Lexicographical Neighbors of Fograms
Literary usage of Fograms
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Court of England Under George IV.: Founded on a Diary Interspersed with by Charlotte Campbell Bury (1896)
"The sight was not enchanting, as it was loaded with old fograms. My usual resource
on this occasion is to show the great apartments and the rarities they ..."
2. The Early Diary of Frances Burney, 1768-1778: With a Selection from Her by Fanny Burney, Annie Raine Ellis (1907)
"What can Jem do with a parcel of old fograms, without some other help to keep up
the ball?—If any objection is made to this my proposal by the superiors of ..."
3. Mrs. Fitzherbert and George IV by William Henry Wilkins (1905)
"There is scarcely a creature I know here except some old fograms, whose company
I would rather be without. People have made such melancholy histories about ..."
4. The Diary of a Lady-in-waiting by Charlotte Campbell Bury, Archibald Francis Steuart (1908)
"The sight was not enchanting, as it was loaded with old fograms. My usual resource
on this occasion is to show the great apartments and the rarities they ..."
5. Diary Illustrative of the Times of George the Fourth: Interspersed with by Charlotte Campbell Bury (1838)
"... old fograms, male and female, will be there to enliven the party. This is all
the merriment of my budget which I can offer you to-day. ..."
6. Court Life Below Stairs, Or, London Under the Last Georges, 1760-1830 by Joseph Fitzgerald Molloy (1885)
"The sight was not enchanting, as it was loaded with old fograms. My usual resource
on this occasion is to show them the great apartments and the rarities ..."