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(61) Words.

Found In
Words
Definitions
1828 dictionary(639) Words.

aborea
abstraction
accend
accident
acolin
acontias
adamantine
adansonia
adularia
adverb
agaric
agouty
agrimony
agrom
aigret
aigrette
ajuru-catinga
ajuru-para
alabaster
alb
albatros
albescent
albin
albino
albinos
albion
albugineous
albugo
album
albumen
alburnum
alle
alp
alphenix
alphus
alps
alum
aluminite
amadogade
amandola
amber
amianthoid
amianthus
amilot
amphisbena
anise
anomorhomboid
ant-eggs
antimony
apostolics
argent
argil
arsenious
asbestos
asparagin
atropia
attagen
auk
avosetta
awatcha
backgammon
badger
baikalite
balloon
banoy
barbel
barnacle
barracada
barystrontianite
basket-salt
basking-shark
bass
beet
behen
beken
benzoic
bergmanite
bernardins
besnowed
bezan
biarmian
bib
bicauda
bind-weed
birch
bismuth
black
blanch
blanched
blancher
blanching
blank
blanket
blaze
bleach
bleached
bleacher
bleaching
bleak
blink
blood
blossom
bole
bone
bonito
booby
borax
botryolite
braul
breaker
brocatello
bryony
bucholzite
butter
butternut
buzzard
cabbage-tree
cabure
cacao
cachinnation
cadmium
calamus
calangay
calico
calp
camaieu
camayeu
cambric
camelopard
cameo
canary-bird
candent
candicant
candid
canescent
cannequin
cargoose
carnelian
cats-eye
cawk
celestins
cerium
ceruse
cerused
chabasite
chalcedony
chalcedonyx
chalk
chalk-stone
chard
charlock
cherry
chian
chick-weed
christmas-rose
chrome
chub
chyle
cimolite
cinnamon
cipolin
clarifier
clay
clayed
cleavelandite
cloud
clout
clove
clover-grass
cobalt
cocoa
coffee
cofferer
cold-finch
collyrite
color
comb
concrete
copperas
coral
cornflag
cosmetic
cotton-plant
cotton-shrub
cowl
cream-faced
cross-stone
cryolite
crystaline
cuckoo-spit
currant
cypress
daffodil
damask-rose
dark
darken
darkening
darnel
datolite
dealbate
dealbation
delf
diadem
dimity
diopside
dirty
dissyllable
distemper
dittany
domite
dragonet
dusk
dusty
eagle
edematous
efflorescence
efflorescent
effusion
egg
egret
elaolite
elephantine
emblem
emblematical
emergency
ermine
etiolate
etiolated
etiolating
etiolation
euclase
eurite
europe
excandescence
excandescent
fair
fairness
farina
feel
feverfew
fibrolite
fillet
flake
flake-white
flecker
fleece
flux
frankincense
french
friar
frosted
frosty
frounce
galaxy
galbanum
galipot
gavilan
gelatin
gibbsite
ginseng
girasol
glair
glareous
glauberite
glow
glowing
glucin
godwit
goshawk
grampus
gray
green
gridelin
grizzle
ground
guava
guhr
guinea-hen
guinea-pig
gulaund
gum
gum-resin
gurhofite
halo
hartshorn
hatchetine
hawthorn
heart-pea
heat
hellebore
hermodactyl
hoar
hoar-frost
hoariness
hoary
hyalite
hyperborean
incandescence
incandescent
indianite
influence
inodorous
ipecacuanha
ish
ivory
jargon
jasmine
jonquil
kaolin
keffekil
ken
kindle
knack
knebelite
kollyrite
koupholite
kyanite
lactary
lactescence
lactescent
lactiferous
last
lead
leprosy
leprous
leucine
leucite
leuco-ethiopic
leucophlegmacy
leucophlegmatic
leucothiop
leuthrite
ligament
light
lightsome
lilac
lily-handed
lily-livered
linen
livered
lupine
lynx
madrepore
magnesite
mail
mangaby
manganese
mangrove
mantle
marble
margarite
marline
mastich
masticot
matrix
may-dew
mechoacan
meconium
meionite
melt
membrane
meniver
mesoleucys
miemite
milk
milkwhite
miller
moonstone
moralize
morgray
moroxylic
mosk
mountain
mulatto
mussite
nacrite
naker
needle-zeolite
nephelin
nepheline
nickel
niter
nun
oak
oakum
oculist
olibanum
ophite
opium
opopanax
pair
pale
paleness
paper-faced
parcel
pearl
pearl-sinter
pec-cary
pepper
perigraph
petalite
petong
pharmacolite
physalite
pine
pinite
pitch
pity
plight
poley
polverine
pompholyx
poplar
poppy
porcelain
predicable
predicate
premonstrants
primrose
proposition
ptarmigan
pumice
purfle
pus
pyrolithic
quachilto
quadroon
quality
quartz
quick-match
raspberry
recreate
red
rent
rhetizite
rhodonite
rhomb-spar
roan
rochet
rock-crystal
rose
rose-quartz
rubellite
rubican
rudder
sand
sandarach
sanders
sanies
sapphire
saussurite
scale-stone
scarcity
schelium
scillitin
sclerotic
sea-bear
severite
shade
shalstone
shed
sheldrake
shorl
shorlite
sight
silcia
silex
silk
silver
silver-fish
silvered
silvering
silvery
sinter
snow
snow-drop
snow-white
snowy
soapstone
sodium
somewhiter
spanish-white
spattling-poppy
sperm
spoon-bill
spot
staurolite
staurotide
steatite
stellite
stilbite
stoat
streak
strontian
strychnia
subject
successively
suckling
surplice
suslik
swan
swedish-turnep
sydneian
tabular
tafelspath
talc
tartar
taw
tawed
tawer
tawing
tellurium
temper
thinness
thorn
thred
thrustings
tiger-shell
timber
tin
tingent
titanium
tokay
tombac
tragacanth
trammeled
transition
travestin
treddle
triumph
trout-colored
tumbler
tung
tungsten
turban
turn
tutenag
ultramarine
unprinted
vari
variegate
variegated
vellum
venus
veratria
verger
vermilion
vex
visible
vitellary
vitriol
vulpinite
wafer
wall-eyed
wallerite
wear
weeper
wernerite
wheat
wheat-ear
white
white-bait
white-beam
white-bear
white-blaze
white-brant
white-bug
white-campion
white-caterpillar
white-centaury
white-clover
white-crop
white-darnel
white-ear
white-face
white-film
white-foot
white-honeysuckle
white-horse-fish
white-land
white-lead
white-limed
white-line
white-livered
white-manganese
white-meat
white-poplar
white-poppy
white-pot
white-precipitate
white-pyrite
white-pyrites
white-rent
white-salt
white-swelling
white-tail
white-thorn
white-throat
white-vitriol
white-washer
white-water
white-wax
white-wine
whited
whitely
whiten
whitened
whitener
whiteness
whites
whitester
whitestone
whitewash
whitewashed
whitewashing
whitewood
whiting
whitish
whitishness
whitleather
whitlether
whitster
whitsuntide
whittle
whity-brown
widgeon
willow
wit-fish
witherite
wolf
wood-layer
wrinkle
yaw
yellow
yolk
yttria
zink
zirconia
zoisite



