To take from one to another. [Little used.] NWAD TRANSUME.2
1. Lying or being across or in a cross direction; as a transverse diameter of axis. Transverse lines are the diagonals of a square or parallelogram. Lines which intersect perpendiculars, are also called transverse. NWAD TRANSVERSE.2
2. In botany, a transverse partition, in a pericarp, is at right angles with the valves, as in a silique. NWAD TRANSVERSE.3
At Stonehenge, the stones lie transversely upon each other. NWAD TRANSVERSELY.2
1. An engine that shuts suddenly or with a spring, used for taking game; as a trap for foxes. A trap is a very different thing from a snare; though the latter word may be used in a figurative sense for a trap. NWAD TRAP.2
2. An engine for catching men. [Not used in the U. States.] NWAD TRAP.3
3. An ambush; a stratagem; any device by which men or other animals may be caught unawares. NWAD TRAP.4
Let their table be made a snare and a trap. Romans 11:9. NWAD TRAP.5
4. A play in which a ball is driven with a stick. NWAD TRAP.6
1. To ensnare; to take by stratagem. NWAD TRAP.9
I trapp’d the foe. NWAD TRAP.10
2. To adorn; to dress with ornaments. [See Trappings.] [the verb is little used.] NWAD TRAP.11
A solid bounded by twenty four equal and similar trapeziums. NWAD TRAPEZIHEDRON.2
1. In geometry, a plane figure contained under four unequal right lines, none of them parallel. NWAD TRAPEZIUM.2
2. In anatomy, a bone of the carpus. NWAD TRAPEZIUM.3
1. Having the surface composed of twenty four trapeziums, all equal and similar. NWAD TRAPEZOIDAL.2
1. Ornaments of horse furniture. NWAD TRAPPINGS.2
Caparisons and steeds, NWAD TRAPPINGS.3
Bases and tinsel trappings-- NWAD TRAPPINGS.4
2. Ornaments; dress; external and superficial decorations. NWAD TRAPPINGS.5
These but the trappings and the suits of woe. NWAD TRAPPINGS.6
Trappings of life, for ornament, not use. NWAD TRAPPINGS.7
Affectation is part of the trappings of folly. NWAD TRAPPINGS.8
Pertaining to trap; resembling trap, or partaking of its form or qualities. NWAD TRAPPOUS.2
1. Any waste or worthless matter. NWAD TRASH.2
Who steals my money, steals trash. NWAD TRASH.3
2. Loppings of trees; bruised canes, etc. In the West Indies, the decayed leaves and stems of canes are called field-trash; the bruised or macerated rind of canes is called cane-trash; and both are called trash. NWAD TRASH.4
3. Fruit or other matter improper for food, but eaten by children, etc. It is used particularly of unripe fruits. NWAD TRASH.5
4. A worthless person. [Not proper.] NWAD TRASH.6
5. A piece of leather or other thing fastened to a dog’s neck to retard his speed. NWAD TRASH.7
1. To strip of leaves; as, to trash ratoons. NWAD TRASH.9
2. To crush; to humble; as, to trash the Jews. NWAD TRASH.10
3. To clog; to encumber; to hinder. NWAD TRASH.11
1. Pertaining to or applied to wounds. NWAD TRAUMATIC.2
2. Vulnerary; adapted to the cure of wounds. NWAD TRAUMATIC.3
1. To labor with pain; to toil. NWAD TRAVAIL.2
2. To suffer the pangs of childbirth; to be in labor. Genesis 35:16. NWAD TRAVAIL.3
As every thing of price, so doth this require travail. NWAD TRAVAIL.6
1. Labor in childbirth; as a severe travail; an easy travail. NWAD TRAVAIL.7
1. A wooden frame to confine a horse while the smith is setting his shoes. This is not used for horses in America, but a similar frame is used for confining oxen for shoeing. NWAD TRAVE.2
2. Beam; a lay of joints; a traverse. NWAD TRAVE.3
1. To walk; to go or march on foot; as, to travel from London to Dover, or from New York to Philadelphia. So we say, a man ordinarily travels three miles an hour. [This is the proper sense of the word, which implies toil.] NWAD TRAVEL.2
2. To journey; to ride to a distant place in the same country; as, a man travels for his health; he is traveling to Virginia. A man traveled from London to Edinburgh in five days. NWAD TRAVEL.3
3. To go to a distant country, or to visit foreign states or kingdoms, either by sea or land. It is customary for men of rank and property to travel for improvement. Englishmen travel to France and Italy. Some men travel for pleasure or curiosity; others travel to extend their knowledge of natural history. NWAD TRAVEL.4
4. To pass; to go; to move. News travels with rapidity. NWAD TRAVEL.5
Time travels in divers paces with divers persons. NWAD TRAVEL.6
