1828 dictionary Noah Webster's 1828 American Dictionary 1828 webster
Noah Webster's 1828 American Dictionary
1828 american dictionary
 
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Results
1828 dictionary(36) Words.

Found In
Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(323) Words.

abase
abate
adorn
against
air
airing
american
anchor
aristocratical
arride
arrogance
arrogantly
ascaris
ashamed
atlantis
attire
banter
barber-monger
baseless
bedridden
behind
berth
bestraddle
bestride
big
bitter
bitts
blanchimeter
blast
blazon
boast
bolster
bridal
bride
bridecake
bridegroom
brideman
briderbed
bridermaid
bridewell
bridle
bull-fight
buprestes
but
calculate
calomel
camel
canter
cantharidin
cantharis
carry
cataphract
censure
chaplet
chloride
chloridic
cognation
condescension
confarreation
contemptible
contumeliously
copulative
correction
corrosive
counterpoise
crest
cut
depress
depression
deride
derided
derider
disdain
dismount
downfall
dub
elated
elation
elude
enter
envy
epithalamy
equitant
ermined
estrapade
exalt
extol
exultation
fancy
fierceness
flatter
flattering
flattery
fleer
foamy
follow
foot
forehand
forespurrer
fulmar
gallop
gaudy
gibe
giber
gird
glory
glorying
glow
goom
greatness
gride
grizelin
groom
grove
gust
hand
harbinger
harbor
haughtiness
haughty
hauteur
have
headmold-shot
hebridian
hereditary
high
high-blown
high-minded
hobby
hobbyhorse
horn
horse
horseman
huff
humble
humbler
humiliating
humiliation
humility
imputation
in
indignant
indispose
indulge
inflate
insolence
insolently
iridescence
iridescent
irrision
jade
jeer
jeered
jockey
jolt
lackey
lash
laugh
lengthy
lift
lifted
lifting
loftiness
look
lordliness
lordly
lower
lowliness
lowly
luxury
magnify
man
manly
medium
meekness
mince
mock
mocker
monarchal
moonstone
moor
morally
moroseness
mortification
mouth
naughtiness
news
nobility
obequitate
or
outride
outrider
override
overweening
paranymph
patience
pavonine
peep
peripatetic
personal
petulanceulancy
pillion
pique
pleasant
plume
portoise
post
postboy
postillion
prance
presumptuous
pride
prideful
prideless
priding
pridingly
priestridden
propose
proud
puff
puffed
purse-pride
quadridecimal
quadridentate
quarantine
quell
quintin
r
race
radiant
ramble
rankness
read
ready
reflective
rein
return
revolt
rid
ride
ridicule
ridiculed
riding
riding-habit
riding-hood
risible
road
rode
rout
ruff
run
rutter
ryder
saddle
sail
sarcasm
savor
scholastical
sciolist
scoffer
scorn
scorner
sculk
sensibility
sexual
shall
should
son
spanker
spoil
staid
stand
stang
stateliness
stiff-necked
stirrup
stomach
stone
stride
stuff
subside
supercilious
surquedry
swell
swelling
symbol
take
tame
tantivy
tax
thought
through
tide
tilt
time
trample
travel
tride
trident
tridentate
unbacked
unconscionable
unmeaning
unmoored
unmooring
vaingloriously
vainglory
vainness
vanity
vast
vaunt
vesicatory
void
walk
want
wanton
waste
wedding-clothes
westward
wild
willfulness
wince
worm



Bible Results
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R  ›  ride
R  ›  ride
1828 Definition

RIDE, v.i. pret. rode or rid; pp. rid, ridden. [L rheda, a chariot or vehicle.]

1. To be carried on horseback, or on any beast, or in any vehicle. We ride on a horse, on a camel, in a coach, chariot, wagon, &c.

2. To be borne on or in a fluid. A ship rides at anchor; the ark rode on the flood; a balloon rides in the air.

He rode on a cherub and did fly; yea, he did fly on the wings of the wind. Ps. 18.

3. To be supported in motion.

Strong as the axle-tree on which heaven rides.

4. To practice riding. He rides often for his health.

5. To manage a horse well.

He rode, he fenc'd, he mov'd with graceful ease.

6. To be supported by something subservient; to sit.

On whose foolish honesty my practices rid easy.

To ride easy, in seaman's language, is when a ship does not labor or feel a great strain on her cables.

