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(1) Word.

Found In
Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(1) Word.
1828 dictionary(242) Words.

abstractitious
acetum
acid
adansonia
adiaphorous
adnata
age
agouty
agriculture
aliment
alive
alkali
amber
animal
antispasmodic
appellative
appetency
approximation
arbor
armature
asbestos
asparagin
atropia
badger
balsam
benzoic
birth
bleach
botanist
botanize
botany
brine
brucine
bruise
burnt-offering
bustard
cabbage-tree
carbon
carbonic
carry
cassamunair
caterpillar
chlorophyl
cloth
cologne-earth
compost
conserve
consume
cook
coral
corrupt
delicacy
delphia
die
dissect
dissection
dissolution
distinction
drug
durability
eat
economy
effluvium
element
empyreuma
empyreumatical
extractive
farina
fermentable
fermentation
fertilizing
fibrin
flatulent
flesh
fleshly
fletz
fodder
food
fossil
fossil-copal
fresh
fructification
fry
fryingpan
fun-gin
gamboge
garden-stuff
gelatin
general
good
green-crop
grow
growth
gum
harm
hash
heat
herb
herbaceous
herbal
herbivorous
honey
hyosciama
hypophosphorous
incogitative
increase
indigenous
influence
inulin
iodine
juse
kill
kingdom
kitchen-garden
lichenography
lignification
lithophyte
live
manure
membrane
mocha-stone
molder
monster
morphia
moss
mucilage
muck
mule
naphtha
natural
nectary
nourish
nourishment
nutriment
nutrition
ocra
oil
order
oxygen
papaw
peat
petrifaction
petrifactive
petrify
pharmacy
phosphorescence
phytolite
plant
pollenin
porcellanite
porridge-pot
pot
potage
potash
potassa
potassium
potato
preserve
production
propagable
putrefaction
putrefy
putrescence
putrid
quintessence
racoon
radical
reduce
replaced
resin
rhubarbarine
rosin
rot
salading
sauce
scurvy
seed
self-healing
seminary
sexual
shade
shale
shift
simple
sirup
sloth
smoke
soap
soundness
spice
spicery
spiracle
spoil
spring
squash
stain
still-life
strength
structure
sugar
sweet
sythe
tannin
tartarin
tea
term
thicken
tincture
translocation
transmutation
treacle
tree
tribe
truffle
trunk
tub
turf
umbilical
vascular
vegetability
vegetable
vegetate
vegetation
vegetive
vegeto-animal
vend
veratria
verdurous
vesicle
vicinity
vigor
vinegar
viridity
vital
vitality
vivid
windiness
wound
yield
yttria
zoophyte
zumic



Bible Results
Webster
KJV
1828 dictionaryTo be ...
These Bibles or ...
1828 dictionary... Completed
... Maybe you pick two (KJV vs Young's Literal) if logged in
V  ›  vegetable
V  ›  vegetable
1828 Definition

VEG'ETABLE, n. [L. vigeo, to grow.]

1. A plant; an organized body destitute of sense and voluntary motion, deriving its nourishment through pores or vessels on its outer surface, in most instances adhering to some other body, as the earth, and in general, propagating itself by seeds. some vegetables have spontaneous motion, as the sunflower. Vegetables alone have the power of deriving nourishment from inorganic matter, or organic matter entirely decomposed.

2. In a more limited sense, vegetables are such plants as are used for culinary purposes and cultivated in gardens, or are destined for feeding cattle and sheep. Vegetables for these uses are such as are of a more soft and fleshy substance than trees and shrubs; such as cabbage, cauliflower, turnips, potatoes, peas, beans, &c.

VEG'ETABLE, a.

1. Belonging to plants; as a vegetable nature; vegetable qualities; vegetable juices.

2. Consisting of plants; as the vegetable kingdom.

3. having the nature of plants; as a vegetable body.
1913 Definition
Vegetable (vegetable)
a.(?)
Veg`e*ta*ble
[F. végétable growing, capable of growing, formerly also, as a noun, a vegetable, from L. vegetabilis enlivening, from vegetare to enliven, invigorate, quicken, vegetus enlivened, vigorous, active,
  1. Of or pertaining to plants; having the nature of, or produced by, plants; as, a vegetable nature; vegetable growths, juices, etc.