5. To labor. [See Travail.] NWAD TRAVEL.7
6. To move, walk or pass, as a beast, a horse, ox or camel. A horse travels fifty miles in a day; a camel; twenty. NWAD TRAVEL.8
I travel this profound. NWAD TRAVEL.10
1. To force to journey. NWAD TRAVEL.11
The corporations--shall not be traveled forth from their franchises. [Not used.] NWAD TRAVEL.12
1. A passing on foot; a walking. NWAD TRAVEL.14
2. Journey; a passing or riding from place to place. NWAD TRAVEL.15
His travels ended at his country seat. NWAD TRAVEL.16
3. Travel or travels, a journeying to a distant country or countries. The gentle man has just returned from his travels. NWAD TRAVEL.17
4. The distance which a man rides in the performance of his official duties; or the fee paid for passing that distance; as the travel of the sheriff is twenty miles; or that of a representative is seventy miles. His travel is a dollar for every twenty miles. NWAD TRAVEL.18
5. Travels, in the plural, an account of occurrences and observations made during a journey; as a book of travels; the title of a book that relates occurrences in traveling; as travels in Italy. NWAD TRAVEL.19
6. Labor; toil; labor in childbirth. [See Travail.] NWAD TRAVEL.20
1. a. Having made journeys. NWAD TRAVELED.2
1. One who travels in any way. Job 31:32. NWAD TRAVELER.2
2. One who visits foreign countries. NWAD TRAVELER.3
3. In ships, an iron thimble or thimbles with a rope spliced round them, forming a kind of tail or a species of grommet. NWAD TRAVELER.4
1. Walking; going; making a journey. Matthew 25:14. NWAD TRAVELING.2
2. a. Incurred by travel; as traveling expenses. NWAD TRAVELING.3
3. Paid for travel; as traveling fees. NWAD TRAVELING.4
The ridges of the field lay traverse. NWAD TRAVERSE.2
He traverse NWAD TRAVERSE.4
The whole battalion views their order due. [Little used.] NWAD TRAVERSE.5
Oak--may be trusted in traverse work for summers. NWAD TRAVERSE.7
There is a traverse placed in the loft where she sitteth. NWAD TRAVERSE.9
1. Something that thwarts, crosses or obstructs; a cross accident. He is satisfied he should have succeeded, had it not been for unlucky traverses not in his power. NWAD TRAVERSE.10
2. In fortification, a trench with a little parapet for protecting men on the flank; also, a wall raised across a work. NWAD TRAVERSE.11
3. In navigation, traverse-sailing is the mode of computing the place of a ship by reducing several short courses made by sudden shifts or turns, to one longer course. NWAD TRAVERSE.12
4. In law, a denial of what the opposite party has advanced in any state of the pleadings. When the traverse or denial comes from the defendant, the issue is tendered in this manner, “and of this he puts himself on the country.” When the traverse lies on the plaintiff, he prays “this may be inquired of by the country.” NWAD TRAVERSE.13
The technical words introducing a traverse are absque hoc, without this; that is, without this which follows. NWAD TRAVERSE.14
5. A turning; a trick. NWAD TRAVERSE.15
The parts should be often traversed or crossed by the flowing of the folds. NWAD TRAVERSE.17
1. To cross by way of opposition; to thwart; to obstruct. NWAD TRAVERSE.18
Frog thought to traverse this new project. NWAD TRAVERSE.19
2. To wander over; to cross in traveling; as, to traverse the habitable globe. NWAD TRAVERSE.20
What seas you travers’d, and what fields you fought. NWAD TRAVERSE.21
3. To pass over and view; to survey carefully. NWAD TRAVERSE.22
My purpose is to traverse the nature, principles and properties of this detestable vice, ingratitude. NWAD TRAVERSE.23
4. To turn and point in any direction; as, to traverse a cannon. NWAD TRAVERSE.24
5. To plane in a direction across the grain of the wood; as, to traverse a board. NWAD TRAVERSE.25
6. In law pleadings, to deny what the opposite party has alleged. When the plaintiff or defendant advances new matter, he avers it to be true, and traverses what the other party has affirmed. So to traverse an indictment or an office, is to deny it. NWAD TRAVERSE.26
To traverse a yard, in sailing, is to brace it aft. NWAD TRAVERSE.27
To see thee fight, to see thee traverse-- NWAD TRAVERSE.29
1. To turn, as on a pivot; to move round; to swivel. The needle of a compass traverses; if it does not traverse well, it is an unsafe guide. NWAD TRAVERSE.30
