Lexicographical Neighbors of Enmeshments
Literary usage of Enmeshments
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. English Literature by Wilford Merton Aikin, Thomas Ernest Rankin (1917)
"Not the recklessness or the comic enmeshments of life, as in the comedy, but the
seriously responsible moments of life make up the subject matter of the ..."
2. The Connecticut Magazine: An Illustrated Monthly by William Farrand Felch, George C. Atwell, H. Phelps Arms, Frances Trevelyan Miller (1897)
"The Indian retaining communism sank ever deeper in its hopeless enmeshments.
An interesting treatise might be elaborated upon this subject, ..."
3. The Connecticut Magazine: An Illustrated Monthly by William Farrand Felch, George C. Atwell, H. Phelps Arms, Frances Trevelyan Miller (1897)
"... enmeshments. An interesting treatise might be elaborated upon this subject,
but to our present purpose it limits itself to the uses of tobacco, ..."
4. The Universal Anthology: A Collection of the Best Literature, Ancient by Richard Garnett, Leon Vallée, Alois Brandl (1899)
"... if we delight in the wonders of Kipling, or the bewitching enmeshments of
Daudet, or Zola, 'tis not that we have forsworn or forgotten the kind, old, ..."
5. Woodrow Wilson and the World's Peace by George Davis Herron (1917)
"... of an antique and subterranean diplomacy—to step forth from its enmeshments
and address the German nation in terms that shall be human and familiar? ..."
6. Bristol, Connecticut by Eddy N. Smith (1907)
"The Indian retaining communism sank ever deeper in its hopeless enmeshments.
An interesting treatise might be elaborated upon this subject, ..."
7. The International Library of Famous Literature: Selections from the World's by Richard Garnett, Leon Vallée, Alois Brandl, Donald Grant Mitchell (1899)
"... if we delight in the wonders of Kipling, or the bewitching enmeshments of
Daudet, or Zola, 'tis not that we have forsworn or forgotten the kind, old, ..."