J (jā). J is the tenth letter of the English
alphabet. It is a later variant form of the Roman letter I, used to
express a consonantal sound, that is, originally, the sound of
English y in yet. The forms J and I have, until a
recent time, been classed together, and they have been used
interchangeably.
In medical prescriptions j is still used in place of
i at the end of a number, as a Roman numeral; as, vj,
xij.
J is etymologically most closely related to i, y,
g; as in jot, iota; jest, gesture;
join, jugular, yoke. See I.
J is a compound vocal consonant, nearly equivalent in sound to
dzh. It is exactly the same as g in gem. See
Guide to Pronunciation, §§ 179, 211, 239.
Jaal" goat` (?). (Zoöl.)A species of
wild goat (Capra Nubiana) found in the mountains of Abyssinia,
Upper Egypt, and Arabia; -- called also beden, and
jaela.
Jab (?), v. t. [Cf. Job.]
To thrust; to stab; to punch. See Job, v.
t. [Scot. & Colloq. U. S.]
Jab, n.A thrust or stab.
[Scot. & Colloq. U. S.]
Jab"ber (?), v. i. [imp. & p.
p.Jabbered (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Jabbering.] [Cf. Gibber, Gabble.] To talk
rapidly, indistinctly, or unintelligibly; to utter gibberish or
nonsense; to chatter.Swift.
Jab"ber, v. t.To utter rapidly or
indistinctly; to gabble; as, to jabber French.Addison.
Jab"ber, n.Rapid or incoherent
talk, with indistinct utterance; gibberish.Swift.
Jab"ber*er (?), n.One who
jabbers.
Jab"ber*ing*ly, adv.In a
jabbering manner.
Jab"ber*ment (?), n.Jabber.
[R.] Milton.
Jab"ber*nowl` (?), n.Same as
Jobbernowl.
Jab"i*ru (?), n. [Braz.
jabirú, jaburú.] (Zoöl.)One of several large wading birds of the genera Mycteria
and Xenorhynchus, allied to the storks in form and
habits.
&fist; The American jabiru (Mycteria Americana) is white,
with the head and neck black and nearly bare of feathers. The East
Indian and Australian (Xenorhynchus Australis) has the neck,
head, and back covered with glossy, dark green feathers, changing on
the head to purple. The African jabiru (Mycteria, or
Ephippiorhynchus, Senegalensis) has the neck, head, wing coverts,
and tail, black, and is called also saddle-billed stork.
Jab`o*ran"di (?), n.(Bot.)The native name of a South American rutaceous shrub
(Pilocarpus pennatifolius). The leaves are used in medicine as
an diaphoretic and sialogogue.
Jab"o*rine (?), n. [From
Jaborandi.] (Chem.)An alkaloid found in jaborandi
leaves, from which it is extracted as a white amorphous substance. In
its action it resembles atropine.
||Jab"ot (?), n. [F.]
1.Originally, a kind of ruffle worn by men
on the bosom of the shirt.
2.An arrangement of lace or tulle, looped
ornamentally, and worn by women on the front of the dress.
Jac"a*mar` (?), n. [F. jacamar,
Braz. jacamarica; cf. Sp. jacamar.] (Zoöl.)Any one of numerous species of tropical American birds of the
genus Galbula and allied genera. They are allied to the
kingfishers, but climb on tree trunks like nuthatches, and feed upon
insects. Their colors are often brilliant.
Jac"a*na` (?), n. [Cf. Sp.
jacania.] (Zoöl.)Any of several wading birds
belonging to the genus Jacana and several allied genera, all
of which have spurs on the wings. They are able to run about over
floating water weeds by means of their very long, spreading toes.
Called also surgeon bird.
&fist; The most common South American species is Jacana
spinosa. The East Indian or pheasant jacana (Hydrophasianus
chirurgus) is remarkable for having four very long, curved,
middle tail feathers.
Jac`a*ran"da (?), n. [Braz.; cf. Sp. &
Pg. jacaranda.] (Bot.)(a)The
native Brazilian name for certain leguminous trees, which produce the
beautiful woods called king wood, tiger wood, and
violet wood.(b)A genus of
bignoniaceous Brazilian trees with showy trumpet-shaped
flowers.
Jac"a*re` (?), n. [Pg.
jacaré; of Brazilian origin.] (Zoöl.)A cayman. See Yacare.
Jac"chus (?), n. [NL., fr. L.
Jacchus a mystic name of Bacchus, Gr. &?;.]
(Zoöl.)The common marmoset (Hapale
vulgaris). Formerly, the name was also applied to other species
of the same genus.
Jac"co*net (?), n.See
Jaconet.
Ja"cent (?), a. [L. jacens, p.
pr. of jacere to lie: cf. F. jacent.] Lying at
length; as, the jacent posture. [R.] Sir H.
Wotton.
Ja"cinth (?), n. [F. jacinthe,
L. hyacinthus. See Hyacinth.] See
Hyacinth.Tennyson.
Jack (jăk), n. [Pg. jaca,
Malayalam, tsjaka.] (Bot.)A large tree, the
Artocarpus integrifolia, common in the East Indies, closely
allied to the breadfruit, from which it differs in having its leaves
entire. The fruit is of great size, weighing from thirty to forty
pounds, and through its soft fibrous matter are scattered the seeds,
which are roasted and eaten. The wood is of a yellow color, fine
grain, and rather heavy, and is much used in cabinetwork. It is also
used for dyeing a brilliant yellow. [Written also
jak.]
Jack (?), n. [F. Jacques James,
L. Jacobus, Gr. &?;, Heb. Ya 'aqōb Jacob; prop.,
seizing by the heel; hence, a supplanter. Cf. Jacobite,
Jockey.]
1.A familiar nickname of, or substitute for,
John.
You are John Rugby, and you are Jack
Rugby.
Shak.
2.An impertinent or silly fellow; a
simpleton; a boor; a clown; also, a servant; a rustic.
"Jack fool." Chaucer.
Since every Jack became a gentleman,
There 's many a gentle person made a Jack.
Shak.
3.A popular colloquial name for a sailor; --
called also Jack tar, and Jack afloat.
4.A mechanical contrivance, an auxiliary
machine, or a subordinate part of a machine, rendering convenient
service, and often supplying the place of a boy or attendant who was
commonly called Jack; as: (a)A
device to pull off boots.(b)A sawhorse
or sawbuck.(c)A machine or contrivance
for turning a spit; a smoke jack, or kitchen
jack.(b)(Mining)A wooden
wedge for separating rocks rent by blasting.(e)(Knitting Machine)A lever for
depressing the sinkers which push the loops down on the
needles.(f)(Warping Machine)A
grating to separate and guide the threads; a heck box.(g)(Spinning)A machine for twisting the
sliver as it leaves the carding machine.(h)A compact, portable machine for planing metal.(i)A machine for slicking or pebbling
leather.(k)A system of gearing driven by
a horse power, for multiplying speed.(l)A hood or other device placed over a chimney or vent pipe, to
prevent a back draught.(m)In the
harpsichord, an intermediate piece communicating the action of the
key to the quill; -- called also hopper.(n)In hunting, the pan or frame holding the
fuel of the torch used to attract game at night; also, the light
itself.C. Hallock.
5.A portable machine variously constructed,
for exerting great pressure, or lifting or moving a heavy body
through a small distance. It consists of a lever, screw, rack and
pinion, hydraulic press, or any simple combination of mechanical
powers, working in a compact pedestal or support and operated by a
lever, crank, capstan bar, etc. The name is often given to a
jackscrew, which is a kind of jack.
6.The small bowl used as a mark in the game
of bowls.Shak.
Like an uninstructed bowler who thinks to attain the
jack by delivering his bowl straight forward upon
it.
Sir W. Scott.
7.The male of certain animals, as of the
ass.
8.(Zoöl.)(a)A
young pike; a pickerel.(b)The
jurel.(c)A large, California rock fish
(Sebastodes paucispinus); -- called also boccaccio, and
mérou.(d)The wall-eyed
pike.
9.A drinking measure holding half a pint;
also, one holding a quarter of a pint. [Prov. Eng.]
Halliwell.
10.(Naut.)(a)A
flag, containing only the union, without the fly, usually hoisted on
a jack staff at the bowsprit cap; -- called also union jack.
The American jack is a small blue flag, with a star for each
State.(b)A bar of iron athwart ships at
a topgallant masthead, to support a royal mast, and give spread to
the royal shrouds; -- called also jack crosstree.R.
H. Dana, Jr.
11.The knave of a suit of playing
cards.
&fist; Jack is used adjectively in various senses. It
sometimes designates something cut short or diminished in
size; as, a jack timber; a jack rafter; a
jack arch, etc.
Jack arch, an arch of the thickness of one
brick. -- Jack back(Brewing & Malt Vinegar
Manuf.), a cistern which receives the wort. See under 1st
Back. -- Jack block(Naut.),
a block fixed in the topgallant or royal rigging, used for
raising and lowering light masts and spars. -- Jack
boots, boots reaching above the knee; -- worn in the 17
century by soldiers; afterwards by fishermen, etc. --
Jack crosstree. (Naut.)See 10,
b, above. -- Jack curlew(Zoöl.), the whimbrel. -- Jack
frame. (Cotton Spinning)See 4
(g), above. -- Jack Frost,
frost personified as a mischievous person. -- Jack
hare, a male hare.Cowper. -- Jack
lamp, a lamp for still hunting and camp use. See def. 4
(n.), above. -- Jack plane,
a joiner's plane used for coarse work. -- Jack
post, one of the posts which support the crank shaft of
a deep-well-boring apparatus. -- Jack pot(Poker Playing), the name given to the stakes,
contributions to which are made by each player successively, till
such a hand is turned as shall take the "pot," which is the sum total
of all the bets. -- Jack rabbit(Zoöl.), any one of several species of large American
hares, having very large ears and long legs. The California species
(Lepus Californicus), and that of Texas and New Mexico (L.
callotis), have the tail black above, and the ears black at the
tip. They do not become white in winter. The more northern prairie
hare (L. campestris) has the upper side of the tail white, and
in winter its fur becomes nearly white. -- Jack
rafter(Arch.), in England, one of the shorter
rafters used in constructing a hip or valley roof; in the United
States, any secondary roof timber, as the common rafters resting on
purlins in a trussed roof; also, one of the pieces simulating
extended rafters, used under the eaves in some styles of
building. -- Jack salmon(Zoöl.),
the wall-eyed pike, or glasseye. -- Jack
sauce, an impudent fellow. [Colloq. & Obs.] --
Jack shaft(Mach.), the first
intermediate shaft, in a factory or mill, which receives power,
through belts or gearing, from a prime mover, and transmits it, by
the same means, to other intermediate shafts or to a line shaft.
-- Jack sinker(Knitting Mach.), a thin
iron plate operated by the jack to depress the loop of thread between
two needles. -- Jack snipe.
(Zoöl.)See in the Vocabulary. -- Jack
staff(Naut.), a staff fixed on the bowsprit
cap, upon which the jack is hoisted. -- Jack
timber(Arch.), any timber, as a rafter, rib, or
studding, which, being intercepted, is shorter than the others.
-- Jack towel, a towel hung on a roller for
common use. -- Jack truss(Arch.),
in a hip roof, a minor truss used where the roof has not its full
section. -- Jack tree. (Bot.)See
1st Jack, n. -- Jack
yard(Naut.), a short spar to extend a topsail
beyond the gaff.
Blue jack, blue vitriol; sulphate of
copper. -- Hydraulic jack, a jack used for
lifting, pulling, or forcing, consisting of a compact portable
hydrostatic press, with its pump and a reservoir containing a supply
of liquid, as oil. -- Jack-at-a-pinch.
(a)One called upon to take the place of another
in an emergency. (b)An itinerant parson who
conducts an occasional service for a fee. -- Jack-at-
all-trades, one who can turn his hand to any kind of
work. -- Jack-by-the-hedge(Bot.),
a plant of the genus Erysimum (E. alliaria, or
Alliaria officinalis), which grows under hedges. It bears a
white flower and has a taste not unlike garlic. Called also, in
England, sauce-alone.Eng. Cyc. -- Jack-
in-a-box. (a)(Bot.)A tropical
tree (Hernandia sonora), which bears a drupe that rattles when
dry in the inflated calyx. (b)A child's
toy, consisting of a box, out of which, when the lid is raised, a
figure springs. (c)(Mech.)An
epicyclic train of bevel gears for transmitting rotary motion to two
parts in such a manner that their relative rotation may be variable;
applied to driving the wheels of tricycles, road locomotives, and to
cotton machinery, etc.; an equation box; a jack frame; -- called also
compensating gearing. (d)A large
wooden screw turning in a nut attached to the crosspiece of a rude
press. -- Jack-in-office, an insolent
fellow in authority.Wolcott. -- Jack-in-the-
bush(Bot.), a tropical shrub with red fruit
(Cordia Cylindrostachya). -- Jack-in-the-
green, a chimney sweep inclosed in a framework of
boughs, carried in Mayday processions. -- Jack-in-the-
pulpit(Bot.), the American plant
Arisæma triphyllum, or Indian turnip, in which the
upright spadix is inclosed. -- Jack-of-the-
buttery(Bot.), the stonecrop (Sedum
acre). -- Jack-of-the-clock, a figure,
usually of a man, on old clocks, which struck the time on the
bell. -- Jack-on-both-sides, one who is or
tries to be neutral. -- Jack-out-of-office,
one who has been in office and is turned out.Shak. -
- Jack the Giant Killer, the hero of a well-
known nursery story. -- Jack-with-a-lantern,
Jack-o'-lantern. (a)An ignis
fatuus; a will-o'-the-wisp. "[Newspaper speculations] supplying
so many more jack-o'-lanterns to the future historian."
Lowell.(b)A lantern made of a pumpkin so
prepared as to show in illumination the features of a human face,
etc. -- Yellow Jack(Naut.), the
yellow fever; also, the quarantine flag. See Yellow flag,
under Flag.
Jack (?), n. [F. jaque,
jacque, perh. from the proper name Jacques. Cf.
Jacquerie.] A coarse and cheap mediæval coat of
defense, esp. one made of leather.
Their horsemen are with jacks for most part
clad.
Sir J. Harrington.
Jack (?), n. [Named from its
resemblance to a jack boot.] A pitcher or can of waxed
leather; -- called also black jack. [Obs.]
Dryden.
Jack, v. i.To hunt game at night
by means of a jack. See 2d Jack, n., 4,
n.
Jack, v. t.To move or lift, as a
house, by means of a jack or jacks. See 2d Jack,
n., 5.
Jack`-a-dan"dy (?), n.A little
dandy; a little, foppish, impertinent fellow.
Jack"al` (?), n. [Pers.
shaghāl: cf. OF. jackal, F. chacal; cf.
Skr. çr.gāla.]
1.(Zoöl.)Any one of several
species of carnivorous animals inhabiting Africa and Asia, related to
the dog and wolf. They are cowardly, nocturnal, and gregarious. They
feed largely on carrion, and are noted for their piercing and dismal
howling.
&fist; The common species of Southern Asia (Canis aureus)
is yellowish gray, varied with brown on the shoulders, haunches, and
legs. The common African species (C. anthus) is darker in
color.
2.One who does mean work for another's
advantage, as jackals were once thought to kill game which lions
appropriated. [Colloq.] Ld. Lytton.
Jack"-a-lent (?), n.A small
stuffed puppet to be pelted in Lent; hence, a simple
fellow.
Jack"a*napes (?), n. [For Jack
o' (= of) apes; prop., a man who exhibits apes.]
[Written also jackanape.]
1.A monkey; an ape.Shak.
2.A coxcomb; an impertinent or conceited
fellow.
A young upstart jackanapes.
Arbuthnot.
Jack"ass` (?), n. [2d jack +
ass.]
1.The male ass; a donkey.
2.A conceited dolt; a perverse
blockhead.
Jackass bark(Naut.), a three-masted
vessel, with only the foremast square-rigged; a barkentine. --
Jackass deer(Zoöl.), the
koba. -- Jackass hare, Jackass
rabbit(Zoöl.). See Jack rabbit,
under 2d Jack, n. -- Jackass
penguin(Zoöl.), any species of penguin of
the genus Spheniscus, of which several are known. One species
(S. demersus) inhabits the islands near the Cape of Good Hope;
another (S. Magellanicus) is found at the Falkland Islands.
They make a noise like the braying of an ass; -- hence the name.
-- Laughing jackass. (Zoöl.)See
under Laughing.
Jack"daw` (?), n. [Prob. 2d jack
+ daw, n.] (Zoöl.)See
Daw, n.
Jack*een" (?), n.A drunken,
dissolute fellow. [Ireland] S. C. Hall.
Jack"et (?), n. [F. jaquette,
dim. of jaque. See 3d Jack, n.]
1.A short upper garment, extending downward
to the hips; a short coat without skirts.
2.An outer covering for anything, esp. a
covering of some nonconducting material such as wood or felt, used to
prevent radiation of heat, as from a steam boiler, cylinder, pipe,
etc.
3.(Mil.)In ordnance, a strengthening
band surrounding and reënforcing the tube in which the charge is
fired.
4.A garment resembling a waistcoat lined
with cork, to serve as a life preserver; -- called also cork
jacket.
Blue jacket. (Naut.)See under
Blue. -- Steam jacket, a space
filled with steam between an inner and an outer cylinder, or between
a casing and a receptacle, as a kettle. -- To dust one's
jacket, to give one a beating. [Colloq.]
Jack"et, v. t.1.To put a jacket on; to furnish, as a boiler, with a
jacket.
2.To thrash; to beat. [Low]
Jack"et*ed, a.Wearing, or
furnished with, a jacket.
Jack"et*ing, n.The material of a
jacket; as, nonconducting jacketing.
Jack" Ketch" (?). [Perh. fr. Jack, the proper name
+ Prov. E. ketch a hangman, fr. ketch, for
catch to seize; but see the citations below.] A public
executioner, or hangman. [Eng.]
The manor of Tyburn was formerly held by Richard
Jaquett, where felons for a long time were executed; from
whence we have Jack Ketch.
Lloyd's MS.,
British Museum.
[Monmouth] then accosted John Ketch, the
executioner, a wretch who had butchered many brave and noble victims,
and whose name has, during a century and a half, been vulgarly given
to all who have succeeded him in his odious office.
Macaulay.
Jack"knife` (?), n.A large,
strong clasp knife for the pocket; a pocket knife.
Jack"man (?), n.; pl.Jackmen (&?;).
1.One wearing a jack; a horse soldier; a
retainer. See 3d Jack, n.
Christie . . . the laird's chief
jackman.
Sir W. Scott.
2.A cream cheese. [Obs.] Sir T.
Elyot.
Jack"-o'-lan`tern (?), n.See
Jack-with-a-lantern, under 2d Jack.
Jack"pud`ding (?), n.A merry-
andrew; a buffoon.Milton.
Jack"saw` (?), n.(Zoöl.)The merganser.
Jack"screw` (?), n.A jack in
which a screw is used for lifting, or exerting pressure. See
Illust. of 2d Jack, n., 5.
Jack"slave` (?), n.A low servant;
a mean fellow.Shak.
Jack"smith` (?), n.A smith who
makes jacks. See 2d Jack, 4, c.Dryden.
Jack"snipe` (?), n.(Zoöl.)(a)A small European snipe (Limnocryptes
gallinula); -- called also judcock, jedcock,
juddock, jed, and half snipe.(b)A small American sandpiper (Tringa
maculata); -- called also pectoral sandpiper, and grass
snipe.
Jack"stay` (?), n.(Naut.)A rail of wood or iron stretching along a yard of a vessel, to
which the sails are fastened.
Jack"stone` (?), n.(a)One of the pebbles or pieces used in the game of
jackstones.(b) (pl.) A game played
with five small stones or pieces of metal. See 6th
Chuck.
Jack"straw` (?), n.1.An effigy stuffed with straw; a scarecrow; hence, a man without
property or influence.Milton.
2.One of a set of straws of strips of ivory,
bone, wood, etc., for playing a child's game, the jackstraws being
thrown confusedly together on a table, to be gathered up singly by a
hooked instrument, without touching or disturbing the rest of the
pile. See Spilikin.
Jack"wood` (?), n.Wood of the
jack (Artocarpus integrifolia), used in cabinetwork.
Ja"cob (?), n. [Cf. F. Jacob.
See 2d Jack.] A Hebrew patriarch (son of Isaac, and
ancestor of the Jews), who in a vision saw a ladder reaching up to
heaven (Gen. xxviii. 12); -- also called
Israel.
And Jacob said . . . with my staff I passed
over this Jordan, and now I am become two bands.
Gen.
xxxii. 9, 10.
Thy name shall be called no more Jacob, but
Israel.
Gen. xxxii. 28.
Jacob's ladder. (a)(Bot.)A perennial herb of the genus Polemonium
(P. cœruleum), having corymbs of drooping flowers, usually
blue. Gray.(b)(Naut.)A rope
ladder, with wooden steps, for going aloft. R. H. Dana,
Jr.(c)(Naut.)A succession of short
cracks in a defective spar. -- Jacob's
membrane. See Retina. -- Jacob's
staff. (a)A name given to many forms
of staff or weapon, especially in the Middle Ages; a pilgrim's
staff. [Obs.] Spenser.(b)(Surveying)See under Staff.
Jac`o*bæ"an lil"y (?). [See Jacobean.]
(Bot.)A bulbous plant (Amaryllis, or Sprekelia,
formosissima) from Mexico. It bears a single, large, deep, red,
lilylike flower. [Written also Jacobean.]
{ Ja*co"be*an (?; 277), Ja*co"bi*an (?), }
a. [From L. Jacobus James. See 2d
Jack.] Of or pertaining to a style of architecture and
decoration in the time of James the First, of England. "A
Jacobean table." C. L. Eastlake.
Jac"o*bin (?), n. [F. See 2d
Jack, Jacobite.]
1.(Eccl. Hist.)A Dominican friar; --
so named because, before the French Revolution, that order had a
convent in the Rue St. Jacques, Paris.
2.One of a society of violent agitators in
France, during the revolution of 1789, who held secret meetings in
the Jacobin convent in the Rue St. Jacques, Paris, and concerted
measures to control the proceedings of the National Assembly. Hence:
A plotter against an existing government; a turbulent
demagogue.
3.(Zoöl.)A fancy pigeon, in
which the feathers of the neck form a hood, -- whence the name. The
wings and tail are long, and the beak moderately short.
Jac"o*bin, a.Same as
Jacobinic.
Jac"o*bine (?), n.A
Jacobin.
{ Jac`o*bin"ic (?), Jac`o*bin"ic*al (?), }
a.Of or pertaining to the Jacobins of France;
revolutionary; of the nature of, or characterized by,
Jacobinism.Burke. -- Jac`o*bin"ic*al*ly,
adv.
Jac"o*bin*ism (?), n. [Cf. F.
Jacobinisme.] The principles of the Jacobins; violent
and factious opposition to legitimate government.
Under this new stimulus, Burn's previous Jacobitism
passed towards the opposite, but not very distant, extreme of
Jacobinism.
J. C. Shairp.
Jac"o*bin*ize` (?), v. t.
[imp. & p. p.Jacobinized (?); p.
pr. & vb. n.Jacobinizing (?).] [Cf. F.
Jacobiniser.] To taint with, or convert to,
Jacobinism.
France was not then jacobinized.
Burke.
Jac"o*bite (?), n. [L. Jacobus
James: cf. F. Jacobite. See 2d Jack.]
1.(Eng. Hist.)A partisan or
adherent of James the Second, after his abdication, or of his
descendants, an opposer of the revolution in 1688 in favor of William
and Mary.Macaulay.
2.(Eccl.)One of the sect of Syrian
Monophysites. The sect is named after Jacob Baradæus,
its leader in the sixth century.
Jac"o*bite, a.Of or pertaining to
the Jacobites.
{ Jac`o*bit"ic (?), Jac`o*bit"ic*al (?), }
a.Of or pertaining to the Jacobites;
characterized by Jacobitism. -- Jac`o*bit"ic*al*ly,
adv.
Jac"o*bit*ism` (?), n.The
principles of the Jacobites.Mason.
Ja*co"bus (?), n.; pl.Jacobuses (#). [See Jacobite.] An
English gold coin, of the value of twenty-five shillings sterling,
struck in the reign of James I.
Jac"o*net (?), n. [F. jaconas.]
A thin cotton fabric, between cambric and muslin, used for
dresses, neckcloths, etc. [Written also jacconet.]
Jac*quard" (?), a.Pertaining to,
or invented by, Jacquard, a French mechanician, who died in
1834.
Jacquard apparatus or
arrangement, a device applied to looms for
weaving figured goods, consisting of mechanism controlled by a chain
of variously perforated cards, which cause the warp threads to be
lifted in the proper succession for producing the required
figure. -- Jacquard card, one of the
perforated cards of a Jacquard apparatus. -- Jacquard
loom, a loom with Jacquard apparatus.
||Jacque"mi*not (?), n.A half-
hardy, deep crimson rose of the remontant class; -- so named after
General Jacqueminot, of France.
||Jacque`rie" (?), n. [F.] The
name given to a revolt of French peasants against the nobles in 1358,
the leader assuming the contemptuous title, Jacques Bonhomme,
given by the nobles to the peasantry. Hence, any revolt of
peasants.
Jac"tan*cy (jăk"tan*s&ybreve;),
n. [L. jactantia, fr. jactans, p. pr.
of jactare to throw, boast, freq. fr. jacere to throw;
cf. F. jactance.] A boasting; a bragging.
[Obs.]
Jac*ta"tion (jăk*tā"shŭn),
n. [L. jactatio, fr. jactare: af. F.
jactation. See Jactancy.] A throwing or tossing of
the body; a shaking or agitation.Sir. W. Temple.
Jac"ti*ta"tion (?), n. [L.
jactitare to utter in public, from jactare. See
Jactancy.]
1.(Law)Vain boasting or assertions
repeated to the prejudice of another's right; false claim.Mozley & W.
2.(Med.)A frequent tossing or
moving of the body; restlessness, as in delirium.Dunglison.
Jactitation of marriage(Eng. Eccl. Law),
a giving out or boasting by a party that he or she is married to
another, whereby a common reputation of their matrimony may
ensue.Blackstone.
Jac"u*la*ble (?), a.Fit for
throwing. [Obs.]
Jac"u*late (?), v. t. [imp. &
p. p.Jaculated (?); p. pr. & vb.
n.Jaculating.] [L. jaculatus, p. p. of
jaculari. See Ejaculate.] To throw or cast, as a
dart; to throw out; to emit.
Jac`u*la"tion (?), n. [L.
jaculatio.] The act of tossing, throwing, or hurling, as
spears.
Hurled to and fro with jaculation
dire.
Milton.
Jac"u*la`tor (?), [L.] 1.One who
throws or casts. [R.]
2.(Zoöl.)The archer fish
(Toxotes jaculator).
Jac"u*la*to*ry (?), a. [L.
jaculatorius: cf. F. jaculatoire.] Darting or
throwing out suddenly; also, suddenly thrown out; uttered in short
sentences; ejaculatory; as, jaculatory prayers.Smart.
Jad"ding (?), n.(Mining)See Holing.
Jade (?), n. [F., fr. Sp. jade,
fr. piedra de ijada stone of the side, fr. ijada flank,
side, pain in the side, the stone being so named because it was
supposed to cure this pain. Sp. ijada is derived fr. L.
ilia flanks. Cf. Iliac.] (Min.)A stone,
commonly of a pale to dark green color but sometimes whitish. It is
very hard and compact, capable of fine polish, and is used for
ornamental purposes and for implements, esp. in Eastern countries and
among many early peoples.
&fist; The general term jade includes nephrite, a compact
variety of tremolite with a specific gravity of 3, and also the
mineral jadeite, a silicate of alumina and soda, with a specific
gravity of 3.3. The latter is the more highly prized and includes the
feitsui of the Chinese. The name has also been given to other tough
green minerals capable of similar use.
Jade, n. [OE. jade; cf. Prov. E.
yaud, Scot. yade, yad, yaud, Icel.
jalda a mare.]
1.A mean or tired horse; a worthless
nag.Chaucer.
Tired as a jade in overloaden
cart.
Sir P. Sidney.
2.A disreputable or vicious woman; a wench;
a quean; also, sometimes, a worthless man.Shak.
She shines the first of battered
jades.
Swift.
3.A young woman; -- generally so called in
irony or slight contempt.
A souple jade she was, and strang.
Burns.
Jade, v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Jaded; p. pr. & vb. n.Jading.]
1.To treat like a jade; to spurn.
[Obs.] Shak.
2.To make ridiculous and
contemptible. [Obs.]
I do now fool myself, to let imagination jade
me.
Shak.
3.To exhaust by overdriving or long-
continued labor of any kind; to tire or wear out by severe or tedious
tasks; to harass.
The mind, once jaded by an attempt above its
power, . . . checks at any vigorous undertaking ever
after.
Locke.
Syn. -- To fatigue; tire; weary; harass. -- To
Jade, Fatigue, Tire, Weary.
Fatigue is the generic term; tire denotes fatigue which
wastes the strength; weary implies that a person is worn out
by exertion; jade refers to the weariness created by a long
and steady repetition of the same act or effort. A little exertion
will tire a child or a weak person; a severe or protracted
task wearies equally the body and the mind; the most powerful
horse becomes jaded on a long journey by a continual straining
of the same muscles. Wearied with labor of body or mind;
tired of work, tired out by importunities; jaded
by incessant attention to business.
Jade, v. i.To become weary; to
lose spirit.
They . . . fail, and jade, and tire in the
prosecution.
South.
