Lexicographical Neighbors of Enewed
Literary usage of Enewed
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Edinburgh Review by Sydney Smith (1872)
"In this case the fowl was said to be enewed—the hawk ... The fowl was often enewed
once or twice before it was landed effectively enough for the final swoop ..."
2. The Old Dramatists: Conjectural Readings on the Texts of Marston, Beaumont by Kenneth Deighton (1896)
"In this case the fowl was said to be enewed—the hawk ... The fowl was often enewed
once or twice before it was landed effectively enough for the final swoop ..."
3. The Poetical Works of John Skelton: With Notes, and Some Account of the by John Skelton (1843)
"Fr., 1530. fol. ccxxvi. (Table of Verbes). " Ylike enewed with ... was enewed
with whyte, and the other ..."
4. A Glossary to the Works of William Shakespeare by Alexander Dyce (1902)
"If the bird pursued gets over the water again, the hawk is said to enew it.
This elucidates the etymology. The fowl dives, or is enewed; ..."
5. Shakespeare Studies, and Essay on English Dictionaries by Thomas Spencer Baynes, Lewis Campbell (1896)
"... without doing much damage, as the blow could not be followed up, the fowl
taking refuge in diving. In this case the fowl was said to be enewed—the hawk ..."
6. The Anatomy of Melancholy: What it Is, with All the Kinds, Causes, Symptoms by Robert Burton (1847)
"... that now nestle themselves about Cracow and Rakow in Poland, have enewed this
opinion) serve his own God, with that fear and reverence as he ought. iua ..."