Definition of Toboggin

1. toboggan [v -ED, -ING, -S] - See also: toboggan

Lexicographical Neighbors of Toboggin

tobiko
tobine
tobines
toboggan
toboggan cap
toboggan slide
toboggan slides
tobogganed
tobogganer
tobogganers
tobogganing
tobogganings
tobogganist
tobogganists
toboggans
toboggin (current term)
toboggins
tobogin
tobogins
tobramycin
tobramycin adenylyltransferase
tobreak
tobrest
tobroken
tobruise
tobruised
toburst
toby
toby fillpot jug
toby jug

Literary usage of Toboggin

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Sketches from America by John White (1870)
"... a toboggin is made to hold at least two persons, and as in thern practice of ... toboggin steers with his hand. Any want of care or skill on his part is ..."

2. Sketches from America by John White (1870)
"In Canada a toboggin is made to hold at least two persons, and as in the practice of ... The sitter in the back seat of the toboggin steers with his hand. ..."

3. The Canadian Handbook and Tourist's Guide: Giving a Description of Canadian by Henry Beaumont Small, John Taylor (1867)
"We do not know of any exercise more invigorating than guiding a toboggin at ... A toboggin is a light Indian sleigh made of very thin wood and curled over ..."

4. The Canadian Handbook and Tourist's Guide: Giving a Description of Canadian by Henry Beaumont Small, John Taylor (1866)
"We do not know of any exercise more invigorating than guiding a toboggin at ... A toboggin is a light Indian sleigh made of very thin wood and curled over ..."

5. Italian Byways by John Addington Symonds (1883)
"... and made the frame of the toboggin tremble—down over hillocks of hard frozen snow, dashing and bounding, to the river and the bridge. ..."

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