Jade"ite (?), n.(Min.)See
Jade, the stone.
Jad"er*y (?), n.The tricks of a
jade.
Jad"ish, a.1.Vicious; ill-tempered; resembling a jade; -- applied to a
horse.
2.Unchaste; -- applied to a woman.L'Estrange.
||Jae"ger (?), n.See
Jager.
Jag (?), n. [Prob. of Celtic origin;
cf. W. gag aperture, cleft, chink; akin to Ir. & Gael.
gag.] [Written also jagg.]
1.A notch; a cleft; a barb; a ragged or
sharp protuberance; a denticulation.
Arethuss arose . . .
From rock and from jag.
Shelley.
Garments thus beset with long
jags.
Holland.
2.A part broken off; a fragment.Bp. Hacket.
3.(Bot.)A cleft or
division.
Jag bolt, a bolt with a nicked or barbed
shank which resists retraction, as when leaded into stone.
Jag, v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Jagged (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Jagging (?).] To cut into notches or teeth like those of
a saw; to notch. [Written also jagg.]
Jagging iron, a wheel with a zigzag or
jagged edge for cutting cakes or pastry into ornamental
figures.
Jag, n. [Scot. jag, jaug,
a leather bag or wallet, a pocket. Cf. Jag a notch.] A
small load, as of hay or grain in the straw, or of ore. [Prov.
Eng. & Colloq. U.S.] [Written also jagg.] Forby.
Jag, v. t.To carry, as a load;
as, to jag hay, etc. [Prov. Eng. & Colloq. U.S.]
Ja"ger (?), n. [G. jäger a
hunter, a sportsman. Cf. Yager.] [Written also
jaeger.] 1.(Mil.)A
sharpshooter. See Yager.
2.(Zoöl.)Any species of gull
of the genus Stercorarius. Three species occur on the Atlantic
coast. The jagers pursue other species of gulls and force them to
disgorge their prey. The two middle tail feathers are usually
decidedly longer than the rest. Called also boatswain, and
marline-spike bird. The name is also applied to the skua, or
Arctic gull (Megalestris skua).
Jagg (?), v. t. & n.See
Jag.
Jag"ged (jăg"g&ebreve;d), a.Having jags; having rough, sharp notches, protuberances, or
teeth; cleft; laciniate; divided; as, jagged rocks. "
Jagged vine leaves' shade." Trench. --
Jag"ged*ly, adv. -- Jag"ged*ness,
n.
Jag"ger (jăg"g&etilde;r), n.One who carries about a small load; a peddler. See 2d
Jag. [Scot.] Sir W. Scott.
Jag"ger, n. [From 4th Jag.]
One who, or that which, jags; specifically: (a)
jagging iron used for crimping pies, cakes, etc. (b)
A toothed chisel. See Jag, v. t.
Jagger spring, a spring beneath a seat, and
resting on cleats or blocks in the body of a vehicle.Knight.
Jag"ger*y (?), n. [Hind
jāgrī. Cf. Sugar.] Raw palm sugar,
made in the East Indies by evaporating the fresh juice of several
kinds of palm trees, but specifically that of the palmyra
(Borassus flabelliformis). [Written also
jagghery.]
Jag"gy (?), a.Having jags; set
with teeth; notched; uneven; as, jaggy teeth.Addison.
||Ja"ghir (?), n. [Per.
jāgīr.] A village or district the government
and revenues of which are assigned to some person, usually in
consideration of some service to be rendered, esp. the maintenance of
troops. [Written also jaghire, jagir, etc.]
[India] Whitworth.
||Ja"ghir*dar` (?), n. [Per.
jāgīr-dār.] The holder of a
jaghir.
Ja"gua palm` (?). [Sp. jagua the fruit of the
jagua palm.] (Bot.)A great Brazilian palm
(Maximiliana regia), having immense spathes which are used for
baskets and tubs.
Ja*guar" (?), n. [Braz.
yagoára: cf. & Pg. jaguar.] (Zoöl.)A large and powerful feline animal (Felis onca), ranging
from Texas and Mexico to Patagonia. It is usually brownish yellow,
with large, dark, somewhat angular rings, each generally inclosing
one or two dark spots. It is chiefly arboreal in its habits. Called
also the American tiger.
||Ja`gua*ron"di (?), n. [Native name.]
(Zoöl.)A South American wild cat (Felis
jaguarondi), having a long, slim body and very short legs. Its
color is grayish brown, varied with a blackish hue. It is arboreal in
its habits and feeds mostly on birds.
Jah (jä), n. [Heb.
yāh.] Jehovah.Ps. lxviii. 4.
Jail (?), n. [OE. jaile,
gail, gayhol, OF. gaole, gaiole,
jaiole, F. geôle, LL. gabiola, dim. of
gabia cage, for L. cavea cavity, cage. See
Cage.] A kind of prison; a building for the confinement
of persons held in lawful custody, especially for minor offenses or
with reference to some future judicial proceeding. [Written
also gaol.]
This jail I count the house of
liberty.
Milton.
Jail bird, a prisoner; one who has been
confined in prison. [Slang] -- Jail delivery,
the release of prisoners from jail, either legally or by
violence. -- Jail delivery commission. See
under Gaol. -- Jail fever(Med.), typhus fever, or a disease resembling it,
generated in jails and other places crowded with people; -- called
also hospital fever, and ship fever. --
Jail liberties, or Jail limits,
a space or district around a jail within which an imprisoned
debtor was, on certain conditions, allowed to go at large.Abbott. -- Jail lock, a peculiar form of
padlock; -- called also Scandinavian lock.
Jail, v. t.To imprison.
[R.] T. Adams (1614).
[Bolts] that jail you from free
life.
Tennyson.
Jail"er (?), n. [OE. jailer,
gailer, OF. geolier, F. geôlier. See
Jail.] The keeper of a jail or prison. [Written
also jailor, gaoler.]
{ Jain (?), Jai"na, } n. [Skr.
Jaina, fr. Jina, a proper name, fr. jina
victorious.] One of a numerous sect in British India, holding
the tenets of Jainism.
Jain"ism (?), n.The heterodox
Hindoo religion, of which the most striking features are the
exaltation of saints or holy mortals, called jins, above the
ordinary Hindoo gods, and the denial of the divine origin and
infallibility of the Vedas. It is intermediate between Brahmanism and
Buddhism, having some things in common with each.
||Jai*rou" (?), n. [Native name.]
(Zoöl.)The ahu or Asiatic gazelle.
Jak (?), n.(Bot.)see 1st
Jack.
Jakes (?), n. [Prob. fr. F.
Jacques, the proper name. See 2d Jack.] A
privy.Shak.
Ja"kie (?), n.(Zoöl.)A South American striped frog (Pseudis paradoxa),
remarkable for having a tadpole larger than the adult, and hence
called also paradoxical frog.
Jak"o (jăk"&osl;), n.(Zoöl.)An African parrot (Psittacus
erithacus), very commonly kept as a cage bird; -- called also
gray parrot.
Jak"wood` (?), n.See
Jackwood.
Jal"ap (?), n. [F., fr. Sp.
jalapa; -- so called from Jalapa, a town in Mexico,
whence it was first obtained.] (Med.)The tubers of the
Mexican plant Ipomœa purga (or Exogonium purga),
a climber much like the morning-glory. The abstract, extract, and
powder, prepared from the tubers, are well known purgative medicines.
Other species of Ipomœa yield several inferior kinds of jalap,
as the I. Orizabensis, and I. tuberosa.
False jalap, the root of Mirabilis
Jalapa, four-o'clock, or marvel of Peru.
Ja*lap"ic (?), a.Of or pertaining
to jalap.
Jal"a*pin (?), n.(Chem.)A
glucoside found in the stems of the jalap plant and scammony. It is a
strong purgative.
||Ja`lons", n. pl. [F. Of unknown
origin.] (Mil.)Long poles, topped with wisps of straw,
used as landmarks and signals.Farrow.
||Ja`lou`sie", n. [F. See
Jealousy.] A Venetian or slatted inside window
blind.
Ja`lou`sied" (?), a.Furnished
with jalousies; as, jalousied porches.
Jam (?), n. [Per. or Hind.
jāmah garment, robe.] A kind of frock for
children.
Jam, n.(Mining)See
Jamb.
Jam, v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Jammed (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Jamming.] [Either fr. jamb, as if squeezed between
jambs, or more likely from the same source as champ See
Champ.]
1.To press into a close or tight position;
to crowd; to squeeze; to wedge in.
The . . . jammed in between two
rocks.
De Foe.
2.To crush or bruise; as, to jam a
finger in the crack of a door. [Colloq.]
3.(Naut.)To bring (a vessel) so
close to the wind that half her upper sails are laid aback.W. C. Russell.
Jam, n.1.A mass
of people or objects crowded together; also, the pressure from a
crowd; a crush; as, a jam in a street; a jam of logs in
a river.
2.An injury caused by jamming.
[Colloq.]
Jam, n. [Prob. fr. jam, v.; but
cf. also Ar. jamad ice, jelly, jāmid congealed,
jamd congelation, ice.] A preserve of fruit boiled with
sugar and water; as, raspberry jam; currant jam; grape
jam.
Jam nut. See Check nut, under
Check. -- Jam weld(Forging),
a butt weld. See under Butt.
||Jam`a*ci"na (?), n. [NL.]
Jamaicine.
||Jam"a*dar (?), n.Same as
Jemidar.
Ja*mai"ca (?), n.One of the West
India islands.
Jamaica ginger, a variety of ginger, called
also white ginger, prepared in Jamaica from the best roots,
which are deprived of their epidermis and dried separately. --
Jamaica pepper, allspice. --
Jamaica rose(Bot.), a West Indian
melastomaceous shrub (Blakea trinervis), with showy pink
flowers.
Ja*mai"can (?), a.Of or
pertaining to Jamaica. -- n.A native
or inhabitant of Jamaica.
Ja*ma"i*cine (?), n. [From
Jamaica.] (Chem.)An alkaloid said to be contained
in the bark of Geoffroya inermis, a leguminous tree growing in
Jamaica and Surinam; -- called also jamacina.Watts.
Jamb (?), n. [Prov. E. jaumb,
jaum, F. jambe a leg, jambe de force a principal
rafter. See Gambol.]
1.(Arch)The vertical side of any
opening, as a door or fireplace; hence, less properly, any narrow
vertical surface of wall, as the of a chimney-breast or of a pier, as
distinguished from its face.Gwilt.
2.(Mining)Any thick mass of rock
which prevents miners from following the lode or vein.
Jamb (?), v. t.See Jam,
v. t.
Jam*bee" (?), n. [See Jamb,
n.: cf. OF. jamboier to walk.] A
fashionable cane. [Obs.] Tatler.
{ Jambes (?), Jam"beux (?), } n.
pl. [From F. jambe a leg: cf. OF. jambiere.
See Jamb, n.] (Ancient Armor)In
the Middle Ages, armor for the legs below the knees. [Written
also giambeux.] Chaucer.
||Jam`bo*la"na (?), n. [Cf. Pg.
jambolão a kind of tropical fruit.] (Bot.)A myrtaceous tree of the West Indies and tropical America
(Calyptranthes Jambolana), with astringent bark, used for
dyeing. It bears an edible fruit.
||Jam"da*ni (?), n.A silk fabric,
with a woven pattern of sprigs of flowers. [Written also
jamdanee.] Balfour (Cyc. of India).
Ja"me*son*ite (?), n. [From Prof.
Jameson, of Edinburgh.] (Min.)A steel-gray
mineral, of metallic luster, commonly fibrous massive. It is a
sulphide of antimony and lead, with a little iron.
James"'s pow`der (?). (Med.)Antimonial
powder, first prepared by Dr. James, an English physician; --
called also fever powder.
James"town` weed` (?). (Bot.)The poisonous
thorn apple or stramonium (Datura stramonium), a rank weed
early noticed at Jamestown, Virginia. See
Datura.
&fist; This name is often corrupted into jimson,
jimpson, and gympsum.
Jan (jăn), n. [Ar.] (Moham.
Myth.)One of an intermediate order between angels and
men.
Jane (jān), n. [LL. Janua
Genoa; L. Genua, also OE. Jean.] 1.A coin of Genoa; any small coin.Chaucer.
2.A kind of twilled cotton cloth. See
Jean.
Jane"-of-apes" (?), n.A silly,
pert girl; -- corresponding to jackanapes.Massinger.
Jan"gle (?), v. i. [imp. & p.
p.Jangled (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Jangling (?).] [OE. janglen to quarrel, OF.
jangler to rail, quarrel; of Dutch or German origin; cf. D.
jangelen, janken, to whimper, chide, brawl,
quarrel.]
1.To sound harshly or discordantly, as
bells out of tune.
2.To talk idly; to prate; to babble; to
chatter; to gossip. "Thou janglest as a jay."
Chaucer.
3.To quarrel in words; to altercate; to
wrangle.
Good wits will be jangling; but, gentles,
agree.
Shak.
Prussian Trenck . . . jargons and jangles in an
unmelodious manner.
Carlyle.
Jan"gle, v. t.To cause to sound
harshly or inharmoniously; to produce discordant sounds
with.
Like sweet bells jangled, out of tune, and
harsh.
Shak.
Jan"gle, n. [Cf. OF.
jangle.]
1.Idle talk; prate; chatter; babble.Chaucer.
2.Discordant sound; wrangling.
The musical jangle of sleigh
bells.
Longfellow.
Jan"gler (?), n. [Cf. OF.
jangleor.]
1.An idle talker; a babbler; a
prater.Chaucer.
2.A wrangling, noisy fellow.
Jan"gler*ess, n.A female prater
or babbler.
Jan"gler*y, n. [Cf. OF.
janglerie chattering, talk.] Jangling. [Obs.]
Chaucer.
Jan"gling (?), a.Producing
discordant sounds. "A jangling noise."
Milton.
Jan"gling, n.1.Idle babbling; vain disputation.
From which some, having swerved, have turned aside
unto vain jangling.
1 Tim. i. 6.
2.Wrangling; altercation.Lamb.
Jan"is*sa*ry (?), n.See
Janizary.
Jan"i*tor (?), n. [L., fr. janua
a door.] A door-keeper; a porter; one who has the care of a
public building, or a building occupied for offices, suites of rooms,
etc.
{ Jan"i*tress (?), Jan"i*trix (?), }
n. [L. janitrix. See Janitor.] A
female janitor.
Jan"i*zar` (?), n.A
janizary. [R.] Byron.
Jan`i*za"ri*an (?), a.Of or
pertaining to the janizaries, or their government.
Burke.
Jan"i*za*ry (?), n.; pl.Janizaries (#). [F. janissaire, fr. Turk.
ye&?;i-tsheri new soldiers or troops.] A soldier of a
privileged military class, which formed the nucleus of the Turkish
infantry, but was suppressed in 1826. [written also
janissary.]
Jan"ker (?), n.A long pole on two
wheels, used in hauling logs. [Scot.] Jamieson.
Jan"sen*ism (?), n. [F.
Jansénisme.] (Eccl. Hist.)The doctrine of
Jansen regarding free will and divine grace.
Jan"sen*ist, n. [F.
Janséniste.] (Eccl. Hist.)A follower of
Cornelius Jansen, a Roman Catholic bishop of Ypres, in
Flanders, in the 17th century, who taught certain doctrines denying
free will and the possibility of resisting divine grace.
Jant (?), v. i.See
Jaunt.
||Jan"thi*na (?), n.(Zoöl.)See Ianthina.
Jan"ti*ly (?), adv.See
Jauntily.
Jan"ti*ness, n.See
Jauntiness.
||Jan"tu (?) n.A machine of great
antiquity, used in Bengal for raising water to irrigate land.Knight.
Jan"ty (?), a.See
Jaunty.
Jan"u*a*ry (?), n. [L.
Januarius, fr. Janus an old Latin deity, the god of the
sun and the year, to whom the month of January was sacred; cf.
janua a door, Skr. yā to go.] The first
month of the year, containing thirty-one days.
&fist; Before the adoption of New Style, the commencement of the
year was usually reckoned from March 25.
Ja"nus (?), n. [L. See January.]
(Rom. Antiq.)A Latin deity represented with two faces
looking in opposite directions. Numa is said to have dedicated to
Janus the covered passage at Rome, near the Forum, which is usually
called the Temple of Janus. This passage was open in war and closed
in peace.Dr. W. Smith.
Janus cloth, a fabric having both sides
dressed, the sides being of different colors, -- used for reversible
garments.
Ja"nus-faced` (?), a.Double-
faced; deceitful.
Janus-faced lock, one having duplicate faces
so as to go upon a right or a left hand door, the key entering on
either side indifferently.Knight.
Ja"nus-head`ed (?), a.Double-
headed.
Ja*pan" (j&adot;*păn"), n. [From
Japan, the country.] Work varnished and figured in the
Japanese manner; also, the varnish or lacquer used in
japanning.
Ja*pan", a.Of or pertaining to
Japan, or to the lacquered work of that country; as, Japan
ware.
Japan allspice(Bot.), a spiny shrub
from Japan (Chimonanthus fragrans), related to the Carolina
allspice. -- Japan black(Chem.), a
quickly drying black lacquer or varnish, consisting essentially of
asphaltum dissolved in naphtha or turpentine, and used for coating
ironwork; -- called also Brunswick black, Japan
lacquer, or simply Japan. -- Japan
camphor, ordinary camphor brought from China or Japan,
as distinguished from the rare variety called borneol or
Borneo camphor. -- Japan clover, or
Japan pea(Bot.), a cloverlike plant
(Lespedeza striata) from Eastern Asia, useful for fodder,
first noticed in the Southern United States about 1860, but now
become very common. During the Civil War it was called variously
Yankee clover and Rebel clover. -- Japan
earth. See Catechu. -- Japan
ink, a kind of writing ink, of a deep, glossy black
when dry. -- Japan varnish, a varnish
prepared from the milky juice of the Rhus vernix, a small
Japanese tree related to the poison sumac.
Ja*pan" (j&adot;*păn"), v. t.
[imp. & p. p.Japanned
(j&adot;*pănd"); p. pr. & vb. n.Japanning.]
1.To cover with a coat of hard, brilliant
varnish, in the manner of the Japanese; to lacquer.
2.To give a glossy black to, as
shoes. [R.] Gay.
Jap`a*nese" (?), a.Of or
pertaining to Japan, or its inhabitants.
Jap`a*nese", n. sing. & pl.
1.A native or inhabitant of Japan;
collectively, the people of Japan.
2.sing.The language of the people
of Japan.
Ja*panned" (?), a.Treated, or
coated, with varnish in the Japanese manner.
Japanned leather, leather treated with
coatings of Japan varnish, and dried in a stove.Knight.
Ja*pan"ner (?), n.1.One who varnishes in the manner of the Japanese, or one skilled
in the art.
2.A bootblack. [R.]
Ja*pan"ning (?), n.The art or act
of varnishing in the Japanese manner.
Ja*pan"nish (?), a.After the
manner of the Japanese; resembling japanned articles.Carlyle.
Jape (?), v. i. [Prob. from the same
source as gab, influenced by F. japper to yelp. See
Gab to deceive.] To jest; to play tricks; to jeer.
[Obs.] Chaucer.
Jape, v. t.To mock; to
trick.Chaucer.
I have not been putting a jape upon
you.
Sir W. Scott.
The coy giggle of the young lady to whom he has
imparted his latest merry jape.
W.
Besant.
Jap"er (?), n.A jester; a
buffoon. [Obs.] Chaucer.
Jap"er*y (?), n. [Cf. OF.
japerie a yelping.] Jesting; buffoonery. [Obs.]
Chaucer.
Ja"pheth*ite (?), n.A
Japhetite.Kitto.
Ja*phet"ic (?), a.Pertaining to,
or derived from, Japheth, one of the sons of Noah; as,
Japhetic nations, the nations of Europe and Northern Asia;
Japhetic languages.
Ja"phet*ite (?), n.A descendant
of Japheth.
Ja*pon"i*ca (?), n. [NL., Japanese, fr.
Japonia Japan.] (Bot.)A species of Camellia
(Camellia Japonica), a native of Japan, bearing beautiful red
or white flowers. Many other genera have species of the same
name.
Jar (jär), n. [See Ajar.]
A turn. [Only in phrase.]
On the jar, on the turn, ajar, as a
door.
Jar (jär), n. [F. jarre,
Sp. jarra, from Ar. jarrah ewer; cf. Pers.
jarrah.] 1.A deep, broad-mouthed
vessel of earthenware or glass, for holding fruit, preserves, etc.,
or for ornamental purposes; as, a jar of honey; a rose
jar.Dryden.
2.The measure of what is contained in a
jar; as, a jar of oil; a jar of preserves.
Bell jar, Leyden jar. See
in the Vocabulary.
Jar, v. i. [imp. & p.
p.Jarred (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Jarring (?).] [Cf. OE. charken to creak, AS.
cearcian to gnash, F. jars a gander, L. garrire
to chatter, prate, OHG. kerran to chatter, croak, G.
quarren to grumble, and E. jargon, ajar.]
1.To give forth a rudely quivering or
tremulous sound; to sound harshly or discordantly; as, the notes
jarred on my ears.
When such strings jar, what hope of harmony
?
Shak.
A string may jar in the best master's
hand.
Roscommon.
2.To act in opposition or disagreement; to
clash; to interfere; to quarrel; to dispute.
When those renowned noble peers Greece
Through stubborn pride among themselves did jar.
Spenser.
For orders and degrees Jar not with liberty, but well consist.
Milton.
Jar, v. t.1.To
cause a short, tremulous motion of, to cause to tremble, as by a
sudden shock or blow; to shake; to shock; as, to jar the
earth; to jar one's faith.
2.To tick; to beat; to mark or tell
off. [Obs.]
My thoughts are minutes, and with sighs they
jar
Their watches on unto mine eyes.
Shak.
Jar, n.1.A
rattling, tremulous vibration or shock; a shake; a harsh sound; a
discord; as, the jar of a train; the jar of harsh
sounds.
2.Clash of interest or opinions; collision;
discord; debate; slight disagreement.
And yet his peace is but continual
jar.
Spenser.
Cease, cease these jars, and rest your minds in
peace.
Shak.
3.A regular vibration, as of a
pendulum.
I love thee not a jar of the
clock.
Shak.
4.pl.In deep well boring, a device
resembling two long chain links, for connecting a percussion drill to
the rod or rope which works it, so that the drill is driven down by
impact and is jerked loose when jammed.
||Jar`a*ra"ca (?), n. [Pg., from the
native name.] (Zoöl.)A poisonous serpent of Brazil
(Bothrops jararaca), about eighteen inches long, and of a
dusky, brownish color, variegated with red and black spots.
Jar"ble (?), v. t.To wet; to
bemire. [Prov. Eng.] Halliwell.
||Jar`di`nière" (?), n. [F.,
fem. of jardinier gardener. See Garden.] An
ornamental stand or receptacle for plants, flowers, etc., used as a
piece of decorative furniture in room.
Jards (?), n. [F. jarde,
jardon.] (Far.)A callous tumor on the leg of a
horse, below the hock.
Jar"gle (?), v. i. [Cf. OSw.
jerga to repeat angrily, to brawl, Icel. jarg tedious
iteration, F. jargonner to talk jargon. See Jargon
gabble.] To emit a harsh or discordant sound. [Obs.]
Bp. Hall.
Jar"gon (?), n. [F. jargon, OF.
also gargon, perh. akin to E. garrulous, or
gargle.] Confused, unintelligible language; gibberish;
hence, an artificial idiom or dialect; cant language; slang.
"A barbarous jargon." Macaulay. "All jargon of
the schools." Prior.
The jargon which serves the
traffickers.
Johnson.
Jar"gon (jär"g&obreve;n), v. i.
[imp. & p. p.Jargoned (-g&obreve;nd);
p. pr. & vb. n.Jargoning.] To utter
jargon; to emit confused or unintelligible sounds; to talk
unintelligibly, or in a harsh and noisy manner.
The noisy jay, Jargoning like a foreigner at his food.
Longfellow.
Jar"gon, n. [E. jargon, It.
jiargone; perh. fr. Pers. zarg&?;n gold-colored, fr.
zar gold. Cf. Zircon.] (Min.)A variety of
zircon. See Zircon.
Jar`go*nelle" (?), n. [F.
jargonelle a very gritty variety of pear. See Jargon
zircon.] A variety of pear which ripens early.
Jar*gon"ic (?), a.Of or
pertaining to the mineral jargon.
Jar"gon*ist (?), n.One addicted
to jargon; one who uses cant or slang.Macaulay.
||Jarl (?), n. [Icel., nobleman, chief.
See Earl.] A chief; an earl; in English history, one of
the leaders in the Danish and Norse invasions.Longfellow.
Ja*ro"site (?), n. [From Barranco
Jaroso, in Spain.] (Min.)An ocher-yellow mineral
occurring in minute rhombohedral crystals. It is a hydrous sulphate
of iron and potash.
Jar"-owl` (?), n.(Zoöl.)The goatsucker.
Jar"rah (?), n.The mahoganylike
wood of the Australian Eucalyptus marginata. See
Eucalyptus.
Jar"ring (?), a. [See Jar.]
Shaking; disturbing; discordant. "A jarring sound."
Dryden.
Jar"ringn.1.A
shaking; a tremulous motion; as, the jarring of a steamship,
caused by its engines.
2.Discord; a clashing of interests.
"Endless jarrings and immortal hate." Dryden.
Jar"ring*ly, adv.In a jarring or
discordant manner.
{ Jar"vey, Jar"vy } (?), n.1.The driver of a hackney coach. [Slang,
Eng.] Carlyle.
2.A hackney coach. [Slang, Eng.]
The litter at the bottom of the
jarvy.
T. Hook.
Ja"sey (?), n.A wig; -- so
called, perhaps, from being made of, or resembling, Jersey
yarn.Thackeray.
Jas"hawk` (?), n. [A corruption of
eyas hawk.] (Zoöl.)A young hawk.Booth.
Jas"mine (?), n. [F. jasmin, Sp.
jazmin, Ar. yāsmīn, Pers.
yāsmīn; cf. It. gesmino, gelsomino.
Cf. Jessamine.] (Bot.)A shrubby plant of the
genus Jasminum, bearing flowers of a peculiarly fragrant odor.
The J. officinale, common in the south of Europe, bears white
flowers. The Arabian jasmine is J. Sambac, and, with J.
angustifolia, comes from the East Indies. The yellow false
jasmine in the Gelseminum sempervirens (see Gelsemium).
Several other plants are called jasmine in the West Indies, as
species of Calotropis and Faramea. [Written also
jessamine.]
Cape jasmine, orCape
jessamine, the Gardenia florida, a shrub with
fragrant white flowers, a native of China, and hardy in the Southern
United States.
Jasp (?), n.Jasper. [Obs.]
Spenser.
Jas"pa*chate (?), n. [L.
iaspachates, Gr. &?;.] (Min.)Agate jasper.
[Obs.]
Jas"per (?), n. [OE. jaspre,
jaspe, OF. jaspre, jaspe, F. jaspe, L.
iaspis, Gr. &?;; cf. Per. yashp, yashf, Ar.
yashb, yasb, yasf, Heb. yāshpheh.
Cf. Diaper.] (Min.)An opaque, impure variety of
quartz, of red, yellow, and other dull colors, breaking with a smooth
surface. It admits of a high polish, and is used for vases, seals,
snuff boxes, etc. When the colors are in stripes or bands, it is
called striped or banded jasper. The Egyptian pebble is a
brownish yellow jasper.
Jasper opal, a yellow variety of opal
resembling jasper. -- Jasper ware, a
delicate kind of earthenware invented by Josiah Wedgwood. It is
usually white, but is capable of receiving color.
Jas"per*a`ted (?), a.mixed with
jasper; containing particles of jasper; as, jasperated
agate.
Jas"per*ize (?), v. t. [Usually p. p.
Jasperized (&?;).] To convert into, or make to resemble,
jasper.
Polished specimens of jasperized and agatized
woods.
Pop. Sci. Monthly.
Jas"per*y (?), a.Of the nature of
jasper; mixed with jasper.
{ Jas*pid"e*an (?), Jas*pid"e*ous (?), }
a. [L. iaspideus. See Jasper.]
Consisting of jasper, or containing jasper; jaspery;
jasperlike.
Jas"pi*lite (?), n. [Jasper +
-lite.] (Min.)A compact siliceous rock resembling
jasper.
Jas"poid (?), a. [F.
jaspoïde; jaspe jasper + Gr. &?; form.]
Resembling jasper. [R.]
Jasp`o"nyx (?), n. [L. iasponyx,
Gr. &?;. See Jasper, and Onyx.] (min.)An onyx, part or all of whose layers consist of
jasper.
Ja*troph"ic (?), a.Of or
pertaining to physic nuts, the seeds of plants of the genus
Jatropha.
Jaunce (?), v. i. [OF. jancer.
Cf. Jounce, Jaunt.] To ride hard; to jounce.
[Obs.]
Spurr'd, galled and tired by jauncing
Bolingbroke.
Shak.
Jaun"dice (?; 277), n. [OE.
jaunis, F. jaunisse, fr. jaune yellow, orig.
jalne, fr. L. galbinus yellowish, fr. galbus
yellow.] (Med.)A morbid condition, characterized by
yellowness of the eyes, skin, and urine, whiteness of the
fæces, constipation, uneasiness in the region of the stomach,
loss of appetite, and general languor and lassitude. It is caused
usually by obstruction of the biliary passages and consequent damming
up, in the liver, of the bile, which is then absorbed into the
blood.
Blue jaundice. See
Cyanopathy.
Jaun"dice (?), v. t.To affect
with jaundice; to color by prejudice or envy; to prejudice.
