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(55) Words.

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Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(509) Words.

abet
accend
accension
achiote
acutiator
affrighted
afire
agaric
air
air-pipe
aired
airing
alarm
ammunition
andiron
answer
antiperistasis
appear
appearance
apyrexy
apyrous
archimagus
ardent
armenian
asphurelates
aurate
bake
ball
balloon
bandoleers
bannock
banquette
barbe
basket
bath
bayonet
bbarbacan
beacon
before
belfry
bellows
bertram
blaze
blood
blow
blower
blunderbuss
bolis
bomb
bonfire
boot
bore
bote
bran-new
brand
brand-new
break
brisk
britch
broil
bucket
burn
burned
burner
burning
burnt
by
caboose
caisson
caissoon
calcinable
calefaction
candle-coal
cannel-coal
caponniere
carbine
carbonize
carcass
cartouch
catch
causticity
cauterization
cauterize
chimney
chimney-corner
chimney-hook
chimney-piece
choke
cinder
circulation
circulatory
clamp
coal
coal-box
cock
coke
colophony
combustibility
combustible
combustion
commons
compact
concurrent
conflagration
consumable
consume
consuming
contend
corbeil
corporal
counsel
course
cower
crepitate
crude
culinary
cupel
curfew
curtain
damage
damp
damper
dark
deflagrability
deflagrable
deflagrate
deflagration
depart
destroy
destructive
devastation
devour
dipyre
discharge
discharger
dismettled
dull
earth
ebony
ebullition
electricity
element
elicit
embers
emblem
emission
emit
empale
empyreal
empyrean
empyreuma
empyrosis
enfire
engine
enkindle
enkindled
enkindling
enliven
entice
erysipelas
essential
estovers
eternal
everlasting
example
expansive
explode
extinct
extinction
extinguish
extinguishment
false
fan
fascine
fatuous
feed
fender
fetus
fieriness
fiery
fire
fire-arrow
fire-company
fire-engine
fire-escape
fire-office
fire-ordeal
firebarrel
firebavin
firebrand
firebucket
fireclay
firecock
fired
firelock
fireman
firemaster
firepan
fireplace
fireplug
firer
fireship
fireshovel
fireside
fireward
firewarden
firework
fireworker
firing
flake
flame
flammability
flaring
flee
flint
flower
flue
focus
for
frigid
frigidity
fry
fuel
fumigation
furnace
fusee
fusil
gabion
gallinaceous
gehenna
genial
glow
go
grapling
greek
grenade
ground
gun
gunsmith
gunsmithery
hag
hang
hearth
heaven
heavy
high-mettled
high-spirited
holocaust
hose
hot
housling
hurdle
hydra
hypocaust
igneous
ignescent
ignifluous
ignify
ignipotent
ignite
ignited
igniting
ignition
ignivomous
illuminate
impastation
incendiary
incense
incension
incombustible
inconsumptible
inflame
inflamed
inflammability
inflammable
inflammableness
inflammation
ingle
ink
inmost
insecurity
insure
intrenchment
inwardly
jamb
jasper
keffekil
kindle
kindled
kindler
kindling
know
laboratory
languid
lead
life
light
lighted
lighten
live
lock
lodgment
loophole
loricate
lorication
manage
mantle-shelf
mantle-tree
mark
masticot
match
matchlock
matross
mercurial
metaphor
meteor
meterolite
mettled
mingle
minister
misfortune
mount
musket
natural
neighborhood
nether
nicety
night-fire
oil
on
open
ordeal
out
outward
overlay
pan
peel
pellet
penal
pervious
pharos
phlogiston
pillar
pistol
piston
platform
platoon
play
plunge
plutonian
poker
policy
port-fire
pot-hook
pour
preservation
prester
prime
priming
productive
promethean
proof
prostrate
pumice
purgation
purifier
put
pyrallolite
pyramid
pyramidical
pyretology
pyrite
pyrolatry
pyroligneous
pyrolignic
pyrolignous
pyrolithic
pyrology
pyromalic
pyromancy
pyromantic
pyrometer
pyromucous
pyrope
pyrophane
pyrophorus
pyroscope
pyrotartaric
pyrotartarous
pyrotechnic
pyrotechnical
pyrotechnics
pyrotechny
pyroxene
qualify
quenchless
ragstone
rain
rake
raking
ravage
realize
reboil
receive
recoil
refine
register
rekindle
relight
represent
resoluble
roast
rocket
roll
rousing
rug
run
salamander
salamandrine
sally-port
saucisson
scald
scarefire
scorch
screen
sheet
shooting
shotting
siege
sign
signal
singe
sink
slake
small-coal
smoky
solution
soul
spark
spirit
spirited
spiritless
sponk
spontaneous
spunk
starve
steam
stifle
stock
stoker
straight
stud
suffer
sufferer
suffocate
survey
talc
tamping
target
tenfold
termagant
throw
tinder
tine
toast
toasting
tongs
torrefaction
torrefied
torrefy
torrefying
torrent
torture
touch-hole
touch-wood
touchy
train
trammel
trigger
trim
trunk
try
turgid
unburning
unburnt
unextinguishable
unfired
uninflamed
uninflammable
unlighted
unraked
unscorched
vehement
vent
versification
vestal
vitrify
voice
volcanist
volcano
walk
want
ward
water-rocket
way
wheel-fire
wildfire
with
wood



