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(13) Words.

Found In
Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(400) Words.

abactor
act
adrift
affair
agitator
ambages
apagogy
apocrustic
appeal
approach
appulse
articulation
ashore
attack
authentical
backwards
ball
bandy
banish
banished
bar
basilisk
battle
bayonet
bear
beat
beetle
bid
billiards
blow
blow-pipe
blown
bomb
brad
brawl
breastplow
calk
call
carman
carry
carter
cast
cause
certainty
chaff
chariot-man
chariot-race
charioteer
chase
chased
chaser
chide
clap
clash
clinch
cloy
coach-box
coachman
cog
colcothar
compact
compel
compellable
compress
compressible
conciliate
conflict
conjure
conquest
constrain
contemn
counterbuff
cram
crowded
crown-wheel
cut
dashed
defend
demise
depulsion
dethrone
disbench
discuss
dishabit
dislodge
dislodged
dispel
dispelled
disperse
dispersed
displant
dissipate
drabble
drave
drift
drift-wind
drifted
drive
drivel
driveler
driveling
driven
driver
drone
drove
drover
eject
elastical
elbow
embolus
emboss
enforce
enforced
epact
essay
exact
exigency
exile
exorcise
expel
expellable
expelled
expeller
experience
explode
exploded
explore
expulse
expulsion
exterminate
exterminated
extrude
extruded
eyebolt
fail
fall
far
fast
fear
feather-driver
febrifuge
ferret
ferreted
fether-driver
fill
fire
flash
fling
float-board
flume
flutter
fly
flyflap
football
force
forced
forceful
forcer
forefend
fortune
fraise
frantic
frostnail
full-drive
fume
goad
golf
hackney-coachman
hasten
heart-struck
herd
hole
home
hoop
hoot
house
hull
hunt
hurl
hurry
hydragogue
impact
impacted
impel
impelled
impellent
impetus
inch
inculcate
inhibit
interpellation
jee
job
jowter
justle
knock
lead
let
mantlet
many
mediocrity
melanagogue
menagogue
militia
millrace
moment
muleteer
nail
nepenthe
oppilate
outcast
overblown
overdrive
pallmall
pare
parried
peal
pelt
pelted
pelting
penguin
peristaltic
phlegmagogue
pile
pillar
pistillation
piston
plowboy
plunge
pond
port-fire
press
prodigal
prodigy
profit
profligate
projectile
propel
propelled
propulse
protrude
ptsymagogue
puff
puffed
puke
pulmonary
pulsate
pulse
pulverable
push
pushed
pusher
put
rage
raging
rain
ram
rammed
rammer
rattle
read
rebound
recoil
recusant
redound
refuse
refute
renitency
repeat
repel
repelled
repellency
repellent
repercussive
repulse
repulsed
repulser
reservoir
resign
restif
retreat
retropulsive
reverberate
reverberated
revert
rhetoric
rid
ride
rivet
roll
rouse
row
rowed
run
rush
sagittal
sail
sake
sand
scare
scatter
scowl
scratch
screen
scud
scudding
sea-room
sedition
seek
send
serr
shake
shoot
shove
slabber
slabbering
slaver
slavered
slaverer
slice
slot
smite
snow-drift
spanker
spanner
spar
speed
spell
spile
spire
spirit
spit
split
spoom
sport
sportive
spray
spur
spurn
spurt
squir
squirt
staple
stool-ball
strand
strive
sweep
swell
swing-wheel
synagogue
tamping
teamster
tempest
tempest-tost
tennis
testaceous
thine
throb
throw
thrust
thunder-storm
tide
transact
trap
triumphantly
troll
turn
undriven
unearthed
unharbor
unhouse
unhoused
unkennel
unkenneled
unroosted
urge
vagabond
vehemency
venery
venom
violent
voice
walk
war
water-sail
water-spout
wave
way
weather-driven
wedge
whip
whoop
wind
wind-rode
winnow
wish
wool-driver
wreak
wreck
wrought



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D  ›  drive
D  ›  drive
1828 Definition

DRIVE, v.t. pret. Drove, [formerly drave; pp. Driven, G.]

1. To impel or urge forward by force; to force; to move by physical force. We drive a nail into wood with a hammer; the wind or a current drive a ship on the ocean.

2. To compel or urge forward by other means than absolute physical force, or by means that compel the will; as, to drive cattle to market. A smoke drives company from the room. A man may be drive by the necessities of the times, to abandon his country.

Drive thy business; let not thy business drive thee.

3. To chase; to hunt.

To drive the deer with hound and horn.

4. To impel a team of horses or oxen to move forward, and to direct their course; hence, to guide or regulate the course of the carriage drawn by them. We say, to drive a team, or to drive a carriage drawn by a team.

5. To impel to greater speed.

6. To clear any place by forcing away what is in it.

To drive the country, force the swains away.

7. To force; to compel; in a general sense.

8. To hurry on inconsiderately; often with on. In this sense it is more generally intransitive.

9. To distress; to straighten; as desperate men far driven.

10. To impel by influence of passion. Anger and lust often drive men into gross crimes.

11. To urge; to press; as, to drive an argument.

12. To impel by moral influence; to compel; as, the reasoning of his opponent drove him to acknowledge his error.

13. To carry on; to prosecute; to keep in motion; as, to drive a trade; to drive business.

14. To make light by motion or agitation; as, to drive feathers.

His thrice driven bed of down.

