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(49) Words.

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Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(425) Words.

a
abjuration
absolution
absolve
absolved
absolving
abyss
acquit
acquitment
acquittal
acquittance
acquitted
acquitting
across
adage
adarcon
adjudge
adversary
agitator
ambrosia
amend
amendment
ampliation
anathema
ancient
ancientness
ancienty
andalusite
anoint
antientry
antiquarian
antiquarianism
antiquary
antique
antiquity
apex
apollinarian
applause
aquitanian
archeological
archeology
argus
armigerous
arsenic
arundelian
ascend
astrea
austromancy
avoid
avouch
awful
bacchanals
banish
banisher
banishing
basin
battel
battering-ram
bear
bell
betray
blur
bosom
bran-new
brand-new
brazen
breastplate
bring
but
cadmian
caduceus
calamus
capon
carry
casuistry
chancellor
chancery
change
charge
choke-full
christ
circus
clean
clear
cleared
clearing
close-couched
clossus
combination
common
compassion
compete
condemn
congruity
conscionableness
consider
coppiously
corban
countenance
countervail
covert-way
crime
criminally
crooked
crookedness
cruelly
crustaceous
cunning
curious
decree
deliverance
derivation
descent
desert
deserter
desertion
deserve
deviation
dilemma
discharge
discharged
discharging
discoast
disembark
dismission
dogweary
door
dropping
drops
eclectic
elench
elephantine
elope
embroil
emergency
emigrant
emigrate
empower
encomium
enough
ephod
equal
equestrian
equitable
equitableness
equitably
equitant
equitation
equity
error
erudition
escape
escaping
evacuate
evacuated
evenhanded
exchange
exchequer
excuse
excusing
exile
exit
expatriate
expelling
fair
fairly
fairness
far
fasces
fillet
flora
flourish
fly
for
foreclose
forsake
full
full-hot
game
gaoldelivery
garbler
genial
get
give
godfather
gordian
gratify
ground
guerdon
hardihood
hardly
harpy
harvest
hear
heartless
hecatomb
hemina
hide
hieroglyphic
high
hoar
hold
honest
idolatrous
ill
illness
impartial
impartiality
impartially
incident
incompetent
indirectness
inequitable
iniquitous
iniquity
injustice
judge
judgment
just
justice
justify
justness
king
lay
leaving
legion
liable
litigation
longinquity
lustration
man
match
mercury
mercy
mine
mortgage
multiplicity
mutilate
nearness
negro
nobility
obequitate
obequitation
obliqueness
obliquity
obliterate
oldness
omnipresence
omnipresent
ophiomancy
ordeal
origin
original
ostracism
ovation
oxymoron
pack
packed
paleologist
paleology
palpably
pantomime
parian
part
pat
petrify
phalanx
philology
pine
plow
point
pre-existence
primitiveness
print
probationer
property
propinquity
prosecution
purify
questor
quick-grass
quietus
quit
quitch-grass
quitclaim
quitclaimed
quitclaiming
quite
quits
quittal
quittance
quitted
quitter
quitter-bone
rapacious
rave
reach
read
reap
receit
reception
recompensed
recompensing
reconciliation
regard
release
released
releasing
relic
relinquish
relinquished
relinquisher
relinquishing
relinquishment
remise
remorse
remote
remunerate
renown
rent
repay
repaying
request
requital
requite
requiter
resolve
respect
respecter
retaliate
retaliation
retributing
reverently
reverse
rewarded
rewarder
rewarding
right
righteous
righteously
righteousness
roguery
roll
rustical
scaldic
scant
scape-goat
scepter
score
scourge
scrap
seduce
serve
sesquitertian
sesquitertional
sesquitone
shape
sheer
sheerly
sibyl
sin
sinful
sinfully
sinfulness
sinter
slope
slopeness
so
span-new
stand
step
stock
strike
studious
stuff
succeed
succeeding
supplication
surety
sword
table
tell
tenaciousness
ternary
throughout
thwart
timbrel
touch
trace
trance
trident
turn
ubiquity
unabsolved
unacquitted
uncertainty
uncorrupt
unequitable
unfairly
unfairness
unjust
unrequited
unrighteous
unrighteousness
upbraid
utter
vacate
validity
virtue
virtuoso
visit
visor
vogue
void
voiding
votary
wave
way
whirligig
will
withdraw
worship
wreak
wrong
zodiac



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Q  ›  quit
Q  ›  quit
1828 Definition

QUIT, v.t. pret. and pp. quit or quitted. [L. cedo. The sense of quit is to leave, to withdraw from; but the primary sense of the root must have been to move or to send; for to requite is to send back.]

1. To leave; to depart from, either temporarily or forever. It does not necessarily include the idea of abandoning, without a qualifying word. A man quits his house for an hour, or for a month. He quits his native country on a voyage or he quits it forever; he quits an employment with the intention of resuming it.

2. To free; to clear; to liberate; to discharge from.

To quit you of this fear, you have already looked death in the face. [Nearly obsolete.]

3. To carry through; to do or perform something to the end, so that nothing remains; to discharge or perform completely.

Never a worthy prince a day did quit with greater hazard and with more renown.

4. To quit one's self, reciprocally, to clear one's self of incumbent duties by full performance.

Samson hath quit himself like Samson.

In this sense, acquit is generally used.

5. To repay; to requite.

- Enkindle all the sparks of nature to quit this horrid act.

