Lexicographical Neighbors of Dolmenic
Literary usage of Dolmenic
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Report of the Annual Meeting (1876)
"In some places the monuments are close together ; in others they are separated
by a number of tombs of the ordinary dolmenic type, as if the latter were ..."
2. Man Before Metals by Nicolas Joly (1889)
"... 1 According to the savant whom we have just quoted, the ethnical characters
of the African dolmenic race reappear among the modern Berbers and Touaregs, ..."
3. Journal of the British Archaeological Association by British Archaeological Association (1904)
"But markings of the same character with those engraved on rocks and dolmenic
stones in all parts of Europe, and painted on the rocky sides of their secret ..."
4. The Gold of Ophir: Whence Brought and by Whom? by Augustus Henry Keane (1901)
"Many parts of Canaan arc strewn with remains of a dolmenic type, and we know that
dolmens were in their inception the tombs of the departed, ..."
5. Arts of the World: Comparative Art Studies by Edwin Swift Balch (1920)
"From the dolmenic remains being thick along the north African coast and the shores
of France and England, and the Neolithic pottery female symbolic figure ..."
6. The New York Medical Times (1896)
"The Lybian alphabet differs much from the Punic, and approaches the dolmenic
writing. ACADEMY OF MEDICINE. Treatment of Malignant Tumors by Natural and ..."
7. Report by British Association for the Advancement of Science (1876)
"In some places the monuments are close together ; in others they are separated
by a number of tombs of the ordinary dolmenic type, as if the latter were ..."