Lexicographical Neighbors of Flagrancies
Literary usage of Flagrancies
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Studies in Literature by Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch (1918)
"Yes, the flagrancies are flagrant: yet I think too much has been made of them.
For (as I hold the business of an examiner is always to discover how much a ..."
2. The Works of Thomas Carlyle by Thomas Carlyle, Henry Duff Traill (1898)
"... Lion <fOr refusing to be concerned with us farther); twelve soldiers ; Madame
Denis with curtains of bayonets,— and other well-known flagrancies. ..."
3. History of Friedrich II. of Prussia, called Frederick the Great: in ten vol by Thomas Carlyle (1864)
"... Lion fOr refusing to be concerned with us farther) ; twelve soldiers; Madame
Denis with curtains of bayonets,—-and other well-known flagrancies. ..."
4. History of Friedrich II. of Prussia, called Frederick the Great by Thomas Carlyle (1864)
"... Lion d'Or refusing to be concerned with us farther) ; twelve soldiers ; Madame
Denis with curtains of bayonets,—and other well-known flagrancies. ..."
5. History of Friedrich II of Prussia, Called Frederick the Great by Thomas Carlyle (1864)
"... and other well-known flagrancies. * * The 7th of July, Voltaire did actually
go; and then in an extreme hurry, — by his own blame, again. ..."
6. The Fortnightly Review (1872)
"... priest's blessing, and would have made a pilgrimage with peas in their shoes
to be touched by a mitred abbot, such flagrancies might easily pass muster. ..."