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(29) Words.

Found In
Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(626) Words.

a
abate
above-ground
abstraction
acauline
acclivity
acorn
adansonia
adarce
adipocere
adnata
adoration
adown
advantage
advantage-ground
adz
afforest
afforestation
aflat
again
agouty
agricultor
agriculture
agriculturist
aground
ale-hoof
alectryomancy
aloft
alt
alternative
ammochryse
ammony
amyline
anchor
anchor-ground
anchorage
appropriate
appropriation
aqueduct
arcuation
area
arena
arura
ashore
assurance
atrip
aweigh
background
backside
badger
badigeon
bake
bamboo
bank
barilla
basement
basis
bass-relief
batable
battel
bear
beat
bed
beer
begin
beginning
belie
belief
believe
berme
bhuchampac
bilge
bite
blank
blood
bog
boll
bore
bottom
bowl
bowling-green
bray
break
breaker
bridestake
broad-cast
bubble
bulb
butterwort
cabbage
calade
caltrop
camaieu
camayeu
cameo
camp
campain
campestrian
canker-worm
caponniere
career
carpet
carry
cast
cats-foot
caudex
causeless
causey
cawk
caxou
chase
cheese
chewed
chick
chocolate
church-yard
clay-ground
clear
clearness
cleave
clod
coafforest
coffee
commendation
common
commonable
commoner
commons
compartition
compartment
concession
condition
confidence
consideration
contest
continent
copland
corps
cote
countermine
coupee
course
covert-way
coving
crane
crash
crawl
crawling
creep
cress
cross-tining
crouch
crow
cucumber
damask
dampness
deep
delve
depasture
descant
design
designation
dew-berry
dew-worm
difference
dig
disafforest
dispute
disroot
down
downcast
draco
drag
dragged
dragging
draggle
draggled
draggling
drain
draw
dregs
earth
earthnut
earthworm
edge
elevation
embase
eminency
enamel
encouraging
encroach
engineer
epilepsy
estoppel
etch
exhumation
expectation
experience
fall
fallow
fallow-crop
false
farm
farmer
favorable
fell
felling
fenny
fertile
fertility
fertilize
fethered
field
field-colors
flat
flatten
fling
flinty
flixweed
float
floor
flow
footing
foreground
foreign
forest
fork
foundation
fret
fringe
fume
fund
fundamental
gain
gallery
gallop
gape
garden
gate
gather
gavel
geomancer
geoscopy
giant
glebe
graze
green
grind
grist
grit
ground
ground-ivy
ground-plot
ground-tackle
groundage
groundless
groundlessly
groundlessness
groundling
groundly
groundsel
groundwork
grove
grovel
groveling
grundsel
guess
guessing
hang
harrow
haul
haw
heartless
heaviness
herbage
hight
his
hold
home
homestead
hope
hopeful
hopefully
hopefulness
hopeless
hover-ground
humble
humicubation
husband
husbandman
husbandry
hyperbole
hypogeum
ichnographical
ichnography
imputation
inch
inclose
incloser
inclosure
infirm
inlay
inlaying
institute
interval
inundation
ivy
jolt
justly
kayle
kitchen-garden
lair
land
layer
layland
lead
leap
length
level
lever
libation
lie
linstock
list
litigious
little
low
lowness
marish
meadow
meal
mellow
memorial
meteor
misground
moisture
mold-warp
mole
mole-hill
mole-track
moor
moorland
morass
morris-dance
mosaic
muller
mum
mushroom
neaped
never
nine-holes
nothing
notionality
notionist
occupy
oddly
olive-yard
on
orchard
ostensible
ostrich
other
overspread
owse
oxydizing
paage
pace
palification
palisade
pang
parcel
parch
park
parterre
pastil
pasturage
pasture
patch
path
peat
peg
pendent
pensile
pesade
piccage
pignut
pile
pillar
piste
pitcher
pity
place
plain
plaint
plant
plantation
planting
platform
pleasure-ground
plot
plow
plowing
plowshare
poach
poachy
police
poor
poorly
populousness
porphyry
portico
pose
position
post
praise
preach
precognition
prejudice
premunire
prepare
prepossess
press
presumption
presumptive
presumptively
presumptuous
presumptuously
presumptuousness
prick
principle
private
procumbent
promise
promising
prospect
prostrate
provine
purlieu
quantum
quarrel
queachy
quicksand
quirk
quiver
race
rake
raking
ranger
rase
raze
ready
reason
reconnoiter
recreate
relief
rely
respect
resupinate
retreat
ride
ridge
ridicule
riding
rise
road
rock
rooty
rope-walk
rout
rowen
rub
rudiment
run
sake
sally-port
sanctuary
satisfy
scene
scotch-hopper
seminary
sermon
sewer
shack
shall
share
shear
sheathe
shelf
shiver
shoaly
shore
shrew-mouse
siderite
sinuous
sit
site
slade
slight
slope
sloppy
slump
sole
solidly
soundings
souterrain
sowed
sowing
sown
speckled
spend
spile
spot
spotted
sprawl
spread
spred
spring
squat
stage
stain
stake
stalk
stamp
stand
stitch
stockade
stoniness
stony
stop
story
strand
strath
streak
stream-tin
strip
stripe
stubble
subsidency
subterrane
subterraneous
subterranity
subterrany
summer-colt
sumptuary
superterrene
supine
suspecting
suspiral
sustain
swamp
syke
taboo
tackle
tankard-turnep
tear
tedder
tenable
tenter-ground
terrier
thick
thinly
thirdings
thistly
throat-wort
thunder
thwaite
tillage
tilth
tint
tithe
toad-stool
top
trail
trailed
trailing
tread
trespass
tripping
trust
tunnel-pit
turf
unclassical
undercroft
underdrain
underground
uneven
unevenness
ungrounded
ungroundedly
ungroundedness
unimproved
unsown
untenable
upland
upturn
vale
vanity
vantage-ground
variance
vase
veneer
vermilion
vine
vomit
warp
warren
wash
waste
water-cart
water-furrow
water-table
water-tath
way
way-leave
weeding-chisel
weeding-fork
weedy
weep
weigh
well-grounded
whereon
whisk
why
will
win
winter-fallow