The envy of wealth jaundiced his
soul.
Ld. Lytton.
Jaun"diced (?), a.1.Affected with jaundice.
Jaundiced eyes seem to see all objects
yellow.
Bp. Hall.
2.Prejudiced; envious; as, a
jaundiced judgment.
Jaunt (?), v. i. [imp. & p.
p.Jaunted; p. pr. & vb. n.Jaunting.] [Cf. Scot. jaunder to ramble, jaunt
to taunt, jeer, dial. Sw. ganta to play the buffoon, romp,
jest; perh. akin to E. jump. Cf. Jaunce.]
1.To ramble here and there; to stroll; to
make an excursion.
2.To ride on a jaunting car.
Jaunting car, a kind of low-set open
vehicle, used in Ireland, in which the passengers ride sidewise,
sitting back to back. [Written also jaunty car.]
Thackeray.
Jaunt, v. t.To jolt; to
jounce. [Obs.] Bale.
Jaunt, n.1.A
wearisome journey. [R.]
Our Savior, meek, and with untroubled mind
After his aëry jaunt, though hurried sore.
Hungry and cold, betook him to his rest.
Milton.
2.A short excursion for pleasure or
refreshment; a ramble; a short journey.
Jaun"ti*ly (?), adv.In a jaunty
manner.
Jaun"ti*ness, n.The quality of
being jaunty.
That jauntiness of air I was once master
of.
Addison.
Jaun"ty (?), a.
[Compar.Jauntier (?);
superl.Jauntiest.] [Formerly spelt
janty, fr. F. gentil. See Gentle, and cf.
Genty.] Airy; showy; finical; hence, characterized by an
affected or fantastical manner.
Ja"va (?), n.1.One of the islands of the Malay Archipelago belonging to the
Netherlands.
2.Java coffee, a kind of coffee brought
from Java.
Java cat(Zoöl.), the
musang. -- Java sparrow(Zoöl.),
a species of finch (Padda oryzivora), native of Java, but
very commonly kept as a cage bird; -- called also ricebird,
and paddy bird. In the male the upper parts are glaucous gray,
the head and tail black, the under parts delicate rose, and the
cheeks white. The bill is large and red. A white variety is also kept
as a cage bird.
Jav`a*nese" (?), a.Of or
pertaining to Java, or to the people of Java. -- n.
sing. & pl.A native or natives of Java.
Jav"el (?), n.A vagabond.
[Obs.] Spenser.
Jave"lin (?), n. [F. javeline;
akin to Sp. jabalina, It. giavelina, and F.
javelot, OF. gavlot. Cf. Gavelock.] A sort
of light spear, to be thrown or cast by the hand; anciently, a weapon
of war used by horsemen and foot soldiers; now used chiefly in
hunting the wild boar and other fierce game.
Flies the javelin swifter to its mark,
Launched by the vigor of a Roman arm?
Addison.
Jave"lin, v. t.To pierce with a
javelin. [R.] Tennyson.
Jave`lin*ier" (?), n.A soldier
armed with a javelin.Holland.
Jaw (?), n. [A modification of
chaw, formed under the influence of F. joue the cheek.
See Chaw, Chew.]
1.(Anat.)(a)One of
the bones, usually bearing teeth, which form the framework of the
mouth.(b)Hence, also, the bone itself
with the teeth and covering.(c)In the
plural, the mouth.
2.Fig.: Anything resembling the jaw of an
animal in form or action; esp., pl., the mouth or way of
entrance; as, the jaws of a pass; the jaws of darkness;
the jaws of death.Shak.
3.(Mach.)(a)A
notch or opening.(b)A notched or forked
part, adapted for holding an object in place; as, the jaw of a
railway-car pedestal. See Axle guard.(b)One of a pair of opposing parts which are
movable towards or from each other, for grasping or crushing anything
between them, as, the jaws of a vise, or the jaws of a
stone-crushing machine.
4.(Naut.)The inner end of a boom or
gaff, hollowed in a half circle so as to move freely on a
mast.
5.Impudent or abusive talk. [Slang]
H. Kingsley.
Jaw bit(Railroad), a bar across the
jaws of a pedestal underneath an axle box. -- Jaw
breaker, a word difficult to pronounce. [Obs.] --
Jaw rope(Naut.), a rope which holds the
jaws of a gaff to the mast. -- Jaw tooth,
a molar or grinder; a back tooth.
Jaw, v. i. [imp. & p.
p.Jawed (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Jawing.] To scold; to clamor. [Low]
Smollett.
Jaw, v. t.To assail or abuse by
scolding. [Low]
Jaw"bone` (?), n.The bone of
either jaw; a maxilla or a mandible.
Jawed (j&add;d), a.Having jaws; -
- chiefly in composition; as, lantern-jawed.
"Jawed like a jetty." Skelton.
Jaw"-fall` (?), n.Depression of
the jaw; hence, depression of spirits.M. Griffith
(1660).
Jaw"-fall`en (?), a.Dejected;
chopfallen.
Jaw"foot` (?), n.(Zoöl.)See Maxilliped.
Jaw"ing, n.Scolding; clamorous or
abusive talk. [Slang] H. Kingsley.
Jawn (?), v. i.See
Yawn. [Obs.] Marston.
Jaw"y (?), a.Relating to the
jaws.Gayton.
Jay (?), n. [F. geai, OF.
gai, jaj, perh. fr. OHG. gāhi. Cf.
Gay.] (Zoöl.)Any one of the numerous species
of birds belonging to Garrulus, Cyanocitta, and allied
genera. They are allied to the crows, but are smaller, more graceful
in form, often handsomely colored, and usually have a
crest.
&fist; The European jay (Garrulus glandarius) is a large
and handsomely colored species, having the body pale reddish brown,
lighter beneath; tail and wing quills blackish; the primary coverts
barred with bright blue and black; throat, tail coverts, and a large
spot on the wings, white. Called also jay pie, Jenny
jay, and kæ. The common blue jay (Cyanocitta
cristata.), and the related species, are brilliantly colored, and
have a large erectile crest. The California jay (Aphelocoma
Californica), the Florida jay (A. Floridana), and the
green jay (Xanthoura luxuosa), of Texas and Mexico, are large,
handsome, crested species. The Canada jay (Perisoreus
Canadensis), and several allied species, are much plainer and
have no crest. See Blue jay, and Whisky jack.
Jay thrush(Zoöl.), any one
several species of Asiatic singing birds, of the genera
Garrulax, Grammatoptila, and related genera of the
family Crateropodidæ; as, the white-throated jay
thrush (G. albogularis), of India.
Jay"et (?), n.(Min.)See
Jet. [Obs.]
Jay"hawk`er (?), n.A name given
to a free-booting, unenlisted, armed man or guerrilla. [A term
of opprobrium used in the war of 1861-65, U. S.]
Ja"zel (?), n.A gem of an azure
color. [Obs.]
Jaz"er*ant (?), n. [OF.
jacerant, jaseran, Sp. jacerina, cota
jacerina, fr. jazarino Algerine, fr. Ar.
jazāīr Algiers.] A coat of defense made of
small plates of metal sewed upon linen or the like; also, this kind
of armor taken generally; as, a coat of jazerant.
Jeal"ous (?), a. [OE. jalous,
gelus, OF. jalous, F. jaloux, LL. zelosus
zealous, fr. zelus emulation, zeal, jealousy, Gr.
zh^los. See Zeal, and cf. Zealous.]
I have been very jealous for the Lord God of
hosts.
Kings xix. 10.
How nicely jealous is every one of us of his
own repute!
Dr. H. More.
2.Apprehensive; anxious; suspiciously
watchful.
'This doing wrong creates such doubts as these,
Renders us jealous and disturbs our peace.
Waller.
The people are so jealous of the clergy's
ambition.
Swift.
3.Exacting exclusive devotion; intolerant
of rivalry.
Thou shalt worship no other God; for the Lord, whose
name is Jealous, is a jealous God.
Ex. xxxiv.
14.
4.Disposed to suspect rivalry in matters of
interest and affection; apprehensive regarding the motives of
possible rivals, or the fidelity of friends; distrustful; having
morbid fear of rivalry in love or preference given to another;
painfully suspicious of the faithfulness of husband, wife, or
lover.
If the spirit of jealousy come upon him, and he
be jealous of his wife.
Num. v. 14.
To both these sisters have I sworn my love:
Each jealous of the other, as the stung
Are of the adder.
Shak.
It is one of the best bonds, both of chastity and
obedience, in the wife, if she think her husband wise; which she will
never do if she find him jealous.
Bacon.
Syn. -- Suspicious; anxious; envious. Jealous,
Suspicious. Suspicious is the wider term. We
suspect a person when we distrust his honesty and imagine he
has some bad design. We are jealous when we suspect him of
aiming to deprive us of what we dearly prize. Iago began by awakening
the suspicions of Othello, and converted them at last into
jealousy. "Suspicion may be excited by some kind of
accusation, not supported by evidence sufficient for conviction, but
sufficient to trouble the repose of confidence." "Jealousy is
a painful apprehension of rivalship in cases that are peculiarly
interesting to us." Cogan.
Jeal"ous*hood (?), n.Jealousy. [Obs.] Shak.
Jeal"ous*ly, adv.In a jealous
manner.
Jeal"ous*ness, n.State or quality
of being jealous.
Jeal"ous*y (?), n.; pl.Jealousies (#). [ F. jalousie. See
Jealous, and cf. Jalousie.] The quality of being
jealous; earnest concern or solicitude; painful apprehension of
rivalship in cases nearly affecting one's happiness; painful
suspicion of the faithfulness of husband, wife, or lover.
I was jealous for jealousy.
Zech. viii. 2.
Jealousy is the . . . apprehension of
superiority.
Shenstone.
Whoever had qualities to alarm our jealousy,
had excellence to deserve our fondness.
Rambler.
Jeames (?), n. [Corrup. of
James.] A footman; a flunky. [Slang, Eng.]
Thackeray.
Jean (?), n. [Prob. named from
Genoa. See Jane.] A twilled cotton
cloth.
Satin jean, a kind of jean woven smooth and
glossy, after the manner of satin.
Jears (?), n. pl.(Naut.)See 1st Jeer(b).
Jeat (?), n.(Min.)See
Jet. [Obs.]
Jed"ding ax` (?), n.A stone
mason's tool, having a flat face and a pointed part.Knight.
Jee (?), v. t. & i.See
Gee.
Jeel (?), n. [Hind. jhīl.]
A morass; a shallow lake. [Written also jhil.]
[India] Whitworth.
Jeer (?), n. [Cf. Gear.]
(Naut.)(a)A gear; a tackle.(b)pl.An assemblage or combination of
tackles, for hoisting or lowering the lower yards of a
ship.
Jeer capstan(Naut.), an extra
capstan usually placed between the foremast and mainmast.
Jeer, v. i. [imp. & p.
p.Jeered (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Jeering.] [Perh. a corrup. of cheer to salute with
cheers, taken in an ironical sense; or more prob. fr. D.
gekscheren to jeer, lit., to shear the fool; gek a fool
(see 1st Geck) + scheren to shear. See Shear,
v.] To utter sarcastic or scoffing
reflections; to speak with mockery or derision; to use taunting
language; to scoff; as, to jeer at a speaker.
But when he saw her toy and gibe and
jeer.
Spenser.
Syn. -- To sneer; scoff; flout; gibe; mock.
Jeer (?), v. t.To treat with
scoffs or derision; to address with jeers; to taunt; to flout; to
mock at.
And if we can not jeer them, we jeer
ourselves.
B. Jonson.
Jeer, n.A railing remark or
reflection; a scoff; a taunt; a biting jest; a flout; a jibe;
mockery.
Midas, exposed to all their jeers,
Had lost his art, and kept his ears.
||Jef`fer*so"ni*a (?), n. [NL. Named
after Thomas Jefferson.] (Bot.)An American herb
with a pretty, white, solitary blossom, and deeply two-cleft leaves
(Jeffersonia diphylla); twinleaf.
Jef`fer*so"ni*an (?), a.Pertaining to, or characteristic of, Thomas Jefferson or his
policy or political doctrines.Lowell.
Jef"fer*son*ite (?), n. [Named after
Thomas Jefferson.] (Min.)A variety of pyroxene of
olive-green color passing into brown. It contains zinc.
Jeg (?), n.(Mach.)See
Jig, 6.
Je*ho"vah (?), n. [Heb. usually
y&ebreve;hōvāh (with the vowel points of
ădōnāi Lord), sometimes (to avoid
repetition) y&ebreve;hōvih (with the vowel points of
&ebreve;lōhīm God); but only the four Heb,
consonants yhvh are conceded to be certainly known.] A
Scripture name of the Supreme Being, by which he was revealed to the
Jews as their covenant God or Sovereign of the theocracy; the
"ineffable name" of the Supreme Being, which was not pronounced by
the Jews.
Je*ho"vist (?), n.1.One who maintains that the vowel points of the word
Jehovah, in Hebrew, are the proper vowels of that word; --
opposed to adonist.
2.The writer of the passages of the Old
Testament, especially those of the Pentateuch, in which the Supreme
Being is styled Jehovah. See Elohist.
The characteristic manner of the Jehovist
differs from that of his predecessor [the Elohist]. He is fuller and
freer in his descriptions; more reflective in his assignment of
motives and causes; more artificial in mode of
narration.
S. Davidson.
Je`ho*vis"tic (?), a.Relating to,
or containing, Jehovah, as a name of God; -- said of certain parts of
the Old Testament, especially of the Pentateuch, in which
Jehovah appears as the name of the Deity. See
Elohistic.
Je"hu (?), n. [From Jehu, son of
Nimshi. 2 Kings ix. 20.] A coachman; a driver;
especially, one who drives furiously. [Colloq.]
Je*ju"nal (?), a.Pertaining to
the jejunum.
Je*june" (?), a. [L. jejunus
fasting, hungry, dry, barren, scanty; of unknown origin.]
1.Lacking matter; empty; void of
substance.
2.Void of interest; barren; meager; dry;
as, a jejune narrative.
- Je*june"ly, adv. --
Je*june"ness, n.Bacon.
Je*ju"ni*ty (?), n.The quality of
being jejune; jejuneness.
||Je*ju"num (?), n. [NL., fr. L.
jejunus empty, dry.] (Anat.)The middle division
of the small intestine, between the duodenum and ileum; -- so called
because usually found empty after death.
||Jel"er*ang (?), n. [Native name.]
(Zoöl.)A large, handsome squirrel (Sciurus
Javensis), native of Java and Southern Asia; -- called also
Java squirrel.
Jell (?), v. i.To jelly.
[Colloq.]
Jel"lied (?), a.Brought to the
state or consistence of jelly.
Jel"ly (?), n.; pl.Jellies (#). [ Formerly gelly, gely,
F. gelée jelly, frost, fr. geler to freeze. L.
gelare; akin to gelu frost. See Gelid.]
1.Anything brought to a gelatinous
condition; a viscous, translucent substance in a condition between
liquid and solid; a stiffened solution of gelatin, gum, or the
like.
2.The juice of fruits or meats boiled with
sugar to an elastic consistence; as, currant jelly; calf's-
foot jelly.
Jelly bag, a bag through which the material
for jelly is strained. -- Jelly mold, a
mold for forming jelly in ornamental shapes. -- Jelly
plant(Bot.), Australian name of an edible
seaweed (Eucheuma speciosum), from which an excellent jelly is
made.J. Smith. -- Jelly powder, an
explosive, composed of nitroglycerin and collodion cotton; -- so
called from its resemblance to calf's-foot jelly.
Jel"ly, v. i. [imp. & p.
p.Jellied (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Jellying.] To become jelly; to come to the state or
consistency of jelly.
Jel"ly*fish` (?), n.(Zoöl.)Any one of the acalephs, esp. one of the
larger species, having a jellylike appearance. See
Medusa.
||Jem"i*dar` (j&ebreve;m"&ibreve;*där`),
n. [Per. & Hind. jama-dār.] The
chief or leader of a band or body of persons; esp., in the native
army of India, an officer of a rank corresponding to that of
lieutenant in the English army. [Written also jemadar,
jamadar.]
Jem"my (?), a. [Cf. Gim, and
Gimp, a.] Spruce. [Slang, Eng.]
Smart.
Jem"my, n.1.A
short crowbar. See Jimmy.
2.A baked sheep's head. [Slang, Eng.]
Dickens.
||Je*ni"quen (?), n. [Sp.
jeniquen.] (Bot.)A Mexican name for the Sisal
hemp (Agave rigida, var.Sisalana); also, its
fiber. [Written also henīequen.]
Je"nite (?), n.(Min.)See
Yenite.
Jen"kins (?), n.A name of
contempt for a flatterer of persons high in social or official life;
as, the Jenkins employed by a newspaper. [Colloq. Eng. &
U.S.] G. W. Curtis.
Jen"net (j&ebreve;n"n&ebreve;t), n. [F.
genet, Sp. jinete, orig., a mounted soldier, Ar.
zenāta a tribe of Barbary celebrated for its cavalry.]
A small Spanish horse; a genet.
Jen"net*ing, n. [Prob. fr. a dim. of
Jean John, so named as becoming ripe about St. John's
day, June 24. F. Jean is fr. L. Johannes. See
Zany.] A variety of early apple. See
Juneating. [Written also geniting.]
Jen"ny (?), n.; pl.Jennies (&?;).
1.A familiar or pet form of the proper name
Jane.
2.(Zoöl.)A familiar name of
the European wren.
Jenny ass(Zoöl.), a female
ass.
Jen"ny, n. [A corruption of gin
an engine; influenced by Jenny, the proper name. See
Gin an engine, and cf. Ginny-carriage.] A machine
for spinning a number of threads at once, -- used in
factories.
Jent"ling (?), n.(Zoöl.)A fish of the genus Leuciscus; the blue chub of the
Danube.
Jeof"ail (j&ebreve;f"&asl;l), n. [F.
j'ai failli I have failed.] (Law)An oversight in
pleading, or the acknowledgment of a mistake or oversight.Blackstone.
Jeop"ard (?), v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Jeoparded; p. pr. & vb. n.Jeoparding.] [From Jeopardy.] To put in jeopardy;
to expose to loss or injury; to imperil; to hazard.Sir T.
North.
A people that jeoparded their lives unto the
death.
Judg. v. 18.
Syn. -- To hazard; risk; imperil; endanger; expose.
Jeop"ard*er (?), n.One who puts
in jeopardy. [R.]
Jeop"ard*ize (?), v. t. [imp.
& p. p.Jeopardized (?); p. pr. & vb.
n.Jeopardizing (?).] To expose to loss or
injury; to risk; to jeopard.
That he should jeopardize his willful head
Only for spite at me.
H. Taylor.
Jeop"ard*ous (?), a.Perilous;
hazardous.
His goodly, valiant, and jeopardous
enterprise.
Fuller.
-- Jeop"ard*ous*ly, adv.Huloet.
Jeop"ard*y (?), n. [OE.
jupartie, juperti, jeuparti, OF. jeu
parti an even game, a game in which the chances are even; OF.
jeu, ju, F. jeu (L. jocus jest) + F.
partier to divide, L. partire to divide. See
Joke, and Part.] Exposure to death, loss, or
injury; hazard; danger.
There came down a storm of wind on the lake; and they
were filled with water, and were in jeopardy.
Luke viii. 23.
Look to thyself, thou art in
jeopardy.
Shak.
Syn. -- Danger; peril; hazard; risk. See Danger.
Jeop"ard*y, v. t.To
jeopardize. [R.] Thackeray.
Jer*bo"a (?), n. [Ar. yarb&?;'.]
(Zoöl.)Any small jumping rodent of the genus
Dipus, esp. D. Ægyptius, which is common
in Egypt and the adjacent countries. The jerboas have very long hind
legs and a long tail. [Written also gerboa.]
&fist; The name is also applied to other small jumping rodents, as
the Pedetes Caffer, of the Cape of Good Hope.
Jerboa kangaroo(Zoöl.), small
Australian kangaroo (Bettongia penicillata), about the size of
a common hare.
Jer*eed" (?), n. [Ar.
jerīd. Cf. Djereed.] A blunt javelin used
by the people of the Levant, especially in mock fights.
[Written also jerreed, jerid.] Byron.
{ Jer`e*mi"ad, Jer`e*mi"ade },
n. [From Jeremiah, the prophet: cf. F.
jérémiade.] A tale of sorrow,
disappointment, or complaint; a doleful story; a dolorous tirade; --
generally used satirically.
He has prolonged his complaint into an endless
jeremiad.
Lamb.
Jer"fal`con (?), n.(Zoöl.)The gyrfalcon.
Jer"guer (?), n.See
Jerquer.
Jer*id" (?), n.Same as
Jereed.
Jerk (j&etilde;rk), v. t. [Corrupted
from Peruv. charqui dried beef.] To cut into long slices
or strips and dry in the sun; as, to jerk beef. See
Charqui.
Jerk, v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Jerked (j&etilde;rkt); p. pr. & vb.
n.Jerking.] [Akin to yerk, and perh. also to
yard a measure.]
1.To beat; to strike. [Obs.]
Florio.
2.To give a quick and suddenly arrested
thrust, push, pull, or twist, to; to yerk; as, to jerk one
with the elbow; to jerk a coat off.
3.To throw with a quick and suddenly
arrested motion of the hand; as, to jerk a stone.
Jerk, v. i.
1.To make a sudden motion; to move with a
start, or by starts.Milton.
2.To flout with contempt.
Jerk, n.
1.A short, sudden pull, thrust, push,
twitch, jolt, shake, or similar motion.
His jade gave him a jerk.
B.
Jonson.
2.A sudden start or spring.
Lobsters . . . swim backwards by jerks or
springs.
Grew.
Jerk"er (?), n.
1.A beater. [Obs.] Beau. &
Fl.
2.One who jerks or moves with a
jerk.
3.(Zoöl.)A North American
river chub (Hybopsis biguttatus).
Jer"kin (?), n. [Dim. of D. jurk
a frock.] A jacket or short coat; a close waistcoat.Shak.
Jer"kin, n.(Zoöl.)A
male gyrfalcon.
Jerk"ing (?), n.The act of
pulling, pushing, or throwing, with a jerk. --
Jerk"ing*ly, adv.
Jer"kin*head` (?), n.(Arch.)The hipped part of a roof which is hipped only for a part of its
height, leaving a truncated gable.
Jerk"y (?), a.Moving by jerks and
starts; characterized by abrupt transitions; as, a jerky
vehicle; a jerky style.
Je*ron"y*mite (?), n.(Eccl.
Hist.)One belonging of the mediæval religious orders
called Hermits of St. Jerome. [Written also
Hieronymite.]
Jer`o*pig"i*a (?), n.See
Geropigia.
Jer"quer (?), n. [Cf. F.
chercher to search, E. search.] A customhouse
officer who searches ships for unentered goods. [Eng.] [Written
also jerguer.]
Jer"quing (?), n.The searching of
a ship for unentered goods. [Eng.] [Written also
jerguer.]
Jer"quing (?), n.The searching of
a ship for unentered goods. [Eng.]
Jer"ry-built` (?), a.Built
hastily and of bad materials; as, jerry-built houses.
[Colloq. Eng.]
Jer"sey (?), n.; pl.Jerseys (#). [From Jersey, the largest of
the Channel Islands.]
1.The finest of wool separated from the
rest; combed wool; also, fine yarn of wool.
2.A kind of knitted jacket; hence, in
general, a closefitting jacket or upper garment made of an elastic
fabric (as stockinet).
3.One of a breed of cattle in the Island of
Jersey. Jerseys are noted for the richness of their milk.
Je*ru"sa*lem (j&esl;*r&udd;"s&adot;*l&ebreve;m),
n. [Gr. 'Ieroysalh`m, fr. Heb.
Y&ebreve;rūshālaim.] The chief city of
Palestine, intimately associated with the glory of the Jewish nation,
and the life and death of Jesus Christ.
Jerusalem artichoke [Perh. a corrupt. of It.
girasolei.e., sunflower, or turnsole. See Gyre,
Solar.] (Bot.)(a)An American
plant, a perennial species of sunflower (Helianthus
tuberosus), whose tubers are sometimes used as food.
(b)One of the tubers themselves. --
Jerusalem cherry(Bot.), the popular
name of either of two species of Solanum (S. Pseudo-
capsicum and S. capsicastrum), cultivated as ornamental
house plants. They bear bright red berries of about the size of
cherries. -- Jerusalem oak(Bot.),
an aromatic goosefoot (Chenopodium Botrys), common about
houses and along roadsides. -- Jerusalem sage(Bot.), a perennial herb of the Mint family (Phlomis
tuberosa). -- Jerusalem thorn(Bot.), a spiny, leguminous tree (Parkinsonia
aculeata), widely dispersed in warm countries, and used for
hedges. -- The New Jerusalem, Heaven; the
Celestial City.
Jer"vine (?), n. [Prob. fr. Sp.
yerba herb, OSp., the poison of the veratrum.] (Chem.)A poisonous alkaloid resembling veratrine, and found with it in
white hellebore (Veratrum album); -- called also
jervina.
Jess (?), n.; pl.Jesses (#). [OF. gies, giez, prop.
pl. of giet, get, jet, F. jet, a
throwing, jess. See Jet a shooting forth.] (falconry)
A short strap of leather or silk secured round the leg of a
hawk, to which the leash or line, wrapped round the falconer's hand,
was attached when used. See Illust. of
Falcon.
Like a hawk, which feeling freed
From bells and jesses which did let her flight.
Spenser.
Jes"sa*mine (?), n.(Bot.)Same as Jasmine.
Jes"sant (?), a.(Her.)Springing up or emerging; -- said of a plant or
animal.
Jes"se (?), n. [LL. Jesse, the
father of David, fr. Gr. &?;, fr. Herb. Yishai.] Any
representation or suggestion of the genealogy of Christ, in
decorative art; as: (a)A genealogical
tree represented in stained glass.(b)A
candlestick with many branches, each of which bears the name of some
one of the descendants of Jesse; -- called also tree of
Jesse.
Jesse window(Arch.), a window of
which the glazing and tracery represent the tree of Jesse.
Jessed (?), a.(Her.)Having jesses on, as a hawk.
Jest (?), n. [OE. jeste,
geste, deed, action, story, tale, OF. geste, LL.
gesta, orig., exploits, neut. pl. from L. gestus, p. p.
of gerere to bear, carry, accomplish, perform; perh. orig., to
make to come, bring, and perh. akin to E. come. Cf.
Gest a deed, Register, n.]
1.A deed; an action; a gest.
[Obs.]
The jests or actions of princes.
Sir T. Elyot.
2.A mask; a pageant; an interlude.
[Obs.] Nares.
He promised us, in honor of our guest,
To grace our banquet with some pompous jest.
Kyd.
3.Something done or said in order to amuse;
a joke; a witticism; a jocose or sportive remark or phrase. See
Synonyms under Jest, v. i.
I must be sad . . . smile at no man's
jests.
Shak.
The Right Honorable gentleman is indebted to his
memory for his jests, and to his imagination for his
facts.
Sheridan.
4.The object of laughter or sport; a
laughingstock.
Then let me be your jest; I deserve
it.
Shak.
In jest, for mere sport or diversion; not in
truth and reality; not in earnest.
And given in earnest what I begged in
jest.
Shak.
-- Jest book, a book containing a collection
of jests, jokes, and amusing anecdotes; a Joe Miller.
Jest, v. i. [imp. & p.
p.Jested; p. pr. & vb. n.Jesting.]
1.To take part in a merrymaking; --
especially, to act in a mask or interlude. [Obs.]
Shak.
2.To make merriment by words or actions; to
joke; to make light of anything.
He jests at scars that never felt a
wound.
Shak.
Syn. -- To joke; sport; rally. -- To Jest,
Joke. One jests in order to make others laugh; one
jokes to please himself. A jest is usually at the
expense of another, and is often ill-natured; a joke is a
sportive sally designed to promote good humor without wounding the
feelings of its object. "Jests are, therefore, seldom
harmless; jokes frequently allowable. The most serious subject
may be degraded by being turned into a jest."
Crabb.
Jest"er, n. [Cf. Gestour.]
1.A buffoon; a merry-andrew; a court
fool.
This . . . was Yorick's skull, the king's
jester.
Shak.
Dressed in the motley garb that jesters
wear.
Longfellow.
2.A person addicted to jesting, or to
indulgence in light and amusing talk.
He ambled up and down
With shallow jesters.
Shak.
Jest"ful (?), a.Given to jesting;
full of jokes.
Jest"ing, a.Sportive; not
serious; fit for jests.
He will find that these are no jesting
matters.
Macaulay.
Jest"ing, n.The act or practice
of making jests; joking; pleasantry.Eph. v. 4.
Jest"ing*ly, adv.In a jesting
manner.
Jes"u*it (?), n. [F.
Jésuite, Sp. Jesuita: cf. It.
Gesuita.]
1.(R. C. Ch.)One of a religious
order founded by Ignatius Loyola, and approved in 1540, under the
title of The Society of Jesus.
&fist; The order consists of Scholastics, the Professed, the
Spiritual Coadjutors, and the Temporal Coadjutors or Lay Brothers.
The Jesuit novice after two years becomes a Scholastic, and takes his
first vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience simply. Some years
after, at the close of a second novitiate, he takes his second vows
and is ranked among the Coadjutors or Professed. The Professed are
bound by a fourth vow, from which only the pope can dispense,
requiring them to go wherever the pope may send them for missionary
duty. The Coadjutors teach in the schools, and are employed in
general missionary labors. The Society is governed by a General who
holds office for life. He has associated with him "Assistants" (five
at the present time), representing different provinces. The Society
was first established in the United States in 1807. The Jesuits have
displayed in their enterprises a high degree of zeal, learning, and
skill, but, by their enemies, have been generally reputed to use art
and intrigue in promoting or accomplishing their purposes, whence the
words Jesuit, Jesuitical, and the like, have acquired
an opprobrious sense.
