Definition of Disjected

1. disject [v] - See also: disject

Lexicographical Neighbors of Disjected

disinvests
disinvigorate
disinvigorated
disinvigorates
disinvigorating
disinvite
disinvited
disinvites
disinviting
disinvolve
disinvolved
disinvolves
disinvolving
disir
disject
disjected (current term)
disjecting
disjection
disjects
disjoin
disjoined
disjoined pyeloplasty
disjoining
disjoins
disjoint
disjointed
disjointedly
disjointedness
disjointing
disjointly

Literary usage of Disjected

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Classical Influence in English Literature in the Nineteenth Century: And by William Chislett (1918)
"For who will say that Berkeley's philosophers have the Platonic artistry of speech, keeping up the good dialectic and yet maintaining the disjected sway of ..."

2. The Expositor edited by Samuel Cox, William Robertson Nicoll, James Moffatt (1903)
"Can anything be more evident than that the smooth, and polished style of Tennyson, and the disjected rugged- ness of Browning, belong to different stages in ..."

3. The Collected Writings of Edward Irving by Edward Irving (1865)
"... but one concatenated systematic testimony unto the Christ; into whom, as all the disjected members are to be gathered up again into the head, ..."

4. Sermons, lectures, and occasional discourses by Edward Irving (1828)
"... but one concatenated system^ testimony unto the Christ; into whom, as all* disjected members are to be gathered up ag£ into the head, so believe I, ..."

5. Publications by Musical Antiquarian Society (1842)
"... who persuaded him it was but ane apprehension of his fantasie, at which he sould not be disjected; in the mean tyme comes there letters from his wife of ..."

6. Harper's New Monthly Magazine by Henry Mills Alden (1883)
"At various points the cruel cliffs are made »till more cruel by huge disjected rucks scattered about at a distance from the mainland, as if tbe shore were ..."

7. Southern History of the War by Edward Alfred Pollard (1866)
"... him the benefit of intelligent advice, and in collecting the ill-preserved and disjected historical testimony of the struggle of the Confederates. ..."

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