. Free; nimble; sprightly; active.
    [Obs.]

    Wonderly deliver and great of strength. Chaucer.


1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
Language is not an abstract construction of the learned, or of dictionary makers, but is something arising out of the work, needs, ties, joys, affections, tastes, of long generations of humanity, and has its bases broad and low, close to the ground
  




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