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(17) Words.

Found In
Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(418) Words.

aberration
according
acknowledge
acknowledgment
admit
adonists
adulterer
adultery
advance
affirm
affirmation
agreeable
air
alias
allowable
altern
altitude
amend
amomum
an
anastomotic
antedate
antiamerican
antichronism
antipathy
antonomasy
aperient
aperitive
apparent
apprehend
approve
argumentation
arminian
arsenic
article
asparagus
aspect
assenting
assurance
astrology
atempogiusto
attainable
attest
authentical
averment
awry
balsam
bdellium
beldam
believed
believer
bewail
bild
bismuth
bleak
book-keeping
bow-dye
bowsprit
bride
broche
but
catachresis
celandine
certain
certainty
characteristical
characterize
chard
chasm
chaste
chronologist
chronology
church
cinnamon
come
commensurable
concede
concern
conclusive
concubinage
confess
confessed
confessing
conformable
conformation
conformity
construct
construction
construe
construed
contraries
converse
couch
counterfeit
cun
cuticle
dapple
dark
defensive
deflect
deflection
demurrer
denial
deny
deobstruent
deoppilative
descant
determinately
deviate
dial
diffuse
dignity
dipping-needle
disavow
disbelieve
disbeliever
discriminate
disingenuous
disloyal
display
disproportionable
distort
distortion
distrust
divine
doctrine
doggers
ecphractic
epitropy
equation
err
error
estreat
eteostic
etymology
etymon
explicit
fable
fagend
faithful
faithless
false
falsehood
falsify
fancy
fealty
felony
figurative
find
flecker
for
foredate
foredated
forehanded
fornication
fossil-copal
friendship
gainsay
gentile
genuine
genuineness
gif
gnostic
godhead
grafting
grant
granted
grind
gum
halt
harlot
heathen
heathenism
help
herbage
heretical
heritable
hermeneutically
herself
heterodox
hold
hollow-hearted
honor
horizon
hypocist
hypocrite
icy
imagination
imbitter
imitation
improbability
improbable
improbably
improve
imputation
indeed
induction
inexact
infer
inference
insinuate
insnare
intendment
intrinsical
islamism
jehovist
joiner
just
justify
leden
liar
libel
lichen
light
likely
loyal
masoretic
maxim
mercury
mettle
mirror
misconstruction
misconstrue
misconstrued
misconstruer
misnomer
miss
mope
morally
mulberry
muscle
musk
mussulman
necessity
never
new
nip
objective
obligate
obstruent
octavo
one-berry
optimism
orthodoxy
orthography
ought
overcount
own
parachronism
paradox
paralogism
paris
partially
pass
penal
perpetual
perspective
perversion
pervert
philosophy
phrase
play
plum
point
pongo
poorness
postdate
premises
presumable
presumably
presume
presumed
presuming
pretense
pretension
probably
problem
proportionable
prove
proverb
pseudomorphous
purchase
pure
purpose
question
ravel
reading
real
realized
reason
reconciliation
reindeer
religion
report
restore
rhubarb
right
righteousness
rime
rotatory
sandix
scan
seem
shag
significance
significancy
simplify
simulation
slow
social
society
soder
solid
solution
sooth
sophism
sovereign
speculatively
speed
spinel
spinelle
spirit
spirituality
spiritually
spurious
square
squint
stay
steadfastly
stedfastly
style
subjective
substantial
subtly
superfluous
suppose
supposed
supposing
supposition
surmise
swamp
sway
syllepsis
syllogism
take
talent
taste
taxer
temple
tenet
test
theoretically
though
thought
throne
time
title
topping
torricellian
touch
tradition
transforming
traverse
true
trueborn
truebred
truehearted
trueheartedness
truelove
truelove-knot
trueness
truepenny
truism
truly
truth
try
tung
u
unauthentic
unbelieve
unbias
unproved
unsound
untrue
unveritable
unwarped
variation
vein
venus
veracious
veracity
verdict
verification
verifier
verify
verifying
verisimilar
verisimilitude
veritable
veritably
verity
veronica
very
vindicate
vindicated
vindicating
virtue
voluntary
warp
warped
warrant
welaway
whereas
whoredom
wisdom
wise
witness
yield



Bible Results
Webster
KJV
1828 dictionaryTo be ...
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T  ›  true
T  ›  true
1828 Definition

TRUE, a.

1. Conformable to fact; being in accordance with the actual state of things; as a true relation or narration; a true history. A declaration is true, when it states the facts. In this sense, true is opposed to false.

2. Genuine; pure; real; not counterfeit, adulterated or false; as true balsam; the true bark; true love of country; a true christian.

--The true light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world. John 1.

3. Faithful; steady in adhering to friends, to promises, to a prince or to the state; loyal; not false, fickle or perfidious; as a true friend; a true lover; a man true to his king, true to his country, true to his word; a husband true to his wife; a wife true to her husband; a servant true to his master; an officer true to his charge.

4. Free from falsehood; as a true witness.

5. Honest; not fraudulent; as good men and true.

If king Edward be as true and just--

6. Exact; right to precision; conformable to a rule or pattern; as a true copy; a true likeness of the original.

7. Straight; right; as a true line; the true course of a ship.

8. Not false or pretended; real; as, Christ was the true Messiah.

9. Rightful; as, George IV is the true king of England.
1913 Definition
True (true)
a.(?)
True
[Compar. Truer (?); superl. Truest.] [OE. trewe, AS. treówe faithful, true, from treów fidelity, faith, troth; akin to OFries. triuwe, adj., tre
  1. Conformable to fact] in accordance with the actual state of things; correct; not false, erroneous, inaccurate, or the like; as, a true relation or narration; a true history; a declaration is true when it states the facts.
  2. Right to precision; conformable to a rule or pattern; exact; accurate; as, a true copy; a true likeness of the original.

    Making his eye, foot, and hand keep true time. Sir W. Scott.

  3. Steady in adhering to friends, to promises, to a prince, or the like; unwavering; faithful; loyal; not false, fickle, or perfidious; as, a true friend; a wife true to her husband; an officer true to his charge.

    Thy so true,
    So faithful, love unequaled.
    Milton.

    Dare to be true: nothing can need a lie. Herbert.

  4. Actual; not counterfeit, adulterated, or pretended; genuine; pure; real; as, true balsam; true love of country; a true Christian.

    The true light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world. John i. 9.

    True ease in writing comes from art, not chance. Pope.

    * True is sometimes used elliptically for It is true.

    Out of true, varying from correct mechanical form, alignment, adjustment, etc.; -- said of a wall that is not perpendicular, of a wheel whose circumference is not in the same plane, and the like. [Colloq.] -- A true bill (Law), a bill of indictment which is returned by the grand jury so indorsed, signifying that the charges to be true. -- True time. See under Time.

  5. In accordance with truth; truly.
    Shak.
  6. Genuine; real; not deviating from the essential characters of a class; as, a lizard is a true reptile; a whale is a true, but not a typical, mammal.

1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
In my view, the Christian religion is the most important and one of the first things in which all children, under a free government ought to be instructed... No truth is more evident to my mind than that the Christian religion must be the basis of any government intended to secure the rights and privileges of a free people.
 Preface to 1828 Dictionary 




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