Lexicographical Neighbors of Quiescences
Literary usage of Quiescences
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Outline of History: Being a Plain History of Life and Mankind by Herbert George Wells (1920)
"... a doctrine more difficult indeed isp, but easier to reconcile with the habits
and dispositions quiescences of everyday life in the Near East. ..."
2. Speeches and Addresses Delivered in the Congress of the United States: And by Henry Winter Davis, John Angel James Cresswell (1867)
"All their barriers of laws and certificates, presumptions against fact, and ac-
quiescences extorted from protests and denials, are swept away. ..."
3. Tribune Essays: Leading Articles Contributed to the New York Tribune by by Charles Taber Congdon (1869)
"If any person fondly thinks that the Northern people are ready to go back to the
deadly-lively ac- quiescences which created the Compromise Bill, ..."
4. The Control of Hunger in Health and Disease by Anton Julius Carlson (1916)
"The "emptiness" feeling does not disappear entirely during the relative quiescences
of the empty stomach between the hunger periods. ..."
5. The Control of Hunger in Health and Disease by Anton Julius Carlson (1916)
"The "emptiness" feeling does not disappear entirely during the relative quiescences
of the empty stomach between the hunger periods. ..."
6. A Narrative by John Ashburnham of His Attendance on King Charles the First by John Ashburnham, George Ashburnham Ashburnham (1830)
"The last of his three ac- quiescences was indeed a banishment: but the second,
passed in Spain, if a banishment, was self inflicted; and has been elsewhere ..."