1. A body of stagnant water without an outlet, larger than a puddle, and smaller than a lake; or a like body of water with a small outlet. In the United States, we give this name to collections of water in the interior country, which are fed by springs, and from which issues a small stream. These ponds are often a mile or two or even more in length, and the current issuing from them is used to drive the wheels of mills and furnaces. NWAD POND.2
2. A collection of water raised in a river by a dam, for the purpose of propelling mill-wheels. These artificial ponds are called mill-ponds. NWAD POND.3
Pond for fist. [See Fish-pond.] NWAD POND.4
1. To weigh in the mind; to consider and compare the circumstances or consequences of an event, or the importance of the reasons for or against a decision. NWAD PONDER.2
Mary kept all these things, and pondered them in her heart. Luke 2:19. NWAD PONDER.3
2. To view with deliberation; to examine. NWAD PONDER.4
Ponder the path of thy feet. Proverbs 4:26. NWAD PONDER.5
The Lord pondereth the hearts. Proverbs 21:2. NWAD PONDER.6
To ponder on, is sometimes used, but is not be to countenanced. NWAD PONDER.7
1. Very heavy; weighty; as a ponderous shield; a ponderous load. NWAD PONDEROUS.2
2. Important; momentous; as a ponderous project. [This application of the word is unusual.] NWAD PONDEROUS.3
3. Forcible; strongly impulsive; as a motion vehement or ponderous; a ponderous blow. NWAD PONDEROUS.4
Ponderous spar, heavy spar, or baryte. NWAD PONDEROUS.5
Western; as the ponent winds. [Little used.] NWAD PONENT.2
The name pongo was applied by Buffon to a large species of orang outang, which is now ascertained to have been an imaginary animal. It is applied by Cuvier to the largest species of ape known, which inhabits Borneo, and resembles the true orang outang in its general form and erect position, but has the cheek pouches and lengthened muzzle of the baboon. It has also been applied [Ed. Encyc.] to the Simia troglodytes or chimpanzee of Curvier, a native of W. Africa. NWAD PONGO.2
A duty paid for repairing bridges. NWAD PONTAGE.2
Pertaining to the Pontus, Euxine, or Black Sea. NWAD PONTIC.2
1. Splendid; magnificent. NWAD PONTIFICAL.2
2. Bridge-building. [Not used.] NWAD PONTIFICAL.3
1. The dress and ornaments of a priest or bishop. NWAD PONTIFICAL.5
He turned hermit in the view of being advanced to the pontificate. NWAD PONTIFICATE.2
1. The reign of a pope. NWAD PONTIFICATE.3
Painting, sculpture and architecture may all recover themselves under the present pontificate. NWAD PONTIFICATE.4
1. A flat-bottomed boat, whose frame of wood is covered and lined with tin, or covered with copper; used in forming bridges over rivers for armies. NWAD PONTOON.2
2. A lighter; a low flat vessel resembling a barge, furnished with cranes, capstans and other machinery; used in careening ships, chiefly in the Mediterranean. NWAD PONTOON.3
Pontoon-bridge, is a bridge formed with pontoons, anchored or made fast in two lines, about five feet asunder. NWAD PONTOON.4
Pontoon-Carriage, is made with two wheels only, and two long side pieces, whose fore ends are supported by timbers. NWAD PONTOON.5
A small collection of water in a hollow place, supplied by a spring, and discharging its surplus water by an outlet. It is smaller than a lake, and in New England is never confounded with pond or lake. It signifies with us, a spring with a small basin or reservoir on the surface of the earth. It is used by writers with more latitude, and sometimes signifies a body of stagnant water. NWAD POOL.2
The highest and aftmost part of a ship’s desk. NWAD POOP.2
1. To strike the stern, as one vessel that runs her stem against another’s stern. NWAD POOP.4
1. Wholly destitute of property, or not having property sufficient for a comfortable subsistence; needy. It is often synonymous with indigent, and with necessitous, denoting extreme want; it is also applied to persons who are not entirely destitute of property, but are not rich; as a poor man or woman; poor people NWAD POOR.2
2. In law, so destitute of property as to be entitled to maintenance from the public. NWAD POOR.3
3. Destitute of strength, beauty or dignity; barren; mean; jejune; as a poor composition; a poor essay; a poor discourse. NWAD POOR.4
4. Destitute of value, worth or importance; of little use; trifling. NWAD POOR.5
That I have wronged no man, will be a poor plea or apology at the last day. NWAD POOR.6
5. Paltry; mean; of little value; as a poor coat; a poor house. NWAD POOR.7
6. Destitute of fertility; barren; exhausted; as poor land. The ground is become poor. NWAD POOR.8
7. Of little worth; unimportant; as in my poor opinion. NWAD POOR.9
8. Unhappy; pitiable. NWAD POOR.10
Vex’d sailors curse the rain NWAD POOR.11
For which poor shepherds pray’d in vain. NWAD POOR.12
9. Mean; depressed; low; dejected; destitute of spirit. NWAD POOR.13
