Lexicographical Neighbors of Broadways
Literary usage of Broadways
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Chariots of Fire and Iron by Daniel Thompson Taylor (1888)
"On these endless broadways, the grandest highways of a great world's travel and
traffic, the cars make their rapid transits, and here they collide with ..."
2. A Chariot of Fire: The Cars in Prophecy & History, with the Wonders of Rapid by Daniel T. Taylor (1888)
"On these endless broadways, the grandest highways of a great world's travel and
traffic, the cars make their rapid transits, and here they collide with ..."
3. The Ecclesiologist by Ecclesiological Society (1849)
"The effect of tiles depends on their juxtaposition broadways ; a series, ...
But to get them to be broadways, it is necessary that they should be disposed ..."
4. Annual Report of the American Institute of the City of New York (1857)
"He said that we must have two more Broadways at least. ... It is extremely doubtful
whether two more Broadways would relieve the main artery of its tide of ..."
5. Iron: An Illustrated Weekly Journal for Iron and Steel Manufacturers edited by Sholto Percy, Perry Fairfax Nursey (1847)
"... the float boards of the paddle-wheel may be brought broadways during any
required half of their course, and of course edgeways through the other half. ..."
6. "From Under the Dust of Ages": A Series of Six Lectures on the History and by William St. Chad Boscawen (1886)
"In speaking of the great city of Nineveh as the city of streets or broadways, he
alludes to the most important feature of the topography of the Assyrian ..."