Lexicographical Neighbors of Stounding
Literary usage of Stounding
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The British Journal of Homoeopathy edited by John James Drysdale, Robert Ellis Dudgeon, Richard Hughes, John Rutherfurd Russell (1854)
"... easier by bending forward; dull, stitchy, deep-seated pain in right side of
face for a few minutes; occasional dull shooting (stounding ..."
2. A New Form of Nervous Disease: Together with an Essay on Erythroxylon Coca by William S. Searle (1881)
"... chest, ankles, and thighs for which he felt obliged to coin a word—"stounding.
... to regard the " stounding" and shock as very similar sensations. ..."
3. The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference on the by Charles George Herbermann (1913)
"Still, in the hands of cold scientific Protestant investigators, his character
and work have of late undergone an »stounding rehabilitation, one that calls ..."
4. First Lines of the Practice of Physic by William Cullen (1808)
"... exactly circumscribed; the whole being attended with a pain of distention,
often of a stounding or throbbing kind, and frequently ending in suppuration. ..."