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(18) Words.

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Definitions
1828 dictionary(240) Words.

accessory
active
acute
alum-earth
amblyopy
animal
annotta
apprehension
ass
ass-head
backwardness
barren
beef-witted
beetle-headed
besot
blockheaded
blockish
blockishness
blunt
blunted
blunting
bluntness
bluntwitted
bone
brain
buffle-headed
cachinnation
chert
chili
chrysoprase
chuff
clod
clodpated
conceitless
damp
dead-heartedness
depress
dim
dimness
diploe
disedged
do
doltish
doze
drone
droning
drowse
drowsily
drowsy
dulbrained
dull
dull-brained
dull-browed
dull-disposed
dull-eyed
dull-head
dull-sighted
dull-witted
dullard
dulled
duller
dulling
dullness
dully
dump
dumpish
dumpishness
dun
dunce
duncery
dunny
dusk
enliven
eyed
fat
fatbrained
fatwitted
flag
flat
flatly
flatness
flatten
foggy
foil
free
frigid
frigidity
frigidly
frigidness
gape
gaping
gross
gurhofite
heaviness
heavy
hebetate
hebetated
hebetating
hebetation
hebete
hebetude
hum
humdrum
impenetrably
indocible
indocility
inert
inexcitable
insensibility
insensible
insipid
insulse
ivory
languid
languidness
languish
languishingly
languor
lassitude
lead
leaden
lethargical
lethargy
lifeless
lifelessly
lob
loggerheaded
loord
lose
low
lumpish
lumpishly
lumpishness
lungis
mangle
market
mawkish
medullary
medullin
mome
mope
moping
mopish
mopishness
muddy
muddy-headed
mumpish
musty
nerve
numskulled
oafish
oafishness
obtund
obtuse
obtusely
obtuseness
obtusion
oppression
oscitancy
oscitant
outbalance
pargasite
phlegmatic
phlem
pleasantry
plodder
plumbeous
ready
reanimate
retund
rust
rusty
sanders
saturnine
saturnist
scratch
segnity
sleepily
slow
slowness
sluggish
sluggishness
somber
sombre
sot
sottish
sottishness
spiritless
spiritlessness
sprightless
stagnant
stagnate
stagnation
stock
stolid
stolidity
stupefaction
stupefier
stupefy
stupefying
stupid
stupidity
stupidly
sturdy
sullen
tarnish
tedious
thick
thickheaded
thickness
thickskull
thickskulled
thoughtless
time
tire
tiresomeness
torpid
torpidnesspitude
torpor
tripoli
ugliness
unanimated
unanimating
unapt
unaptness
unblunted
uncensured
uncheery
undull
unentertainingness
uningenious
unintelligent
unliveliness
unlively
vapid
vapidness
vitriol
wrought
yawn
yawning



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D  ›  dull
D  ›  dull
1828 Definition

DULL, a. [G.]

1. Stupid; doltish; blockish; slow of understanding; as a lad of dull genius.

2. Heavy; sluggish; without life or spirit; as a surfeit leaves a man very dull.

3. Slow of motion; sluggish; as a dull stream.

4. Slow of hearing or seeing; as dull of hearing; dull of seeing.

5. Slow to learn or comprehend; unready; awkward; as a dull scholar.

6. Sleepy; drowsy.

7. Sad; melancholy.

8. Gross; cloggy; insensible; as the dull earth.

9. Not pleasing or delightful; not exhilarating; cheerless; as, to make dictionaries is dull work.

10. Not bright or clear; clouded; tarnished; as, the mirror is dull.

11. Not bright; not briskly burning; as a dull fire.

12 Dim; obscure; not vivid; as a dull light.

13. Blunt; obtuse; having a thick edge; as a dull knife or ax.

14. Cloudy; overcast; not clear; not enlivening; as dull weather.

15. With seamen, being without wind; as, a ship has a dull time.

16. Not lively or animated; as a dull eye.

DULL, v.t.

1. To make dull; to stupify; as, to dull the senses.

2. To blunt; as, to dull a sword or an ax.

3. To make sad or melancholy.

4. To hebetate; to make insensible or slow to perceive; as, to dull the ears; to dull the wits.

5. To damp; to render lifeless; as, to dull the attention.

6. To make heavy or slow of motion; as, to dull industry.

7. To sully; to tarnish or cloud; as, the breath dulls a mirror.

DULL, v.i. To become dull or blunt; to become stupid.

