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(43) Words.

Found In
Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(903) Words.

abate
abatement
abator
ability
abstain
academy
adamites
adessenarians
adhere
adjudication
admiral
adoration
affection
aga
agouty
ahold
air-holder
air-pipe
all-beholding
all-sustaining
allodial
allodium
anabaptist
anchor
anchor-hold
anchorage
anguifer
antinomian
apart
appendant
appertain
apprehend
arbiter
arbor
arcuation
aristocracy
armful
ascriptitious
assizes
atomist
attach
autocrasy
autocratical
autocrator
aversion
await
ball
band
bank
baron
barque
barrel
basin
batfowling
bayard
beak
beam
beauty
bed
beer-barrel
beheld
behold
beholden
beholder
beholding
believe
bench
beneficiary
bestride
beware
bewitch
bigamy
bite
blanch
blanching
blunderbuss
bockland
bolster
bond
borough
borough-holder
borsholder
bottle
bowl
brace
brasier
bread-room
breastrope
bridle
bridle-hand
bridling
broker
bulk
bureau
call
can
candle-coal
candle-holder
candle-stick
cannel-coal
capable
capacious
capacity
capite
capitol
carbureted
cargo
carry
cartouch
cartridge
catch
catching
cavy
ceaseless
cellarage
censorship
certify
cessor
chafing-dish
chancellor
chancery
chandelier
charter
chaste
chattel
cheat
check
cherish
chew
chief
child
chimney-hook
choice
chorus
chrismatory
cistern
citizen
clasp
clasping
cleave
clevis
clinch
cling
clinging
clip
cloud
clough
co-ordination
cock
cofferer
cohere
command
commendam
commendatary
commendatory
commerce
commorant
communicate
compare
compel
comprehend
con
conceal
concealing
concentrate
conduct
congiary
congregational
congregationalist
congress
consent
conserve
consociate
constrain
constraining
contain
containing
contenement
content
contest
continence
continency
continuance
continuate
continue
contrary
controller
converse
coop
copyhold
copyholder
corporation
correction
correspond
correspondence
correspondency
council
council-board
countenance
county
courtesy
cramp
cream-bowl
cream-pot
credit
crimp
cross
cruet
cry
cupbearer
curb
curb-stone
curbing
customary
custrel
cuttle
cuttle-fish
dade
dapifer
defend
deforce
deforcement
deform
defraud
defrauded
defrauder
defrauding
deluder
demain
demon
demonocracy
demonstration
denizen
deny
depend
descry
despise
detainer
detaing
detaining
detention
dignitary
dilemma
dinner
disbelieve
disbelieving
disclaim
disclaimer
discount
disfavor
disguise
disseize
distaff
distend
distinct
distinction
distress
donation
doubt
down
drab
drag
drawing-room
dumbness
duration
dure
during
economical
economy
ejectment
elect
eliminate
eloin
emblem
embrace
embraced
embracing
eminent
enchain
enchaining
enchantment
end
endure
engrapple
engrasp
enjoy
enlarge
enough
entertain
entertainment
envy
epoch
equipoise
escrow
esquire
estate
esteem
estrange
eternalist
ewry
exhibit
expropriate
expropriation
eyre
fair
fall
family
fang
fast
fasten
fastness
fealty
fee
feodary
feudary
feudatory
fiduciary
fill
find
fine
finger
firepan
fishroom
fix
flagon
foamy
foe
folkland
foot
foothold
for
forbear
forbearance
forbearing
force
forcible
forecast
foreholding
forepossessed
form
fortifier
fortress
foul
foundation
franchise
frankalmoigne
frankfee
franklin
franktenement
fraternization
fraternize
freebench
freehold
freeholder
functionary
g
gaze
gentleman
give
glassfull
glue
good
goods
gorgon
governing
government
grapling
grapple
grasp
grasper
grasping
grate
greencloth
grip
gripe
griping
groom
guard
guile
guiltless
gush
habit
habitation
hall
halt
halter
hamlet
hanaper
hand
handfast
handle
hang
harbinger
hatchway
have
haver
having
headborough
heck
heir-loom
held
hent
here
heresy
heretic
heriot
heterodox
hide
hiding
hitch
hold
holdback
holder
holderforth
holdfast
holding
homager
honor
honorable
hook
horror
house
household
household-stuff
householder
housekeeper
how
hug
hylozoic
image
imbosom
imbosoming
imparl
impertinency
impudent
incapable
incapableness
incest
