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Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary - Contents
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    MISRECKONED — MISTRUSTLESS

    MISRECKONED, pp. Reckoned or computed erroneously.

    MISRECKONING, ppr. Reckoning wrong; and as a noun, an erroneous computation.

    MISRELATE, v.t. To relate falsely or inaccurately.

    MISRELATED, pp. Erroneously related or told.

    MISRELATING, ppr. Relating or telling erroneously.

    MISRELATION, n. Erroneous relation or narration.

    MISREMEMBER, v.t. To mistake in remembering; not to remember correctly.

    MISREMEMBERED, pp. Inaccurately recollected.

    MISREMEMBERING, ppr. Remembering inaccurately.

    MISREPORT, v.t. To report erroneously; to give an incorrect account of.

    MISREPORT, n. An erroneous report; a false or incorrect account given.

    MISREPORTED, pp. Incorrectly reported.

    MISREPORTING, ppr. Reporting incorrectly.

    MISREPRESENT, v.t. To represent falsely or incorrectly; to give a false or erroneous representation, either maliciously, ignorantly or carelessly.

    MISREPRESENTATION, n. The act of giving a false or erroneous representation.

    1. A false or incorrect account given, either from mistake, carelessness or malice.NWAD MISREPRESENTATION.2

    MISREPRESENTED, pp. Falsely or erroneously represented.

    MISREPRESENTER, n. One who gives a false or erroneous account.

    MISREPRESENTING, ppr. Giving a false or erroneous representation.

    [Note. This word is so customarily used for an euphemism, or as a softer expression for lie or falsehood, as to convey the idea generally of intentional falsehood. This signification however is not necessarily implied.]NWAD MISREPRESENTING.2

    MISREPUTE, v.t. To have in wrong estimation.

    MISREPUTED, pp. or a. Erroneously reputed.

    MISRULE, n. Disorder; confusion; tumult from insubordination.

    Enormous riot and misrule--NWAD MISRULE.2

    1. Unjust domination.NWAD MISRULE.3

    MISRULY, a. Unruly; ungovernable; turbulent.

    MISS, n.

    1. The title of a young woman or girl; as little masters and misses.NWAD MISS.2

    2. A kept mistress; a prostitute retained; a concubine.NWAD MISS.3

    MISS, v.t. [L. mitto, misi; omitto, omisi.]

    1. To fail in aim; to fail of reaching the object; not to hit; as, to miss the mark; to miss the object intended.NWAD MISS.5

    2. To fail of finding the right way; to err in attempting to find; as, to miss the way or the road.NWAD MISS.6

    3. To fail of obtaining.NWAD MISS.7

    Orgalus feared nothing but to miss Parthenia.NWAD MISS.8

    4. To learn or discover that something is wanting, or not where it was supposed to be; as, to miss one’s snuff-box; I missed the first volume of Livy.NWAD MISS.9

    Neither missed we any thing--. Nothing was missed of all that pertained to him. 1 Samuel 25:15.NWAD MISS.10

    5. To be without; as, we cannot miss him.NWAD MISS.11

    6. To omit; to pass by; to go without; to fail to have; as, to miss a meal of victuals.NWAD MISS.12

    She would never miss one dayNWAD MISS.13

    A walk so fine, a sight so gay.NWAD MISS.14

    7. To perceive the want of.NWAD MISS.15

    What by me thou hast lost, thou least shalt miss,NWAD MISS.16

    He who has a firm sincere friend, may want all the rest without missing them.NWAD MISS.17

    8. To fail of seeing or finding.NWAD MISS.18

    MISS, v.i. To fail to hit; to fly wide; to deviate from the true direction.

