¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Cellarages
1. cellarage [n] - See also: cellarage
Lexicographical Neighbors of Cellarages
Literary usage of Cellarages
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. History of the United Netherlands, from the Death of William the Silent to by John Lothrop Motley (1900)
"... and besieged all washed together into the German Ocean, and it was hard digging
and grubbing among the scanty cellarages of the dilapidated houses. ..."
2. The Scottish Nation: Or, The Surnames, Families, Literature, Honours, and by William Anderson (1863)
"... cellarages and colleagues was long a favourite with the lower classes, but it
U no» less popular, as its marvellous descriptions are no» less credited. ..."
3. German Romance: Specimens of Its Chief Authors by Thomas Carlyle, Ernst Theodor Amadeus Hoffmann, Jean Paul (1841)
"... in all cellarages a precious wound-water, which the patient has only to take
and pour over his slashes and bone-breakages — gin- twist, I mean, or beer, ..."
4. The Law of Party Walls and Fences: Including the New Metropolitan Buildings by Humphry William Woolrych (1845)
"The act then proceeds to forbid the letting of places unfit for habitation, as
cellarages, &c., upon pain of forfeiting 2().v. a-day upou conviction before ..."
5. California Desert Trails by Joseph Smeaton Chase (1919)
"... but along the mountain-side ran the ancient sea-line, reminding me that I was
in one of Neptune's cellarages, pumped dry by the sun. ..."