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(33) Words.

Found In
Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(357) Words.

ablepsy
above
accident
acute
after
amaurosis
amazement
amblyopy
anopsy
appall
apparent
appear
appearance
appearing
areopagus
aspect
at
attend
autopsy
axiom
back
beauteous
beauteously
beautiful
bedazzle
bedazzled
before
behind
bell
birdeyed
blear
blear-eyed
blind
blinded
blinding
blindly
blindness
bow
caligation
care
cast
charge
cheer
circumferentor
clear
clear-sighted
clear-sightedness
coast
cofferer
collimation
conceal
concealed
concealment
constraint
contingent
contingently
coroner
cover
creeper
cuddle
curiosity
dark
daystar
dayswork
daytime
daywearied
daywork
daze
dazzled
dazzlement
dazzling
deep
deeply
deform
deprive
descry
determine
devour
die
dim
dim-sighted
dimly
dimness
dioptric
dioptrical
disagreeable
disappear
disappearance
disappearing
discerning
discover
discovery
dispart
distinguish
double
dull-sighted
eagle
eagle-eyed
eagle-sighted
elbow
eloin
elude
envy
error
escape
espy
evanescence
evanish
eye
eye-brightening
eyeglass
eyeless
eyeshot
eyesight
eyesore
face
fail
failure
fair
faith
fall
favor
figure
find
flash
fly
follow
forbid
foresight
foresightful
formidable
forthwith
gazehound
glad
glance
glaucoma
gorgon
grievous
gross
half-sighted
hasty
hateful
hawkeyed
heave
hide
hideous
high-sighted
hit
honest
horizon
horrible
horrid
hover
humble
humility
imagination
impenetrable
imperceptible
improvidence
improvident
improvidently
inadvertency
incautiousness
inconsiderable
inconspicuous
inoffensive
insight
inspection
intendant
interview
intuition
invisible
invisibleness
invisibly
jeofail
ken
kenning
label
land
lay
little
lo
long-sight
long-sighted
long-sightedness
look
lose
lurk
lurker
lurking
lynx
mad
make
manifest
manifestness
meditation
mental
micher
miching
mild
misprision
miss
misshape
mistrust
misty
mock
mode
monster
monstrous
mope-eyed
morally
mortification
much
myope
myopy
nictating
nictitating
notable
nyctalops
nyctalopy
object
obliging
obscurely
observation
obvious
occultation
ocular
ocularly
odious
offensive
optic
ordination
ornament
out
oversight
painting
partition
pass
peer
perspective
perspicacious
perspicaciousness
perspicacity
perspicacy
perspicuousness
pervious
phaeton
pile
pinules
pitiful
play
please
poor
pore
presence
prevail
prevent
prevision
profoundly
prospect
prospective
provide
providence
providently
purblind
purblindness
put
quick-sighted
quicksightedness
recoil
recover
regard
repute
resume
right
rise
sanded
scotomy
screen
scrupulous
second-sight
second-sighted
secret
sense
shade
shaeful
sharp
sharp-sighted
sharpness
shock
short
short-sight
short-sightedness
shortsighted
sickly
sight
sighted
sightfulness
sightless
sightliness
sightly
sightsman
sign
slip
soften
spare
specktacle
specuation
specular
spring
spy
stalking-horse
steadfast
stedfast
strong
structure
superintend
superintendency
superintendent
surprise
swim
symbolical
symptom
tarry
tend
terribleness
terrific
thin
thing
thoughtful
tical
toad
transmissive
transpicuous
trip
ugly
unexpectation
unsifted
unsighted
unsightliness
unsightly
vail
vailing
vanish
vanishing
view
vile
visible
vision
visual
warily
web
what
whirl
within
wonder
yield



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S  ›  sight
S  ›  sight
1828 Definition

SIGHT, n.

1. The act of seeing; perception of objects by the eye; view; as, to gain sight of land; to have a sight of a landscape; to lose sight of a ship at sea. A cloud received him out of their sight. Acts 1.

2. The faculty of vision, or of perceiving objects by the instrumentality of the eyes. It has been doubted whether moles have sight. Milton lost his sight. The sight usually fails at of before fifty years of age. O loss of sight, of thee I most complain.

