Lexicographical Neighbors of Foamily
Literary usage of Foamily
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Journal of a Landscape Painter in Corsica by Edward Lear (1870)
"... sitting outside their dwelling, make a picture, combined with groups of trees
and the beautiful river, here close below the highway, and dashing foamily ..."
2. The American Journal of Politics (1892)
"... that whale to which politicians are now throwing tubs, and which spouts so
foamily in the deep sea of living issues. Women, as a class, have been the ..."
3. Transactions of the National Council of Women of the United States by Rachel Foster Avery (1891)
"Women are beginning to study the labor question, that whale which politicians
are now throwing tubs, and which spouts so foamily the deep sea of living ..."
4. Turkish Life and Character by Walter Thornbury (1860)
"He is one of our ' abandoned,'" he said, foamily ; " we have given him up, we
wash our hands of him. (Here typical and suitable gestures. ..."
5. I, Mary MacLane: A Diary of Human Days by Mary MacLane (1917)
"I bathe foamily icily each morning. Josephina would seem never to have had a bath.
She cleans windows and floors and rugs for thirty- five cents an hour. ..."
6. An Oberland Châlet by Edith Elmer Wood (1910)
"The only noisy thing we could find was the " Infant Aar " brawling foamily down
under a covered wooden bridge. We hung over its parapets for some time, ..."