Lexicographical Neighbors of Dorneck
Literary usage of Dorneck
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Living Age by Making of America Project, Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell (1893)
"Then one of us must Shoot the other," said dorneck soberly. ... dorneck threw a
keen glance at him. In the despair which Fernald's features so plainly ..."
2. Autobiography of William Michael by William Michael (1921)
"One is of Elizabeth Wilson dorneck of Lancaster, great grandmother of the ...
Another portrait is of Mrs. Sally dorneck Brenner, and is in the home of her ..."
3. Textiles and Clothing by Kate Heintz Watson, American School of Home Economics (1911)
"dorneck an inferior damask woven of silk, wool, linen, thread and gold, was made
in Flanders at the city of dorneck. From the Asiatic city Mosul came the ..."
4. An Illustrated Dictionary of Words Used in Art and Archaeology by John William Mollett (1883)
"... wrought of silk, wool, linen thread, and gold, at Tournay or dorneck ; 15th
century. Dormer Window. A gabled window in the sloping side of a roof, ..."
5. Costume of Colonial Times by Alice Morse Earle (1894)
"A heavy, coarse linen, much like canvas, originally made at dorneck or Tournay.
It appears on lists under various spellings ..."
6. Miscellanea Scotica.: A Collection of Tracts Relating to the History (1820)
"If you would enter the harbour of Tayne or dorneck, take the point of the bank
of sand which lies at the mouth of the haven on the NW side. ..."