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(12) Words.

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Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(293) Words.

abutment
adz
aggregate
annihilate
apron
ash
ax
balloen
barnacle
batter
beam
bearer
belly-timber
bevel
beveling
bilge
bitts
block
board
board-load
boll
bore
brace
bracket
breasthook
bridge
broad-ax
but
but-end
butment
camber
cant
capstan
carling
carnelian
carpenter
carpentry
causey
ceiled
ceiling
chestnut-tree
chock
clamp
clean
clean-timbered
coffer
column
coving
crack
cradle
cramp
crane
crook
cross
cross-grained
cross-piece
cross-trees
crotch
culvertailed
cut
dead-reckoning
deadnettle
deadpledge
deadwater
deadwood
defect
defective
diameter
dilapidate
do
dock-yard
dog
dove-tail
drag
durability
durable
employ
excellency
excellent
fall
fashion-monger
fender
fish
fishing
float
floating-bridge
floor
floor-timbers
flute
forefoot
forehook
frame
futtock
gage
gain
gate
giddy
gill
girder
good
goodness
green
gripe
gutter
handscrew
harrow
hawse-piece
heading
hearty
hew
hitch
hook
horse
hub
hurdle
interduce
joinery
joint
joist
keel
keelson
kevel
knee
knight-heads
knotty
ledge
limber
log
lote
lumber
maguey
main
mantle-tree
mast
merchantable
mold
mortise
munnion
nail
nave
oak
oar
orgues
outlicker
penstock
piece
pier
pile
pillar
pin
pine
pitman
plank
plate
platform
plow-bote
plyer
pontoon
portcullis
post
puncheon
purlin
putlog
quantity
rabbet
rack
raft
rafter
rail
rave
rib
ribin
rider
rift
rive
rivet
rot
rough-hew
rudder
rung
sabliere
salt
samsons-post
saw
saw-pit
sawyer
scaffold
scantling
score
scratch
shaken
shaky
sheave-hole
sheers
shell
shoe
short
sill
sink
sizable
skid
slab
slat
sled
sleeper
slice
slide
sloat
soffit
soggy
sound
soundness
spar
split
spot
spring
spur
stake
stanchion
stave
stem
step
stern-frame
stern-post
stick
stock
straight
stretcher
strip
stud
stun
summer
sweep
table
tabling
tambor
teek
templet
tenon
thick
thill
threshhold
throat
through
timber
timber-head
timber-tree
timber-work
timber-yard
timbered
timbering
timbre
touch
tough
transom
tray
tree
tree-nail
trestle
trim
trimmer
trough
tun
unframed
unseasoned
unsound
unsoundness
unsquared
unsuitable
untimbered
up
wain-bote
wainscot
wair
want
warp
water-way
waver
way
weak
wedge
wharf
wharfage
whitewood
windlas
windlass
wood-land
wood-layer
worm-eaten
wring-bolt
yard
yew
yoke



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T  ›  timber
T  ›  timber
1828 Definition

TIM'BER, n. [L. domus, a house; Gr. the body.]

1. That sort of wood which is proper for building or for tools, utensils, furniture, carriages, fences, ships and the like. We apply the word to standing trees which are suitable for the uses above mentioned, as a forest contains excellent timber; or to the beams, rafters, scantling, boards, planks, &c. hewed or sawed from such trees. Of all the species of trees useful as timber, in our climate, the white oak and the white pine hold the first place in importance.

2. The body or stem of a tree.

3. The materials; in irony.

Such dispositions--are the fittest timber to make politics of.

4. A single piece or squared stick of wood for building, or already framed.

Many of the timbers were decayed.

5. In ships, a timber is a rib or curving piece of wood, branching outward from the keel in a vertical direction. One timber is composed of several pieces united in one frame.

TIM'BER, v.t. To furnish with timber. [See Timbered.]

TIM'BER, v.i. To light on a tree. [Not in use.]

1. In falconry, to make a nest.

Timber or timmer of furs, as of martens, ermines, sables and the like, denotes forty skins; of other skins, one hundred and twenty.

Timber of ermine, in heraldry, denote the ranks or rows of ermine in noblemen's coats.

1913 Definition
Timber (timber)
n.(?)
Tim"ber
[Probably the same word as timber sort of wood; cf. Sw. timber, LG. timmer, MHG. zimber, G. zimmer, F. timbre, LL. timbrium. Cf. Timmer.] (Com.)
  1. A certain quantity of fur skins, as of martens, ermines, sables, etc., packed between boards; being in some cases forty skins, in others one hundred and twenty; -- called also timmer.
    [Written also timbre.]
  2. The crest on a coat of arms.
    [Written also timbre.]
  3. To surmount as a timber does.
    [Obs.]
  4. That sort of wood which is proper for buildings or for tools, utensils, furniture, carriages, fences, ships, and the like; -- usually said of felled trees, but sometimes of those standing. Cf. Lumber, 3.

    And ta'en my fiddle to the gate, . . .
    And fiddled in the timber!
    Tennyson.

  5. The body, stem, or trunk of a tree.
  6. Fig.: Material for any structure.

    Such dispositions are the very errors of human nature; and yet they are the fittest timber to make politics of. Bacon.

  7. A single piece or squared stick of wood intended for building, or already framed; collectively, the larger pieces or sticks of wood, forming the framework of a house, ship, or other structure, in distinction from the covering or boarding.

    So they prepared timber . . . to build the house. 1 Kings v. 18.

    Many of the timbers were decayed. W. Coxe.

  8. Woods or forest; wooden land.
    [Western U. S.]
  9. A rib, or a curving piece of wood, branching outward from the keel and bending upward in a vertical direction. One timber is composed of several pieces united.

    Timber and room. (Shipbuilding) Same as Room and space. See under Room. -- Timber beetle (Zoöl.), any one of numerous species of beetles the larvæ of which bore in timber; as, the silky timber beetle (Lymexylon sericeum). -- Timber doodle (Zoöl.), the American woodcock. [Local, U. S.] -- Timber grouse (Zoöl.), any species of grouse that inhabits woods, as the ruffed grouse and spruce partridge; -- distinguished from prairie grouse. -- Timber hitch (Naut.), a kind of hitch used for temporarily marking fast a rope to a spar. See Illust. under Hitch. -- Timber mare, a kind of instrument upon which soldiers were formerly compelled to ride for punishment. Johnson. -- Timber scribe, a metal tool or pointed instrument for marking timber. Simmonds. -- Timber sow. (Zoöl.) Same as Timber worm, below. Bacon. -- Timber tree, a tree suitable for timber. -- Timber worm (Zoöl.), any larval insect which burrows in timber. -- Timber yard, a yard or place where timber is deposited.

  10. To furnish with timber] -- chiefly used in the past participle.

    His bark is stoutly timbered. Shak.

  11. To light on a tree.
    [Obs.]
  12. To make a nest.

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
There are two powers only which are sufficient to control men, and secure the rights of individuals and a peaceable administration; these are the combined force of religion and law, and the force or fear of the bayonet.
  




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