1828 dictionary Noah Webster's 1828 American Dictionary 1828 webster
Noah Webster's 1828 American Dictionary
1828 american dictionary
 
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Results
1828 dictionary(9) Words.

Found In
Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(406) Words.

affectation
affected
affecting
ague-cake
amorpha
anomaly
apocryphal
apostate
apprehension
arrogate
asperse
assign
attaint
authentical
barefaced
bastard
bear
bedswerver
belie
belied
beware
blend
bribery
broad
brucine
bubble
burly
calumniate
calumniated
calumniation
calumniator
calumny
cavil
chaff
chasm
checker
cloke
cog
coggery
coin
color
confidence
confutable
confutation
confute
confuted
confuting
conspiracy
conspirator
conspire
contradiction
contraries
contrariety
convict
council
counter
counterfeit
counterfeiter
counterfeitly
countertaste
creation
criterion
critically
crocodile
cuckold
cunning
deceptious
deceptive
defamation
defamatory
defame
defaming
delude
deluder
deluding
delusion
determinately
detraction
devil
disabuse
discern
discernment
discriminate
discuss
discussion
disguise
disguisement
disguising
disloyal
disproof
disprove
disproved
disproving
dispute
dissemble
dissembled
dissembler
dissembling
dissemblingly
dissimulation
distaff-thistle
distinguish
divest
divine
divinity
doctrine
double-hearted
downright
dress
enemy
epoch
eradicate
errant
erroneous
erroneously
erroneousness
evidence
exprobration
extract
fable
fabling
fabricate
fabricated
fabricating
fabrication
face
faithless
fallacious
fallacy
falsary
false
false-heart
false-hearted
false-heartedness
falsehood
falsely
falseness
falsetto
falsification
falsifier
falsify
falsifying
falsity
fancy
farce
fare
feign
feigning
feigningly
feint
fib
fictitious
fictitiously
flam
flatter
flattered
flattering
flattery
forge
forgery
forswear
forswearer
forswearing
foulness
fraud
friendship
fucated
fucus
gentile
gentilism
genuine
genuineness
gild
give
gloze
go
god
good
groundless
haak
hang
heteroptics
hollow
huff
hypocrisy
hypocrite
hypocritical
hypocritically
idolatrous
illegality
illusion
illusive
illusively
illusiveness
illusory
imagery
imp
impose
impostor
imposture
imprisonment
incendiary
incompatibility
incompatible
inconclusively
inconclusiveness
inconsistent
infirm
ingenuous
insincere
instance
interweave
invent
involution
jactitation
judge
juggle
keel
knave
know
lay
leasing
legitimate
legitimately
liar
libel
lie
liege
liver
loin
lumbar
lye
lying
main-keel
mainswear
manner
mendacious
mendacity
meretricious
misascribe
misbelief
misbeliever
mischaracterize
miscite
miscomputation
misconceive
misconception
miscreancy
miscreant
misdevotion
misinformation
misjudge
mispersuasion
misprofess
misrate
misrelate
misreport
misrepresent
misrepresentation
misrepresented
misrepresenter
misrepresenting
misseem
missemblance
misspelling
misstating
mistakingly
misvouch
miszealous
mock
mockery
momentous
mormo
mountebank
name
necessarily
notion
oath
opinion
opossum
pagan
paganism
paralogism
paralogize
paralogy
pass
passable
perfidious
periwig
perjure
perjured
perjurer
perjuring
perjury
personage
petrific
philosophism
phlogiston
play
pretend
pretended
pretendedly
pretending
pretense
pretension
pretext
prevaricate
prevarication
priscillianist
privily
problem
prophet
prove
provost
pseudo
pseudo-apostle
pseudo-china
pseudo-galena
pseudography
pseudology
quarter
reason
reasoning
recreant
rectify
refutable
refutation
refute
refuted
refuting
religion
repay
reprobation
reversal
sacrifice
sagacity
scandal
seducement
seducer
serious
sham
sheer
signal
simulation
sincerity
slander
slandered
slanderous
slanderously
sooterkin
sophism
sophistry
spurious
spuriously
spuriousness
stab
stay
strumpet
suborn
subornation
suborned
suborner
suborning
subreptitious
superstition
suppose
supposition
sway
swear
swearing
swift
tell
temper
temperament
tete
theoretically
thief
tinsel
tissue
ton
tradition
trail
tritone
true
trumpery
truth
tumid
tumor
twit
unaffectedly
understanding
undisguised
undissembling
unobjectionable
untrue
untruly
untruth
utter
vain
vaunt-mure
vice
warrantable
whip
winnow
wise
worship



Bible Results
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F  ›  false
F  ›  false
1828 Definition

FALSE, a. [L. falsus, from fallo, to deceive. See Fall and Fail.]

1. Not true; not conformable to fact; expressing what is contrary to that which exists, is done, said or thought. A false report communicates what is not done or said. A false accusation imputes to a person what he has not done or said. A false witness testifies what is not true. A false opinion is not according to truth or fact. The word is applicable to any subject, physical or moral.

2. Not well founded; as a false claim.

3. Not true; not according to the lawful standard; as a false weight or measure.

4. Substituted for another; succedaneous; supposititious; as a false bottom.

5. Counterfeit; forged; not genuine; as false coin; a false bill or note.

6. Not solid or sound; deceiving expectations; as a false foundation

False and slippery ground.

7. Not agreeable to rule or propriety; as false construction in language.

8. Not honest or just; not fair; as false play.

9. Not faithful or loyal; treacherous; perfidious; deceitful. The king's subjects may prove false to him. So we say, a false heart.

