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Definition of Flagrance
1. n. Flagrancy.
Definition of Flagrance
1. [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Flagrance
Literary usage of Flagrance
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Horizons: A Book of Criticism by Francis Hackett (1918)
"The flagrance which permitted Hilda to deviate from Edwin without a word — that
flagrance which he was once so falsely represented as accept. ing entire ..."
2. The New Republic Book: Selections from the First-hundred Issues (1916)
"The flagrance which permitted Hilda to deviate from Edwin without a word — that
flagrance which he was once so falsely represented as accepting entire ..."
3. The Rambler by Samuel Johnson (1791)
"... and to be the right of every one that has art to pluck th,em without injuring
their colours or their flagrance. ..."
4. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1820)
"... The badger and the bear gave full delight, Their flagrance and their fragrance
were so blended. Each evening left, if I'm instructed right. ..."