Webster's American Dictionary

American Dictionary Of The English Language (#5713) by Noah Webster. This is a must for every home! This is Noah Webster's 1828 edition of his famous dictionary. It defines words as they were used during the writing of the KJV 1611. Contains scripture references, etymologies from 28 languages and pronunciations. Modern dictionaries reflect cultural corruption's; consider and compare definitions for words such as sin, marriage, truth, spirit, and Jesus Christ.
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Webster considered "education useless without the Bible." And as a result he utilized God's written word as a key to the meaning of words. This is the reason, the Webster 1828 is one of the most important reprint of the twentieth century, the essential tool of education for Christians. Compare definitions of such words as education, marriage, truth, and many more. Compare a few of these definitions in the chart below, you will be amazed to discover the secularization of our modern English language. Two Dictionaries. Two Definitions. Which Dictionary is on Your Shelf?

1828
American Dictionary of the English Language
1981
Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary
Marriage:
The act of uniting a man and woman for life... Marriage was instituted by God himself. . . . "Marriage is honorable in all. . . ." Heb. 13.
Marriage:
...men and woman are joined in a special kind of social and legal dependence for the purpose of founding and maintaining a family. . .an intimate or close union
Education:
Education comprehends. . . instruction and discipline intended to enlighten the understanding, correct the temper, and form the manners and habits of youth, and fit them for usefulness in their future stations. To give them a religious education is indispensable.
Education:
the action or process of [developing mentally or morally]
Truth:
Conformity to fact or reality. . . . We rely on the truth of scriptural prophecies. "Sanctify them through thy truth. . . . " John 17
Truth:
sincerity in action, character, and utterance. . . the body of real thing. . . a judgment. . . that is true or accepted as true.