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(13) Words.

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Definitions
1828 dictionary(205) Words.

abdomen
act
aloes
ammodyte
anise
antestomach
antidote
antipathy
arthritis
associable
attrition
bee
beech-oil
belch
belched
belching
belly-worm
bezoar
burn
bust
cardiacal
cardialgy
charge
chuffy
chyme
colon
concoct
concoction
contraction
coriander
coronary
correct
correction
crab
cramp-fish
crave
craw
create
crop
crop-sick
crop-sickness
crude
crudity
cud
digest
digested
digester
digesting
digestion
digestive
disagree
disease
disgorge
disgorged
disgust
disorder
dissolvent
distaste
drink
drunk
elixation
emetic
empoison
engender
ephod
epiglottis
eructate
eructation
esophagus
eupepsy
expel
flatulency
flatulent
flatus
fry
full-stomached
fume
gargle
gastric
gastriloquist
gastrocele
gentian
gizzard
good
gorge
gout
gullet
gulp
gut
heart-burn
heavy
hickup
high-stomached
hippolith
honey-bag
hunger
hydrophoby
hysterics
indigested
indigestible
indigestion
ingest
ingestion
inject
intestine
juniper
keck
laboratory
life
light
load
macerate
maintain
manchineel
mare
mastication
maw
mawworm
membranaceous
muscle
myrrh
nausea
nightmar
offensive
official
operation
oppress
overload
pancreas
pannel
pass
paunch
piston
poison
polypus
powerfully
protrude
puke
pylorus
qualm
qualmish
queasy
reception
regorge
rennet
retch
retentive
revomit
rice
ructation
ruminate
runnet
saturant
sick
sicken
sickness
sour
spew
spewing
spin
squeamish
stay
sternum
stethescope
stimulate
stomach
stomached
stomacher
stomachful
stomachfulness
stomachic
stomachical
stomaching
stomachless
stomachous
strychnia
surfeit
swallow-stone
swallowed
swallowing
throw
tripe
tunic
turn
undergo
undigested
venom
ventricle
villous
vomit
vomited
vomiting
vomitive
vomitory
wamble
wamble-cropped
white-water
wind
wool-ball
work
worm
worm-powder
worm-seed
wormwood
zedoary



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S  ›  stomach
S  ›  stomach
1828 Definition

STOMACH, n. [L.]

1. In animal bodies, a membranous receptacle, the organ of digestion, in which food is prepared for entering into the several parts of the body for its nourishment.

2. Appetite; the desire of food caused by hunger; as a good stomach for roast beef. [A popular use of the word.]

3. Inclination; liking.

He which hath no stomach to this fight, let him depart--

4. Anger; violence of temper.

Stern was his look, and full of stomach vain.

5. Sullenness; resentment; willful obstinacy; stubbornness.

This sort of crying proceeding from pride, obstinacy and stomach, the will, where the fault lies, must be bent.

6. Pride; haughtiness.

He was a man of an unbounded stomach, ever ranking himself with princes.

[Note. This word in all the foregoing senses, except the first, is nearly obsolete or inelegant.]

STOMACH, v.t. [L.]

1. To resent; to remember with anger.

The lion began to show his teeth, and to stomach the affront.

This sense is not used in America, as far as my observation extends. In America, at least in New England, the sense is,

2. To brook; to bear without open resentment or without opposition. [Not elegant.]

STOMACH, v.i. To be angry. [Not in use.]

1913 Definition
Stomach (stomach)
n.(?)
Stom"ach
[OE. stomak, F. estomac, L. stomachus, fr. Gr. sto`machos stomach, throat, gullet, fr. sto`ma a mouth, any outlet or entrance.]
  1. An enlargement, or series of enlargements, in the anterior part of the alimentary canal, in which food is digested] any cavity in which digestion takes place in an animal; a digestive cavity. See Digestion, and Gastric juice, under Gastric.
  2. The desire for food caused by hunger; appetite; as, a good stomach for roast beef.
    Shak.
  3. Hence appetite in general; inclination; desire.

    He which hath no stomach to this fight,
    Let him depart.
    Shak.

  4. Violence of temper; anger; sullenness; resentment; willful obstinacy; stubbornness.
    [Obs.]

    Stern was his look, and full of stomach vain. Spenser.

    This sort of crying proceeding from pride, obstinacy, and stomach, the will, where the fault lies, must be bent. Locke.

  5. Pride; haughtiness; arrogance.
    [Obs.]

    He was a man
    Of an unbounded stomach.
    Shak.

    Stomach pump (Med.), a small pump or syringe with a flexible tube, for drawing liquids from the stomach, or for injecting them into it. -- Stomach tube (Med.), a long flexible tube for introduction into the stomach. -- Stomach worm (Zoöl.), the common roundworm (Ascaris lumbricoides) found in the human intestine, and rarely in the stomach.

  6. To resent] to remember with anger; to dislike.
    Shak.

    The lion began to show his teeth, and to stomach the affront. L'Estrange.

    The Parliament sit in that body . . . to be his counselors and dictators, though he stomach it. Milton.

  7. To bear without repugnance; to brook.
    [Colloq.]
  8. To be angry.
    [Obs.] Hooker.

1828 dictionary
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