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(24) Words.

Found In
Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(396) Words.

acerb
acid
acidity
acrid
acritude
after-taste
agouty
agreeable
agreeableness
ale-taster
alkali
almagra
alumina
amateur
amber
amber-seed
ambrosia
ambrosial
amomum
anime
anise
antepast
anticipate
anticipated
anticipation
apricot
aromatize
arraign
asparagus
asperity
asphaltum
attaste
austere
austereness
avocado
azote
babyroussa
balm
banana
bandian
bass
bdellium
bean
benzoic
bergamot
birdsnest
bitter
bitter-sweet
bitter-wort
bitterly
bitterness
briny
burn
cabbage-tree
cabos
camomile
camphor
caraway
carob
catarrh
catasterism
catchpenny
cheesy
cherry
chew
china-root
choke-pear
cinnamon
classical
colombo
condiment
confarreation
conversant
copaiba
copperas
coppery
correctness
countertaste
crab
cress
critic
critical
cultivate
cumin
daintily
daintiness
dainty
daphnin
deep
delibate
delibation
delicacy
delicate
delicious
deliciously
deliciousness
delphia
depravation
deprave
disagree
disagreeable
disagreeableness
disgust
disgustful
disgusting
display
displease
displeasing
disrelish
disrelishing
distance
distaste
distasted
distasteful
distastefulness
distinguish
dittander
dragons-blood
dress
dulcet
ear
earth
earthnut
earthy
ebony
elaterium
elegancy
elegant
elocution
embellishment
empyreumatical
enter
ether
euphorbium
experience
exquisite
fancy
farinaceous
fastidious
fastidiousness
feast
feculum
fig
filbert
fine
finely
fineness
fishy
flaggy
flashy
flat
flatten
flavor
flavorless
flavorous
foretaste
foretasted
foretaster
frankincense
galbanum
garlic
gaudy
gentian
ginseng
glucin
good
gout
grateful
gratefulness
gratification
gratify
gum
gust
gustable
gustful
gustfulness
gustless
gusto
habituate
hair-salt
handsome
harsh
hazel
hematin
hermodactyl
high-tasted
honey
horehound
horseradish
how
hypophosphorous
hyssop
imperceptible
indelicacy
index
inelegant
ingustable
injunction
insapory
insipid
insipidly
insipidness
intastable
iodine
jalap
juniper
libation
lickerish
lignum-vitae
lothe
lupine
luscious
medullin
mellow
mental
mild
modern
modernize
morgray
mortal
mustard
myrrh
naphtha
nature
neatly
nice
niceness
nicotin
nidorosity
nidorous
niter
notice
nutmeg
offensive
offensiveness
oil
opium
opobalsam
opopanax
out
palatable
palatableness
palate
palative
pall
particular
pear
pepper
perceivable
perceive
peruvian
physical
pistachio
pleasant
please
pochard
poetaster
poignancy
poignant
positive
pregustation
prelibation
prettily
prettiness
prick
profuse
progressiveness
provoke
pungency
pungent
quality
quicken
race
racy
rankness
reasty
refine
refinement
regale
relish
relishable
relished
remember
reserve
resipiscence
romantic
rosemary
rough
roughly
roughness
saccharine
salinous
salsoacid
salt
saltly
saltness
sanders
sapid
sapidness
sapience
sapor
saporific
saporosity
saporous
sassafras
sauce
savor
savoriness
savorless
savorly
savory
scammony
scorn
scurvy-grass
sense
sharp
sickish
silver
skillfulness
smack
smart
smatch
smatter
snakewood
somewhat
sour
sourish
sourness
sparingly
spice
spruceness
squeamish
squeamishness
stale
standard
stingo
storax
strength
strong
sweet
sweet-corn
sweetish
sweetness
take
tampoe
tang
tansy
tart
tartness
tastable
taste
tasted
tasteful
tastefully
tasteless
tastelessness
taster
tastily
tasting
tasty
tawdry
that
tincture
tinge
to
tobacco
tokay
tooth
toothsome
toothsomeness
tung
turmeric
umber
unpalatable
unsavoriness
unsavory
untasted
untasteful
untastefully
untasting
untoothsome
vanilla
venturous
viand
viciate
vinous
virtu
vitiate
water
watery
winy
wormwood
wring
yarrish
yttria
zest



Bible Results
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T  ›  taste
T  ›  taste
1828 Definition

TASTE, v.t.

