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3 definitions found
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Sev·en
a.
One
more
than
six
;
six
and
one
added
;
as
,
seven
days
make
one
week
.
Seven sciences
.
See
the
Note
under
Science
,
n.
, 4.
Seven stars
Astron.
,
the
Pleiades
.
Seven wonders of the world
.
See
under
Wonders
.
Seven-year apple
Bot.
,
a
rubiaceous
shrub
(
Genipa clusiifolia
)
growing
in
the
West
Indies
;
also
,
its
edible
fruit
.
Seven-year vine
Bot.
,
a
tropical
climbing
plant
(
Ipomœa tuberosa
)
related
to
the
morning-glory
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Won·der
n.
1.
That
emotion
which
is
excited
by
novelty
,
or
the
presentation
to
the
sight
or
mind
of
something
new
,
unusual
,
strange
,
great
,
extraordinary
,
or
not
well
understood
;
surprise
;
astonishment
;
admiration
;
amazement
.
They
were
filled
with
wonder
and
amazement
at
that
which
had
happened
unto
him
.
--
Acts
iii
. 10.
Wonder
is
the
effect
of
novelty
upon
ignorance
.
--
Johnson
.
Note:
☞
Wonder
expresses
less
than
astonishment
,
and
much
less
than
amazement
.
It
differs
from
admiration
,
as
now
used
,
in
not
being
necessarily
accompanied
with
love
,
esteem
,
or
approbation
.
2.
A
cause
of
wonder
;
that
which
excites
surprise
;
a
strange
thing
;
a
prodigy
;
a
miracle
.
“
Babylon
,
the
wonder
of
all
tongues.”
To
try
things
oft
,
and
never
to
give
over
,
doth
wonders
.
--
Bacon
.
I
am
as
a
wonder
unto
many
.
--
Ps
.
lxxi
. 7.
Seven wonders of the world
.
See
in
the
Dictionary
of
Noted
Names
in
Fiction
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
World
n.
1.
The
earth
and
the
surrounding
heavens
;
the
creation
;
the
system
of
created
things
;
existent
creation
;
the
universe
.
The
invisible
things
of
him
from
the
creation
of
the
world
are
clearly
seen
.
--
Rom
. 1. 20.
With
desire
to
know
,
What
nearer
might
concern
him
,
how
this
world
Of
heaven
and
earth
conspicuous
first
began
. --
Milton
.
2.
Any
planet
or
heavenly
body
,
especially
when
considered
as
inhabited
,
and
as
the
scene
of
interests
analogous
with
human
interests
;
as
,
a
plurality
of
worlds
.
“Lord
of
the
worlds
above.”
Amongst
innumerable
stars
,
that
shone
Star
distant
,
but
high-hand
seemed
other
worlds
. --
Milton
.
There
may
be
other
worlds
,
where
the
inhabitants
have
never
violated
their
allegiance
to
their
almighty
Sovereign
.
--
W
.
B
.
Sprague
.
3.
The
earth
and
its
inhabitants
,
with
their
concerns
;
the
sum
of
human
affairs
and
interests
.
That
forbidden
tree
,
whose
mortal
taste
Brought
death
into
the
world
,
and
all
our
woe
. --
Milton
.
4.
In
a
more
restricted
sense
,
that
part
of
the
earth
and
its
concerns
which
is
known
to
any
one
,
or
contemplated
by
any
one
;
a
division
of
the
globe
,
or
of
its
inhabitants
;
human
affairs
as
seen
from
a
certain
position
,
or
from
a
given
point
of
view
;
also
,
state
of
existence
;
scene
of
life
and
action
;
as
,
the
Old
World
;
the
New
World
;
the
religious
world
;
the
Catholic
world
;
the
upper
world
;
the
future
world
;
the
heathen
world
.
One
of
the
greatest
in
the
Christian
world
Shall
be
my
surety
. --
Shak
.
Murmuring
that
now
they
must
be
put
to
make
war
beyond
the
world's
end
--
for
so
they
counted
Britain
.
--
Milton
.
5.
The
customs
,
practices
,
and
interests
of
men
;
general
affairs
of
life
;
human
society
;
public
affairs
and
occupations
;
as
,
a
knowledge
of
the
world
.
Happy
is
she
that
from
the
world
retires
.
--
Waller
.
If
knowledge
of
the
world
makes
man
perfidious
,
May
Juba
ever
live
in
ignorance
. --
Addison
.
6.
Individual
experience
of
,
or
concern
with
,
life
;
course
of
life
;
sum
of
the
affairs
which
affect
the
individual
;
as
,
to
begin
the
world
with
no
property
;
to
lose
all
,
and
begin
the
world
anew
.
7.
The
inhabitants
of
the
earth
;
the
human
race
;
people
in
general
;
the
public
;
mankind
.
Since
I
do
purpose
to
marry
,
I
will
think
nothing
to
any
purpose
that
the
world
can
say
against
it
.
--
Shak
.
Tell
me
,
wench
,
how
will
the
world
repute
me
For
undertaking
so
unstaid
a
journey
? --
Shak
.
8.
The
earth
and
its
affairs
as
distinguished
from
heaven
;
concerns
of
this
life
as
distinguished
from
those
of
the
life
to
come
;
the
present
existence
and
its
interests
;
hence
,
secular
affairs
;
engrossment
or
absorption
in
the
affairs
of
this
life
;
worldly
corruption
;
the
ungodly
or
wicked
part
of
mankind
.
I
pray
not
for
the
world
,
but
for
them
which
thou
hast
given
me
;
for
they
are
thine
.
--
John
xvii
. 9.
Love
not
the
world
,
neither
the
things
that
are
in
the
world
.
If
any
man
love
the
world
,
the
love
of
the
Father
is
not
in
him
.
For
all
that
is
in
the
world
,
the
lust
of
the
flesh
,
and
the
lust
of
the
eyes
,
and
the
pride
of
life
,
is
not
of
the
Father
,
but
is
of
the
world
.
--
1
John
ii
. 15, 16.
9.
As
an
emblem
of
immensity
,
a
great
multitude
or
quantity
;
a
large
number
.
“A
world
of
men.”
--
Chapman
.
“A
world
of
blossoms
for
the
bee.”
Nor
doth
this
wood
lack
worlds
of
company
.
--
Shak
.
A
world
of
woes
dispatched
in
little
space
.
--
Dryden
.
All . . . in the world
,
all
that
exists
;
all
that
is
possible
;
as
,
all
the
precaution
in the world
would
not
save
him
.
A world to see
,
a
wonder
to
see
;
something
admirable
or
surprising
to
see
. [
Obs
.]
O
,
you
are
novices
; '
t
is
a
world to see
How
tame
,
when
men
and
women
are
alone
,
A
meacock
wretch
can
make
the
curstest
shrew
. --
Shak
.
--
For all the world
.
(a)
Precisely
;
exactly
.
(b)
For
any
consideration
.
Seven wonders of the world
.
See
in
the
Dictionary
of
Noted
Names
in
Fiction
.
To go to the world
,
to
be
married
. [
Obs
.]
“Thus
goes
every
one
to
the
world
but
I
. . . ;
I
may
sit
in
a
corner
and
cry
heighho
for
a
husband!”
--
Shak
.
World's end
,
the
end
,
or
most
distant
part
,
of
the
world
;
the
remotest
regions
.
World without end
,
eternally
;
forever
;
everlastingly
;
as
if
in
a
state
of
existence
having
no
end
.
Throughout
all
ages
,
world without end
.
--
Eph
.
iii
. 21.
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