inclasp
include
incommunicative
inconsistent
incorporate
incredulity
incredulous
incumbency
indelible
independent
indifference
indulge
infidelity
infold
inhibit
inhold
inholder
injustice
ink
inkhorn
inkstand
inlet
innholder
innkeeper
instinctive
intelligence
intercommunicate
jacobinical
jacobite
jehovist
jigger
jigpin
joint-tenant
jug
jury
justice
keep
keeper
keeping
king
kingdom
knight-marshal
know
la
label
lamb
landholder
landlady
lar
last
laureate
lay
leasehold
leash
leet
legumen
let
library
librate
liege
lieutenant
limitarian
linstock
lo
locker
look
loose
lordship
lothful
lyam
magazine
magian
maintain
maintaining
majesty
major-domo
man
many
mark
marshalsea
mask
match
material
meat
mediately
mesne
messuage
millenist
misbeliever
moderate
money-bag
money-box
monothelite
mortal
mote
muniment
mysticism
naked
necromancer
negotiate
netting
nominee
nothing
notionist
oblivious
obscurity
observe
observer
obtain
obtend
occupancy
occupate
occupation
occupier
occupy
operative
opinator
opiner
orlop
other
ouster
out
overstand
own
pace
pail-full
palace-court
palatine
pan
paravail
parcenary
parcener
parley
parsimony
particular
path
patin
payer
peace
pedal-note
pedobaptist
pelican
penstock
perk
persevere
pertain
pertinacious
pertinency
petit
phial
pillar
pincase
pinite
pisophalt
pitifully
place
platter
pledge
plow
plowman
pluralist
point
poise
polytheistical
portentous
portfolio
possess
possessing
possession
possessor
pot
poulterer
power
pratique
pre-emption
predestinating
predestinator
prehension
preliminary
presentment
preserve
presidency
presidentship
press
pretend
pretending
pretense
pretension
prince
prohibit
prominent
proprietary
protend
provost
publican
pudding
punishment
pure
purveyance
purveyor
put
quarter
rain
ramp
reach
rebutter
receive
reception
recovery
redemption
redraft
redraw
refrain
refraining
refuge
regard
reign
reigning
relent
relief
remitter
remove
rent
repute
reservation
reserve
respect
resplendency
restoration
restrain
restraining
restraint
retain
retention
retinue
revolvency
revulsion
reward
rider
ring
rob
rudiment
rummage
rush-candle
sac
sack
salt
say
scaffold
scarlet
scheme
schesis
sconce
scoop
scope
scorn
scornful
scorning
sea
sect
seeing
seize
seizing
seizure
semi-pelagian
sequester
servant
serve
severalty
shareholder
sheephook
shelf
sideboard
sideways
sidewise
signaturist
silence
sill
sit
skeel
slack
sleeper
slippery
sloat
snaffle
so
soc
socage
socket
socman
soe
solemn
sounding-rod
sower
spadeful
spare
specktacle
spectator
spectatorship
spectatress
spectatrix
specter
spirit
splint
spright
stadtholder
stadtholderate
staff
stand
staple
starost
statesman
stay
stayer
steady
steddy
steepy
steve
stevedore
steward
stick
stifle
stove
stow
stratocracy
strong-hold
strut
subinfeudation
substantial
substantialness
substraction
succession
successive
sulphureted
support
supporter
supporting
supreme
surety
suspect
suspend
suspender
suspending
suspension
suspensory
sustain
sustainer
sustaining
swanimote
swell
switch
table
tache
tackle
tacksman
take
tarif
tarpaulin
tenable
tenacious
tenaciously
tenaciousness
tenacity
tenail
tenancy
tenant
tenanting
tend
tender
tenement
tenet
tenon
tenor
tenure
teraphim
testudo
theocracy
think
thought
threshhold
ticket
tidings
timber
timocracy
tithing
title
titulary
tole
too
tote
track
trade
tradition
train-bearer
treasurer
trigger
trip
tuition
tun
tung
tye
unbelief
under
underprop
understand
undertenant
undervalue
unfix
universalist
unorthodox
unreserved
upheld
uphold
upholder
upholsterer
use
usher
usurp
vacuist
value
valuer
vassal
vat
vavasor
venial
verge
vessel
veto
view
viewing
vile
villan
virtually
vise
vote
vouchsafe
wadsetter
ward
warrant
wassail
wassail-bowl
waste
water
water-logged
water-pot
waver
weather
ween
well
wield
will
window-frame
wing
withheld
withhold
withholden
withholder
withholding
witness
wo
world
wrong
yeoman
yeomanry
zemindar



