¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Demonologies
1. demonology [n] - See also: demonology
Lexicographical Neighbors of Demonologies
Literary usage of Demonologies
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Autobiography by John Stuart Mill, Thomas Carlyle (1909)
"Over these last writings of Scott, his Napoleons, demonologies, Scotch Histories,
and the rest, criticism, finding still much to wonder at, much to commend, ..."
2. The Southern Review by Albert Taylor Bledsoe, Methodist Episcopal Church, South (1874)
"... the hungry longing of the human heart, whose divine fulfilment is in Christ,
endeavors to satisfy itself with demonologies and hosts of saints, ..."
3. Literary Style: And Other Essays by William Mathews (1881)
"... a poem so saturated with magic and snaky fascination, that, compared with it,
the demonologies of Godwin, Maturin, Lewis and Shelley seem tame and cold. ..."
4. Studies in European Literature: Being the Taylorian Lectures 1889-1899 by Taylor Institution, Stéphane Mallarmé, Walter Pater (1900)
"... in the middle ages he becomes supernatural and figures largely in demonologies,
and so he comes through Rabelais and Dickens right down to our own time. ..."