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KING JAMES BIBLE DICTIONARY

 

Case

The Bible

Bible Usage:

Dictionaries:

  • Included in Eastons: No
  • Included in Hitchcocks: No
  • Included in Naves: No
  • Included in Smiths: No
  • Included in Websters: Yes
  • Included in Strongs: Yes
  • Included in Thayers: Yes
  • Included in BDB: Yes

Strongs Concordance:

Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Case

CASE, noun

1. A covering, box or sheath; that which incloses or contains; as a case for knives; a case for books; a watch case; a printers case; a pillow case

2. The outer part of a building.

3. A certain quantity; as a case of crown glass.

4. A building unfurnished.

CASE, verb transitive

1. To cover with a case; to surround with any material that shall inclose or defend.

2. To put in a case or box.

3. To strip off a case covering, or the skin.

CASE, noun Literally, that which falls, comes, or happens; an event. Hence, the particular state, condition, or circumstances that befall a person, or in which he is placed; as, make the case your own; this is the case with my friend; this is his present case

2. The state of the body, with respect to health or disease; as a case of fever; he is in a consumptive case; his case is desperate.

To be in good case is to be fat, and this phrase is customarily abridged, to be in case; applied to beasts, but not to men, except in a sense rather ludicrous.

3. A question; a state of facts involving a question for discussion or decision; as, the lawyer stated the case

4. A cause or suit in court; as, the case was tried at the last term. In this sense, case is nearly synonymous with cause, whose primary sense is nearly the same.

5. In grammar, the inflection of nouns, or a change of termination, to express a difference of relation in the word to others, or to the thing represented. The variation of nouns and adjectives is called declension; both case and declension signifying, falling or leaning from the first state of the word. Thus, liber is a book; libri, of a book; libro, to a book. In other words, case denotes a variation in the termination of a noun, to show how the noun acts upon the verb with which it is connected, or is acted upon by it, or by an agent. The cases, except the nominative, are called oblique cases.

In case is a phrase denoting condition or supposition; literally, in the event or contingency; if it should so fall out or happen.

Put the case suppose the event, or a certain state of things.

Action on the case in law, is an action in which the whole cause of complaint is set out in the writ.

CASE, verb intransitive To put cases.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Cased

CASED, participle passive Covered with a case.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Case-harden

CASE-HARDEN, verb transitive To harden the outer part or superficies, as of iron, by converting it into steel. This may be done by putting the iron into an iron box, with a cement, and exposing it, for some hours, to a red heat.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Caseic

CASEIC, adjective The caseic acid is the acid of cheese, or a substance so called, extracted from cheese.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Case-knife

CASE-KNIFE, noun A large table knife, often kept in a case.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Casemate

CASEMATE, noun

1. In fortification, a vault of masons work in the flank of a bastion, next to the curtain, somewhat inclined toward the capital of the bastion, serving as a battery to defend the face of the opposite bastion, and the moat or ditch.

2. A well, with its subterraneous branches, dug in the passage of the bastion, till the miner is heard at work, and air given to the mine.


Easton's Bible Dictionary
Casement

A barrier of open-work placed before windows (Proverbs 7:6). In Judges 5:28 the Hebrew word is rendered "lattice," in the LXX. "network," an opening through which cool air is admitted.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Casement

CASEMENT, noun

1. A hollow molding, usually one sixth or one fourth of a circle.

2. A little movable window, usually within a large, made to turn and open on hinges.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Caseous

CASEOUS, adjective Like cheese; having the qualities of cheese.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Casern

CASERN, noun A lodging for soldiers in garrison towns, usually near the rampart, containing each two beds.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Caseshot

CASESHOT, noun Musket balls, stones, old iron, etc., put in cases, to be discharged from cannon.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Case-worm

CASE-WORM, noun A worm that makes itself a case.