Bible Results
Webster
KJV
1828 dictionaryTo be ...
These Bibles or ...
1828 dictionary... Completed
... Maybe you pick two (KJV vs Young's Literal) if logged in
H  ›  hold
H  ›  hold
1828 Definition

HOLD, v.t. pret.held; pp. held. Holden is obsolete in elegant writing. [Gr. to hold or restrain; Heb. to hold or contain.]

1. To stop; to confine; to restrain from escape; to keep fast; to retain. It rarely or never signifies the first act of seizing or falling on, but the act of retaining a thing when seized or confined. To grasp, is to seize, or to keep fast in the hand; hold coincides with grasp in the latter sense, but not in the former. We hold a horse by means of a bridle. An anchor holds a ship in her station.

2. To embrace and confine, with bearing or lifting. We hold an orange in the hand, or a child in the arms.

3. To connect; to keep from separation.

The loops held one curtain to another. Ex.36.

4. To maintain, as an opinion. He holds the doctrine of justification by free grace.

5. To consider; to regard; to think; to judge, that is, to have in the mind.

I hold him but a fool.

The Lord will not hold him guiltless, that taketh his name in vain. Ex.20.

6. To contain, or to have capacity to receive and contain. Here is an empty basket that holds two bushels. This empty cask holds thirty gallons. The church holds two thousand people.

7. To retain within itself; to keep from running or flowing out. A vessel with holes in its bottom will not hold fluids.

They have hewed them out broken cisterns that can hold no water. Jer.2.

8. To defend; to keep possession; to maintain.

We mean to hold what anciently we claim

Of empire.

9. To have; as, to hold a place, office or title.

10. To have or possess by title; as,he held his lands of the king. The estate is held by copy of court-roll.

11. To refrain; to stop; to restrain; to withhold. Hold your laughter. Hold your tongue.

Death! what do'st? O, hold thy blow.

12. To keep; as, hold your peace.

13. To fix; to confine; to compel to observe or fulfill; as, to hold one to his promise.

14. To confine; to restrain from motion.

The Most High--held still the flood till they had passed. 2 Esdras.

15. To confine; to bind; in a legal or moral sense. He is held to perform his covenants.

16. To maintain; to retain; to continue.

But still he held his purpose to depart.

17. To keep in continuance or practice.

And Night and Chaos, ancestors of nature, hold Eternal anarchy.

18. To continue; to keep; to prosecute or carry on.

Seed-time and harvest,heat and hoary-frost,

Shall hold their course.

19. To have in session; as, to hold a court or parliament; to hold a council.

20. To celebrate; to solemnize; as, to hold a feast.

21. To maintain; to sustain; to have in use or exercise; as, to hold an argument or debate.

22. To sustain; to support.

Thy right hand shall hold me. Ps.139.

23. To carry; to wield.

They all hold swords, being expert in war. Cant.3.

24. To maintain; to observe in practice.

Ye hold the traditions of men. Mark 7.

25. To last; to endure. The provisions will hold us, till we arrive in port. So we say, the provisions will last us; but the phrase is elliptical for will hold or last for us, the verb being intransitive.

To hold forth, to offer; to exhibit; to propose.

Observe the connection of ideas in the propositions which books hold forth and pretend to teach.

1. To reach forth; to put forward to view.

To hold in, to restrain; to curb; to govern by the bridle.

1. To restrain in general; to check; to repress.

To hold off, to keep at a distance.

To hold on, to continue or proceed in; as, to hold on a course.

To hold out, to extend; to stretch forth.

The king held out to Esther the golden scepter.Esther 5.

1. To propose; to offer.

Fortune holds out these to you as rewards.

2. To continue to do or suffer.

He cannot long hold out these pangs. [Not used.]

