Dictionary entry

Consult (2)

Webster's Dictionary 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 forgot, or feared, to consult nature...; they were content to consult libraries.

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.

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.

Thou hast consulted shame to thy house by cutting off many people.

Hab. ii. 10.