Lexicographical Neighbors of Cabalisms
Literary usage of Cabalisms
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Works of Thomas Shepard: First Pastor of the First Church, Cambridge by Thomas Shepard (1853)
"... but also what curious cabalisms and fond interpretations men make of the Hebrew
text, the answer to which learned Rivet hath long since made, ..."
2. The Literature of the Church of England Indicated in Selections from the by Richard Cattermole (1844)
"For what is all the beggarly skill of the Arabians in physics and the mathematics,
all the cabalisms of the Jews; in sum, all the rather folly than wisdom, ..."
3. The Mathematical and Philosophical Works of the Right Rev. John Wilkins by John Wilkins (1802)
"... the holy spirit hath purposely involved in the words of scripture, every secret
that belongs to any art or science, under such cabalisms as these. ..."
4. The Quotations of the New Testament from the Old, Considered in the Light of by Franklin Johnson (1895)
"... the superstitions, the cabalisms, the puerilities, the absurdities, the
insanities, which stare at him from every page of the rabbinic interpretations ..."
5. Novels, Poems and Letters of Charles Kingsley by Charles Kingsley (1899)
"... heard such silly cabalisms, certainly." " You have ? Then suppose that I went
on, and saw in my dream how this same academic and unbeliever, ..."
6. Israel in Egypt; or, The books of Genesis and Exodus, illustrated by by William Osburn (1854)
"... gint, were mere cabalisms. Their import had been long forgotten, and they were
only to be represented in the new version by the transcription of their ..."