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(8) Words.

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Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(275) Words.

abut
acoustic
act
adam
addition
adorable
adorer
adventure
afeard
affrayment
affront
affronted
afore
aforehand
aikraw
alburnum
all
all-heal
almond
aloe
amenable
ammony
angle
arbor
arise
arrange
arrangement
assembly
atone
autumn
average
awlwort
bald
ballad
bargain
battle
bay
beat
beef
beef-eater
behindhand
believe
belle
bene
berry
bidder
bistort
boggle
bolt-sprit
boson
bright
bruising
bunt
burgess
burn
bushel
buy
calabash
calculate
call
campion
canker
cant
captious
catch
catchpenny
cause
centaury
check
choke-cherry
chuk
cipher
circle
civil
clam
climate
close
combustion
come
comet
comfort
comitial
commonwealth
comprehend
court
cow-bane
cringe
crop
crow
cry
current
currently
cut
deed
democratical
deplorable
desperate
desperately
difficulty
disease
doctor
draw
drawback
dressing
earth
electrize
element
enthusiasm
everlasting
fall
family
fearfulness
fellowship
fine
fire
fish
fix
flee
flush
frolick
garden-stuff
gentleman
gird
gutter
hackmatack
handsome
harangue
harm
heat
heave
heft
hemlock
hoist
how
humor
i
idea
influence
ironwood
jacobinism
keep
knock
legumen
lift
lithy
lope
man
manners
marble
match
maxim
merchant
mitten
monkey
month
musquash
oak
obnoxiousness
ostracize
parody
passable
pea
pebblestone
peek
peel
perch
petalism
petrifaction
physic
pimento
plane
plant
plaster
plausible
plumply
pocket
pod
poke-weed
poker
polt
popular
popularity
popularize
popularized
popularizing
popularly
potash
pretend
promise
proxy
pry
publicly
publishment
pucker
punch
quahaug
quit
quiz
range
rap
reception
receptory
recollection
red-bird
renegado
report
reported
respectable
rub
rumbud
rumor
run
say
scarlatina
scrabble
seditiousness
sentiment
sentinel
serpiginous
shore
side
siss
skunk
slick
snarl
spar
speak
spear-wort
spell
sprag
spy-glass
square
squire
stamp
stand
stark
steam
steerage
stingy
stint
stomach
stone
story
stout
style
sun
swim
tackle
taste
tedder
tell
tempest
thing
thorough-wort
thresh
to
tonsil
town
transmutation
trim
unpopular
unpopularity
unto
vehicle
vex
vogue
wage
whig
whippowil
without
woodchuk
work
worry
year
you



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P  ›  popular
P  ›  popular
1828 Definition

POP'ULAR, a. [L. popularis. See People.]

1. Pertaining to the common people; as the popular voice; popular elections.

So the popular vote inclines.

2. Suitable to common people; familiar; plain; easy to be comprehended; not critical or abstruse.

Homilies are plain and popular instructions.

3. Beloved by the people; enjoying the favor of the people; pleasing to people in general; as a popular governor; a popular preacher; a popular ministry; a popular discourse; a popular administration; a popular war or peace. Suspect the man who endeavors to make that popular which is wrong.

4. Ambitious; studious of the favor of the people.

A popular man is in truth no better than a prostitute to common fame and to the people.

[This sense is not used. It is more customary to apply this epithet to a person who has already gained the favor of the people.]

5. Prevailing among the people; extensively prevalent; as a popular disease.

6. In law, a popular action is one which gives a penalty to the person that sues for the same.

[Note. Popular, at least in the United States, is not synonymous with vulgar; the latter being applied to the lower classes of people, the illiterate and low bred; the former is applied to all classes, or to the body of the people, including a great portion at least of well educated citizens.]

1913 Definition
Popular (popular)
a.(?)
Pop"u*lar
[L. popularis, fr. populus people: cf. F. populaire. See People.]
  1. Of or pertaining to the common people, or to the whole body of the people, as distinguished from a select portion; as, the popular voice; popular elections.
    "Popular states." Bacon. "So the popular vote inclines." Milton.

    The men commonly held in popular estimation are greatest at a distance. J. H. Newman.

  2. Suitable to common people; easy to be comprehended; not abstruse; familiar; plain.

    Homilies are plain popular instructions. Hooker.

  3. Adapted to the means of the common people; possessed or obtainable by the many; hence, cheap; common; ordinary; inferior; as, popular prices; popular amusements.

    The smallest figs, called popular figs, . . . are, of all others, the basest and of least account. Holland.

  4. Beloved or approved by the people; pleasing to people in general, or to many people; as, a popular preacher; a popular law; a popular administration.
  5. Devoted to the common people; studious of the favor of the populace.
    [R.]

    Such popular humanity is treason. Addison.

  6. Prevailing among the people; epidemic; as, a popular disease.
    [Obs.] Johnson.

    Popular action (Law), an action in which any person may sue for penalty imposed by statute. Blackstone.


1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
It is not only important, but, in a degree necessary, that the people of this country, should have an American Dictionary of the English language; for, although the body of the language is the same as in England, and it is desirable to perpetuate that sameness, yet some differences must exist. Language is the expression of ideas; and if the people of one country cannot preserve an identity of ideas, they cannot retain an identity of language.
  




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1828 dictionary
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