1. Aim at a certain point; a pointing towards, in a straight line or course; as, the direction of good works to a good end. NWAD DIRECTION.2
2. The line in which a body moves by impulse; course. Matter or body cannot alter the direction of its own motion. NWAD DIRECTION.3
3. A straight line or course. A star appeared int eh direction of a certain tower. The ship sailed in a south-easterly direction. NWAD DIRECTION.4
4. The act of governing; administration; management; guidance; superintendence; as the direction of public affairs; direction of domestic concerns; the direction of a bank. NWAD DIRECTION.5
5. Regularity; adjustment. NWAD DIRECTION.6
All chance, direction which thou canst not see. NWAD DIRECTION.7
6. Order; prescription; either verbal or written; instruction in what manner to proceed. The employer gives directions to his workmen; the physician, to his patient. NWAD DIRECTION.8
7. The superscription of a letter, including the name, title and place of abode of the person for whom it is intended. NWAD DIRECTION.9
8. A body or board of directors. NWAD DIRECTION.10
1. Having the power of direction; as a directive rule. NWAD DIRECTIVE.2
2. Informing; instructing; shewing way. NWAD DIRECTIVE.3
1. In a straight lin or course; rectilineally; not in a winding course. Aim directly to the object. Gravity tends directly to the center of the earth. NWAD DIRECTLY.2
2. Immediately; soon; without delay; as, he will be with us directly. NWAD DIRECTLY.3
3. Openly; expressly, without circumlocution or ambiguity, or without a train or inferences. NWAD DIRECTLY.4
No man hath been so impious, as directly to condemn prayer. NWAD DIRECTLY.5
1. One who directs; one who superintends, governs or manages; one who prescribes to others, by virtue of authority; an instructor; a counselor. NWAD DIRECTOR.2
2. That which directs; a rule; an ordinance. NWAD DIRECTOR.3
3. One appointed to transact the affairs of a company; as the director of a bank, or of the India Company. NWAD DIRECTOR.4
4. That which directs or controls by influence. NWAD DIRECTOR.5
Safety from external danger is the most powerful director of national conduct. NWAD DIRECTOR.6
5. In surgery, a grooved probe, intended to direct the edge of the knife or scissors in opening sinuses or fistulae; a guide for and incision-knife. NWAD DIRECTOR.7
1. A guide; a rule to direct; particularly, a book containing directions for public worship, or religious services. The Bible is our best directory, in faith and practice. NWAD DIRECTORY.3
2. A book containing an alphabetical list of the inhabitants of a city, with their places of abode. NWAD DIRECTORY.4
3. The supreme council of France, in the late revolution. NWAD DIRECTORY.5
4. A board of directors. NWAD DIRECTORY.6
1. To darken. NWAD DIRK.4
2. To poniard; to stab. NWAD DIRK.5
1. Any foul or filthy substance; excrement; earth; mud; mire; dust; whatever adhering to any thing, renders it foul or unclean. NWAD DIRT.2
The fat closed, and the dirt came out. Judges 3:22. NWAD DIRT.3
Whose waters cast up mire and dirt. Isaiah 57:20. NWAD DIRT.4
2. Meanness; sordidness. [Not in use.] NWAD DIRT.5
1. In a dirty manner; foully; nastily; filthily. NWAD DIRTILY.2
2. Meanly; sordidly; by low means. NWAD DIRTILY.3
1. Filthiness; foulness; nastiness. NWAD DIRTINESS.2
2. Meanness; baseness; sordidness. NWAD DIRTINESS.3
1. Foul; nasty; filthy; not clean; as dirty hands. NWAD DIRTY.2
2. Not clean; not pure; turbid; as dirty water. NWAD DIRTY.3
3. Cloudy; dark; dusky; as a dirty white. NWAD DIRTY.4
4. Mean; base; low; despicable; groveling; as a dirty fellow; a dirty employment. NWAD DIRTY.5
1. To foul; to make filthy; to soil; as, to dirty the clothes or hands. NWAD DIRTY.7
2. To tarnish; to sully; to scandalize; applied to reputation. NWAD DIRTY.8
1. Want of competent natural or bodily power, strength or ability; weakness; impotence; as disability arising from infirmity or broken limbs. NWAD DISABILITY.2
