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Definition of Hundred-and-thirty-fifth
1. Adjective. The ordinal number of one hundred thirty-five in counting order.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Hundred-and-thirty-fifth
Literary usage of Hundred-and-thirty-fifth
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Ocean to Ocean on Horseback: Being the Story of a Tour in the Saddle from by Willard W. Glazier (1896)
"... Thirty-fourth Day—Colonel Stephens —One Hundred and Thirty-fifth Day—Visit
Peru— One Hundred and Thirty-sixth Day—Mistaken for a Highwayman—One Hundred ..."
2. Annotated Consolidated Laws of the State of New York: As Amended to January by Clarence Frank Birdseye, Robert Cushing Cumming, Frank Bixby Gilbert, New York (State). (1916)
"... to Madison avenue, to East One Hundred and Twenty-seventh street, to Fifth
avenue, to West One Hundred and Thirty- fifth street, to Lenox avenue, ..."
3. The Encyclopedia of Pure Materia Medica: A Record of the Positive Effects of by Timothy Field Allen (1879)
"... at noon (one hundred and thirty-fourth day) ; occasional tiresome aching in
the nose (one hundred and thirty-fifth day); during the day, repeated aching ..."
4. The Water-supply of the City of New York. 1658-1895 by Edward Wegmann (1896)
"A masonry conduit, "under pressure," from Mosholu Avenue to the gate-house on
Manhattan Island at One Hundred and Thirty-fifth Street and Convent Avenue. ..."
5. The Consolidated Laws of the State of New York, 1909 by New York (State), Frederick Eugene Wadhams (1909)
"... East One Hundred and Twentieth street, Madison avenue, East One Hundred and
Twenty-ninth street, Fifth avenue, West One Hundred and Thirty-fifth street, ..."