¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Furtherances
1. furtherance [n] - See also: furtherance
Lexicographical Neighbors of Furtherances
Literary usage of Furtherances
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Manual of Church History: Ancient Church History, Comprising the First Six by Heinrich Ernst Ferdinand Guericke (1872)
"CAUSES AND furtherances OF THE SPREAD OF CHRISTIANITY.1 The antagonism between
the earnest spirit of the gospel, and the resisting spirit of the world, ..."
2. The World's Great Classics by Timothy Dwight, Julian Hawthorne (1899)
"furtherances, its rate should be under the weightiest dray-rate, some three miles
an hour! Alas, one knows not whether it ever even got out of Paris;—and ..."
3. Microcosmus: An Essay Concerning Man and His Relation to the World by Hermann Lotze (1888)
"... of Development by External Conditions- Geographical and Climatic furtherances
and Hindrances—Examples of Peoples in a State of Nature. § 1. ..."
4. The Principles of Gothic Ecclesiastical Architecture: With an Explanation of by Matthew Holbeche Bloxam (1859)
"... furtherances of edification, helps of memory, exercises of faith, the leaves
that preserve the fruit, the shell that preserves the kernel of religion ..."
5. A Manual of Psychology by George Frederick Stout (1915)
"What has been said of obstacles is equally true of furtherances. ... Formal obstacles
and furtherances are those which depend on the form of the flow of ..."
6. Report of the Centenary Conference on the Protestant Missions of the World by James Johnston, Samuel Macauley Jackson (1889)
"But if in this case the furtherances are of greater consequences than the
hindrances (as ig my own opinion), or the reverse, 1 leave to everyone to decide ..."
7. Character and Temperament by Joseph Jastrow (1921)
"out to food furtherances and sex furtherances, to food frustrations and sex
frustrations, and in these relations shape the emotional repertory; ..."