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(4) Words.

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Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(264) Words.

account
ace
address
admiral
adversary
advocate
advowson
almanack
alone
amicable
anecdote
aplome
appellant
appellative
archivault
arthrodia
article
as
autocrasy
balloen
barrow
blot
blow
bond
bottom
bout
breath
cantata
cartel
celibacy
celibate
center
challenge
challenger
char
char-woman
chop
circle
circumlocution
coil
colonnade
column
compress
conglobate
conscience
consider
consort
contribute
converge
copy
corn
corporation
crepitate
cross-stone
crystaline
culmiferous
damianists
derive
descent
dipyre
duel
dueler
dueling
duelist
duplicity
emulgent
encounter
engagement
ere
exact
experience
experiment
expunge
eye-service
fake
feature
felicitate
fight
flax
foliole
for
formation
fray
gale
game
general
generation
genus
gladness
glove
grace
grain
gramineous
grape
grass
hailstone
hair
hang
heat
hinge
hoist
hoof
hore
host
impression
indignant
individual
individuate
individuation
indulge
instant
interrupt
joinhand
judgment
jump
l
landscape
lantern
libel
link
lipogram
lipogrammatist
loment
lone
machinery
mast
melancholy
melody
metaphor
minor
miraculously
monarchical
monarchy
monogamy
monograph
monologue
monomachy
moor
moss
mountain
movement
music
neat
nibble
nomial
notwithstanding
occur
occurrence
one
oneness
only
opalescence
opalescent
oppose
palanquin
paper
particular
particularity
particularize
partner
party
passage
pasteboard
pavilion
petition
phenix
piece
piecemeal
pleadings
plot
plush
point
polyscope
post
prayer
print
probate
proper
puff
puffing
quire
raiment
realize
resolve
respecting
rhinoceros
rime
rope-yarn
sack
sail
sap
sedan
semi-double
semi-proof
sever
several
shrimp
sigh
simple
simpleness
simplicity
single
singleness
singular
singularize
snip
solenness
solitary
solo
sphere
spire
sporadic
sporadical
spurway
stage
state
staurolite
staurotide
step
stitch
store
story
straw
sulky
syllable
symbolize
syncopy
t
tablature
the
timber
tome
touch
tract
trade
trait
trip
tripyramid
tune
turn
twist
unison
unit
unlucky
unmoor
unmoored
unmooring
unrighteousness
unsingled
until
unwedded
vault
verse
virtue
volume
vouchor
wale-knot
wall-knot
wheel-barrow
without
word
writ
you
young



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S  ›  single
S  ›  single
1828 Definition

SIN'GLE, a.

1. Separate; one; only; individual; consisting of one only; as a single star; a single city; a single act.

2. Particular; individual. No single man is born with a right of controlling the opinions of all the rest.

3. Uncompounded. Simple ideas are opposed to complex, and single to compound.

4. Alone; having no companion or assistant. Who single hast maintain'd against revolted multitudes the cause of truth.

5. Unmarried; as a single man; a single woman.

6. Not double; not complicated; as a single thread; a single strand of a rope.

7. Performed with one person or antagonist on a side, or with one person only opposed to another; as a single fight; a single combat.

8. Pure; simple; incorrupt; unbiased; having clear vision of divine truth. Matt. 6.

9. Small; weak; silly

10. In botany, a single flower is when there is only one on a stem, and in common usage, one not double.
1913 Definition
Single (single)
a.(?)
Sin"gle
[L. singulus, a dim. from the root in simplex simple; cf. OE. *** OF. sengle, fr. L. singulus. See Simple, and cf. Singular.]
  1. One only, as distinguished from more than one] consisting of one alone; individual; separate; as, a single star.

    No single man is born with a right of controlling the opinions of all the rest. Pope.

  2. Alone; having no companion.

    Who single hast maintained,
    Against revolted multitudes, the cause
    Of truth.
    Milton.

  3. Hence, unmarried; as, a single man or woman.

    Grows, lives, and dies in single blessedness. Shak.

    Single chose to live, and shunned to wed. Dryden.

  4. Not doubled, twisted together, or combined with others; as, a single thread; a single strand of a rope.
  5. Performed by one person, or one on each side; as, a single combat.

    These shifts refuted, answer thy appellant, . . .
    Who now defles thee thrice ti single fight.
    Milton.

  6. Uncompounded; pure; unmixed.

    Simple ideas are opposed to complex, and single to compound. I. Watts.

  7. Not deceitful or artful; honest; sincere.

    I speak it with a single heart. Shak.

  8. Simple; not wise; weak; silly.
    [Obs.]

    He utters such single matter in so infantly a voice. Beau. *** Fl.

    Single ale, beer, or drink, small ale, etc., as contrasted with double ale, etc., which is stronger. [Obs.] Nares. -- Single bill (Law), a written engagement, generally under seal, for the payment of money, without a penalty. Burril. -- Single court (Lawn Tennis), a court laid out for only two players. -- Single-cut file. See the Note under 4th File. -- Single entry. See under Bookkeeping. -- Single file. See under 1st File. -- Single flower (Bot.), a flower with but one set of petals, as a wild rose. -- Single knot. See Illust. under Knot. -- Single whip (Naut.), a single rope running through a fixed block.

  9. To select, as an individual person or thing, from among a number] to choose out from others; to separate.

    Dogs who hereby can single out their master in the dark. Bacon.

    His blood! she faintly screamed her mind
    Still singling one from all mankind.
    More.

  10. To sequester; to withdraw; to retire.
    [Obs.]

    An agent singling itself from consorts. Hooker.

  11. To take alone, or one by one.

    Men . . . commendable when they are singled. Hooker.

  12. To take the irrregular gait called single-foot;- said of a horse. See Single- foot.

    Many very fleet horses, when overdriven, adopt a disagreeable gait, which seems to be a cross between a pace and a trot, in which the two legs of one side are raised almost but not quite, simultaneously. Such horses are said to single, or to be single-footed. W. S. Clark.

  13. A unit; one; as, to score a single.
  14. The reeled filaments of silk, twisted without doubling to give them firmness.
  15. A handful of gleaned grain.
    [Prov. Eng. *** Scot.]
  16. A game with but one player on each side] -- usually in the plural.
  17. A hit by a batter which enables him to reach first base only.

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
Noah Webster was born on Monday, October 16th, 1758 making him a Libra, Yin Fire Ox [Ding-chou].
  




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