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(104) Words.

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Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(775) Words.

a
abdals
aberruncate
about
action
adamantine
adipocere
agouty
ahead
albatros
alleghany
allegory
almanack
alternation
amputate
andalusite
annular
anole
antecursor
antiparallel
aorta
appian
apple-tree
apricot
arborator
archivault
ard
arm
arrow-root
arundelian
arundinaceous
arundineous
assideans
at
athletic
atilt
automalite
averruncate
averruncation
avocado
away
azerira
bacchanalian
bacchanals
bacchic
bamboo
banquette
baptist
bar
bardesanists
barilla
barratry
baton
batoon
beacon
bead
beam
beard
beat
bed
beguin
belay
belly-bound
beslubber
between
bill
blanket
bleed
bleeding
block
board
boil
boom
borachio
borough
bos
bousy
box
branch
breastplate
bridle
brook
brun
brunet
brunette
brunion
brunt
bubble
bug
bullace
bumper
burn
bust
bustard
button
cable
caltrop
camelopard
can
cane
canker
canoe
capstan
career
careering
carry
caruncle
caruncular
carunculated
cassowary
cast
casting
celerity
cephalic
ceylanite
chase
chasideans
cherry
chest
chondrodite
circensian
circle
circulate
circumcursation
circus
clack
clamp
clatter
clip
coamings
cockle
cockscomb
coffer
coistril
collateral
collect
collision
comb
combination
compass
compute
concord
concourse
concur
concurring
confluence
confluent
confluxibility
constable
contracted
controllable
coral
cordage
corindon
cornet
coronary
corridor
corrivation
corundum
coryphene
counter
countercurrent
countermine
course
coursed
courser
coursing
crapulence
crapulous
creeper
crimpled
cringle
crinkle
crocodile
cross
cross-grained
cross-sea
crossing
crown-work
crunk
crunkle
cunning
cup
curb
curdle
currency
current
curricle
cursitor
cursive
cursorily
cursory
custom
cut
cutter
daggle
damson
dart
dead-drunk
dead-reckoning
deadnettle
deadpledge
decurrent
decursion
decursive
deepness
deflux
defluxion
degrade
demain
deodand
descant
descend
desert
detruncate
detruncation
devotion
diadrom
diluviate
discourse
discursion
distance
diving-bell
divorcer
dolphin
down
drain
draught-hooks
draw
drink
drinker
dromedary
drunk
drunkard
drunken
drunkenly
drunkenness
dry
dunder
dunghill
dwindled
ebriety
ebriosity
eddy
elecampane
elephant
elope
eloping
emarginated
ember
emerald
emery
empyrean
encroach
end
entire
excavate
excursion
expeditious
extremity
fahlunite
faints
fast
fend
fibrolite
fierce
figure
file
fillet
fish
flapping
flee
fleetfoot
flier
flight
flirt
flocking
flowing
fluor
flush
fly
footman
footmanship
forerun
forerunner
forestall
foul
fourwheeled
from
frush
frustum
fuddle
fuddled
fugitive
furiously
furuncle
fusil
gabble
gahnite
galanga
gallop
game
gantlope
geat
gerund
get
giddy
glanders
glass
gleet
go
goal
goer
gospel-gossip
gossip
gossiping
griping
groan
ground
growl
grundsel
grunt
grunter
grunting
gruntle
gruntling
gully
guntackle
gurgle
gurgling
gutter
gymnastic
half-scholar
hamstring
handbell
harbinger
hard
hayward
hazard
headstrong
heat
heel
hell
helvin
herald
herd
hie
hippodrome
hold
hook
horsecourser
horserace
horseracing
hourglass
howitzer
humite
hurtle
hydrolite
illuminati
incline
incorrigible
incur
incursion
indicative
inebriate