A soothsayer made Antonius believe that his genius, which was otherwise brave, was, in the presence of Octavianus, poor and cowardly. NWAD POOR.14
10. Lean; emaciated; as a poor horse. The ox is poor. NWAD POOR.15
11. Small, or of a bad quality; as a poor crop; a poor harvest. NWAD POOR.16
12. Uncomfortable; restless; ill. The patient has had a poor night. NWAD POOR.17
13. Destitute of saving grace. Revelation 3:17. NWAD POOR.18
14. In general, wanting good qualities, or the qualities which render a thing valuable, excellent, proper, or sufficient for its purpose; as a poor pen; a poor ship; a poor carriage; poor fruit; poor bread; poor wine, etc. NWAD POOR.19
15. A word of tenderness or pity; dear. NWAD POOR.20
Poor, little, pretty, fluttering thing. NWAD POOR.21
16. A word of slight contempt; wretched. NWAD POOR.22
The poor monk never saw many of the decrees and councils he had occasion to use. NWAD POOR.23
17. The poor, collectively, used as a noun; those who are destitute of property; the indigent; the needy; in a legal sense, those who depend on charity or maintenance by the public. NWAD POOR.24
I have observed the more public provisions are made for the poor, the less they provide for themselves. NWAD POOR.25
Poor in spirit, in a Scriptural sense, humble; contrite; abased in one’s own sight by a sense of guilt. Matthew 5:3. NWAD POOR.26
1. With little or no success; with little growth, profit or advantage; as, wheat grows poorly on the Atlantic borders of New England; these men have succeeded poorly in business. NWAD POORLY.2
2. Meanly; without spirit. NWAD POORLY.3
Nor is their courage or their wealth so low, NWAD POORLY.4
That from his wars they poorly would retire. NWAD POORLY.5
3. Without excellence or dignity. He performs poorly in elevated characters. NWAD POORLY.6
For three or four weeks past I have lost ground, having been poorly in health. NWAD POORLY.8
No less I hate him than the gates of hell, NWAD POORNESS.2
That poorness can force an untruth to tell. NWAD POORNESS.3
[In this sense, we generally use poverty.] NWAD POORNESS.4
1. Meanness; lowness; want of dignity; as the poorness of language. NWAD POORNESS.5
2. Want of spirit; as poorness and degeneracy of spirit. NWAD POORNESS.6
3. Barrenness; sterility; as the poorness of land or soil. NWAD POORNESS.7
4. Unproductiveness; want of the metallic substance; as the poorness of ore. NWAD POORNESS.8
5. Smallness or bad quality; as the poorness of crops or of grain. NWAD POORNESS.9
6. Want of value or importance; as the poorness of a plea. NWAD POORNESS.10
7. Want of good qualities, or the proper qualities which constitute a thing good in its kind; as the poorness of a ship or of cloth. NWAD POORNESS.11
8. Narrowness; barrenness; want of capacity. NWAD POORNESS.12
Poorness of spirit, in a theological sense, true humility or contrition of heart on account of sin. NWAD POORNESS.13
I startled at his popping upon me unexpectedly. NWAD POP.3
1. To dart; to start from place to place suddenly. NWAD POP.4
He popp’d a paper into his hand. NWAD POP.6
Did’st thou never pop NWAD POP.7
Thy head into a tinman’s shop? NWAD POP.8
To pop off, to thrust away; to shift off. NWAD POP.9
1. The bishop of Rome, the head of the catholic church. NWAD POPE.2
2. A small fish, called also a ruff. NWAD POPE.3
1. The jurisdiction of the pope. NWAD POPEDOM.2
1. A parrot. NWAD POPINJAY.2
2. A woodpecker, a bird with a gay head. NWAD POPINJAY.3
The green woodpecker, with a scarlet crown, a native of Europe. NWAD POPINJAY.4
3. A gay, trifling young man; a fop or coxcomb. NWAD POPINJAY.5
Pertaining to the ham or knee joint. NWAD POPLITEAL.2
1. Pertaining to the common people; as the popular voice; popular elections. NWAD POPULAR.2
So the popular vote inclines. NWAD POPULAR.3
2. Suitable to common people; familiar; plain; easy to be comprehended; not critical or abstruse. NWAD POPULAR.4
Homilies are plain and popular instructions. NWAD POPULAR.5
3. Beloved by the people; enjoying the favor of the people; pleasing to people in general; as a popular governor; a popular preacher; a popular ministry; a popular discourse; a popular administration; a popular war or peace. Suspect the man who endeavors to make that popular which is wrong. NWAD POPULAR.6
4. Ambitious; studious of the favor of the people. NWAD POPULAR.7
A popular man is in truth no better than a prostitute to common fame and to the people. NWAD POPULAR.8
[This sense is not used. It is more customary to apply this epithet to a person who has already gained the favor of the people.] NWAD POPULAR.9
5. Prevailing among the people; extensively prevalent; as a popular disease. NWAD POPULAR.10
6. In law, a popular action is one which gives a penalty to the person that sues for the same. NWAD POPULAR.11
[Note. Popular, at least in the United States, is not synonymous with vulgar; the latter being applied to the lower classes of people, the illiterate and low bred; the former is applied to all classes, or to the body of the people, including a great portion at least of well educated citizens.] NWAD POPULAR.12
