Lexicographical Neighbors of Corbinas
Literary usage of Corbinas
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Voyage to South America: Describing at Large the Spanish Cities, Towns by Antonio de Ulloa, John Adams (1806)
"The most pajat- able are the corbinas, and the pege reyes, ... The corbinas, and
the king's fish, infinitely excel those of Spain ; the latter is also ..."
2. A Voyage to South-America: Describing at Large the Spanish Cities, Towns by Antonio de Ulloa, Jorge Juan (1758)
"The molt pala. table are the corbinas, and the Pege Reyes, ... The corbinas, and
the king's flub, infinitely excel ..."
3. The Northmen, Columbus and Cabot, 985-1503: The Voyages of the Northmen by Julius Emil Olson, Edward Gaylord Bourne (1906)
"They caught many fish like those of Castile — dace, salmon, hake, dory, gilt
heads, mullets, corbinas, shrimps,1 and they saw sardines. ..."
4. The History of North America by Guy Carleton Lee, Francis Newton Thorpe (1903)
"They caught many fish like those of Castille—dace, salmon, hake, dory, gilt heads,
skates, corbinas, shrimps, and they saw sardines. They found many aloes. ..."
5. Discovery and Exploration by Alfred Brittain, George Edward Reed (1903)
"They caught many fish like those of Castille—dace, salmon, hake, dory, gilt heads,
skates, corbinas, shrimps, and they saw sardines. They found many aloes. ..."