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
W  ›  white
W  ›  white
1828 Definition

WHITE, a. [G.]

1. Being in the color of pure snow; snowy; not dark; as white paper; a white skin.

2. Pale; destitute of color in the cheeks, or of the tinge of blood color; as white with fear.

3. Having the color of purity; pure; clean; free from spot; as white robed innocence.

4. Gray; as white hair; a venerable man, white with age.

5. Pure; unblemished.

No whiter page than Addisons remains.

6. In a scriptural sense, purified from sin; sanctified. Psalm 51.
1913 Definition
White (white)
a.(?)
White
[Compar. Whiter (?); superl. Whitest.] [OE. whit, AS. hw(?)t; akin to OFries. and OS. hw***imacr]t, D. wit, G. weiss, OHG. w***imacr]z, hw[uCod
  1. Reflecting to the eye all the rays of the spectrum combined; not tinted with any of the proper colors or their mixtures; having the color of pure snow; snowy; -- the opposite of black or dark; as, white paper; a white skin.
    "Pearls white." Chaucer.

    White as the whitest lily on a stream. Longfellow.

  2. Destitute of color, as in the cheeks, or of the tinge of blood color; pale; pallid; as, white with fear.

    Or whispering with white lips, "The foe!
    They come! they come!"
    Byron.

  3. Having the color of purity; free from spot or blemish, or from guilt or pollution; innocent; pure.

    White as thy fame, and as thy honor clear. Dryden.

    No whiter page than Addison's remains. Pope.

  4. Gray, as from age; having silvery hair; hoary.

    Your high engendered battles 'gainst a head
    So old and white as this.
    Shak.

