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(59) Words.

Found In
Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(227) Words.

a
absent
aceldama
alway
always
antistrophe
applause
apprentice
apprenticeship
artist
assay-master
austere
average
away
bargemaster
barrack-master
barrator
barratry
beadle
bergmaster
boiarin
bondslave
borough-master
burger-master
burgh-master
burgomaster
captain
care
ceremony
charter-party
clothe
cock-master
cofferer
commandry
commencement
compare
con
connection
connoisseur
cornmaster
corporal
craftsmaster
creat
credit
crib
crouch
crown-office
dabster
dan
dancing-master
dapifer
deceptious
deceptive
deceptory
decerpt
decerption
decertation
degree
demurrage
deputy-post-master
deputy-sheriff
die
diet
dilemma
dismiss
displeasure
doctrine
dominant
don
drawing-master
eat
elope
eloping
encourager
enslave
ever
exhort
eye
eye-servant
faculty
faithless
fathom
fawn
feat
fellow-servant
fencing-master
field
field-colors
fine
fireworker
follow
force
free
general
gone
good
goodman
gordian
graduate
hard
havener
high
horemaster
householder
housekeeper
husbandman
imputation
insolent
involuntary
jar
jurisconsult
landlord
language-master
lictor
light
literator
lord
magisterial
magisterially
magisterialness
magistrate
maister
major-domo
mameluke
man
manifest
many-mastered
marry
master
master-piece
masterful
masterless
masterly
mastership
mastery
mate
menial
mintmaster
miss
muster-master
niggard
noddle
nose
now
obey
observant
odd
offer
office
ordinary
out
owner
patron
paymaster
pedagogue
pedant
petit
pitiless
possess
postmaster
posture-master
prate
precentor
primage
puppetmaster
quarter
rabbin
rebuke
rector
redemptioner
regent
relation
relative
report
retainer
reys
rhetorician
rifle
rigid
rosicrucian
roundhouse
roundly
run
sacrament
schoolmaster
scold
scrimer
servant
serve
service
servitude
sheep-master
shipmaster
shock
shout
sick
singing-master
sir
skipper
slavery
speed
staff
starboard
stop
storm
strict
stubbornness
taskmaster
teutonic
tidings
toil
treason
true
twinge
tyrannical
tyrannize
tyranny
undermaster
unmasterable
unmastered
victor
warden
warrant
whoremaster
whoremonger
workmaster
writing-master



Bible Results
Webster
KJV
1828 dictionaryTo be ...
These Bibles or ...
1828 dictionary... Completed
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M  ›  master
M  ›  master
1828 Definition

M`ASTER, n. [L. magister, compounded of the root of magis, major, greater.]

1. A man who rules, governs or directs either men or business. A man who owns slaves is their master; he who has servants is their master; he who has apprentices is their master; he who has apprentices is their master, as he has the government and direction of them. The man who superintends and directs any business, is master, or master workman.

O thou my friend, my genius, come along,

Thou master of the poet and the song.

Nations that want protectors, will have masters.

2. A director, head, or chief manager; as the master of a feast.

3. The owner; proprietor; with the idea of governing. The master of a house may be the owner, or the occupant, who has a temporary right of governing it.

It would be believed that he rather took the horse for his subject, than his master.

4. A lord; a ruler; one who has supreme dominion.

Caesar, the world's great master and his own.

5. A chief; a principal; as the master root of a plant.

One master passion swallows up the rest.

6. One who has possession, and the power of controlling or using at pleasure.

When I have made myself master of a hundred thousand drachmas--

7. The commander of a merchant ship.

8. In ships of war, an officer who takes rank immediately after the lieutenants,and navigates the ship under the direction of the captain.

9. The director of a school; a teacher; an instructor.

In this sense the word is giving place to the more appropriate words teacher, instructor and preceptor; at least it is so in the United States.

10. One uncontrolled.

Let every man be master of his time.

11. An appellation of respect.

Master doctor, you have brought those drugs.

12. An appellation given to young men.

Where there are little masters and misses in a house--

13. A man eminently or perfectly skilled in any occupation, art or science. We say, a man is master of his business; a great master of music, of the flute or violin; a master of his subject, &c.

14. A title of dignity in colleges and universities; as Master of Arts.

15. The chief of a society; as the Grand Master of Malta, of free-masons, &c.

16. The director of ceremonies at public places, or on public occasions.

17. The president of a college.

Master in chancery, an assistant of the lord chancellor, chosen from among the barristers to sit in chancery, or at the rolls.

To be master of one's self, to have the command or control of one's own passions.

The word master has numerous applications, in all of which it has the sense of director, chief or superintendent.

As a title of respect given to adult persons, it is pronounced mister; a pronunciation which seems to have been derived from some of the northern dialects. [supra.]

M`ASTER, v.i. To conquer; to overpower; to subdue; to bring under control.