Bible Results
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G  ›  ground
G  ›  ground
1828 Definition

GROUND, n.

1. The surface of land or upper part of the earth, without reference to the materials which compose it. We apply ground to soil,sand or gravel indifferently, but never apply it to the whole mass of the earth or globe, nor to any portion of it when removed. We never say a shovel full or a load of ground. We say under ground, but not under earth; and we speak of the globe as divided into land and water, not into ground and water. Yet ground, earth and land are often used synonymously. We say, the produce or fruits of the ground, of the earth, or of land. The water overflows the low ground, or the low land.

There was not a man to till the ground. Gen.2.

The ground shall give its increase. Zech.8.

The fire ran along on the ground. Ex.9.

2. Region; territory; as Egyptian ground; British ground; heavenly ground.

3. Land; estate; possession.

Thy next design is on thy neighbor's grounds.

4. The surface of the earth, or a floor or pavement.

Dagon had fallen on his face to the ground. 1 Sam.5.

5. Foundation; that which supports any thing. This argument stands on defensible ground. Hence,

6. Fundamental cause; primary reason or original principle. He stated the grounds of his complaint.

Making happiness the ground of his unhappiness.

7. First principles; as the grounds of religion.

8. In painting, the surface on which a figure or object is represented; that surface or substance which retains the original color, and to which the other colors are applied to make the representation; as crimson on a white ground.

9. In manufactures, the principal color, to which others are considered as ornamental.

10. Grounds, plural, the bottom of liquors; dregs; lees; feces; as coffee grounds; the grounds of strong beer.

11. The plain song; the tune on which descants are raised.

On that ground, I'll build a holy descant.

12. In etching, a gummous composition spread over the surface of the metal to be etched, to prevent the nitric acid from eating, except where the ground is opened with the point of a needle.

13. Field or place of action. He fought with fury, and would not quit the ground.

14. In music, the name given to a composition in which the base, consisting of a few bars of independent notes, is continually repeated to a continually varying melody.