To ride hard, is when a ship pitches violently, so as to strain her cables, masts and hull.

To ride out, as a gale, signifies that a ship does not drive during a storm.

RIDE, v.t.

1. To sit on, so as to be carried; as, to ride a horse.

They ride the air in whirlwind.

2. To manage insolently at will; as in priestridden.

The nobility could no longer endure to be ridden by bakers, cobblers and brewers.

3. To carry. [Local.]

RIDE, n.

1. An excursion on horseback or in a vehicle.

2. A saddle horse. [Local.]

3. A road cut in a wood or through a ground for the amusement of riding; a riding.

1913 Definition
Ride (ride)
v. i.(r***imacr]d)
Ride
[imp. Rode (r1913 webster dictionaryd) (Rid [r***ibreve]d], archaic); p. p. Ridden ((?)) (Rid, archaic); p. pr. *** vb. n. Riding (&?]).] [AS. r***imacr
  1. To be carried on the back of an animal, as a horse.

    To-morrow, when ye riden by the way. Chaucer.

    Let your master ride on before, and do you gallop after him. Swift.

  2. To be borne in a carriage; as, to ride in a coach, in a car, and the like. See Synonym, below.

    The richest inhabitants exhibited their wealth, not by riding in gilden carriages, but by walking the streets with trains of servants. Macaulay.

  3. To be borne or in a fluid; to float; to lie.

    Men once walked where ships at anchor ride. Dryden.

  4. To be supported in motion; to rest.

    Strong as the exletree
    On which heaven rides.
    Shak.

    On whose foolish honesty
    My practices ride easy!
    Shak.

  5. To manage a horse, as an equestrian.

    He rode, he fenced, he moved with graceful ease. Dryden.

  6. To support a rider, as a horse; to move under the saddle; as, a horse rides easy or hard, slow or fast.

    To ride easy (Naut.), to lie at anchor without violent pitching or straining at the cables. -- To ride hard (Naut.), to pitch violently. -- To ride out. (a) To go upon a military expedition. [Obs.] Chaucer. (b) To ride in the open air. [Colloq.] -- To ride to hounds, to ride behind, and near to, the hounds in hunting.

    Syn. -- Drive. -- Ride, Drive. Ride originally meant (and is so used throughout the English Bible) to be carried on horseback or in a vehicle of any kind. At present in England, drive is the word applied in most cases to progress in a carriage; as, a drive around the park, etc.; while ride is appropriated to progress on a horse. Johnson seems to sanction this distinction by giving "to travel on horseback" as the leading sense of ride; though he adds "to travel in a vehicle" as a secondary sense. This latter use of the word still occurs to some extent; as, the queen rides to Parliament in her coach of state; to ride in an omnibus.

    "Will you ride over or drive?" said Lord Willowby to his quest, after breakfast that morning. W. Black.

  7. To sit on, so as to be carried; as, to ride a horse; to ride a bicycle.

    [They] rend up both rocks and hills, and ride the air
    In whirlwind.
    Milton.

  8. To manage insolently at will; to domineer over.

    The nobility could no longer endure to be ridden by bakers, cobblers, and brewers. Swift.

  9. To convey, as by riding; to make or do by riding.

    Tue only men that safe can ride
    Mine errands on the Scottish side.
    Sir W. Scott.

  10. To overlap (each other); -- said of bones or fractured fragments.

    To ride a hobby, to have some favorite occupation or subject of talk. -- To ride and tie, to take turn with another in labor and rest; -- from the expedient adopted by two persons with one horse, one of whom rides the animal a certain distance, and then ties him for the use of the other, who is coming up on foot. Fielding. -- To ride down. (a) To ride over; to trample down in riding; to overthrow by riding against; as, to ride down an enemy. (b) (Naut.) To bear down, as on a halyard when hoisting a sail. -- To ride out (Naut.), to keep safe afloat during (a storm) while riding at anchor or when hove to on the open sea; as, to ride out the gale.

  11. The act of riding; an excursion on horseback or in a vehicle.
  12. A saddle horse.
    [Prov. Eng.] Wright.
  13. A road or avenue cut in a wood, or through grounds, to be used as a place for riding; a riding.

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
All the miseries and evils which men suffer from vice, crime, ambition, injustice, oppression, slavery and war, proceed from their despising or neglecting the precepts contained in the Bible.
  




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