Con*sult" (?), v. i. [imp. & p.p. Consulted; p.pr. & vb.n. Consulting.] [L. consultare, fr. consulere to consult: cf. f. consulter. Cf. Counsel.]
To seek the opinion or advice of another; to take consel; to deliberate together; to confer.
Let us consult upon to-morrow's business.
Shak.
All the laws of England have been made by the kings England, consulting with the nobility and commons.
Hobbes.
© Webster 1913.
Con*sult", v. t.
1.
To ask advice of; to seek the opinion of; to apply to for information or instruction; to refer to; as, to consult a physician; to consult a dictionary.
Men fergot, or feared, to consult . . . ; they were content to consult liberaries.
Whewell.
2.
To have reference to, in judging or acting; to have regard to; to consider; as, to consult one's wishes.
We are . . . to consult the necessities of life, rather than matters of ornament and delight.
L'Estrange.
3.
To deliberate upon; to take for.
[Obs.]
Manythings were there consulted for the future, yet nothing was positively resolved.
Clarendon.
4.
To bring about by counsel or contrivance; to devise; to contrive.
[Obs.]
Thou hast consulted shame to thy use by cutting off many people.
Hab. ii. 10.
© Webster 1913.
Con*sult" (? ∨ ?), n.
1.
The act of consulting or deliberating; consultation; also, the result of consulation; determination; decision.
[Obs.]
The council broke;
And all grave consults dissolved in smoke.
Dryden.
2.
A council; a meeting for consultation.
[Obs.] "A
consult of coquettes."
Swift.
3.
Agreement; concert
[Obs.]
Dryden.
© Webster 1913.