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(34) Words.

Found In
Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(541) Words.

abelmosk
abstraction
accrue
acronical
adansonia
adjure
admiration
admire
advance
after
agave
agitato
agrise
ah
aha
alarm
alarmed
alco
alert
allegiance
alternate
amaze
amazed
amazedness
amazement
amazing
amazon
ambitious
ambuscade
ambush
amorpha
amount
amphibology
anatron
anger
angle
anise
aorta
appearance
appreciate
apprise
approach
archchancellor
arduous
arise
ark
arose
artery
ascend
ascendant
ascended
ascension
ascensive
ascent
aspire
aspirer
assail
assassin
assassinate
assassinated
assassinating
assassination
assideans
assiduity
associate
astonish
astonished
astonishment
ataxy
autochthon
autumn
awake
aware
balloon
banana
bank
beat
begin
beginning
belfry
bestir
betray
beware
bhuchampac
billow
bivouac
blister
blow
blush
bockland
boil
bold
bolt
bond
break
bristle
brow
bubble
bubo
by
calogeri
caloyers
camisade
can
capture
carry
catch
celestins
chasideans
chinkapin
cipher
circulatory
circumspectly
circumstantial
civil
climax
climb
climbed
climber
cocoa
coefficient
collect
collected
collectedness
colon
columel
comet
commence
commencement
commodore
compile
comprehend
comprehensible
comprise
comprised
condemn
confederacy
confession
confidence
confuse
congratulate
conics
connusant
constancy
consternation
contain
containable
contained
contemporise
corymb
cosmically
cotton
couch
couchant
courage
crank
cream
creature
crepuscle
crepuscule
cry
curl
curtain
cuticle
dam
damage
defy
degree
deprehend
deprehended
deride
despite
dew-drop
dicotyledonous
difficulty
disembark
disincline
distinguish
disturb
doctor
dogday
dotal
draw
early
east
ecstasy
elutriate
embrace
emerge
empale
emprise
emulation
enhancement
entangle
enterprise
enterprised
enterpriser
enthusiasm
enviously
equal
equator
erect
estrapade
exhalation
exhaustion
expense
exundation
fail
fall
fallowist
familiarly
fashion
favor
fearfulness
felony
fether
fethered
finely
flee
flood
flow
flowing
fluctuate
fly
for
foundation
friseur
fund
gape
get
giant
gibbous
ginger
glader
go
good-now
grise
grisette
griskin
guard
ha
hah
hallucination
hardness
haughty
head
heady
heap
heart
heave
heedless
hegira
heliacally
heliocentric
hence
hero
heroic
herse
high
hight
homotonous
horizon
hyperbole
hypocrisy
i
ignominious
illusion
imband
immolated
implicit
imply
improve
imputation
include
increase
indeed
influence
insensibly
instance
insurgent
insurrection
intercept
interest
intermingled
internal
involve
iris
irised
ivy
jealousy
judiciously
knight
ladder
lateritious
leap
leaven
length
let
levant
lift
local
loftily
lvelihood
make
mansion
marvelous
marvelously
mercury
mesprise
metal
miscarry
misdemeanor
moory
morning
mortify
mount
mounty
mushroom
mutineer
mutiny
myrtle
naptaking
night
nilometer
noctambulist
o
obreption
obreptitious
obsequiously
obturator
occasion
oh
olive
once
opinion
oracle
orient
ornithology
ortive
other
over
overgrow
overleaven
overlook
overreach
overswell
overtake
overtop
pain
palisade
palm
partisan
perseverance
persevere
persevering
phantom
pharisaicical
pharisaism
pharisean
phenix
phylactered
piracy
pitch
pith
place
plane-tree
plantain-tree
plumule
point
political
pompholyx
portcullis
predestine
predicate
premium
prevalently
prosecute
prosperity
protection
protuberance
proverbial
prudent
pump
purprise
quarrel
quite
rack
rage
rail
raise
rashness
reascend
redound
relief
relinquish
remain
remember
result
resurrection
revelly
rib
rickets
ridge
right
ringleader
rise
risen
riser
risse
rose
rugous
run
screw
scum
seconder
sect
sentinel
serpentine-stone
shackle
shadow
shroud
siphon
sit
slowly
soar
solemnity
solicitude
something
soon
soss
source
specuation
speculator
speed
spirit
spring
spring-tide
springing
stack
stair
stand
stare
start
startle
startled
startling
steam
step-stone
stirrer
stoor
strange
strangely
strangeness
strength
strikingly
stupid
subdivide
sublime
subreption
subscapular
subtilization
successful
sudden
sugar
sum
sunrise
sunrising
surge
surmount
surprisal
surprise
surprising
surprisingly
swell
swoon
symmetry
take
temper
tenet
terribly
territory
theoremic
thus
tide
to
toss
tossed
tower
transcend
tread
tribulation
trisect
trisected
trisecting
trisection
trisepalous
trot
tumefy
tumor
turn
twilight
unable
unapprised
undergo
undertaking
undulatory
unexpectedness
unlabored
up
upon
uprise
upwhirl
valley
value
verily
vigorously
violent
volatility
volatilization
volatilize
volatilized
volatilizing
warily
water-mark
west
who
wildly
window
wit
wonder
wonderful
wonderfully
wonderment
wonderstruck
wondrous
worse
wrap
wryneck
yaw
year
yew



