Lexicographical Neighbors of Crowdedly
Literary usage of Crowdedly
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Botanical Register by Sydenham Edwards, John Bellenden Ker (1815)
"Umbels upright, rather numerously but not crowdedly flowered ; bloom scarlet and
saffron-coloured. Plants of it last with us three or four years, ..."
2. Transactions of the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences by Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences (1871)
"There are also short, stout spindles, crowdedly covered with warts on the whole
surface. Club-shaped spicula occasionally occur, having the larger end but ..."
3. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia by Royal Society of South Australia (1893)
"116), but is larger and the pronotum is crowdedly impressed punctate, a character
otherwise attached to the American ..."
4. Annals of the Lyceum of Natural History of New York by New York Academy of Sciences (1862)
"The upper surface is elsewhere naked and glabrous, although depresso-papillose
and crowdedly granulated, the granules appearing as if covered with a kind of ..."
5. The Edinburgh Literary Journal; Or, Weekly Register of Criticism and Belles by Percy Bysshe Shelley (1830)
"... Rooms on Thursday evening, was crowdedly attended. Mr Taylor, of course,
distinguished himself as the first harp-player In Edinburgh. ..."
6. Catalogue of Auriculidae, Proserpinidae, and Truncatellidae in the by Ludwig Georg Karl Píeiffer (1857)
"... solid, crowdedly grooved spirally, not shining, of a pale rusty colour, ...
solid, distinctly striated longitudinally, and crowdedly grooved spirally, ..."