|
Alternative terms
We're sorry, but that doesn't seem to be in our dictionary. Perhaps you were looking for:
Lexicographical Neighbors of
Literary usage of
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Dictionary of the English Language: In which the Words are Deduced from ...by Samuel Johnson by Samuel Johnson (1805)
"To UNWRA'P. -ua To open what is Some have delivered the polity of spirit*, «mf
that they stand in awe of conjurations, which signify nothing, ..."
2. Early Italian Poets: From Cuillo D'Alcamo to Dante Alighieri (1100-1200-1300 by Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1904)
"... DA FAENZA SONNET He is in awe of his Lady EVEN as the moon amid the stars doth
shed Her lovelier splendour of exceeding light,— Even so my lady seems ..."
3. Dante and His Circle: With the Italian Poets Preceding Him (1100-1200-1300 by Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Dante Alighieri (1905)
"He is in awe of his Lady. EVEN as the moon amid the stars doth shed Her lovelier
splendor of exceeding light, — Even so my lady seems the queen and head Is ..."
4. A Dictionary of English Etymology by Hensleigh Wedgwood (1859)
"... to wonder at, to be angry; Dan. avc, chastisement, correction, awe, fear,
discipline. "At staae under eens ave " —to stand in awe of one ; " At holde i ..."
5. Contemporary Memoirs of Russia, from the Year 1727-1744 by Cristof Hermann Manstein (1856)
"The Tartars began to stand more in awe of the Russians than they had done, while
these on the other hand conceived a hearty contempt for their enemies; ..."
6. The True Intellectual System of the Universe: Wherein All the Reason and by Ralph Cudworth, Thomas Birch (1837)
"... stand in awe of it for its power, but they worship it, that is, love and honor
it, for its justice. — And indeed an omnipotent arbitrary Deity may seem ..."
7. A Dictionary of the English Language: In which the Words are Deduced from ...by Samuel Johnson by Samuel Johnson (1805)
"To UNWRA'P. -ua To open what is Some have delivered the polity of spirit*, «mf
that they stand in awe of conjurations, which signify nothing, ..."
8. Early Italian Poets: From Cuillo D'Alcamo to Dante Alighieri (1100-1200-1300 by Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1904)
"... DA FAENZA SONNET He is in awe of his Lady EVEN as the moon amid the stars doth
shed Her lovelier splendour of exceeding light,— Even so my lady seems ..."
9. Dante and His Circle: With the Italian Poets Preceding Him (1100-1200-1300 by Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Dante Alighieri (1905)
"He is in awe of his Lady. EVEN as the moon amid the stars doth shed Her lovelier
splendor of exceeding light, — Even so my lady seems the queen and head Is ..."
10. A Dictionary of English Etymology by Hensleigh Wedgwood (1859)
"... to wonder at, to be angry; Dan. avc, chastisement, correction, awe, fear,
discipline. "At staae under eens ave " —to stand in awe of one ; " At holde i ..."
11. Contemporary Memoirs of Russia, from the Year 1727-1744 by Cristof Hermann Manstein (1856)
"The Tartars began to stand more in awe of the Russians than they had done, while
these on the other hand conceived a hearty contempt for their enemies; ..."
12. The True Intellectual System of the Universe: Wherein All the Reason and by Ralph Cudworth, Thomas Birch (1837)
"... stand in awe of it for its power, but they worship it, that is, love and honor
it, for its justice. — And indeed an omnipotent arbitrary Deity may seem ..."