Lexicographical Neighbors of Drouthier
Literary usage of Drouthier
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1828)
"seph ! and is this the return you get for all your wakeful nights, and long
laborious days—for your drouthy calculations, and drouthier harangues ! ..."
2. The Scalp Hunters, Or, Romantic Adventures in Northern Mexico by Mayne Reid (1851)
"They sat down close to where I lay; and, prying out the bung, filled the liquor
into their tin cups, and commenced imbibing, A drouthier pair of mortals ..."
3. The Edinburgh Literary Journal; Or, Weekly Register of Criticism and Belles by Percy Bysshe Shelley (1829)
"... drouthier," for so true lias the eye of the sculptor proved, that every one
is said instantly to recognise the cobbler's phiz and person. ..."
4. Farm Development: An Introductory Book in Agriculture, Including a by Willet Martin Hays (1910)
"... laws in which are recognized the general principles as emphasized by the best
business and legal experience in the drouthier states which earlier began ..."
5. Jane Seton; or, The king's advocate: A Scottish Historical Romance by James Grant (1857)
"... replied with his habitual tone of insolence— "By my faith, cummer Jean, ye
shall be thirstier and drouthier than even was I in Douglasdale, ..."