1. To perceive by means of the tongue; to have a certain sensation in consequence of something applied to the tongue, the organ of taste; as, to taste bread; to taste wine; to taste a sweet or an acid.

2. To try the relish of by the perception of the organs of taste.

3. To try by eating a little; or to eat a little.

Because I tasted a little of this honey. 1 Sam.14.

4. To essay first.

5. To have pleasure from.

6. To experience; to feel; to undergo.

That he by the grace of God should taste death for every man. Heb.2.

7. To relish intellectually; to enjoy.

Thou, Adam, wilt taste no pleasure.

8. To experience by shedding, as blood.

When Commodus had once tasted human blood, he became incapable of pity or remorse.

TASTE, v.i. To try by the mouth; to eat or drink; or to eat or drink a little only; as, to taste of each kind of wine.

1. To have a smack; to excite a particular sensation, by which the quality or flavor is distinguished; as, butter tastes of garlic; apples boiled in a brass-kettle, sometimes taste of brass.

2. To distinguish intellectually.

Scholars, when good sense describing,

Call it tasting and imbibing.

3. To try the relish of any thing. Taste of the fruits; taste for yourself.

4. To be tinctured; to have a particular quality or character.

Ev'ry idle, nice and wanton reason

Shall, to the king, taste of this action.

5. To experience; to have perception of.

The valiant never taste of death but once.

6. To take to be enjoyed.

Of nature's bounty men forbore to taste.

7. To enjoy sparingly.

For age but tastes of pleasures, youth devours.

8. To have the experience or enjoyment of.

They who have tasted of the heavenly gift, and the good word of God. Heb.6.

TASTE, n. The act of tasting; gustation.

1. A particular sensation excited in an animal by the application of a substance to the tongue, the proper organ; as the taste of an orange or an apple; a bitter taste; an acid taste; a sweet taste.

2. The sense by which we perceive the relish of a thing. This sense appears to reside in the tongue or its papillae. Men have a great variety of tastes. In the influenza of 1790, the taste, for some days, was entirely extinguished.

3. Intellectual relish; as, he had no taste of true glory.

I have no taste

Of popular applause.

[Note. In this use, the word is now followed by for. "He had no taste for glory." When followed by of, the sense is ambiguous, or rather it denotes experience, trial.]

4. Judgment; discernment; nice perception, or the power of perceiving and relishing excellence in human performances; the faculty of discerning beauty, order, congruity, proportion, symmetry, or whatever constitutes excellence, particularly in the fine arts and belles lettres. Taste is not wholly the gift of nature, nor wholly the effect of art. It depends much on culture. We say, a good taste, or a fine taste.

5. Style; manner, with respect to what is pleasing; as a poem or music composed in good taste.

6. Essay; trial; experiment. [Not in use.]

7. A small portion given as a specimen.

8. A bit; a little piece tasted or eaten.
1913 Definition
Taste (taste)
v. t.(t1913 webster dictionaryst)
Taste
[imp. *** p. p. Tasted] p. pr. *** vb. n. Tasting.] [OE. tasten to feel, to taste, OF. taster, F. tater to feel, to try by the touch, to try, to taste, (assumed) LL. tax
  1. To try by the touch] to handle; as, to taste a bow.
    [Obs.] Chapman.

    Taste it well and stone thou shalt it find. Chaucer.

  2. To try by the touch of the tongue; to perceive the relish or flavor of (anything) by taking a small quantity into a mouth. Also used figuratively.

    When the ruler of the feast had tasted the water that was made wine. John ii. 9.