I have long since learned the little value which is to be placed in popularity, acquired by any other way than virtue; I have also learned that it is often obtained by other means. NWAD POPULARITY.2
The man whose ruling principle is duty--is never perplexed with anxious corroding calculations of interest and popularity. NWAD POPULARITY.3
1. Representation suited to vulgar or common conception; that which is intended or adapted to procure the favor of the people. [Little used.] NWAD POPULARITY.4
The victor knight, NWAD POPULARLY.2
Bareheadaed, popularly low had bow’d. NWAD POPULARLY.3
1. According to the conceptions of the common people. NWAD POPULARLY.4
When there be great shoals of people which go on to populate. NWAD POPULATE.2
1. The whole number of people or inhabitants in a country. The population of England is estimated at ten millions of souls; that of the United States in 1823, was ten millions. NWAD POPULATION.2
A country may have a great population, and yet not be populous. NWAD POPULATION.3
2. The state of a country with regard to its number of inhabitants, or rather with regard to its numbers compared with their expenses, consumption of goods and productions, and earnings. NWAD POPULATION.4
Neither is the population to be reckoned only by number; for a smaller number that spend more and earn less, do wear out an estate sooner than a greater number that live lower and gather more. NWAD POPULATION.5
By populousness, in contradistinction to population, is understood the proportion the number bears to the surface of the ground they live on. NWAD POPULOUSNESS.2
1. The finest species of earthen ware, originally manufactured in China and Japan, but now made in several European countries. All earthen wares which are white and semi-transparent, are called porcelains, but they differ much in their fineness and beauty. The porcelain of China is said to be made of two species of earth, the petuntse, which is fusible, and the kaolin, which is not fusible, or not with the degree of heat which fuses the petuntse, and that in porcelain the substances are only semi-vitrified, or one substance only is vitrified, the other not. Hence it is concluded that porcelain is an intermediate substance between earth and glass. Hence the second degree of fusibility, of which emollescence is the first, is called by Kirwan the porcelain state. NWAD PORCELAIN.2
2. The plant called purslain, which see. NWAD PORCELAIN.3
1. In architecture, a kind of vestibule supported by columns at the entrance of temples, halls, churches or other buildings. NWAD PORCH.2
2. A portico; a covered walk. NWAD PORCH.3
3. By way of distinction, the porch, was a public portico in Athens, where Zeno, the philosopher, taught his disciples. It was called the painted porch, from the pictures of Polygnotus and other eminent painters, with which it was adorned. Hence, the Porch is equivalent to the school of the Stoics. NWAD PORCH.4
Pertaining to swine; as the porcine species of animals. NWAD PORCINE.2
In zoology, a quadruped of the genus Hystrix. The crested porcupine has a body about two feet in length, four toes on each of the fore feet, and five on each of the hind feet, a crested head, a short tail, and the upper lip divided like that of the hare. The body is covered with prickles which are very sharp, and some of them nine or ten inches long; these he can erect at pleasure. When attacked, he rolls his body into a round form, in which position the prickles are presented in every direction to the enemy. This species is a native of Africa and Asia. NWAD PORCUPINE.2
1. In anatomy, a minute interstice in the skin of an animal, through which the perspirable matter passes to the surface or is excreted. NWAD PORE.2
2. A small spiracle, opening or passage in other substances; as the pores of plants or of stones. NWAD PORE.3
Painfully to pore upon a book. NWAD PORE.5
With sharpened sight pale antiquaries pore. NWAD PORE.6
The state of being pory or having numerous pores. NWAD PORINESS.2
In geometry, a name given by ancient geometers to two classes of propositions. Euclid gave this name to propositions involved in others which he was investigating, and obtained without a direct view to their discovery. These he called acquisitions, but such propositions are now called corollaries. A porism is defined, “a proposition affirming the possibility of finding such conditions as will render a certain problem indeterminate or capable of innumerable solutions.” It is not a theorem, nor a problem, or rather it includes both. It asserts that a certain problem may become indeterminate, and so far it partakes of the nature of a theorem, and in seeking to discover the conditions by which this may be effected, it partakes of the nature of a problem. NWAD PORISM.2