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(17) Words.

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Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(247) Words.

aberrance
accuse
acknowledgment
address
admonish
admonition
amend
amendment
amiss
arraign
arraignment
attributable
bad
bear
bethink
blamable
blamableness
blame
blameful
blameless
blamelessly
blamer
blaming
captious
captiousness
carp
cavil
censurable
censure
censured
chargeable
chasten
chastise
chide
citizen
coetaneous
complain
complainer
complaining
complaint
concession
confess
confession
confitent
connivance
connive
conniving
constable
correct
correction
correctly
corrector
critic
critical
criticise
criticised
criticising
criticism
critique
culpable
culpably
cultivate
decry
default
defaulted
defaulter
defaulting
defect
defective
defectiveness
defectuosity
defendant
delinquency
delinquent
detraction
discourtesy
disculpate
door
emendation
emendator
error
exaggerate
exculpate
exculpated
exculpating
exculpation
exculpatory
excuse
excusing
expose
extenuation
facile
failance
failing
failure
fastidious
fault
faulted
faulter
faultful
faultily
faultiness
faulting
faultless
faultlessness
faulty
find
findfault
findfaulting
flame
flaw
flawy
foreknowledge
forfeit
fragility
frailty
frankly
frugality
gently
glaucoma
hallucination
harmlessly
have
hesitate
hint
hypercritical
idiopathic
imperfection
imperfectly
improve
imputable
imputation
impute
inaccuracy
inadvertency
incorrect
incriminate
inculpable
infirmity
ingenuousness
interlocutory
irreprehensible
irritate
judgment
judiciously
lapse
lavish
law
lecture
line
long
make
material
mend
minor
mischance
misdemeanor
misdo
misdoer
misdoing
misfortune
mislay
mistake
monitor
multitude
nibble
nice
non-appearance
non-user
nonsuit
nonsuited
objection
overlook
overtake
own
palliate
palliation
pardon
pass
peccadillo
penance
penurious
pick
plead
precedent
principally
punish
punishment
quaintly
quarrel
quarreling
rebuke
rebuked
regarder
remit
reprehend
reprehension
reprimand
reproach
reproof
reprove
reproved
resist
reverently
run
scandal
scandalously
scold
scour
scourge
severe
sleek
slip
smooth
soften
sponsor
spot
spotless
stomach
strange
submission
submissiveness
suspension
talkative
taunt
thought
transgression
transgressive
trouble
unaccused
unacknowledged
unblamableness
unculpable
undo
unfaulty
unimpeachable
unobjectionable
unobjeected
unoffending
venial
vice
viciously
victory
votary
warning
weakness
wink



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F  ›  fault
F  ›  fault
1828 Definition

FAULT, n. [See Fail.]

1. Properly, an erring or missing; a failing; hence, an error or mistake; a blunder; a defect; a blemish; whatever impairs excellence; applied to things.

2. In morals or deportment, any error or defect; an imperfection; any deviation from propriety; a slight offense; a neglect of duty or propriety, resulting from inattention or want of prudence, rather than from design to injure or offend, but liable to censure or objection.

I do remember my faults this day. Gen. 41.

If a man be overtaken in a fault, ye who are spiritual, restore such as one in the spirit of meekness. Gal. 6.

Fault implies wrong, and often some degree of criminality.

3. Defect; want; absence. [Not now used. See Default.]

I could tell to thee, as to one if pleases me, for fault of a better to call my friend.

4. Puzzle; difficulty.

Among sportsmen, when dogs lose the scent, they are said to be at fault. Hence the phrase, the inquirer is at fault.

5. In mining, a fissure in strata, causing a dislocation of the same, and thus interrupting the course of veins.

To find fault, to express blame; to complain.

Thou wilt say then, why doth he yet find fault? Rom 9.

To find fault with, to blame; to censure; as, to find fault with the times, or with a neighbor's conduct.

FAULT, v.i. To fail; to be wrong. [Not used.]