inebriating
inebriation
inebriety
inform
insobriety
intercourse
intercurrence
intercurrent
interlope
interloper
into
intoxicate
intoxicated
intoxication
intransitive
issue
jib-boom
jostle
jostled
jostling
justle
kick
knell
knight
kyanite
landloper
lap
lash
lawing
leap
leg
lid
lift
light
lightfooted
likelihood
living
longitudinal
loop
looping
loose
lope
loping
low-wines
lugger
lumpfish
lunette
lurch
luxuriant
mad
manger
marble
martin
mast
maudlin
mazy
messenger
midriff
montanist
moonstone
moor
mortgage
move
muck
muddle
muddled
muddling
muddy
mummy
murmur
naked
neck
neuter
nimble-footed
nod
noose
novel
nutmeg
obelisk
obtruncate
obtruncation
occur
ostrich
out
outrun
outstrip
over
overflow
overflowing
overglance
overrun
overrunner
overrunning
parallel
parian
part
pass
pay
pest
pietist
pilser
pin
pipe
plow
plum
poop
pooping
potable
poverty
prate
precurse
precursor
prelude
prepare
prescribe
prick
prime
prism
proboscis
prodrome
proin
prune
prunello
pruner
pruniferous
pruning-knife
psaltery
pulley
purl
put
quadrune
quick
quintessence
race
race-horse
racer
ran
range
rantipole
rapidly
ravel
recourse
recur
recurrent
recursion
redound
reed
reel
refine
regard
rennet
reprune
repruned
repruning
restif
retund
rig
rigging
rill
ring
riot
ripple
risk
roll
rong
ronion
ront
root
rosicrucian
rover
ruby
ruin
run
runagate
runaway
runcation
runcinate
rundle
rundlet
rune
runer
rung
runlet
runnel
runner
runnet
running
running-fight
running-rigging
running-title
runnion
runt
sacring-bell
same
sanguifluous
sanious
sapphire
sarlac
saunter
sawyer
scamper
scampering
scoop
scour
scourer
scratch
scud
scudding
scuddle
scuttle
seedling
self-heal
set
sewer
shale
sheep-shank
shilling
shoad-stone
shoe
shrink
shrove-tuesday
shrunk
shrunken
sinew-shrunk
skirr
skirt
sled
sledding
sledge
sleet
sleigh
sloe
sluice
smuggle
smuggler
snathe
snivel
snively
sober
sot
specktacle
speed
spill
spilling
spinel
spinelle
spit
spout
sprang
spring
sprung
sprunt
spruntly
spry
spur
spurn
squint
squirrel
stage
stage-coach
stagnant
stand
stave
steady
steddy
steep
step
stepping
stew
still
stopper
straggle
strand
stranded
stranding
strap
stray
streak
stream
streaming
streamy
stretch
strike
string
strung
stubbed
stumble
subterfluous
succor
sugar
surculate
surculation
swallow
swallow-wort
swarm
sway
sweal
sweep
swinish
syllable
syndromy
tail
temperance
temulency
temulentive
tenor
tern
theodolite
thicksprung
thigh
thoracic
three-nerved
thrid
thrill
thrilling
through
throw
tick
tide
tide-gate
tilt
tip
tippler
toper
torrent
torso
train
trangram
transcur
transversal
tree-nail
trend
trending
trickle
trim
trimming
trip
triumph
trochil
trochite
trochlea
trochoid
troll
tronco
trot
trotting
truckle-bed
truncate
truncated
truncating
truncation
truncheon
truncheoneer
trundle
trundle-bed
trundle-tail
trunk
trunked
trunnion
trunnion-plate
trunnion-ring
tun
turbid
turn
tympan
u
umbel
unbent
underneath
underrun
undressed
unpruned
unrig
unshrunk
untrimmed
unwrung
usher
ushering
vapor
veer
vehicle
velocity
veney
venture
venus
verb
vesuvian
vine-dresser
vinolency
walk
wand
wanton
warder
warp
wassail
wassailer
well
whip
wick
willing
wing
wither-wrung
withered
wrack
wrecking
wring
wrong
wrung
yak
zeta