2.Fig.: A crafty person; an
intriguer.
Jesuits' bark, Peruvian bark, or the bark of
certain species of Cinchona; -- so called because its
medicinal properties were first made known in Europe by Jesuit
missionaries to South America. -- Jesuits'
drops. See Friar's balsam, under
Friar. -- Jesuits' nut, the
European water chestnut. -- Jesuits' powder,
powdered cinchona bark. -- Jesuits' tea,
a Chilian leguminous shrub, used as a tea and
medicinally.
Jes"u*it*ed, a.Conforming to the
principles of the Jesuits.Milton.
Jes"u*it*ess, n. [Cf. F.
Jésuitesse.] (R. C. Hist.)One of an order
of nuns established on the principles of the Jesuits, but suppressed
by Pope Urban in 1633.
{ Jes`u*it"ic (?), Jes`u*it"ic*al (?), }
a. [Cf. F. jésuitique.]
1.Of or pertaining to the Jesuits, or to
their principles and methods.
2.Designing; cunning; deceitful; crafty; --
an opprobrious use of the word.Dryden.
Jes`u*it"ic*al*ly, adv.In a
jesuitical manner.
Jes"u*it*ism (?), n. [Cf. F.
jésuitisme.]
1.The principles and practices of the
Jesuits.
2.Cunning; deceit; deceptive practices to
effect a purpose; subtle argument; -- an opprobrious use of the
word.
Jes`u*it*oc"ra*cy (?), n.
[Jesuit + -cracy, as in aristocracy.]
Government by Jesuits; also, the whole body of Jesuits in a
country. [R.] C. Kingsley.
Je"sus (jē"zŭs), n. [L.
Jesus, Gr. &?;, from Heb. Yēshūa';
Yāh Jehovah + hōshīa' to help.]
The Savior; the name of the Son of God as announced by
the angel to his parents; the personal name of Our Lord, in
distinction from Christ, his official appellation.Luke i.
31.
Thou shalt call his name Jesus; for he shall
save his people from their sins.
Matt. i. 21.
&fist;The form Jesu is often used, esp. in the
vocative.
Jesu, do thou my soul receive.
Keble.
The Society of Jesus. See
Jesuit.
Jet (?), n.Same as 2d
Get. [Obs.] Chaucer.
Jet, n. [OF. jet, jayet,
F. jaïet, jais, L. gagates, fr. Gr. &?;; --
so called from &?; or &?;, a town and river in Lycia.] [written also
jeat, jayet.] (Min.)A variety of lignite,
of a very compact texture and velvet black color, susceptible of a
good polish, and often wrought into mourning jewelry, toys, buttons,
etc. Formerly called also black amber.
Jet ant(Zoöl.), a blackish
European ant (Formica fuliginosa), which builds its nest of a
paperlike material in the trunks of trees.
Jet, n. [F. jet, OF. get,
giet, L. jactus a throwing, a throw, fr. jacere
to throw. Cf. Abject, Ejaculate, Gist,
Jess, Jut.]
1.A shooting forth; a spouting; a spurt; a
sudden rush or gush, as of water from a pipe, or of flame from an
orifice; also, that which issues in a jet.
2.Drift; scope; range, as of an
argument. [Obs.]
3.The sprue of a type, which is broken from
it when the type is cold.Knight.
Jet propeller(Naut.), a device for
propelling vessels by means of a forcible jet of water ejected from
the vessel, as by a centrifugal pump. -- Jet
pump, a device in which a small jet of steam, air,
water, or other fluid, in rapid motion, lifts or otherwise moves, by
its impulse, a larger quantity of the fluid with which it
mingles.
Jet, v. i. [imp. & p.
p.Jetted (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Jetting.] [F. jeter, L. jactare, freq. fr.
jacere to throw. See 3d Jet, and cf. Jut.]
1.To strut; to walk with a lofty or haughty
gait; to be insolent; to obtrude. [Obs.]
he jets under his advanced
plumes!
Shak.
To jet upon a prince's right.
Shak.
2.To jerk; to jolt; to be shaken.
[Obs.] Wiseman.
3.To shoot forward or out; to project; to
jut out.
Jet, v. t.To spout; to emit in a
stream or jet.
A dozen angry models jetted steam.
Tennyson.
Jet"-black` (?), a.Black as jet;
deep black.
||Jet` d'eau" (?), pl.Jets
d'eau (&?;). [F., a throw of water. See Jet a
shooting forth.] A stream of water spouting from a fountain or
pipe (especially from one arranged to throw water upward), in a
public place or in a garden, for ornament.
||Jet"e*rus (?), n.(Bot.)A yellowness of the parts of plants which are normally green;
yellows.
{ ||Jet"sam (?), ||Jet"son (?), }
n. [F. jeter to throw: cf. OF.
getaison a throwing. Cf. Flotsam,
Jettison.]
1.(Mar. Law)Goods which sink when
cast into the sea, and remain under water; -- distinguished from
flotsam, goods which float, and ligan, goods which are
sunk attached to a buoy.
Jet"ter (-t&etilde;r), n.One who
struts; one who bears himself jauntily; a fop. [Obs.]
Palsgrave.
Jet"ti*ness (-t&ibreve;*n&ebreve;s). n.The state of being jetty; blackness.Pennant.
Jet"ti*son (?). n. [See
Jetsam.]
1.(Mar. Law)The throwing overboard
of goods from necessity, in order to lighten a vessel in danger of
wreck.
2.See Jetsam, 1.
Jet"ton (?), n. [F. jeton.]
A metal counter used in playing cards.
Jet"ty (?), a.Made of jet, or
like jet in color.
The people . . . are of a jetty.
Sir T. Browne.
Jet"ty, n.; pl.Jetties (#). [F. jetée a pier, a
jetty, a causeway. See Jet a shooting forth, and cf.
Jutty.]
1.(Arch.)A part of a building that
jets or projects beyond the rest, and overhangs the wall
below.
2.A wharf or pier extending from the
shore.
3.(Hydraul. Engin.)A structure of
wood or stone extended into the sea to influence the current or tide,
or to protect a harbor; a mole; as, the Eads system of jetties
at the mouth of the Mississippi River.
Jetty head(Naut.), a projecting part
at the end of a wharf; the front of a wharf whose side forms one of
the cheeks of a dock.
Jet"ty, v. i.To jut out; to
project. [Obs.] Florio.
||Jeu" d'es`prit" (?). [F., play of mind.] A
witticism.
Jew (?), n. [OF. Juis, pl., F.
Juif, L. Judaeus, Gr. &?;, fr. &?; the country of the
Jews, Judea, fr. Heb. Y&?;h&?;dāh Judah, son of Jacob.
Cf. Judaic.] Originally, one belonging to the tribe or
kingdom of Judah; after the return from the Babylonish captivity, any
member of the new state; a Hebrew; an Israelite.
Jew's frankincense, gum styrax, or
benzoin. -- Jew's mallow(Bot.), an
annual herb (Corchorus olitorius) cultivated in Syria and
Egypt as a pot herb, and in India for its fiber. --
Jew's pitch, asphaltum; bitumen. --
The Wandering Jew, an imaginary personage, who,
for his cruelty to the Savior during his passion, is doomed to wander
on the earth till Christ's second coming.
Jew"bush` (?), n.(Bot.)A
euphorbiaceous shrub of the genus Pedilanthus (P.
tithymaloides), found in the West Indies, and possessing powerful
emetic and drastic qualities.
Jew"el (jū"&ebreve;l or j&udd;"&ebreve;l),
n. [OE. juel, jowel, OF.
jouel, juel, joiel, F. joyau, dim. of OF.
joie joy, jewel, F. joie joy. See Joy.]
1.An ornament of dress usually made of a
precious metal, and having enamel or precious stones as a part of its
design.
Plate of rare device, and jewels
Of rich and exquisite form.
Shak.
2.A precious stone; a gem.Shak.
3.An object regarded with special affection;
a precious thing. "Our prince (jewel of children)."
Shak.
4.A bearing for a pivot a pivot in a watch,
formed of a crystal or precious stone, as a ruby.
Jewel block(Naut.), block at the
extremity of a yard, through which the halyard of a studding sail is
rove.
Jew"el, v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Jeweled (?), or Jewelled; p. pr. &
vb. n.Jeweling, or Jewelling.] To
dress, adorn, deck, or supply with jewels, as a dress, a sword hilt,
or a watch; to bespangle, as with jewels.
The long gray tufts . . . are jeweled thick
with dew.
M. Arnold.
Jew"el*er (?), n. [Cf. F.
joaillier.] One who makes, or deals in, jewels, precious
stones, and similar ornaments. [Written also
jeweller.]
Jeweler's gold. See under
Gold.
Jew"el*ler*y (?), n.See
Jewelry.Burke.
Jew"el*ry (?), n. [Cf. F.
joaillerie.]
1.The art or trade of a jeweler.Cotgrave.
2.Jewels, collectively; as, a bride's
jewelry.
Jew"el*weed` (?), n.(Bot.)See Impatiens.
Jew"ess, n., fem. of
Jew. A Hebrew woman.
Jew"fish` (?), n.(Zoöl.)
1.A very large serranoid fish (Promicrops
itaiara) of Florida and the Gulf of Mexico. It often reaches the
weight of five hundred pounds. Its color is olivaceous or yellowish,
with numerous brown spots. Called also guasa, and
warsaw.
2.A similar gigantic fish (Stereolepis
gigas) of Southern California, valued as a food fish.
3.The black grouper of Florida and
Texas.
4.A large herringlike fish; the
tarpum.
Jew*ise" (?), n.Same as
Juise. [Obs.] Chaucer.
Jew"ish (?), a.Of or pertaining
to the Jews or Hebrews; characteristic of or resembling the Jews or
their customs; Israelitish. -- Jew"ish*ly,
adv. -- Jew"ish*ness,
n.
Jew"ry (?), n. [OE. Jewerie, OF.
Juierie, F. Juiverie.] Judea; also, a district
inhabited by Jews; a Jews' quarter.Chaucer.
Teaching throughout all Jewry.
Luke xxiii. 5.
Jew's"-ear` (?), n.(Bot.)A species of fungus (Hirneola Auricula-Judæ, or
Auricula), bearing some resemblance to the human ear.
Jew's-harp` (?), n. [Jew +
harp; or possibly a corrupt. of jaw's harp; cf. G.
maultrommel, lit., mouthdrum.] 1.An
instrument of music, which, when placed between the teeth, gives, by
means of a bent metal tongue struck by the finger, a sound which is
modulated by the breath; -- called also Jew's-trump.
2.(Naut.)The shackle for joining a
chain cable to an anchor.
{ Jew's-stone` (?), Jew"stone` (?) },
n.(Paleon.)A large clavate spine of a
fossil sea urchin.
Jez"e*bel (?), n. [From Jezebel,
Heb. Izebel, the wife of Ahab king of Israel.] A bold,
vicious woman; a termagant.Spectator.
Jha"ral (?), n. [Native name.]
(Zoöl.)A wild goat (Capra Jemlaica) which
inhabits the loftiest mountains of India. It has long, coarse hair,
forming a thick mane on its head and neck.
Jib (?), n. [Named from its shifting
from side to side. See Jib, v. i..,
Jibe.]
1.(Naut.)A triangular sail set upon
a stay or halyard extending from the foremast or fore-topmast to the
bowsprit or the jib boom. Large vessels often carry several jibs; as,
inner jib; outer jib; flying jib; etc.
2.(Mach.)The projecting arm of a
crane, from which the load is suspended.
Jib boom(Naut.), a spar or boom
which serves as an extension of the bowsprit. It is sometimes
extended by another spar called the flying jib boom.
[Written also gib boom.] -- Jib crane(Mach.), a crane having a horizontal jib on which a
trolley moves, bearing the load. -- Jib door(Arch.), a door made flush with the wall, without
dressings or moldings; a disguised door. -- Jib
header(Naut.), a gaff-topsail, shaped like a
jib; a jib-headed topsail. -- Jib topsail(Naut.), a small jib set above and outside of all the
other jibs. -- The cut of one's jib, one's
outward appearance. [Colloq.] Sir W. Scott.
Jib (?), v. i. [Connected with
jibe; cf. OF. giber to shake.] To move restively
backward or sidewise, -- said of a horse; to balk. [Written
also jibb.] [Eng.]
Jib"ber (?), n.A horse that
jibs. [Eng.]
Jibe (jīb), v. t. [imp. &
p. p.Jibed (jībd); p. pr. & vb.
n.Jibing (jīb"&ibreve;ng).] [Cf. Dan.
gibbe, D. gijpen, v. i., and dial.
Sw. gippa to jerk. Cf. Jib, n. &
v. i.] (Naut.)To shift, as the boom of
a fore-and-aft sail, from one side of a vessel to the other when the
wind is aft or on the quarter. See Gybe.
Jibe, v. i.1.(Naut.)To change a ship's course so as to cause a
shifting of the boom. See Jibe, v. t., and
Gybe.
2.To agree; to harmonize. [Colloq.]
Bartlett.
Jif"fy (?), n. [Perh. corrupt. fr.
gliff.] [Written also giffy.] A moment; an
instant; as, I will be ready in a jiffy. [Colloq.]
J. & H. Smith.
Jig (?), n. [OF. gigue a
stringed instrument, a kind of dance, F. gigue dance, tune,
gig; of German origin; cf. MHG. gīge fiddle, G.
geige. Cf. Gig a fiddle, Gig a whirligig.]
1.(Mus.)A light, brisk musical
movement.
Hot and hasty, like a Scotch jig.
Shak.
3.A light, humorous piece of writing, esp.
in rhyme; a farce in verse; a ballad. [Obs.]
A jig shall be clapped at, and every rhyme
Praised and applauded.
Beau. & Fl.
4.A piece of sport; a trick; a prank.
[Obs.]
Is't not a fine jig,
A precious cunning, in the late Protector?
Beau. &
Fl.
5.A trolling bait, consisting of a bright
spoon and a hook attached.
6.(Mach.)(a)A small
machine or handy tool; esp.: (Metal Working)A
contrivance fastened to or inclosing a piece of work, and having hard
steel surfaces to guide a tool, as a drill, or to form a shield or
templet to work to, as in filing.(b)(Mining)An apparatus or a machine for jigging
ore.
Drill jig, a jig for guiding a drill. See
Jig, 6 (a). -- Jig
drilling, Jig filing(Metal
Working), a process of drilling or filing in which the action
of the tool is directed or limited by a jig. -- Jig
saw, a sawing machine with a narrow, vertically
reciprocating saw, used to cut curved and irregular lines, or
ornamental patterns in openwork, a scroll saw; -- called also gig
saw.
Jig, v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Jigged (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Jigging (?).]
1.To sing to the tune of a jig.
Jig off a tune at the tongue's
end.
Shak.
2.To trick or cheat; to cajole; to
delude.Ford.
3.(Mining)To sort or separate, as
ore in a jigger or sieve. See Jigging,
n.
4.(Metal Working)To cut or form, as
a piece of metal, in a jigging machine.
Jig, v. i.To dance a jig; to skip
about.
You jig, you amble, and you lisp.
Shak.
Jig"ger (?), n. [A corrupt. of
chigre.] (Zoöl.)A species of flea
(Sarcopsylla, or Pulex, penetrans), which burrows beneath the
skin. See Chigoe.
Jig"ger, n. [See Jig, n.
& v.]
1.One who, or that which, jigs;
specifically, a miner who sorts or cleans ore by the process of
jigging; also, the sieve used in jigging.
2.(Pottery)(a)A
horizontal table carrying a revolving mold, on which earthen vessels
are shaped by rapid motion; a potter's wheel.(b)A templet or tool by which vessels are
shaped on a potter's wheel.
3.(Naut.)(a)A light
tackle, consisting of a double and single block and the fall, used
for various purposes, as to increase the purchase on a topsail sheet
in hauling it home; the watch tackle.Totten.(b)A small fishing vessel, rigged like a
yawl. [New Eng.] (c)A supplementary sail.
See Dandy, n., 2
(b).
4.A pendulum rolling machine for slicking or
graining leather; same as Jack, 4
(i).
Jigger mast. (Naut.)(a)The after mast of a four-masted vessel. (b)The small mast set at the stern of a yawl-rigged boat.
Jig"ging (?), n.(Mining)The act or using a jig; the act of separating ore with a jigger,
or wire-bottomed sieve, which is moved up and down in
water.
Jigging machine. (a)(Mining)A machine for separating ore by the process of
jigging. (b)(Metal Working)A
machine with a rotary milling cutter and a templet by which the
action of the cutter is guided or limited; -- used for forming the
profile of an irregularly shaped piece; a profiling machine.
Jig"gish (?), a.1.Resembling, or suitable for, a jig, or lively movement.Tatler.
2.Playful; frisky. [R.]
She is never sad, and yet not
jiggish.
Habington.
Jig"gle (?), v. i. [Freq. of
jig.] To wriggle or frisk about; to move awkwardly; to
shake up and down.
Jig"jog` (?), n.A jolting motion;
a jogging pace.
Jig"jog, a.Having a jolting
motion.
Jill (?), n. [See Gill
sweetheart.] A young woman; a sweetheart. See Gill.Beau. & Fl.
Jill"-flirt` (?), n.A light,
giddy, or wanton girl or woman. See Gill-flirt.
Jilt (?), n. [Contr. fr. Scot.
jillet a giddy girl, a jill-flirt, dim. of jill a
jill.] A woman who capriciously deceives her lover; a coquette;
a flirt.Otway.
Jilt, v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Jilted; p. pr. & vb. n.Jilting.] To cast off capriciously or unfeelingly, as a
lover; to deceive in love.Locke.
Jilt, v. i.To play the jilt; to
practice deception in love; to discard lovers capriciously.Congreve.
Jim"crack` (?), n.See
Gimcrack.
Jim"-crow` (?), n.(Mach.)1.A machine for bending or straightening
rails.
2.A planing machine with a reversing tool,
to plane both ways.
Jim"my (?), n.; pl.Jimmies (#). [Cf. Jemmy.] A short
crowbar used by burglars in breaking open doors. [Written also
jemmy.]
Jimp (?), a. [Cf. Gimp,
a.] Neat; handsome; elegant. See
Gimp.
Jim"son weed` (?). See Jamestown weed.
[Local, U.S.]
{ Jin, Jinn (?) }, n.See
Jinnee. "Solomon is said to have had power over the
jin." Balfour (Cyc. of India).
Jin*gal" (?), n. [Hind.
jangāl a swivel, a large musket.] A small portable
piece of ordnance, mounted on a swivel. [Written also
gingal and jingall.] [India]
Jin"gle (?), v. i. [OE.
gingelen, ginglen; prob. akin to E. chink; cf.
also E. jangle.]
1.To sound with a fine, sharp, rattling,
clinking, or tinkling sound; as, sleigh bells jingle.
[Written also gingle.]
2.To rhyme or sound with a jingling
effect. "Jingling street ballads." Macaulay.
Jin"gle, v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Jingled (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Jingling (?).] To cause to give a sharp metallic sound as
a little bell, or as coins shaken together; to tinkle.
The bells she jingled, and the whistle
blew.
Pope.
Jin"gle, n.1.A
rattling, clinking, or tinkling sound, as of little bells or pieces
of metal.
2.That which makes a jingling sound, as a
rattle.
If you plant where savages are, do not only entertain
them with trifles and jingles, but use them
justly.
Bacon.
3.A correspondence of sound in rhymes,
especially when the verse has little merit; hence, the verse
itself." The least jingle of verse."
Guardian.
Jingle shell. See Gold shell(b), under Gold.
Jin"gler (?), n.One who, or that
which, jingles.
Jin"gling (?), n.The act or
process of producing a jingle; also, the sound itself; a chink.
"The jingling of the guinea." Tennyson.
Jin"gling*ly, adv.So as to
jingle.Lowell.
Jin"go (?), n.; pl.Jingoes (#). [Said to be a corruption of St.
Gingoulph.]
1.A word used as a jocular oath. "By
the living jingo." Goldsmith.
2.A statesman who pursues, or who favors,
aggressive, domineering policy in foreign affairs. [Cant,
Eng.]
&fist; This sense arose from a doggerel song which was popular
during the Turco-Russian war of 1877 and 1878. The first two lines
were as follows: --
We don't want to fight, but by Jingo if we
do,
We 've got the ships, we 've got the men, we 've got the money
too.
Jin"go*ism (?), n.The policy of
the Jingoes, so called. See Jingo, 2. [Cant, Eng.]
Jin"nee (j&ibreve;n"nē), n.;
pl.Jinn (j&ibreve;n). [Ar.] (Arabian &
Mohammedan Myth.)A genius or demon; one of the fabled
genii, good and evil spirits, supposed to be the children of fire,
and to have the power of assuming various forms. [Written also
jin, djinnee, etc.]
&fist; Jinn is also used as sing., with
pl.jinns (&?;).
Jin"ny road` (?). [Cf. Gin an engine,
Ginnycarriage.] (Mining)An inclined road in a
coal mine, on which loaded cars descend by gravity, drawing up empty
ones.Knight.
Jin*rik"i*sha (?), n. [Jap. jin
man + riki power + sha carriage.] A small, two-
wheeled, hooded vehicle drawn by one or more men. [Japan]
Jip"po (j&ibreve;p"p&osl;), n. [Abbrev.
fr. juppon.] A waistcoat or kind of stays for
women.
Jo (?), n.; pl.Joes (#). [Etymol. uncertain.] A sweetheart; a
darling. [Scot.] Burns.
Job (j&obreve;b), n. [Prov. E.
job, gob, n., a small piece of wood,
v., to stab, strike; cf. E. gob, gobbet; perh.
influenced by E. chop to cut off, to mince. See
Gob.]
1.A sudden thrust or stab; a jab.
2.A piece of chance or occasional work; any
definite work undertaken in gross for a fixed price; as, he did the
job for a thousand dollars.
3.A public transaction done for private
profit; something performed ostensibly as a part of official duty,
but really for private gain; a corrupt official business.
4.Any affair or event which affects one,
whether fortunately or unfortunately. [Colloq.]
5.A situation or opportunity of work; as, he
lost his job. [Colloq.]
&fist; Job is used adjectively to signify doing
jobs, used for jobs, or let on hire to do jobs; as,
job printer; job master; job horse; job
wagon, etc.
By the job, at a stipulated sum for the
work, or for each piece of work done; -- distinguished from time
work; as, the house was built by the job. --
Job lot, a quantity of goods, usually
miscellaneous, sold out of the regular course of trade, at a certain
price for the whole; as, these articles were included in a job
lot. -- Job master, one who lest out
horses and carriages for hire, as for family use. [Eng.] --
Job printer, one who does miscellaneous
printing, esp. circulars, cards, billheads, etc. -- Odd
job, miscellaneous work of a petty kind; occasional
work, of various kinds, or for various people.
Job (j&obreve;b), v. t. [imp. &
p. p.Jobbed (j&obreve;bd); p. pr. & vb.
n.Jobbing.]
1.To strike or stab with a pointed
instrument.L'Estrange.
2.To thrust in, as a pointed
instrument.Moxon.
3.To do or cause to be done by separate
portions or lots; to sublet (work); as, to job a
contract.
4.(Com.)To buy and sell, as a
broker; to purchase of importers or manufacturers for the purpose of
selling to retailers; as, to job goods.
5.To hire or let by the job or for a period
of service; as, to job a carriage.Thackeray.
Job, v. i.1.To
do chance work for hire; to work by the piece; to do petty
work.
Authors of all work, to job for the
season.
Moore.
2.To seek private gain under pretense of
public service; to turn public matters to private
advantage.
And judges job, and bishops bite the
town.
Pope.
3.To carry on the business of a jobber in
merchandise or stocks.
Job (jōb), n.The hero of
the book of that name in the Old Testament; the typical patient
man.
Job's comforter. (a)A false
friend; a tactless or malicious person who, under pretense of
sympathy, insinuates rebukes.(b)A
boil. [Colloq.] -- Job's news, bad
news.Carlyle. -- Job's tears(Bot.), a kind of grass (Coix Lacryma), with hard,
shining, pearly grains.
Jo*ba"tion (?), n. [Prov. E. job
to scold, to reprove, perh. fr. Job, the proper name.] A
scolding; a hand, tedious reproof. [Low] Grose.
Job"ber (?), n.1.One who works by the job.
2.A dealer in the public stocks or funds; a
stockjobber. [Eng.]
3.One who buys goods from importers,
wholesalers, or manufacturers, and sells to retailers.
4.One who turns official or public business
to private advantage; hence, one who performs low or mercenary work
in office, politics, or intrigue.
Job"ber*nowl` (?), n. [OE.
jobbernoule, fr. jobarde a stupid fellow; cf. E.
noll.] A blockhead. [Colloq. & Obs.] H.
Taylor.
Job"ber*y (?), n.1.The act or practice of jobbing.
2.Underhand management; official corruption;
as, municipal jobbery.Mayhew.
Job"bing (?), a.1.Doing chance work or odd jobs; as, a jobbing
carpenter.
2.Using opportunities of public service for
private gain; as, a jobbing politician.London Sat.
Rev.
Jobbing house, a mercantile establishment
which buys from importers, wholesalers or manufacturers, and sells to
retailers. [U.S.]
Jo"cant*ry (?), n. [L. jocans,
p. pr. of jocare to jest, fr. jocus a jest.] The
act or practice of jesting. [Obs.]
Jock"ey (?), n.; pl.Jockeys (#). [Dim. of Jack, Scot.
Jock; orig., a boy who rides horses. See 2d Jack.]
1.A professional rider of horses in
races.Addison.
2.A dealer in horses; a horse trader.Macaulay.
3.A cheat; one given to sharp practice in
trade.
Jock"ey, v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Jockeyed (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Jockeying.] 1." To jostle by riding
against one."Johnson.
2.To play the jockey toward; to cheat; to
trick; to impose upon in trade; as, to jockey a
customer.
Jock"ey, v. i.To play or act the
jockey; to cheat.
Jock"ey*ing (?), n.The act or
management of one who jockeys; trickery.Beaconsfield.
Jock"ey*ism (?), n.The practice
of jockeys.
Jock"ey*ship, n.The art,
character, or position, of a jockey; the personality of a
jockey.
Go flatter Sawney for his
jockeyship.
Chatterton.
Where can at last his jockeyship
retire?
Cowper.
Jo*cose" (?), a. [L jocosus, fr.
jocus joke. See Joke.] Given to jokes and jesting;
containing a joke, or abounding in jokes; merry; sportive;
humorous.
To quit their austerity and be jocose and
pleasant with an adversary.
Shaftesbury.
All . . . jocose or comical airs should be
excluded.
Spondanus imagines that Ulysses may possibly speak
jocosely, but in truth Ulysses never behaves with
levity.
Broome.
He must beware lest his letter should contain anything
like jocoseness; since jesting is incompatible with a holy and
serious life.
Buckle.
Jo`co*se"ri*ous (?), a. [Jocose
+ serious.] Mingling mirth and seriousness.M.
Green.
Jo*cos"i*ty (?), n.A jocose act
or saying; jocoseness.Sir T. Browne.
Joc"u*lar (?), a. [L. jocularis,
fr. joculus, dim. of jocus joke. See Joke.]
1.Given to jesting; jocose; as, a
jocular person.
2.Sportive; merry. "Jocular
exploits." Cowper.
The style is serious and partly
jocular.
Dryden.
Joc`u*lar"i*ty (?), n.Jesting;
merriment.
Joc"u*lar*ly (?), adv.In jest;
for sport or mirth; jocosely.
Joc"u*la*ry (?), a. [L.
jocularius. Cf. Jocular.] Jocular; jocose;
sportive.Bacon.
Joc"u*la`tor (?), n. [L. See
Juggler.] A jester; a joker. [Obs.]
Strutt.
Joc"u*la*to*ry (?), a. [L.
joculatorius.] Droll; sportive. [Obs.]
Cockeram.
Joc"und (?), [L. jocundus, jucundus, orig.,
helpful, fr. juvare to help. See Aid.] Merry;
cheerful; gay; airy; lively; sportive.
Night's candles are burnt out, and jocund
day
Stands tiptoe on the misty mountain tops.
Shak.
Rural sports and jocund strains.
Prior.
-- Joc"und*ly (#), adv. --
Joc"und*ness, n.
Joc"und, adv.Merrily;
cheerfully.Gray.
Jo*cun"di*ty (?), n. [L. jocunditas
jucunditas. See Jocund, and cf. Jucundity.]
The state or quality of being jocund; gayety;
sportiveness.
Joe (?), n.See
Johannes.
Joe" Mil"ler (?). [From Joseph Miller, a comic
actor, whose name was attached, after his death, to a popular jest
book published in 1739.] A jest book; a stale jest; a worn-out
joke. [Colloq.]
It is an old Joe Miller in whist circles, that
there are only two reasons that can justify you in not returning
trumps to your partner's lead; i. e., first, sudden illness;
secondly, having none.
Pole.
Joe`-Pye" weed` (?). (Bot.)A tall composite
plant of the genus Eupatorium (E. purpureum), with
purplish flowers, and whorled leaves.
Jog (j&obreve;g), v. t. [imp. &
p. p.Jogged (j&obreve;gd); p. pr. & vb.
n.Jogging (-g&ibreve;ng).] [OE. joggen; cf.
W. gogi to shake, and also E. shog, shock,
v.]
