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(25) Words.

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Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(291) Words.

abate
abdicate
abdication
abhor
abjuration
abjure
abyssinians
adversity
ae
alkoranist
alogians
aphis
armenian
athanasian
auditor
avoided
avoiding
baluster
belch
belched
belching
blank
blot
borrelists
breathe
calumet
canonical
cashier
cashierer
cast
castaway
chap-fallen
chili
chilled
chop-fallen
cloy
come
comptonite
condemn
contemn
contemned
contemning
coquet
coquette
crest-fallen
crucify
damp
damping
dampy
deject
dejected
dejectedly
dejectedness
dejecting
dejection
dejectly
dejectory
dejecture
deliver
denial
denier
depress
depressing
depression
despond
despondency
despondent
desponding
despondingly
digest
digested
disagree
disallow
disallowance
disallowed
disallowing
disanimate
disapprove
disapproved
disapproving
disavow
disavowal
disavowing
discard
discarded
discarding
disclaim
disclaimed
discomfort
disconsolate
discourage
discouraged
disgorge
disgorged
disgorging
dishearten
dismay
dismayedness
dispirit
dispirited
dispiriting
downcast
downhearted
downlooked
dragonet
ebionite
eject
ejected
ejecting
ejection
ejectment
ejector
erect
eructate
eructation
evacuate
evacuated
exclude
excluding
exclusion
excommunicate
excommunication
excrement
excremental
excretive
expectorate
expel
explode
exploded
exploder
exploding
faint
fainthearted
faintness
fall
fastidious
flag
flat
flatness
flatten
fling
forgive
forsake
forswear
forswearer
full
gloom
gloomy
go
great-hearted
heartlessness
heavily
heaviness
heavy
iconoclast
idocrase
jawfallen
jilt
lava
lay
lightly
low
low-spirited
low-spiritedness
lowness
melancholic
melancholy
mopish
mopishness
mother
mouth
mute
nauseate
nill
none
offal
offer
offered
offscouring
oft
omen
ousted
ouster
ousting
out
outcast
overrule
overture
perdition
persecutor
plenty
poor
possession
proscribe
proscription
prosternation
prostration
ptolemaic
puke
pumice
quail
qualm
rabbinist
rebuff
recover
recovery
recuse
refuse
refused
refuser
refusing
regorge
reject
rejectable
rejectamenta
rejectaneous
rejected
rejecter
rejecting
rejection
rejective
rejectment
renounce
renounced
renouncement
renouncing
renunciation
reprobate
reprobated
reprobating
reprobation
repudiable
repudiate
repudiated
repudiating
repudiation
resolution
revolt
revolting
revomit
rubbish
sacred
sadness
savor
scoria
shab
shackle
shotten
sin
sneezing
sordes
sorrowful
spawn
spew
spewed
spewing
spiritless
spit
spitter
spitting
spittle
spitvenom
sprit
spurious
spurn
spurned
spurning
spurt
squirt
surplusage
thought
throw
thrust
tilly-vally
tradition
trashy
ultimatum
unaccepted
unbelief
unman
voidance
voiding
volcano
vomit
vomited
vomiting
vomitive
vomitory
waped
waste
wave



Bible Results
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E  ›  eject
E  ›  eject
1828 Definition

EJECT', v.t. [L. ejicio, ejectum; e and jacio, to throw; jacto.]

1. To throw out; to cast forth; to thrust out, as from a place inclosed or confined.

2. To discharge through the natural passages or emunctories; to evacuate.

3. To throw out or expel from an office; to dismiss from an office; to turn out; as, to eject a clergyman.

4. To dispossess of land or estate.

5. To drive away; to expel; to dismiss with hatred.

6. To cast away; to reject; to banish; as, to eject words from a language.
1913 Definition
Eject (eject)
v. t.(?)
E*ject"
[imp. *** p. p. Ejected] p. pr. *** vb. n. Ejecting.] [L. ejectus, p. p. of ejicere] e out + jacere to throw. See Jet a shooting forth.]
  1. To expel; to dismiss; to cast forth; to thrust or drive out; to discharge; as, to eject a person from a room; to eject a traitor from the country; to eject words from the language.
    "Eyes ejecting flame." H. Brooke.
  2. To cast out; to evict; to dispossess; as, to eject tenants from an estate.

    Syn. -- To expel; banish; drive out; discharge; oust; evict; dislodge; extrude; void.

  3. An object that is a conscious or living object, and hence not a direct object, but an inferred object or act of a subject, not myself] -- a term invented by W. K. Clifford.

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
Corrupt or incompetent men will be appointed to execute the laws; the public revenues will be squandered on unworthy men; and the rights of the citizens will be violated or disregarded.
 History of the United States :: 1832 




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