Lexicographical Neighbors of Incogs
Literary usage of Incogs
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Bookman (1907)
"Speaking of "incogs." recalls a very interesting list of the names used by European
notables which recently appeared in London AI. ..."
2. The Badminton Magazine of Sports & Pastimes edited by Alfred Edward Thomas Watson (1901)
"On one occasion seven incogs. were out for 90 when we had gone in for 221.
Some members of the fielding side sent in for time-tables to see what earlier ..."
3. The English Village Community Examined in Its Relations to the Manorial and by Frederic Seebohm (1896)
"... or incogs—who in the Latin translations of the laws are called villani—the
key to their position was their non-possession of tribal blood, and therefore ..."
4. Pharmaceutical Journal by Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain (1849)
"The number of " incogs." in the country list, is, as might be expected, much
greater. If a Supplemental List be published at all, we think it should he ..."
5. The Gentlest Art: A Choice of Letters, by Entertaining Hands by Edward Verrall Lucas (1907)
"... that "Health, Happiness and Prosperity" may attend all "incogs"—and thus I
conclude — with my well known exclamation, The ball is "over" gentlemen,—and ..."
6. The Gentlest Art: A Choice of Letters by Entertaining Hands by Edward Verrall Lucas (1907)
"... Happiness and Prosperity" may attend all "incogs" — and thus I conclude — with
my well known exclamation, The ball is "over" gentlemen,—and respectfully ..."
7. Democracy in Europe: A History by Thomas Erskine May (1878)
"The traditions and experience of the Swiss may incogs- have justified this
democratic jealousy of re- ..."