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Definition of Ciderpress
1. Noun. A press that is used to extract the juice from apples.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Ciderpress
Literary usage of Ciderpress
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Our Colonial Curriculum, 1607-1776 by Colyer Meriwether (1907)
"His mental ciderpress could squeeze the last drop of meaning from the raw materials
of thought. Know your book, said Roger Bacon, and you know everything of ..."
2. Wise, Witty, Eloquent Kings of the Platform and Pulpit: Biographies by Melville De Lancey Landon (1890)
"‘He has some of this same breed. It is an apple which will turn when it is trodden
upon. Nobody but a ciderpress can eat one and live. ..."
3. Anderson Crow, Detective by George Barr McCutcheon (1920)
"'Specially if you've got trees that bear in the fall. Fall apples make the best
cider. They ain't so mushy. And as fer the feller that owns a ciderpress, ..."
4. Wheeler's Graded Literary Readers, with Interpretations by William Iler Crane, William Henry Wheeler (1919)
"I WASHINGTON IRVING into baskets and barrels for the market, others heaped up in
rich piles for the ciderpress. Farther on he beheld great fields of Indian ..."
5. An Old Exeter Manuscript: A Short Chronicle of the Church of Exeter : Tenths by Oswald Joseph Reichel (1907)
"I sacrifice the purely casual " ciderpress " with pleasure. Irrespective of its
uses, the block in question remains an example of that for which alone I ..."
6. DEVON AND CORNWALL NOTES & QUERIES. (1907)
"I sacrifice the purely casual " ciderpress " with pleasure. Irrespective of its
uses, the block in question remains an example of that for which alone I ..."