Lexicographical Neighbors of Dindling
Literary usage of Dindling
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Dublin Journal of Medical Science (1907)
"I am informed also by Dr. Hurst that after he was taken ill he wrote to an
apothecary requesting him to send him something for a *dindling (tingling) ..."
2. The Diary of the Reverend John Mill: Minister of the Parishes of Dunrossness by John Mill (1889)
"... away of the noxious humour, was as clean and whole as ever, and never felt
the least tincture of the distemper since, except a little dindling [? ..."
3. Promptorium Parvulorum Sive Clericorum, Dictionarius Anglo-latinus Princeps by British Museum, Galfridus (1843)
"... 1579, recommends the juice of feverfew as a remedy for the " eares ache, and
dindling." Dutch, tintelen, to tingle. * The office for the dead received ..."
4. Promptorium parvulorum sive clericorum: lexicon anglo-latinum princeps by Galfridus Anglicus, Albert Way (1843)
"Langham, in the Garden of Health, 1579, recommends the juice of feverfew as a
remedy for the " eares ache, and dindling." Dutch, tintelen, to tingle. ..."