    When Commodus had once tasted human blood, he became incapable of pity or remorse. Gibbon.

  3. To try by eating a little; to eat a small quantity of.

    I tasted a little of this honey. 1 Sam. xiv. 29.

  4. To become acquainted with by actual trial; to essay; to experience; to undergo.

    He . . . should taste death for every man. Heb. ii. 9.

  5. To partake of; to participate in; -- usually with an implied sense of relish or pleasure.

    Thou . . . wilt taste
    No pleasure, though in pleasure, solitary.
    Milton.

  6. To try food with the mouth; to eat or drink a little only; to try the flavor of anything; as, to taste of each kind of wine.
  7. To have a smack; to excite a particular sensation, by which the specific quality or flavor is distinguished; to have a particular quality or character; as, this water tastes brackish; the milk tastes of garlic.

    Yea, every idle, nice, and wanton reason
    Shall to the king taste of this action.
    Shak.

  8. To take sparingly.

    For age but tastes of pleasures, youth devours. Dryden.

  9. To have perception, experience, or enjoyment; to partake; as, to taste of nature's bounty.
    Waller.

    The valiant never taste of death but once. Shak.

  10. The act of tasting; gustation.
  11. A particular sensation excited by the application of a substance to the tongue; the quality or savor of any substance as perceived by means of the tongue; flavor; as, the taste of an orange or an apple; a bitter taste; an acid taste; a sweet taste.
  12. The one of the five senses by which certain properties of bodies (called their taste, savor, flavor) are ascertained by contact with the organs of taste.

    * Taste depends mainly on the contact of soluble matter with the terminal organs (connected with branches of the glossopharyngeal and other nerves) in the papillæ on the surface of the tongue. The base of the tongue is considered most sensitive to bitter substances, the point to sweet and acid substances.

  13. Intellectual relish; liking; fondness; -- formerly with of, now with for; as, he had no taste for study.

    I have no taste
    Of popular applause.
    Dryden.

  14. The power of perceiving and relishing excellence in human performances; the faculty of discerning beauty, order, congruity, proportion, symmetry, or whatever constitutes excellence, particularly in the fine arts and belles-letters; critical judgment; discernment.
  15. Manner, with respect to what is pleasing, refined, or in accordance with good usage; style; as, music composed in good taste; an epitaph in bad taste.
  16. Essay; trial; experience; experiment.
    Shak.
  17. A small portion given as a specimen; a little piece tasted or eaten; a bit.
    Bacon.
  18. A kind of narrow and thin silk ribbon.

    Syn. -- Savor; relish; flavor; sensibility; gout. -- Taste, Sensibility, Judgment. Some consider taste as a mere sensibility, and others as a simple exercise of judgment; but a union of both is requisite to the existence of anything which deserves the name. An original sense of the beautiful is just as necessary to æsthetic judgments, as a sense of right and wrong to the formation of any just conclusions on moral subjects. But this "sense of the beautiful" is not an arbitrary principle. It is under the guidance of reason; it grows in delicacy and correctness with the progress of the individual and of society at large; it has its laws, which are seated in the nature of man; and it is in the development of these laws that we find the true "standard of taste."

    What, then, is taste, but those internal powers,
    Active and strong, and feelingly alive
    To each fine impulse? a discerning sense
    Of decent and sublime, with quick disgust
    From things deformed, or disarranged, or gross
    In species? This, nor gems, nor stores of gold,
    Nor purple state, nor culture, can bestow,
    But God alone, when first his active hand
    Imprints the secret bias of the soul.
    Akenside.

    Taste of buds, or Taste of goblets (Anat.), the flask-shaped end organs of taste in the epithelium of the tongue. They are made up of modified epithelial cells arranged somewhat like leaves in a bud.


1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
The brief exposition of the constitution of the United States, will unfold to young persons the principles of republican government; and it is the sincere desire of the writer that our citizens should early understand that the genuine source of correct republican principles is the Bible, particularly the New Testament or the Christian religion.
 History of the United States :: 1832 




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