Words
Definitions
Webster
KJV
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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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WRECK, n.
WRECK, v.t.
WRECK, v.i. To suffer wreck or ruin.
See 2d & 3d
Wreak.
The destruction or injury of a vessel by being
cast on shore, or on rocks, or by being disabled or sunk by the force of
winds or waves; shipwreck.
Hard and obstinate Destruction or injury of anything, especially by
violence; ruin; as, the wreck of a railroad train.
The wreck of matter and the crush of worlds. Addison. Its intellectual life was thus able to go on amidst the wreck of its political life. J. R. Green. The ruins of a ship stranded; a ship dashed
against rocks or land, and broken, or otherwise rendered useless, by
violence and fracture; as, they burned the wreck.
The remain of anything ruined or fatally
injured.
To the fair haven of my native home, Goods, etc., which, after a
shipwreck, are cast upon the land by the sea.
Bouvier. To destroy, disable, or seriously damage, as a
vessel, by driving it against the shore or on rocks, by causing it to
become unseaworthy, to founder, or the like] to shipwreck.
Supposing that they saw the king's ship wrecked. Shak. To bring wreck or ruin upon by any kind of
violence; to destroy, as a railroad train.
To involve in a wreck; hence, to cause to suffer
ruin; to balk of success, and bring disaster on.
Weak and envied, if they should conspire, To
suffer wreck or ruin.
Milton. To work upon a wreck, as in saving property or
lives, or in plundering.
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