3. Open view; the state of admitting unobstructed vision; a being within the limits of vision. The harbor is in sight of the town. The shore of Long Island is in sight of New Haven. The White mountain is in plain sight at Portland, in Maine; a mountain is or is not within sight; an engagement at sea is within sight of land.

4. Notice from seeing; knowledge; as a letter intended for the sight of one person only.

5. Eye; the instrument of seeing. From the depth of hell they lift their sight.

6. An aperture through which objects are to be seen; or something to direct the vision; as the sight of a quadrant; the sight of a fowling piece or a rifle.

7. That which is beheld; a spectacle; a show; particularly, something wonderful. They never saw a sight so fair. Moses said, I will now turn aside and see the great sight, why the bush is not burned. Ex. 3. Fearful sights and great signs shall there be from heaven. To take sight, to take aim; to look for purpose of directing a piece of artillery, &c.
1913 Definition
Sight (sight)
n.(?)
Sight
[OE. sight, si(?)t, siht, AS. siht, gesiht, gesih(?), gesieh(?), gesyh(?); akin to D. gezicht, G. sicht, gesicht, Dan. sigte, Sw. sigt,
  1. The act of seeing; perception of objects by the eye; view; as, to gain sight of land.

    A cloud received him out of their sight. Acts. i. 9.

  2. The power of seeing; the faculty of vision, or of perceiving objects by the instrumentality of the eyes.

    Thy sight is young,
    And thou shalt read when mine begin to dazzle.
    Shak.

    O loss of sight, of thee I most complain! Milton.

  3. The state of admitting unobstructed vision; visibility; open view; region which the eye at one time surveys; space through which the power of vision extends; as, an object within sight.
  4. A spectacle; a view; a show; something worth seeing.

    Moses said, I will now turn aside and see this great sight, why the bush is not burnt. Ex. iii. 3.

    They never saw a sight so fair. Spenser.

  5. The instrument of seeing; the eye.

    Why cloud they not their sights? Shak.

  6. Inspection; examination; as, a letter intended for the sight of only one person.
  7. Mental view; opinion; judgment; as, in their sight it was harmless.
    Wake.

    That which is highly esteemed among men is abomination in the sight of God. Luke xvi. 15.

  8. A small aperture through which objects are to be seen, and by which their direction is settled or ascertained; as, the sight of a quadrant.

    Thier eyes of fire sparking through sights of steel. Shak.

  9. A small piece of metal, fixed or movable, on the breech, muzzle, center, or trunnion of a gun, or on the breech and the muzzle of a rifle, pistol, etc., by means of which the eye is guided in aiming.
    Farrow.
  10. In a drawing, picture, etc., that part of the surface, as of paper or canvas, which is within the frame or the border or margin. In a frame or the like, the open space, the opening.
  11. A great number, quantity, or sum; as, a sight of money.
    [Now colloquial]

    * Sight in this last sense was formerly employed in the best usage. "A sight of lawyers." Latimer.

    A wonder sight of flowers. Gower.

    At sight, as soon as seen, or presented to sight; as, a draft payable at sight: to read Greek at sight; to shoot a person at sight. -- Front sight (Firearms), the sioht nearost the ouzzle. -- Open sight. (Firearms) (a) A front sight through which the objects aimed at may be seen, in distinction from one that hides the object. (b) A rear sight having an open notch instead of an aperture. -- Peep sight, Rear sight. See under Peep, and Rear. -- Sight draft, an order, or bill of exchange, directing the payment of money at sight. -- To take sight, to take aim; to look for the purpose of directing a piece of artillery, or the like.

    Syn. -- Vision; view; show; spectacle; representation; exhibition.

  12. To get sight of] to see; as, to sight land; to sight a wreck.
    Kane.
  13. To look at through a sight; to see accurately; as, to sight an object, as a star.
  14. To apply sights to; to adjust the sights of; also, to give the proper elevation and direction to by means of a sight; as, to sight a rifle or a cannon.
  15. To take aim by a sight.

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
Language is not an abstract construction of the learned, or of dictionary makers, but is something arising out of the work, needs, ties, joys, affections, tastes, of long generations of humanity, and has its bases broad and low, close to the ground.
  




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1828 dictionary
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