FAULT, v.t. To charge with a fault; to accuse.

For that I will not fault thee.
1913 Definition
Fault (fault)
n.(?)
Fault
[OE. faut, faute, F. faute (cf. It., Sp., *** Pg. falta
  1. Defect] want; lack; default.

    One, it pleases me, for fault of a better, to call my friend. Shak.

  2. Anything that fails, that is wanting, or that impairs excellence; a failing; a defect; a blemish.

    As patches set upon a little breach
    Discredit more in hiding of the fault.
    Shak.

  3. A moral failing; a defect or dereliction from duty; a deviation from propriety; an offense less serious than a crime.
  4. A dislocation of the strata of the vein.
    (b)
  5. A lost scent; act of losing the scent.

    Ceasing their clamorous cry till they have singled,
    With much ado, the cold fault cleary out.
    Shak.

  6. Failure to serve the ball into the proper court.

    At fault, unable to find the scent and continue chase; hence, in trouble or embarrassment, and unable to proceed; puzzled; thrown off the track. -- To find fault, to find reason for blaming or complaining; to express dissatisfaction; to complain; -- followed by with before the thing complained of; but formerly by at. "Matter to find fault at." Robynson (More's Utopia).

    Syn. -- -- Error; blemish; defect; imperfection; weakness; blunder; failing; vice. -- Fault, Failing, Defect, Foible. A fault is positive, something morally wrong; a failing is negative, some weakness or falling short in a man's character, disposition, or habits; a defect is also negative, and as applied to character is the absence of anything which is necessary to its completeness or perfection; a foible is a less important weakness, which we overlook or smile at. A man may have many failings, and yet commit but few faults; or his faults and failings may be few, while his foibles are obvious to all. The faults of a friend are often palliated or explained away into mere defects, and the defects or foibles of an enemy exaggerated into faults. "I have failings in common with every human being, besides my own peculiar faults; but of avarice I have generally held myself guiltless." Fox. "Presumption and self-applause are the foibles of mankind." Waterland.

  7. To charge with a fault] to accuse; to find fault with; to blame.
    [Obs.]

    For that I will not fault thee. Old Song.

  8. To interrupt the continuity of (rock strata) by displacement along a plane of fracture; -- chiefly used in the p. p.; as, the coal beds are badly faulted.
  9. To err; to blunder, to commit a fault; to do wrong.
    [Obs.]

    If after Samuel's death the people had asked of God a king, they had not faulted. Latimer.

  10. A defective point in an electric circuit due to a crossing of the parts of the conductor, or to contact with another conductor or the earth, or to a break in the circuit.
  11. A dislocation caused by a slipping of rock masses along a plane of facture] also, the dislocated structure resulting from such slipping.

    The surface along which the dislocated masses have moved is called the fault plane. When this plane is vertical, the fault is a vertical fault; when its inclination is such that the present relative position of the two masses could have been produced by the sliding down, along the fault plane, of the mass on its upper side, the fault is a normal, or gravity, fault. When the fault plane is so inclined that the mass on its upper side has moved up relatively, the fault is then called a reverse (or reversed), thrust, or overthrust, fault. If no vertical displacement has resulted, the fault is then called a horizontal fault. The linear extent of the dislocation measured on the fault plane and in the direction of movement is the displacement; the vertical displacement is the throw; the horizontal displacement is the heave. The direction of the line of intersection of the fault plane with a horizontal plane is the trend of the fault. A fault is a strike fault when its trend coincides approximately with the strike of associated strata (i.e., the line of intersection of the plane of the strata with a horizontal plane); it is a dip fault when its trend is at right angles to the strike; an oblique fault when its trend is oblique to the strike. Oblique faults and dip faults are sometimes called cross faults. A series of closely associated parallel faults are sometimes called step faults and sometimes distributive faults.


1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
When a citizen gives his suffrage to a man of known immorality he abuses his trust; he sacrifices not only his own interest, but that of his neighbor; he betrays the interest of his country.
  




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