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

RISE, v.i. rize. pret. rose; pp. risen; pron. rose, rizn. [See Raise.]

1. To move to pass upward in any manner; to ascend; as, a fog rises from a river or from low ground; a fish rises in water; fowls rise in the air; clouds rise from the horizon towards the meridian; a balloon rises above the clouds.

2. To get up; to leave the place of sleep or rest; as, to rise from bed.

3. To get up or move from any recumbent to an erect posture; as, to rise after a fall.

4. To get up from a seat; to leave a sitting posture; as, to rise from a sofa or chair.

5. To spring; to grow; as a plant; hence, to be high or tall. A tree rises to the height of 60 feet.

6. To swell in quantity or extent; to be more elevated; as, a river rises after a rain.

7. To break forth; to appear; as, a boil rises on the skin.

8. To appear above the horizon; to shine; as, the sun or a star rises.

He maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on the good. Matt. 5.

9. To begin to exist; to originate; to come into being or notice. Great evils sometimes rise from small imprudences.

10. To be excited; to begin to move or act; as, the wind rose at 12 o'clock.

11. To increase in violence. The wind continued to rise till 3 o'clock.

12. To appear in view; as, to rise up to the reader's view.

13. To appear in sight; also, to appear more elevated; as in sailing towards a shore, the land rises.

14. To change a station; to leave a place; as, to rise from a siege.

15. To spring; to be excited or produced. A thought now rises in my mind.

16. To gain elevation in rank, fortune or public estimation; to be promoted. Men may rise by industry, by merit, by favor, or by intrigue.

Some rise by sin, and some by virtue fall.

When the wicked rise, men hide themselves. Prov. 28.

17. To break forth into public commotions; to make open opposition to government; or to assemble and oppose government; or to assemble in arms for attacking another nation. The Greeks have risen against their oppressors.

No more shall nation against nation rise.

18. To be excited or roused into action.

Rise up to the battle. Jer. 49.

19. To make a hostile attack; as when a man riseth against his neighbor. Deut. 22.

Also, to rebel. 2Sam. 18.

20. To increase; to swell; to grow more or greater. A voice, feeble at first, rises to thunder. The price of good rises. The heat rises to intensity.

21. To be improved; to recover from depression; as, a family may rise after misfortune to opulence and splendor.

22. To elevate the style or manner; as, to rise in force of expression; to rise in eloquence.

23. To be revived from death.

The dead in Christ shall rise first. 1Thess. 4.

24. To come by chance.

25. To ascend; to be elevated above the level or surface; as, the ground rises gradually one hundred yards. The Andes rise more than 20,000 feet above the level of the ocean; a mountain in Asia is said to rise still higher.

26. To proceed from.

A scepter shall rise out of Israel. Numbers 24.

27. To have its sources in. Rivers rise in lakes, ponds and springs.

28. To be moved, roused, excited, kindled or inflamed, as passion. His wrath rose to rage.

29. To ascend in the diatonic scale; as, to rise a tone or semitone.

30. To amount. The public debt rises to a hundred million.

31. To close a session. We say, congress will rise on the 4th of March; the legislature or the court will rise on a certain day.

This verb is written also arise, which see. In general, it is indifferent which orthography is used; but custom has, in some cases, established one to the exclusion of the other. Thus we never say, the price of goods arises, when we mean advanced, but we always say, the price rises. We never say, the ground arises to a certain altitude, and rarely, a man arises into an office or station. It is hardly possible to class or define the cases in which usage has established a difference in the orthography of this verb.