To hold up, to raise; as, hold up your head.

1. To sustain; to support.

He holds himself up in virtue.

2. To retain; to withhold.

3. To offer; to exhibit. He held up to view the prospect of gain.

4. To sustain; to keep from falling.

To hold one's own, to keep good one's present condition; not to fall off, or to lose ground. In seamen's language, a ship holds her own, when she sails as fast as another ship, or keeps her course.

To hold, is used by the Irish, for to lay, as a bet, to wager. I hold a crown, or a dollar; but this is a vulgar use of the word.

HOLD, v.i. To be true; not to fail; to stand, as a fact or truth. This is a sound argument in many cases, but does not hold in the case under consideration.

The rule holds in lands as well as in other things.

In this application, we often say, to hold true, to hold good. The argument holds good in both cases. This holds true in most cases.

1. To continue unbroken or unsubdued.

Our force by land hath nobly held. [Little used.]

2. To last; to endure.

We now say, to hold out.

3. To continue.

While our obedience holds.

4. To be fast; to be firm; not to give way, or part. The rope is strong; I believe it will hold. The anchor holds well.

5. To refrain.

His dauntless heart would fain have held

From weeping.

6. To stick or adhere. The plaster will not hold.

To hold forth, to speak in public; to harangue; to preach; to proclaim.

To hold in, to restrain one's self. He was tempted to laugh; he could hardly hold in.

1. To continue in good luck. [Unusual.]

To hold off, to keep at a distance; to avoid connection.

To hold of, to be dependent on; to derive title from.

My crown is absolute and holds of none.

To hold on, to continue; not to be interrupted.

The trade held on many years.

1. To keep fast hold; to cling to.

2. To proceed in a course. Job 17.

To hold out, to last; to endure; to continue.

A consumptive constitution may hold out a few years. He will accomplish the work, if his strength holds out.

1. Not to yield; not to surrender; not to be subdued.

The garrison still held out.

To hold to, to cling or cleave to; to adhere.

Else he will hold to the one, and despise the other. Matt.6.

To hold under, or from, to have title from; as petty barons holding under the greater barons.

To hold with, to adhere to; to side with; to stand up for.hold plow, to direct or steer a plow by the hands, in tillage.

To hold together, to be joined; not to separate; to remain in union.

To hold up, to support one's self; as, to hold up under misfortunes.

1. To cease raining; to cease, as falling weather; used impersonally. It holds up; it will hold up.

2. To continue the same speed; to run or move fast.

But we now say, to keep up.

To hold a wager, to lay, to stake or to hazard a wager.

Hold, used imperatively, signifies stop; cease; forbear; be still.

HOLD, n. A grasp with the hand; an embrace with the arms; any act or exertion of the strength or limbs which keeps a thing fast and prevents escape. Keep your hold; never quit your hold.

It is much used after the verbs to take, and to lay; to take hold, or to lay hold, is to seize. It is used in a literal sense; as to take hold with the hands, with the arms, or with the teeth; or in a figurative sense.

Sorrow shall take hold on the inhabitants of Palestine. Ex.15.

Take fast hold of instruction. Prov.4.

My soul took hold on thee.

1. Something which may be seized for support; that which supports.

If a man be upon a high place, without a good hold, he is ready to fall.

2. Power of keeping.

On your vigor now,

My hold of this new kingdom all depends.

3. Power of seizing.

The law hath yet another hold on you.

4. A prison; a place of confinement.

They laid hands on them, and put them in hold till the next day. Acts.4.

5. Custody; safe keeping.

King Richard, he is in the mighty hold

Of Bolingbroke.

6. Power or influence operating on the mind; advantage that may be employed in directing or persuading another, or in governing his conduct.

Fear--by which God and his laws take the surest hold of us.

--Gives fortune no more hold of him than is necessary.

7. Lurking place; a place of security; as the hold of a wild beast.

8. A fortified place; a fort; a castle; often called a strong hold. Jer.51.

9. The whole interior cavity of a ship, between the floor and the lower deck. In a vessel of one deck, the whole interior space from the keel or floor to the deck. That part of the hold which lies abaft the main-mast is called the after-hold; that part immediately before the main-mast, the main-hold; that part about the fore-hatchway, the fore-hold.

