lIHTi^^IEIPIlIE (& ]B®(D)'3rSI31IESp STEW 'S'(D>3EK, 



HAVE RECENTLY PUBLISHED, 



In one handsome Volume, of nearly 1400 pages, Sheep extra, Price $3 50 



E)r. tUcbstcr's 'American Dictionari) 



OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE, 



EXHIBITING THE ORIGIN, ORTHOGRAPHY, PRONUNCIATION, AND DEFINITIOW 



OF WORDS, ETC. 



TflOROlGHLY REVISED AND CONSIDERABLY ENLARGED, 

 33s i3vof. CCjjauncej ^. €iootivic% 



OF YALE COLLEGE. 



ASSISTED BY A NUMBER OF GENTLEMEN DISTINGUISHED FOR THEIR HIGH 



ATTAINMENTS IN THE VARIOUS DEPARTMENTS OF LEARNING, WHOSE 



NAMES WILL BE FOUND IN THE PREFACE. 



The entire work has been re-stereotyped, and is now beautifully printed 

 upon a new set of plates. Several thousand additwnal words have been 

 incorporated in this edition, embracing all the terms given in the recent edi- 

 tion 171 the quarto form. The Synopsis and Walker's Key to the classical 

 pronunciation of Greek, Latin, and Scripture proper names have been re- 

 vised and improved. A complete Vocabulary, giving the pronunciation of 

 modern Geographical names, has been added to this edition. Great at- 

 tention has been given in the revision to the pronunciation. A large num- 

 ber of w'ords having been respelled, it will now- be found to be a complete 

 Pronouncing Dictionary. This edition has been made a SynonymoiLs Dic- 

 tionary : a neio and very important feature, not to be found incorporated 

 in the same form into any similar work. The utmost care has been given 

 in every department of the w-ork to render it the most perfect and satis- 

 factory ever offered to the public. Considering its compreliensiveness, its 

 numerous essential improvements, and its general utility, it will be found 

 One of the most indispensable and cheapest books of the times. For a 

 more particular statement of the principles on which the revision has been 

 conducted, reference is made to the preface of the work. 



The most complete and thorough manual of 

 our language yet offered to the public : it can 

 not fail to come into universal use, not only 

 in all schools and academies, but with every 

 practical person and general reader. — Liter- 

 ary World. 



This edition of Webster is all that could be 

 desired. It is superior to any that has pre- 

 i^eded it, and is a monument of learning and 

 research. — A'. Y Commercial Advertiser. 



We can safely say that, for a dictionary for 

 common use, it has no superior — m our judg- 

 ment no equal. — Evangelist. 



The best English diction.iry extant. Many 

 of the original errors of Dr. Webster have 

 been corrected, while a few only of his cor- 

 rections of the old defective orthography have 

 been abandoned, and the work, on the whole, 

 is belter than he left it. — Tribune. 



The whole work has been thorooghly re- 

 Tised by Prof Goodrich, of Yale College, and 

 leveral important and most valuable improve- 

 nenls introduced, which will give Ut this edi- 



tion a pre-eminent advantage over any that 

 has beeu previously published. — -Veie York 

 Observer. 



'The labors of Professor Gooodrich have ma- 

 terially added to the value of tins dictionary. 

 He has been engaged in them for three years 

 past, and the application of his acute philo- 

 logical faculties to this tnsk has not been 

 without ample fruit. — N. Y. Evening Post. 



It must be the standard English dictionary 

 throughout this country. It conforms more 

 nearly than any other to the usage of the best 

 authors, and is in every respect the best work 

 of Its kind, for general use, new before the 

 pulilic. — iV. Y. Courier and Enquirer. 



Undoubtedly the best English dictionary 

 ever published. It is complete in all its parts, 

 and in every possible way the work has bnin 

 adapted to the wants of the great body of the 

 people. It will find Us way not only into all 

 the schools and academies of the country, but 

 to the desk of every student and the lireeid* 

 of every family. — Alirror. 



