Lexicographical Neighbors of Inlocking
Literary usage of Inlocking
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Manual of Dental Prosthetics by George Henry Wilson (1920)
"These retainers consist of clasps, lugs—both rest and inlocking, and bars—both
connecting and extending; also crowns, inlays and the Roach ball-and-slit ..."
2. The States and Territories of the Great West: Including Ohio, Indiana by Jacob Ferris (1856)
"Trom this point, the southern acclivity of the Kansas Valley presses against the
channel every four or five miles, inlocking intervals of enticing ..."
3. An Appeal to Cæsar by Albion Winegar Tourgée (1884)
"As though two giant trunks become one simply because the hurricane has lashed
their inlocking branches together for an hour. The Southern people did not ..."
4. A Voyage Round the World: And Visits to Various Foreign Countries, in the by Fitch Waterman Taylor (1847)
"... and here, in its luxuriance, growing five feet high, and inlocking its branches
so as to form a thick hedge on either side of the pathway. ..."
5. The History of Thucydides by Thucydides (1829)
"... by so doing, the closeness of the inlocking is their best defence.7 The cause
of this originates in the first man on the right in each file, ..."
6. Mont Blanc: A Treatise on Its Geodesical and Geological Constitution; Its by Eugène-Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc (1877)
"... inlocking of pieces which is represented in Fig. 73 bis. And if it is exposed
for a moment to the sun's rays, all these fragments which are separated by ..."