1.To push or shake with the elbow or hand;
to jostle; esp., to push or touch, in order to give notice, to excite
one's attention, or to warn.
Now leaps he upright, jogs me, and cries: Do
you see
Yonder well-favored youth?
Donne.
Sudden I jogged Ulysses, who was laid
Fast by my side.
Pope.
2.To suggest to; to notify; to remind; to
call the attention of; as, to jog the memory.
3.To cause to jog; to drive at a jog, as a
horse. See Jog, v. i.
Jog, v. i.To move by jogs or
small shocks, like those of a slow trot; to move slowly, leisurely,
or monotonously; -- usually with on, sometimes with
over.
Jog on, jog on, the footpath
way.
Shak.
So hung his destiny, never to rot,
While he might still jog on and keep his trot.
Milton.
The good old ways our sires jogged safely
over.
R. Browning.
Jog, n.1.A
slight shake; a shake or push intended to give notice or awaken
attention; a push; a jolt.
To give them by turns an invisible
jog.
Swift.
2.A rub; a slight stop; an obstruction;
hence, an irregularity in motion of from; a hitch; a break in the
direction of a line or the surface of a plane.Glanvill.
Jog trot, a slow, regular, jolting gait;
hence, a routine habit or method, persistently adhered to.T. Hook.
Jog"ger (?), n.One who
jogs.Dryden.
Jog"ging (?), n.The act of giving
a jog or jogs; traveling at a jog.
Jog"gle (?), v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Joggled (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Joggling (?).] [Freq. of jog.]
1.To shake slightly; to push suddenly but
slightly, so as to cause to shake or totter; to jostle; to
jog.
2.(Arch.)To join by means of
joggles, so as to prevent sliding apart; sometimes, loosely, to
dowel.
The struts of a roof are joggled into the truss
posts.
Gwilt.
Jog"gle, v. i.To shake or totter;
to slip out of place.
Jog"gle, n. [Arch.] A notch or
tooth in the joining surface of any piece of building material to
prevent slipping; sometimes, but incorrectly, applied to a separate
piece fitted into two adjacent stones, or the like.
Joggle joint(Arch.), a joint in any
kind of building material, where the joining surfaces are made with
joggles.
Jo`han*ne"an (j&osl;`hăn*nē"an),
a.Of or pertaining to John, esp. to the
Apostle John or his writings.M. Stuart.
Jo*han"nes (j&osl;*hăn"nēz),
n. [NL., fr. Gr. &?;, Heb.
Y&ebreve;hōkhānān,
Yōkhānān, i. e., one whom Jehovah has
blessed; hence F. Jean, E. John.] (Numis.)A Portuguese gold coin of the value of eight dollars, named from
the figure of King John which it bears; -- often contracted into
joe; as, a joe, or a half joe.
Jo*han"nis*ber`ger (?), n. [G.] A
fine white wine produced on the estate of Schloss (or Castle)
Johannisberg, on the Rhine.
John (j&obreve;n), n. [See
Johannes.] A proper name of a man.
John-apple, a sort of apple ripe about St.
John's Day. Same as Apple-john. -- John
Bull, an ideal personification of the typical
characteristics of an Englishman, or of the English people. --
John Bullism, English character.W.
Irving. -- John Doe(Law), the name
formerly given to the fictitious plaintiff in an action of
ejectment.Mozley & W. -- John Doree,
John Dory. [John (or F. jaune yellow)
+ Doree, Dory.] (Zoöl.)An oval,
compressed, European food fish (Zeus faber). Its color is
yellow and olive, with golden, silvery, and blue reflections. It has
a round dark spot on each side. Called also dory,
doree, and St. Peter's fish.
John"a*dreams` (?), n.A dreamy,
idle fellow.Shak.
John"ny (?), n.; pl.Johnnies (&?;). 1.A familiar
diminutive of John.
2.(Zoöl.)A sculpin.
[Local cant]
Johny Crapaud (&?;), a jocose designation of
a Frenchman, or of the French people, collectively.
John"ny*cake` (-kāk`), n.A
kind of bread made of the meal of maize (Indian corn), mixed with
water or milk, etc., and baked. [U.S.] J. Barlow.
John`son*ese" (?), n.The literary
style of Dr. Samuel Johnson, or one formed in imitation of it;
an inflated, stilted, or pompous style, affecting classical
words.E. Everett.
John"son grass` (?). [Named after W. Johnson of
Alabama, who planted it about 1840-1845.] (Bot.)A tall
perennial grass (Sorghum Halepense), valuable in the Southern
and Western States for pasture and hay. The rootstocks are large and
juicy and are eagerly sought by swine. Called also Cuba grass,
Means grass, Evergreen millet, and Arabian
millet.
John*so"ni*an (?), a.Pertaining
to or resembling Dr. Johnson or his style; pompous;
inflated.
John*so"ni*an*ism (?), n.A manner
of acting or of writing peculiar to, or characteristic of, Dr.
Johnson. [Written also Johnsonism.]
John's"-wort` (?), n.See St.
John's-wort.
Join (join), v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Joined (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Joining.] [OE. joinen, joignen, F.
joindre, fr. L. jungere to yoke, bind together, join;
akin to jugum yoke. See Yoke, and cf. Conjugal,
Junction, Junta.]
1.To bring together, literally or
figuratively; to place in contact; to connect; to couple; to unite;
to combine; to associate; to add; to append.
Woe unto them that join house to
house.
Is. v. 8.
Held up his left hand, which did flame and burn
Like twenty torches joined.
Shak.
Thy tuneful voice with numbers
join.
Dryden.
2.To associate one's self to; to be or
become connected with; to league one's self with; to unite with; as,
to join a party; to join the church.
We jointly now to join no other
head.
Dryden.
3.To unite in marriage.
He that joineth his virgin in
matrimony.
Wyclif.
What, therefore, God hath joined together, let
not man put asunder.
Matt. xix. 6.
4.To enjoin upon; to command. [Obs. &
R.]
They join them penance, as they call
it.
Tyndale.
5.To accept, or engage in, as a contest; as,
to join encounter, battle, issue.Milton.
To join battle, To join issue.
See under Battle, Issue.
Syn. -- To add; annex; unite; connect; combine; consociate;
couple; link; append. See Add.
Join, v. i.To be contiguous,
close, or in contact; to come together; to unite; to mingle; to form
a union; as, the bones of the skull join; two rivers
join.
Whose house joined hard to the
synagogue.
Acts xviii. 7.
Should we again break thy commandments, and
join in affinity with the people of these
abominations?
Ezra ix. 14.
Nature and fortune joined to make thee
great.
Shak.
Join, n.(Geom.)The line
joining two points; the point common to two intersecting lines.Henrici.
Join"ant (?), a. [OF. & F.
joignant, p. pr. of joindre to join.]
Adjoining. [Obs.] Chaucer.
Join"der (?), n. [F. joindre.
See Join, v. t.]
1.The act of joining; a putting together;
conjunction.
Confirmed by mutual joinder of your
hands.
Shak.
2.(Law)(a)A joining
of parties as plaintiffs or defendants in a suit.(b)Acceptance of an issue tendered in law or
fact.(c)A joining of causes of action or
defense in civil suits or criminal prosecutions.
Join"er, n.1.One
who, or that which, joins.
2.One whose occupation is to construct
articles by joining pieces of wood; a mechanic who does the woodwork
(as doors, stairs, etc.) necessary for the finishing of
buildings. "One Snug, the joiner." Shak.
3.A wood-working machine, for sawing,
plaining, mortising, tenoning, grooving, etc.
Syn. -- See Carpenter.
Join"er*y (?), n.The art, or
trade, of a joiner; the work of a joiner.
A piece of joinery . . . whimsically
dovetailed.
Burke.
Join"hand` (?), n.Writing in
which letters are joined in words; -- distinguished from writing in
single letters.Addison.
Joint (joint), n. [F. joint, fr.
joindre, p. p. joint. See Join.]
1.The place or part where two things or
parts are joined or united; the union of two or more smooth or even
surfaces admitting of a close-fitting or junction; junction; as, a
joint between two pieces of timber; a joint in a
pipe.
2.A joining of two things or parts so as to
admit of motion; an articulation, whether movable or not; a hinge;
as, the knee joint; a node or joint of a stem; a ball
and socket joint. See Articulation.
A scaly gauntlet now, with joints of steel,
Must glove this hand.
Shak.
To tear thee joint by
joint.
Milton.
3.The part or space included between two
joints, knots, nodes, or articulations; as, a joint of cane or
of a grass stem; a joint of the leg.
4.Any one of the large pieces of meat, as
cut into portions by the butcher for roasting.
5.(Geol.)A plane of fracture, or
divisional plane, of a rock transverse to the
stratification.
6.(Arch.)The space between the
adjacent surfaces of two bodies joined and held together, as by means
of cement, mortar, etc.; as, a thin joint.
7.The means whereby the meeting surfaces of
pieces in a structure are secured together.
Coursing joint(Masonry), the mortar
joint between two courses of bricks or stones. -- Fish
joint, Miter joint, Universal
joint, etc. See under Fish, Miter,
etc. -- Joint bolt, a bolt for fastening
two pieces, as of wood, one endwise to the other, having a nut
embedded in one of the pieces. -- Joint chair(Railroad), the chair that supports the ends of abutting
rails. -- Joint coupling, a universal
joint for coupling shafting. See under Universal. --
Joint hinge, a hinge having long leaves; a
strap hinge. -- Joint splice, a
reënforce at a joint, to sustain the parts in their true
relation. -- Joint stool. (a)A stool consisting of jointed parts; a folding stool.Shak.(b)A block for supporting the end
of a piece at a joint; a joint chair. -- Out of
joint, out of place; dislocated, as when the head of a
bone slips from its socket; hence, not working well together;
disordered. "The time is out of joint." Shak.
Joint (joint), a. [F., p. p. of
joindre. See Join.]
2.Involving the united activity of two or
more; done or produced by two or more working together.
I read this joint effusion twice
over.
T. Hook.
3.United, joined, or sharing with another or
with others; not solitary in interest or action; holding in common
with an associate, or with associates; acting together; as,
joint heir; joint creditor; joint debtor,
etc. "Joint tenants of the world." Donne.
4.Shared by, or affecting two or more; held
in common; as, joint property; a joint bond.
A joint burden laid upon us all.
Shak.
Joint committee(Parliamentary Practice),
a committee composed of members of the two houses of a
legislative body, for the appointment of which concurrent resolutions
of the two houses are necessary.Cushing. --
Joint meeting, or Joint session,
the meeting or session of two distinct bodies as one; as, a
joint meeting of committees representing different
corporations; a joint session of both branches of a State
legislature to chose a United States senator. "Such joint
meeting shall not be dissolved until the electoral votes are all
counted and the result declared." Joint Rules of Congress, U.
S. -- Joint resolution(Parliamentary
Practice), a resolution adopted concurrently by the two
branches of a legislative body. "By the constitution of the
United States and the rules of the two houses, no absolute
distinction is made between bills and joint resolutions."
Barclay (Digest). -- Joint rule(Parliamentary Practice), a rule of proceeding adopted by
the concurrent action of both branches of a legislative
assembly. "Resolved, by the House of Representatives (the Senate
concurring), that the sixteenth and seventeenth joint rules be
suspended for the remainder of the session." Journal H. of R., U.
S. -- Joint and several(Law), a
phrase signifying that the debt, credit, obligation, etc., to which
it is applied is held in such a way that the parties in interest are
engaged both together and individually thus a joint and
several debt is one for which all the debtors may be sued
together or either of them individually. -- Joint
stock, stock held in company. -- Joint-
stock company(Law), a species of partnership,
consisting generally of a large number of members, having a capital
divided, or agreed to be divided, into shares, the shares owned by
any member being usually transferable without the consent of the
rest. -- Joint tenancy(Law), a
tenure by two or more persons of estate by unity of interest, title,
time, and possession, under which the survivor takes the whole.Blackstone. -- Joint tenant(Law),
one who holds an estate by joint tenancy.
Joint, v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Jointed; p. pr. & vb. n.Jointing.]
1.To unite by a joint or joints; to fit
together; to prepare so as to fit together; as, to joint
boards.
Pierced through the yielding planks of jointed
wood.
Pope.
2.To join; to connect; to unite; to
combine.
Jointing their force 'gainst
Cæsar.
Shak.
3.To provide with a joint or joints; to
articulate.
The fingers are jointed together for
motion.
Ray.
4.To separate the joints; of; to divide at
the joint or joints; to disjoint; to cut up into joints, as
meat. "He joints the neck." Dryden.
Quartering, jointing, seething, and
roasting.
Holland.
Joint, v. i.To fit as if by
joints; to coalesce as joints do; as, the stones joint,
neatly.
Joint"ed, a.Having joints;
articulated; full of nodes; knotty; as, a jointed doll;
jointed structure. "The jointed herbage." J.
Philips. -- Joint"ed*ly, adv.
Joint"er (?), n.1.One who, or that which, joints.
2.A plane for smoothing the surfaces of
pieces which are to be accurately joined; especially:
(a)The longest plane used by a joiner.(b)(Coopering)A long stationary plane,
for planing the edges of barrel staves.
3.(Masonry)(a)A
bent piece of iron inserted to strengthen the joints of a wall.(b)A tool for pointing the joints in
brickwork.
Joint"-fir` (?), n.(Bot.)A genus (Ephedra) of leafless shrubs, with the stems
conspicuously jointed; -- called also shrubby horsetail. There
are about thirty species, of which two or three are found from Texas
to California.
Joint"ing, n.The act or process
of making a joint; also, the joints thus produced.
Jointing machine, a planing machine for wood
used in furniture and piano factories, etc. -- Jointing
plane. See Jointer, 2. -- Jointing
rule(Masonry), a long straight rule, used by
bricklayers for securing straight joints and faces.
Joint"less, a.Without a joint;
rigid; stiff.
Joint"ly, adv.In a joint manner;
together; unitedly; in concert; not separately.
Then jointly to the ground their knees they
bow.
Shak.
Joint"ress (?), n.(Law)A
woman who has a jointure. [Written also jointuress.]
Blackstone.
Join"ture (?), n. [F. jointure a
joint, orig., a joining, L. junctura, fr. jungere to
join. See Join, and cf. Juncture.]
1.A joining; a joint. [Obs.]
2.(Law)An estate settled on a wife,
which she is to enjoy after husband's decease, for her own life at
least, in satisfaction of dower.
The jointure that your king must make,
Which with her dowry shall be counterpoised.
Shak.
Join"ture (?), v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Jointured (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Jointuring.] To settle a jointure upon.
Join"ture*less, a.Having no
jointure.
Join"tur*ess, n.See
Jointress.Bouvier.
Joint"weed` (?), n.(Bot.)A slender, nearly leafless, American herb (Polygonum
articulatum), with jointed spikes of small flowers.
Joint"worm` (?), n.(Zoöl.)The larva of a small, hymenopterous fly (Eurytoma
hordei), which is found in gall-like swellings on the stalks of
wheat, usually at or just above the first joint. In some parts of
America it does great damage to the crop.
Joist (joist), n. [OE. giste,
OF. giste, F. gîte, fr. gesir to lie, F.
gésir. See Gist.] (Arch.)A piece of
timber laid horizontally, or nearly so, to which the planks of the
floor, or the laths or furring strips of a ceiling, are nailed; --
called, according to its position or use, binding joist,
bridging joist, ceiling joist, trimming joist,
etc. See Illust. of Double-framed floor, under
Double, a.
Joist, v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Joisted; p. pr. & vb. n.Joisting.] To fit or furnish with joists.Johnson.
Joke, n. [L. jocus. Cf
Jeopardy, Jocular, Juggler.]
1.Something said for the sake of exciting a
laugh; something witty or sportive (commonly indicating more of
hilarity or humor than jest); a jest; a witticism; as, to
crack good-natured jokes.
And gentle dullness ever loves a
joke.
Pope.
Or witty joke our airy senses moves
To pleasant laughter.
Gay.
2.Something not said seriously, or not
actually meant; something done in sport.
Inclose whole downs in walls, 't is all a
joke.
Pope.
In joke, in jest; sportively; not meant
seriously. -- Practical joke. See under
Practical.
Joke, v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Joked (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Joking.] To make merry with; to make jokes upon; to
rally; to banter; as, to joke a comrade.
Joke, v. i. [L. jocari.] To
do something for sport, or as a joke; to be merry in words or
actions; to jest.
He laughed, shouted, joked, and
swore.
Macaulay.
Syn. -- To jest; sport; rally; banter. See Jest.
Jok"er (?), n.1.One who makes jokes or jests; a humorist; a wag.
Jol"ly (j&obreve;l"l&ybreve;), a.
[Compar.Jollier (-l&ibreve;*&etilde;r);
superl.Jolliest.] [OF. joli,
jolif, joyful, merry, F. joli pretty; of Scand. origin,
akin to E. yule; cf. Icel. jōl yule, Christmas
feast. See Yule.]
1.Full of life and mirth; jovial; joyous;
merry; mirthful.
Like a jolly troop of huntsmen.
Shak.
"A jolly place," said he, "in times of old!
But something ails it now: the spot is cursed."
Wordsworth.
2.Expressing mirth, or inspiring it;
exciting mirth and gayety.
And with his jolly pipe delights the
groves.
Prior.
Their jolly notes they chanted loud and
clear.
Fairfax.
3.Of fine appearance; handsome; excellent;
lively; agreeable; pleasant. "A jolly cool wind." Sir
T. North. [Now mostly colloq.]
Full jolly knight he seemed, and fair did
sit.
Spenser.
The coachman is swelled into jolly
dimensions.
W. Irving.
Jol"ly-boat` (?), n. [A corruption of
Dan. jolle yawl, or of D. jol yawl + E. boat.
See Yawl the boat.] (Naut.)A boat of medium size
belonging to a ship.
Jol"ly*head (?), n.Jollity.
[Obs.] Spenser.
Jolt (jōlt), v. i. [imp.
& p. p.Jolted; p. pr. & vb. n.
Jolting.] [Prob. fr. jole, joll, jowl, and
originally meaning, to knock on the head. See Jowl.] To
shake with short, abrupt risings and fallings, as a carriage moving
on rough ground; as, the coach jolts.
Jolt, v. t.To cause to shake with
a sudden up and down motion, as in a carriage going over rough
ground, or on a high-trotting horse; as, the horse jolts the
rider; fast driving jolts the carriage and the
passengers.
Jolt, n.A sudden shock or jerk; a
jolting motion, as in a carriage moving over rough ground.
The first jolt had like to have shaken me
out.
Swift.
Jolt"er (?), n.One who, or that
which, jolts.
{ Jolt"er*head`, Jolt"head` } (?),
n. [See Jolt, Jowl.] A dunce; a
blockhead.Sir T. North.
Jolt"ing*ly, adv.In a jolting
manner.
Jolt"y (?), a.That jolts; as, a
jolty coach. [Colloq.]
Jo"nah (?), n.The Hebrew prophet,
who was cast overboard as one who endangered the ship; hence, any
person whose presence is unpropitious.
Jonah crab(Zoöl.), a large crab
(Cancer borealis) of the eastern coast of the United States,
sometimes found between tides, but usually in deep water.
Jo*ne"sian (?), a.Of or
pertaining to Jones.
The Jonesian system, a system of
transliterating Oriental words by English letters, invented by Sir
William Jones.
{ Jon"gleur (?), Jon"gler (?), }
n. [F. jongleur. See Juggler.]
1.In the Middle Ages, a court attendant or
other person who, for hire, recited or sang verses, usually of his
own composition. See Troubadour.
Vivacity and picturesquenees of the jongleur's
verse.
J R. Green.
2.A juggler; a conjuror. See
Juggler.Milton.
{ Jon"quil, Jon"quille }, n.
[F. jonquille, fr. L. juncus a rush, because it has
rushlike leaves.] (Bot.)A bulbous plant of the genus
Narcissus (N. Jonquilla), allied to the daffodil. It has long,
rushlike leaves, and yellow or white fragrant flowers. The root has
emetic properties. It is sometimes called the rush-leaved
daffodil. See Illust. of Corona.
Jo"ram (?), n.See
Jorum.
{ Jor"dan (?), Jor"den (?), }
n. [Prob. fr. the river Jordan, and
shortened fr. Jordan bottle a bottle of water from the Jordan,
brought back by pilgrims.]
1.A pot or vessel with a large neck,
formerly used by physicians and alchemists. [Obs.]
Halliwell.
2.A chamber pot. [Obs.] Chaucer.
Shak.
Jo"rum (?), n. [Perh. corrupted fr.
jorden an earthen pot.] A large drinking vessel; also,
its contents. [Colloq. Eng.] Forby.
Jo"seph (?), n.An outer garment
worn in the 18th century; esp., a woman's riding habit, buttoned down
the front.Fairholt.
Jo"seph's flow"er (?). (Bot.)A composite
herb (Tragopogon pratensis), of the same genus as the
salsify.
Jo"so (?), n.(Zoöl.)A small gudgeon.
Joss (?), n. [Chinese, corrupt. fr. Pg.
deos God, L. deus.] A Chinese household divinity;
a Chinese idol. "Critic in jars and josses." Colman
(1761).
Joss house, a Chinese temple or house for
the Chinese mode of worship. -- Joss stick,
a reed covered with a paste made of the dust of odoriferous
woods, or a cylinder made wholly of the paste; -- burned by the
Chinese before an idol.
Jos"sa (?), interj.A command to a
horse, probably meaning "stand still." [Obs.]
Chaucer.
Jos"tle (?), v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Jostled (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Jostling (?).] [A dim. of joust, just, v. See
Joust, and cf. Justle.] [Written also justle.]
To run against and shake; to push out of the way; to elbow; to
hustle; to disturb by crowding; to crowd against. "Bullies
jostled him." Macaulay.
Systems of movement, physical, intellectual, and
moral, which are perpetually jostling each other.
I. Taylor.
Jos"tle, v. i.To push; to crowd;
to hustle.
None jostle with him for the wall.
Lamb.
Jos"tle, n.A conflict by
collisions; a crowding or bumping together; interference.
The jostle of South African nationalities and
civilization.
The Nation.
Jos"tle*ment (?), n.Crowding;
hustling.
Jot (?), n. [L. iota, Gr. &?;
the name of the letter (E. i, Heb. y&?;d), the smallest
letter of the Greek alphabet. Cf. Iota.] An iota; a
point; a tittle; the smallest particle. Cf. Bit,
n.
Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one
tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be
fulfilled.
Matt. v. 18.
Neither will they bate
One jot of ceremony.
Shak.
Jot, v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Jotted; p. pr. & vb. n.Jotting.] To set down; to make a brief note of; --
usually followed by down.
Jot"ter (?), n.1.One who jots down memoranda.
2.A memorandum book.
Jougs (?), n. [F. joug a yoke,
L. jugum. See Yoke.] An iron collar fastened to a
wall or post, formerly used in Scotland as a kind of pillory.
[Written also juggs.] See Juke.Sir W.
Scott.
Jou"is*sance (?), n. [F., fr.
jouir to enjoy, fr. L. gaudere to rejoice.]
Jollity; merriment. [Obs.] Spenser.
Jouk (?), v. i.See
Juke.
Joul (?), v. t.See
Jowl.
Joule (j&oomac;l), n. [From the
distinguished English physicist, James P. Joule.]
(Physics.)A unit of work which is equal to
107 units of work in the C. G. S. system of units (ergs),
and is practically equivalent to the energy expended in one second by
an electric current of one ampere in a resistance of one ohm. One
joule is approximately equal to 0.738 foot pounds.
Joule's equivalent. See under
Equivalent, n.
Jounce (jouns), v. t. & i.
[imp. & p. p.Jounced (jounst); p.
pr. & vb. n.Jouncing (joun"s&ibreve;ng).] [Cf.
Jaunce.] To jolt; to shake, especially by rough riding or
by driving over obstructions.
Jounce, n.A jolt; a shake; a hard
trot.
Jour"nal (?), a. [F., fr. L.
diurnalis diurnal, fr. diurnus belonging to the day,
fr. dies day. See Diurnal.] Daily; diurnal.
[Obs.]
Whiles from their journal labors they did
rest.
Spenser.
Jour"nal, n. [F. journal. See
Journal, a.]
1.A diary; an account of daily transactions
and events. Specifically: (a)(Bookkeeping)A book of accounts, in which is entered a
condensed and grouped statement of the daily transactions.(b)(Naut.)A daily register of the
ship's course and distance, the winds, weather, incidents of the
voyage, etc.(c)(Legislature)The
record of daily proceedings, kept by the clerk.(d)A newspaper published daily; by extension, a
weekly newspaper or any periodical publication, giving an account of
passing events, the proceedings and memoirs of societies, etc.; a
periodical; a magazine.
2.That which has occurred in a day; a day's
work or travel; a day's journey. [Obs. & R.] B.
Jonson.
3.(Mach.)That portion of a rotating
piece, as a shaft, axle, spindle, etc., which turns in a bearing or
box. See Illust. of Axle box.
Journal box, or Journal
bearing(Mach.)the carrier of a journal; the
box in which the journal of a shaft, axle, or pin turns.
Jour"nal*ism (?), n. [Cf. F.
journalisme.]
1.The keeping of a journal or diary.
[Obs.]
2.The periodical collection and publication
of current news; the business of managing, editing, or writing for,
journals or newspapers; as, political journalism.
Journalism is now truly an estate of the
realm.
Ed. Rev.
Jour"nal*ist, n. [Cf. F.
journaliste.]
1.One who keeps a journal or diary.
[Obs.] Mickle.
2.The conductor of a public journal, or one
whose business it to write for a public journal; an editorial or
other professional writer for a periodical.Addison.
Jour"nal*is"tic (?), a.Pertaining
to journals or to journalists; contained in, or characteristic of,
the public journals; as, journalistic literature or
enterprise.
Jour"nal*ize (?), v. t. [imp. &
p. p.Journalized (?); p. pr. & vb.
n.Journalizing (?).] To enter or record in a
journal or diary.Johnson.
Jour"nal*ize, v. i.to conduct or
contribute to a public journal; to follow the profession of a
journalist.
Jour"ney (?), n.; pl.Journeys (#). [OE. jornee, journee,
prop., a day's journey, OF. jornée,
jurnée, a day, a day's work of journey, F.
journée, fr. OF. jorn, jurn, jor a
day, F. jour, fr. L. diurnus. See Journal.]
1.The travel or work of a day. [Obs.]
Chaucer.
We have yet large day, for scarce the sun
Hath finished half his journey.
Milton.
2.Travel or passage from one place to
another; hence, figuratively, a passage through life.
The good man . . . is gone a long
journey.
Prov. vii. 19.
We must all have the same journey's
end.
Bp. Stillingfleet.
Syn. -- Tour; excursion; trip; expedition; pilgrimage. --
Journey, Tour, Excursion, Pilgrimage. The
word journey suggests the idea of a somewhat prolonged
traveling for a specific object, leading a person to pass directly
from one point to another. In a tour, we take a roundabout
course from place to place, more commonly for pleasure, though
sometimes on business. An excursion is usually a brief tour or
trip for pleasure, health, etc. In a pilgrimage we travel to a
place hallowed by our religions affections, or by some train of
sacred or tender associations. A journey on important
business; the tour of Europe; an excursion to the
lakes; a pilgrimage to the Holy Land.
Jour"ney, v. i. [imp. & p.
p.Journeyed (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Journeying.] To travel from place to place; to go from
home to a distance.
Abram journeyed, going on still toward the
south.
Gen. xii. 9.
Jour"ney, v. t.To traverse; to
travel over or through. [R.] "I journeyed many a land."
Sir W. Scott.
Jour"ney-bat`ed (?), a.Worn out
with journeying. [Obs.] Shak.
Jour"ney*er (?), n.One who
journeys.
Jour"ney*man (?), n.; pl.Journeymen (&?;). Formerly, a man hired to
work by the day; now, commonly, one who has mastered a handicraft or
trade; -- distinguished from apprentice and from master
workman.
I have thought some of nature's journeymen had
made men, and not made them well.
Shak.
Jour"ney*work` (?), n.Originally,
work done by the day; work done by a journeyman at his
trade.
Joust (?), v. i. [OE. justen,
jousten, OF. jouster, jouster, joster, F.
jouter, fr. L. juxta near to, nigh, from the root of
jungere to join. See Join, and cf. Jostle.]
To engage in mock combat on horseback, as two knights in the
lists; to tilt. [Written also just.]
For the whole army to joust and
tourney.
Holland.
Joust, n. [OE. juste,
jouste, OF. juste, jouste, joste, F.
joute. See Joust, v. i.] A
tilting match; a mock combat on horseback between two knights in the
lists or inclosed field. [Written also just.]
Gorgeous knights at joust and
tournament.
Milton.
Joust"er, n.One who jousts or
tilts.
Jove (?), n. [L. Jupiter, gen.
Jovis, OL. Jovis, nom. & gen. for Djovis; akin
to E. Tuesday. See Tuesday, and cf.
Jupiter.]
1.The chief divinity of the ancient Romans;
Jupiter.
2.(Astron.)The planet Jupiter.
[R.] Pope.
3.(Alchemy)The metal tin.
Bird of Jove, the eagle.
Jo"vi*al (?), a. [F., fr. L.
Jovialis pertaining to Jove. The planet Jupiter was thought to
make those born under it joyful or jovial. See Jove.]
1.Of or pertaining to the god, or the
planet, Jupiter. [Obs.]
Our jovial star reigned at his
birth.
Shak.
The fixed stars astrologically differenced by the
planets, and esteemed Martial or Jovial according to the
colors whereby they answer these planets.
Sir T.
Browne.
