Lexicographical Neighbors of Disaccustoming
Literary usage of Disaccustoming
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Lectures on the Philosophy of History by Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, John Sibree (1902)
"A renunciation, a disaccustoming, is the means of leading to an absolute basis
of existence. That contradiction which afflicts the ..."
2. English Garner: Ingatherings from Our History & Literature by Edward Arber (1897)
"... and Troy's new rising frame ; Meeting heroic feet in every line, That tread
high measures in the Scene of Fame, And I (though disaccustoming my Muse, ..."
3. Elizabethan Sonnets by Sidney Lee (1904)
"... and Troy's new rising frame ; Meeting heroic feet in every line, That tread
high measures in the Scene of Fame, And I (though disaccustoming my Muse, ..."
4. Delia by Samuel Daniel, Henry Constable (1896)
"... Meeting heroic feet in every line, That tread high measures in the scene of
fame, And I, though disaccustoming my muse, And sing but low songs in an ..."
5. A Grammar of the German Language by Georg Heinrich Noehden, Barnas Sears (1842)
"By disaccustoming the eye from the old type, many valuable productions of
literature, unles reprinted, would be rendered less easy to read, ..."
6. Reducing Weight Comfortably: The Dietetic Treatment of Obesity by Gustav Gaertner (1914)
"... is easier to attain than educating them to be temperate, and because I attach
especial importance to disaccustoming them ever after from eating bread ..."