15. The foil to set a thing off.

16. Formerly, the pit of a play house.

To gain ground, to advance; to proceed forward in conflict; as, an army in battle gains ground. Hence, to obtain an advantage; to have some success; as, the army gains ground on the enemy. Hence,

1. To gain credit; to prevail; to become more general or extensive; as,the opinion gains ground.

To lose ground, to retire; to retreat; to withdraw from the position taken. Hence, to lose advantage. Hence,

1. To lose credit; to decline; to become less in force or extent.

To give ground, to recede; to yield advantage.

get ground, and to gather ground, are seldom used.

GROUND, v.t. To lay or set on the ground.

1. To found; to fix or set, as on a foundation, cause, reason or principle; as arguments grounded on reason; faith grounded on scriptural evidence.

2. To settle in first principles; to fix firmly.

Being rooted and grounded in love Eph.3.

GROUND, v.i. To run aground; to strike the bottom and remain fixed; as, the ship grounded in two fathoms of water.

GROUND, pret. and pp. of grind.

1913 Definition
Ground (ground)
n.(ground)
Ground
[OE. ground, grund, AS. grund; akin to D. grond, OS., G., Sw., *** Dan. grund, Icel. grunnr bottom, Goth. grundus (in composition)] perh. orig. meaning, dust, gravel, and if so perh. akin to E. g
  1. The surface of the earth; the outer crust of the globe, or some indefinite portion of it.

    There was not a man to till the ground. Gen. ii. 5.

    The fire ran along upon the ground. Ex. ix. 23.

    Hen

  2. Any definite portion of the earth's surface; region; territory; country. Hence: A territory appropriated to, or resorted to, for a particular purpose; the field or place of action; as, a hunting or fishing ground; a play ground.

    From . . . old Euphrates, to the brook that parts Egypt from Syrian ground. Milton.

  3. Land; estate; possession; field; esp. (pl.), the gardens, lawns, fields, etc., belonging to a homestead; as, the grounds of the estate are well kept.

    Thy next design is on thy neighbor's grounds. Dryden. 4.

  4. The basis on which anything rests; foundation. Hence: The foundation of knowledge, belief, or conviction; a premise, reason, or datum; ultimate or first principle; cause of existence or occurrence; originating force or agency; as, the ground of my hope.
  5. That surface upon which the figures of a composition are set, and which relieves them by its plainness, being either of one tint or of tints but slightly contrasted with one another] as, crimson Bowers on a white ground.
    See Background, Foreground, and Middle-ground. (b)
  6. A gummy composition spread over the surface of a metal to be etched, to prevent the acid from eating except where an opening is made by the needle.
  7. One of the pieces of wood, flush with the plastering, to which moldings, etc., are attached; -- usually in the plural.

    * Grounds are usually put up first and the plastering floated flush with them.

  8. A composition in which the bass, consisting of a few bars of independent notes, is continually repeated to a varying melody.
    (b)
  9. A conducting connection with the earth, whereby the earth is made part of an electrical circuit.
  10. Sediment at the bottom of liquors or liquids; dregs; lees; feces; as, coffee grounds.
  11. The pit of a theater.
    [Obs.] B. Jonson.

