path
Webster 1828
P'ATH, noun plural paths. [Gr. to tread.]1. A way beaten or trodden by the feet of man or beast, or made hard by wheels; that part of a highway on which animals or carriages ordinarily pass; applied to the ground only, and never to a paved street in a city.2. Any narrow way beaten by the foot.3. The way, course or track where a body moves in the atmosphere or in space; as the path of a planet or comet; the path of a meteor.4. A way or passage.5. Course of life.He marketh all my paths. Job 33:11.6. Precepts; rules prescribed.Uphold my going in thy paths. Psalms 17:4.7. Course of providential dealings; moral government.All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth to such as keep his covenant. Psalms 25:4.P'ATH, verb transitive To make a path by treading; to beat a path as in snow.To push forward; to cause to go; to make way for.P'ATH, verb intransitive To walk abroad