2. In the manege, to cut the tread crosswise, as a horse that throws his croup to one side and his head to the other. NWAD TRAVERSE.31
G. Battista Lalli travestied Virgil, or turned him into Italian burlesque verse. NWAD TRAVESTY.4
You treacherously practic’d to undo me. NWAD TREACHEROUSLY.2
1. The spume of sugar in sugar refineries. Treacle is obtained in refining sugar; molasses is the drainings of crude sugar. Treacle however is often used for molasses. NWAD TREACLE.2
2. A saccharine fluid, consisting of the inspissated juices or decoctions of certain vegetables, as the sap of the birch, sycamore, etc. NWAD TREACLE.3
3. A medicinal compound of various ingredients. [See Theriaca.] NWAD TREACLE.4
1. To set the foot. NWAD TREAD.2
Where’er you tread, the blushing flow’rs shall rise. NWAD TREAD.3
Fools rush in where angels fear to tread. NWAD TREAD.4
2. To walk or go. NWAD TREAD.5
Every place whereon the soles of your feet shall tread, shall be yours. Deuteronomy 11:24. NWAD TREAD.6
3. To walk with form or state. NWAD TREAD.7
Ye that stately tread, or lowly creep. NWAD TREAD.8
4. To copulate, as fowls. NWAD TREAD.9
To tread or tread on, to trample; to set the foot on in contempt. NWAD TREAD.10
Thou shalt tread upon their high places. Deuteronomy 33:29. NWAD TREAD.11
Forbid to tread the promis’d land he saw. NWAD TREAD.13
1. To press under the feet. NWAD TREAD.14
2. To beat or press with the feet; as, to tread a path; to tread land when too light; a well trodden path. NWAD TREAD.15
3. To walk in a formal or stately manner. NWAD TREAD.16
He thought she trod the ground with greater grace. NWAD TREAD.17
4. To crush under the foot; to trample in contempt or hatred, or to subdue. Psalms 44:5; Psalms 60:12. NWAD TREAD.18
5. To compress, as a fowl. NWAD TREAD.19
To tread the state, to act as a stage-player; to perform a part in a drama. NWAD TREAD.20
To tread or tread out, to press out with the feet; to press out wine or wheat; as, to tread out grain with cattle or horses. NWAD TREAD.21
They tread their wine presses and suffer thirst. Job 24:11. NWAD TREAD.22
1. Way; track; path. [Little used.] NWAD TREAD.24
2. Compression of the male fowl. NWAD TREAD.25
3. Manner of stepping; as, a horse has a good tread. NWAD TREAD.26
1. The albuminous cords which unite the yolk of the egg to the white. NWAD TREADLE.2
Treason is the highest crime of a civil nature of which a man can be guilty. Its signification is different in different countries. In general, it is the offense of attempting to overthrow the government of the state to which the offender owes allegiance, or of betraying the state into the hands of a foreign power. In monarchies, the killing of the king, or an attempt to take his life, is treason. In England, to imagine or compass the death of the king, or of the prince, or of the queen consort, or of the heir apparent of the crown, is high treason; as are many other offenses created by statute. NWAD TREASON.2
In the United States, treason is confined to the actual levying of war against the United States, or in adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort. NWAD TREASON.3
Treason in Great Britain, is of two kinds, high treason and petit treason. High treason is a crime that immediately affects the king or state; such as the offenses just enumerated. Petit treason involves a breach of fidelity, but affects individuals. Thus for a wife to kill her husband, a servant his master or lord, or an ecclesiastic his lord or ordinary, is petit treason. But in the United States this crime is unknown; the killing in the latter cases being murder only. NWAD TREASON.4
Most men’s heads had been intoxicated with imaginations of plots and treasonable practices. NWAD TREASONABLE.2
1. Wealth accumulated; particularly, a stock or store of money in reserve. Henry VII. was frugal and penurious, and collected a great treasure of gold and silver. NWAD TREASURE.2
2. A great quantity of any thing collected for future use. NWAD TREASURE.3
We have treasures in the field, of wheat and of barley, and of oil and of honey. Jeremiah 41:8. NWAD TREASURE.4
3. Something very much valued. Psalm 135:4. NWAD TREASURE.5
Ye shall be a peculiar treasure to me. Exodus 19:5. NWAD TREASURE.6
4. Great abundance. NWAD TREASURE.7
In whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge. Colossians 2:3. NWAD TREASURE.8
