Lexicographical Neighbors of Ebonised
Literary usage of Ebonised
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Belgravia by Mary Elizabeth Braddon (1875)
"The walls are painted a delicate French gray, relieved by a four-foot dado of
ebonised panelling, aml the ceiling of palest primrose. ..."
2. Notable Women Authors of the Day by Helen C. Black (1906)
"There are flowers everywhere—pobs of lilies of the valley, ferns and palms, alike
on the little hexagonal ebonised table in the windows and the small ..."
3. Electricity Control: A Treatise on Electric Switchgear and Systems of by Leonard Andrews (1904)
"Each tube contains an ebonised iron rod E, carried at its upper extremity by an
insulator I). At the lower end of this rod is a piston F, upon which is ..."
4. Reports of Artisans Selected by a Committee Appointed by the Council of the by Royal Society of Arts (Great Britain) (1867)
"Black being, as it were, quite the fashion, much of this is ebonised, and thus
spoilt. 1 feel sure that several exhibitors of ebonised furniture would have ..."
5. Work and Leisure, the Englishwoman's Advertiser, Reporter and Gazette: Being by Louisa M. Hubbard (1885)
"6d., f,s.; 2 ebonised rush chairs, 125.; black table (.398 in Maple's list), 14.
... \\d.; carpet-chair, 3^. i\d.; ebonised wicker flower-stand, I/, is. ..."