Walker and Webster combined in a dictionary of the English language

Front Cover

From inside the book

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 143 - An ambassador is a minister of the highest rank, employed by one prince or state at the court of another, to manage the concerns of his own prince or state, and representing the dignity and power of his sovereign.
Page 225 - In deduction we begin with a general truth, which is already proven or provisionally assumed and seek to connect it with some particular case by means of a middle term or class of objects known to be equally connected with both. Thus we bring down the general into the particular, affirming of the latter the distinctive qualities of the former. This is the syllogistic method. By induction, Franklin established the identity of lightning and electricity. By deduction he inferred that dwellings might...
Page 208 - Matt. 18: 2-4. NOTES. — Humility is "freedom from pride and arrogance; lowliness of mind; a modest estimate of one's own worth." It implies a sense of one's own unworthiness through imperfection and sinfulness, and consists in rating our claims low, in being willing to waive our rights, and to take a lower place than might be our due. It does not require that we underrate ourselves or our life-work. The humility of Christ was perfect, yet He had a true sense of the importance of His life and mission....
Page iv - Every other author may aspire to praise; the lexicographer can only hope to escape reproach, and even this negative recompense has been yet granted to very few.
Page 255 - To make even ; to reduce or bring to the same height with something else; to lay fiat to reduce to equality of condition; to point In taking aim. LEVEL, n. A plain; a flat surface; equal state; line of direction in which a weapon is aimed ; in mechanic*, an instrument for drawing horizontal lines; rule, plan or scheme. LEVEL-ER, n. One who levels or destroys distinctions.
Page 177 - Friction (frik'shun), in physics, the effect of rubbing, or the resistance which a moving body meets with from the surface on which it moves.
Page 142 - Hurl'd often cuts off the vowel at the end of a word, when the next word begins with a vowel...
Page 216 - In architecture, that part of a pillar in vaults and arches, on which the weight of the building rests...
Page viii - At the same time it must be confessed that when /, i, or n, follow the letter, we are apt,, even in London, to give a slight prolongation to the vowel, which would, in other cases, be quite rustic...
Page 348 - A precedent is something which comes down to us from the past with the sanction of usage and of common consent. We quote examples in literature and precedents in lav, PRfi€'E-DENT-ED (pres'e-dent-ed), a.

Bibliographic information