Lexicographical Neighbors of Haviors
Literary usage of Haviors
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Publications by English Dialect Society (1886)
"MORLEY. haviors or HAVERS, s. "to be on one's haviors" is to be on one's good
behaviour. " To mind one's P's and Q's." L. HAW, s. a hall. ..."
2. A Glossary of Words Used in the County of Chester by Robert Holland (1886)
"MORLEY. haviors or HAVERS, s. "to be on one's haviors" is to be on one's good
behaviour. "To mind one's P's and Q's." L. HAW, s. a hall. ..."
3. Stress, Gender, and Alcohol-Seeking Behavior edited by Walter A. Hunt, Sam Zakhari (1996)
"... creased interest in corticosteroid about many of the proposed corti- Finally,
there is evidence of in- that m the near future questions haviors. ..."
4. The Library of Wit and Humor, Prose and Poetry: Selected from the Literature by Ainsworth Rand Spofford, Rufus Edmonds Shapley (1894)
"I will teach the children their pe- haviors ; and I will pe like a jack-an-apes
also, to burn the knight with my taper. Ford.. That wilI be excellent. ..."
5. The Rural Poetry of the English Language: Illustrating the Seasons and by Joseph William Jenks (1856)
"And there you ean our different haviors spy ; There 's nane shall ken o't there
but you and I. ..."
6. Specimens of English Dramatic Poets who Lived about the Time of Shakespeare by Charles Lamb (1845)
"I owe your cheek my hand For that presumption now, but I 'll forget it; Come,
you shall leave those childish 'haviors, And understand your time. ..."