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(21) Words.

Found In
Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(230) Words.

aceldama
acre
adjacent
adumbration
afield
agrarian
agrestical
agricultor
agriculture
aker
alliteration
allotment
anarchical
argent
arriere
arura
ash
atlantis
average
balk
balloon
banneret
base
beating
belong
bend
bendy
bless
blink
brow
calenture
camp
campain
campestrian
cannon
carpet
cave
channel
chess
clad
clean
cleche
common
consider
constrain
convert
coquet
coquette
corn
cornfield
counterchanged
covert-way
crown-work
cuckoo-spit
cumber
curlew
curtilage
dewy
disrobe
dissipate
distance
divers
division
dwelling
earsh
elysian
elysium
embattled
ensanguine
equestrian
equipage
ether
even-tide
extensive
extermination
extirpate
fabian
fairy
faldage
fallow
farmer
fatten
fence
fertile
fertility
field
field-bed
field-marshal
field-piece
field-preaching
field-sports
fielded
fieldfare
fieldmouse
fieldy
fiendlike
fighting
fix
flowery
fluctuate
fold
foreground
fortin
fresh
freshness
frith
further
game
glacier
glacis
glean
gleaned
glitter
glory
go
gossamer
grazed
ground
grove
grubstreet
haw
haycock
hedge
hedgerow
herborization
himself
hoe
hook
horsehoe
howitzer
i
impurple
inclose
inflict
intercommoning
jeopard
join
jove
keep
laboratory
lanch
languish
large
lay
level
lick
life
list
litigious
lozengy
lustration
ly
major
manure
marshal
misery
mouse
mow
much
olate
open
opium
over
overrun
pale
parsonage
peragrate
perfume
piece
plain
planted
plot
prance
prescient
pulpit-oratory
purple
ravage
reap
riddance
robe
roll
rout
rove
rowen
run
sabbatical
scarecrow
scarp
scratch
scuffle
setter
settlement
several
shack
sheild
side
smoke
spaniel
sport
sportsman
stook
strew
stride
stuckle
successless
tare
tented
thistle
time
toil
torn
trash
traverse
treasure
trophy
unreaped
upon
verdant
vermin
vicinage
void
wander
warping-bank
waste
widen
wild
windrow
wise
yahoo
yield



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F  ›  field
F  ›  field
1828 Definition

FIELD, n.

1. A piece of land inclosed for tillage or pasture; any part of a farm, except the garden and appurtenances of the mansion; properly land not covered with wood, and more strictly applicable to tillage land than to mowing land, which is often called meadow. But we say, the master of the house is in the field with his laborers, when he is at a distance from his house on his farm. He is in the field, plowing, sowing, reaping or making hay.

2. Ground not inclosed.

3. The ground where a battle is fought.

We say, the field of battle; these veterans are excellent soldiers in the field.

4. A battle; action in the field.

What though the field be lost.

5. To keep the field, is to keep the campaign open; to live in tents, or to be in a state of active operations. At the approach of cold weather, the troops, unable to keep the field, were ordered into winter quarters.

6. A wide expanse.

Ask of yonder argent fields above.

7. Open space for action or operation; compass; extent. This subject opens a wide field for contemplation.

8. A piece or tract of land.

The field I give thee and the cave that is therein.

Gen. 23.

9. The ground or blank space on which figures are drawn; as the field or ground of a picture.

10. In heraldry, the whole surface of the shield, or the continent.

11. In scripture, field often signifies the open country, ground not inclosed, as it may in some countries in modern times.

12. A field of ice, a large body of floating ice.
1913 Definition
Field (field)
n.(f***emacr]ld)
Field
[OE. feld, fild, AS. feld; akin to D. veld, G. feld, Sw. fält, Dan. felt, Icel. fold field of grass, AS. folde earth, land, ground, OS. folda.]
  1. Cleared land; land suitable for tillage or pasture; cultivated ground; the open country.
  2. A piece of land of considerable size; esp., a piece inclosed for tillage or pasture.

    Fields which promise corn and wine. Byron.

  3. A place where a battle is fought; also, the battle itself.

    In this glorious and well-foughten field. Shak.

    What though the field be lost? Milton.