The sense is probably to beat; but I do not recollect this application of the word in America.

To drive away, to force to remove to a distance; to expel; to dispel; to scatter.

To drive off, to compel to remove from a place; to expel; to drive to a distance.

To drive out, to expel.

DRIVE, v.i.

1. To be forced along; to be impelled; to be moved by any physical force or agent; as, a ship drives before the wind.

2. To rush and press with violence; as, a storm drives against the house.

Fierce Boreas drove against his flying sails.

3. To pass in a carriage; as, he drove to London. This phrase is elliptical. He drove his horses or carriage to London.

4. To aim at or tend to; to urge towards a point; to make an effort to reach or obtain; as, we know the end the author is driving at.

5. To aim a blow; to strike at with force.

Four rogues in buckram let drive at me.

Drive, in all its senses, implies forcible or violent action. It is opposed to lead. To drive a body is to move it by applying a force behind; to lead is to cause to move by applying the force before, or forward of the body.

DRIVE, n. Passage in a carriage.

1913 Definition
Drive (drive)
v. t.(dr***imacr]v)
Drive
[imp. Drove (dr1913 webster dictionaryv
  1. To impel or urge onward by force in a direction away from one, or along before one; to push forward; to compel to move on; to communicate motion to; as, to drive cattle; to drive a nail; smoke drives persons from a room.

    A storm came on and drove them into Pylos. Jowett (Thucyd. ).

    Shield pressed on shield, and man drove man along. Pope.

    Go drive the deer and drag the finny prey. Pope.

  2. To urge on and direct the motions of, as the beasts which draw a vehicle, or the vehicle borne by them; hence, also, to take in a carriage; to convey in a vehicle drawn by beasts; as, to drive a pair of horses or a stage; to drive a person to his own door.

    How . . . proud he was to drive such a brother! Thackeray.

  3. To urge, impel, or hurry forward; to force; to constrain; to urge, press, or bring to a point or state; as, to drive a person by necessity, by persuasion, by force of circumstances, by argument, and the like.
    " Enough to drive one mad." Tennyson.

    He, driven to dismount, threatened, if I did not do the like, to do as much for my horse as fortune had done for his. Sir P. Sidney.

  4. To carry or; to keep in motion; to conduct; to prosecute.
    [Now used only colloquially.] Bacon.

    The trade of life can not be driven without partners. Collier.

  5. To clear, by forcing away what is contained.

    To drive the country, force the swains away. Dryden.

  6. To dig Horizontally; to cut a horizontal gallery or tunnel.
    Tomlinson.
  7. To pass away; -- said of time.
    [Obs.] Chaucer.

    * Drive, in all its senses, implies forcible or violent action. It is the reverse of to lead. To drive a body is to move it by applying a force behind; to lead is to cause to move by applying the force before, or in front. It takes a variety of meanings, according to the objects by which it is followed; as, to drive an engine, to direct and regulate its motions; to drive logs, to keep them in the current of a river and direct them in their course; to drive feathers or down, to place them in a machine, which, by a current of air, drives off the lightest to one end, and collects them by themselves. "My thrice-driven bed of down." Shak.

  8. To rush and press with violence; to move furiously.

    Fierce Boreas drove against his flying sails. Dryden.

    Under cover of the night and a driving tempest. Prescott.

    Time driveth onward fast,
    And in a little while our lips are dumb.
    Tennyson.

  9. To be forced along; to be impelled; to be moved by any physical force or agent; to be driven.

    The hull drives on, though mast and sail be torn. Byron.

    The chaise drives to Mr. Draper's chambers. Thackeray.

  10. To go by carriage; to pass in a carriage; to proceed by directing or urging on a vehicle or the animals that draw it; as, the coachman drove to my door.
  11. To press forward; to aim, or tend, to a point; to make an effort; to strive; -- usually with at.

    Let them therefore declare what carnal or secular interest he drove at. South.

  12. To distrain for rent.
    [Obs.]

    To let drive, to aim a blow; to strike with force; to attack. "Four rogues in buckram let drive at me." Shak.

  13. Driven.
    [Obs.] Chaucer.
  14. The act of driving; a trip or an excursion in a carriage, as for exercise or pleasure; -- distinguished from a ride taken on horseback.
  15. A place suitable or agreeable for driving; a road prepared for driving.
  16. Violent or rapid motion; a rushing onward or away; esp., a forced or hurried dispatch of business.

    The Murdstonian drive in business. M. Arnold.

  17. In type founding and forging, an impression or matrix, formed by a punch drift.
  18. A collection of objects that are driven; a mass of logs to be floated down a river.
    [Colloq.]

    Syn. -- See Ride.

  19. To make a drive, or stroke from the tee.
  20. Specif., in various games, as tennis, baseball, etc., to propel (the ball) swiftly by a direct stroke or forcible throw.
  21. In various games, as tennis, cricket, etc., the act of player who drives the ball; the stroke or blow; the flight of the ball, etc., so driven.
  22. A stroke from the tee, generally a full shot made with a driver; also, the distance covered by such a stroke.
  23. An implement used for driving;
    as: (a)

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
The brief exposition of the constitution of the United States, will unfold to young persons the principles of republican government; and it is the sincere desire of the writer that our citizens should early understand that the genuine source of correct republican principles is the Bible, particularly the New Testament or the Christian religion.
 History of the United States :: 1832 




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