2. Want of competent intellectual power or strength of mind; incapacity; as the disability of a deranged person to reason or to make contracts. NWAD DISABILITY.3
3. Want of competent means or instruments. [In this sense, inability is generally used.] NWAD DISABILITY.4
4. Want of legal qualifications; incapacity; as a disability to inherit an estate, when the ancestor has been attainted. [In this sense, it has a plural.] NWAD DISABILITY.5
Disability differs from inability, in denoting deprivation of ability; whereas inability denotes destitution of ability, either by deprivation or otherwise. NWAD DISABILITY.6
1. To render unable; to deprive of competent natural strength or power. A man is disabled to walk by a broken or paralytic leg, by sickness, etc. NWAD DISABLE.2
2. To deprive of mental power, as by destroying or weakening the understanding. NWAD DISABLE.3
3. To deprive of adequate means, instruments or resources. A nation may be disabled to carry on war by want of money. The loss of a ship may disable a man to prosecute commerce, or to pay his debts. NWAD DISABLE.4
4. To destroy the strength; or to weaken and impair so as to render incapable of action, service or resistance. A fleet is disabled by a storm, or by a battle. A ship is disabled by the loss of her masts or spars. NWAD DISABLE.5
5. To destroy or impair and weaken the means which render any thing active, efficacious or useful; to destroy or diminish any competent means. NWAD DISABLE.6
6. To deprive of legal qualifications, or competent power; to incapacitate; to render incapable. NWAD DISABLE.7
An attainder of the ancestor corrupts the blood and disables his children to inherit. NWAD DISABLE.8
If men are now sufficiently enlightened to disabuse themselves of artifice, hypocrisy and superstition, they will consider this event as an era in their history. NWAD DISABUSE.2
1. That which prevents success, or renders it difficult; a state not favorable to successful operation. The army commenced an attack on the enemy, notwithstanding the disadvantage of its position. NWAD DISADVANTAGE.2
2. Any unfavorable state; a state in which some loss or injury may be sustained. Hence, NWAD DISADVANTAGE.3
3. Loss; injury; prejudice to interest, fame, credit, profit, or other good; as, to sell goods to disadvantage. NWAD DISADVANTAGE.4
1. To alienate affection; to make less friendly to; to make less faithful to a person, party or cause, or less zealous to support it; to make discontented or unfriendly; as, an attempt was made to disaffect the army. NWAD DISAFFECT.2
2. To disdain, or dislike. NWAD DISAFFECT.3
3. To throw into disorder. NWAD DISAFFECT.4
1. Alienation of affection, attachment or good will; want of affection; or more generally, positive enmity, dislike or unfriendliness; disloyalty. It generally signifies more than indifference; as the disaffection of people to their prince or government; the disaffection of allies; disaffection to religion. NWAD DISAFFECTION.2
2. Disorder; bad constitution; in a physical sense. [Little used.] NWAD DISAFFECTION.3
1. To deny; to contradict. NWAD DISAFFIRM.2
2. To overthrow or annul, as a judicial decision, by a contrary judgment of a superior tribunal. NWAD DISAFFIRM.3
1. Denial; negation; disproof; confutation. NWAD DISAFFIRMANCE.2
2. Overthrow or annulment, by the decision of a superior tribunal; as disaffirmance of judgment. NWAD DISAFFIRMANCE.3
By Charter 9. Hen. III many forests were disafforested. NWAD DISAFFOREST.2
1. To differ; to be not accordant or coincident; to be not the same; to be not exactly similar. Two ideas disagree, when they are not the same, or when they are not exactly alike. The histories of th same fact often disagree. NWAD DISAGREE.2
2. To differ, as in opinion; as, the best judges sometimes disagree. NWAD DISAGREE.3
