Lexicographical Neighbors of Futileness
Literary usage of Futileness
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Metropolitan (1844)
"Hypocrisy drops her many-folded veil, and the heart, too appalled for further
deceit and made conscious of its futileness, shows, as through a transparency, ..."
2. Art-hints: Architecture, Sculpture, and Painting by James Jackson Jarves (1855)
"... they might have wasted their genius in the feebleness of copy, and the futileness
of effort to revive that which, having lost its soul, can never again ..."
3. Writings and Speeches of Alvan Stewart, on Slavery by Alvan Stewart, Luther Rawson Marsh (1860)
"... he was found almost uniformly to be a man, who from the futileness of his
powers, could render our cause no service, and would, if a man of some talent, ..."
4. The Nicholas Papers: Correspondence of Sir Edward Nicholas by Sir Edward Nicholas (1886)
"Radcliffe, who, besides his great futileness, doth, it seems, dilate very unfriendly
what his friends communicate in most confidence with him. ..."
5. A Selection of Cases on Private Corporations by Jeremiah Smith (1902)
"... as the futileness of the interested, but discontented, shareholders attempting
to frustrate the designs of the interested director with his majority is ..."
6. I, Mary MacLane: A Diary of Human Days by Mary MacLane (1917)
"... would confront me again with the more rancor, the more futileness gathered
into it from having been put off. ..."