Lexicographical Neighbors of Doppings
Literary usage of Doppings
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Revised Reports: Being a Republication of Such Cases in the English by Frederick Pollock, Robert Campbell, Oliver Augustus Saunders, Arthur Beresford Cane, Joseph Gerald Pease, William Bowstead, Great Britain Courts (1899)
"... where the Dopping family papers were kept; that Lowton House is the family
mansion of the doppings ; that the papers in his possession were handed to ..."
2. Reports of Cases Heard and Decided in the House of Lords on Appeals and by Great Britain Parliament. House of Lords, Charles Clark, William Finnelly, Jonathan Cogswell Perkins (1873)
"... which was the family mansion-house of the doppings; that is, the mansion-house *
of the * 539 family of which Anthony Dopping, formerly Bishop of Meath, ..."
3. Ireland and Her People; a Library of Irish Biography: Together with a by Thomas W. H. Fitzgerald (1910)
"... that a black man had no rights which a white man was bound to respect. Happily,
humanity and civilization are in the end too much for the doppings and ..."
4. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the English Courts of Common Law by Great Britain Bail Court (1853)
"... found tied up together with other papers relating to the see, in a house called
Lowton House, which was the family mansion of the doppings, that is, ..."
5. New Reports of Cases Heard in the House of Lords, on Appeals and Writs of Error by Richard Bligh, Great Britain Parliament. House of Lords (1838)
"... where the Dopping family papers were kept, that Lowton House is the family
mansion of the doppings, and that the papers in his possession were handed to ..."
6. New Reports of Cases Heard in the House of Lords: On Appeals and Writs of by Great Britain Parliament. House of Lords, Richard Bligh (1838)
"... where the Dopping family papers were kept, that Lowton House is the family
mansion of the doppings, and that the papers in his possession were handed to ..."
7. The Miscellany of the Irish Archaeological Society. Vol. 1 by Dublin Irish Archaeological Society (1846)
"It was the seat of the doppings, to whom our Author was related.— See Journey.
Sat: Hayy" if p. ..."