  4. An open space; an extent; an expanse.
    Esp.: (a)
  5. The whole surface of an escutcheon; also, so much of it is shown unconcealed by the different bearings upon it. See Illust. of Fess, where the field is represented as gules (red), while the fess is argent (silver).
  6. An unresticted or favorable opportunity for action, operation, or achievement; province; room.

    Afforded a clear field for moral experiments. Macaulay.

  7. A collective term for all the competitors in any outdoor contest or trial, or for all except the favorites in the betting.
  8. That part of the grounds reserved for the players which is outside of the diamond; -- called also outfield.

    * Field is often used adjectively in the sense of belonging to, or used in, the fields; especially with reference to the operations and equipments of an army during a campaign away from permanent camps and fortifications. In most cases such use of the word is sufficiently clear; as, field battery; field fortification; field gun; field hospital, etc. A field geologist, naturalist, etc., is one who makes investigations or collections out of doors. A survey uses a field book for recording field notes, i.e., measurment, observations, etc., made in field work (outdoor operations). A farmer or planter employs field hands, and may use a field roller or a field derrick. Field sports are hunting, fishing, athletic games, etc.

    Coal field (Geol.) See under Coal. -- Field artillery, light ordnance mounted on wheels, for the use of a marching army. -- Field basil (Bot.), a plant of the Mint family (Calamintha Acinos); -- called also basil thyme. -- Field colors (Mil.), small flags for marking out the positions for squadrons and battalions; camp colors. -- Field cricket (Zoöl.), a large European cricket (Gryllus campestric), remarkable for its loud notes. -- Field day. (a) A day in the fields. (b) (Mil.) A day when troops are taken into the field for instruction in evolutions. Farrow. (c) A day of unusual exertion or display; a gala day. -- Field driver, in New England, an officer charged with the driving of stray cattle to the pound. - - Field duck (Zoöl.), the little bustard (Otis tetrax), found in Southern Europe. -- Field glass. (Optics) (a) A binocular telescope of compact form; a lorgnette; a race glass. (b) A small achromatic telescope, from 20 to 24 inches long, and having 3 to 6 draws. (c) See Field lens. -- Field lark. (Zoöl.) (a) The skylark. (b) The tree pipit. -- Field lens (Optics), that one of the two lenses forming the eyepiece of an astronomical telescope or compound microscope which is nearer the object glass; -- called also field glass. -- Field madder (Bot.), a plant (Sherardia arvensis) used in dyeing. -- Field marshal (Mil.), the highest military rank conferred in the British and other European armies. -- Field mouse (Zoöl.), a mouse inhabiting fields, as the campagnol and the deer mouse. See Campagnol, and Deer mouse. -- Field officer (Mil.), an officer above the rank of captain and below that of general. -- Field officer's court (U.S.Army), a court-martial consisting of one field officer empowered to try all cases, in time of war, subject to jurisdiction of garrison and regimental courts. Farrow. -- Field plover (Zoöl.), the black-bellied plover (Charadrius squatarola); also sometimes applied to the Bartramian sandpiper (Bartramia longicauda). -- Field spaniel (Zoöl.), a small spaniel used in hunting small game. -- Field sparrow. (Zoöl.) (a) A small American sparrow (Spizella pusilla). (b) The hedge sparrow. [Eng.] -- Field staff> (Mil.), a staff formerly used by gunners to hold a lighted match for discharging a gun. -- Field vole (Zoöl.), the European meadow mouse. -- Field of ice, a large body of floating ice; a pack. -- Field, or Field of view, in a telescope or microscope, the entire space within which objects are seen. -- Field magnet. see under Magnet. -- Magnetic field. See Magnetic. -- To back the field, or To bet on the field. See under Back, v. t. -- To keep the field. (a) (Mil.) To continue a campaign. (b) To maintain one's ground against all comers. -- To lay, or back, against the field, to bet on (a horse, etc.) against all comers. -- To take the field (Mil.), to enter upon a campaign.

  9. To take the field.
    [Obs.] Spenser.
  10. To stand out in the field, ready to catch, stop, or throw the ball.
  11. To catch, stop, throw, etc. (the ball), as a fielder.

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
If the citizens neglect their duty and place unprincipled men in office, the government will soon be corrupted; laws will be made not for the public good so much as for the selfish or local purposes.
 History of the United States :: 1832 




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