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Noah Webster's 1828 American Dictionary
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1828 Definition

WAKE, v.i. [G. The primary sense is to stir, to rouse, to excite.]

1. To be awake; to continue awake; to watch; not to sleep. Psalm 127.

The father waketh for the daughter.

Though wisdom wakes, suspicion sleeps.

I cannot think any time, waking or sleeping, without being sensible of it.

2. To be excited or roused from sleep; to awake; to be awakened. He wakes at the slightest noise.

3. To cease to sleep; to awake.

4. To be quick; to be alive or active.

5. To be excited from a torpid state; to be put in motion. The dormant powers of nature wake from their frosty slumbers.

Gentle airs to fan the earth now wakd.

WAKE, v.t.

1. To rouse from sleep.

The angel that talked with me, came again and waked me. Zechariah 4.

2. To arouse; to excite; to put in motion or action.

Prepare war, wake up the mighty men. Joel 3.

[The use of up is common, but not necessary.]

To wake the soul by tender strokes of art.

3. To bring to life again, as if from the sleep of death.

To second life wakd in the renovation of the just.

WAKE, n.

1. The feast of the dedication of the church, formerly kept by watching all night.

2. Vigils; state of forbearing sleep.

--Their merry wakes and pastimes keep.

3. Act of waking. [Old song.]

Wake of a ship, the track it leaves in the water, formed by the meeting of the water, which rushes from each side to fill the space which the ship makes in passing through it.

To be in the wake of a ship, is to be in her track, or in a line with her keel.
1913 Definition
Wake (wake)
n.(?)
Wake
[Originally, an open space of water s(?)rrounded by ice, and then, the passage cut through ice for a vessel, probably of Scand. origin; cf. Icel. vök a hole, opening in ice, Sw. vak, Dan. vaage, perhaps akin to E.
  1. The track left by a vessel in the water; by extension, any track; as, the wake of an army.

    This effect followed immediately in the wake of his earliest exertions. De Quincey.

    Several humbler persons . . . formed quite a procession in the dusty wake of his chariot wheels. Thackeray.

  2. To be or to continue awake; to watch; not to sleep.

    The father waketh for the daughter. Ecclus. xlii. 9.

    Though wisdom wake, suspicion sleeps. Milton.

    I can not think any time, waking or sleeping, without being sensible of it. Locke.

  3. To sit up late festive purposes; to hold a night revel.

    The king doth wake to-night, and takes his rouse,
    Keeps wassail, and the swaggering upspring reels.
    Shak.

  4. To be excited or roused from sleep; to awake; to be awakened; to cease to sleep; -- often with up.

    He infallibly woke up at the sound of the concluding doxology. G. Eliot.

  5. To be exited or roused up; to be stirred up from a dormant, torpid, or inactive state; to be active.

    Gentle airs due at their hour
    To fan the earth now waked.
    Milton.

    Then wake, my soul, to high desires. Keble.

  6. To rouse from sleep; to awake.

    The angel . . . came again and waked me. Zech. iv. 1.

  7. To put in motion or action; to arouse; to excite.
    "I shall waken all this company." Chaucer.

    Lest fierce remembrance wake my sudden rage. Milton.

    Even Richard's crusade woke little interest in his island realm. J. R. Green.

  8. To bring to life again, as if from the sleep of death; to reanimate; to revive.

    To second life
    Waked in the renovation of the just.
    Milton.

  9. To watch, or sit up with, at night, as a dead body.
  10. The act of waking, or being awaked; also, the state of being awake.
    [Obs. or Poetic]

    Making such difference 'twixt wake and sleep. Shak.

    Singing her flatteries to my morning wake. Dryden.

  11. The state of forbearing sleep, especially for solemn or festive purposes; a vigil.

    The warlike wakes continued all the night,
    And funeral games played at new returning light.
    Dryden.

    The wood nymphs, decked with daises trim,
    Their merry wakes and pastimes keep.
    Milton.

  12. An annual parish festival formerly held in commemoration of the dedication of a church. Originally, prayers were said on the evening preceding, and hymns were sung during the night, in the church; subsequently, these vigils were discontinued, and the day itself, often with succeeding days, was occupied in rural pastimes and exercises, attended by eating and drinking, often to excess.

    Great solemnities were made in all churches, and great fairs and wakes throughout all England. Ld. Berners.

    And every village smokes at wakes with lusty cheer. Drayton.

    (b)


1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
They choose men, not because they are just men, men of religion and integrity, but solely for the sake of supporting a party. This is a fruitful source of public evils. But as surely as there is a God in heaven, who exercises a moral government over the affairs of this world, so certainly will the neglect of the divine command, in the choice of rulers, be followed by bad laws and as bad administration; by laws unjust or partial, by corruption, tyranny, impunity of crimes, waste of public money, and a thousand other evils. Men may desire and adopt a new form of government; they may amend old forms, repair breaches and punish violators of the constitution; but there is, there can be no effectual remedy, but obedience to the divine law.
 Value of the Bible (unpublished manuscript) :: 1834 




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1828 dictionary
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