  5. Characterized by freedom from that which disturbs, and the like; fortunate; happy; favorable.

    On the whole, however, the dominie reckoned this as one of the white days of his life. Sir W. Scott.

  6. Regarded with especial favor; favorite; darling.

    Come forth, my white spouse. Chaucer.

    I am his white boy, and will not be gullet. Ford.

    * White is used in many self-explaining compounds, as white-backed, white-bearded, white-footed.

    White alder. (Bot.) See Sweet pepper bush, under Pepper. -- White ant (Zoöl.), any one of numerous species of social pseudoneuropterous insects of the genus Termes. These insects are very abundant in tropical countries, and form large and complex communities consisting of numerous asexual workers of one or more kinds, of large- headed asexual individuals called soldiers, of one or more queens (or fertile females) often having the body enormously distended by the eggs, and, at certain seasons of numerous winged males, together with the larvæ and pupæ of each kind in various stages of development. Many of the species construct large and complicated nests, sometimes in the form of domelike structures rising several feet above the ground and connected with extensive subterranean galleries and chambers. In their social habits they closely resemble the true ants. They feed upon animal and vegetable substances of various kinds, including timber, and are often very destructive to buildings and furniture. -- White arsenic (Chem.), arsenious oxide, As2O3, a substance of a white color, and vitreous adamantine luster, having an astringent, sweetish taste. It is a deadly poison. -- White bass (Zoöl.), a fresh-water North American bass (Roccus chrysops) found in the Great Likes. -- White bear (Zoöl.), the polar bear. See under Polar. -- White blood cell. (Physiol.) See Leucocyte. -- White brand (Zoöl.), the snow goose. -- White brass, a white alloy of copper; white copper. -- White campion. (Bot.) (a) A kind of catchfly (Silene stellata) with white flowers. (b) A white-flowered Lychnis (Lychnis vespertina). -- White canon (R. C. Ch.), a Premonstratensian. -- White caps, the members of a secret organization in various of the United States, who attempt to drive away or reform obnoxious persons by lynch-law methods. They appear masked in white. -- White cedar (Bot.), an evergreen tree of North America (Thuja occidentalis), also the related Cupressus thyoides, or Chamæcyparis sphæroidea, a slender evergreen conifer which grows in the so-called cedar swamps of the Northern and Atlantic States. Both are much valued for their durable timber. In California the name is given to the Libocedrus decurrens, the timber of which is also useful, though often subject to dry rot. Goodale. The white cedar of Demerara, Guiana, etc., is a lofty tree (Icica, or Bursera, altissima) whose fragrant wood is used for canoes and cabinetwork, as it is not attacked by insect. -- White cell. (Physiol.) See Leucocyte. -- White cell- blood (Med.), leucocythæmia. -- White clover (Bot.), a species of small perennial clover bearing white flowers. It furnishes excellent food for cattle and horses, as well as for the honeybee. See also under Clover. -- White copper, a whitish alloy of copper. See German silver, under German. -- White copperas (Min.), a native hydrous sulphate of iron; coquimbite. -- White coral (Zoöl.), an ornamental branched coral (Amphihelia oculata) native of the Mediterranean. -- White corpuscle. (Physiol.) See Leucocyte. -- White cricket (Zoöl.), the tree cricket. -- White crop, a crop of grain which loses its green color, or becomes white, in ripening, as wheat, rye, barley, and oats, as distinguished from a green crop, or a root crop. -- White currant (Bot.), a variety of the common red currant, having white berries. -- White daisy (Bot.), the oxeye daisy. See under Daisy. -- White damp, a kind of poisonous gas encountered in coal mines. Raymond. -- White elephant (Zoöl.), a whitish, or albino, variety of the Asiatic elephant. -- White elm (Bot.), a majestic tree of North America (Ulmus Americana), the timber of which is much used for hubs of wheels, and for other purposes. -- White ensign. See Saint George's ensign, under Saint. -- White feather, a mark or symbol of cowardice. See To show the white feather, under Feather, n. -- White fir (Bot.), a name given to several coniferous trees of the Pacific States, as Abies grandis, and A. concolor. -- White flesher (Zoöl.), the ruffed grouse. See under Ruffed. [Canada] -- White frost. See Hoarfrost. -- White game (Zoöl.), the white ptarmigan. -- White garnet (Min.), leucite. -- White grass (Bot.), an American grass (Leersia Virginica) with greenish-white paleæ. -- White grouse. (Zoöl.) (a) The white ptarmigan. (b) The prairie chicken. [Local, U. S.] -- White grub (Zoöl.), the larva of the June bug and other allied species. These grubs eat the roots of grasses and other plants, and often do much damage. -- White hake (Zoöl.), the squirrel hake. See under Squirrel. -- White hawk, or kite (Zoöl.), the hen harrier. -- White heat, the temperature at which bodies become incandescent, and appear white from the bright light which they emit. -- White hellebore (Bot.), a plant of the genus Veratrum (V. album) See Hellebore, 2. -- White herring, a fresh, or unsmoked, herring, as distinguished from a red, or cured, herring. [R.] Shak. -- White hoolet (Zoöl.), the barn owl. [Prov. Eng.] -- White horses (Naut.), white-topped waves; whitecaps. -- The White House. See under House. -- White ibis (Zoöl.), an American ibis (Guara alba) having the plumage pure white, except the tips of the wings, which are black. It inhabits tropical America and the Southern United States. Called also Spanish curlew. -- White iron. (a) Thin sheets of iron coated with tin; tinned iron. (b) A hard, silvery-white cast iron containing a large proportion of combined carbon. -- White iron pyrites (Min.), marcasite. -- White land, a tough clayey soil, of a whitish hue when dry, but blackish after rain. [Eng.] -- White lark (Zoöl.), the snow bunting. -- White lead. (a) A carbonate of lead much used in painting, and for other purposes; ceruse. (b) (Min.) Native lead carbonate; cerusite. -- White leather, buff leather; leather tanned with alum and salt. -- White leg (Med.), milk leg. See under Milk. -- White lettuce (Bot.), rattlesnake root. See under Rattlesnake. -- White lie. See under Lie. -- White light. (a) (Physics) Light having the different colors in the same proportion as in the light coming directly from the sun, without having been decomposed, as by passing through a prism. See the Note under Color, n., 1. (b) A kind of firework which gives a brilliant white illumination for signals, etc. -- White lime, a solution or preparation of lime for whitewashing; whitewash. -- White line (Print.), a void space of the breadth of a line, on a printed page; a blank line. -- White meat. (a) Any light-colored flesh, especially of poultry. (b) Food made from milk or eggs, as butter, cheese, etc.

