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(4) Words.

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Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(276) Words.

abbe
abscond
absconding
act
action
adjourn
admonish
admonition
affair
affrayment
ambuscade
ambuscaded
ambush
amphictyons
anathema
anecdote
animosity
appeal
appealed
appealing
appellee
appointee
apprize
appropriate
aside
assault
backdoor
backstairs
ballot
bank
bell
bellows
benefactor
billeting
biscuit
blind
bolt
both
breathe
brew
brief
by-law
by-respect
by-way
cabal
cabinet
cabineted
cadet
chapel
charcoal
charter
chase
church
civil
civilly
clancular
clancularly
clandestine
clandestinely
clerk
close
closet
closeting
club
combat
combatant
commune
communing
company
complaint
concern
conclave
confess
confession
confidential
confiscate
conscience
consult
conversion
countersign
covert
covertly
crime
darkness
dearnly
derange
dimiciliary
disburse
disbursement
discharge
disinterest
disinterested
disinterestedness
dispensation
divulge
dominion
dormant
drawing-room
drown
duel
elope
elopement
eloping
emissary
emission
end
enemy
enthusiasm
esoteric
eventful
eves-dropper
farce
ferreter
file
fit
free
gazette
go
governance
hear
hereditably
homefelt
homemade
hospital
hostile
hostility
idiot
imperiality
impious
impolicy
impoliticly
impropriate
income
informtion
infringe
inimical
inpolitic
intelligencer
interest
intrusion
inwardly
juncate
lane
law
lay
league
leak
letter
library
lurch
malign
market
marshal
massacre
misgovernment
mismanagment
most
notify
nuisance
nusance
obscurely
office
openly
operate
opinion
oratory
overrule
pack
paper-money
paramount
particular
partnership
pass
peace
peaceable
peaceably
peculate
personal
petition
placard
plaint
policy
pompous
post
postern
prayer
prayer-book
privacy
private
privateer
privately
privation
privilege
privily
privity
privy
prize
providence
public
public-spirited
public-spiritednes
publish
publisher
punishment
qualification
raise
recess
referring
rehearse
reimburse
remonstrance
reprimand
reserve
resolve
respectively
rest
retire
retired
retirement
retreat
rob
robbery
rose
ruelle
ruin
rule
run
salutation
scrutinize
secrecy
secret
secretary
secrete
secretly
self-affairs
self-interest
selfish
sense
sequestered
shoplifter
signet
simulty
smuggler
sneak
soldier
statute
stealingly
still
strive
student
suborn
subversive
suffer
sway
tax
tell-tale
terrier
tete
the
theft
thief
token
treacherous
treasurer
trooper
turnserving
unbias
unpublic
unpublished
usurp
vice
victor
voyager
warp
way
wrong



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P  ›  private
P  ›  private
1828 Definition

PRI'VATE, a. [L. privatus, from privo, to bereave, properly to strip or separate; privus, singular, several, peculiar to one's self, that is, separate; rapio, diripio, eripio; privo for perivo or berivo.]

1. Properly, separate; unconnected with others; hence, peculiar to one's self; belonging to or concerning an individual only; as a man's private opinion, business or concerns; private property; the king's private purse; a man's private expenses. Charge the money to my private account in the company's books.

2. Peculiar to a number in a joint concern, to a company or body politic; as the private interest of a family, of a company or of a state; opposed to public, or to the general interest of nations.

3. Sequestered from company or observation; secret; secluded; as a private cell; a private room or apartment; private prayer.

4. Not publicly known; not open; as a private negotiation.

5. Not invested with public office or employment; as a private man or citizen; private lift.

A private person may arrest a felon.

6. Individual; personal; in contradistinction from public or national; as private interest.

Private way, in law, is a way or passage in which a man has an interest and right, though the ground may belong to another person. In common language, a private way may be a secret way, one not known or public.

A private act or statute, is one which operates on an individual or company only; opposed to a general law, which operates on the whole community.

A private nuance or wrong, is one which affects an individual.

In private, secretly; not openly or publicly.

PRI'VATE, n. A secret message; particular business. [Unusual.]

1. A common soldier.
1913 Definition
Private (private)
a.(?; 48)
Pri"vate
[L. privatus apart from the state, peculiar to an individual, private, properly p. p. of privare to bereave, deprive, originally, to separate, fr. privus single, private, perhaps originally, put forward (hence, alone, single) and
  1. Belonging to, or concerning, an individual person, company, or interest; peculiar to one's self; unconnected with others; personal; one's own; not public; not general; separate; as, a man's private opinion; private property; a private purse; private expenses or interests; a private secretary.
  2. Sequestered from company or observation; appropriated to an individual; secret; secluded; lonely; solitary; as, a private room or apartment; private prayer.

    Reason . . . then retires
    Into her private cell when nature rests.
    Milton.

  3. Not invested with, or engaged in, public office or employment; as, a private citizen; private life.
    Shak.

    A private person may arrest a felon. Blackstone.

  4. Not publicly known; not open; secret; as, a private negotiation; a private understanding.
  5. Having secret or private knowledge; privy.
    [Obs.]

    Private act or statute, a statute exclusively for the settlement of private and personal interests, of which courts do not take judicial notice; -- opposed to a general law, which operates on the whole community. -- Private nuisance or wrong. See Nuisance. -- Private soldier. See Private, n., 5. -- Private way, a right of private passage over another man's ground. Kent.

  6. A secret message; a personal unofficial communication.
    [Obs.] Shak.
  7. Personal interest; particular business.
    [Obs.]

    Nor must I be unmindful of my private. B. Jonson.

  8. Privacy; retirement.
    [Archaic] "Go off; I discard you; let me enjoy my private." Shak.
  9. One not invested with a public office.
    [Archaic]

    What have kings, that privates have not too? Shak.

  10. A common soldier; a soldier below the grade of a noncommissioned officer.
    Macaulay.
  11. The private parts; the genitals.

    In private, secretly; not openly or publicly.


1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
In correcting public evils, great reliance is placed on schools.… But schools no more make statesmen than human learning makes christians. Literature & scientific attainments have never prevented the corruption of government. Knowledge derived from experience & from the evils of bad measures may produce a change of measures to correct a particular evil. But learning & sciences have no material effect in subduing ambition & selfishness, reconciling parties or subjecting private interest to the influence of a ruling preference of public good.
 On Suffrage ::  




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