Obstinacy and willful neglect must be mastered, even though it costs blows.

Evil customs must be mastered by degrees.

1. To execute with skill.

I will not offer that which I cannot master.

2. To rule; to govern.

--And rather father thee than master thee. [Not used.]

M`ASTER, v.i. To be skillful; to excel.

1913 Definition
Master (master)
n.(-1913 webster dictionaryr)
Mast"er
(Naut.)
  1. A vessel having (so many) masts; -- used only in compounds; as, a two-master.
  2. A male person having another living being so far subject to his will, that he can, in the main, control his or its actions; -- formerly used with much more extensive application than now.
    (a)
  3. One who uses, or controls at will, anything inanimate; as, to be master of one's time.
    Shak.

    Master of a hundred thousand drachms. Addison.

    We are masters of the sea. Jowett (Thucyd. ).

  4. One who has attained great skill in the use or application of anything; as, a master of oratorical art.

    Great masters of ridicule. Macaulay.

    No care is taken to improve young men in their own language, that they may thoroughly understand and be masters of it. Locke.

  5. A title given by courtesy, now commonly pronounced m***ibreve]ster, except when given to boys; -- sometimes written Mister, but usually abbreviated to Mr.
  6. A young gentleman; a lad, or small boy.

    Where there are little masters and misses in a house, they are impediments to the diversions of the servants. Swift.

  7. The commander of a merchant vessel; -- usually called captain. Also, a commissioned officer in the navy ranking next above ensign and below lieutenant; formerly, an officer on a man-of-war who had immediate charge, under the commander, of sailing the vessel.
  8. A person holding an office of authority among the Freemasons, esp. the presiding officer; also, a person holding a similar office in other civic societies.

    Little masters, certain German engravers of the 16th century, so called from the extreme smallness of their prints. -- Master in chancery, an officer of courts of equity, who acts as an assistant to the chancellor or judge, by inquiring into various matters referred to him, and reporting thereon to the court. -- Master of arts, one who takes the second degree at a university; also, the degree or title itself, indicated by the abbreviation M. A., or A. M. -- Master of the horse, the third great officer in the British court, having the management of the royal stables, etc. In ceremonial cavalcades he rides next to the sovereign. -- Master of the rolls, in England, an officer who has charge of the rolls and patents that pass the great seal, and of the records of the chancery, and acts as assistant judge of the court. Bouvier. Wharton. -- Past master, one who has held the office of master in a lodge of Freemasons or in a society similarly organized. -- The old masters, distinguished painters who preceded modern painters; especially, the celebrated painters of the 16th and 17th centuries. -- To be master of one's self, to have entire self-control; not to be governed by passion. -- To be one's own master, to be at liberty to act as one chooses without dictation from anybody.

    * Master, signifying chief, principal, masterly, superior, thoroughly skilled, etc., is often used adjectively or in compounds; as, master builder or master-builder, master chord or master-chord, master mason or master-mason, master workman or master-workman, master mechanic, master mind, master spirit, master passion, etc.

    Throughout the city by the master gate. Chaucer.

    Master joint (Geol.), a quarryman's term for the more prominent and extended joints traversing a rock mass. -- Master key, a key adapted to open several locks differing somewhat from each other; figuratively, a rule or principle of general application in solving difficulties. -- Master lode (Mining), the principal vein of ore. -- Master mariner, an experienced and skilled seaman who is certified to be competent to command a merchant vessel. -- Master sinew (Far.), a large sinew that surrounds the hough of a horse, and divides it from the bone by a hollow place, where the windgalls are usually seated. -- Master singer. See Mastersinger. -- Master stroke, a capital performance; a masterly achievement; a consummate action; as, a master stroke of policy. -- Master tap (Mech.), a tap for forming the thread in a screw cutting die. -- Master touch. (a) The touch or skill of a master. Pope. (b) Some part of a performance which exhibits very skillful work or treatment. "Some master touches of this admirable piece." Tatler. -- Master work, the most important work accomplished by a skilled person, as in architecture, literature, etc.; also, a work which shows the skill of a master; a masterpiece. -- Master workman, a man specially skilled in any art, handicraft, or trade, or who is an overseer, foreman, or employer.

  9. To become the master of; to subject to one's will, control, or authority; to conquer; to overpower; to subdue.

    Obstinacy and willful neglects must be mastered, even though it cost blows. Locke.

  10. To gain the command of, so as to understand or apply; to become an adept in; as, to master a science.
  11. To own; to posses.
    [Obs.]

    The wealth
    That the world masters.
    Shak.

  12. To be skillful; to excel.
    [Obs.]

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
In my view, the Christian religion is the most important and one of the first things in which all children, under a free government ought to be instructed.. .No truth is more evident to my mind than that the Christian religion must be the basis of any government intended to secure the rights and privileges of a free people.
 Preface to 1828 Dictionary 




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