    Driving their cattle continually with them, and feeding only upon their milk and white meats. Spenser.

    -- White merganser (Zoöl.), the smew. -- White metal. (a) Any one of several white alloys, as pewter, britannia, etc. (b) (Metal.) A fine grade of copper sulphide obtained at a certain stage in copper smelting. -- White miller. (Zoöl.) (a) The common clothes moth. (b) A common American bombycid moth (Spilosoma Virginica) which is pure white with a few small black spots; -- called also ermine moth, and virgin moth. See Woolly bear, under Woolly. -- White money, silver money. -- White mouse (Zoöl.), the albino variety of the common mouse. -- White mullet (Zoöl.), a silvery mullet (Mugil curema) ranging from the coast of the United States to Brazil; -- called also blue-back mullet, and liza. -- White nun (Zoöl.), the smew; -- so called from the white crest and the band of black feathers on the back of its head, which give the appearance of a hood. -- White oak. (Bot.) See under Oak. -- White owl. (Zoöl.) (a) The snowy owl. (b) The barn owl. -- White partridge (Zoöl.), the white ptarmigan. -- White perch. (Zoöl.) (a) A North American fresh-water bass (Morone Americana) valued as a food fish. (b) The croaker, or fresh-water drum. (c) Any California surf fish. -- White pine. (Bot.) See the Note under Pine. -- White poplar (Bot.), a European tree (Populus alba) often cultivated as a shade tree in America; abele. -- White poppy (Bot.), the opium-yielding poppy. See Poppy. -- White powder, a kind of gunpowder formerly believed to exist, and to have the power of exploding without noise. [Obs.]

    A pistol charged with white powder. Beau. *** Fl.

