Lexicographical Neighbors of Bandittis
Literary usage of Bandittis
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Records of the Cape Colony from February 1793 [to: Copied for the Cape by Cape of Good Hope (South Africa), Great Britain Public Record Office (1903)
"Armed bandittis, like the Army of the Faith in Spain, and with similar views,
... The unfortunate people composing these bandittis, goaded by the artifices ..."
2. Soil Conditions and Plant Growth by Edward John Russell (1917)
"So much were Tull's writings esteemed, Cobbett tells us, that they were " plundered
by English writers not a few and by Scotch in whole bandittis ..."
3. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1826)
"... or bandittis, or what do they call them as attacks one there, I should like
Italy well enough, and to see the Pope, and the Venus of ..."
4. A Record of the Boston Stage by William Warland Clapp (1853)
"... Shall a lawless bandittis, faces, The refuge of a degenerate people Pass
unnoticed, and be suffered To triumph over the opinions And the long, ..."
5. A Philosophical Dictionary by Voltaire (1824)
"... that kings being often chiefs of banditti, or warriors armed against those
bandittis ; it was not possible to be subject to the government of a woman. ..."
6. Principles and Acts of the Revolution in America: Or, An Attempt to Collect by Hezekiah Niles (1822)
"... patriotism become suppliants for immoderate vengeance: the whole soul clamors
for arms, and is on fire to attack the brutal bandittis we fly agonizing ..."