Lexicographical Neighbors of Damneder
Literary usage of Damneder
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Macmillan's Magazine by David Masson, George Grove, John Morley, Mowbray Morris (1864)
"... and the deduction that the Bengalees were damneder niggers than ever, occupied
their thoughts so entirely, that no room was left for more noble or ..."
2. Lawrie Todd: Or, the Settlers in the Woods by John Galt (1849)
"Squire," said he, " I ben'ta thing to bray in a mortar, so thinks I myself; but
I would be damneder than seven fools and a philosopher, ..."
3. Edmund Yates: His Recollections and Experiences by Edmund Hodgson Yates (1884)
"I am very sorry, my dear Dickens," said Forster, " that I cannot return the
compliment, for a damneder ass than your friend Mr. Blank I never met in a ..."
4. The Competition Wallah by George Otto Trevelyan (1866)
"The fear lest Hely should be condemned by the machinations of the friends of the
Hindoo, and the deduction that the Bengalees were damneder niggers than ..."
5. The Garrick Club by Percy Hetherington Fitzgerald (1904)
"I am sorry, my dear Dickens," rolled out Forster, "that I cannot reciprocate the
compliments of your friend, for, in the whole course of my life, a damneder ..."
6. Edmund Campion: A Biography by Richard Simpson (1867)
"When grammar's done we're turned to poetry. There ne'er was damneder rubbish:
mounts and founts, Divine Apollo, and the Muses nine: ..."
7. Life and Letters of Thomas Henry Huxley by Thomas Henry Huxley, Leonard Huxley (1903)
"Did you ever read Henry George's book " Progress and Poverty " 1 It is more
damneder nonsense than poor Rousseau's blether. And to think of the popularity ..."