    -- White precipitate. (Old Chem.) See under Precipitate. -- White rabbit. (Zoö]l.) (a) The American northern hare in its winter pelage. (b) An albino rabbit. -- White rent, (a) (Eng. Law) Formerly, rent payable in silver; -- opposed to black rent. See Blackmail, n., 3. (b) A rent, or duty, of eight pence, payable yearly by every tinner in Devon and Cornwall to the Duke of Cornwall, as lord of the soil. [Prov. Eng.] -- White rhinoceros. (Zoöl.) (a) The one-horned, or Indian, rhinoceros (Rhinoceros Indicus). See Rhinoceros. (b) The umhofo. -- White ribbon, the distinctive badge of certain organizations for the promotion of temperance or of moral purity; as, the White-ribbon Army. -- White rope (Naut.), untarred hemp rope. -- White rot. (Bot.) (a) Either of several plants, as marsh pennywort and butterwort, which were thought to produce the disease called rot in sheep. (b) A disease of grapes. See White rot, under Rot. -- White sage (Bot.), a white, woolly undershrub (Eurotia lanata) of Western North America; -- called also winter fat. -- White salmon (Zoöl.), the silver salmon. -- White salt, salt dried and calcined; decrepitated salt. -- White scale (Zoöl.), a scale insect (Aspidiotus Nerii) injurious to the orange tree. See Orange scale, under Orange. -- White shark (Zoöl.), a species of man- eating shark. See under Shark. -- White softening. (Med.) See Softening of the brain, under Softening. -- White spruce. (Bot.) See Spruce, n., 1. -- White squall (Naut.), a sudden gust of wind, or furious blow, which comes up without being marked in its approach otherwise than by whitecaps, or white, broken water, on the surface of the sea. -- White staff, the badge of the lord high treasurer of England. Macaulay. -- White stork (Zoöl.), the common European stork. -- White sturgeon. (Zoöl.) See Shovelnose (d). -- White sucker. (Zoöl.) (a) The common sucker. (b) The common red horse (Moxostoma macrolepidotum). -- White swelling (Med.), a chronic swelling of the knee, produced by a strumous inflammation of the synovial membranes of the kneejoint and of the cancellar texture of the end of the bone forming the kneejoint; -- applied also to a lingering chronic swelling of almost any kind. -- White tombac. See Tombac. -- White trout (Zoöl.), the white weakfish, or silver squeteague (Cynoscion nothus), of the Southern United States. -- White vitriol (Chem.), hydrous sulphate of zinc. See White vitriol, under Vitriol. -- White wagtail (Zoöl.), the common, or pied, wagtail. -- White wax, beeswax rendered white by bleaching. -- White whale (Zoöl.), the beluga. -- White widgeon (Zoöl.), the smew. -- White wine. any wine of a clear, transparent color, bordering on white, as Madeira, sherry, Lisbon, etc.; -- distinguished from wines of a deep red color, as port and Burgundy. "White wine of Lepe." Chaucer. -- White witch, a witch or wizard whose supernatural powers are supposed to be exercised for good and beneficent purposes. Addison. Cotton Mather. -- White wolf. (Zoöl.) (a) A light-colored wolf (Canis laniger) native of Thibet; -- called also chanco, golden wolf, and Thibetan wolf. (b) The albino variety of the gray wolf. -- White wren (Zoöl.), the willow warbler; - - so called from the color of the under parts.

  7. The color of pure snow; one of the natural colors of bodies, yet not strictly a color, but a composition of all colors; the opposite of black; whiteness. See the Note under Color, n., 1.

    Finely attired in a of white. Shak.

  8. Something having the color of snow; something white, or nearly so; as, the white of the eye.
  9. Specifically, the central part of the butt in archery, which was formerly painted white; the center of a mark at which a missile is shot.

    'T was I won the wager, though you hit the white. Shak.

  10. A person with a white skin; a member of the white, or Caucasian, races of men.
  11. A white pigment; as, Venice white.
  12. Any one of numerous species of butterflies belonging to Pieris, and allied genera in which the color is usually white. See Cabbage butterfly, under Cabbage.

    Black and white. See under Black. -- Flake white, Paris white, etc. See under Flack, Paris, etc. -- White of a seed (Bot.), the albumen. See Albumen, 2. -- White of egg, the viscous pellucid fluid which surrounds the yolk in an egg, particularly in the egg of a fowl. In a hen's egg it is alkaline, and contains about 86 per cent of water and 14 per cent of solid matter, the greater portion of which is egg albumin. It likewise contains a small amount of globulin, and traces of fats and sugar, with some inorganic matter. Heated above 60° C. it coagulates to a solid mass, owing to the albumin which it contains. Parr. -- White of the eye (Anat.), the white part of the ball of the eye surrounding the transparent cornea.

  13. To make white; to whiten; to whitewash; to bleach.

    Whited sepulchers, which indeed appear beautiful outward, but are within full of . . . uncleanness. Matt. xxiii. 27.

    So as no fuller on earth can white them. Mark. ix. 3.


1828 dictionary
Noah Says...
God's Word, contained in the Bible, has furnished all necessary rules to direct our conduct.
  




The McGuire Center for Entrepreneurship's instructional and and intrview videos offer insight to the entreprenurial businessperson




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