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

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1828 dictionary(60) Words.

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Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(263) Words.

abuse
admiration
admire
against
aim
alburnum
alimental
amaurosis
apology
ashamed
assapanic
assault
asteriated
backwards
balk
balked
balm
bewitch
bilk
bilked
blame
blamed
blast
bleed
bleeding
blinkard
box
calculary
calomel
censure
chesapeak
chide
chrysoberyl
circulate
comet
condemn
conscience
consume
crafty
croker
cymophane
damn
defeat
defeating
delude
demoralize
device
die
disallow
disallowance
disallowed
disallowing
disapparel
disappear
disappearance
disappearing
disappoint
disappointed
disappointing
disappointment
disappreciate
disapprobation
disapprobatory
disappropriate
disapproval
disapprove
disapproved
disapproving
disciplinary
discomfiture
discommend
discommendable
discommendableness
discountenance
discountenancer
discountenancing
disesteem
disfavor
disinclination
dislike
disliked
disliker
disliking
displeasure
dispraise
dispropriate
disprove
dissatisfaction
dissipate
disthene
dodge
dried
dry
drying
duct
eagerness
evanid
evanish
evanishment
expect
expectation
explode
exploded
exploding
fade
fail
faint
fallacious
fate
flagrant
flash
foiling
fool
fooled
fooling
frustrate
frustrated
frustrating
frustration
fy
gauze
hatred
hiss
hoop
hussy
illude
illusion
impatiently
improbation
improbity
insapory
insipid
insipience
jilt
juse
kyanite
latent
lie
life
live
lop
lubricate
lurch
lyrical
maple-tree
measure
milky
mine
miner
mining
misapplication
misapplied
misapply
misapplying
misapprehend
misapprehended
misapprehending
misapprehension
mislike
misliked
misliking
mistake
misused
misusing
mock
mockery
monitory
moral
mortification
mutilate
nick
opodeldoc
panic
pass
perversion
pervert
perverter
perverting
plant
plantain-tree
puceron
put
ready
reprobated
reprobating
reprove
resipiscence
resist
resolution
right
ruby
salt
sap
sapadillo-tree
sapajo
sapid
sapidity
sapidness
sapience
sapient
sapiential
sapless
sapling
saponaceous
saponary
saponification
saponify
saponule
sapor
saporific
saporosity
sapota
sappadillo-tree
sappare
sapped
sapper
sapphic
sapphire
sapphirine
sappiness
sappy
sarsaparilla
savor
secret
sept
sham
shatter
shorl
soap
soapwort
solution
somewhat
spend
strike
succiferous
suffer
swallow-fish
sweep
tantalized
tap
telesia
temperament
thyme
treacle
uncondemned
undermine
undermined
underminer
undermining
undisappointed
unimproved
utricle
vanish
vanishing
variety
vein
vessel
water-sapphire
waver
weariness
wither
wood-seere
zircon



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KJV
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S  ›  sap
S  ›  sap
1828 Definition

SAP, n.

1. The juice of plants of any kind, which flows chiefly between the wood and the bark. From the sap of a species of maple, is made sugar of a good quality by evaporation.

2. The alburnum of a tree; the exterior part of the wood, next to the bark. [A sense in general use in New England.]

SAP, v.t.

1. To undermine; to subvert by digging or wearing away; to mine.

Their dwellings were sapp'd by floods.

2. To undermine; to subvert by removing the foundation of. Discontent saps the foundation of happiness. Intrigue and corruption sap the constitution of a free government.

SAP, v.i. To proceed by mining, or by secretly undermining.

Both assaults are carried on by sapping.

SAP, n. In sieges, a trench for undermining; or an approach made to a fortified place by digging or under cover. The single sap has only a single parapet; the double has one on each side, and the flying is made with gabions, &c. In all saps, traverses are left to cover the men.

1913 Definition
Sap (sap)
n.(?)
Sap
[AS. sæp; akin to OHG. saf, G. saft, Icel. safi; of uncertain origin; possibly akin to L. sapere to taste, to be wise, sapa must or new wine boiled thick. Cf. Sapid, Sapient.]
  1. The juice of plants of any kind, especially the ascending and descending juices or circulating fluid essential to nutrition.

    * The ascending is the crude sap, the assimilation of which takes place in the leaves, when it becomes the elaborated sap suited to the growth of the plant.

  2. The sapwood, or alburnum, of a tree.
  3. A simpleton; a saphead; a milksop.
    [Slang]

    Sap ball (Bot.), any large fungus of the genus Polyporus. See Polyporus. -- Sap green, a dull light green pigment prepared from the juice of the ripe berries of the Rhamnus catharticus, or buckthorn. It is used especially by water-color artists. -- Sap rot, the dry rot. See under Dry. -- Sap sucker (Zoöl.), any one of several species of small American woodpeckers of the genus Sphyrapicus, especially the yellow-bellied woodpecker (S. varius) of the Eastern United States. They are so named because they puncture the bark of trees and feed upon the sap. The name is loosely applied to other woodpeckers. -- Sap tube (Bot.), a vessel that conveys sap.

  4. To subvert by digging or wearing away] to mine; to undermine; to destroy the foundation of.

    Nor safe their dwellings were, for sapped by floods,
    Their houses fell upon their household gods.
    Dryden.

  5. To pierce with saps.
  6. To make unstable or infirm; to unsettle; to weaken.

    Ring out the grief that saps the mind. Tennyson.

  7. To proceed by mining, or by secretly undermining; to execute saps.
    W. P. Craighill.

    Both assaults are carried on by sapping. Tatler.

  8. A narrow ditch or trench made from the foremost parallel toward the glacis or covert way of a besieged place by digging under cover of gabions, etc.

    Sap fagot (Mil.), a fascine about three feet long, used in sapping, to close the crevices between the gabions before the parapet is made. -- Sap roller (Mil.), a large gabion, six or seven feet long, filled with fascines, which the sapper sometimes rolls along before him for protection from the fire of an enemy.


1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
They choose men, not because they are just men, men of religion and integrity, but solely for the sake of supporting a party. This is a fruitful source of public evils. But as surely as there is a God in heaven, who exercises a moral government over the affairs of this world, so certainly will the neglect of the divine command, in the choice of rulers, be followed by bad laws and as bad administration; by laws unjust or partial, by corruption, tyranny, impunity of crimes, waste of public money, and a thousand other evils. Men may desire and adopt a new form of government; they may amend old forms, repair breaches and punish violators of the constitution; but there is, there can be no effectual remedy, but obedience to the divine law.
 Value of the Bible (unpublished manuscript) :: 1834 




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