In England, the lord high treasurer is the principal officer of the crown, under whose charge is all the national revenue. NWAD TREASURER.2
The treasurer of the household, in the absence of the lord-steward, has power with the controller and other officers of the Green-cloth, and the steward of the Marshalsea, to hear and determine treasons, felonies and other crimes committed within the king’s palace. There is also the treasurer of the navy, and the treasurers of the county. NWAD TREASURER.3
1. A building appropriated for keeping public money. John 8:20. NWAD TREASURY.2
2. The officer or officers of the treasury department. NWAD TREASURY.3
3. A repository of abundance. Psalm 135:7. NWAD TREASURY.4
1. To handle; to manage; to use. Subjects are usually faithful or treacherous, according as they are well or ill treated. To treat prisoners ill, is the characteristic of barbarians. Let the wife of your bosom be kindly treated. NWAD TREAT.2
2. To handle in a particular manner, in writing or speaking; as, to treat a subject diffusely. NWAD TREAT.3
3. To entertain without expense to the guest. NWAD TREAT.4
4. To negotiate; to settle; as, to treat a peace. [Not in use.] NWAD TREAT.5
5. To manage in the application of remedies; as, to treat a disease or a patient. NWAD TREAT.6
1. To come to terms of accommodation. NWAD TREAT.8
Inform us, will the emp’ror treat? NWAD TREAT.9
2. To make gratuitous entertainment. It is sometimes the custom of military officers to treat when first elected. NWAD TREAT.10
To treat with, to negotiate; to make and receive proposals for adjusting differences. Envoys were appointed to treat with France, but without success. NWAD TREAT.11
1. Something given for entertainment; as a rich treat. NWAD TREAT.13
2. Emphatically, a rich entertainment. NWAD TREAT.14
The heats or the colds of seasons are less treatable than with us. [Not in use.] NWAD TREATABLE.2
1. Usage; manner of using; good of bad behavior towards. NWAD TREATMENT.2
Accept such treatment as a swain affords. NWAD TREATMENT.3
2. Manner of applying remedies to cure; mode or course pursued to check and destroy; as the treatment of a disease. NWAD TREATMENT.4
3. Manner of applying remedies to; as the treatment of a patient. NWAD TREATMENT.5
He cast by treaty and by trains NWAD TREATY.2
Her to persuade. NWAD TREATY.3
1. An agreement, league or contract between two or more nations or sovereigns, formally signed by commissioners properly authorized, and solemnly ratified by the several sovereigns or the supreme power of each state. Treaties are of various kinds, as treaties for regulating commercial intercourse, treaties of alliance, offensive and defensive, treaties for hiring troops, treaties of peace, etc. NWAD TREATY.4
2. Intreaty. [Not in use.] NWAD TREATY.5
1. Threefold; triple; as a lofty tower with treble walls. NWAD TREBLE.2
2. In music, acute; sharp; as a treble sound. NWAD TREBLE.3
3. That plays the highest part or most acute sounds; that plays the treble; as a treble violin. NWAD TREBLE.4
1. The general name of the largest of the vegetable kind, consisting of a firm woody stem springing from woody roots, and spreading above into branches which terminate in leaves. A tree differs from a shrub principally in size, many species of trees growing to the highth of fifty or sixty feet, and some species to seventy or eighty, and a few, particularly the pine, to a much greater highth. NWAD TREE.2
Trees are of various kinds; as nuciferous, or nut-bearing trees; bacciferous, or berry-bearing; coniferous, or cone-bearing, etc. Some are forest-trees, and useful for timber or fuel; others are fruit trees, and cultivated in gardens and orchards; others are used chiefly for shade and ornament. NWAD TREE.3
2. Something resembling a tree, consisting of a stem or stalk and branches; as a genealogical tree. NWAD TREE.4
3. In ship-building, pieces of timber are called chess-trees, cross-trees, roof-trees, tressel-trees, etc. NWAD TREE.5
4. In Scripture, a cross. NWAD TREE.6
--Jesus, whom they slew and hanged on a tree. Acts 10:39. NWAD TREE.7
5. Wood. NWAD TREE.8
A long wooden pin, used in fastening the planks of a ship to the timbers. NWAD TREE-NAIL.2
The common name for many plants of the genus Trifolium; also, in agriculture, a name of the medicago tupulina, a plant resembling clover, with yellow flowers, much cultivated for hay and fodder. NWAD TREFOIL.2