Lexicographical Neighbors of Extravagated
Literary usage of Extravagated
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Quarterly Review by William Gifford, John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero Ernle, George Walter Prothero (1820)
"... and where there was neither offence nor punishment, he should have extravagated
into the discussions that perplexed Milton's devils, we can still less ..."
2. Southey's Common-place Book by Robert Southey (1876)
"Earth a purgatory for the good,— this is the truth from which monachism hi:
extravagated. 284-8. Who they are for whom dûs world is not made to thrive in, ..."
3. Letters and Correspondence of John Henry Newman During His Life in the by John Henry Newman (1903)
"Even if Sir Robert Peel extravagated into better men at any time, what would be
his most ambitious ascent ? To Rose, I suppose, who, with his ten thousand ..."
4. The Science and Art of Surgery: A Treatise on Surgical Injuries, Diseases by John Eric Erichsen, Marcus Beck (1884)
"... of blood is extravagated, or if in consequence of local irritation, as from
a wound or rupture of the gut with or without slight fecal extravasation, ..."
5. A New and General Biographical Dictionary: Containing an Historical and by William Tooke, William Beloe, Robert Nares (1798)
"... that he had not extravagated the attitudes of his figures, and that he had
not top much pronounced the parts of the body. ..."