Search for: planet
201 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. BIQUINTILE.2 (Noah Webster)
An aspect of the planets, when they are distant from each other, by twice the fifth part of a great circle, that is 144 degrees or twice 72 degrees.
202 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CALCULATE.5 (Noah Webster)
4. To compute the situation of the planets at a certain time, for astrological purposes; as, to calculate the birth of a person.
203 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CARTESIAN.1 (Noah Webster)
CARTESIAN, a. Pertaining to the philosopher Des Cartes, or to his philosophy, which taught the doctrine of vortexes round the sun and planets.
204 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CELERITY.2 (Noah Webster)
… a planet in its orbit. This distinction however is not general, nor can the different uses of the two words be precisely defined. We apply celerity rather than …
205 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CENTRIPETAL.1 (Noah Webster)
… a planet revolving round the sun, the center of the system. [Note: The common accentuation of centrifugal and centripetal is artificial and harsh. The accent …
206 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CERES.3 (Noah Webster)
2. The name of a planet discovered by M. Piozzi, at Palermo in Sicily, in 1801.
207 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CERIUM.1 (Noah Webster)
CERIUM, n. A metal recently discovered in Sweden, in the mineral cerate, and so called rom the planet Ceres. It is of great specific gravity. Its color a grayish white and its texture lamellar.
208 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CIRCLE.12 (Noah Webster)
10. Circles of latitude, are great circles perpendicular to the plane of the ecliptic, passing through its poles and through every star and planet.
209 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CIRCLE.22 (Noah Webster)
And other planets circle other suns.
210 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. COMBUST.1 (Noah Webster)
… a planet is in conjunction with the sun or apparently very near it, it is said to be combust or in combustion. The distance within which this epithet is applicable …
211 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. COMET.1 (Noah Webster)
… a planet, but accompanied with a train of light, performing revolutions about the sun, in an elliptical orbit, having the sun in one of its foci. In its approach …
212 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CONCENTRIC.1 (Noah Webster)
CONCENTRIC, a. [L., center.] Having a common center; as the concentric coats of an onion; the concentric orbits of the planets.
213 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CONFIGURATE.1 (Noah Webster)
CONFIGURATE, v.i. [L. See Configure.] To show like the aspects of the planets towards each other.
214 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CONFIGURATION.3 (Noah Webster)
2. Aspects of the planets; or the face of the horoscope, according to the aspects of the planets toward each other at any time.
215 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CONJUNCTION.3 (Noah Webster)
2. In astronomy, the meeting of two or more stars or planets in the same degree of the zodiac; as the conjunction of the moon with the sun, or of Jupiter with Saturn.
216 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CUBE.4 (Noah Webster)
The law of the planets is, that the squares of the times of their revolutions are in proportion to the cubes of their mean distances.
217 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CULMINATE.1 (Noah Webster)
CULMINATE, v.i. [L., a top or ridge.] To be vertical; to come or be in the meridian; to be in the highest point of altitude; as a planet.
218 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CULMINATION.2 (Noah Webster)
1. The transit of a planet over the meridian, or highest point of altitude for the day.
219 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CURTATE.1 (Noah Webster)
… a planet from the sun to that point, where a perpendicular let fall from the planet meets with the ecliptic. Or the interval between the sun or earth, and that …
220 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CURTATION.1 (Noah Webster)
CURTATION, n. [See Curtate.] The interval between a planets distance from the sun and the curtate distance.