¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Consters
1. conster [v] - See also: conster
Lexicographical Neighbors of Consters
Literary usage of Consters
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Chief Elizabethan Dramatists, Excluding Shakespeare by William Allan Neilson (1911)
"Ay, ay. we consters so. Duke. Confest : ' tia true. Doct. Nor let it stand against
me as a bar To thrust me from ..."
2. A Discourse of the Common Weal of this Realm of England: First Printed in by Elizabeth Lamond, William Cunningham (1893)
"... thinke it a greate shame for him to be brought from that he once hathe affirmed
to be true. Therfore whatsoever he reades after, he consters it for the ..."
3. The Works of Sir Walter Ralegh, Kt by Sir Walter Raleigh, Thomas Birch, William Oldys (1829)
"... as both Josephus consters it, and as it may be gathered by his former answers
to Samuel, when he acknowledged himself the least of the least tribe. ..."
4. Works of the Camden Society by Camden Society (Great Britain), Royal Historical Society (Great Britain) (1875)
"... and every one here consters it soe, for it is, in effect, telling yc world y'
he thinkes the Dr insufficient for the work, otherwise he would not set ..."
5. The New English by T[homas] L[aurence] Kington Oliphant (1886)
"A man consters a lesson to a lady, and she listens to his construction, p. 362.
The word piety means natural affection in p. 103 ; it is sundered from pity, ..."