Bible Results
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F  ›  fire
F  ›  fire
1828 Definition

FIRE, n. [The radical sense of fire is usually, to rush, to rage, to be violently agitated; and if this is the sense of fire, in coincides with L. furo. It may be from shining or consuming.]

1. Heat and light emanating visibly, perceptibly and simultaneously from any body; caloric; the unknown cause of the sensation of heat and of the retrocession of the homogeneous particles of bodies from one another, producing expansion, and thus enlarging all their dimensions; one of the causes of magnetism, as evinced by Dr. Hare's calorimotor.

In the popular acceptation of the word, fire is the effect of combustion. The combustible body ignited or heated to redness we call fire; and when ascending in a stream or body, we call it flame. A piece of charcoal in combustion, is of a red color and very hot. In this state it is said to be on fire, or to contain fire. When combustion ceases, it loses its redness and extreme heat, and we say, the fire is extinct.

2. The burning of fuel on a hearth, or in any other place. We kindle a fire in the morning, and at night we rake up the fire. Anthracite will maintain fire during the night.

3. The burning of a house or town; a conflagration. Newburyport and Savannah have suffered immense losses by fire. The great fire in Boston in 1711 consumed a large part of the town.

4. Light; luster; splendor.

Stars, hide your fires!

5. Torture by burning.

6. The instrument of punishment; or the punishment of the impenitent in another state.

Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire? Is. 33.

7. That which inflames or irritates the passions.

What fire is in my ears?

8. Ardor of temper; violence of passion.

He had fire in his temper.

9. Liveliness of imagination; vigor of fancy; intellectual activity; animation; force of sentiment or expression.

And warm the critic with a poet's fire.

10. The passion of love; ardent affection.

The God of love retires; dim are his torches, and extinct his fires.

11. Ardor; heat; as the fire of zeal or of love.

12. Combustion; tumult; rage; contention.

13. Trouble; affliction.

When thou walkest through the fire, thou shalt not be burnt. Is. 43.

To set on fire, to kindle; to inflame; to excite violent action.

St. Anthony's fire, a disease marked by an eruption on the skin, or a diffused inflammation, with fever; the Erysipelas.

Wild fire, an artificial or factitious fire, which burns even under water. it is made by a composition of sulphur, naphtha, pitch, gum and bitumen. It is called also Greek fire.

FIRE, v.t.

1. To set on fire; to kindle; as, to fire a house or chimney; to fire a pile.

2. To inflame; to irritate the passions; as, to fire with anger or revenge.

3. To animate; to give life or spirit; as, to fire the genius.

4. To drive by fire. [Little used.]

5. To cause to explode; to discharge; as, to fire a musket or cannon.

6. To cauterize; a term in farriery.

FIRE, v.i.

1. To take fire; to be kindled.

2. To be irritated or inflamed with passion.

3. To discharge artillery or firearms. They fired on the town.
1913 Definition
Fire (fire)
n.(f***imacr]r)
Fire
[OE. fir, fyr, fur AS. f***ymacr]r; akin to D. vuur, OS. *** OHG. fiur, G. feuer, Icel. f&ymacr]ri, f1913 webster dictionaryrr, Gr. py^r, and perh. to L. purus pure, E.
  1. The evolution of light and heat in the combustion of bodies; combustion; state of ignition.

