¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Dazzles
1. dazzle [v] - See also: dazzle
Lexicographical Neighbors of Dazzles
Literary usage of Dazzles
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Knickerbocker: Or, New-York Monthly Magazine by Charles Fenno Hoffman, Timothy Flint, Lewis Gaylord Clark, Kinahan Cornwallis, John Holmes Agnew (1839)
"By that seraphic smile of loveliness, Which dazzles, not with bright hypocrisy :
I know thou art the star of my life's sky, MY OWN PECULIAR: ILIO ОГ ..."
2. Women and Economics: A Study of the Economic Relation Between Men and Women by Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1898)
"... Women and Economics whose splendid extravagance dazzles the world, whose
economic goods are the greatest, are often neither ..."
3. The American Quarterly Review by Robert Walsh (1835)
"in the way of safety; it was rather the fitful and fleeting meteor, which dazzles
for a time, to disturb and distort the sight accustomed to its delusive ..."
4. Dictionary of Quotations from Ancient and Modern English and Foreign Sources by James Wood (1899)
"... What dazzles is produced for the moment ; what is genuine remains unlost to
posterity. Goethe, Was Gott thut, ..."
5. Professor Conant: A Story of English and American Social and Political Life by Lucius Seth Huntington (1884)
"... CHAPTER V. THE AMERICAN COUSIN dazzles MY LOBD. LORD BOLTON had just returned
after a sojourn of two months in Paris. He had telegraphed a few friends ..."
6. Homœopathic therapeutics by Samuel Lilienthal (1879)
"of day dazzles and causes head to ache, with lachrymation, especially in open
air ; obscuration of vision dependent upon hepatic dc ment; painful heaviness ..."