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(27) Words.

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Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(278) Words.

active
advancer
affreight
affreighted
affreightment
alco
allude
amphitheater
amusement
ark
asportation
athletic
bale
bear-baiting
bear-garden
beast
beater-up
boat
boating
boll
bolt
boot
bowlder
breakage
bull-fight
canal
carriage
carry
carrying
celestially
chariot-race
chest
childish
chub
coal-ship
cock-fighting
collier
comical
commute
contraband
convey
conveyance
conveyer
conveying
coquet
coquette
courser
coursing
crate
dally
deport
deportation
deported
deporting
deride
disport
disporting
dithyramb
dithyrambus
diversion
divert
diverting
droll
drollery
eagle-stone
ecstasied
ecstatical
employment
encore
enrapture
enraptured
enrapturing
enravish
enravished
equestrian
exile
export
facetious
facetiousness
falcon
falconer
familiar
fare
fault
ferry
ferryman
field-sports
firman
flesh
flota
flute
fond
fool
football
fowler
freight
fun
furious
gairish
gambol
game
gamecock
gamekeeper
gamesome
gamesomeness
gaming
gay
girl
gleek
gust
hare
harlequin
hawk
heavily
hoax
hoy
hunt
hunter
inland
inwrap
jeer
jest
jester
jocose
jocosely
jocular
jocularly
jocund
joke
joy
juggle
juggler
juvenile
keen
lake
largely
lastage
laughing-stock
leash
loss
ludibrious
ludicrous
ludicrously
ludicrousness
ludificatory
lusorious
make
match
may-game
merchantman
merrily
merriment
merry-andrew
mimick
mimicry
mock
mockery
mocking-stock
mortify
mumm
mummer
nightly
outsport
overjoy
owling
pass
passport
pastime
penalty
permit
play
player
playfellow
playful
playfully
playfulness
pleasant
plebeian
point
pointer
powder-horn
prank
prison-base
profanation
protection
punish
punishment
pursuit
puss
rage
ramp
rap
rapt
rapture
raptured
rapturous
rather
ravish
ravisher
ravishing
ravishment
recreate
recreative
rig
risible
row
sabbath-breaking
safeguard
saturanlian
school
scow
scurrilously
seaworthy
setter
setting-dog
ship
shotting
slave-trade
sled
sledding
sleigh
snatch
snet
soho
spaniel
sport
sporter
sportful
sportfully
sportfulness
sportive
sportiveness
sportless
sportsman
sportulary
sportule
spout
squabble
sylva
tag
tonnage
tournament
toy
trade
traduction
trajection
transfer
transport
transportable
transportance
transportation
transported
transportedly
transportedness
transporter
transporting
transportment
venery
vulgar
waftage
wag
waggishly
waggishness
wagon
wagoning
wain
wanton
wantonly
wantonness
water-carriage
waterage
well
whistle
wing
winged
woodman
wrap
youthful



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S  ›  sport
S  ›  sport
1828 Definition

SPORT, n.

1. That which diverts and makes merry; play; game; diversion; also, mirth. The word signifies both the cause and the effect; that which produces mirth, and the mirth or merriment produced.

Her sports were such as carried riches of knowledge upon the stream of delight.

Here the word denotes the cause of amusement.

They called Samson out of the prison-house; and he made them sport. Judges 16.

Here sport is the effect.

2. Mock; mockery; contemptuous mirth.

Then make sport at me, then let me be your jest.

They made a sport of his prophets.

3. That with which one plays, or which is driven about.

To flitting leaves, the sport of every wind.

Never does man appear to greater disadvantage than when he is the sport of his own ungoverned passions.

4. Play; idle jingle.

An author who should introduce such a sport of words upon our stage, would meet with small applause.

5. Diversion of the field, as fowling, hunting, fishing.

In sport. To do a thing in sport, is to do it in jest, for play or diversion.

So is the man that deceiveth his neighbor, and saith, am not I in sport? Proverbs 26.

SPORT, v.t.

1. To divert; to make merry; used with the reciprocal pronoun.

Against whom do ye sport yourselves? Isaiah 47.

2. To represent by any kind of play.

Now sporting on thy lyre the love of youth.

SPORT, v.i.

1. To play; to frolick; to wanton.

See the brisk lambs that sport along the mead.

2. To trifle. The man that laughs at religion sports with his own salvation.
1913 Definition
Sport (sport)
n.(sp1913 webster dictionaryrt)
Sport
[Abbreviated frm disport.]
  1. That which diverts, and makes mirth; pastime; amusement.

    It is as sport a fool do mischief. prov. x. 23.

    Her sports were such as carried riches of knowledge upon the stream of delight. Sir P. Sidney.

    Think it but a minute spent in sport. Shak.

  2. Mock; mockery; contemptuous mirth; derision.

    Then make sport at me; then let me be your jest.Shak.

  3. That with which one plays, or which is driven about in play; a toy; a plaything; an object of mockery.

    Flitting leaves, the sport of every wind. Dryden.

    Never does man appear to greater disadvantage than when he is the sport of his own ungoverned pasions. John Clarke.

  4. Play; idle jingle.

    An author who should introduce such a sport of words upon our stage would meet with small applause. Broome.

  5. Diversion of the field, as fowling, hunting, fishing, racing, games, and the like, esp. when money is staked.
  6. A plant or an animal, or part of a plant or animal, which has some peculiarity not usually seen in the species; an abnormal variety or growth. See Sporting plant, under Sporting.
  7. A sportsman; a gambler.
    [Slang]

    In sport, in jest; for play or diversion. "So is the man that deceiveth his neighbor, and saith, Am not I in sport?" Prov. xxvi. 19.

    Syn. -- Play; game; diversion; frolic; mirth; mock; mockery; jeer.

  8. To play] to frolic; to wanton.

    [Fish], sporting with quick glance,
    Show to the sun their waved coats dropt with gold.
    Milton.

  9. To practice the diversions of the field or the turf; to be given to betting, as upon races.
  10. To trifle.
    "He sports with his own life." Tillotson.
  11. To assume suddenly a new and different character from the rest of the plant or from the type of the species; -- said of a bud, shoot, plant, or animal. See Sport, n., 6.
    Darwin.

    Syn. -- To play; frolic; game; wanton.

  12. To divert; to amuse; to make merry; -- used with the reciprocal pronoun.

    Against whom do ye sport yourselves? Isa. lvii. 4.

  13. To represent by any knd of play.

    Now sporting on thy lyre the loves of youth. Dryden.

  14. To exhibit, or bring out, in public; to use or wear; as, to sport a new equipage.
    [Colloq.] Grose.
  15. To give utterance to in a sportive manner; to throw out in an easy and copious manner; -- with off; as, to sport off epigrams.
    Addison.

    To sport one's oak. See under Oak, n.


1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
All the miseries and evils which men suffer from vice, crime, ambition, injustice, oppression, slavery and war, proceed from their despising or neglecting the precepts contained in the Bible.
  




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