    Flying bullets now,NWAD MISS.20

    To execute his rage, appear too slow;NWAD MISS.21

    They miss, or sweep but common souls away.NWAD MISS.22

    1. Not to succeed; to fail.NWAD MISS.23

    Men observe when things hit, and not when they miss--NWAD MISS.24

    2. To fail; to miscarry, as by accident.NWAD MISS.25

    The invention all admired, and each, how heNWAD MISS.26

    To be the inventor missed.NWAD MISS.27

    3. To fail to obtain, learn or find; with of.NWAD MISS.28

    On the least reflection, we can miss of them.NWAD MISS.29

    4. To fail; to mistake.NWAD MISS.30

    MISS, n. Loss; want.

    There will be no great miss of those which are lost.NWAD MISS.32

    1. Mistake; error.NWAD MISS.33

    He did without any great miss in the hardest points of grammar. [Little used.]NWAD MISS.34

    2. Harm from mistake.NWAD MISS.35

    MISSAL, n. The Romish mass-book.

    MISSAY, v.t. To say wrong; to slander. [Little used.]

    MISSAY, v.i. To speak ill.

    MISSAYING, n. Wrong expression.

    MISSEEM, v.i. To make a false appearance.

    1. To misbecome.NWAD MISSEEM.2

    MISSEL, MISSEL-BIRD, n. A species of thrush.

    MISSELDINE, n. The mistletoe. [Not used.]

    MISSEMBLANCE, n. False resemblance.

    MISSERVE, v.t. misserv’. To serve unfaithfully.

    MISSHAPE, v.t. [See Shape.] To shape ill; to give an ill form to; to deform.

    And horribly misshapes with ugly sights.NWAD MISSHAPE.2

    A misshaped figure.NWAD MISSHAPE.3

    Misshapen mountains.NWAD MISSHAPE.4

    MISSHAPED, MISSHAPEN, pp. Ill formed; deformed; ugly.

    MISSILE, a. [L. missilis, from missus, sent; mitto, to send.]

    Thrown or sent, or that may be thrown. A missile weapon is one that is thrown by the hand, or from an engine in war, in distinction from such as are held or retained in the hand, or fixed. An arrow, a dart, a javelin, a stone, a bullet, a bomb, are missile weapons.NWAD MISSILE.2

    MISSING, ppr. [from miss.] Failing to hit, to reach or to find; discovering to be wanting.

    1. a. Lost; absent from the place where it was expected to be found; wanting. My horse is missing; my pen or my book is missing.NWAD MISSING.2

    For a time caught up to God, as onceNWAD MISSING.3

    Moses was in the mount, and missing long.NWAD MISSING.4

    MISSION, n. [L. missio, from mitto, to send.]

    1. A sending or being sent, usually the latter; a being sent or delegated by authority, with certain powers for transacting business; commission; as sent on a foreign mission.NWAD MISSION.2

    How to begin, how to accomplish bestNWAD MISSION.3

    His end of being on earth, and mission high.NWAD MISSION.4

    2. Persons sent; any number of persons appointed by authority to perform any service; particularly, the persons sent to propagate religion, or evangelize the heathen. The societies for propagating the gospel have missions in almost every country. Last week a mission sailed for the Sandwich isles. We have domestic missions and foreign missions.NWAD MISSION.5

    3. Dismission; discharge from service; a Roman use of the word; in English, obsolete.NWAD MISSION.6

    4. Faction; party. [Not in use.]NWAD MISSION.7

    MISSIONARY, n. One sent to propagate religion. Christian missionaries are called missionaries of the cross.

    MISSIONARY, a. Pertaining to mission; as a missionary meeting; a missionary fund.

    MISSIONER, for missionary, is not used.

    MISSIVE, a. Such as is sent; as a letter missive.

    1. Thrown or sent, or such as may be sent; as a missive weapon.NWAD MISSIVE.2

    MISSIVE, n. A letter sent, or messenger.

    MISSPEAK, v.i. [See Speak.] To err or mistake in speaking.

    MISSPEAK, v.t. To utter wrong.

    MISSPELL, v.t. To spell wrong; to write or utter with wrong letters.

