Lexicographical Neighbors of Extravagates
Literary usage of Extravagates
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Theatre of the Greeks: A Series of Papers Relating to the History and edited by John William Donaldson (1849)
"... is doubtless unfinished, and not unfrequently extravagates into epic and lyric
elements not well fused together. Abrupt, immoderate, harsh, he often is ..."
2. The Theatre of the Greeks: A Series of Papers Relating to the History and by John William Donaldson, James Tate (1836)
"... is doubtless unfinished, and not unfrequently extravagates into epic and lyric
elements not well fused together. Abrupt, immoderate, harsh, he often is ..."
3. Recollections of an Actor by Walter Alexander Donaldson (1865)
"... mumbles and extravagates; And it equally as true is That, Mr. Jones, you are
not Lewis. If, Jones, to your ear my caustic lays May seem too niggard of ..."
4. History of Materialism and Criticism of Its Present Importance by Friedrich Albert Lange (1892)
"luxuriant imagination extravagates. And yet the strictest common sense must tell
us that, a priori, and before experience has passed judgment, ..."
5. Examination of the Principles of the Scoto-Oxonian Philosophy by M. P. W. Bolton (1861)
"... whenever he extravagates beyond the limits of thought, must reject his teaching
as illegitimate. In this case, it behoves us to repudiate his ..."