In this sense, quit is now rarely used. We use requite.

6. To vacate obligation; to release; to free from

Dangers of law, actions, decrees, judgments against us quitted.

7. To pay; to discharge; hence, to free from; as, to quit the debt of gratitude.

8. To set free; to release; to absolve; to acquit.

Guiltless I quit, guilty I set them free. In this sense, acquit is now used.

9. To leave; to give up; to resign; to relinquish; as, to quit an office.

10. To pay.

Before that judge that quits each soul his hire. [Not used.]

11. To forsake; to abandon.

Such a superficial way of examining is to quit truth for appearance.

To quit cost, to pay; to free from by an equivalent; to reimburse; as, the cultivation of barren land will not always quit cost.

To quit scores, to make even; to clear mutually from demands by mutual equivalents given. We will quit scores [marks of charges] before we part.

Does not the earth quit scores with all the elements in her noble fruits?

QUIT, a. Free; clear; discharged from; absolved.

The owner of the ox shall be quit. Ex. 21. [This word, though primarily a participle, and never placed before its noun, has properly the sense of an adjective.]

Qui tam, [L.] A qui tam action, in law, is a popular action, in which a man prosecutes an offender for the king or state, as well as for himself.
1913 Definition
Quit (quit)
n.(kw***ibreve]t)
Quit
(Zoöl.)
  1. Any one of numerous species of small passerine birds native of tropical America. See Banana quit, under Banana, and Guitguit.
  2. Released from obligation, charge, penalty, etc.; free; clear; absolved; acquitted.
    Chaucer.

    The owner of the ox shall be quit. Ex. xxi. 28.

    * This word is sometimes used in the form quits, colloquially; as, to be quits with one, that is, to have made mutual satisfaction of demands with him; to be even with him; hence, as an exclamation: Quits! we are even, or on equal terms. "To cry quits with the commons in their complaints." Fuller.

  3. To set at rest] to free, as from anything harmful or oppressive; to relieve; to clear; to liberate.
    [R.]

    To quit you of this fear, you have already looked Death in the face; what have you found so terrible in it? Wake.

  4. To release from obligation, accusation, penalty, or the like; to absolve; to acquit.

    There may no gold them quyte. Chaucer.

    God will relent, and quit thee all his debt. Milton.

  5. To discharge, as an obligation or duty; to meet and satisfy, as a claim or debt; to make payment for or of; to requite; to repay.

    The blissful martyr quyte you your meed. Chaucer.

    Enkindle all the sparks of nature
    To quit this horrid act.
    Shak.

    Before that judge that quits each soul his hire. Fairfax.

  6. To meet the claims upon, or expectations entertained of; to conduct; to acquit; -- used reflexively.

    Be strong, and quit yourselves like men. 1 Sam. iv. 9.

    Samson hath quit himself
    Like Samson.
    Milton.

  7. To carry through; to go through to the end.
    [Obs.]

    Never worthy prince a day did quit
    With greater hazard and with more renown.
    Daniel.

  8. To have done with; to cease from; to stop; hence, to depart from; to leave; to forsake; as, to quit work; to quit the place; to quit jesting.

    Such a superficial way of examining is to quit truth for appearance. Locke.

    To quit cost, to pay; to reimburse. -- To quit scores, to make even; to clear mutually from demands.

    Does not the earth quit scores with all the elements in the noble fruits that issue from it? South.

    Syn. -- To leave; relinquish; resign; abandon; forsake; surrender; discharge; requite. -- Quit, Leave. Leave is a general term, signifying merely an act of departure; quit implies a going without intention of return, a final and absolute abandonment.

  9. To go away; to depart; to stop doing a thing; to cease.

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
If a republican government fails to secure public prosperity and happiness, it must be because the citizens neglect the divine commands, and elect bad men to make and administer the laws.
 History of the United States :: 1832 




Patents to plants which are stable and reproduced by asexual reproduction, and not a potato or other edible tuber reproduced plant, are provided for by Title 35 United States Code, Section 161 which states: Whoever invents or discovers and asexually reproduces any distinct and new variety of plant, including cultivated sports, mutants, hybrids, and newly found seedlings, other than a tuber propagated plant or a plant found in an uncultivated state, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the conditions and requirements of title. (Amended September 3, 1954, 68 Stat. 1190). The plant patent must also satisfy the general requirements of patentability. The subject matter of the application would be a plant which developed or discovered by applicant, and which has been found stable by asexual reproduction. To be patentable, it would also be required: (1) That the plant was invented or discovered and, if discovered, that the discovery was made in a cultivated area. (2)That the plant is not a plant which is excluded by statute, where the part of the plant used for asexual reproduction is not a tuber food part, as with potato or Jerusalem artichoke. (3) That the person or persons filing the application are those who actually invented the claimed plant; i.e., discovered or developed and identified or isolated the plant, and asexually reproduced the plant. (4) That the plant has not been sold or released in the United States of America more than one year prior to the date of the application. (5)That the plant has not been enabled to the public, i.e., by description in a printed publication in this country more than one year before the application for patent with an offer to sale; or by release or sale of the plant more than one year prior to application for patent. (6) That the plant be shown to differ from known, related plants by at least one distinguishing characteristic, which is more than a difference caused by growing conditions or fertility levels, etc. (7) The invention would not have been obvious to one skilled in the art at the time of invention by applicant.




1828 dictionary
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