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Definition of Cabrit
1. n. Same as Cabrée.
Definition of Cabrit
1. cabrie [n -S] - See also: cabrie
Lexicographical Neighbors of Cabrit
Literary usage of Cabrit
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Chronological History of the West Indies by Southey, Thomas (1827)
"... either laid flat, or greatly damaged — the town of Portsmouth entirely
destroyed — the greatest part of the barracks on Morne cabrit carried away; and, ..."
2. Notes on Haiti: Made During a Residence in that Republic by Charles Mackenzie (1830)
"... capital—Trianon— Mountain pass—Morne cabrit—Fond au Diable—Plain of Cul de
Sac—Arrival at cottage—Occupations—Rumoured insurrection—Trial and execution ..."
3. Die Balearen: Geschildert in Wort und Bild by Ludwig Salvator (1897)
"Sie hiessen fortan Sant cabrit und Sant Bassa. ... Jahrhundert stammen, Reliquien
der Vaterlands-Märtyrer cabrit und Bassa, sowie ein theilweise ..."
4. Mallorca by Sebastian Melmoth (2001)
"Two of the Mallorcan leaders, Guillem cabrit and Guillem Bassa, sent a message to
... In a play on the names of the Mallorcan leaders cabrit and Bassa, ..."
5. The Annual Register, Or, A View of the History, Politics, and Literature for by Edmund Burke (1817)
"But this convulsion of nature was stronger felt at Prince Rupert's than in Roseau,
and the consequences most distressing ; the barrack in the inner cabrit ..."
6. The Annual Register edited by Edmund Burke (1817)
"... the inner cabrit rendered totally uninhabitable, and the men's barracks in
Fort Shiny with one side of the roof off; the large officer's barrack is also ..."