¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Garbos
1. garbo [n] - See also: garbo
Lexicographical Neighbors of Garbos
Literary usage of Garbos
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Notes and Queries by Martim de Albuquerque (1861)
"NORRIS: Quarterly argent and gules, a frett or, within a PENNELL: Argent, on a
fess gules, 3 garbos or. ..."
2. Italy by Karl Baedeker (Firm) (1877)
"The hot springs oí Hammam garbos may either be visited by boat from Goletta, or
from Tunis by carriage, via Hammam Lif and Soliman. ..."
3. Report by United States Board on Geographic Names, United States Geographic Board (1916)
"... Creek, tributary to garbos River from southwest, north of Mother Mountains,
Mount Rainier National Park, Pierce Counry, ..."
4. The Slave Systems of Greek and Roman Antiquity by William Linn Westermann (1984)
"... seven by one of the garbos, two maintained as camp servants by Manius Curio,
who conquered Pyrrhus, and five slaves as camp assistants taken to Spain by ..."
5. The English Review (1846)
"... some of whom feared the point of Dante's poetical aphorism scarcely more than
the bard himself. " The four Accorsi, the two Del garbos, ..."
6. Notes and Queries by Martim de Albuquerque (1861)
"NORRIS: Quarterly argent and gules, a frett or, within a PENNELL: Argent, on a
fess gules, 3 garbos or. ..."
7. Italy by Karl Baedeker (Firm) (1877)
"The hot springs oí Hammam garbos may either be visited by boat from Goletta, or
from Tunis by carriage, via Hammam Lif and Soliman. ..."
8. Report by United States Board on Geographic Names, United States Geographic Board (1916)
"... Creek, tributary to garbos River from southwest, north of Mother Mountains,
Mount Rainier National Park, Pierce Counry, ..."
9. The Slave Systems of Greek and Roman Antiquity by William Linn Westermann (1984)
"... seven by one of the garbos, two maintained as camp servants by Manius Curio,
who conquered Pyrrhus, and five slaves as camp assistants taken to Spain by ..."
10. The English Review (1846)
"... some of whom feared the point of Dante's poetical aphorism scarcely more than
the bard himself. " The four Accorsi, the two Del garbos, ..."