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1828.mshaffer.com › Word [pulse]
PULSE, n. puls. [L. pulsus, from pello, to drive.] 1. In animals, the beating or throbbing of the heart and arteries;more particularly, the sudden dilatation of an artery, caused by the projectile force of the blood, which is perceptible to the touch. Hence we say, to feel the pulse. The pulse is frequent or rare, quick or slow, equal or unequal, regular or intermitting, hard or soft, strong or weak, &c. The pulses of an adult in health, are little more than one pulse to a second; in certain fevers, the number is increased to 90, 100, or even to 140 in a minute.2. The stroke with which a medium is affected by the motion of light, sound, &c.; oscillation; vibration. Sir Isaac Newton demonstrates that the velocities of the pulses of an elastic fluid medium are in a ratio compounded of half the ratio of the elastic force directly, and half the ratio of the density inversely.To feel one's pulse, metaphorically, to sound one's opinion; to try or to know one's mind. PULSE, v.i. To beat, as the arteries. [Little used.] PULSE, v.t. [L. pulso.] To drive, as the pulse. [Little used.] PULSE, n. [L. pulsus, beaten out, as seeds; Heb. a bean, to separate.] Leguminous plants or their seeds; the plants whose pericarp is a legume or pod, as beans, peas, &c.
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Evolution (or devolution) of this word [pulse]
1828 Webster | 1844 Webster | 1913 Webster |
PULSE, n. puls. [L. pulsus, from pello, to drive.] 1. In animals, the beating or throbbing of the heart and arteries;more particularly, the sudden dilatation of an artery, caused by the projectile force of the blood, which is perceptible to the touch. Hence we say, to feel the pulse. The pulse is frequent or rare, quick or slow, equal or unequal, regular or intermitting, hard or soft, strong or weak, &c. The pulses of an adult in health, are little more than one pulse to a second; in certain fevers, the number is increased to 90, 100, or even to 140 in a minute.2. The stroke with which a medium is affected by the motion of light, sound, &c.; oscillation; vibration. Sir Isaac Newton demonstrates that the velocities of the pulses of an elastic fluid medium are in a ratio compounded of half the ratio of the elastic force directly, and half the ratio of the density inversely.To feel one's pulse, metaphorically, to sound one's opinion; to try or to know one's mind. PULSE, v.i. To beat, as the arteries. [Little used.] PULSE, v.t. [L. pulso.] To drive, as the pulse. [Little used.] PULSE, n. [L. pulsus, beaten out, as seeds; Heb. a bean, to separate.] Leguminous plants or their seeds; the plants whose pericarp is a legume or pod, as beans, peas, &c. | PULSE, n.1 [puls; L. pulsus, from pello, to drive; Fr. pouls.]- In animals, the beating or throbbing of the heart and arteries; more particularly, the sudden dilatation of an artery, caused by the projectile force of the blood, which is perceptible to the touch. Hence we say, to feel the pulse. The pulse is frequent or rare, quick or slow, equal or unequal, regular or intermitting, hard or soft, strong or weak, &c. The pulses of an adult in health, are little more than one pulse to a second; in certain fevers, the number is increased to 90, 100, or even to 140 in a minute.
- The stroke with which a medium is affected by the motion of light, sound, &c.; oscillation; vibration.
Sir Isaac Newton demonstrates that the velocities of the pulses of an elastic fluid medium are in a ratio compound of half the ratio of the elastic force directly, and half the ratio of the density inversely. – Encyc.
To feel one's pulse, metaphorically, to sound one's opinion; to try or to know one's mind.
PULSE, n.2 [Qv. from L. pulsus, beaten out, as seeds; or Heb. and Ch. פול, a bean, from פלה, to separate.]Leguminous plants or their seeds; the plants whose pericarp is a legume, as beans, peas, &c. – Milton. Dryden. PULSE, v.i.To beat, as the arteries. [Little used.] – Ray. PULSE, v.t. [L. pulso.]To drive, as the pulse. [Little used.] | Pulse
- Leguminous plants, or their seeds, as beans, pease,
etc.
- The beating or
throbbing of the heart or blood vessels, especially of the
arteries.
- To beat, as the
arteries; to move in pulses or beats; to pulsate; to throb.
- To drive by a pulsation; to cause to
pulsate.
- Any measured or regular beat; any short,
quick motion, regularly repeated, as of a medium in the transmission
of light, sound, etc.; oscillation; vibration; pulsation; impulse;
beat; movement.
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1828 Webster | 1844 Webster | 1913 Webster |
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Pulse PULSE, noun puls. [Latin pulsus, from pello, to drive.] 1. In animals, the beating or throbbing of the heart and arteries; more particularly, the sudden dilatation of an artery, caused by the projectile force of the blood, which is perceptible to the touch. Hence we say, to feel the pulse The pulse is frequent or rare, quick or slow, equal or unequal, regular or intermitting, hard or soft, strong or weak, etc. The pulses of an adult in health, are little more than one pulse to a second; in certain fevers, the number is increased to 90, 100, or even to 140 in a minute. 2. The stroke with which a medium is affected by the motion of light, sound, etc.; oscillation; vibration. Sir Isaac Newton demonstrates that the velocities of the pulses of an elastic fluid medium are in a ratio compounded of half the ratio of the elastic force directly, and half the ratio of the density inversely. To feel one's pulse metaphorically, to sound one's opinion; to try or to know one's mind. PULSE, verb intransitive To beat, as the arteries. [Little used.] PULSE, verb transitive [Latin pulso.] To drive, as the pulse [Little used.] PULSE, noun [Latin pulsus, beaten out, as seeds; Heb. a bean, to separate.] Leguminous plants or their seeds; the plants whose pericarp is a legume or pod, as beans, peas, etc.
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* As a note, I have purchased each of these products. In fact, as we have been developing the Project:: 1828 Reprint, I have purchased several of the bulky hard-cover dictionaries. My opinion is that the 2000-page hard-cover edition is the only good viable solution at this time. The compact edition was a bit disappointing and the CD-ROM as well. |
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