    MISSPELLED, MISSPELT, pp. Spelled wrong, or with wrong letters.

    MISSPELLING, ppr. Spelling wrong.

    MISSPELLING, n. A wrong spelling; false orthography.

    MISSPEND, v.t. To spend amiss; to waste or consume to no purpose, or to a bad one; as, to misspend time or money; to misspend life.

    1. To waste.NWAD MISSPEND.2

    The genial moisture dueNWAD MISSPEND.3

    To apples, otherwise misspends itself.NWAD MISSPEND.4

    MISSPENDER, n. One that consumes prodigally or improperly.

    MISSPENDING, pp. Spending to no purpose, or to a bad one.

    MISSPENSE, n. misspens’. A spending improperly; a wasting.

    MISSPENT, ppr. Ill spent; expended or consumed to no purpose, or to a bad one; as misspent time or life.

    MISSPOKE, MISSPOKEN, pp. Uttered or spoken amiss.

    MISSTATE, v.t. To state wrong; to make an erroneous representation of facts; as, to misstate a question in debate.

    MISSTATED, pp. Stated erroneously.

    MISSTATEMENT, n. A wrong statement; an erroneous representation, verbal or written; as a misstatement of facts in testimony, or of accounts in a report.

    MISSTATING, ppr. Stating falsely or erroneously.

    MISSY, n. The sulphate of iron, having lost the water of its crystallization, is called sori; more thoroughly calcined, it is yellow, and called missy.

    MIST, n. [L. mixtus, mistus, from misceo, to mix.]

    1. Water falling in very numerous, but fine and almost imperceptible drops.NWAD MIST.2

    A mist is a multitude of small but solid globules, which therefore descend.NWAD MIST.3

    2. That which dims or darkens, and obscures or intercepts vision.NWAD MIST.4

    His passion cast a mist before his sense.NWAD MIST.5

    MIST, v.t. To cloud; to cover with vapor.

    MIST-ENCUMBERED, a. Loaded with mist.

    MISTAKABLE, a. That may be misconceived or mistaken.

    MISTAKE, v.t. To take wrong; to conceive or understand erroneously; to misunderstand or misapprehend.

    ‘Tis to mistake them costs the time and pain.NWAD MISTAKE.2

    1. To take one thing or person for another.NWAD MISTAKE.3

    We mistake the eloquence of self-apology for the animation of conscious integrity.NWAD MISTAKE.4

    A man may mistake the love of virtue for the practice of it.NWAD MISTAKE.5

    MISTAKE, v.i. To err in opinion or judgment.

    Servants mistake, and sometimes occasion misunderstanding among friends.NWAD MISTAKE.7

    MISTAKE, n. An error in opinion or judgment; misconception.

    Infallibility is an absolute security of the understanding from all possibility of mistake.NWAD MISTAKE.9

    1. A slip; a fault; an error. There is a mistake in the account or in the date.NWAD MISTAKE.10

    MISTAKEN. In the use of this participle, there is a peculiarity which ought to be carefully noticed. When used of persons, it signified to be in an error, to be wrong; as, I am mistaken, you are mistaken, he is mistaken. But when used of things, it signified misunderstood, misconceived; as, the sense of the passage is mistaken, that is, not rightly understood.

    MISTAKER, n. One that mistakes or misunderstands.

    MISTAKING, ppr. Making a mistake; erring from the truth; misconceiving.

    MISTAKING, n. An error; a mistake.

    MISTAKINGLY, adv. Erroneously; falsely.

    MISTAUGHT, pp. Wrongly taught; as a mistaught youth.

    MISTEACH, v.t. [See Teach.] To teach wrong; to instruct erroneously.

    MISTEACHING, ppr. Instructing erroneously.

    MISTELL, v.t. [See Tell.] To tell erroneously.

    MISTEMPER, v.t. To temper ill; to disorder.

