The rest--willing to fall to thrift; prove very good husbands. NWAD THRIFT.2
1. Prosperity; success and advance in the acquisition of property; increase of worldly goods; gain. NWAD THRIFT.3
I have a mind presages me such thrift. NWAD THRIFT.4
2. Vigorous growth, as of a plant. NWAD THRIFT.5
3. In botany, a plant of the genus Statice. NWAD THRIFT.6
1. With increase of worldly goods. NWAD THRIFTILY.2
1. Prosperity in business; increase of property. NWAD THRIFTINESS.2
I am glad he has so much youth and vigor left, of which he has not been thrifty. NWAD THRIFTY.2
1. More generally, thriving by industry and frugality; prosperous in the acquisition of worldly goods; increasing in wealth; as a thrifty farmer or mechanic. NWAD THRIFTY.3
2. Thriving; growing rapidly or vigorously; as a plant. NWAD THRIFTY.4
3. Well husbanded. NWAD THRIFTY.5
I have five hundred crowns, NWAD THRIFTY.6
The thrifty hire I sav’d under your father. NWAD THRIFTY.7
1. A warbling. [See Trill.] NWAD THRILL.2
2. A breathing place or hole. NWAD THRILL.3
1. To bore; to drill; to perforate by turning a gimblet or other similar instrument. [But in the literal sense, drill is now chiefly or wholly used. Spenser used it literally in the clause, “with thrilling point of iron brand.”] NWAD THRILL.5
2. To pierce; to penetrate; as something sharp. NWAD THRILL.6
The cruel word her tender heart so thrill’d, NWAD THRILL.7
That sudden cold did run through every vein NWAD THRILL.8
A servant that he bred, thrill’d with remorse. NWAD THRILL.9
A faint cold fear thrills through my veins. NWAD THRILL.11
1. To feel a sharp shivering sensation running through the body. NWAD THRILL.12
To seek sweet safety out NWAD THRILL.13
In vaults and prisons; and to thrill and shake-- NWAD THRILL.14
1. Piercing; penetrating; having the quality of penetrating; passing with a tingling, shivering sensation. NWAD THRILLING.2
2. Feeling a tingling, shivering sensation running through the system. NWAD THRILLING.3
1. To prosper by industry, economy and good management of property; to increase in goods and estate. A farmer thrives by good husbandry. When the body of laboring men thrive, we pronounce the state prosperous. NWAD THRIVE.2
Diligence and humility is the way to thrive in the riches of the understanding, as well as in gold. NWAD THRIVE.3
2. To prosper in any business; to have increase or success. NWAD THRIVE.4
O son, why sit we here, each other viewing NWAD THRIVE.5
Idly, while Satan our great author thrives? NWAD THRIVE.6
They by vices thrive. NWAD THRIVE.7
3. To grow; to increase in bulk or stature; to flourish. Young cattle thrive in rich pastures; and trees thrive in a good soil. NWAD THRIVE.8
4. To grow; to advance; to increase or advance in any thing valuable. NWAD THRIVE.9
1. a. Being prosperous or successful; advancing in wealth; increasing; growing; as a thriving mechanic; a thriving trader. NWAD THRIVING.2
1. The anterior part of the neck of an animal, in which are the gullet and windpipe, or the passages for the food and breath. NWAD THROAT.2
In medicine, the fauces; all that hollow or cavity which may be seen when the mouth is wide open. NWAD THROAT.3
2. In seamen’s language, that end of a gaff which is next the mast. NWAD THROAT.4
3. In ship-building, the inside of the knee-timber at the middle or turns of the arms; also, the inner part of the arms of an anchor where they join the shank; and the middle part of a floor-timber. NWAD THROAT.5
Throat-brails, brails attached to the gaff, close to the mast. NWAD THROAT.6
Throat-halliards, are those that raise the throat of the gaff. NWAD THROAT.7
