Lexicographical Neighbors of Crenelling
Literary usage of Crenelling
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The World's Great Masterpieces: History, Biography, Science, Philosophy by Caroline Ticknor, Harry Thurston Peck, Frank Richard Stockton (1901)
"These were the sappers crenelling the walls for musketry; and this I could now
perceive was looked upon as a position of no small importance. ..."
2. Library of Useful Knowledge by Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (Great Britain) (1838)
"In a common Indian plant called Bryophyllum, the leaves are capable of forming
young plants in the crenelling of their border; in the rare little Mai axis ..."
3. The Phytologist: A Popular Botanical Miscellany edited by George Luxford, Edward Newman (1851)
"The author observes, however, that "in a common Indian plant, called Bryophyllum,
the leaves are capable of forming young plants in the crenelling of their ..."
4. The Panorama of Science and Art: Embracing the Sciences of Aerostation by James Smith (1815)
"The grounding-tool has the shape of a shoemaker's knife, with a fine crenelling
edge. It is used to indent the plate with lines in every direction. ..."
5. The Cabinet of Arts: Or, General Instructor in Arts, Science, Trade by Hewson Clarke, John Dougall (1817)
"... and the present grounding-tool introduced, which, in its form, resembles a
shoemaker's cutting-board-knif«, with a fine crenelling on the edje. ..."