Lexicographical Neighbors of Impregnableness
Literary usage of Impregnableness
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Views and Reviews in American Literature, History, and Fiction by William Gilmore Simms (1845)
"... fervid impregnableness of mood, which becomes conspicuous at a moment, and
gives a dark and savage character even to their amusements. ..."
2. The Christian Examiner (1850)
"... enemies it has challenged the blows whose dint is but the proof of its
impregnableness. The most important discussions of the present day relate to it. ..."
3. The Theological and Literary Journal (1857)
"... thus give of the wide scope and refinement of their critical learning, the
delicacy of their discrimination, and the impregnableness of their logic ! ..."
4. Dodd's Church History of England from the Commencement of the Sixteenth by Hugh Tootell (1841)
"... or of the innumerable conquests she hath made over all other sects, from
Christ's time hitherto, or of the multitude and impregnableness of her proofs, ..."
5. The Works of the Right Reverend Joseph Hall by Joseph Hall, Philip Wynter (1863)
"... of thine impregnableness and might, come down, for so thou shalt, and sit in
the dust; for thither shalt thou be humbled: thou shalt no more rule over ..."
6. The Christian Examiner and Religious Miscellany by Alvan Lamson, Ezra Stiles Gannett, George Putnam, George Edward Ellis (1850)
"... enemies it has challenged the blows whose dint is but the proof of its
impregnableness. The most important discussions of the present day relate to it. ..."