    Blooming ambrosial fruit
    Of vegetable gold.
    Milton.

  2. Consisting of, or comprising, plants; as, the vegetable kingdom.

    Vegetable alkali (Chem.), an alkaloid. -- Vegetable brimstone. (Bot.) See Vegetable sulphur, below. -- Vegetable butter (Bot.), a name of several kinds of concrete vegetable oil; as that produced by the Indian butter tree, the African shea tree, and the Pentadesma butyracea, a tree of the order Guttiferæ, also African. Still another kind is pressed from the seeds of cocoa (Theobroma). -- Vegetable flannel, a textile material, manufactured in Germany from pine-needle wool, a down or fiber obtained from the leaves of the Pinus sylvestris. -- Vegetable ivory. See Ivory nut, under Ivory. -- Vegetable jelly. See Pectin. -- Vegetable kingdom. (Nat. Hist.) See the last Phrase, below. -- Vegetable leather. (a) (Bot.) A shrubby West Indian spurge (Euphorbia punicea), with leathery foliage and crimson bracts. (b) See Vegetable leather, under Leather. -- Vegetable marrow (Bot.), an egg-shaped gourd, commonly eight to ten inches long. It is noted for the very tender quality of its flesh, and is a favorite culinary vegetable in England. It has been said to be of Persian origin, but is now thought to have been derived from a form of the American pumpkin. -- Vegetable oyster (Bot.), the oyster plant. See under Oyster. -- Vegetable parchment, papyrine. -- Vegetable sheep (Bot.), a white woolly plant (Raoulia eximia) of New Zealand, which grows in the form of large fleecy cushions on the mountains. -- Vegetable silk, a cottonlike, fibrous material obtained from the coating of the seeds of a Brazilian tree (Chorisia speciosa). It us used for various purposes, as for stuffing, and the like, but is incapable of being spun on account of a want of cohesion among the fibers. -- Vegetable sponge. See 1st Loof. -- Vegetable sulphur, the fine highly inflammable spores of the club moss (Lycopodium clavatum); witch. -- Vegetable tallow, a substance resembling tallow, obtained from various plants; as, Chinese vegetable tallow, obtained from the seeds of the tallow tree. Indian vegetable tallow is a name sometimes given to piney tallow. -- Vegetable wax, a waxy excretion on the leaves or fruits of certain plants, as the bayberry.

    Vegetable kingdom (Nat. Hist.), that primary division of living things which includes all plants. The classes of the vegetable kingdom have been grouped differently by various botanists. The following is one of the best of the many arrangements of the principal subdivisions.

    I. Phænogamia (called also Phanerogamia

  3. A plant. See Plant.
  4. A plant used or cultivated for food for man or domestic animals, as the cabbage, turnip, potato, bean, dandelion, etc.; also, the edible part of such a plant, as prepared for market or the table.

    * Vegetables and fruits are sometimes loosely distinguished by the usual need of cooking the former for the use of man, while the latter may be eaten raw; but the distinction often fails, as in the case of quinces, barberries, and other fruits, and lettuce, celery, and other vegetables. Tomatoes if cooked are vegetables, if eaten raw are fruits.


1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
All the miseries and evils which men suffer from vice, crime, ambition, injustice, oppression, slavery and war, proceed from their despising or neglecting the precepts contained in the Bible.
  




The Japanese commissioner in Washington DC in the 1900's studying the American patent system said, "We have looked about us to see what nations are the greatest, so that we can be like them... We said, 'What makes the United States such a great nation?' and we investigated and found that it was patents, and we will have patents."




1828 dictionary
Browse
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
monte








myApp
3d toon xxx3d monster porn3d sex3d porn3d monsters3d Monster FuckXxx Cartoontoon fuckAdult Comics3d gay sexHentai gay Porn