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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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PEP'PER, n. [L. piper.] A plant and its seed or grain, of the genus Piper. The stem of the plant is a vine requiring a prop, which is usually a tree. The leaves are oval and the flower white. We have three kinds of pepper,the black,the white, and the long. The black pepper is the produce of Java, Sumatra, Ceylon, and other Asiatic countries; The white pepper is the black pepper decorticated; the long pepper is the fruit of a different species, also from the E. Indies. It consists of numerous grains attached to a common footstalk. Pepper has a strong aromatic smell and a pungent taste.
PEP'PER, v.t. To sprinkle with pepper.
A well-known,
pungently aromatic condiment, the dried berry, either whole or
powdered, of the Piper nigrum.
* Common, or black, pepper is made from the whole berry, dried just before maturity; white pepper is made from the ripe berry after the outer skin has been removed by maceration and friction. It has less of the peculiar properties of the plant than the black pepper. Pepper is used in medicine as a carminative stimulant. The plant which yields
pepper, an East Indian woody climber (Piper nigrum), with ovate
leaves and apetalous flowers in spikes opposite the leaves. The
berries are red when ripe. Also, by extension, any one of the several
hundred species of the genus Piper, widely dispersed throughout
the tropical and subtropical regions of the earth.
Any plant of the genus Capsicum, and its
fruit; red pepper; as, the bell pepper.
* The term pepper has been extended to various other fruits and plants, more or less closely resembling the true pepper, esp. to the common varieties of Capsicum. See Capsicum, and the Phrases, below. African pepper, the Guinea pepper. See under
Guinea. -- Cayenne pepper. See under
Cayenne. -- Chinese pepper, the
spicy berries of the Xanthoxylum piperitum, a species of
prickly ash found in China and Japan. -- Guinea
pepper. See under Guinea, and
Capsicum. -- Jamaica pepper. See
Allspice. -- Long pepper.
To sprinkle or season with
pepper.
Figuratively: To shower shot or other
missiles, or blows, upon] to pelt; to fill with shot, or cover with
bruises or wounds.
"I have peppered two of them." "I am
peppered, I warrant, for this world." Shak. To fire numerous
shots (at).
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