My heart throbs to know one thing. NWAD THROB.2
We apply the word also the breast. NWAD THROB.3
Here may his head live on my throbbing breast. NWAD THROB.4
Thou talk’st like one who never felt NWAD THROB.6
Th’ impatient throbs and longings of a soul NWAD THROB.7
That pants and reaches after distant good. NWAD THROB.8
My throes came thicker, and my cries increas’d. NWAD THROE.2
1. A royal seat; a chair of state. The throne is sometimes an elegant chair richly ornamented with sculpture and gilding, raised a step above the floor, and covered with a canopy. NWAD THRONE.2
2. The seat of a bishop. NWAD THRONE.3
3. In Scripture, sovereign power and dignity. NWAD THRONE.4
Only in the throne will I be greater than thou. Genesis 41:40. NWAD THRONE.5
Thy throne, O God, is forever. Psalm 45:6. NWAD THRONE.6
4. Angels. Colossians 1:16. NWAD THRONE.7
5. The place where God peculiarly manifests his power and glory. NWAD THRONE.8
The heaven is my throne, and the earth my footstool. Isaiah 66:1. NWAD THRONE.9
1. To place in an elevated position; to give an elevated place to; to exalt. NWAD THRONE.11
True image of the Father, whether thron’d NWAD THRONE.12
In the bosom of bliss and light of light. NWAD THRONE.13
1. A crowd; a multitude of persons or of living beings pressing or pressed into a close body or assemblage; as a throng of people at a play-house. NWAD THRONG.2
2. A great multitude; as the heavenly throng. NWAD THRONG.3
I have seen NWAD THRONG.5
The dumb men throng to see him. NWAD THRONG.6
Much people followed him, and thronged him. Mark 5:24. NWAD THRONG.8
1. To breathe hard, as when nearly suffocated. NWAD THROTTLE.3
Throttle their practic’d accents in their fears. NWAD THROTTLE.5
1. From end to end, or from side to side; from one surface or limit to the opposite; as, to bore through a piece of timber, or through a board; a ball passes through the side of a ship. NWAD THROUGH.2
2. Noting passage; as, to pass through a gate or avenue. NWAD THROUGH.3
Through the gates of iv’ry he dismiss’d NWAD THROUGH.4
His valiant offspring. NWAD THROUGH.5
3. By transmission, noting the means of conveyance. NWAD THROUGH.6
Through these hands this science has passed with great applause. NWAD THROUGH.7
Material things are presented only through their senses. NWAD THROUGH.8
4. By means of; by the agency of; noting instrumentality. This signification is a derivative of the last. NWAD THROUGH.9
Through the scent of water it will bud. Job 14:9. NWAD THROUGH.10
Some through ambition, or through thirst of gold, NWAD THROUGH.11
Have slain their brothers, and their country sold. NWAD THROUGH.12
Sanctify them through thy truth. John 17:17. NWAD THROUGH.13
The gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord. Romans 6:23. NWAD THROUGH.14
5. Over the whole surface or extent; as, to ride through the country. NWAD THROUGH.15
Their tongue walketh through the earth. Psalm 73:9. NWAD THROUGH.16
6. Noting passage among or in the midst of; as, to move through water, as a fish; to run through a thicket, as a deer. NWAD THROUGH.17
1. From beginning to end; as, to read a letter through. NWAD THROUGH.19
2. To the end; to the ultimate purpose; as, to carry a project through. NWAD THROUGH.20
To carry through, to complete; to accomplish. NWAD THROUGH.21
To go through, to prosecute a scheme to the end. NWAD THROUGH.22
1. To undergo; to sustain; as, to go through hardships. NWAD THROUGH.23
1. Without reserve; sincerely. NWAD THROUGHLY.2
[For this, thoroughly is now used.] NWAD THROUGHLY.3
1. Properly, to hurl; to whirl; to fling or cast in a winding direction. NWAD THROW.2
