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(53) Words.

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Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(348) Words.

above
acid
alabaster
alum
ambigenal
anatomy
anchor
angusticlave
anole
aroph
atlas
atrip
aweigh
banana
bar
bare
bark
bark-bared
barked
barker
barking
barred
barring
bass
bereave
bereaved
bereaving
bezan
blanch
botryolite
brace
braul
cantaro
case
cassowary
castigate
cat
centripetal
chastise
chastisement
checker
colored
courant
couranto
decorator
decorous
decorously
decorticate
decorticated
decorticating
decortication
degarnish
degarnished
degarnishing
degrade
denudate
denudation
denuded
denuding
depilate
deplumation
deplume
deplumed
depluming
deprived
desolate
despoil
despoiled
despoiler
despoiling
despoliation
devest
devested
devesting
diapase
diapason
disafforest
disafforested
disapparel
disarm
disarmed
disarming
discalceated
discarnate
discase
disfurnish
disfurnished
dishorned
dismantle
dismantled
dismantling
dismask
dismasked
dismasking
dismasting
displant
displume
displumed
disrobe
disrobed
disrober
disrobing
divest
divested
divesting
divestiture
divesture
doff
encumbrance
endeavor
estrepement
exceed
excoriate
excoriated
excoriating
excoriation
excortication
expilation
fearfully
felt
fig-tree
filch
flake
flay
flayed
flayer
flaying
flecker
fleece
fleeced
fleecer
fleecing
footfall
forage
foraging
force
forlorn
founder
free
fur
gale
gantlope
garbaged
gingham
good
hanging-sleeves
harrow
harry
headland
hide
hornpipe
hull
husk
husked
husking
jasper
lace
lad
laticlave
libel
limpet
list
listed
lithontriptic
lithontriptor
lithontripty
loll
mail
microcosm
motley
naked
night-tripping
niter
nudation
o
orrach
outstrip
outwing
overtrip
paled
paraboloid
parallelopiped
peel
peeled
peeler
peeling
pennached
pert
pill
pillage
pillaging
plad
pluck
plucked
plucking
plunder
poll
pond-weed
private
punish
purslain
ransack
rap
rib
ridge
rifle
rob
robber
robbing
rotten-stone
ruffle
rush-candle
sack
save
scale
scaling
sextuple
shaver
silver-fish
skin
skinned
slit
spodumene
spoil
sprightly
stole
strap
streak
streaked
streaky
strike
string
strip
stripe
striped
striping
stripling
stripped
stripper
stripping
strippings
strop
stumble
stumbling
subtriple
subtriplicate
sucker
supplant
supplanted
supplanting
tarnished
tear
three-parted
three-petaled
throw
tiara
tiercet
trash
tray-trip
treble
trevet
tridiapason
triform
trill
trim
trip
tripartite
tripartition
tripe
tripe-man
tripedal
tripennate
tripersonal
tripersonality
tripetalous
triphthong
triphthongal
triphyllous
tripinnate
triple
triplet
triplicate
triplication
triplicity
triply-ribbed
tripod
tripoli
tripoline
tripos
tripped
tripper
tripping
trippingly
triptote
tripudiary
tripudiation
tripyramid
triternate
tung
umbrella
unarm
unbanded
unbarked
uncase
uncased
unclothe
unclothed
unclothing
uncover
uncovering
undeprived
undress
unfence
unfurnish
ungear
ungearing
unhang
unharness
unhoop
unhusked
unmask
unmasked
unplume
unplundered
unpolled
unprovide
unrifled
unrig
unrigged
unrigging
unrobe
unroof
unroofed
unroofing
unsaddle
volume
wale
waltz
waste
weal
widow
widowed
widowing
winding-tackle
worthy
wrestle
younker
zebra



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T  ›  trip
T  ›  trip
1828 Definition

TRIP, v.t.

1. To supplant; to cause to fall by striking the feet suddenly from under the person; usually followed by up; as, to trip up a man in wrestling; to trip up the heels.

