Lexicographical Neighbors of Bidentals
Literary usage of Bidentals
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Popular Science Review: A Quarterly Miscellany of Entertaining and (1879)
"A third extensive series carried the tortoise likeness further by the absence of
tusks, but with the same composite cranial structure as in the bidentals ..."
2. Transactions of the Geological Society of London by Geological Society of London (1856)
"The most remarkable character of the fossils selected for description is that
which their discoverer, Mr. Bain, has indicated by calling them ' bidentals ..."
3. Proceedings by Royal Colonial Institute (Great Britain) (1879)
"A third extensive series earned the tortoise likeness further by the absence of
tusks, but with the same composite cranial structure as in the bidentals; ..."
4. Creatures of Other Days by Henry Neville Hutchinson, William Henry Flower (1894)
"These fossils were first made known to English geologists under the name of "
bidentals," by Mr. Bain, on account of their two teeth, or tusks, ..."
5. Naples: ses monumens et ses curiosités, avec un catalogue détaillé du Musée by Stanislao d'. Aloe (1856)
"... et ensuite continuées par Ferdinand I. Une des premières découvertes fut le
petit temple du Génie de Stable et les deux autels circulaires, ou bidentals ..."