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R  ›  run
R  ›  run
1828 Definition

RUN, v.i. pret. ran or run; pp. run.

1. To move or pass in almost any manner, as on the feet or on wheels. Men and other animals run on their feet; carriages run on wheels, and wheels run on their axle-trees.

2. To move or pass on the feet with celerity or rapidity, by leaps or long quick steps; as, men and quadrupeds run when in haste.

3. To use the legs in moving; to step; as, children run alone or run about.

4. To move in a hurry.

The priest and people run about.

5. To proceed along the surface; to extend; to spread; as, the fire runs over a field or forest.

The fire ran along upon the ground. Ex. 9.

6. To rush with violence; as, a ship runs against a rock; or one ship runs against another.

7. To move or pass on the water; to sail; as, ships run regularly between New York and Liverpool. Before a storm, run into a harbor, or under the lee of the land. The ship has run ten knots an hour.

8. To contend in a race; as, men or horses run for a prize.

9. To flee for escape. When General Wolfe was dying, an officer standing by him exclaimed, see how they run. Who run? said the dying hero. The enemy, said the officer. Then I die happy, said the general.

10. To depart privately; to steal away.

My conscience will serve me to run from this Jew, my master.

11. To flow in any manner, slowly or rapidly; to move or pass; as a fluid. Rivers run to the ocean or to lakes. The Connecticut runs on sand, and its water is remarkably pure. The tide runs two or three miles an hour. Tears run down the cheeks.

12. To emit; to let flow.

I command that the conduit run nothing but claret.

Rivers run potable gold.

But this form of expression is elliptical, with being omitted; "rivers run with potable gold."

13. To be liquid or fluid.

As wax dissolves, as ice begin to run -

14. To be fusible; to melt.

Sussex iron ores run freely in the fire.

15. To fuse; to melt.

Your iron must not burn in the fire, that is, run or melt, for then it will be brittle.

16. To turn; as, a wheel runs on an axis or on a pivot.

17. To pass; to proceed; as, to run through a course of business; to run through life; to run in a circle or a line; to run through all degrees of promotion.

18. To flow, as words, language or periods. The lines run smoothly.

19. To pass, as time.

As fast as our time runs, we should be glad in most part of our lives that it ran much faster.

20. To have a legal course; to be attached to; to have legal effect.

Customs run only upon our goods imported or exported, and that but once for all; whereas interest runs as well upon our ships as goods, and must be yearly paid.

21. To have a course or direction.

Where the generally allowed practice runs counter to it.

Little is the wisdom, where the flight so runs against all reason.

22. To pass in thought, speech or practice; as, to run through a series of arguments; to run from one topic to another.

Virgil, in his first Georgic, has run into a set of precepts foreign to his subject.

23. To be mentioned cursorily or in few words.

The whole runs on short, like articles in an account.

24. To have a continued tenor or course. The conversation ran on the affairs of the Greeks.

The king's ordinary style runneth, "our sovereign lord the king."

25. To be in motion; to speak incessantly. Her tongue runs continually.

26. To be busied; to dwell.

When we desire any thing, our minds run wholly on the good circumstances of it; when it is obtained, our minds run wholly on the bad ones.

27. To be popularly known.

Men gave then their own names, by which they run a great while in Rome.

28. To be received; to have reception, success or continuance. The pamphlet runs well among a certain class of people.

29. To proceed in succession.

She saw with joy the line immortal run, each sire impress'd and glaring in his son.

30. To pass from one state or condition to another; as, to run into confusion or error; to run distracted.

31. To proceed in a train of conduct.

You should run a certain course.

32. To be in force.

The owner hath incurred the forfeiture of eight years profits of his lands, before he cometh to the knowledge of the process that runneth against him.

33. To be generally received.

He was not ignorant what report run of himself.

34. To be carried; to extend; to rise; as, debates run high.

In popish countries, the power of the clergy runs higher.

35. To have a track or course.

Searching the ulcer with my probe, the sinus run up above the orifice.

36. To extend; to lie in continued length. Veins of silver run in different directions.

37. To have a certain direction. The line runs east and west.

38. To pass in an orbit of any figure. The planets run their periodical courses. The comets do not run lawless through the regions of space.

39. To tend in growth or progress. Pride is apt to run into a contempt of others.

40. To grow exuberantly. Young persons of 10 or 12 years old, soon run up to men and women.

If the richness of the ground cause turnips to run to leaves, treading down the leaves will help their rooting.

