Lexicographical Neighbors of Cowheards
Literary usage of Cowheards
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Representative English Comedies: With Introductory Essays and Notes, an by Charles Mills Gayley, Alwin Thaler (1913)
"Ia cowheards sonne, because I turne not a drunken, whore-hunting rake-hell like
thy selfe ! Quick. Rake-hell ! rakehell ! 120 Offers to draw, and GOULDING ..."
2. Humour, Wit, & Satire of the Seventeenth Century by John Ashton (1883)
"Scogin revolving in his mind the cowheards words, did set up his horse at a poore
mans house, and returned to the Cow- heard, supposing that he had beene a ..."
3. Humour, Wit, & Satire of the Seventeenth Century by John Ashton (1883)
"Scogin revolving in his mind the cowheards words, did set up his horse at a poore
mans house, and returned to the Cow- heard, supposing that he had beene a ..."
4. La Mort D'Arthure: The History of King Arthur and of the Knights of the by Thomas Malory (1866)
"... and sir Tor, the which was begotten upon Aries the cowheards wife, but this
sir Tor was begotten before Aries the ..."
5. Eastward Hoe by George Chapman, John Marston, Ben Jonson, Felix Emmanuel Schelling (1903)
"Ia 160 cowheards sonne, because I turne not a drunken, whore-hunting rake-hell
like thy selfe ! S>uick. Rakehell! rakehell! Offers to draw, and Goulding ..."
6. Early Travellers in Scotland by P Hume (editor) Brown (1891)
"... and cowheards, who feede cattell, and spinne, and make some woollen clothe,
which carryed to bee dyed and dressed at ..."