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Definition of Gulf of venice
1. Noun. An arm of the Adriatic Sea.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Gulf Of Venice
Literary usage of Gulf of venice
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Universal Geography: Or a Description of All Parts of the World, on a New by Conrad Malte-Brun (1824)
"... in In the gulf of Venice, very remarkable changes have ta- n?^lf of ken place.
Ramazzini having observed that all the country round Modena is suspended ..."
2. Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge by Charles Knight (1843)
"... Cicero at his Villa : View of Ancona ; Broken Bridge of Narni ; Ruins on the
coast of Baiae ; Temple of Venus at Baiae; Island in the Gulf of Venice; ..."
3. The reader's handbook of allusions, references, plots and storiesby Ebenezer Cobham Brewer by Ebenezer Cobham Brewer (1882)
"... Gulf of Venice, ШЗ; Mount St. Michael, Cornwall, ISM; Л Skirmish off Heligoland,
.... Gulf of Venice ..."
4. Brookes's General Gazetteer Improved: Or, A New and Compendious Geographical ...by Richard Brookes by Richard Brookes (1812)
"... \own of Venetian Istria, 3 • cs i'mrn the gulf of Venice, bon. 13 5 î,:*l.45 10
N. />.:-не, л. town of France, ..."
5. A New System of Geography, Ancient and Modern: For the Use of Schools by Sidney Edwards Morse, Jedidiah Morse (1824)
"The Alps, which form the northern boundary, are like an arch with one end resting
on the gulf of Venice, and the other on the gulf of Genoa. ..."