Lexicographical Neighbors of Gambo
Literary usage of Gambo
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Collections of the Maine Historical Society by Maine Historical Society (1897)
"gambo, OLD AND NEW. BY SAMUEL T. DOLE. Read before the Maine Historical Society,
December 19,1895. THIS fine water-power is situated on the Presump- scot ..."
2. The Textile Fibres: Their Physical, Microscopical and Chemical Properties by Joseph Merritt Matthews (1913)
"... or gambo Hemp is an East Indian fibre derived from the bast of Hibiscus
cannabinus.\ The fibre when care- * According to Wiesner sunn hemp contains a ..."
3. The Textile Fibres: Their Physical, Microscopical and Chemical Properties by Joseph Merritt Matthews (1907)
"... or gambo Hemp is an East Indian fibre derived from the bast of Hibiscus
cannabinus.^ The fibre when care- * Another variety of Crotalaria used for its ..."
4. Newfoundland: the Oldest British Colony: Its History, Its Present Condition by Moses Harvey, Joseph Hatton (1883)
"... White Bay—The fertile belts of the Gander and gambo country—A wilderness that
might be "settled"—The unpeopled valley of the Exploits — Gander Eiver. ..."
5. Collections of the Maine Historical Society by Maine Historical Society (1897)
"gambo, OLD AND NEW. BY SAMUEL T. DOLE. Read before the Maine Historical Society,
December 19,1895. THIS fine water-power is situated on the Presump- scot ..."
6. The Textile Fibres: Their Physical, Microscopical and Chemical Properties by Joseph Merritt Matthews (1913)
"... or gambo Hemp is an East Indian fibre derived from the bast of Hibiscus
cannabinus.\ The fibre when care- * According to Wiesner sunn hemp contains a ..."
7. The Textile Fibres: Their Physical, Microscopical and Chemical Properties by Joseph Merritt Matthews (1907)
"... or gambo Hemp is an East Indian fibre derived from the bast of Hibiscus
cannabinus.^ The fibre when care- * Another variety of Crotalaria used for its ..."
8. Newfoundland: the Oldest British Colony: Its History, Its Present Condition by Moses Harvey, Joseph Hatton (1883)
"... White Bay—The fertile belts of the Gander and gambo country—A wilderness that
might be "settled"—The unpeopled valley of the Exploits — Gander Eiver. ..."