Lexicographical Neighbors of Exiguities
Literary usage of Exiguities
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Works of Thomas Carlyle: (complete). by Thomas Carlyle (1897)
"Not to mention any pictorial exiguities, which indeed existed chiefly in
expectance, — there had almost accidentally arisen for him, in the first place, ..."
2. The Dreamers: A Club. Being a More Or Less Faithful Account of the Literary by John Kendrick Bangs (1899)
"... or at least as nearly wholly as the exiguities of existence would permit of
a persistent and continuous devotion, to the contemplation of the beautiful ..."
3. Medical jurisprudence by Alfred Swaine Taylor (1858)
"There is headache, pain the abdomen, with purging ; the pain is of a colicky cha-
and in aggravated cases there are spasms of the exiguities and convulsions ..."
4. The Realm of the Habsburgs by Sidney Whitman (1893)
"... circumstance for the Austrian nobility in the past that class exiguities often
found some healthy dilution through the political nature of things, ..."
5. Works by Thomas Carlyle (1894)
"Not to mention any pictorial exiguities, which indeed existed chiefly in expectance,—
there had almost accidentally arisen for him, in the first place, ..."
6. The Westminster Problems Book: Prose and Verse by Westminster Gazette, London, Westminster Gazette, Naomi Gwladys Royde-Smith (1908)
"The skirt was modishly cut, and evidently designed by simplicity and adequacy of
style for the exiguities of the trottoir. The seams, which display a ..."