2.Sunny; serene. [Obs.] "The heavens
always joviall." Spenser.
3.Gay; merry; joyous; jolly; mirth-
inspiring; hilarious; characterized by mirth or jollity; as, a
jovial youth; a jovial company; a jovial
poem.
Be bright and jovial among your
guests.
Shak.
His odes are some of them panegyrical, others moral;
the rest are jovial or bacchanalian.
Dryden.
&fist; This word is a relic of the belief in planetary influence.
Other examples are saturnine, mercurial,
martial, lunatic, etc.
Jo"vi*al*ist (?), n.One who lives
a jovial life.Bp. Hall.
Jo`vi*al"i*ty (?), n. [Cf. F.
jovialité.] The quality or state of being
jovial.Sir T. Herbert.
Jo"vi*al*ly (?), adv.In a jovial
manner; merrily; gayly.B. Jonson.
Jo"vi*al*ness, n.Noisy mirth;
joviality.Hewyt.
Jo"vi*al*ty (?), n.Joviality. [R.] Barrow.
Jo"vi*an (?), a.Of or pertaining
to Jove, or Jupiter (either the deity or the planet).
Jo`vi*cen"tric (?), a. [See
Jove, and Center.] (Astron.)Revolving
around the planet Jupiter; appearing as viewed from Jupiter.
[R.] J. R. Hind.
Jo*vin"ian*ist (?), n.(Script.
Hist.)An adherent to the doctrines of Jovinian, a monk of
the fourth century, who denied the virginity of Mary, and opposed the
asceticism of his time.
Jowl (?), n. [For older chole,
chaul, AS. ceaft jaw. Cf. Chaps.] The
cheek; the jaw. [Written also jole, choule,
chowle, and geoule.]
Cheek by jowl, with the cheeks close
together; side by side; in close proximity. "I will go with thee
cheek by jole." Shak. " Sits cheek by jowl."
Dryden.
Jowl, v. t.To throw, dash, or
knock. [Obs.]
How the knave jowls it to the
ground.
Shak.
Jowl"er (?), n.(Zoöl.)A dog with large jowls, as the beagle.
Jow"ter (?), n.A mounted peddler
of fish; -- called also jouster. [Obs.]
Carew.
Joy (?), n. [OE. joye, OF.
joye, joie, goie, F. joie, L.
gaudia, pl. of gaudium joy, fr. gaudere to
rejoice, to be glad; cf. Gr. &?; to rejoice, &?; proud. Cf.
Gaud, Jewel.]
1.The passion or emotion excited by the
acquisition or expectation of good; pleasurable feelings or emotions
caused by success, good fortune, and the like, or by a rational
prospect of possessing what we love or desire; gladness; exhilaration
of spirits; delight.
Her heavenly form beheld, all wished her
joy.
Dryden.
Glides the smooth current of domestic
joy.
Johnson.
Who, for the joy that was set before him,
endured the cross, despising the shame.
Heb. xii. 2.
Tears of true joy for his return.
Shak.
Joy is a delight of the mind, from the
consideration of the present or assured approaching possession of a
good.
Locke.
2.That which causes joy or
happiness.
For ye are our glory and joy.
1
Thess. ii. 20.
A thing of beauty is a joy
forever.
Keats.
3.The sign or exhibition of joy; gayety;
mirth; merriment; festivity.
Such joy made Una, when her knight she
found.
Spenser.
The roofs with joy resound.
Dryden.
&fist; Joy is used in composition, esp. with participles,
to from many self-explaining compounds; as, joy-bells,
joy-bringing, joy-inspiring, joy-resounding,
etc.
Joy, v. i. [imp. & p.
p.Joyed (joid); p. pr. & vb. n.Joying.] [OF. joir, F. jouir. See Joy,
n.] To rejoice; to be glad; to delight; to
exult.
I will joy in the God of my
salvation.
Hab. iii. 18.
In whose sight all things joy.
Milton.
Joy, v. t.1.To
give joy to; to congratulate. [Obs.] "Joy us of our
conquest." Dryden.
To joy the friend, or grapple with the
foe.
Prior.
2.To gladden; to make joyful; to
exhilarate. [Obs.]
Neither pleasure's art can joy my
spirits.
Shak.
3.To enjoy. [Obs.] See
Enjoy.
Who might have lived and joyed immortal
bliss.
Milton.
Joy"ance (?), n. [OF. joiance.]
Enjoyment; gayety; festivity; joyfulness.Spenser.
Some days of joyance are decreed to
all.
Byron.
From what hid fountains doth thy joyance
flow?
Trench.
Joy"an*cy (?), n.Joyance.
[R.] Carlyle.
Joy"ful (?), a.Full of joy;
having or causing joy; very glad; as, a joyful heart.
"Joyful tidings." Shak.
My soul shall be joyful in my God.
Is. lxi. 10.
Sad for their loss, but joyful of our
life.
Pope.
-- Joy"ful*ly, adv. --
Joy"ful*ness, n.
Joy"less, a.Not having joy; not
causing joy; unenjoyable. -- Joy"less*ly,
adv. -- Joy"less*ness,
n.
With downcast eyes the joyless victor
sat.
Dryden.
Youth and health and war are joyless to
him.
Addison.
[He] pining for the lass,
Is joyless of the grove, and spurns the growing
grass.
Dryden.
Joy"ous (?), a. [OE. joyous,
joious, joios, F. joyeux.See Joy.]
Glad; gay; merry; joyful; also, affording or inspiring joy; with
of before the word or words expressing the cause of
joy.
Jub (?), n. [Perh. corrupted fr.
jug.] A vessel for holding ale or wine; a jug.
[Obs.] Chaucer.
||Ju"ba (?), n.; pl.Jubæ (-bē). [L., a mane.]
1.(Zoöl.)The mane of an
animal.
2.(Bot.)A loose panicle, the axis of
which falls to pieces, as in certain grasses.
Ju"bate (?), a. [L. jubatus
having a mane.] (Zoöl.)Fringed with long, pendent
hair.
||Ju`bé" (?), n. [F.]
(Arch.)(a)A chancel screen or rood screen.(b)The gallery above such a screen, from which
certain parts of the service were formerly read. See Rood
loft, under Rood.
Ju"bi*lant (?), a. [L. jubilans,
-antis, p. pr. of jubilare to shout for joy: cf. F.
jubilant. See Jubilate.] Uttering songs of
triumph; shouting with joy; triumphant; exulting. "The
jubilant age." Coleridge.
While the bright pomp ascended
jubilant.
Milton.
Ju"bi*lant*ly, adv.In a jubilant
manner.
Ju"bi*lar (?), a. [Cf. F.
jubilaire.] Pertaining to, or having the character of, a
jubilee. [R.] Bp. Hall.
Ju`bi*la"te (?), n. [L., imperat. of
jubilare to shout for joy.]
1.The third Sunday after Easter; -- so
called because the introit is the 66th Psalm, which, in the Latin
version, begins with the words, "Jubilate Deo."
2.A name of the 100th Psalm; -- so called
from its opening word in the Latin version.
Ju"bi*late (?), v. i. [L.
jubilatus, p. p. of jubilare.] To exult; to
rejoice. [R.] De Quincey.
Ju`bi*la"tion (?), n. [L.
jubilatio: cf. F. jubilation.] A triumphant
shouting; rejoicing; exultation. "Jubilations and
hallelujahs." South.
Ju"bi*lee (?), n. [F.
jubilé, L. jubilaeus, Gr. &?;, fr. Heb.
y&?;bel the blast of a trumpet, also the grand sabbatical
year, which was announced by sound of trumpet.]
1.(Jewish Hist.)Every fiftieth year,
being the year following the completion of each seventh sabbath of
years, at which time all the slaves of Hebrew blood were liberated,
and all lands which had been alienated during the whole period
reverted to their former owners. [In this sense spelled also,
in some English Bibles, jubile.] Lev. xxv. 8-17.
2.The joyful commemoration held on the
fiftieth anniversary of any event; as, the jubilee of Queen
Victoria's reign; the jubilee of the American Board of
Missions.
3.(R. C. Ch.)A church solemnity or
ceremony celebrated at Rome, at stated intervals, originally of one
hundred years, but latterly of twenty-five; a plenary and
extraordinary indulgence granted by the sovereign pontiff to the
universal church. One invariable condition of granting this
indulgence is the confession of sins and receiving of the
eucharist.
4.A season of general joy.
The town was all a jubilee of
feasts.
Dryden.
5.A state of joy or exultation. [R.]
"In the jubilee of his spirits." Sir W. Scott.
Ju*cun"di*ty (?), n. [L.
jucunditas, from jucundus.] Pleasantness;
agreeableness. See Jocundity. [R.] Sir T.
Browne.
Ju"dah*ite (?), n.One of the
tribe of Judah; a member of the kingdom of Judah; a Jew.Kitto.
{ Ju*da"ic (?), Ju*da"ic*al (?), }
a. [L. Judaïcus, fr. Judaea, the
country Judea: cf. F. Judaïque. See Jew.] Of
or pertaining to the Jews. "The natural or Judaical
[religion]." South.
Ju*da"ic*al*ly, adv.After the
Jewish manner.Milton.
Ju"da*ism (?), n. [L.
Judaïsmus: cf. F. judaïsme.]
1.The religious doctrines and rites of the
Jews as enjoined in the laws of Moses.J. S. Mill.
2.Conformity to the Jewish rites and
ceremonies.
Ju"da*ist, n.One who believes and
practices Judaism.
Ju`da*is"tic (?), a.Of or
pertaining to Judaism.
Ju`da*i*za"tion (?), n.The act of
Judaizing; a conforming to the Jewish religion or ritual.
[R.]
Ju"da*ize (?), v. i. [imp. & p.
p.Judaized (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Judaizing (?).] [Cf. F. judaïser.] To conform
to the doctrines, observances, or methods of the Jews; to inculcate
or impose Judaism.
They . . . prevailed on the Galatians to
Judaize so far as to observe the rites of Moses in various
instances.
They were Judaizing doctors, who taught the observation of the
Mosaic law.
Bp. Bull.
Ju"da*ize, v. t.To impose Jewish
observances or rites upon; to convert to Judaism.
The heretical Theodotion, the Judaized
Symmachus.
Milton.
Ju"da*i`zer (?), n.One who
conforms to or inculcates Judaism; specifically, pl.(Ch.
Hist.), those Jews who accepted Christianity but still adhered to
the law of Moses and worshiped in the temple at Jerusalem.
Ju"das (?), n.The disciple who
betrayed Christ. Hence: A treacherous person; one who betrays under
the semblance of friendship. -- a.Treacherous; betraying.
Judas hole, a peephole or secret opening for
spying. -- Judas kiss, a deceitful and
treacherous kiss. -- Judas tree(Bot.),
a leguminous tree of the genus Cercis, with pretty, rose-
colored flowers in clusters along the branches. Judas is said to have
hanged himself on a tree of this genus (C. Siliquastrum).
C. Canadensis and C. occidentalis are the American
species, and are called also redbud.
Ju"das-col`ored (?), a.Red; --
from a tradition that Judas Iscariot had red hair and
beard.
There's treachery in that Judas-colored
beard.
Dryden.
Jud"dock (jŭd"d&obreve;k), n.
[For judcock; jud (equiv. to Prov. E. gid a
jacksnipe, W. giach snipe) + cock.] (Zoöl.)See Jacksnipe.
Ju*de"an (j&usl;*dē"an),
a. [L. Judaeus. See Jew.] Of or
pertaining to Judea. -- n.A native of
Judea; a Jew.
Judge (jŭj), n. [OE.
juge, OF. & F. juge, fr. OF. jugier, F.
juger, to judge. See Judge, v.
i.]
1.(Law)A public officer who is
invested with authority to hear and determine litigated causes, and
to administer justice between parties in courts held for that
purpose.
The parts of a judge in hearing are four: to
direct the evidence; to moderate length, repetition, or impertinency
of speech; to recapitulate, select, and collate the material points
of that which hath been said; and to give the rule or
sentence.
Bacon.
2.One who has skill, knowledge, or
experience, sufficient to decide on the merits of a question, or on
the quality or value of anything; one who discerns properties or
relations with skill and readiness; a connoisseur; an expert; a
critic.
A man who is no judge of law may be a good
judge of poetry, or eloquence, or of the merits of a
painting.
Dryden.
3.A person appointed to decide in a trial of
skill, speed, etc., between two or more parties; an umpire; as, a
judge in a horse race.
4.(Jewish Hist.)One of the supreme
magistrates, with both civil and military powers, who governed Israel
for more than four hundred years.
5.pl.The title of the seventh book
of the Old Testament; the Book of Judges.
Judge Advocate(Mil. & Nav.), a
person appointed to act as prosecutor at a court-martial; he acts as
the representative of the government, as the responsible adviser of
the court, and also, to a certain extent, as counsel for the accused,
when he has no other counsel. -- Judge-Advocate
General, in the United States, the title of two
officers, one attached to the War Department and having the rank of
brigadier general, the other attached to the Navy Department and
having the rank of colonel of marines or captain in the navy. The
first is chief of the Bureau of Military Justice of the army, the
other performs a similar duty for the navy. In England, the
designation of a member of the ministry who is the legal adviser of
the secretary of state for war, and supreme judge of the proceedings
of courts-martial.
Syn. -- Judge, Umpire, Arbitrator,
Referee. A judge, in the legal sense, is a magistrate
appointed to determine questions of law. An umpire is a person
selected to decide between two or more who contend for a prize. An
arbitrator is one chosen to allot to two contestants their
portion of a claim, usually on grounds of equity and common sense. A
referee is one to whom a case is referred for final
adjustment. Arbitrations and references are sometimes
voluntary, sometimes appointed by a court.
Judge, v. i. [imp. & p.
p.Judged (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Judging.] [OE. jugen, OF. jugier, F.
juger, L. judicare, fr. judex judge; jus
law or right + dicare to proclaim, pronounce, akin to
dicere to say. See Just, a., and
Diction, and cf. Judicial.]
1.To hear and determine, as in causes on
trial; to decide as a judge; to give judgment; to pass
sentence.
The Lord judge between thee and
me.
Gen. xvi. 5.
Father, who art judge
Of all things made, and judgest only right!
Milton.
2.To assume the right to pass judgment on
another; to sit in judgment or commendation; to criticise or pass
adverse judgment upon others. See Judge, v.
t., 3.
Forbear to judge, for we are sinners
all.
Shak.
3.To compare facts or ideas, and perceive
their relations and attributes, and thus distinguish truth from
falsehood; to determine; to discern; to distinguish; to form an
opinion about.
Judge not according to the
appearance.
John vii. 24.
She is wise if I can judge of her.
Shak.
Judge, v. t.1.To
hear and determine by authority, as a case before a court, or a
controversy between two parties. "Chaos [shall] judge
the strife." Milton.
2.To examine and pass sentence on; to try;
to doom.
God shall judge the righteous and the
wicked.
Eccl. iii. 7.
To bring my whole cause 'fore his holiness,
And to be judged by him.
Shak.
3.To arrogate judicial authority over; to
sit in judgment upon; to be censorious toward.
Judge not, that ye be not
judged.
Matt. vii. 1.
4.To determine upon or deliberation; to
esteem; to think; to reckon.
If ye have judged me to be faithful to the
Lord.
Acts xvi. 15.
5.To exercise the functions of a magistrate
over; to govern. [Obs.]
Make us a king to judge us.
1
Sam. viii. 5.
Judg"er (?), n.One who
judges.Sir K. Digby.
Judge"ship (?), n.The office of a
judge.
Judg"ment (?), n. [OE. jugement,
F. jugement, LL. judicamentum, fr. L. judicare.
See Judge, v. i.]
1.The act of judging; the operation of the
mind, involving comparison and discrimination, by which a knowledge
of the values and relations of thins, whether of moral qualities,
intellectual concepts, logical propositions, or material facts, is
obtained; as, by careful judgment he avoided the peril; by a
series of wrong judgments he forfeited confidence.
I oughte deme, of skilful jugement,
That in the salte sea my wife is deed.
Chaucer.
2.The power or faculty of performing such
operations (see 1); esp., when unqualified, the faculty of judging or
deciding rightly, justly, or wisely; good sense; as, a man of
judgment; a politician without judgment.
He shall judge thy people with righteousness and thy
poor with judgment.
Ps. lxxii. 2.
Hernia. I would my father look'd but with my
eyes. Theseus. Rather your eyes must with his judgment
look.
Shak.
3.The conclusion or result of judging; an
opinion; a decision.
She in my judgment was as fair as
you.
Shak.
Who first his judgment asked, and then a
place.
Pope.
4.The act of determining, as in courts of
law, what is conformable to law and justice; also, the determination,
decision, or sentence of a court, or of a judge; the mandate or
sentence of God as the judge of all.
In judgments between rich and poor, consider
not what the poor man needs, but what is his own.
Jer. Taylor.
Most heartily I do beseech the court
To give the judgment.
Shak.
5.(Philos.)(a)That
act of the mind by which two notions or ideas which are apprehended
as distinct are compared for the purpose of ascertaining their
agreement or disagreement. See 1. The comparison may be threefold:
(1) Of individual objects forming a concept. (2) Of concepts giving
what is technically called a judgment. (3) Of two judgments giving an
inference. Judgments have been further classed as analytic,
synthetic, and identical.(b)That power
or faculty by which knowledge dependent upon comparison and
discrimination is acquired. See 2.
A judgment is the mental act by which one thing
is affirmed or denied of another.
Sir W.
Hamilton.
The power by which we are enabled to perceive what is
true or false, probable or improbable, is called by logicians the
faculty of judgment.
Stewart.
6.A calamity regarded as sent by God, by way
of recompense for wrong committed; a providential punishment.
"Judgments are prepared for scorners." Prov. xix. 29.
"This judgment of the heavens that makes us tremble."
Shak.
7.(Theol.)The final award; the last
sentence.
&fist; Judgment, abridgment, acknowledgment,
and lodgment are in England sometimes written,
judgement, abridgement, acknowledgement, and
lodgement.
&fist; Judgment is used adjectively in many self-explaining
combinations; as, judgment hour; judgment throne.
Judgment day(Theol.), the last day,
or period when final judgment will be pronounced on the subjects of
God's moral government. -- Judgment debt(Law), a debt secured to the creditor by a judge's
order. -- Judgment hall, a hall where
courts are held. -- Judgment seat, the
seat or bench on which judges sit in court; hence, a court; a
tribunal. "We shall all stand before the judgment seat of
Christ." Rom. xiv. 10. -- Judgment summons(Law), a proceeding by a judgment creditor against a
judgment debtor upon an unsatisfied judgment.
Arrest of judgment. (Law)See
under Arrest, n. -- Judgment of
God, a term formerly applied to extraordinary trials of
secret crimes, as by arms and single combat, by ordeal, etc.; it
being imagined that God would work miracles to vindicate innocence.
See under Ordeal.
Ju"di*ca*ble (?), a. [L.
judicabilis. See Judge, v. i.]
Capable of being judged; capable of being tried or decided
upon.Jer. Taylor.
Ju"di*ca*tive (?), a.Having power
to judge; judicial; as, the judicative faculty.Hammond.
Ju"di*ca*to*ry (?), a. [L.
judicatorius.] Pertaining to the administration of
justice; dispensing justice; judicial; as, judicatory
tribunals.T. Wharton.
Power to reject in an authoritative or
judicatory way.
Bp. Hall.
Ju"di*ca*to*ry (277), n. [L.
judicatorium.]
1.A court of justice; a tribunal.Milton.
2.Administration of justice.
The supreme court of judicatory.
Clarendon.
Ju"di*ca*ture (?; 135), n. [F., fr. LL.
judicatura.]
1.The state or profession of those employed
in the administration of justice; also, the dispensing or
administration of justice.
The honor of the judges in their judicature is
the king's honor.
Bacon.
2.A court of justice; a judicatory.South.
3.The right of judicial action;
jurisdiction; extent jurisdiction of a judge or court.
Our Savior disputes not here the judicature,
for that was not his office, but the morality, of
divorce.
Milton.
Ju*di"cial (?), a. [L.
judicialis, fr. judicium judgment, fr. judex
judge: cf. OF. judicial. See Judge.]
1.Pertaining or appropriate to courts of
justice, or to a judge; practiced or conformed to in the
administration of justice; sanctioned or ordered by a court; as,
judicial power; judicial proceedings; a judicial
sale. "Judicial massacres." Macaulay.
Not a moral but a judicial law, and so was
abrogated.
Milton.
2.Fitted or apt for judging or deciding; as,
a judicial mind.
3.Belonging to the judiciary, as
distinguished from legislative, administrative, or
executive. See Executive.
4.Judicious. [Obs.] B.
Jonson.
Ju*di"cial*ly, adv.In a judicial
capacity or judicial manner. "The Lords . . . sitting
judicially." Macaulay.
Ju*di"cia*ry (?; 277), a. [L.
judiciarius, fr. judicium judgment: cf. F.
judiciare. See Judicial.] Of or pertaining to
courts of judicature, or legal tribunals; judicial; as, a
judiciary proceeding.Bp. Burnet.
Ju*di"cia*ry, n. [Cf. LL.
judiciaria, F. judiciaire.] That branch of
government in which judicial power is vested; the system of courts of
justice in a country; the judges, taken collectively; as, an
independent judiciary; the senate committee on the
judiciary.
Ju*di"cious (?), a. [F.
judicieux, fr. L. judicium judgment. See
Judicial.] Of or relating to a court; judicial.
[Obs.]
His last offenses to us
Shall have judicious hearing.
Shak.
2.Directed or governed by sound judgment;
having sound judgment; wise; prudent; sagacious; discreet.
He is noble, wise, judicious, and best
knows
The fits o' the season.
Ju*di"cious*ly, adv.In a
judicious manner; with good judgment; wisely.
Ju*di"cious*ness, n.The quality
or state of being judicious; sagacity; sound judgment.
Jug (?), n. [Prob. fr. Jug, a
corruption of, or nickname for, Joanna; cf. 2d Jack,
and Jill. See Johannes.]
1.A vessel, usually of coarse earthenware,
with a swelling belly and narrow mouth, and having a handle on one
side.
2.A pitcher; a ewer. [Eng.]
3.A prison; a jail; a lockup. [Slang]
Gay.
Jug (?), v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Jugged (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Jugging (?).]
1.To seethe or stew, as in a jug or jar
placed in boiling water; as, to jug a hare.
2.To commit to jail; to imprison.
[Slang]
Jug, v. i.(Zoöl.)1.To utter a sound resembling this word, as
certain birds do, especially the nightingale.
2.To nestle or collect together in a covey;
-- said of quails and partridges.
Ju"gal (?), a. [L. jugalis, fr.
jugum yoke.]
1.Relating to a yoke, or to marriage.
[Obs.]
2.(Anat.)Pertaining to, or in the
region of, the malar, or cheek bone.
||Ju*ga"ta (?), n. pl. [Neut. pl. of L.
jugatus, p. p. of jugare to join.]
(Numis.)The figures of two heads on a medal or coin,
either side by side or joined.
Ju"ga*ted (?), a.(Bot.)Coupled together.
Juge (?), n.A judge. [Obs.]
Chaucer.
Jug"e*ment (?), n.Judgment.
[Obs.] Chaucer.
Ju"ger (?), n. [L. jugerum.]
A Roman measure of land, measuring 28,800 square feet, or 240
feet in length by 120 in breadth.
Jug"ger (?), n.(Zoöl.)An East Indian falcon. See Lugger.
Jug"ger*naut` (?), n. [Skr.
jagannātha lord of the world.] One of the names
under which Vishnu, in his incarnation as Krishna, is worshiped by
the Hindoos. [Written also Juggernnath, Jaganath,
Jaganatha, etc.]
&fist; The principal seat of the worship of Juggernaut is at
Pûri in Orissa. At certain times the idol is drawn from the
temple by the multitude, on a high car with sixteen wheels. Formerly,
fanatics sometimes threw themselves under the wheels to be crushed as
a sacrifice to the god.
Jug"gle (?), v. i. [imp. & p.
p.Juggled (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Juggling (?).] [OE. juglen; cf. OF. jogler,
jugler, F. jongler. See Juggler.]
1.To play tricks by sleight of hand; to
cause amusement and sport by tricks of skill; to conjure.
2.To practice artifice or
imposture.
Be these juggling fiends no more
believed.
Shak.
Jug"gle, v. t.To deceive by trick
or artifice.
Is't possible the spells of France should
juggle
Men into such strange mysteries?
Shak.
Jug"gle, n.1.A
trick by sleight of hand.
2.An imposture; a deception.Tennyson.
A juggle of state to cozen the
people.
Tillotson.
3.A block of timber cut to a length, either
in the round or split.Knight.
Jug"gler (?), n. [OE. jogelour,
juglur, OF. jogleor, jugleor, jongleor,
F. jongleur, fr. L. joculator a jester, joker, fr.
joculus a little jest or joke, dim. of jocus jest,
joke. See Joke, and cf. Jongleur,
Joculator.]
1.One who practices or exhibits tricks by
sleight of hand; one skilled in legerdemain; a conjurer.
As nimble jugglers that deceive the
eye.
Shak.
Jugglers and impostors do daily delude
them.
Sir T. Browne.
2.A deceiver; a cheat.Shak.
Jug"gler*ess, n.1.A female juggler.T. Warton.
Jug"gler*y (?), n. [OE. & OF.
joglerie, F. jonglerie.]
Jug"lan*din (?), n. [L. juglans,
-andis, a walnut: cf. F. juglandine.] (Chem.)An extractive matter contained in the juice of the green shucks
of the walnut (Juglans regia). It is used medicinally as an
alterative, and also as a black hair dye.
Jug"lan*dine (?), n.An alkaloid
found in the leaves of the walnut (Juglans regia).
||Jug"lans (?), n. [L., walnut.]
(Bot.)A genus of valuable trees, including the true
walnut of Europe, and the America black walnut, and
butternut.
Ju"glone (?), n. [L. juglans the
walnut + -one.] (Chem.)A yellow crystalline
substance resembling quinone, extracted from green shucks of the
walnut (Juglans regia); -- called also nucin.
Ju"gu*lar (?), a. [L. jugulum
the collar bone, which joins together the shoulders and the breast,
the throat, akin to jungere to yoke, to join: cf. F.
jugulaire. See Join.]
1.(Anat.)(a)Of or
pertaining to the throat or neck; as, the jugular vein.(b)Of or pertaining to the jugular vein; as,
the jugular foramen.
2.(Zoöl.)Having the ventral
fins beneath the throat; -- said of certain fishes.
Ju"gu*lar, n. [Cf. F. jugulaire.
See Jugular, a.]
1.(Anat.)One of the large veins
which return the blood from the head to the heart through two chief
trunks, an external and an internal, on each side of the neck; --
called also the jugular vein.
2.(Zoöl.)Any fish which has the
ventral fins situated forward of the pectoral fins, or beneath the
throat; one of a division of fishes (Jugulares).
Ju"gu*late (?), v. t. [imp. &
p. p.Jugulated (?); p. pr. & vb.
n.Jugulating (?).] [L. jugulatus, p.
p. of jugulare, fr. jugulatum. See Jugular.]
To cut the throat of. [R.] Jacob Bigelow.
||Ju"gu*lum (?), n.; pl.Jugula (#). [L.] (Zoöl.)The lower
throat, or that part of the neck just above the breast.
||Ju"gum (?), n.; pl. L.
Juga (#), E. Jugums (#). [L., a
yoke, ridge.] (Bot.)(a)One of the
ridges commonly found on the fruit of umbelliferous plants.(b)A pair of the opposite leaflets of a pinnate
plant.
Juice (jūs), n. [OE. juse,
F. jus broth, gravy, juice, L. jus; akin to Skr.
yūsha.] The characteristic fluid of any vegetable
or animal substance; the sap or part which can be expressed from
fruit, etc.; the fluid part which separates from meat in
cooking.
An animal whose juices are
unsound.
Arbuthnot.
The juice of July flowers.
B.
Jonson.
The juice of Egypt's grape.
Shak.
Letters which Edward Digby wrote in lemon
juice.
Macaulay.
Cold water draws the juice of
meat.
Mrs. Whitney.
Juice (jūs), v. t.To
moisten; to wet. [Obs.] Fuller.
Juice"less, a.Lacking juice;
dry.Dr. H. More.
Jui"ci*ness (?), n.The state or
quality of being juicy; succulence plants.
Jui"cy (?), a.
[Compar.Juicier; superl.Juiciest.] A bounding with juice; succulent.Bacon.
Ju*ise" (?), n. [OF. juise. L.
judicium. See Judicial.] Judgment; justice;
sentence. [Obs.]
Up [on] pain of hanging and high
juise.
Chaucer.
Ju"jube (jū"j&usl;b), n. [F., fr.
L. zizyphum, Gr. zi`zyfon, Per.
zīzfūn, zizafūn,
zayzafūn.] The sweet and edible drupes (fruits) of
several Mediterranean and African species of small trees, of the
genus Zizyphus, especially the Z. jujuba, Z.
vulgaris, Z. mucronata, and Z. Lotus. The last
named is thought to have furnished the lotus of the ancient Libyan
Lotophagi, or lotus eaters.
Jujube paste, the dried or inspissated jelly
of the jujube; also, a confection made of gum arabic
sweetened.
Juke (?), v. i. [from Scottish
jouk to bow.] To bend the neck; to bow or duck the
head. [Written also jook and jouk.]
The money merchant was so proud of his trust that he
went juking and tossing of his head.
L'
Estrange.
Juke, n.The neck of a bird.
[Prov. Eng.]
Juke, v. i. [F. juc a roost,
perch, jucher to roost, to perch.] To perch on anything,
as birds do. [Obs.]
