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(25) Words.

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Definitions
1828 dictionary(348) Words.

accessory
accouplement
acraze
alarm-post
anguish
appair
ashamed
assault
attaint
badigeon
balance
bale
batter
battered
bee
bijugous
binate
blast
blasted
blemish
blunt
blunted
blunting
bote
brace
brachiate
brain
break
broken-hearted
bruise
caligation
careen
cart-bote
cataract
caterpillar
change
chaplet
chick-weed
chili
comfortabley
commendam
compass
conjugate
conjugation
consignation
convenience
conveniency
copulate
coquet
coquette
corrode
corroded
corroding
corrosive
coscinomancy
couple
couplet
crack
crack-brained
cracking
cranes-bill
craze
crazed
crazedness
cross-armed
damage
damageable
damaged
damaging
damnify
damnifying
debentured
debile
debilitate
debilitated
debilitating
decayed
decayedness
decussated
defamation
defame
dentist
depravation
deprave
despair
despairer
despairful
despairing
despairingly
desperate
desperately
desperation
despond
despondent
desponding
despondingly
deteriorate
deteriorated
detraction
detractor
dichotomize
dichotomous
dichotomous-corymb
dichotomy
didynam
didynamian
dilapidation
dim
diminish
disable
discrete
disease
disfigure
disfigured
disfiguring
dispair
disreputable
dissipation
do
dock
dotard
dote
double
doublet
dozen
efface
embase
empair
evil
examine
fault
fellow
fever
fig-marigold
flat
fold
forceps
forcipated
forfex
forge
fresh
fret
galangal
gap
gemel
geminous
geminy
gig
gill
give
good
gunsmith
hail
hale
harm
haybote
hedge-bote
hit
hopeless
housebote
how
hurt
hurtful
hussar
ill
imagination
imp
impair
impairer
imperfect
impoison
impoverisher
imprescriptibility
imprescriptible
incorrupted
industry
injure
injured
injuring
injurious
injury
innocency
instauration
integrity
irrecoverable
irrecoverably
irreparability
irreparable
irreparably
irretrievable
join
keep
labefy
laboratory
lame
lamely
lameness
lassitude
last
least
line
lingual
lobster
lock
macerate
madness
make
malady
mar
marrer
mend
mended
mender
model
multijugous
murage
mural
new
nourishment
noxiousness
nutrient
nutriment
nutrition
nutritious
obstreperous
opposite
ox
pair
pair-royal
pairing
pall
parbuckle
parity
patch
pentecost
perplex
pioneer
plow-bote
poisonous
pollute
polluted
pontage
postillion
prejudice
prejudicial
prey
punt
quadrijugous
rampart
recently
recompact
recover
recruit
redress
reduce
refit
refitted
refitting
reflective
refresh
remedied
remedy
renew
renewed
renewing
repair
repairable
repairer
reparable
reparation
reparative
resort
restore
restorer
restoring
retrieve
retrieved
retrieving
rope-bands
rostrum
rout
run
rust
rusty
sail-maker
scapular
scissors
scraper
sejugous
shake
shrimp
shroud
sicken
side
slander
sob
soft
sort
soundness
spring
stage
stand
standard
star
stipula
storm-beat
suborn
suffer
superannuate
superannuated
surrender
tattoo
tempt
tenantable
time-worn
tinet
tongs
touch
town
township
trijugous
triply-ribbed
turnpike
turnpike-road
twin
two
uminpaired
undecayed
undespairing
undiminished
undrooping
unharmed
untenantable
unworn
vamp
vamped
vapor
viciate
viciated
vitiate
voltaic
waste
watchmaker
wear
whole
win
yoke
zygodactylous



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P  ›  pair
P  ›  pair
1828 Definition

PAIR, n. [L. par; Heb. to join, couple or associate.]

1. Two things of a kind, similar in form, applied to the same purpose,and suited to each other or used together; as a pair of gloves or stockings; a pair of shoes; a pair of oxen or horses.

2. Two of a sort; a couple; a brace; as a pair of nerves; a pair of doves. Luke 2.

PAIR, v.i. To be joined in pairs; to couple, as, birds pair in summer.