Who shall decide when doctors disagree? NWAD DISAGREE.4
3. To be unsuitable. Medicine sometimes disagrees with the patient; food often disagrees with the stomach or the taste. NWAD DISAGREE.5
4. To differ; to be in opposition. NWAD DISAGREE.6
Men often reject the plainest sense of scripture, because it disagrees with their reason or preconceived opinions. NWAD DISAGREE.7
It is usually followed by with. But we say, I disagree to your proposal. The use of from after disagree is not common. NWAD DISAGREE.8
1. Contrary; unsuitable; not conformable; not congruous. [Little used.] NWAD DISAGREEABLE.2
This conduct was disagreeable to her natural sincerity. NWAD DISAGREEABLE.3
2. Unpleasing; offensive to the mind, or to the sense; but expressing less than disgusting and odious. Behavior may be disagreeable to our minds; food may be disagreeable to the taste; many things are disagreeable to the sight; sounds may be disagreeable to the ear, and odors to the smell. Whatever is disagreeable gives some pain or uneasiness. NWAD DISAGREEABLE.4
1. Unsuitableness; contrariety. NWAD DISAGREEABLENESS.2
2. Unpleasantness; offensiveness to the mind, or to the senses; as the disagreeableness of anothers manners; the disagreeableness of a taste, sound or smell. NWAD DISAGREEABLENESS.3
1. Difference, either in form or essence; dissimilitude; diversity; as the disagreement of two ideas, of two pictures, of two stories or narrations. NWAD DISAGREEMENT.2
2. Difference of opinion or sentiments. NWAD DISAGREEMENT.3
3. Unsuitableness. NWAD DISAGREEMENT.4
2. To testify dislike or disapprobation; to refuse assent. NWAD DISALLOW.2
But if her father shall disallow her int he day that he heareth, not nay of her vows or her bonds--shall stand. Numbers 30:5. NWAD DISALLOW.3
3. Not to approve; not to receive; to reject. NWAD DISALLOW.4
To whom coming, as to a living stone, disallowed indeed of men, but chosen of God, and precious. 1 Peter 2:4. NWAD DISALLOW.5
4. Not to allow or admit as just; to reject; as, to disallow an account or charge. NWAD DISALLOW.6
1. To deprive of life. [Not used.] NWAD DISANIMATE.2
2. To deprive of spirit or courage; to discourage; to dishearten; to deject. NWAD DISANIMATE.3
1. The act of discouraging; depression of spirits. NWAD DISANIMATION.2
2. Privation of life. [Not used.] NWAD DISANIMATION.3
Wilt thou also disannul my judgment? Job 40:8; Galatians 3:15. NWAD DISANNUL.2
Disannual differs from repeal, as the genus from the species. A repeal makes a law void by the same power that enacted it. Annulment or disannulment destroys its force and authority by repeal or by other means. NWAD DISANNULMENT.2
1. To vanish from the sight; to recede from the view; to become invisible by vanishing or departing, or by being enveloped in any thing that conceals, or by the interposition of an object. Darkness disappears at the access of light, and light disappears at the approach of darkness. A ship disappears by departure to a distance; the sun disappears in a fog, or behind a cloud, or in setting. NWAD DISAPPEAR.2
2. To cease; as, the epidemic has disappeared. NWAD DISAPPEAR.3
3. To withdraw from observation. The debtor disappears when he absconds. NWAD DISAPPEAR.4
1. To defeat of expectation, wish, hope, desire or intention; to frustrate; to balk; to hinder from the possession or enjoyment of that which was intended, desired, hoped or expected. We say, a man is disappointed of his hopes or expectations, or his hopes, desires, intentions or expectations are disappointed. A bad season disappoints the farmer of his crops; a defeat disappoints an enemy of his spoil The man promised me a visit, by he disappointed me. NWAD DISAPPOINT.2
Without counsel purposes are disappointed. Proverbs 15:22. NWAD DISAPPOINT.3
2. To frustrate; to prevent an effect intended. NWAD DISAPPOINT.4
The retiring foe shrinks from the wound, and disappoints the blow. NWAD DISAPPOINT.5