2. To supplant; to overthrow by depriving of support.

3. To catch; to detect.

4. To loose an anchor from the bottom by its cable or buoy-rope.

TRIP, v.i. To stumble; to strike the foot against something, so as to lose the step and come near to fall; or to stumble and fall.

1. To err; to fail; to mistake; to be deficient.

Virgil pretends sometimes to trip.

TRIP, v.i.

1. To run or step lightly; to walk with a light step.

She bounded by and tripp'd so light.

They had not time to take a steady sight.

Thus from the lion trips the trembling doe.

2. To take a voyage or journey.

TRIP, n. A stroke or catch by which a wrestler supplants his antagonist.

And watches with a trip his foe to foil.

1. A stumble by the loss of foot-hold, or a striking of the foot against an object.

2. A failure; a mistake.

Each seeming trip, and each digressive start.

3. A journey; or a voyage.

I took a trip to London on the death of the queen.

4. In navigation, a single board in plying to windward.

5. Among farmers, a small flock of sheep, or a small stock of them. [Local.]
1913 Definition
Trip (trip)
v. i.(?)
Trip
[imp. *** p. p. Tripped (?)] p. pr. *** vb. n. Tripping.] [OE. trippen] akin to D. trippen, Dan. trippe, and E. tramp. See Tramp.]

  1. To move with light, quick steps; to walk or move lightly; to skip; to move the feet nimbly; -- sometimes followed by it. See It, 5.

    This horse anon began to trip and dance. Chaucer.

    Come, and trip it, as you go,
    On the light fantastic toe.
    Milton.

    She bounded by, and tripped so light
    They had not time to take a steady sight.
    Dryden.

  2. To make a brief journey or pleasure excursion; as, to trip to Europe.
  3. To take a quick step, as when in danger of losing one's balance; hence, to make a false step; to catch the foot; to lose footing; to stumble.
  4. Fig.: To be guilty of a misstep; to commit an offense against morality, propriety, or rule; to err; to mistake; to fail.
    "Till his tongue trip." Locke.

    A blind will thereupon comes to be led by a blind understanding; there is no remedy, but it must trip and stumble. South.

    Virgil is so exact in every word that none can be changed but for a worse; he pretends sometimes to trip, but it is to make you think him in danger when most secure. Dryden.

    What? dost thou verily trip upon a word? R. Browning.

  5. To cause to stumble, or take a false step; to cause to lose the footing, by striking the feet from under; to cause to fall; to throw off the balance; to supplant; -- often followed by up; as, to trip up a man in wrestling.

    The words of Hobbes's defense trip up the heels of his cause. Abp. Bramhall.

  6. Fig.: To overthrow by depriving of support; to put an obstacle in the way of; to obstruct; to cause to fail.

    To trip the course of law, and blunt the sword. Shak.

  7. To detect in a misstep; to catch; to convict.
    [R.]

    These her women can trip me if I err. Shak.

  8. To raise (an anchor) from the bottom, by its cable or buoy rope, so that it hangs free.
    (b)
  9. To release, let fall, or set free, as a weight or compressed spring, as by removing a latch or detent.
  10. A quick, light step; a lively movement of the feet; a skip.

    His heart bounded as he sometimes could hear the trip of a light female step glide to or from the door. Sir W. Scott.

  11. A brief or rapid journey; an excursion or jaunt.

    I took a trip to London on the death of the queen. Pope.

  12. A false step; a stumble; a misstep; a loss of footing or balance. Fig.: An error; a failure; a mistake.

    Imperfect words, with childish trips. Milton.

    Each seeming trip, and each digressive start. Harte.

  13. A small piece; a morsel; a bit.
    [Obs.] "A trip of cheese." Chaucer.
  14. A stroke, or catch, by which a wrestler causes his antagonist to lose footing.

    And watches with a trip his foe to foil. Dryden.

    It is the sudden trip in wrestling that fetches a man to the ground. South.

  15. A single board, or tack, in plying, or beating, to windward.
  16. A herd or flock, as of sheep, goats, etc.
    [Prov. Eng. *** Scott.]
  17. A troop of men] a host.
    [Obs.] Robert of Brunne.
  18. A flock of widgeons.

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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