1828 dictionary Noah Webster's 1828 American Dictionary 1828 webster
Noah Webster's 1828 American Dictionary
1828 american dictionary
 
1828 dictionary online

Results
1828 dictionary(20) Words.

Found In
Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(350) Words.

abase
above
according
accuser
adoration
adore
advance
advancement
advent
aggravate
allude
alluding
allusion
allusive
alone
ambition
ambitiously
americanism
antecedent
anti-chamber
antique
any
aphilanthropy
appeal
appealing
application
apply
apprehension
aspic
asterisk
asterism
auditor
automation
bankrupt
bargain
basalt
beagle
before
belong
benefice
beneficed
bigness
blossom
bougie
but
candidate
cantharis
canvass
capital
cast
castor-oil
catechism
chaffer
childishness
chinch
choice
choicely
choose
choosing
chosen
churlishness
circle
coetaneous
color
commending
commit
commitment
committed
committee
committing
comparative
comparison
compass
compromise
conception
concerning
conclude
concrete
condition
conditionally
considering
consult
contemplate
contemporary
continual
contrary
coptic
cord
cotemporary
cut
dagger
defer
deoxydizing
deprivation
dignity
disoxydation
dispose
distinction
distinguish
distinguishingly
dwarf
either
elect
elected
electing
election
elective
electively
eligibility
eligible
eligibleness
eminency
enough
envy
erratum
especially
estimative
evermore
evoke
excepting
expect
exterior
exude
favorite
favoritism
fluviatile
foible
fool
for
forbearance
foreign
fray
generalize
generosity
gibbousness
glad
glory
greatness
ground
happily
harvest
have
he
head
hither
hundred
if
ignorance
inadvertency
indecorum
index
indictment
indifferent
indifferently
ineligible
influence
injustice
inlist
innuendo
insuperable
integrity
interlocutory
invidious
ipecacuanha
it
ivory
judiciously
kyanite
least
leaved
lend
lest
level
liberty
lividness
look
magnitude
man
manage
mean
meaning
mind
modern
modest
moral
morality
most
multitude
mutually
neither
never
nobility
nobly
notwithstanding
now
number
obelisk
on
once
one
option
optional
orbitual
oxydizing
paper
pendulousness
periscian
physical
please
pleasure
pointedly
polverine
polymorph
port-fire
position
pre-emption
prefer
preferable
preferableness
preferably
preference
preferment
preferred
preferrer
preferring
prelatically
prelation
present
promontory
promote
promotion
pronoun
proselyte
prospect
prospectively
provided
providential
prudence
purveyance
put
quaint
quarry
rabble
rather
recommend
recommit
recommitment
recommitted
recommitting
refer
referable
referee
reference
referendary
referment
referred
referrible
referring
refusal
regard
relate
relating
relation
relative
religion
remit
remitted
rennet
report
republican
rere-ward
reside
respect
respecting
respectless
retrospective
robust
roebuck
rout
sailer
scuffle
seeing
select
selected
selection
self-preference
selfishly
senior
sequester
serve
shade
she
simoniac
simoniacal
simony
sporadic
sporadical
star
state
still
stone
storm
stow
strake
strop
submit
submitted
submitting
such
superstition
survey
swoln
tablature
table
take
tall
team
tegument
tergiversation
that
their
then
theorist
therefore
these
they
thine
this
those
though
three
tiffany
time
top
triangular
umpire
un
unelected
unpreferred
veil
vendible
vote
voting
wheresoever
whether
who
wide
will
worth
zeugma



Bible Results
Webster
KJV
1828 dictionaryTo be ...
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R  ›  refer
R  ›  refer
1828 Definition

REFER', v.t. [L. refero; re and fero, to bear.]

1. To direct, leave or deliver over to another person or tribunal for information or decision; as when parties to a suit refer their cause to another court; or the court refers a cause to individuals for examination and report. A person whose opinion is requested, sometimes refers the inquirer to another person or other source of information.

2. To reduce as to the ultimate end.

You profess and practice to refer all things to yourself.

3. To reduce; to assign; as to an order, genus or class. Naturalists are sometimes at a loss to know to what class or genus an animal or plant is to be referred.

To refer one's self, to betake; to apply. [Little used.]

REFER', v.i.

1. To respect; to have relation. Many passages of Scripture refer to the peculiar customs of the orientals.

2. To appeal; to have recourse; to apply.

In suits it is good to refer to some friend of trust.

3. To allude; to have respect to by intimation without naming. I refer to a well known fact.
1913 Definition
Refer (refer)
v. t.(r*f1913 webster dictionaryr")
Re*fer"
[imp. *** p. p. Referred (-f&etilde]rd); p. pr. *** vb. n. Referring.] [F. ré]férer, L. referre; pref. re- re- + ferre to bear. See Bear to
  1. To carry or send back.
    [Obs.] Chaucer.
  2. Hence: To send or direct away; to send or direct elsewhere, as for treatment, aid, information, decision, etc.; to make over, or pass over, to another; as, to refer a student to an author; to refer a beggar to an officer; to refer a bill to a committee; a court refers a matter of fact to a commissioner for investigation, or refers a question of law to a superior tribunal.
  3. To place in or under by a mental or rational process; to assign to, as a class, a cause, source, a motive, reason, or ground of explanation; as, he referred the phenomena to electrical disturbances.

    To refer one's self, to have recourse; to betake one's self; to make application; to appeal. [Obs.]

    I'll refer me to all things sense. Shak.

  4. To have recourse; to apply; to appeal; to betake one's self; as, to refer to a dictionary.

    In suits . . . it is to refer to some friend of trust. Bacon.

  5. To have relation or reference; to relate; to point; as, the figure refers to a footnote.

    Of those places that refer to the shutting and opening the abyss, I take notice of that in Job. Bp. Burnet.

  6. To carry the mind or thought; to direct attention; as, the preacher referred to the late election.
  7. To direct inquiry for information or a guarantee of any kind, as in respect to one's integrity, capacity, pecuniary ability, and the like; as, I referred to his employer for the truth of his story.

    Syn. -- To allude; advert; suggest; appeal. Refer, Allude, Advert. We refer to a thing by specifically and distinctly introducing it into our discourse. We allude to it by introducing it indirectly or indefinitely, as by something collaterally allied to it. We advert to it by turning off somewhat abruptly to consider it more at large. Thus, Macaulay refers to the early condition of England at the opening of his history; he alludes to these statements from time to time; and adverts, in the progress of his work, to various circumstances of peculiar interest, on which for a time he dwells. "But to do good is . . . that that Solomon chiefly refers to in the text." Sharp. "This, I doubt not, was that artificial structure here alluded to." T. Burnet.

    Now to the universal whole advert:
    The earth regard as of that whole a part.
    Blackmore.


1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
When a citizen gives his suffrage to a man of known immorality he abuses his trust; he sacrifices not only his own interest, but that of his neighbor; he betrays the interest of his country.
  




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