¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Dogates
1. dogate [n] - See also: dogate
Lexicographical Neighbors of Dogates
Literary usage of Dogates
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Sussex Archaeological Collections Relating to the History and Antiquities of by Sussex Archaeological Society (1873)
"... south west part there of neare vnto the lands of Mre Byne and Wm dogates before
... and on the West by the lands of M™ Byne and Wm dogates All w"* said ..."
2. The History of England: From the Invasion of Julius Cæsar, to the Revolution by David Hume (1811)
"Oa this discovery, four- teeu of tlle cn'ef dogates were seized in the house of Mr.
Oliver Bond.1' Lord Edward Fitzgerald escaped, but being afterwards ..."
3. Report of the Annual Meeting (1844)
"... concealing itself during the daytime under the moss on the trunks. Limax
dogates (Draparnaud).—The Irish specimens of this Limax agree with ..."
4. American Eloquence: a Collection of Speeches and Addresses: By the Most by Frank Moore (1857)
"... of delegates ought not to be iu exact on to the number of inhabitants, be- e
influence and power of those States dogates are numerous will be greater, ..."
5. The Queen of the Adriatic: Or, Venice, Mediæval and Modern by Mrs Clara Erskine Clement Waters (1893)
"... he is called) wrote a connected and trustworthy story of his own time, can we
clearly trace the course of events. From 976 on through the dogates of the ..."
6. A System of Mineralogy: Including an Extended Treatise on Crystallography by James Dwight Dana (1837)
"It occurs in detached pieces in clay, on the coast near Whitby, in Yorkshire,
and at Ballard Point, and elsewhere. It is the dogates of Dioscorides and ..."