41. To discharge pus or other matter; as, an ulcer runs.

42. To reach; to extend to the remembrance of; as time out of mind, the memory of which runneth not to the contrary.

43. To continue in time, before it becomes due and payable; as, a note runs thirty days; a note of six months has ninety days to run.

44. To continue in effect, force or operation.

The statute may be prevented from running - by the act of the creditor.

45. To press with numerous demands of payment; as, to run upon a bank.

46. To pass or fall into fault, vice or misfortune; as, to run into vice; to run into evil practices; to run into debt; to run into mistakes.

47. To fall or pass by gradual changes; to make a transition; as, colors run one into another.

48. To have a general tendency.

Temperate climates run into moderate governments.

49. To proceed as on a ground or principle. Obs.

50. To pass or proceed in conduct or management.

Tarquin, running into all the methods of tyranny, after a cruel reign was expelled.

51. To creep; to move by creeping or crawling; as, serpents run on the ground.

52. To slide; as, a sled or sleigh runs on the snow.

53. To dart; to shoot; as a meteor in the sky.

54. To fly; to move in the air; as, the clouds run from N.E. to S.W.

55. In Scripture, to pursue or practice the duties of religion.

Ye did run well; who did hinder you? Gal. 5.

56. In elections, to have interest or favor; to be supported by votes. The candidate will not run, or he will run well.

1. To run after, to pursue or follow.

2. To search for; to endeavor to find or obtain; as, to run after similes.

To run at, to attack with the horns, as a bull.

To run away, to flee; to escape.

1. To run away with, to hurry without deliberation.

2. To convey away; or to assist in escape or elopement.

To run in, to enter; to step in.

To run into, to enter; as, to run into danger.

To run in trust, to run in debt; to get credit. [Not in use.]

1. To run in with, to close; to comply; to agree with. [Unusual.]

2. To make towards; to near; to sail close to; as, to run in with the land; a seaman's phrase.

To run down a coast, to sail along it.

1. To run on, to be continued. Their accounts had run on for a year or two without a settlement.

2. To talk incessantly.

3. To continue a course.

4. To press with jokes or ridicule; to abuse with sarcasms; to bear hard on.

To run over, to overflow; as, a cup runs over; or the liquor runs over.

1. To run out, to come to an end; to expire; as, a lease runs out at Michaelmas.

2. To spread exuberantly; as, insectile animals run out into legs.

3. To expatiate; as, to run out into beautiful digressions. He runs out in praise of Milton.

4. To be wasted or exhausted; as, an estate managed without economy, will soon run out.

5. To become poor by extravagance.

And had her stock been less, no doubt she must have long ago run out.

To run up, to rise; to swell; to amount. Accounts of goods credited run up very fast.

RUN, v.t.

1. To drive or push; in a general sense. Hence to run a sword through the body, is to stab or pierce it.

2. To drive; to force.

A talkative person runs himself upon great inconveniences, by blabbing out his own or others' secrets.

Others accustomed to retired speculations, run natural philosophy into metaphysical notions.

3. To cause to be driven.

They ran the ship aground. Acts 27.

4. To melt; to fuse.

The purest gold must be run and washed.

5. To incur; to encounter; to run the risk or hazard of losing one's property. To run the danger, is a phrase not now in use.

6. To venture; to hazard.

He would himself be in the Highlands to receive them, and run his fortune with them.

7. To smuggle; to import or export without paying the duties required by law; as, to run goods.

8. To pursue in thought; to carry in contemplation; as, to run the world back to its first original.

I would gladly understand the formation of a soul, and run it up to its punctum saliens.

9. To push; to thrust; as, to run the hand into the pocket or the bosom; to run a nail into the foot.

10. To ascertain and mark by metes and bounds; as, to run a line between towns or states.

11. To cause to ply; to maintain in running or passing; as, to run a stage coach from London to Bristol; to run a line of packets from New Haven to New York.

12. To cause to pass; as, to run a rope through a block.

13. To found; to shape, form or make in a mold; to cast; as, to run buttons or balls.

1. To run down, in hunting, to chase to weariness; as, to run down a stag.

2. In navigation, to run down a vessel, is to run against her, end on, and sink her.

3. To crush; to overthrow; to overbear.

Religion is run down by the license of these times.