    * The form of fire exhibited in the combustion of gases in an ascending stream or current is called flame. Anciently, fire, air, earth, and water were regarded as the four elements of which all things are composed.

  2. Fuel in a state of combustion, as on a hearth, or in a stove or a furnace.
  3. The burning of a house or town; a conflagration.
  4. Anything which destroys or affects like fire.
  5. Ardor of passion, whether love or hate; excessive warmth; consuming violence of temper.

    he had fire in his temper. Atterbury.

  6. Liveliness of imagination or fancy; intellectual and moral enthusiasm; capacity for ardor and zeal.

    And bless their critic with a poet's fire. Pope.

  7. Splendor; brilliancy; luster; hence, a star.

    Stars, hide your fires. Shak.

    As in a zodiac
    representing the heavenly fires.
    Milton.

  8. Torture by burning; severe trial or affliction.
  9. The discharge of firearms; firing; as, the troops were exposed to a heavy fire.

    Blue fire, Red fire, Green fire (Pyrotech.), compositions of various combustible substances, as sulphur, niter, lampblack, etc., the flames of which are colored by various metallic salts, as those of antimony, strontium, barium, etc. -- Fire alarm (a) A signal given on the breaking out of a fire. (b) An apparatus for giving such an alarm. -- Fire annihilator, a machine, device, or preparation to be kept at hand for extinguishing fire by smothering it with some incombustible vapor or gas, as carbonic acid. -- Fire balloon. (a) A balloon raised in the air by the buoyancy of air heated by a fire placed in the lower part. (b) A balloon sent up at night with fireworks which ignite at a regulated height. Simmonds. -- Fire bar, a grate bar. -- Fire basket, a portable grate; a cresset. Knight. -- Fire beetle. (Zoöl.) See in the Vocabulary. -- Fire blast, a disease of plants which causes them to appear as if burnt by fire. -- Fire box, the chamber of a furnace, steam boiler, etc., for the fire. -- Fire brick, a refractory brick, capable of sustaining intense heat without fusion, usually made of fire clay or of siliceous material, with some cementing substance, and used for lining fire boxes, etc. -- Fire brigade, an organized body of men for extinguished fires. -- Fire bucket. See under Bucket. -- Fire bug, an incendiary; one who, from malice or through mania, persistently sets fire to property; a pyromaniac. [U.S.] -- Fire clay. See under Clay. -- Fire company, a company of men managing an engine in extinguishing fires. -- Fire cross. See Fiery cross. [Obs.] Milton. -- Fire damp. See under Damp. -- Fire dog. See Firedog, in the Vocabulary. -- Fire drill. (a) A series of evolutions performed by fireman for practice. (b) An apparatus for producing fire by friction, by rapidly twirling a wooden pin in a wooden socket; -- used by the Hindoos during all historic time, and by many savage peoples. -- Fire eater. (a) A juggler who pretends to eat fire. (b) A quarrelsome person who seeks affrays; a hotspur. [Colloq.] -- Fire engine, a portable forcing pump, usually on wheels, for throwing water to extinguish fire. -- Fire escape, a contrivance for facilitating escape from burning buildings. -- Fire gilding (Fine Arts), a mode of gilding with an amalgam of gold and quicksilver, the latter metal being driven off afterward by heat. -- Fire gilt (Fine Arts), gold laid on by the process of fire gilding. -- Fire insurance, the act or system of insuring against fire; also, a contract by which an insurance company undertakes, in consideration of the payment of a premium or small percentage -- usually made periodically -- to indemnify an owner of property from loss by fire during a specified period. -- Fire irons, utensils for a fireplace or grate, as tongs, poker, and shovel. -- Fire main, a pipe for water, to be used in putting out fire. -- Fire master (Mil), an artillery officer who formerly supervised the composition of fireworks. -- Fire office, an office at which to effect insurance against fire. -- Fire opal, a variety of opal giving firelike reflections. -- Fire ordeal, an ancient mode of trial, in which the test was the ability of the accused to handle or tread upon red-hot irons. Abbot. -- Fire pan, a pan for holding or conveying fire, especially the receptacle for the priming of a gun. -- Fire plug, a plug or hydrant for drawing water from the main pipes in a street, building, etc., for extinguishing fires. -- Fire policy, the writing or instrument expressing the contract of insurance against loss by fire. -- Fire pot. (a) (Mil.) A small earthen pot filled with combustibles, formerly used as a missile in war. (b) The cast iron vessel which holds the fuel or fire in a furnace. (c) A crucible. (d) A solderer's furnace. -- Fire raft, a raft laden with combustibles, used for setting fire to an enemy's ships. -- Fire roll, a peculiar beat of the drum to summon men to their quarters in case of fire. -- Fire setting (Mining), the process of softening or cracking the working face of a lode, to facilitate excavation, by exposing it to the action of fire; -- now generally superseded by the use of explosives. Raymond. -- Fire ship, a vessel filled with combustibles, for setting fire to an enemy's ships. -- Fire shovel, a shovel for taking up coals of fire. -- Fire stink, the stench from decomposing iron pyrites, caused by the formation of sulphureted hydrogen. Raymond. -- Fire surface, the surfaces of a steam boiler which are exposed to the direct heat of the fuel and the products of combustion; heating surface. -- Fire swab, a swab saturated with water, for cooling a gun in action and clearing away particles of powder, etc. Farrow. -- Fire teaser, in England, the fireman of a steam emgine. -- Fire water, ardent spirits; -- so called by the American Indians. -- Fire worship, the worship of fire, which prevails chiefly in Persia, among the followers of Zoroaster, called Chebers, or Guebers, and among the Parsees of India. -- Greek fire. See under Greek. -- On fire, burning; hence, ardent; passionate; eager; zealous. -- Running fire, the rapid discharge of firearms in succession by a line of troops. -- St. Anthony's fire, erysipelas; -- an eruptive fever which St. Anthony was supposed to cure miraculously. Hoblyn. -- St. Elmo's fire. See under Saint Elmo. -- To set on fire, to inflame; to kindle. -- To take fire, to begin to burn; to fly into a passion.