2. To fling or cast in any manner; to propel; to send; to drive to a distance from the hand or from an engine. Thus we throw stones or dust with the hand; a cannon throws a ball; a bomb throws a shell. The Roman balista threw various weapons. A fire engine throws water to extinguish flames. NWAD THROW.3
3. To wind; as, to throw silk. NWAD THROW.4
4. To turn; as, to throw balls in a lathe. NWAD THROW.5
[Not in general use.] NWAD THROW.6
5. To venture at dice. NWAD THROW.7
Set less than thou throwest. NWAD THROW.8
6. To cast; to divest or strip one’s self of; to put off; as, a serpent throws his skin. NWAD THROW.9
7. To cast; to send. NWAD THROW.10
I have thrown NWAD THROW.11
A brave defiance in king Henry’s teeth. NWAD THROW.12
8. To put on; to spread carelessly. NWAD THROW.13
O’er his fair limbs a flow’ry vest he threw. NWAD THROW.14
9. To overturn; to prostrate in wrestling; as, a man throws his antagonist. NWAD THROW.15
10. To cast; to drive by violence; as a vessel or sailors thrown upon a rock. NWAD THROW.16
To throw away, to lose by neglect or folly; to spend in vain; as, to throw away time; to throw away money. NWAD THROW.17
1. To bestow without a compensation. NWAD THROW.18
2. To reject; as, to throw away a good book, or a good offer. NWAD THROW.19
To throw by, to lay aside or neglect as useless; as, to throw by a garment. NWAD THROW.20
To throw down, to subvert; to overthrow; to destroy; as, to throw down a fence or wall. NWAD THROW.21
1. To bring down from a high station; to depress. NWAD THROW.22
To throw in, to inject. NWAD THROW.23
1. To put in; to deposit with others; also, to give up or relinquish. NWAD THROW.24
To throw off, to expel; to clear from; as, to throw off a disease. NWAD THROW.25
1. To reject; to discard; as, to throw off all sense of shame; to throw off a dependent. NWAD THROW.26
To throw on, to cast on; to load. NWAD THROW.27
To throw out, to cast out; to reject or discard; to expel. NWAD THROW.28
1. To utter carelessly; to speak; as, to throw out insinuations or observations. NWAD THROW.29
2. To exert; to bring forth into act. NWAD THROW.30
She throws out thrilling shrieks. NWAD THROW.31
3. To distance; to leave behind. NWAD THROW.32
4. To exclude; to reject. The bill was thrown out on the second reading. NWAD THROW.33
To throw up, to resign; as, to throw up a commission. NWAD THROW.34
1. To resign angrily. NWAD THROW.35
Bad games are thrown up too soon. NWAD THROW.36
2. To discharge from the stomach. NWAD THROW.37
To throw one’s self down, to lie down. NWAD THROW.38
To throw one’s self on, to resign one’s self to the favor, clemency or sustaining power of another; to repose. NWAD THROW.39
1. To cast dice. NWAD THROW.41
To throw about, to cast about; to try expedients. [Not much used.] NWAD THROW.42
He heav’d a stone, and rising to the throw, NWAD THROW.44
He sent it in a whirlwind at the foe. NWAD THROW.45
1. A cast of dice; and the manner in which dice fall when cast; as a good throw. None but a fool hazards all upon one throw. NWAD THROW.46
2. The distance which a missile is or may be thrown; as a stone’s throw. NWAD THROW.47
3. A stroke; a blow. NWAD THROW.48
Nor shield defend the thunder of his throws. NWAD THROW.49
4. Effort; violent sally. NWAD THROW.50
Your youth admires NWAD THROW.51
The throws and swellings of a Roman soul. NWAD THROW.52
5. The agony of travail. [See Throe.] NWAD THROW.53
6. A turner’s lathe. [Local.] NWAD THROW.54
1. Any coarse yarn. NWAD THRUM.2
2. Thrums, among gardeners, the thread-like internal bushy parts of flowers; the stamens. NWAD THRUM.3
1. Among seamen, to insert short pieces of rope-yard or spun yard in a sail or mat. NWAD THRUM.6
