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(11) Words.

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Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(348) Words.

ability
able
able-bodied
accountant
acquire
acquirement
adept
adjutancy
adroit
adroitly
agricultor
agriculturist
anatomist
archer
archery
architect
architectonic
arithmetician
armorist
armory
art
artful
artfully
artifice
artificer
artificial
artificially
artisan
artist
artless
artlessly
attend
aurist
avail
bad
badly
balancer
better
bibliographer
botanist
botoched
bungler
cadet
can
canonist
captain
captainship
cast
cavalier
charlatan
charlatanical
charlatanry
chess
chess-player
choice
civilian
clap-doctor
clever
cleverness
clove
coachmanship
compass
complementary
con
connoisseur
connoisseurship
contrapuntist
cope
could
craft
craftsman
craftsmaster
crafty
critic
critical
cunning
cut
cuth
dabster
deeply
defense
depth
dexterity
dextrous
dextrously
dialist
discerningly
disclaim
distance
divine
doctor
draughtsman
dress
empiric
empirical
empiricism
enable
endeictic
engineer
equestrian
exercise
exercised
experience
experienced
experimenter
expert
expertly
expertness
facility
faculty
famous
feat
featness
fellow
fence
fencing
fierceness
financier
finger
florist
fluxionist
fortunate
freshwater
friarlike
game
gamester
gammon
generalship
geometer
geometrician
good
grossly
grow
gumption
gunner
haggle
hand
handicraft
handicraftsman
handily
handsome
handsomely
handy
hebrician
hellenist
herbalist
high-wrought
horseman
horticulturist
housewife
idiot
ignorant
ignorantly
improve
improvement
inability
incurable
indexterity
inexperienced
inexpert
ingenious
ingeniously
ingenuity
inhabile
inhability
insight
insufficiency
insufficient
insufficiently
intelligence
intelligent
invention
japanner
judge
judiciously
knight-errant
knowing
knowledge
laborer
laboring
lapidary
latinist
learn
learnedly
learning
legist
liberal
linguist
lithologist
lithotomist
loadmanage
logical
logician
lozenge
luck
magician
marksman
master
master-hand
master-piece
masterful
masterly
mastership
mastery
mature
mechanical
mechanician
mechanist
medallist
metallist
meterologist
mintman
misprofess
mistress
mountain
mountebank
musician
mystery
nautic
nautical
navigator
novice
obstetrician
oculist
operator
optician
ordinary
ornithologist
orthoepist
outgeneral
painter
panurgy
perfect
perfectness
perite
phaeton
philosophical
physical
physician
physiognomist
phytologist
pianist
pilotage
pilotry
pique
poesy
poet
political
politician
posnet
practical
practically
practice
praecognita
pre-eminence
pretension
profess
professional
profound
profoundly
prosodian
punster
pyrotechnist
quack
quackish
quacksalver
qualify
raw
rawly
rawness
resign
ritualist
rude
rudely
rudeness
sailor
sauce-pan
scient
scrawl
scribe
sea-man
seamanship
seen
shallow
sharp-shooter
show
simplist
skill
skilled
skilless
skillful
skillfully
skillfulness
skilt
soldier
soldiership
songster
specimen
speller
spinner
sportsman
statist
stenographer
stowage
stuff
stupid
sword-fight
sword-player
tact
talent
talented
the
transmute
unable
unartful
understanding
unexpert
unfit
unhandy
unintelligent
unpracticed
unseen
unskilled
unskillful
unskillfully
unskillfulness
untaught
untrained
unversed
verse
veteran
veterinarian
victory
violinist
virtuoso
weather-wise
weird
win
wise
wise-hearted
workman
workmanlike
workmanly
workmanship
workwoman
wrestler
yarely
zumologist



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S  ›  skill
S  ›  skill
1828 Definition

SKILL, n. Calleo, that is to strain, stretch, reach, and with to perfect, that is, to make sound, or to reach the utmost limit. The sense of folly, error, sin, preverseness, is from wandering, deviation.

1. The familiar knowledge of any art or science, united with readiness and dexterity in execution or performance, or in the application of the art or science to practical purposes. Thus we speak of the skill of a mathematician, of a surveyor, of a physician or surgeon, of a mechanic or seaman. So we speak of skill in management or negotiation.

2. Any particular art.
1913 Definition
Skill (skill)
n.(?)
Skill
[Icel. skil a distinction, discernment] akin to skilja to separate, divide, distinguish, Sw. skilja,. skille to separate, skiel reason, right, justice, Sw. skäl reason, Lith. skelli to cleave
  1. Discrimination; judgment; propriety; reason; cause.
    [Obs.] Shak. "As it was skill and right." Chaucer.

    For great skill is, he prove that he wrought. [For with good reason he should test what he created.] Chaucer.

  2. Knowledge; understanding.
    [Obsoles.]

    That by his fellowship he color might
    Both his estate and love from skill of any wight.
    Spenser.

    Nor want we skill or art. Milton.

  3. The familiar knowledge of any art or science, united with readiness and dexterity in execution or performance, or in the application of the art or science to practical purposes; power to discern and execute; ability to perceive and perform; expertness; aptitude; as, the skill of a mathematician, physician, surgeon, mechanic, etc.

    Phocion, . . . by his great wisdom and skill at negotiations, diverted Alexander from the conquest of Athens. Swift.

    Where patience her sweet skill imparts. Keble.

  4. Display of art; exercise of ability; contrivance; address.
    [Obs.]

    Richard . . . by a thousand princely skills, gathering so much corn as if he meant not to return. Fuller.

  5. Any particular art.
    [Obs.]

    Learned in one skill, and in another kind of learning unskillful. Hooker.

    Syn. -- Dexterity; adroitness; expertness; art; aptitude; ability. -- Skill, Dexterity, Adroitness. Skill is more intelligent, denoting familiar knowledge united to readiness of performance. Dexterity, when applied to the body, is more mechanical, and refers to habitual ease of execution. Adroitness involves the same image with dexterity, and differs from it as implaying a general facility of movement (especially in avoidance of danger or in escaping from a difficalty). The same distinctions apply to the figurative sense of the words. A man is skillful in any employment when he understands both its theory and its practice. He is dexterous when he maneuvers with great lightness. He is adroit in the use od quick, sudden, and well-directed movements of the body or the mind, so as to effect the object he has in view.

  6. To know; to understand.
    [Obs.]

    To skill the arts of expressing our mind. Barrow.

  7. To be knowing; to have understanding; to be dexterous in performance.
    [Obs.]

    I can not skill of these thy ways. Herbert.

  8. To make a difference; to signify; to matter; -- used impersonally.
    Spenser.

    What skills it, if a bag of stones or gold
    About thy neck do drown thee?
    Herbert.

    It skills not talking of it. Sir W. Scott.


1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
It is not only important, but, in a degree necessary, that the people of this country, should have an American Dictionary of the English language; for, although the body of the language is the same as in England, and it is desirable to perpetuate that sameness, yet some differences must exist. Language is the expression of ideas; and if the people of one country cannot preserve an identity of ideas, they cannot retain an identity of language.
  




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