1. To run hard, to press with jokes, sarcasm or ridicule.

2. To urge or press importunately.

1. To run over, to recount in a cursory manner; to narrate hastily; as, to run over the particulars of a story.

2. To consider cursorily.

3. To pass the eye over hastily.

1. To run out, to thrust or push out; to extend.

2. To waste; to exhaust; as, to run out an estate.

To run through, to expend; to waste; as, to run through an estate.

1. To run up, to increase; to enlarge by additions. A man who takes goods on credit, is apt to run up his account to a large sum before he is aware of it.

2. To thrust up, as any thing long and slender.

RUN, n.

1. The act of running.

2. Course; motion; as the run of humor.

3. Flow; as a run of verses to please the ear.

4. Course; process; continued series; as the run of events.

5. Way; will; uncontrolled course.

Our family must have their run.

6. General reception; continued success.

It is impossible for detached papers to have a general run or long continuance, if not diversified with humor.

7. Modish or popular clamor; as a violent run against university education.

8. A general or uncommon pressure on a bank or treasury for payment of its notes.

9. The aftmost part of a ship's bottom.

10. The distance sailed by a ship; as, we had a good run.

11. A voyage; also, an agreement among sailors to work a passage from one place to another.

12. A pair of mill-stones. A mill has two, four or six runs of stones.

13. Prevalence; as, a disease, opinion or fashion has its run.

14. In the middle and southern states of America, a small stream; a brook.

In the long run, [at the long run, not so generally used,] signifies the whole process or course of things taken together; in the final result; in the conclusion or end.

The run of mankind, the generality of people.
1913 Definition
Run (run)
v. i.(?)
Run
[imp. Ran (?) or Run; p. p. Run; p. pr. *** vb. n. Running.] [OE. rinnen, rennen (imp. ran, p. p. runnen, ronnen). AS. rinnan
  1. To move, proceed, advance, pass, go, come, etc., swiftly, smoothly, or with quick action; -- said of things animate or inanimate. Hence, to flow, glide, or roll onward, as a stream, a snake, a wagon, etc.; to move by quicker action than in walking, as a person, a horse, a dog.
    Specifically: --
  2. To go swiftly; to pass at a swift pace; to hasten.

    "Ha, ha, the fox!" and after him they ran. Chaucer.

    (b)

  3. To flow, as a liquid; to ascend or descend; to course; as, rivers run to the sea; sap runs up in the spring; her blood ran cold.
    (b)
  4. Specifically, of a horse: To move rapidly in a gait in which each leg acts in turn as a propeller and a supporter, and in which for an instant all the limbs are gathered in the air under the body.
    Stillman (The Horse in Motion).
  5. To move rapidly by springing steps so that there is an instant in each step when neither foot touches the ground; -- so distinguished from walking in athletic competition.

    As things run, according to the usual order, conditions, quality, etc.; on the average; without selection or specification. -- To let run (Naut.), to allow to pass or move freely; to slacken or loosen. -- To run after, to pursue or follow; to search for; to endeavor to find or obtain; as, to run after similes. Locke. -- To run away, to flee; to escape; to elope; to run without control or guidance. -- To run away with. (a) To convey away hurriedly; to accompany in escape or elopement. (b) To drag rapidly and with violence; as, a horse runs away with a carriage. -- To run down. (a) To cease to work or operate on account of the exhaustion of the motive power; -- said of clocks, watches, etc. (b) To decline in condition; as, to run down in health. -- To run down a coast, to sail along it. -- To run for an office, to stand as a candidate for an office. -- To run in or into. (a) To enter; to step in. (b) To come in collision with. -- To run in trust, to run in debt; to get credit. [Obs.] -- To run in with. (a) To close; to comply; to agree with. [R.] T. Baker. (b) (Naut.) To make toward; to near; to sail close to; as, to run in with the land. -- To run mad, To run mad after or on. See under Mad. -- To run on. (a) To be continued; as, their accounts had run on for a year or two without a settlement. (b) To talk incessantly. (c) To continue a course. (d) To press with jokes or ridicule; to abuse with sarcasm; to bear hard on. (e) (Print.) To be continued in the same lines, without making a break or beginning a new paragraph. -- To run out. (a) To come to an end; to expire; as, the lease runs out at Michaelmas. (b) To extend; to spread. "Insectile animals . . . run all out into legs." Hammond. (c) To expatiate; as, to run out into beautiful digressions. (d) To be wasted or exhausted; to become poor; to become extinct; as, an estate managed without economy will soon run out.