RISE, n. rise.

1. The act of rising, either in a literal or figurative sense; ascent; as the rise of vapor in the air; the rise of mercury in the barometer; the rise of water in a river.

2. The act of springing or mounting from the ground; as the rise of the feet in leaping.

3. Ascent; elevation, or degree of ascent; as the rise of a hill or mountain.

4. Spring; source; origin; as the rise of a stream in a mountain. All sin has its rise in the heart.

5. Any place elevated above the common level; as a rise of land.

6. Appearance above the horizon; as the rise of the sun or a star.

7. Increase; advance; as a rise in the price of wheat.

8. Advance in rank, honor, property or fame. Observe a man after his rise to office, or a family after its rise from obscurity.

9. Increase of sound on the same key; a swelling of the voice.

10. Elevation or ascent of the voice in the diatonic scale; as a rise of a tone or semitone.

11. Increase; augmentation.

12. A bough or branch. [Not in use.]

1913 Definition
Rise (rise)
v. i.(?)
Rise
[imp. Rose (?); p. p. Risen (?); p. pr. *** vb. n. Rising.] [AS. r&imacr]san; akin to OS. r***imacr]san, D. rijzen, OHG. r***imacr]san t
  1. To move from a lower position to a higher; to ascend; to mount up. Specifically: -- (a) To go upward by walking, climbing, flying, or any other voluntary motion; as, a bird rises in the air; a fish rises to the bait.

    (b)

  2. To have the aspect or the effect of rising.
    Specifically: --

    (a)

  3. To increase in size, force, or value; to proceed toward a climax.
    Specifically: --

    (a)

  4. In various figurative senses.
    Specifically: --

    (a)

  5. To ascend from the grave; to come to life.

    But now is Christ risen from the dead. 1. Cor. xv. 20.

  6. To terminate an official sitting; to adjourn; as, the committee rose after agreeing to the report.

    It was near nine . . . before the House rose. Macaulay.

  7. To ascend on a musical scale; to take a higher pith; as, to rise a tone or semitone.
  8. To be lifted, or to admit of being lifted, from the imposing stone without dropping any of the type; -- said of a form.

    Syn. -- To arise; mount; ascend; climb; scale. -- Rise, Appreciate. Some in America use the word appreciate for "rise in value;" as, stocks appreciate, money appreciates, etc. This use is not unknown in England, but it is less common there. It is undesirable, because rise sufficiently expresses the idea, and appreciate has its own distinctive meaning, which ought not to be confused with one so entirely different.

  9. The act of rising, or the state of being risen.
  10. The distance through which anything rises; as, the rise of the thermometer was ten degrees; the rise of the river was six feet; the rise of an arch or of a step.
  11. Land which is somewhat higher than the rest; as, the house stood on a rise of land.
    [Colloq.]
  12. Spring; source; origin; as, the rise of a stream.

    All wickednes taketh its rise from the heart. R. Nelson.

  13. Appearance above the horizon; as, the rise of the sun or of a planet.
    Shak.
  14. Increase; advance; augmentation, as of price, value, rank, property, fame, and the like.

    The rise or fall that may happen in his constant revenue by a Spanish war. Sir W. Temple.

  15. Increase of sound; a swelling of the voice.

    The ordinary rises and falls of the voice. Bacon.

  16. Elevation or ascent of the voice; upward change of key; as, a rise of a tone or semitone.
  17. The spring of a fish to seize food (as a fly) near the surface of the water.
  18. To go up; to ascend; to climb; as, to rise a hill.
  19. To cause to rise; as, to rise a fish, or cause it to come to the surface of the water; to rise a ship, or bring it above the horizon by approaching it; to raise.

    Until we rose the bark we could not pretend to call it a chase. W. C. Russell.


1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
In my view, the Christian religion is the most important and one of the first things in which all children, under a free government ought to be instructed... No truth is more evident to my mind than that the Christian religion must be the basis of any government intended to secure the rights and privileges of a free people.
 Preface to 1828 Dictionary 




A patent is a property right for an invention granted by a government to the inventor. A United States patent gives inventors the right "to exclude others" from making, using, offering for sale, or selling their invention throughout the United States or importing their invention into the United States. In exchange for this monopolistic protection, the inventor must publicly disclose the invention (the patent document) and must pay the United States Patent Office (USPTO.gov) to prosecute (application fees) and maintain (maintenance fees) the patent.




1828 dictionary
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