1. A bird, a species of Turdus, the largest of the genus; the Turdus viscivorus or missel-bird. NWAD THRUSH.2
2. An affection of the inflammatory and suppurating kind, in the feet of the horse and some other animals. In the horse it is in the frog. NWAD THRUSH.3
3. In medicine, (L. apthoe,) ulcers in the mouth and fauces. NWAD THRUSH.4
1. To push or drive with force; as, to thrust any thing with the hand or foot, or with an instrument. NWAD THRUST.2
Neither shall one thrust another. Joel 2:8; John 20:25. NWAD THRUST.3
2. To drive; to force; to impel. NWAD THRUST.4
To thrust away or from, to push away; to reject. Acts 7:27. NWAD THRUST.5
To thrust in, to push or drive in. NWAD THRUST.6
Thrust in thy sickle and reap. Revelation 14:15. NWAD THRUST.7
To thrust on, to impel; to urge. NWAD THRUST.8
To thrust off, to push away. NWAD THRUST.9
To thrust through, to pierce; to stab. Numbers 25:8; 2 Samuel 18:14. NWAD THRUST.10
To thrust out, to drive out or away; to expel. Exodus 12:39. NWAD THRUST.11
To thrust one’s self, to obtrude; to intrude; to enter where one is not invited or not welcome. NWAD THRUST.12
To thrust together, to compress. NWAD THRUST.13
1. To enter by pushing; to squeeze in. NWAD THRUST.15
And thrust between my father and the god. NWAD THRUST.16
2. To intrude. NWAD THRUST.17
3. To push forward; to come with force; to press on. NWAD THRUST.18
Young, old, thrust there NWAD THRUST.19
In mighty concourse. NWAD THRUST.20
Polites Pyrrhus with his lance pursues, NWAD THRUST.22
And often reaches, and his thrusts renews. NWAD THRUST.23
1. Attack; assault. NWAD THRUST.24
There is one thrust at your pure, pretended mechanism. NWAD THRUST.25
[Note. Push and shove do not exactly express the sense of thrust. The two former imply the application of force by one body already in contact with the body to be impelled. Thrust on the contrary, often implies the impulse or application of force by a moving body, a body in motion before it reaches the body to be impelled. This distinction does not extend to every case.] NWAD THRUST.26
1. In dairies, the act of squeezing curd with the hand, to expel the whey. [Local.] NWAD THRUSTING.3
[The application of this word to cheese-making, is, I believe, entirely unknown in New England.] NWAD THRUSTINGS.2
1. To soil with the fingers. NWAD THUMB.3
The watchman gave so great a thump at my door, that I awaked at the knock. NWAD THUMP.2
A watchman at night thumps with his pole. NWAD THUMP.5
1. a. Heavy. NWAD THUMPING.2
2. Vulgarly, stout; fat; large. NWAD THUMPING.3
1. The sound which follows an explosion of electricity or lightning; the report of a discharge of electrical fluid, that is, of its passage from one cloud to another, or from a cloud to the earth, or from the earth to a cloud. When this explosion is near to a person, the thunder is a rattling or clattering sound, and when distant, the sound is heavy and rumbling. The fact is in some degree the same with the report of a cannon. This sharpness or acuteness of the sound when near, and the rumbling murmur when distant, are the principal distinctions in thunder. [Thunder is not lightning, but the effect of it. See Johnson’s Dictionary, under thunder.] NWAD THUNDER.2
There were thunders and lightnings. Exodus 19:16. NWAD THUNDER.3
2. Thunder is used for lightning, or for a thunderbolt, either originally through ignorance, or by way of metaphor, or because the lightning and thunder are closely united. NWAD THUNDER.4
The revenging gods NWAD THUNDER.5
‘Gainst parricides all the thunder bend. NWAD THUNDER.6
3. Any loud noise; as the thunder of cannon. NWAD THUNDER.7