1. To suit; to fit; as a counterpart.

Ethelinda,

My heart was made to fit and pair with thine.

PAIR, v.t. To unite in couples; as minds paired in heaven.

1. To unite as correspondent, or rather to contrast.

Glossy jet is paired with shining white.

PAIR, v.t. To impair. [See Impair.]

1913 Definition
Pair (pair)
n.(?)
Pair
[F. paire, LL. paria, L. paria, pl. of par pair, fr. par, adj., equal. Cf. Apparel, Par equality, Peer an equal.]

  1. A number of things resembling one another, or belonging together; a set; as, a pair or flight of stairs. "A pair of beads." Chaucer. Beau. *** Fl. "Four pair of stairs." Macaulay. [Now mostly or quite disused, except as to stairs.]

    Two crowns in my pocket, two pair of cards. Beau. & Fl.

  2. Two things of a kind, similar in form, suited to each other, and intended to be used together] as, a pair of gloves or stockings; a pair of shoes.
  3. Two of a sort; a span; a yoke; a couple; a brace; as, a pair of horses; a pair of oxen.
  4. A married couple; a man and wife.
    "A happy pair." Dryden. "The hapless pair." Milton.
  5. A single thing, composed of two pieces fitted to each other and used together; as, a pair of scissors; a pair of tongs; a pair of bellows.
  6. Two members of opposite parties or opinion, as in a parliamentary body, who mutually agree not to vote on a given question, or on issues of a party nature during a specified time; as, there were two pairs on the final vote.
    [Parliamentary Cant]
  7. In a mechanism, two elements, or bodies, which are so applied to each other as to mutually constrain relative motion.

    * Pairs are named in accordance with the kind of motion they permit; thus, a journal and its bearing form a turning pair, a cylinder and its piston a sliding pair, a screw and its nut a twisting pair, etc. Any pair in which the constraining contact is along lines or at points only (as a cam and roller acting together), is designated a higher pair; any pair having constraining surfaces which fit each other (as a cylindrical pin and eye, a screw and its nut, etc.), is called a lower pair.

    Pair royal (pl. Pairs Royal) three things of a sort; -- used especially of playing cards in some games, as cribbage; as three kings, three "eight spots" etc. Four of a kind are called a double pair royal. "Something in his face gave me as much pleasure as a pair royal of naturals in my own hand." Goldsmith. "That great pair royal of adamantine sisters [the Fates]." Quarles. [Written corruptly parial and prial.]

    Syn. -- Pair, Flight, Set. Originally, pair was not confined to two things, but was applied to any number of equal things (pares), that go together. Ben Jonson speaks of a pair (set) of chessmen; also, he and Lord Bacon speak of a pair (pack) of cards. A "pair of stairs" is still in popular use, as well as the later expression, "flight of stairs."

  8. To be joined in paris] to couple; to mate, as for breeding.
  9. To suit; to fit, as a counterpart.

    My heart was made to fit and pair with thine. Rowe.

  10. Same as To pair off. See phrase below.

    To pair off, to separate from a company in pairs or couples; specif. (Parliamentary Cant), to agree with one of the opposite party or opinion to abstain from voting on specified questions or issues. See Pair, n., 6.

  11. To unite in couples; to form a pair of; to bring together, as things which belong together, or which complement, or are adapted to one another.

    Glossy jet is paired with shining white. Pope.

  12. To engage (one's self) with another of opposite opinions not to vote on a particular question or class of questions.
    [Parliamentary Cant]

    Paired fins. (Zoöl.) See under Fin.

  13. To impair.
    [Obs.] Spenser.

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
An attempt to conduct the affairs of a free government with wisdom and impartiality, and to preserve the just rights of all classes of citizens, without the guidance of Divine precepts, will certainly end in disappointment. God is the supreme moral Governor of the world He has made, and as He Himself governs with perfect rectitude, He requires His rational creatures to govern themselves in like manner. If men will not submit to be controlled by His laws, He will punish them by the evils resulting from their own disobedience.…
 Letter to David McClure :: October 25, 1837 




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1828 dictionary
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