    Ground angling, angling with a weighted line without a float. -- Ground annual (Scots Law), an estate created in land by a vassal who instead of selling his land outright reserves an annual ground rent, which becomes a perpetual charge upon the land. -- Ground ash. (Bot.) See Groutweed. -- Ground bailiff (Mining), a superintendent of mines. Simmonds. -- Ground bait, bits of bread, boiled barley or worms, etc., thrown into the water to collect the fish, Wallon. -- Ground bass or base (Mus.), fundamental base; a fundamental base continually repeated to a varied melody. -- Ground beetle (Zoöl.), one of numerous species of carnivorous beetles of the family Carabidæ, living mostly in burrows or under stones, etc. -- Ground chamber, a room on the ground floor. -- Ground cherry. (Bot.) (a) A genus (Physalis) of herbaceous plants having an inflated calyx for a seed pod: esp., the strawberry tomato (P. Alkekengi). See Alkekengl. (b) A European shrub (Prunus Chamæcerasus), with small, very acid fruit. -- Ground cuckoo. (Zoöl.) See Chaparral cock. -- Ground cypress. (Bot.) See Lavender cotton. -- Ground dove (Zoöl.), one of several small American pigeons of the genus Columbigallina, esp. C. passerina of the Southern United States, Mexico, etc. They live chiefly on the ground. -- Ground fish (Zoöl.), any fish which constantly lives on the botton of the sea, as the sole, turbot, halibut. -- Ground floor, the floor of a house most nearly on a level with the ground; -- called also in America, but not in England, the first floor. -- Ground form (Gram.), the stem or basis of a word, to which the other parts are added in declension or conjugation. It is sometimes, but not always, the same as the root. -- Ground furze (Bot.), a low slightly thorny, leguminous shrub (Ononis arvensis) of Europe and Central Asia,; -- called also rest- harrow. -- Ground game, hares, rabbits, etc., as distinguished from winged game. -- Ground hele (Bot.), a perennial herb (Veronica officinalis) with small blue flowers, common in Europe and America, formerly thought to have curative properties. -- Ground of the heavens (Astron.), the surface of any part of the celestial sphere upon which the stars may be regarded as projected. -- Ground hemlock (Bot.), the yew (Taxus baccata var. Canadensisi) of eastern North America, distinguished from that of Europe by its low, straggling stems. -- Ground hog. (Zoöl.) (a) The woodchuck or American marmot (Arctomys monax). See Woodchuck. (b) The aardvark. -- Ground hold (Naut.), ground tackle. [Obs.] Spenser. -- Ground ice, ice formed at the bottom of a body of water before it forms on the surface. -- Ground ivy. (Bot.) A trailing plant; alehoof. See Gill. -- Ground joist, a joist for a basement or ground floor; a. sleeper. -- Ground lark (Zoöl.), the European pipit. See Pipit. - - Ground laurel (Bot.). See Trailing arbutus, under Arbutus. -- Ground line (Descriptive Geom.), the line of intersection of the horizontal and vertical planes of projection. -- Ground liverwort (Bot.), a flowerless plant with a broad flat forking thallus and the fruit raised on peduncled and radiated receptacles (Marchantia polymorpha). -- Ground mail, in Scotland, the fee paid for interment in a churchyard. -- Ground mass (Geol.), the fine-grained or glassy base of a rock, in which distinct crystals of its constituents are embedded. -- Ground parrakeet (Zoöl.), one of several Australian parrakeets, of the genera Callipsittacus and Geopsittacus, which live mainly upon the ground. -- Ground pearl (Zoöl.), an insect of the family Coccidæ (Margarodes formicarum), found in ants' nests in the Bahamas, and having a shelly covering. They are strung like beads, and made into necklaces by the natives. -- Ground pig (Zoöl.), a large, burrowing, African rodent (Aulacodus Swinderianus) about two feet long, allied to the porcupines but with harsh, bristly hair, and no spines; -- called also ground rat. -- Ground pigeon (Zoöl.), one of numerous species of pigeons which live largely upon the ground, as the tooth-billed pigeon (Didunculus strigirostris), of the Samoan Islands, and the crowned pigeon, or goura. See Goura, and Ground dove (above). -- Ground pine. (Bot.) (a) A blue-flowered herb of the genus Ajuga (A. Chamæpitys), formerly included in the genus Teucrium or germander, and named from its resinous smell. Sir J. Hill. (b) A long, creeping, evergreen plant of the genus Lycopodium (L. clavatum); -- called also club moss. (c) A tree-shaped evergreen plant about eight inches in height, of the same genus (L. dendroideum) found in moist, dark woods in the northern part of the United States. Gray. -- Ground plan (Arch.), a plan of the ground floor of any building, or of any floor, as distinguished from an elevation or perpendicular section. -- Ground plane, the horizontal plane of projection in perspective drawing. -- Ground plate. (a) (Arch.) One of the chief pieces of framing of a building; a timber laid horizontally on or near the ground to support the uprights; a ground sill or groundsel. (b) (Railroads) A bed plate for sleepers or ties; a mudsill. (c) (Teleg.) A metallic plate buried in the earth to conduct the electric current thereto. Connection to the pipes of a gas or water main is usual in cities. Knight. -- Ground plot, the ground upon which any structure is erected; hence, any basis or foundation; also, a ground plan. -- Ground plum (Bot.), a leguminous plant (Astragalus caryocarpus) occurring from the Saskatchewan to Texas, and having a succulent plum-shaped pod. -- Ground rat. (Zoöl.) See Ground pig (above). -- Ground rent, rent paid for the privilege of building on another man's land. -- Ground robin. (Zoöl.) See Chewink. -- Ground room, a room on the ground floor; a lower room. Tatler. -- Ground sea, the West Indian name for a swell of the ocean, which occurs in calm weather and without obvious cause, breaking on the shore in heavy roaring billows; -- called also rollers, and in Jamaica, the North sea. -- Ground sill. See Ground plate (a) (above). -- Ground snake (Zoöl.), a small burrowing American snake (Celuta amœna). It is salmon colored, and has a blunt tail. -- Ground squirrel. (Zoöl.) (a) One of numerous species of burrowing rodents of the genera Tamias and Spermophilus, having cheek pouches. The former genus includes the Eastern striped squirrel or chipmunk and some allied Western species; the latter includes the prairie squirrel or striped gopher, the gray gopher, and many allied Western species. See Chipmunk, and Gopher. (b) Any species of the African genus Xerus, allied to Tamias. -- Ground story. Same as Ground floor (above). -- Ground substance (Anat.), the intercellular substance, or matrix, of tissues. -- Ground swell. (a) (Bot.) The plant groundsel. [Obs.] Holland. (b) A broad, deep swell or undulation of the ocean, caused by a long continued gale, and felt even at a remote distance after the gale has ceased. -- Ground table. (Arch.) See Earth table, under Earth. -- Ground tackle (Naut.), the tackle necessary to secure a vessel at anchor. Totten. -- Ground thrush (Zoöl.), one of numerous species of bright-colored Oriental birds of the family Pittidæ. See Pitta. -- Ground tier. (a) The lowest tier of water casks in a vessel's hold. Totten. (b) The lowest line of articles of any kind stowed in a vessel's hold. (c) The lowest range of boxes in a theater. -- Ground timbers (Shipbuilding) the timbers which lie on the keel and are bolted to the keelson; floor timbers. Knight. -- Ground tit. (Zoöl.) See Ground wren (below). - - Ground wheel, that wheel of a harvester, mowing machine, etc., which, rolling on the ground, drives the mechanism. -- Ground wren (Zoöl.), a small California bird (Chamæa fasciata) allied to the wrens and titmice. It inhabits the arid plains. Called also ground tit, and wren tit. -- To bite the ground, To break ground. See under Bite, Break. -- To come to the ground, To fall to the ground, to come to nothing; to fail; to miscarry. -- To gain ground. (a) To advance; to proceed forward in conflict; as, an army in battle gains ground. (b) To obtain an advantage; to have some success; as, the army gains ground on the enemy. (c) To gain credit; to become more prosperous or influential. -- To get, or To gather, ground, to gain ground. [R.] "Evening mist . . . gathers ground fast." Milton.