Sons of thunder. Mark 3:17. NWAD THUNDER.8
4. Denunciation published; as the thunders of the Vatican. NWAD THUNDER.9
Canst thou thunder with a voice like him? Job 40:9. NWAD THUNDER.11
1. To make a loud noise, particularly a heavy sound of some continuance. NWAD THUNDER.12
His dreadful voice no more NWAD THUNDER.13
Would thunder in my ears. NWAD THUNDER.14
2. To rattle, or give a heavy rattling sound. NWAD THUNDER.15
And roll the thund’ring chariot o’er the ground. NWAD THUNDER.16
Oracles severe NWAD THUNDER.18
Were daily thunder’d in our gen’ral’s ear. NWAD THUNDER.19
1. To publish any denunciation or threat. NWAD THUNDER.20
An archdeacon, as being a prelate, may thunder out an ecclesiastical censure. NWAD THUNDER.21
1. A shaft of lightning; a brilliant stream of the electrical fluid, passing from one part of the heavens to another, and particularly from the clouds to the earth. Psalm 78:48. NWAD THUNDERBOLT.2
2. Figuratively, a daring or irresistible hero; as the Scipios, those thunderbolts of war. NWAD THUNDERBOLT.3
3. Fulmination; ecclesiastical denunciation. NWAD THUNDERBOLT.4
He severely threatens such with the thunderbolt of excommunication. NWAD THUNDERBOLT.5
4. In mineralogy, thunder-stone. NWAD THUNDERBOLT.6
When suddenly the thunder-clap was heard. NWAD THUNDER-CLAP.2
Entreat the Lord that there by no more mighty thunderings and hail. Exodus 9:28. NWAD THUNDERING.3
How he before the thunderous throne doth lie. [Little used.] NWAD THUNDROUS.2
1. To strike, blast or injure by lightning. [Little used in its literal sense.] NWAD THUNDER-STORM.3
2. To astonish or strike dumb, as with something terrible. [Little used except in the participle.] NWAD THUNDER-STORM.4
A censer; a pan for incense. [Not in use.] NWAD THURIBLE.2
Producing or bearing frankincense. NWAD THURIFEROUS.2
The act of fuming with incense; or the act of burning incense. NWAD THURIFICATION.2
The fifth day of the week. NWAD THURSDAY.2
Thus did Noah, according to all that God commanded him. Genesis 6:22. NWAD THUS.2
1. To this degree or extent; as thus wise; thus peaceable. NWAD THUS.3
Thus far extend, thus far thy bounds-- NWAD THUS.4
2. In the phrase, thus much, it seems to be an adjective, equivalent to this much. NWAD THUS.5
1. A plain parcel of ground, cleared of wood and stumps, inclosed and converted to tillage. [Local.] NWAD THWAITE.2
Mov’d contrary with thwart obliquities. NWAD THWART.2
Swift as a shooting star NWAD THWART.4
In autumn thwarts the night. NWAD THWART.5
1. To cross, as a purpose; to oppose; to contravene; hence, to frustrate or defeat. We say, to thwart a purpose, design or inclination; or to thwart a person. NWAD THWART.6
If crooked fortune had not thwarted me. NWAD THWART.7
The proposals of the one never thwarted the inclinations of the other. NWAD THWART.8
--A proposition that shall thwart at all with these internal oracles. [Unusual and improper.] NWAD THWART.10
Thy is the adjective of thou, or a pronominal adjective, signifying of thee, or belonging to thee, like tuus in Latin. It is used in the solemn and grave style. NWAD THY.2
These are thy works, parent of good. NWAD THY.3
A plant of the genus Thymus. The garden thyme is a warm pungent aromatic, much used to give a relish to seasonings and soups. NWAD THYME.2
The thyroid cartilage constitutes the anterior, superior, and largest part of the larynx. NWAD THYROID.2
The thyroid gland is situated on the sides and front of the lower part of the larynx, and the upper part of the trachea. It is copiously supplied with blood, but is not known to furnish any secretion. It is the seat of the bronchocele or goiter. NWAD THYROID.3