10. In music, a mark directing the performer to rest on the note over which it is placed. It is called also a pause.

1913 Definition
Hold (hold)
n.(?)
Hold
[D. hol hole, hollow. See Hole.] (Naut.)
  1. The whole interior portion of a vessel below the lower deck, in which the cargo is stowed.
  2. To cause to remain in a given situation, position, or relation, within certain limits, or the like; to prevent from falling or escaping; to sustain; to restrain; to keep in the grasp; to retain.

    The loops held one curtain to another. Ex. xxxvi. 12.

    Thy right hand shall hold me. Ps. cxxxix. 10.

    They all hold swords, being expert in war. Cant. iii. 8.

    In vain he seeks, that having can not hold. Spenser.

    France, thou mayst hold a serpent by the tongue, . . .
    A fasting tiger safer by the tooth,
    Than keep in peace that hand which thou dost hold.
    Shak.

  3. To retain in one's keeping; to maintain possession of, or authority over; not to give up or relinquish; to keep; to defend.

    We mean to hold what anciently we claim
    Of deity or empire.
    Milton.

  4. To have; to possess; to be in possession of; to occupy; to derive title to; as, to hold office.

    This noble merchant held a noble house. Chaucer.

    Of him to hold his seigniory for a yearly tribute. Knolles.

    And now the strand, and now the plain, they held. Dryden.

  5. To impose restraint upon; to limit in motion or action; to bind legally or morally; to confine; to restrain.

    We can not hold mortality's strong hand. Shak.

    Death! what do'st? O, hold thy blow. Grashaw.

    He had not sufficient judgment and self-command to hold his tongue. Macaulay.

  6. To maintain in being or action; to carry on; to prosecute, as a course of conduct or an argument; to continue; to sustain.

    Hold not thy peace, and be not still. Ps. lxxxiii. 1.

    Seedtime and harvest, heat and hoary frost,
    Shall hold their course.
    Milton.

  7. To prosecute, have, take, or join in, as something which is the result of united action; as to, hold a meeting, a festival, a session, etc.; hence, to direct and bring about officially; to conduct or preside at; as, the general held a council of war; a judge holds a court; a clergyman holds a service.

    I would hold more talk with thee. Shak.

  8. To receive and retain; to contain as a vessel; as, this pail holds milk; hence, to be able to receive and retain; to have capacity or containing power for.

    Broken cisterns that can hold no water. Jer. ii. 13.

    One sees more devils than vast hell can hold. Shak.

  9. To accept, as an opinion; to be the adherent of, openly or privately; to persist in, as a purpose; to maintain; to sustain.

    Stand fast and hold the traditions which ye have been taught. 2 Thes. ii.15.

    But still he held his purpose to depart. Dryden.

  10. To consider; to regard; to esteem; to account; to think; to judge.

    I hold him but a fool. Shak.

    I shall never hold that man my friend. Shak.

    The Lord will not hold him guiltless that taketh his name in vain. Ex. xx. 7.

  11. To bear, carry, or manage; as he holds himself erect; he holds his head high.

    Let him hold his fingers thus. Shak.

    To hold a wager, to lay or hazard a wager. Swift. -- To hold forth, to offer; to exhibit; to propose; to put forward. "The propositions which books hold forth and pretend to teach." Locke. -- To held in, to restrain; to curd. -- To hold in hand, to toy with; to keep in expectation; to have in one's power. [Obs.]

    O, fie! to receive favors, return falsehoods,
    And hold a lady in hand.
    Beaw. *** Fl.

    -- To hold in play, to keep under control] to dally with. Macaulay. -- To hold off, to keep at a distance. -- To hold on, to hold in being, continuance or position; as, to hold a rider on. -- To hold one's day, to keep one's appointment. [Obs.] Chaucer. -- To hold one's own. (a) To keep good one's present condition absolutely or relatively; not to fall off, or to lose ground; as, a ship holds her own when she does not lose ground in a race or chase; a man holds his own when he does not lose strength or weight. -- To hold one's peace, to keep silence.- To hold out. (a) To extend; to offer. "Fortune holds out these to you as rewards." B. Jonson. (b) To continue to do or to suffer; to endure. "He can not long hold out these pangs." Shak. -- To hold up. (a) To raise; to lift; as, hold up your head. (b) To support; to sustain. "He holds himself up in virtue."Sir P. Sidney. (c) To exhibit; to display; as, he was held up as an example. (d) To rein in; to check; to halt; as, hold up your horses. -- To hold water. (a) Literally, to retain water without leaking; hence (Fig.), to be whole, sound, consistent, without gaps or holes; -- commonly used in a negative sense; as, his statements will not hold water. [Collog.] (b) (Naut.) To hold the oars steady in the water, thus checking the headway of a boat.

