Lexicographical Neighbors of Exuberates
Literary usage of Exuberates
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Living Age by Making of America Project, Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell (1861)
"Voltaire's wit is not like Molière's, for it never exuberates ; or Pascal's, for
it never acknowledges earnestness ; or Le Sage's, j for it is never ..."
2. The Monthly Review by Ralph Griffiths (1832)
"... by a general officer in the French army, 159— Italian banditti and their
émissaire», Í6. —the author exuberates rather than extenuates their crimes, ..."
3. The Knickerbocker: Or, New-York Monthly Magazine by Charles Fenno Hoffman, Timothy Flint, Lewis Gaylord Clark, Kinahan Cornwallis, John Holmes Agnew (1855)
"... my locks with odoriferous unguents; my chalice exuberates. 'Indubitably benignity
and commiseration shall continue all the ..."
4. A Treatise on the Principles and Practice of Medicine: Designed for the Use by Austin Flint (1873)
"Jn support of his conviction the patient sometimes not only exuberates ailments
which are present, but insists on the presence of ..."
5. Ainsworth's Magazine: A Miscellany of Romance, General Literature, & Art by William Harrison Ainsworth, George Cruikshank, Hablot Knight Browne (1850)
"To a mind which exuberates in beautiful images, nothing is so painful as the
conviction of declension and decay in lovely things. ..."
6. Pulpit Eloquence of the Nineteenth Century: Being Supplementary to the by Henry Clay Fish, Edwards Amasa Park (1871)
"... making all nature overflow with beauty, because his own spirit exuberates with
it. And when we come to even a true perception of him, much more when we ..."