1913 Definition
Dull (dull)
a.(?)
Dull
[Compar. Duller (?); superl. Dullest.] [AS. dol foolish; akin to gedwelan to err, D. dol mad, dwalen to wander, err, G. toll mad, Goth. dwals foolish, stupid,
  1. Slow of understanding; wanting readiness of apprehension; stupid; doltish; blockish.
    "Dull at classical learning." Thackeray.

    She is not bred so dull but she can learn. Shak.

  2. Slow in action; sluggish; unready; awkward.

    This people's heart is waxed gross, and their ears are dull of hearing. Matt. xiii. 15.

    O, help my weak wit and sharpen my dull tongue. Spenser.

  3. Insensible; unfeeling.

    Think me not
    So dull a devil to forget the loss
    Of such a matchless wife.
    Beau. *** Fl.

  4. Not keen in edge or point] lacking sharpness; blunt.
    "Thy scythe is dull." Herbert.
  5. Not bright or clear to the eye; wanting in liveliness of color or luster; not vivid; obscure; dim; as, a dull fire or lamp; a dull red or yellow; a dull mirror.
  6. Heavy; gross; cloggy; insensible; spiritless; lifeless; inert.
    "The dull earth." Shak.

    As turning the logs will make a dull fire burn, so changes of study a dull brain. Longfellow.

  7. Furnishing little delight, spirit, or variety; uninteresting; tedious; cheerless; gloomy; melancholy; depressing; as, a dull story or sermon; a dull occupation or period; hence, cloudy; overcast; as, a dull day.

    Along life's dullest, dreariest walk. Keble.

    Syn. -- Lifeless; inanimate; dead; stupid; doltish; heavy; sluggish; sleepy; drowsy; gross; cheerless; tedious; irksome; dismal; dreary; clouded; tarnished; obtuse. See Lifeless.

  8. To deprive of sharpness of edge or point.
    "This . . . dulled their swords." Bacon.

    Borrowing dulls the edge of husbandry. Shak.

  9. To make dull, stupid, or sluggish] to stupefy, as the senses, the feelings, the perceptions, and the like.

    Those [drugs] she has
    Will stupefy and dull the sense a while.
    Shak.

    Use and custom have so dulled our eyes. Trench.

  10. To render dim or obscure; to sully; to tarnish.
    "Dulls the mirror." Bacon.
  11. To deprive of liveliness or activity; to render heavy; to make inert; to depress; to weary; to sadden.

    Attention of mind . . . wasted or dulled through continuance. Hooker.

  12. To become dull or stupid.
    Rom. of R.

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
The duties of men are summarily comprised in the Ten Commandments, consisting of two tables; one comprehending the duties which we owe immediately to God-the other, the duties we owe to our fellow men.
  




Patents to plants which are stable and reproduced by asexual reproduction, and not a potato or other edible tuber reproduced plant, are provided for by Title 35 United States Code, Section 161 which states: Whoever invents or discovers and asexually reproduces any distinct and new variety of plant, including cultivated sports, mutants, hybrids, and newly found seedlings, other than a tuber propagated plant or a plant found in an uncultivated state, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the conditions and requirements of title. (Amended September 3, 1954, 68 Stat. 1190). The plant patent must also satisfy the general requirements of patentability. The subject matter of the application would be a plant which developed or discovered by applicant, and which has been found stable by asexual reproduction. To be patentable, it would also be required: (1) That the plant was invented or discovered and, if discovered, that the discovery was made in a cultivated area. (2)That the plant is not a plant which is excluded by statute, where the part of the plant used for asexual reproduction is not a tuber food part, as with potato or Jerusalem artichoke. (3) That the person or persons filing the application are those who actually invented the claimed plant; i.e., discovered or developed and identified or isolated the plant, and asexually reproduced the plant. (4) That the plant has not been sold or released in the United States of America more than one year prior to the date of the application. (5)That the plant has not been enabled to the public, i.e., by description in a printed publication in this country more than one year before the application for patent with an offer to sale; or by release or sale of the plant more than one year prior to application for patent. (6) That the plant be shown to differ from known, related plants by at least one distinguishing characteristic, which is more than a difference caused by growing conditions or fertility levels, etc. (7) The invention would not have been obvious to one skilled in the art at the time of invention by applicant.




1828 dictionary
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