  10. To set on fire] to kindle; as, to fire a house or chimney; to fire a pile.
  11. To subject to intense heat; to bake; to burn in a kiln; as, to fire pottery.
  12. To inflame; to irritate, as the passions; as, to fire the soul with anger, pride, or revenge.

    Love had fired my mind. Dryden.

  13. To animate; to give life or spirit to; as, to fire the genius of a young man.
  14. To feed or serve the fire of; as, to fire a boiler.
  15. To light up as if by fire; to illuminate.

    [The sun] fires the proud tops of the eastern pines. Shak.

  16. To cause to explode; as, to fire a torpedo; to disharge; as, to fire a musket or cannon; to fire cannon balls, rockets, etc.
  17. To drive by fire.
    [Obs.]

    Till my bad angel fire my good one out. Shak.

  18. To cauterize.

    To fire up, to light up the fires of, as of an engine.

  19. To take fire; to be kindled; to kindle.
  20. To be irritated or inflamed with passion.
  21. To discharge artillery or firearms; as, they fired on the town.

    To fire up, to grow irritated or angry. "He . . . fired up, and stood vigorously on his defense." Macaulay.


1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
When you become entitled to exercise the right of voting for public officers, let it be impressed on your mind that God commands you to choose for rulers just men who will rule in the fear of God. The preservation of a republican government depends on the faithful discharge of this duty.
 History of the United States :: 1832 




Myopia is generally what happens when unprecedented opportunities are placed before them. Those in the know generally do better than those in the worry. Consider Cetus, a startup biotech with a focus on a liver drug. The FDA delayed the approval of the drug, and a major funding crisis ensued. Chiron offered to take over the liabilities contingent on the sale of two patents (# 4,683,202 and # 4,683,195) to a third party, Roche Molecule for $300M (in 1993). This sale was stalled because DuPont challenged the validity of the patents, based on the formal claims written by the inventor (not a patent attorney), Kary Mullis. In the end, the soap opera turned out well for the investors with weak constitutions. For $300M, they sold the two patents to Roche, turned the company over to Chiron, and walked away. Kary Mullis won the Nobel prize for his invention embedded in these two patents, known as polymerase chain reaction (PCR) which allows DNA to be cloned. Over 4000 patents in biotech cite these original two patents. In our estimation, $300M represents "pennies on the dollar" valuation of these patents. The shareholders got a payday, and left the game. Roche on the other hand is thriving based on its intangible assets. Let IPstreet.com assist you.




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