Lexicographical Neighbors of Fonned
Literary usage of Fonned
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England by Edward Hyde Clarendon (1807)
"flared, and fet at liberty ; and fuch mutual offices per- fonned between them,
as, with frequent'evidences of ..."
2. Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Standard Work of Reference in Art, Literature (1907)
"Thev fonned the Foundation Committee. The first president was Lord Goderich, and
the vice-presidents Sir John Barrow, Colonel Leake, Sir John Franklin, ..."
3. Annals of the American Revolution: Or, A Record of the Causes and Events by Jedidiah Morse (1824)
"But the recording angel has noted it. and my lamentations would be vain, fn the
course of these ten years they fonned, and organised, and drilled, ..."
4. A New General Biographical Dictionary by Hugh James Rose (1853)
"In the second of these visits he fonned an intimate acquaintance with Brissot de
Warville; and his connexions appear always to have run in a revolutionary ..."
5. Encyclopaedia Americana: A Popular Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature by Francis Lieber, Thomas Gamaliel Bradford (1833)
"The mammalia possess but one larynx; and with them the sound is fonned by a strong
expiration, whilst the ligaments of the glottis (according to the opinion ..."
6. Geological Travels by Jean André de LUC (1811)
"... fonned by a transmutation of their substance, and on which it had no longer
any action. ... fonned ..."