Lexicographical Neighbors of Eristically
Literary usage of Eristically
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Mediaeval Mind: A History of the Development of Thought and Emotion in by Henry Osborn Taylor (1919)
"... eristically-won lecturer's seat a prickly one. He left Paris for a while, and
then returned and taught on Mount St. Genevieve, outside the city. ..."
2. Geoffrey de Mandeville: A Study of the Anarchy by John Horace Round (1892)
"... .eristically observes that Rymer, “from the names appended to it or some other
evidence, dates it in 1101.” As a matter of fact, Rymer assigns no year ..."
3. The Journal of Philology by William George Clark, John Eyton Bickersteth Mayor, William Aldis Wright, Ingram Bywater, Henry Jackson (1885)
"... for himself, conceiving that the arts were unsatisfactory instruments of
education, especially when they were handled popularly and eristically, ..."
4. The Works of James Russell Lowell by James Russell Lowell (1890)
"We learn little of his career there, except that Theophrastus, Plautus, and
Terence were already his favorite authors, that he once charac ,eristically ..."
5. Fighting for the Good Cause: Reflections on Francis Galton's Legacy to by Gerald Sweeney (2001)
"... they were keenly alert to the aggressively, eristically, one-sided quality of
such an operation as well.39 ''For criticisms of Pearson's sibling study, ..."
6. The Christian Remembrancer by William Scott (1856)
"... and in his political speculations he, like the old Sophists, generally seems
to regard the subject eristically than on established convictions. ..."