    And had her stock been less, no doubt
    She must have long ago run out.
    Dryden.

    -- To run over. (a) To overflow; as, a cup runs over, or the liquor runs over. (b) To go over, examine, or rehearse cursorily. (c) To ride or drive over; as, to run over a child. -- To run riot, to go to excess. -- To run through. (a) To go through hastily; as to run through a book. (b) To spend wastefully; as, to run through an estate. -- To run to seed, to expend or exhaust vitality in producing seed, as a plant; figuratively and colloquially, to cease growing; to lose vital force, as the body or mind. -- To run up, to rise; to swell; to grow; to increase; as, accounts of goods credited run up very fast.

    But these, having been untrimmed for many years, had run up into great bushes, or rather dwarf trees. Sir W. Scott.

    -- To run with. (a) To be drenched with, so that streams flow; as, the streets ran with blood. (b) To flow while charged with some foreign substance. "Its rivers ran with gold." J. H. Newman.

  6. To cause to run (in the various senses of Run, v. i.); as, to run a horse; to run a stage; to run a machine; to run a rope through a block.
  7. To pursue in thought; to carry in contemplation.

    To run the world back to its first original. South.

    I would gladly understand the formation of a soul, and run it up to its "punctum saliens." Collier.

  8. To cause to enter; to thrust; as, to run a sword into or through the body; to run a nail into the foot.

    You run your head into the lion's mouth. Sir W. Scott.

    Having run his fingers through his hair. Dickens.

  9. To drive or force; to cause, or permit, to be driven.

    They ran the ship aground. Acts xxvii. 41.

    A talkative person runs himself upon great inconveniences by blabbing out his own or other's secrets. Ray.

    Others, accustomed to retired speculations, run natural philosophy into metaphysical notions. Locke.

  10. To fuse; to shape; to mold; to cast; as, to run bullets, and the like.

    The purest gold must be run and washed. Felton.

  11. To cause to be drawn; to mark out; to indicate; to determine; as, to run a line.
  12. To cause to pass, or evade, offical restrictions; to smuggle; -- said of contraband or dutiable goods.

    Heavy impositions . . . are a strong temptation of running goods. Swift.

  13. To go through or accomplish by running; as, to run a race; to run a certain career.
  14. To cause to stand as a candidate for office; to support for office; as, to run some one for Congress.
    [Colloq. U.S.]
  15. To encounter or incur, as a danger or risk; as, to run the risk of losing one's life. See To run the chances, below.
    "He runneth two dangers." Bacon.
  16. To put at hazard; to venture; to risk.

    He would himself be in the Highlands to receive them, and run his fortune with them. Clarendon.

  17. To discharge; to emit; to give forth copiously; to be bathed with; as, the pipe or faucet runs hot water.

    At the base of Pompey's statua,
    Which all the while ran blood, great Cæsar fell.
    Shak.

  18. To be charged with, or to contain much of, while flowing; as, the rivers ran blood.
  19. To conduct; to manage; to carry on; as, to run a factory or a hotel.
    [Colloq. U.S.]
  20. To tease with sarcasms and ridicule.
    [Colloq.]
  21. To sew, as a seam, by passing the needle through material in a continuous line, generally taking a series of stitches on the needle at the same time.
  22. To migrate or move in schools; -- said of fish; esp., to ascend a river in order to spawn.