Ju*la"ceous (?), a. [See Julus.]
(Bot.)Like an ament, or bearing aments;
amentaceous.
Ju"lep (?), n. [F., fr. Sp.
julepe, fr. Ar. & Per. julāb,
jullāb, fr. Per. gulāb rose water and
julep; gul rose + āb water.]
1.A refreshing drink flavored with aromatic
herbs; esp. (Med.), a sweet, demulcent, acidulous,
or mucilaginous mixture, used as a vehicle.Milton.
Honey in woods, juleps in brooks.
H. Vaughan.
2.A beverage composed of brandy, whisky, or
some other spirituous liquor, with sugar, pounded ice, and sprigs of
mint; -- called also mint julep. [U.S.]
Jul"ian (?; 277) a. [L.
Julianus, fr. Julius. Cf. July,
Gillian.] Relating to, or derived from, Julius
Cæsar.
Julian calendar, the calendar as adjusted by
Julius Cæsar, in which the year was made to consist of 365
days, each fourth year having 366 days. -- Julian
epoch, the epoch of the commencement of the Julian
calendar, or 46 b. c. -- Julian period, a
chronological period of 7,980 years, combining the solar, lunar, and
indiction cycles (28 x 19 x 15 = 7,980), being reckoned from the year
4713 B. C., when the first years of these several cycles would
coincide, so that if any year of the period be divided by 28, 19, or
15, the remainder will be the year of the corresponding cycle. The
Julian period was proposed by Scaliger, to remove or avoid
ambiguities in chronological dates, and was so named because composed
of Julian years. -- Julian year, the year
of 365 days, 6 hours, adopted in the Julian calendar, and in use
until superseded by the Gregorian year, as established in the
reformed or Gregorian calendar.
||Ju`li*enne" (?), n. [F.] A kind
of soup containing thin slices or shreds of carrots, onions,
etc.
Ju"li*form (?), a. [Julus + -
form.] (Bot.)Having the shape or appearance of a
julus or catkin.
||Ju"lus (?), n.;
pl.Juli (#). [Of the same origin as
iulus.] (Bot.)A catkin or ament. See
Ament.
Ju*ly" (?), n.; pl.Julies (#). [L. Julius; -- named from Caius
Julius Cæsar, who was born in this month: cf. F.
Juillet.] The seventh month of the year, containing
thirty-one days.
&fist; This month was called Quintilis, or the fifth month,
according to the old Roman calendar, in which March was the first
month of the year.
Ju*ly"-flow`er (?), n.See
Gillyflower.
Ju"mart (?), n. [F.] The fabled
offspring of a bull and a mare.Locke.
Jum"ble (?), v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Jumbled (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Jumbling (?).] [Prob. fr. jump, i. e., to make to jump,
or shake.] To mix in a confused mass; to put or throw together
without order; -- often followed by together or
up.
Why dost thou blend and jumble such
inconsistencies together?
Burton.
Every clime and age Jumbled together.
Tennyson.
Jum"ble, v. i.To meet or unite in
a confused way; to mix confusedly.Swift.
Jum"ble, n.1.A
confused mixture; a mass or collection without order; as, a
jumble of words.
2.A small, thin, sugared cake, usually ring-
shaped.
Jum"ble*ment (?), n.Confused
mixture. [Low]
Jum"bler (?), n.One who confuses
things.
Jum"bling*ly (?), adv.In a
confused manner.
Ju"ment (?), n. [L. jumentum a
beast of burden: cf. F. jument a mare, OF., a beast of
burden.] A beast; especially, a beast of burden.
[Obs.]
Fitter for juments than men to feed
on.
Burton.
Jump (?), n. [Cf. F. jupe a long
petticoat, a skirt. Cf. Juppon.] (a)A
kind of loose jacket for men.(b)pl.A bodice worn instead of stays by women in the 18th
century.
Jump, v. i. [imp. & p.
p.Jumped (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Jumping.] [Akin to OD. gumpen, dial. G. gumpen,
jumpen.]
1.To spring free from the ground by the
muscular action of the feet and legs; to project one's self through
the air; to spring; to bound; to leap.
Not the worst of the three but jumps twelve
foot and a half by the square.
Shak.
2.To move as if by jumping; to bounce; to
jolt. "The jumping chariots." Nahum iii. 2.
A flock of geese jump down
together.
Dryden.
3.To coincide; to agree; to accord; to
tally; -- followed by with. "It jumps with my
humor." Shak.
To jump at, to spring to; hence, fig., to
accept suddenly or eagerly; as, a fish jumps at a bait; to
jump at a chance.
Jump (?), v. t.1.To pass by a spring or leap; to overleap; as, to jump a
stream.
2.To cause to jump; as, he jumped his
horse across the ditch.
3.To expose to danger; to risk; to
hazard. [Obs.]
To jump a body with a dangerous
physic.
Shak.
4.(Smithwork)(a)To
join by a butt weld.(b)To thicken or
enlarge by endwise blows; to upset.
5.(Quarrying)To bore with a
jumper.
To jump a claim, to enter upon and take
possession of land to which another has acquired a claim by prior
entry and occupation. [Western U. S. & Australia] See
Claim, n., 3. -- To jump one's
bail, to abscond while at liberty under bail
bonds. [Slang, U. S.]
Jump, n.1.The
act of jumping; a leap; a spring; a bound. "To advance by
jumps." Locke.
2.An effort; an attempt; a venture.
[Obs.]
Our fortune lies
Upon thisjump.
Shak.
3.The space traversed by a leap.
4.(Mining)A dislocation in a
stratum; a fault.
5.(Arch.)An abrupt interruption of
level in a piece of brickwork or masonry.
From the jump, from the start or
beginning. [Colloq.] -- Jump joint.
(a)A butt joint. (b)A
flush joint, as of plank in carvel-built vessels. --
Jump seat. (a)A movable
carriage seat. (b)A carriage constructed
with a seat which may be shifted so as to make room for second or
extra seat. Also used adjectively; as, a jump-seat
wagon.
2.A long drilling tool used by masons and
quarrymen.
3.A rude kind of sleigh; -- usually, a
simple box on runners which are in one piece with the poles that form
the thills. [U.S.] J. F. Cooper.
4.(Zoöl.)The larva of the
cheese fly. See Cheese fly, under Cheese.
5.(Eccl.)A name applied in the 18th
century to certain Calvinistic Methodists in Wales whose worship was
characterized by violent convulsions.
6.(Horology)spring to impel the star
wheel, also a pawl to lock fast a wheel, in a repeating
timepiece.
Baby jumper. See in the Vocabulary. --
Bounty jumper. See under
Bounty.
Jump"er, n. [See 1st Jump.]
A loose upper garment; as: (a)A sort
of blouse worn by workmen over their ordinary dress to protect
it.(b)A fur garment worn in Arctic
journeys.
Jump"ing, p. a. & vb. n.of
Jump, to leap.
Jumping bean, a seed of a Mexican
Euphorbia, containing the larva of a moth (Carpocapsa
saltitans). The larva by its sudden movements causes the seed to
roll to roll and jump about. -- Jumping deer(Zoöl.), a South African rodent (Pedetes
Caffer), allied to the jerboa. -- Jumping
jack, a toy figure of a man, jointed and made to jump
or dance by means of strings. -- Jumping louse(Zoöl.), any of the numerous species of plant lice
belonging to the family Psyllidæ, several of which are
injurious to fruit trees. -- Jumping mouse(Zoöl.), North American mouse (Zapus
Hudsonius), having a long tail and large hind legs. It is noted
for its jumping powers. Called also kangaroo mouse. --
Jumping mullet(Zoöl.), gray
mullet. -- Jumping shrew(Zoöl.),
any African insectivore of the genus Macroscelides. They
are allied to the shrews, but have large hind legs adapted for
jumping. -- Jumping spider(Zoöl.), spider of the genus Salticus and
other related genera; one of the Saltigradæ; -- so called
because it leaps upon its prey.
Jump"weld` (?), v. t.See
Buttweld, v. t.
Jun*ca"ceous (?), a. [See
Juncate.] (Bot.)Of. pertaining to, or resembling,
a natural order of plants (Juncaceæ), of which the
common rush (Juncus) is the type.
Jun"cate (?), n.See
Junket.[Obs.] Spenser.
Jun"cite (?), n. [L. juncus a
rush.] (Paleon.)A fossil rush.
Jun"co (?), n.(Zoöl.)Any bird of the genus Junco, which includes several
species of North American finches; -- called also snowbird, or
blue snowbird.
Jun"cous (?), a. [L. juncosus,
fr. juncus a rush.] Full of rushes: resembling rushes;
juncaceous. [R.] Johnson.
Junc"tion (?), n. [L. junctio,
fr. jungere, junctum, to join: cf. F. jonction.
See Join.]
1.The act of joining, or the state of being
joined; union; combination; coalition; as, the junction of two
armies or detachments; the junction of paths.
2.The place or point of union, meeting, or
junction; specifically, the place where two or more lines of railway
meet or cross.
Junction plate(Boilers), a covering
or break-join plate riveted to and uniting the edges of sheets which
make a butt joint. -- Junction rails(Railroads), the switch, or movable, rails, connecting one
line of track with another.
Junc"ture (jŭ&nsm;k"t&usl;r; 135),
n. [L. junctura, fr. jungere to join.
See Jointure.] 1.A joining; a union; an
alliance. [Obs.] "Devotional compliance and juncture of
hearts." Eikon Basilike.
2.The line or point at which two bodies are
joined; a joint; an articulation; a seam; as, the junctures of
a vessel or of the bones.Boyle.
3.A point of time; esp., one made critical
or important by a concurrence of circumstances; hence, a crisis; an
exigency. "Extraordinary junctures."
Addison.
In such a juncture, what can the most plausible
and refined philosophy offer?
Berkeley.
June (?), n. [L. Junius: cf. F.
Juin. So called either from Junius, the name of a Roman
gens, or from Juno, the goddess.] The sixth month of the
year, containing thirty days.
And what is so rare as a day in June?
Then, if ever, come perfect days.
Lowell.
June beetle, June bug(Zoöl.), any one of several species of large brown
beetles of the genus Lachnosterna and related genera; -- so
called because they begin to fly, in the northern United States,
about the first of June. The larvæ of the June beetles live
under ground, and feed upon the roots of grasses and other plants.
Called also May bug or May beetle. -- June
grass(Bot.), a New England name for Kentucky
blue grass. See Blue glass, and Illustration in
Appendix.
June"a*ting (?), n.A kind of
early apple. [Written also jenneting.]
June"ber`ry (?), n.(Bot.)(a)The small applelike berry of American trees
of genus Amelanchier; -- also called service
berry.(b)The shrub or tree which
bears this fruit; -- also called shad bush, and shad
tree.
||Jun`ger*man"ni*a (?), n.; pl.Jungermanniæ (#). [NL. Named after Ludwig
Jungermann, a German botanist.] (Bot.)A genus of
hepatic mosses, now much circumscribed, but formerly comprising most
plants of the order, which is sometimes therefore called
Jungermanniaceæ.
Jun"gle (jŭ&nsm;"g'l), n. [Hind.
jangal desert, forest, jungle; Skr. ja&?;gala desert.]
A dense growth of brushwood, grasses, reeds, vines, etc.; an
almost impenetrable thicket of trees, canes, and reedy vegetation, as
in India, Africa, Australia, and Brazil.
The jungles of India are of bamboos, canes, and
other palms, very difficult to penetrate.
Balfour
(Cyc. of India).
Jungle bear(Zoöl.), the aswail
or sloth bear. -- Jungle cat(Zoöl.), the chaus. -- Jungle
cock(Zoöl.), the male of a jungle
fowl. -- Jungle fowl. (Zoöl.)(a)Any wild species of the genus Gallus,
of which several species inhabit India and the adjacent islands; as,
the fork-tailed jungle fowl (G. varius) of Java, G.
Stanleyi of Ceylon, and G. Bankiva of India. The
latter, which resembles the domestic gamecock, is supposed to be one
of the original species from which the domestic fowl was derived.
(b)An Australian grallatorial bird
(Megapodius tumulus) which is allied to the brush turkey, and,
like the latter, lays its eggs in mounds of vegetable matter, where
they are hatched by the heat produced by decomposition.
Jun"gly (-gl&ybreve;), a.Consisting of jungles; abounding with jungles; of the nature of
a jungle.
Jun"ior (jūn"y&etilde;r; 277), a.
[L. contr. fr. juvenior, compar. of juvenis young. See
Juvenile.]
1.Less advanced in age than another;
younger.
&fist; Junior is applied to distinguish the younger of two
persons bearing the same name in the same family, and is opposed to
senior or elder. Commonly applied to a son who has the
same Christian name as his father.
2.Lower in standing or in rank; later in
office; as, a junior partner; junior counsel;
junior captain.
3.Composed of juniors, whether younger or a
lower standing; as, the junior class; of or pertaining to
juniors or to a junior class. See Junior,
n., 2.
4.Belonging to a younger person, or an
earlier time of life.
Our first studies and junior
endeavors.
Sir T. Browne.
Jun"ior, n.1.A
younger person.
His junior she, by thirty years.
Byron.
2.Hence: One of a lower or later standing;
specifically, in American colleges, one in the third year of his
course, one in the fourth or final year being designated a
senior; in some seminaries, one in the first year, in others,
one in the second year, of a three years' course.
Jun*ior"i*ty (?), n.The state or
quality of being junior.
Ju"ni*per (?), n. [L. juniperus,
prop., youth-producing, and so called from its evergreen appearance,
from the roots of E. juvenile, and parent. Cf.
Gin the liquor.] (Bot.)Any evergreen shrub or
tree, of the genus Juniperus and order
Coniferæ.
&fist; The common juniper (J. communis) is a shrub of a
low, spreading form, having awl-shaped, rigid leaves in whorls of
threes, and bearing small purplish blue berries (or galbuli), of a
warm, pungent taste, used as diuretic and in flavoring gin. A resin
exudes from the bark, which has erroneously been considered identical
with sandarach, and is used as pounce. The oil of juniper is acrid,
and used for various purposes, as in medicine, for making varnish,
etc. The wood of several species is of a reddish color, hard and
durable, and is used in cabinetwork under the names of red
cedar, Bermuda cedar, etc.
Juniper worm(Zoöl.), the larva
of a geometrid moth (Drepanodes varus). It feeds upon the
leaves of the juniper, and mimics the small twigs both in form and
color, in a remarkable manner.
Ju"ni*per*in (?), n.(Chem.)A yellow amorphous substance extracted from juniper
berries.
Ju"ni*per*ite (?), n.(Paleon.)One of the fossil Coniferæ, evidently allied to the
juniper.
Junk (?), n.A fragment of any
solid substance; a thick piece. See Chunk. [Colloq.]
Lowell.
Junk, n. [Pg. junco junk, rush,
L. juncus a bulrush, of which ropes were made in early ages.
Cf. Junket.]
1.Pieces of old cable or old cordage, used
for making gaskets, mats, swabs, etc., and when picked to pieces,
forming oakum for filling the seams of ships.
2.Old iron, or other metal, glass, paper,
etc., bought and sold by junk dealers.
3.(Naut.)Hard salted beef supplied
to ships.
Junk bottle , a stout bottle made of thick
dark-colored glass. -- Junk dealer, a
dealer in old cordage, old metal, glass, etc. -- Junk
hook(Whaling), a hook for hauling heavy pieces
of blubber on deck. -- Junk ring.
(a)A packing of soft material round the piston
of a steam engine. (b)A metallic ring for
retaining a piston packing in place; (c)A
follower. -- Junk shop, a shop where old
cordage, and ship's tackle, old iron, old bottles, old paper, etc.,
are kept for sale. -- Junk vat(Leather
Manuf.), a large vat into which spent tan liquor or ooze is
pumped. -- Junk wad(Mil.), a wad
used in proving cannon; also used in firing hot shot.
Junk, n. [Pg. junco; cf. Jav. &
Malay jong, ajong, Chin. chwan.] (Naut.)A large vessel, without keel or prominent stem, and with huge
masts in one piece, used by the Chinese, Japanese, Siamese, Malays,
etc., in navigating their waters.
||Jun"ker (?), n. [G. Cf.
Yonker.] A young German noble or squire; esp., a member
of the aristocratic party in Prussia.
Jun"ker*ism (?), n.The principles
of the aristocratic party in Prussia.
Jun"ket (?), n. [Formerly also
juncate, fr. It. giuncata cream cheese, made in a
wicker or rush basket, fr. L. juncus a rush. See 2d
Junk, and cf. Juncate.]
1.A cheese cake; a sweetmeat; any delicate
food.
How Faery Mab the junkets eat.
Milton.
Victuals varied well in taste,
And other junkets.
Chapman.
2.A feast; an entertainment.
A new jaunt or junket every night.
Thackeray.
Jun"ket, v. i.To feast; to
banquet; to make an entertainment; -- sometimes applied opprobriously
to feasting by public officers at the public cost.
Job's children junketed and feasted together
often.
South.
Jun"ket, v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Junketed; p. pr. & vb. n.Junketing.] To give entertainment to; to feast.
The good woman took my lodgings over my head, and was
in such a hurry to junket her neighbors.
Walpole.
Jun"ket*ing, n.A feast or
entertainment; a revel.
All those snug junketings and public
gormandizings for which the ancient magistrates were equally famous
with their modern successors.
W. Irving.
The apostle would have no reveling or junketing
upon the altar.
1.(Rom. Myth.)The sister and wife of
Jupiter, the queen of heaven, and the goddess who presided over
marriage. She corresponds to the Greek Hera.
Sweeter than the lids of Juno's
eyes.
Shak.
2.(Astron.)One of the early
discovered asteroids.
Bird of Juno, the peacock.
Jun"ta (jŭn"t&adot;), n.;
pl.Juntas (-t&adot;z). [Sp., fr. L.
junctus joined, p. p. of jungere to join. See
Join, and cf. Junto.] A council; a convention; a
tribunal; an assembly; esp., the grand council of state in
Spain.
Jun"to (-t&osl;), n.; pl.Juntos (-t&osl;z). [Sp. junto united. See
Junta.] A secret council to deliberate on affairs of
government or politics; a number of men combined for party intrigue;
a faction; a cabal; as, a junto of ministers; a junto
of politicians.
The puzzling sons of party next appeared,
In dark cabals and mighty juntos met.
Thomson.
Jup"ar*tie (?), n.Jeopardy.
[Obs.] Chaucer.
Ju`pa*ti" palm` (?). (Bot.)A great Brazilian
palm tree (Raphia tædigera), used by the natives for
many purposes.
Jupe (?), n.Same as
Jupon.
Ju"pi*ter (?), n. [L., fr. Jovis
pater. See Jove.]
1.(Rom. Myth.)The supreme deity,
king of gods and men, and reputed to be the son of Saturn and Rhea;
Jove. He corresponds to the Greek Zeus.
2.(Astron.)One of the planets, being
the brightest except Venus, and the largest of them all, its mean
diameter being about 85,000 miles. It revolves about the sun in
4,332.6 days, at a mean distance of 5.2028 from the sun, the earth's
mean distance being taken as unity.
Jupiter's beard. (Bot.)(a)A South European herb, with cymes of small
red blossoms (Centranthus ruber). (b)The houseleek (Sempervivum tectorum); -- so called from
its massive inflorescence, like the sculptured beard of Jove.
Prior.(c)the cloverlike Anthyllis
Barba-Jovis. -- Jupiter's staff(Bot.), the common mullein; -- so called from its long,
rigid spike of yellow blossoms.
1.A sleeveless jacket worn over the armor in
the 14th century. It fitted closely, and descended below the
hips.Dryden.
2.A petticoat.Halliwell.
Ju"ra (?), n. [F. & L.] 1. A range
of mountains between France and Switzerland.
2.(Geol.)The Jurassic period. See
Jurassic.
Ju"ral (?), a. [L. jus,
juris, right.]
1.Pertaining to natural or positive
right. [R.]
By the adjective jural we shall denote that
which has reference to the doctrine of rights and obligations; as by
the adjective "moral" we denote that which has reference to the
doctrine of duties.
Ju*ras"sic (?), a.(Geol.)Of the age of the middle Mesozoic, including, as divided in
England and Europe, the Lias, Oölite, and Wealden; -- named from
certain rocks of the Jura mountains. --
n.The Jurassic period or formation; -- called
also the Jura.
Ju"rat (?), n. [Prov. F. jurat,
fr. L. juratus sworn, p. p. of jurare to swear.
See Jury, n.]
1.A person under oath; specifically, an
officer of the nature of an alderman, in certain municipal
corporations in England.Burrill.
2.(Law)The memorandum or certificate
at the end of an asffidavit, or a bill or answer in chancery, showing
when, before whom, and (in English practice), where, it was sworn or
affirmed.Wharton. Bouvier.
Ju"ra*to*ry (?), a. [L.
juratorius, fr. jurare to swear: cf. F.
juratoire.] Relating to or comprising an oath; as,
juratory caution.Ayliffe.
Ju`ra-tri"as (?), n.(Geol.)A term applied to many American Mesozoic strata, in which the
characteristics of the Jurassic and Triassic periods appear to be
blended. -- Ju`ra-tri*as"sic (#),
a.
Ju"rel (?), n.(Zoöl.)A yellow carangoid fish of the Atlantic and Gulf coasts
(Caranx chrysos), most abundant southward, where it is valued
as a food fish; -- called also hardtail, horse
crevallé, jack, buffalo jack,
skipjack, yellow mackerel, and sometimes, improperly,
horse mackerel. Other species of Caranx (as C.
fallax) are also sometimes called jurel.
{ Ju*rid"ic (?), Ju*rid"ic*al (?), }
a. [L. juridicus relating to the
administration of justice; jus, juris, right, law +
dicare to pronounce: cf. F. juridique. See Just,
a., and Diction.] Pertaining to a judge
or to jurisprudence; acting in the distribution of justice; used in
courts of law; according to law; legal; as, juridical
law. "This juridical sword." Milton.
The body corporate of the kingdom, in juridical
construction, never dies.
Burke.
Juridical days, days on which courts are
open.
Ju*rid*ic*al*ly, adv.In a
juridical manner.
Ju`ris*con"sult (?), n. [L.
jurisconsultus; jus, juris, right +
consulere, consultum, to consult: cf. F.
jurisconsulte.] (Law)A man learned in the civil
law; an expert in juridical science; a professor of jurisprudence; a
jurist.
Ju`ris*dic"tion (?), n. [L.
jurisdictio; jus, juris, right, law +
dictio a saying, speaking: cf. OF. jurisdiction, F.
juridiction. See Just, a., and
Diction.]
1.(Law)The legal power, right, or
authority of a particular court to hear and determine causes, to try
criminals, or to execute justice; judicial authority over a cause or
class of causes; as, certain suits or actions, or the cognizance of
certain crimes, are within the jurisdiction of a particular
court, that is, within the limits of its authority or
commission.
2.The authority of a sovereign power to
govern or legislate; the right of making or enforcing laws; the power
or right of exercising authority.
To live exempt
From Heaven's high jurisdiction.
Milton.
You wrought to be a legate; by which power
You maim'd the jurisdiction of all bishops.
Shak.
3.Sphere of authority; the limits within
which any particular power may be exercised, or within which a
government or a court has authority.
&fist; Jurisdiction, in its most general sense, is the
power to make, declare, or apply the law. When confined to the
judiciary department, it is what we denominate the judicial
power, the right of administering justice through the laws, by
the means which the laws have provided for that purpose.
Jurisdiction is limited to place or territory, to persons, or
to particular subjects. Duponceau.
Ju`ris*dic"tion*al (?), a. [Cf. LL.
jurisdictionalis, F. juridictionnel.] Of or
pertaining to jurisdiction; as, jurisdictional rights.Barrow.
Ju`ris*pru"dence (?), n. [L.
jurisprudentia; jus, juris, right, law +
prudentia a foreseeing, knowledge of a matter, prudence: cf.
F. jurisprudence. See Just, a., and
Prudence.] The science of juridical law; the knowledge of
the laws, customs, and rights of men in a state or community,
necessary for the due administration of justice.
The talents of Abelard were not confined to theology,
jurisprudence, philosophy.
J. Warton.
Medical jurisprudence, that branch of
juridical law which concerns questions of medicine.
Ju`ris*pru"dent (?), a. [See
Jurisprudence.] Understanding law; skilled in
jurisprudence.G. West.
Ju`ris*pru"dent, n. [Cf. F.
jurisprudent.] One skilled in law or jurisprudence.
[R.] De Quincey.
Ju`ris*pru*den"tial (?), a.Of or
pertaining to jurisprudence.Stewart.
Ju`rist (?), n. [F. juriste, LL.
jurista, fr. L. jus, juris, right, law. See
Just, a.] One who professes the science
of law; one versed in the law, especially in the civil law; a writer
on civil and international law.
It has ever been the method of public jurists
to &?;raw a great part of the analogies on which they form the law of
nations from the principles of law which prevail in civil
community.
Burke.
{ Ju*ris"tic (?), Ju*ris"tic*al (?), }
a.Of or pertaining to a jurist, to the legal
profession, or to jurisprudence. [R.] "Juristic
ancestry." Lowell.
Ju"ror (?), n. [F. jureur one
who takes oath, L. jurator a swearer, fr. jurare,
jurari, to swear. See Jury, n.]
1.(Law)A member of a jury; a
juryman.
I shall both find your lordship judge and
juror.
Shak.
2.A member of any jury for awarding prizes,
etc.
Ju"ry (?), a. [Etymol. uncertain.]
(Naut.)For temporary use; -- applied to a temporary
contrivance.
Jury mast, a temporary mast, in place of one
that has been carried away, or broken. -- Jury
rudder, a rudder constructed for temporary
use.
Ju"ry (?), n.; pl.Juries (#). [OF. jurée an assize, fr.
jurer to swear, L. jurare, jurari; akin to
jus, juris, right, law. See Just,
a., and cf. Jurat, Abjure.]
1.(Law)A body of men, usually
twelve, selected according to law, impaneled and sworn to inquire
into and try any matter of fact, and to render their true verdict
according to the evidence legally adduced. See Grand jury
under Grand, and Inquest.
The jury, passing on the prisoner's
life.
Shak.
2.A committee for determining relative merit
or awarding prizes at an exhibition or competition; as, the art
jury gave him the first prize.
Jury of inquest, a coroner's jury. See
Inquest.
Ju"ry*man (?), n.; pl.Jurymen (&?;). One who is impaneled on a jury,
or who serves as a juror.
Ju"ry-rigged` (?), a.(Naut.)Rigged for temporary service. See Jury,
a.
Jus"si (?), n.A delicate fiber,
produced in the Philippine Islands from an unidentified plant, of
which dresses, etc., are made.
Just (?), a. [F. juste, L.
justus, fr. jus right, law, justice; orig., that which
is fitting; akin to Skr. yu to join. Cf. Injury,
Judge, Jury, Giusto.]
1.Conforming or conformable to rectitude or
justice; not doing wrong to any; violating no right or obligation;
upright; righteous; honest; true; -- said both of persons and
things. "O just but severe law!" Shak.
There is not a just man upon earth, that doeth
good, and sinneth not.
Eccl. vii. 20.
Just balances, just weights, . . . shall
ye have.
Lev. xix. 36.
How should man be just with God?
Job ix. 2.
We know your grace to be a man. Just and upright.
Shak.
2.Not transgressing the requirement of truth
and propriety; conformed to the truth of things, to reason, or to a
proper standard; exact; normal; reasonable; regular; due; as, a
just statement; a just inference.
Just of thy word, in every thought
sincere.
Pope.
The prince is here at hand: pleaseth your lordship
To meet his grace just distance 'tween our
armies.
Shak.
He was a comely personage, a little above just
stature.
Bacon.
Fire fitted with just materials casts a
constant heat.
Jer. Taylor.
When all
The war shall stand ranged in its just array.
Addison.
Their named alone would make a just
volume.
Burton.
3.Rendering or disposed to render to each
one his due; equitable; fair; impartial; as, just
judge.
Men are commonly so just to virtue and goodness
as to praise it in others, even when they do not practice it
themselves.
Tillotson.
Just intonation. (Mus.)(a)The correct sounding of notes or intervals;
true pitch. (b)The giving all chords and
intervals in their purity or their exact mathematical ratio, or
without temperament; a process in which the number of notes
and intervals required in the various keys is much greater than the
twelve to the octave used in systems of temperament.H. W.
Poole.
Just, adv.1.Precisely; exactly; -- in place, time, or degree; neither more
nor less than is stated.
And having just enough, not covet
more.
Dryden.
The god Pan guided my hand just to the heart of
the beast.
Sir P. Sidney.
To-night, at Herne's oak, just 'twixt twelve
and one.
Shak.
2.Closely; nearly; almost.
Just at the point of death.
Sir W. Temple.
3.Barely; merely; scarcely; only; by a very
small space or time; as, he just missed the train; just
too late.
A soft Etesian gale
But just inspired and gently swelled the sail.
Dryden.
Just now, the least possible time since; a
moment ago.
Just, v. i. [See Joust.] To
joust.Fairfax.
Just, n.A joust.Dryden.
Jus"tice (?), n. [F., fr. L.
justitia, fr. justus just. See Just,
a.]
1.The quality of being just; conformity to
the principles of righteousness and rectitude in all things; strict
performance of moral obligations; practical conformity to human or
divine law; integrity in the dealings of men with each other;
rectitude; equity; uprightness.
Justice and judgment are the haditation of thy
throne.
Ps. ixxxix. 11.
The king-becoming graces,
As justice, verity, temperance, stableness, . . .
I have no relish of them.
Shak.