  12. Not to move; to halt; to stop; -- mostly in the imperative.

    And damned be him that first cries, "Hold, enough!" Shak.

  13. Not to give way; not to part or become separated; to remain unbroken or unsubdued.

    Our force by land hath nobly held. Shak.

  14. Not to fail or be found wanting; to continue; to last; to endure a test or trial; to abide; to persist.

    While our obedience holds. Milton.

    The rule holds in land as all other commodities. Locke.

  15. Not to fall away, desert, or prove recreant; to remain attached; to cleave; -- often with with, to, or for.

    He will hold to the one and despise the other. Matt. vi. 24

  16. To restrain one's self; to refrain.

    His dauntless heart would fain have held
    From weeping, but his eyes rebelled.
    Dryden.

  17. To derive right or title; -- generally with of.

    My crown is absolute, and holds of none. Dryden.

    His imagination holds immediately from nature. Hazlitt.

    Hold on! Hold up! wait; stop; forbear. [Collog] -- To hold forth, to speak in public; to harangue; to preach. L'Estrange. -- To hold in, to restrain one's self; as, he wanted to laugh and could hardly hold in. -- To hold off, to keep at a distance. -- To hold on, to keep fast hold; to continue; to go on. "The trade held on for many years," Swift. -- To hold out, to last; to endure; to continue; to maintain one's self; not to yield or give way. -- To hold over, to remain in office, possession, etc., beyond a certain date. -- To hold to or with, to take sides with, as a person or opinion. -- To hold together, to be joined; not to separate; to remain in union. Dryden. Locke. -- To hold up. (a) To support one's self; to remain unbent or unbroken; as, to hold up under misfortunes. (b) To cease raining; to cease to stop; as, it holds up. Hudibras. (c) To keep up; not to fall behind; not to lose ground. Collier.

  18. The act of holding, as in or with the hands or arms; the manner of holding, whether firm or loose; seizure; grasp; clasp; gripe; possession; -- often used with the verbs take and lay.

    Ne have I not twelve pence within mine hold. Chaucer.

    Thou should'st lay hold upon him. B. Jonson.

    My soul took hold on thee. Addison.

    Take fast hold of instruction. Pror. iv. 13.

  19. The authority or ground to take or keep; claim.

    The law hath yet another hold on you. Shak.

  20. Binding power and influence.

    Fear . . . by which God and his laws take the surest hold of. Tillotson.

  21. Something that may be grasped; means of support.

    If a man be upon an high place without rails or good hold, he is ready to fall. Bacon.

  22. A place of confinement; a prison; confinement; custody; guard.

    They . . . put them in hold unto the next day. Acts. iv. 3.

    King Richard, he is in the mighty hold
    Of Bolingbroke.
    Shak.

  23. A place of security; a fortified place; a fort; a castle; -- often called a stronghold.
    Chaucer.

    New comers in an ancient hold Tennyson.

  24. A character [thus (?)] placed over or under a note or rest, and indicating that it is to be prolonged; -- called also pause, and corona.
  25. A small cavity used in some games, usually one into which a marble or ball is to be played or driven; hence, a score made by playing a marble or ball into such a hole, as in golf.
    (b) (Fives)

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
The Bible was America's basic textbook in all fields.
  




Monte J. Shaffer is a fourth-year Ph.D. student and job market candidate (2011) in the Department of Marketing at Washington State University. Monte is currently working on his marketing dissertation in Entrepreneurial Innovations. Prior to joining Washington State University, Monte received a Bachelor in Mathematics / MBA in Marketing from Brigham Young University (BYU) in Provo, UT.




1828 dictionary
Browse
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
monte








myApp
3d toon xxx3d monster porn3d sex3d porn3d monsters3d Monster FuckXxx Cartoontoon fuckAdult Comics3d gay sexHentai gay Porn