    MISTEMPERED, pp. Tempered ill.

    MISTER, n. The common title of address to gentlemen, and to men of all classes. In writing, it is expressed by the abbreviation Mr.

    MISTER, v.t. To occasion loss. [Not in use.]

    MISTERM, v.t. To term or denominate erroneously.

    MISTERMED, pp. Wrongly denominated.

    MISTERMING, ppr. Denominating erroneously.

    MISTFUL, a. Clouded with mist.

    MISTHINK, v.i. [See Think.] To think wrong. [Little used.]

    MISTHOUGHT, pp. of misthink. Thought wrong of.

    Adam, misthought of her to thee so dear.NWAD MISTHOUGHT.2

    MISTIME, v.t. To time wrong; not to adapt to the time.

    MISTIME, v.i. To neglect the proper time.

    MISTIMED, pp. Ill timed; done at a wrong time.

    MISTIMING, ppr. Ill timing; doing unseasonably.

    MISTINESS, n. [See Mist.] A state of being misty; a state of thick rain in very small drops.

    MISTION, n. [L. mistus, mixtus. See Mix.]

    1. A state of being mixed.NWAD MISTION.2

    2. Mixture; a mingling.NWAD MISTION.3

    MISTITLE, v.t. To call by a wrong title or name.

    MISTITLED, pp. Wrongly named.

    MISTLE, v.i. mis’l. [from mist.]

    To fall in very fine drops, as rain. [See Misle.]NWAD MISTLE.2

    MISTLETOE, MISLETOE, n. mis’lto. A plant or shrub that grows on trees. It is of the genus Viscum. The berry contains a glutinous substance, and the shrub is said to be propagated by birds. This plant was held in great veneration by the Druids.

    MISTLIKE, a. Resembling mist.

    MISTOLD, pp. Erroneously told. [See Tell.]

    MISTOOK, pret. of mistake.

    MISTRAIN, v.t. To train or educate amiss.

    MISTRANSLATE, v.t. To translate erroneously.

    MISTRANSLATED, pp. Erroneously rendered into another language.

    MISTRANSLATING, ppr. Translating incorrectly.

    MISTRANSLATION, n. An erroneous translation or version.

    MISTRESS, n. [L. magistra.]

    1. A woman who governs; correlative to servant, slave, or subject.NWAD MISTRESS.2

    My mistress here lies murdered in her bed.NWAD MISTRESS.3

    2. The female head of a family.NWAD MISTRESS.4

    3. That which governs; a sovereign. Rome was mistress of the world.NWAD MISTRESS.5

    4. One that commands, or has possession and sovereignty. The queen is mistress of the Indies.NWAD MISTRESS.6

    5. A female who is well skilled in any thing; as, she is mistress of arithmetic.NWAD MISTRESS.7

    6. A woman teacher; an instructress of a school.NWAD MISTRESS.8

    7. A woman beloved and courted.NWAD MISTRESS.9

    8. A woman in keeping for lewd purposes.NWAD MISTRESS.10

    9. A term of contemptuous address.NWAD MISTRESS.11

    MISTRESS, v.t. To wait upon a mistress; to be courting.

    MISTRESS-SHIP, n. Female rule or dominion.

    MISTRUST, n. Want of confidence or trust; suspicion.

    MISTRUST, v.t. To suspect; to doubt; to regard with jealousy or suspicion.

    Fate her own book mistrusted at the sight.NWAD MISTRUST.3

    MISTRUSTED, pp. Suspected.

    MISTRUSTFUL, a. Suspicious; doubting; wanting confidence in.

    MISTRUSTFULNESS, n. Suspicion; doubt.

    MISTRUSTFULLY, adv. With suspicion or doubt.

    MISTRUSTING, ppr. Suspecting; having no confidence in.

    MISTRUSTINGLY, adv. With distrust or suspicion.

    MISTRUSTLESS, a. Unsuspecting; unsuspicious.

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