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Definition of Fully fashioned
1. Adjective. Knitted to fit the shape of the body. "Full-fashioned hosiery"
Lexicographical Neighbors of Fully Fashioned
Literary usage of Fully fashioned
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Gentleman's Magazine (1882)
"... after being fully fashioned, had receded to a corresponding distance (that
is, to something like the same relative distance from the earth). ..."
2. The Christian Remembrancer by William Scott (1843)
"... and we see it no more, till it emerges, sometimes more, sometimes less beautiful,
but always fully fashioned, and no farther mutable. ..."
3. The New Englander by William Lathrop Kingsley (1883)
"Not as the distant originator of a fabric formed in vast remoteness, who fully
fashioned the world in the beginning and sent it whirling from his hand, ..."
4. New Englander and Yale Review by Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight (1883)
"Not as the distant originator of a fabric formed in vast remoteness, who fully
fashioned the world in the beginning and sent it whirling from his hand, ..."
5. Twelve Lectures on the Connection Between Science and Revealed Religion by Nicholas Patrick Wiseman (1842)
"... and enter into the chrysalis state; and we see it no more till it emerges,
sometimes more, sometimes less beautiful, but always fully fashioned, ..."
6. The Geographical Journal by Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain). (1893)
"Although Mr. Conway's guide, Zurbriggen, cut an immense series of steps, they •were
not fully fashioned, as would be necessary if no climbing-irons were ..."
7. The Popular Science Monthly by Harry Houdini Collection (Library of Congress) (1886)
"... he seems essentially to have always thought of humanity as a self-contained
entity, fully fashioned within itself from the first, and cut off from all ..."