Webster's practical dictionary; a practical dictionary of the English language giving the correct spelling, pronunciation and definitions of words based on the unabridged dictionary of Noah Webster .. . Wedge. am, fame, far, pass or opera, fare; 6nd, eve, tSrm; In, Ice; Odd, tone, 6r; WEEN 503 WELTER tion issued once a week. — adi;. Once a week ; byhebdomadal periods. Ween, wen, i\ t. To think, imagine, fancy. Weep, wep, r. i. [wept, weeping.] To snow grief orother passions bv shedding tears; to shed tears, cry;to lament, comijlain; to flow or run in drops; to dropwater, drip, be very wet; to
Webster's practical dictionary; a practical dictionary of the English language giving the correct spelling, pronunciation and definitions of words based on the unabridged dictionary of Noah Webster .. . Wedge. am, fame, far, pass or opera, fare; 6nd, eve, tSrm; In, Ice; Odd, tone, 6r; WEEN 503 WELTER tion issued once a week. — adi;. Once a week ; byhebdomadal periods. Ween, wen, i\ t. To think, imagine, fancy. Weep, wep, r. i. [wept, weeping.] To snow grief orother passions bv shedding tears; to shed tears, cry;to lament, comijlain; to flow or run in drops; to dropwater, drip, be very wet; to hang the branches, as ifin sorrow; to droop. — v. t. To lament, bewail, be-moan; to shed or pour forth (tears); to shed dropby drop, as if tears ; to snend or consume in tears orweeping.—Weeper. n. One wlio weeps: a white cuffon a black dress. —Weeping willow, n. A speciesof willow whosebranches growvery long andslender, andhang downnearly in a per-pendicular di-rection. Weevil, wevl, small coleop-t e r o u s snout-bearing in s e c tof Sod generaand nearly 4,000species; these lit-tle beetles arevery injuriousto V e g e t a tionand vege tableproducts. Weft, weft, n. Thewoof of cloth:. Weeping-willow. the threads that cross the warp from selvage to sel-vage ; a thing woven. Weigh, wa, r. t. [weighed (wad), weighixg.] Tobear up, raise, lift (esp. an anchor) so that it hangsin the air; to examine by the balance, ascertain theweight of; to be equivalent to in weight; to coun-terbalance; to pay, allot, or take by weight; to pon-der in the ntind, estimate deliberately and mature-ly.— V. i. To have weight, be heavy; to be consid-ered as important; to bear heavily, press hard. — certain quantity estimated bv weight; an of weight.—Weighable, a. Capable ofbeing weighed. — Weigher, n. One who weighs;an officer whose dutv it is to weigh commodities.— Weight, wat, n. The quality of being heavy ;that property of bodies by which they tend towardthe center o
Size: 1529px × 1634px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., book, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectenglishlanguage