Lexicographical Neighbors of Fumitories
Literary usage of Fumitories
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Journal of Botany, British and Foreign (1904)
"The following extract from a recent letter from Mr. Pugsley is, therefore,
noteworthy :—" Since looking through your collection of fumitories some time ago, ..."
2. Minnesota Plant Life by Conway MacMillan (1899)
"The fumitories, with yellowish or pinkish, two- sided flowers, occur in Minnesota
in four different forms. Among the more common is the pale fumitory with ..."
3. Transactions of the Woolhope Naturalists' Field Club by Woolhope Naturalists' Field Club, Hereford, England, G. H. Jack (1888)
"I am now inclined to believe "confusa" is the right name of our common Herefordshire
plant; that is of at least 99 out of every 100 fumitories other than ..."
4. Reports of the Survey (1899)
"The fumitories, with yellowish or pinkish, two- sided flowers, occur in Minnesota
in four different forms. Among the more common is the pale fumitory with ..."
5. The Anatomy of Melancholy: What it Is, with All the Kinds, Causes, Symptomes by Robert Burton (1800)
"... Catholicon : If these prevail not, xve may proceed to stronger, as the confection
of Hamech, PH. Isida;, fumitories, dc ..."
6. International Catalogue of Scientific Literature by Royal Society (Great Britain) (1908)
"Praeger, RL The distribution ot fumitories in Ireland. Irish Nat., Dublin, 14,
1905, (156-163). Sundew. [Drosera anglica.] J. Bot., London, 43, 1905, (307). ..."