    There is no way for duty to prevail, and get ground of them, but by bidding higher. South.

    -- To give ground, to recede; to yield advantage.

    These nine . . . began to give me ground. Shak.

    -- To lose ground, to retire; to retreat; to withdraw from the position taken; hence, to lose advantage; to lose credit or reputation; to decline. -- To stand one's ground, to stand firm; to resist attack or encroachment. Atterbury. -- To take the ground to touch bottom or become stranded; -- said of a ship.

  12. To lay, set, or run, on the ground.
  13. To found] to fix or set, as on a foundation, reason, or principle; to furnish a ground for; to fix firmly.

    Being rooted and grounded in love. Eph. iii. 17.

    So far from warranting any inference to the existence of a God, would, on the contrary, ground even an argument to his negation. Sir W. Hamilton

  14. To instruct in elements or first principles.
  15. To connect with the ground so as to make the earth a part of an electrical circuit.
  16. To cover with a ground, as a copper plate for etching (see Ground, n., 5); or as paper or other materials with a uniform tint as a preparation for ornament.
  17. To run aground; to strike the bottom and remain fixed; as, the ship grounded on the bar.
  18. A local tax paid by a ship for the ground or space it occupies while in port.
    Bouvier.

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
This is genuine christianity, and to this we owe our free constitutions of government.
 History of the United States :: 1832 




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