    To run a blockade, to get to, or away from, a blockaded port in safety. -- To run down. (a) (Hunting) To chase till the object pursued is captured or exhausted; as, to run down a stag. (b) (Naut.) To run against and sink, as a vessel. (c) To crush; to overthrow; to overbear. "Religion is run down by the license of these times." Berkeley. (d) To disparage; to traduce. F. W. Newman. -- To run hard. (a) To press in competition; as, to run one hard in a race. (b) To urge or press importunately. (c) To banter severely. - - To run into the ground, to carry to an absurd extreme; to overdo. [Slang, U.S.] -- To run off, to cause to flow away, as a charge of molten metal from a furnace. -- To run on (Print.), to carry on or continue, as the type for a new sentence, without making a break or commencing a new paragraph. -- To run out. (a) To thrust or push out; to extend. (b) To waste; to exhaust; as, to run out an estate. (c) (Baseball) To put out while running between two bases. -- To run the chances, or one's chances, to encounter all the risks of a certain course. -- To run through, to transfix; to pierce, as with a sword. "[He] was run through the body by the man who had asked his advice." Addison. -- To run up. (a) To thrust up, as anything long and slender. (b) To increase; to enlarge by additions, as an account. (c) To erect hastily, as a building.

  23. The act of running; as, a long run; a good run; a quick run; to go on the run.
  24. A small stream; a brook; a creek.
  25. That which runs or flows in the course of a certain operation, or during a certain time; as, a run of must in wine making; the first run of sap in a maple orchard.
  26. A course; a series; that which continues in a certain course or series; as, a run of good or bad luck.

    They who made their arrangements in the first run of misadventure . . . put a seal on their calamities. Burke.

  27. State of being current; currency; popularity.

    It is impossible for detached papers to have a general run, or long continuance, if not diversified with humor. Addison.

  28. Continued repetition on the stage; -- said of a play; as, to have a run of a hundred successive nights.

    A canting, mawkish play . . . had an immense run. Macaulay.

  29. A continuing urgent demand; especially, a pressure on a bank or treasury for payment of its notes.
  30. A range or extent of ground for feeding stock; as, a sheep run.
    Howitt.
  31. The aftermost part of a vessel's hull where it narrows toward the stern, under the quarter.
    (b)
  32. A pleasure excursion; a trip.
    [Colloq.]

    I think of giving her a run in London. Dickens.

  33. The horizontal distance to which a drift may be carried, either by license of the proprietor of a mine or by the nature of the formation; also, the direction which a vein of ore or other substance takes.
  34. A roulade, or series of running tones.
  35. The greatest degree of swiftness in marching. It is executed upon the same principles as the double-quick, but with greater speed.
  36. The act of migrating, or ascending a river to spawn; -- said of fish; also, an assemblage or school of fishes which migrate, or ascend a river for the purpose of spawning.
  37. In baseball, a complete circuit of the bases made by a player, which enables him to score one; in cricket, a passing from one wicket to the other, by which one point is scored; as, a player made three runs; the side went out with two hundred runs.

    The "runs" are made from wicket to wicket, the batsmen interchanging ends at each run. R. A. Proctor.

  38. A pair or set of millstones.

    At the long run, now, commonly, In the long run, in or during the whole process or course of things taken together; in the final result; in the end; finally.

    [Man] starts the inferior of the brute animals, but he surpasses them in the long run. J. H. Newman.

    -- Home run. (a) A running or returning toward home, or to the point from which the start was made. Cf. Home stretch. (b) (Baseball) See under Home. -- The run, or The common run, etc., ordinary persons; the generality or average of people or things; also, that which ordinarily occurs; ordinary current, course, or kind.

    I saw nothing else that is superior to the common run of parks. Walpole.

    Burns never dreamed of looking down on others as beneath him, merely because he was conscious of his own vast superiority to the common run of men. Prof. Wilson.

    His whole appearance was something out of the common run. W. Irving.

    -- To let go by the run (Naut.), to loosen and let run freely, as lines; to let fall without restraint, as a sail.

  39. Melted, or made from molten material; cast in a mold; as, run butter; run iron or lead.
  40. Smuggled; as, run goods.
    [Colloq.] Miss Edgeworth.

    Run steel, malleable iron castings. See under Malleable. Raymond.

  41. To strike (the ball) in such a way as to cause it to run along the ground, as when approaching a hole.

1828 dictionary
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