¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Senilities
1. senility [n] - See also: senility
Lexicographical Neighbors of Senilities
Literary usage of Senilities
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Burford Papers: Being Letters of Samuel Crisp to His Sister at Burford; and by William Holden Hutton, Samuel Crisp (1905)
"Much the same is true of Senilities, or Solitary Amusements ; in prose and ...
l Graves's own pleasures were very different. They were 1 Senilities, p. ..."
2. Burford Papers: Being Letters of Samuel Crisp to His Sister at Burford; and by William Holden Hutton, Samuel Crisp (1905)
"Much the same is true of Senilities, or Solitary Amusements ; in prose and ...
l Graves's own pleasures were very different. They were 1 Senilities, p. ..."
3. Burford Papers: Being Letters of Samuel Crisp to His Sister at Burford; and by William Holden Hutton, Samuel Crisp (1905)
"Much the same is true of Senilities, or Solitary Amusements ; in prose and verse,
... Graves's own pleasures were very different. They were * Senilities, p. ..."
4. Dictionary of National Biography by LESLIE. STEPHEN, Sidney Lee (1890)
"Senilities, or Solitary Amusements in Prose and Verse, with a Cursory Disquisition
on the Future Condition of the Sexes, by the Editor of the "Reveries of ..."
5. Life and Correspondence of Theodore Parker: Minister of the Twenty-eighth by John Weiss (1864)
"... he has an audience of 150 or 200 : most of them come only from curiosity, or
to amuse themselves at the senilities of this philosophe. He hates Hegel. ..."
6. A Short History of Germany by Ernest Flagg Henderson (1902)
"The same inactivity prevailed in the Netherlands, where Marlborough was hampered
and constantly irritated by the senilities of the Dutch war council. ..."
7. A Short History of Germany: 9 A.D. to 1871 A.D. by Ernest Flagg Henderson (1906)
"... by the senilities of the Dutch war council. In August, 1702, a Dutch-English
fleet set out to take Cadiz, but contented itself with the capture of a few ..."
8. Life and Correspondence of Theodore Parker: Minister of the Twenty-eighth by John Weiss (1864)
"... he has an audience of 150 or 200: most of them come only from curiosity, or
to amuse themselves at the senilities of this philosophe. He hates Hegel. ..."