2.Conformity to truth and reality in
expressing opinions and in conduct; fair representation of facts
respecting merit or demerit; honesty; fidelity; impartiality; as, the
justice of a description or of a judgment; historical
justice.
3.The rendering to every one his due or
right; just treatment; requital of desert; merited reward or
punishment; that which is due to one's conduct or motives.
This even-handed justice
Commends the ingredients of our poisoned chalice
To our own lips.
Shak.
4.Agreeableness to right; equity; justness;
as, the justice of a claim.
5.A person duly commissioned to hold courts,
or to try and decide controversies and administer justice.
&fist; This title is given to the judges of the common law courts
in England and in the United States, and extends to judicial officers
and magistrates of every grade.
Bed of justice. See under Bed. -
- Chief justice. See in the Vocabulary. --
Justice of the peace(Law), a judicial
officer or subordinate magistrate appointed for the conservation of
the peace in a specified district, with other incidental powers
specified in his commission. In the United States a justice of the
peace has jurisdiction to adjudicate certain minor cases, commit
offenders, etc.
Syn. -- Equity; law; right; rectitude; honesty; integrity;
uprightness; fairness; impartiality. -- Justice,
Equity, Law. Justice and equity are the
same; but human laws, though designed to secure justice, are of
necessity imperfect, and hence what is strictly legal is at
times far from being equitable or just. Here a court of
equity comes in to redress the grievances. It does so, as
distinguished from courts of law; and as the latter are often
styled courts of justice, some have fancied that there is in
this case a conflict between justice and equity. The
real conflict is against the working of the law; this a
court of equity brings into accordance with the claims of
justice. It would be an unfortunate use of language which
should lead any one to imagine he might have justice on his
side while practicing iniquity (inequity).
Justice, Rectitude. Rectitude, in its
widest sense, is one of the most comprehensive words in our language,
denoting absolute conformity to the rule of right in principle and
practice. Justice refers more especially to the carrying out
of law, and has been considered by moralists as of three kinds: (1)
Commutative justice, which gives every man his own property,
including things pledged by promise. (2) Distributive justice,
which gives every man his exact deserts. (3) General justice,
which carries out all the ends of law, though not in every
case through the precise channels of commutative or distributive
justice; as we see often done by a parent or a ruler in his dealings
with those who are subject to his control.
Jus"tice (?), v. t.To administer
justice to. [Obs.] Bacon.
Jus"tice*a*ble (?), a.Liable to
trial in a court of justice. [Obs.] Hayward.
Jus"tice*hood (?), n.Justiceship.B. Jonson.
Jus"tice*ment (?), n.Administration of justice; procedure in courts of justice.
[Obs.] Johnson.
Jus"ti*cer (?), n.One who
administers justice; a judge. [Obs.] "Some upright
justicer." Shak.
Jus"tice*ship (?), n.The office
or dignity of a justice.Holland.
Jus*ti"ci*a*ble (?), a. [Cf. LL.
justitiabilis, F. justiciable.] Proper to be
examined in a court of justice.Bailey.
Jus*ti"ci*ar (?), n.Same as
Justiciary.
Jus*ti"ci*a*ry (?), n. [Cf. LL.
justitiarius, F. justicier. See Justice.]
(Old Eng. Law)An old name for the judges of the higher
English courts.
&fist; The chief justiciary, or justiciar, in early
English history, was not only the chief justice of the kingdom, but
also ex officio regent in the king's absence.
Court of justiciary(Scots Law), the
supreme criminal court, having jurisdiction over the whole of
Scotland.
{ Jus"ti*co (?), Jus"ti*coat` (?) },
n. [F. justaucorps, lit., close to the
body.] Formerly, a close coat or waistcoat with
sleeves.
Jus"ti*fi`a*ble (?), a. [Cf. F.
justifiable. See Justify.] Capable of being
justified, or shown to be just.
-- Jus"ti*fi`a*ble*ness, n. --
Jus"ti*fi`a*bly, adv.
Jus`ti*fi*ca"tion (?), n. [L.
justificatio: cf. F. justification. See
Justify.]
1.The act of justifying or the state of
being justified; a showing or proving to be just or conformable to
law, justice, right, or duty; defense; vindication; support; as,
arguments in justification of the prisoner's conduct; his
disobedience admits justification.
I hope, for my brother's justification, he
wrote this but as an essay or taste of my virtue.
Shak.
2.(Law)The showing in court of a
sufficient lawful reason why a party charged or accused did that for
which he is called to answer.
3.(Theol.)The act of justifying, or
the state of being justified, in respect to God's
requirements.
Who was delivered for our offenses, and was raised
again for our justification.
Rom. iv.
25.
In such righteousness
To them by faith imputed, they may find Justification toward God, and peace
Of conscience.
Milton.
4.(Print.)Adjustment of type by
spacing it so as to make it exactly fill a line, or of a cut so as to
hold it in the right place; also, the leads, quads, etc., used for
making such adjustment.
Jus*tif"i*ca*tive (?; 277), a. [Cf. F.
justificatif.] Having power to justify;
justificatory.
Jus"ti*fi*ca`tor (?), n. [LL.
justificator: cf. F. justificateur.] One who
justifies or vindicates; a justifier.Johnson.
Jus"ti*fi`er (?), n.One who
justifies; one who vindicates, supports, defends, or
absolves.
Justifiers of themselves and
hypocrites.
Strype.
That he might be just, and the justifier of him
which believeth in Jesus.
Rom. iii. 26.
Jus"ti*fy (?), v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Justified (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Justifying (?).] [F. justifier, L. justificare;
justus just + -ficare (in comp.) to make. See
Just, a., and -fy.]
1.To prove or show to be just; to vindicate;
to maintain or defend as conformable to law, right, justice,
propriety, or duty.
That to the height of this great argument
I may assert eternal providence,
And justify the ways of God to men.
Milton.
Unless the oppression is so extreme as to
justify revolution, it would not justify the evil of
breaking up a government.
E. Everett.
2.To pronounce free from guilt or blame; to
declare or prove to have done that which is just, right, proper,
etc.; to absolve; to exonerate; to clear.
I can not justify whom the law
condemns.
Shak.
3.(Theol.)To treat as if righteous
and just; to pardon; to exculpate; to absolve.
By him all that believe are justified from all
things, from which ye could not be justified by the law of
Moses.
Acts xiii. 39.
4.To prove; to ratify; to confirm.
[Obs.] Shak.
5.(Print.)To make even or true, as
lines of type, by proper spacing; to adjust, as type. See
Justification, 4.
Syn. -- To defend; maintain; vindicate; excuse; exculpate;
absolve; exonerate.
Jus"ti*fy, v. i.1.(Print.)To form an even surface or true line with
something else; to fit exactly.
2.(Law)To take oath to the ownership
of property sufficient to qualify one's self as bail or
surety.
Jus*tin"i*an (?), a.Of or
pertaining to the Institutes or laws of the Roman
Justinian.
Jus"tle (?), v. i. [Freq. of
joust, just, v. i. See Joust,
v. i., and cf. Jostle.] To run or
strike against each other; to encounter; to clash; to jostle.Shak.
The chariots shall rage in the streets; they shall
justle one against another in the broad ways.
Nahum ii. 4.
Jus"tle, v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Justled (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Justling (?).] To push; to drive; to force by running
against; to jostle.
We justled one another out, and disputed the
post for a great while.
Addison.
Jus"tle, n.An encounter or shock;
a jostle.
Just"ly (?), adv. [From Just,
a.] In a just manner; in conformity to law,
justice, or propriety; by right; honestly; fairly; accurately.
"In equal balance justly weighed." Shak.
Nothing can justly be despised that can not
justly be blamed: where there is no choice there can be no
blame.
South.
Just"ness, n.The quality of being
just; conformity to truth, propriety, accuracy, exactness, and the
like; justice; reasonableness; fairness; equity; as, justness
of proportions; the justness of a description or
representation; the justness of a cause.
In value the satisfaction I had in seeing it
represented with all the justness and gracefulness of
action.
Dryden.
&fist; Justness is properly applied to things, and
justice to persons; but the distinction is not always
observed.
Jut (jŭt), v. i. [imp. &
p. p.Jutted (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Jutting.] [A corruption of jet.]
1.To shoot out or forward; to project beyond
the main body; as, the jutting part of a building. "In
jutting rock and curved shore." Wordsworth.
It seems to jut out of the structure of the
poem.
Sir T. Browne.
2.To butt. [Obs.] "The jutting
steer." Mason.
Jut, n.1.That
which projects or juts; a projection.
2.A shove; a push. [Obs.]
Udall.
Jute (jūt), n. [Hind.
jūt, Skr. jū&tsdot;a matted hair; cf.
ja&tsdot;a matted hair, fibrous roots.] The coarse,
strong fiber of the East Indian Corchorus olitorius, and C.
capsularis; also, the plant itself. The fiber is much used for
making mats, gunny cloth, cordage, hangings, paper, etc.
Jutes (jūts), n. pl. sing.
Jute. (Ethnol.)Jutlanders; one of
the Low German tribes, a portion of which settled in Kent, England,
in the 5th century.
Jut"land*er (?), n.A native or
inhabitant of Jutland in Denmark.
Jut"land*ish, a.Of or pertaining
to Jutland, or to the people of Jutland.
Jut"ting (?), a.Projecting, as
corbels, cornices, etc. -- Jut"ting*ly,
adv.
Jut"ty (?), n. [See Jetty,
Jut, Jet.] A projection in a building; also, a
pier or mole; a jetty.Shak.
Jut"ty, v. t. & i.To project
beyond. [Obs.] Shak.
Ju"ve*nal (?), n. [L. juvenalis
youthful, juvenile, fr. juvenis young.] A youth.
[Obs.] Shak.
Ju`ve*nes"cence (?), n.A growing
young.
Ju`ve*nes"cent (?), a. [L.
juvenescens, p. pr. of juvenescere to grow young again,
from juvenis young.] Growing or becoming young.
Ju"ve*nile (?; 277), a. [L.
juvenilis, from juvenis young; akin to E. young:
cf. F. juvénile, juvénil. See
Young.]
1.Young; youthful; as, a juvenile
appearance. "A juvenile exercitation."
Glanvill.
2.Of or pertaining to youth; as,
juvenile sports.
Syn. -- Puerile; boyish; childish. See Youthful.
Ju"ve*nile, n.A young person or
youth; -- used sportively or familiarly.C.
Bronté.
Ju"ve*nile*ness, n.The state or
quality of being juvenile; juvenility.
Ju`ve*nil"i*ty (?), n.; pl.Juvenilities (#). [L. juvenilitas: cf. F.
juvénilité.]
1.Youthfulness; adolescence.Glanvill.
2.The manners or character of youth;
immaturity.Glanvill.
Ju"vi*a (?), n.(Bot.)A
Brazilian name for the lofty myrtaceous tree (Bertholetia
excelsa) which produces the large seeds known as Brazil
nuts.
||Ju*wan"sa (?), n.(Bot.)The camel's thorn. See under Camel.
Ju*wise" (?), n. [Obs.] Same as
Juise.Chaucer.
Jux`ta*pose" (?), v. t. [Cf.
Juxtaposit, Pose.] To place in
juxtaposition.Huxley.
Jux`ta*pos"it (?), v. t. [imp.
& p. p.Juxtaposited; p. pr. & vb.
n.Juxtapositing.] [L. juxta near +
positus, p. p. of ponere to put.] To place in
close connection or contiguity; to juxtapose.Derham.
Jux`ta*po*si"tion (?), n. [L.
juxta near + positio position: cf. F.
juxtaposition. See Just, v. i., and
Position.] A placing or being placed in nearness or
contiguity, or side by side; as, a juxtaposition of
words.
Parts that are united by a a mere
juxtaposition.
Glanvill.
Juxtaposition is a very unsafe criterion of
continuity.
Hare.
Jym"old (j&ibreve;m"&obreve;ld), a.
[Obs.] See Gimmal.
Webster's New Haven home, where he wrote An American Dictionary of the English Language. Now located in Greenfield Village in Michigan.
Noah Webster (October 16, 1758 – May 28, 1843) was an American lexicographer, textbook pioneer, English spelling reformer, political writer, editor, and prolific author. He has been called the "Father of American Scholarship and Education." His "blue-backed Speller," his "Grammars," and "Reader," all contained Biblical and patriotic themes and Webster led the production of educational volumes emphasizing Christian Constitutional values for more than a century. "In my view, the Christian religion is the most important and one of the first things in which all children, under a free government ought to be instructed...No truth is more evident to my mind than that the Christian religion must be the basis of any government intended to secure the rights and privileges of a free people." 1 Webster considered "education useless without the Bible" but he cautioned against too extensive use of the Bible in schools as "tending to irreverence,"
In 1774, at the age of 16, he matriculated at Yale College in New Haven, studying with the learned Ezra Stiles, Yale's president. His four years at Yale overlapped with the American Revolutionary War, and because of food shortages, many of his college classes were held in other towns. He served in the Connecticut Militia. His father had mortgaged the farm to send Webster to Yale, but the son was now on his own and had no more to do with his family.3 After graduating Yale in 1778, he taught school in Glastonbury, Hartford, and West Hartford. He was admitted to the bar in 1781 and practiced after 1789. Discovering that law was not to his liking, he tried teaching, setting up several very small schools that did not thrive.
Political vision
Webster was by nature a revolutionary, seeking American independence from the cultural thralldom to Britain. To replace it he sought to create a utopian America, cleansed of luxury and ostentation and the champion of freedom4 By 1781, Webster had an expansive view of the new nation. American nationalism was superior to Europe because American values were superior, he claimed.5
America sees the absurdities--she sees the kingdoms of Europe, disturbed by wrangling sectaries, or their commerce, population and improvements of every kind cramped and retarded, because the human mind like the body is fettered 'and bound fast by the chords of policy and superstition': She laughs at their folly and shuns their errors: She founds her empire upon the idea of universal toleration: She admits all religions into her bosom; She secures the sacred rights of every individual; and (astonishing absurdity to Europeans!) she sees a thousand discordant opinions live in the strictest harmony ... it will finally raise her to a pitch of greatness and lustre, before which the glory of ancient Greece and Rome shall dwindle to a point, and the splendor of modern Empires fade into obscurity.
Webster dedicated his Speller and Dictionary to providing an intellectual foundation for American nationalism. In 1787-89 Webster was an outspoken supporter of the new Constitution. In terms of political theory, he deemphasized virtue (a core value of republicanism) and emphasized widespread ownership of property (a key element of liberalism). He was one of the few Americans who paid much attention to the French theorist Jean Jacques Rousseau.6
Federalist editor
To the Friends of Literature in the United States, Webster's prospectus for his first dictionary of the English language, 1807–1808
Webster married well and had joined the elite in Hartford but did not have much money. In 1793, Alexander Hamilton lent him $1500 to move to New York City to edit the leading Federalist Party newspaper. In December, he founded New York's first daily newspaper, American Minerva (later known as The Commercial Advertiser), and edited it for four years, writing the equivalent of 20 volumes of articles and editorials. He also published the semi-weekly publication, The Herald, A Gazette for the country (later known as The New York Spectator).
As a Federalist spokesman, he was repeatedly denounced by the Jeffersonian Republicans as "a pusillanimous, half-begotten, self-dubbed patriot," "an incurable lunatic," and "a deceitful newsmonger ... Pedagogue and Quack." Rival Federalist pamphleteer "Peter Porcupine" (William Cobbett) said Webster's pro-French views made him "a traitor to the cause of Federalism", calling him "a toad in the service of sans-cullottism," "a prostitute wretch," "a great fool, and a barefaced liar," "a spiteful viper," and "a maniacal pedant." Webster, the consummate master of words, was distressed. Even the use of words like "the people," "democracy," and "equality" in public debate bothered him, for such words were "metaphysical abstractions that either have no meaning, or at least none that mere mortals can comprehend." 7
Webster followed French radical thought and was one of the few Americans who admired Jean-Jacques Rousseau. He urged a neutral foreign policy when France and Britain went to war in 1793. But when French minister Citizen Genêt set up a network of pro-Jacobin "Democratic-Republican Societies" that entered American politics and attacked President Washington, Webster condemned them. He called on fellow Federalist editors to "all agree to let the clubs alone—publish nothing for or against them. They are a plant of exotic and forced birth: the sunshine of peace will destroy them."8
For decades, he was one of the most prolific authors in the new nation, publishing textbooks, political essays, a report on infectious diseases, and newspaper articles for his Federalist party. He wrote so much that a modern bibliography of his published works required 655 pages. He moved back to New Haven in 1798; he was elected as a Federalist to the Connecticut House of Representatives in 1800 and 1802-1807.
Copyright
Politician Daniel Webster was Noah Webster’s cousin. As a senator, Daniel sponsored Noah’s proposed copyright bill.9 The first major statutory revision of U.S. copyright law, the 1831 Act was a result of intensive lobbying by Noah Webster and his agents in Congress.10
As a teacher, he had come to dislike American elementary schools. They could be overcrowded, with up to seventy children of all ages crammed into one-room schoolhouses. They had poor underpaid staff, no desks, and unsatisfactory textbooks that came from England. The heating system was also a problem with one side of the room that was too cold and the other side that was too hot. Webster thought that Americans should learn from American books, so he began writing a three volume compendium, A Grammatical Institute of the English Language. The work consisted of a speller (published in 1783), a grammar (published in 1784), and a reader (published in 1785). His goal was to provide a uniquely American approach to training children. His most important improvement, he claimed, was to rescue "our native tongue" from "the clamour11 of pedantry" that surrounded English grammar and pronunciation. He complained that the English language had been corrupted by the British aristocracy, which set its own standard for proper spelling and pronunciation. Webster rejected the notion that the study of Greek and Latin must precede the study of English grammar. The appropriate standard for the American language, argued Webster, was, "the same republican principles as American civil and ecclesiastical constitutions", which meant that the people-at-large must control the language; popular sovereignty in government must be accompanied by popular usage in language.
The Speller was arranged so that it could be easily taught to students, and it progressed by age. From his own experiences as a teacher, Webster thought the Speller should be simple and gave an orderly presentation of words and the rules of spelling and pronunciation. He believed students learned most readily when he broke a complex problem into its component parts and had each pupil master one part before moving to the next. Ellis argues that Webster anticipated some of the insights currently associated with Jean Piaget's theory of cognitive development. Webster said that children pass through distinctive learning phases in which they master increasingly complex or abstract tasks. Therefore, teachers must not try to teach a three-year-old how to read; they could not do it until age five. He organized his speller accordingly, beginning with the alphabet and moving systematically through the different sounds of vowels and consonants, then syllables, then simple words, then more complex words, then sentences.12
The speller was originally titled The First Part of the Grammatical Institute of the English Language. Over the course of 385 editions in his lifetime, the title was changed in 1786 to The American Spelling Book, and again in 1829 to The Elementary Spelling Book. Most people called it the "Blue-Backed Speller" because of its blue cover, and for the next one hundred years, Webster's book taught children how to read, spell, and pronounce words. It was the most popular American book of its time; by 1837 it had sold 15 million copies, and some 60 million by 1890—reaching the majority of young students in the nation's first century. Its royalty of a half-cent per copy was enough to sustain Webster in his other endeavors. It also helped create the popular contests known as spelling bees.
Handwritten drafts of dictionary entries by Webster
Slowly, edition by edition, Webster changed the spelling of words, making them "Americanized." He chose s over c in words like defense, he changed the re to er in words like center, and he dropped one of the Ls in traveler. At first he kept the u in words like colour or favour but dropped it in later editions. He also changed "tongue" to "tung," an innovation that never caught on.13
Part three of his Grammatical Institute (1785) was a reader designed to uplift the mind and "diffuse the principles of virtue and patriotism.":14
"In the choice of pieces," he explained, "I have not been inattentive to the political interests of America. Several of those masterly addresses of Congress, written at the commencement of the late Revolution, contain such noble, just, and independent sentiments of liberty and patriotism, that I cannot help wishing to transfuse them into the breasts of the rising generation."
Students received the usual quota of Plutarch, Shakespeare, Swift, and Addison, as well as such Americans as Joel Barlow's Vision of Columbus, Timothy Dwight's Conquest of Canaan, and John Trumbull's poem M'Fingal. He included excerpts from Tom Paine's The Crisis and an essay by Thomas Day calling for the abolition of slavery in accord with the Declaration of Independence.
Webster's Speller was entirely secular. It ended with two pages of important dates in American history, beginning with Columbus's in 1492 and ending with the battle of Yorktown in 1781. There was no mention of God, the Bible, or sacred events. "Let sacred things be appropriated for sacred purposes," wrote Webster. As Ellis explains, "Webster began to construct a secular catechism to the nation-state. Here was the first appearance of 'civics' in American schoolbooks. In this sense, Webster's speller becoming what was to be the secular successor to The New England Primer with its explicitly biblical injunctions." 15 In turn after 1840 Webster's books lost market share to the McGuffey Eclectic Readers of William Holmes McGuffey, which sold over 120 million copies.16
Noah Webster, The Schoolmaster of the Republic. (1886)
Bynack (1984) examines Webster in relation to his commitment to the idea of a unified American national culture that would stave off the decline of republican virtues and solidarity. Webster acquired his perspective on language from such theorists as Mauertuis, Michaelis, and Herder. There he found the belief that a nation's linguistic forms and the thoughts correlated with them shaped individuals' behavior. Thus the etymological clarification and reform of American English promised to improve citizens' manners and thereby preserve republican purity and social stability. This presupposition animated Webster's Speller and Grammar.17
In 1806, Webster published his first dictionary, A Compendious Dictionary of the English Language. In 1807 Webster began compiling an expanded and fully comprehensive dictionary, An American Dictionary of the English Language; it took twenty-seven years to complete. To evaluate the etymology of words, Webster learned twenty-six languages, including Old English (Anglo-Saxon), German, Greek, Latin, Italian, Spanish, French, Hebrew, Arabic, and Sanskrit. Webster hoped to standardize American speech, since Americans in different parts of the country used different languages. They also spelled, pronounced, and used English words differently.
Webster completed his dictionary during his year abroad in 1825 in Paris, France, and at the University of Cambridge. His book contained seventy thousand words, of which twelve thousand had never appeared in a published dictionary before. As a spelling reformer, Webster believed that English spelling rules were unnecessarily complex, so his dictionary introduced American English spellings, replacing "colour" with "color", substituting "wagon" for "waggon", and printing "center" instead of "centre". He also added American words, like "skunk" and "squash", that did not appear in British dictionaries. At the age of seventy, Webster published his dictionary in 1828.
Though it now has an honored place in the history of American English, Webster's first dictionary only sold 2,500 copies. He was forced to mortgage his home to bring out a second edition, and his life from then on was plagued with debt.
In 1840, the second edition was published in two volumes. On May 28, 1843, a few days after he had completed revising an appendix to the second edition, and with much of his efforts with the dictionary still unrecognized, Noah Webster died.
Title page of Webster's Dictionary of the English Language, circa 1830–1840
Austin (2005) explores the intersection of lexicographical and poetic practices in American literature, and attempts to map out a "lexical poetics" using Webster's dictionaries as the. He shows the ways in which American poetry has inherited Webster, has drawn upon his lexicography in order to reinvent it. Austin explicates key definitions from both the Compendious (1806) and American (1828) dictionaries, and brings into its discourse a range of concerns, including the politics of American English, the question of national identity and culture in the early moments of American independence, and the poetics of citation and of definition. Webster's dictionaries were a redefinition of Americanism within the context of an emergent and unstable American socio-political and cultural identity. Webster's identification of his project as a "federal language" shows his competing impulses towards regularity and innovation in historical terms. Perhaps the contradictions of Webster's project comprised part of a larger dialectical play between liberty and order within Revolutionary and post-Revolutionary political debates.18
Webster in early life was something of a freethinker, but in 1808 he became a convert to Calvinistic orthodoxy, and thereafter became a devout Congregationalist who preached the need to Christianize the nation.19 Webster grew increasingly authoritarian and elitist, fighting against the prevailing grain of Jacksonian Democracy. Webster viewed language as a tool to control unruly thoughts. His American Dictionary emphasized the virtues of social control over human passions and individualism, submission to authority, and fear of God; they were necessary for the maintenance of the American social order. As he grew older, Webster's attitudes changed from those of an optimistic revolutionary in the 1780s to those of a pessimistic critic of man and society by the 1820s.20
His 1828 American Dictionary contained the greatest number of Biblical definitions given in any reference volume. Webster considered education "useless without the Bible". Webster released his own edition of the Bible in 1833, called the Common Version. He used the King James Version (KJV) as a base and consulted the Hebrew and Greek along with various other versions and commentaries. Webster molded the KJV to correct grammar, replaced words that were no longer used, and did away with words and phrases that could be seen as offensive.
Opposition to slavery and abolitionism
Webster helped found the Connecticut Society for the Abolition of Slavery in 1791,21, but by the 1830s rejected the new tone among abolitionists that emphasized Americans who tolerated slavery were themselves sinners. In 1837, Webster warned his daughter about her fervent support of the abolitionist cause. "Webster wrote, "slavery is a great sin and a general calamity – but it is not our sin, though it may prove to be a terrible calamity to us in the north. But we cannot legally interfere with the South on this subject." He added, "To come north to preach and thus disturb our peace, when we can legally do nothing to effect this object, is, in my view, highly criminal and the preachers of abolitionism deserve the penitentiary."
Letter from Webster to daughter Eliza, 1837, warning of perils of the abolitionist movement
Family
Rebecca Greenleaf Webster, wife of Noah Webster
Webster married Rebecca Greenleaf (1766–1847) on October 26, 1789, in New Haven, Connecticut. They had eight children:
Emily Schotten (1790–1861), who married William W. Ellsworth, named by Webster as an executor of his will.22 Emily, their daughter, married Rev. Abner Jackson, who became president of both Hartford's Trinity College and Hobart College in New York State.23
Frances Julianna (1793–1869)
Harriet (1797–1844)
Mary (1799–1819)
William Greenleaf (1801–1869)
Eliza (1803–1888)
Henry (1806–1807)
Louisa (b. 1808)
He moved to Amherst, Massachusetts, in 1812, where Webster helped to found Amherst College. In 1822, the family moved back to New Haven, and Webster was awarded an honorary degree from Yale the following year. He is buried in New Haven's Grove Street Cemetery.
^ John H. Westerhoff III, McGuffey and His Readers: Piety, Morality, and Education in Nineteenth-Century America (1978).
^ Vincent P. Bynack, "Noah Webster and the Idea of a National Culture: the Pathologies of Epistemology." Journal of the History of Ideas 1984 45(1): 99-114.
^ Nathan W. Austin, "Lost in the Maze of Words: Reading and Re-reading Noah Webster's Dictionaries," Dissertation Abstracts International, 2005, Vol. 65 Issue 12, p. 4561
"Noah Webster" in The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes (1907–21). vol 18 section 25:33 online edition
Bynack, Vincent P. "Noah Webster and the Idea of a National Culture: the Pathologies of Epistemology." Journal of the History of Ideas 1984 45(1): 99-114. Issn: 0022-5037 in Jstor
Ellis, Joseph J. After the Revolution: Profiles of Early American Culture 1979. chapter 6, interpretive essay online edition
Gallardo, Andres. "The Standardization of American English." PhD dissertation State U. of New York, Buffalo 1980. 367 pp. DAI 1981 41(8): 3557-A. 8104193, focused on Webster's dictionary
Kendall, Joshua, "The Definition of Yankee Know-How," Los Angeles Times (October 15, 2008)
Lepore, Jill. "Noah's Mark: Webster and the original dictionary wars." The New Yorker, (November 6, 2006). 78-87.
Malone, Kemp. "Webster, Noah," Dictionary of American Biography, Volume 10 (1936)
Micklethwait, David. Noah Webster and the American Dictionary (2005)
Morgan, John S. Noah Webster (1975), popular biography
Moss, Richard J. Noah Webster. (1984). 131 pp. Wester as author
Nelson, C. Louise. "Neglect of Economic Education in Webster's 'Blue-Backed Speller'" American Economist, Vol. 39, 1995 online edition
Proudfit, Isabel. Noah Webster Father of the Dictionary (1966).
Rollins, Richard. The Long Journey of Noah Webster (1980) (ISBN 0-8122-7778-3)
Rollins, Richard M. "Words as Social Control: Noah Webster and the Creation of the American Dictionary." American Quarterly 1976 28(4): 415-430. Issn: 0003-0678 in Jstor
Snyder, K. Alan. Defining Noah Webster: Mind and Morals in the Early Republic. (1990). 421 pp.
Southard, Bruce. "Noah Webster: America's Forgotten Linguist." American Speech 1979 54(1): 12-22. Issn: 0003-1283 in Jstor
Unger, Harlow Giles. Noah Webster: The Life and Times of an American Patriot (1998), scholarly biography
Warfel, Harry R. Noah Webster: Schoolmaster to America (1936), a standard biography
Primary sources
Harry R. Warfel, ed., Letters of Noah Webster (1953),
Homer D. Babbidge, Jr., ed., Noah Webster: On Being American (1967), selections from his writings
Webster, Noah. The American Spelling Book: Containing the Rudiments of the English Language for the Use of Schools in the United States by Noah Webster1836 edition online, the famous Blue- Backed Speller
Webster, Noah. An American dictionary of the English language1848 edition online
Webster, Noah. A grammatical institute of the English language1800 edition online
Webster, Noah. History of the United States published in 1832
Webster, Noah. Miscellaneous papers on political and commercial subjects‎1802 edition online mostly about banks
Webster, Noah. A collection of essays and fugitiv writings: on moral, historical, political and literary subjects1790 edition online 414 pages
External links
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