10. Unfaithful; inconstant; as a false friend; a false lover; false to promises and vows.

The husband and wife proved false to each other.

11. Deceitful; treacherous; betraying secrets.

12. Counterfeit; not genuine or real; as a false diamond.

13. Hypocritical; feigned; made or assumed for the purpose of deception; as false tears; false modesty. The man appears in false colors. The advocate gave the subject a false coloring.

False fire, a blue flame, made by the burning of certain combustibles, in a wooden tube; used as a signal during the night.

False imprisonment, the arrest and imprisonment of a person without warrant or cause, or contrary to law; or the unlawful detaining of a person in custody.

FALSE, adv. Not truly; not honestly; falsely.

FALSE, v.t.

1. To violate by failure of veracity; to deceive. Obs.

2. To defeat; to balk; to evade. Obs.
1913 Definition
False (false)
a.(?)
False
[Compar. Falser (?); superl. Falsest.] [L. falsus, p. p. of fallere to deceive; cf. OF. faus, fals, F. faux, and AS. fals fraud. See Fail, Fall.]
  1. Uttering falsehood; unveracious; given to deceit; dishnest; as, a false witness.
  2. Not faithful or loyal, as to obligations, allegiance, vows, etc.; untrue; treacherous; perfidious; as, a false friend, lover, or subject; false to promises.

    I to myself was false, ere thou to me. Milton.

  3. Not according with truth or reality; not true; fitted or likely to deceive or disappoint; as, a false statement.
  4. Not genuine or real; assumed or designed to deceive; counterfeit; hypocritical; as, false tears; false modesty; false colors; false jewelry.

    False face must hide what the false heart doth know. Shak.

  5. Not well founded; not firm or trustworthy; erroneous; as, a false claim; a false conclusion; a false construction in grammar.

    Whose false foundation waves have swept away. Spenser.

  6. Not essential or permanent, as parts of a structure which are temporary or supplemental.
  7. Not in tune.

    False arch (Arch.), a member having the appearance of an arch, though not of arch construction. -- False attic, an architectural erection above the main cornice, concealing a roof, but not having windows or inclosing rooms. -- False bearing, any bearing which is not directly upon a vertical support; thus, the weight carried by a corbel has a false bearing. -- False cadence, an imperfect or interrupted cadence. -- False conception (Med.), an abnormal conception in which a mole, or misshapen fleshy mass, is produced instead of a properly organized fetus. -- False croup (Med.), a spasmodic affection of the larynx attended with the symptoms of membranous croup, but unassociated with the deposit of a fibrinous membrane. -- False door or window (Arch.), the representation of a door or window, inserted to complete a series of doors or windows or to give symmetry. -- False fire, a combustible carried by vessels of war, chiefly for signaling, but sometimes burned for the purpose of deceiving an enemy; also, a light on shore for decoying a vessel to destruction. -- False galena. See Blende. -- False imprisonment (Law), the arrest and imprisonment of a person without warrant or cause, or contrary to law; or the unlawful detaining of a person in custody. -- False keel (Naut.), the timber below the main keel, used to serve both as a protection and to increase the shio's lateral resistance. -- False key, a picklock. -- False leg. (Zoöl.) See Proleg. -- False membrane (Med.), the fibrinous deposit formed in croup and diphtheria, and resembling in appearance an animal membrane. -- False papers (Naut.), documents carried by a ship giving false representations respecting her cargo, destination, ect., for the purpose of deceiving. -- False passage (Surg.), an unnatural passage leading off from a natural canal, such as the urethra, and produced usually by the unskillful introduction of instruments. -- False personation (Law), the intentional false assumption of the name and personality of another. -- False pretenses (Law), false representations concerning past or present facts and events, for the purpose of defrauding another. -- False rail (Naut.), a thin piece of timber placed on top of the head rail to strengthen it. -- False relation (Mus.), a progression in harmony, in which a certain note in a chord appears in the next chord prefixed by a flat or sharp. -- False return (Law), an untrue return made to a process by the officer to whom it was delivered for execution. -- False ribs (Anat.), the asternal rebs, of which there are five pairs in man. -- False roof (Arch.), the space between the upper ceiling and the roof. Oxford Gloss. -- False token, a false mark or other symbol, used for fraudulent purposes. -- False scorpion (Zoöl.), any arachnid of the genus Chelifer. See Book scorpion. -- False tack (Naut.), a coming up into the wind and filling away again on the same tack. -- False vampire (Zoöl.), the Vampyrus spectrum of South America, formerly erroneously supposed to have blood-sucking habits; -- called also vampire, and ghost vampire. The genuine blood-sucking bats belong to the genera Desmodus and Diphylla. See Vampire. -- False window. (Arch.) See False door, above. -- False wing. (Zoöl.) See Alula, and Bastard wing, under Bastard. -- False works (Civil Engin.), construction works to facilitate the erection of the main work, as scaffolding, bridge centering, etc.

  8. Not truly; not honestly; falsely.
    "You play me false." Shak.
  9. To report falsely; to falsify.
    [Obs.] Chaucer.
  10. To betray; to falsify.
    [Obs.]

    [He] hath his truthe falsed in this wise. Chaucer.

  11. To mislead by want of truth; to deceive.
    [Obs.]

    In his falsed fancy. Spenser.

  12. To feign; to pretend to make.
    [Obs.] "And falsed oft his blows." Spenser.

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
The moral principles and precepts contained in the Scriptures ought to form the basis of all of our civil constitutions and laws....All the miseries and evils which men suffer from vice, crime, ambition, injustice, oppression, slavery and war, proceed from their despising or neglecting the precepts contained in the Bible.
 History of the United States :: 1832 




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