Lexicographical Neighbors of Cueists
Literary usage of Cueists
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Punch by Mark Lemon, Henry Mayhew, Tom Taylor, Shirley Brooks, Francis Cowley Burnand, Owen Seaman (1898)
"... will seek to recoup bis Fortune by playing Bagatelle at the Cat anil Mousetrap
in Kentish Town with the Lower Order of cueists. Though why such Natural ..."
2. The Works of the Right Honorable Edmund Burke by Edmund Burke (1891)
"Trans. by PA Ash won h, translator of Dr. cueists 'History of the English
Constitution.' REUMONT (Alfred de). ..."
3. Southey's Common-place Book by Robert Southey (1876)
"them sooner to the conversation of th > above their age. For, though dancing
cueists merely in outward gracefulness of nation, yet it gives children manly ..."
4. The Sermons of Henry Ward Beecher in Plymouth Church, Brooklyn by Henry Ward Beecher, Truman Jeremiah Ellinwood (1873)
"EFFECT OF cueists BIETH. Lre there not many to whom every street in the city is
more familiar than the ways of this old Book, this old Eden, ..."
5. Chambers's Encyclopædia: A Dictionary of Universal Knowledge for the People by Ephraim Chambers (1870)
"... or COW'ITCH, cueists of short, slender, brittle hairs, which grow on the
outside of the pods of plants of the genus J/unut, natives of the tropical ..."
6. Baily's Magazine of Sports and Pastimes (1898)
"It is not often that cueists of the calibre of Messrs. Bosanquet, Hargreaves,
Page, &c., are seen at Oxford or Cambridge. General news may be very briefly ..."