Lexicographical Neighbors of Invisibles
Literary usage of Invisibles
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. England Under the House of Hanover: Its History and Condition During the by Thomas Wright (1848)
"... is probably for this reason that they are termed in the original print "
invisibles." A few years later the fashionable costume furnished an invisibles. ..."
2. The British and Foreign Medico-chirurgical Review, Or, Quarterly Journal of (1861)
"Moyens de rassembler dans un très petit Espace tous les Corpuscules normalement
invisibles contenus dans un Volume d'Air déterminé. Par M. POUCHET. ..."
3. The Works of George Berkeley by George Berkeley (1871)
"A great number of insensibles—or thus, two invisibles, say, you put together
become visible, therefore that MV contains or is made up of invisibles. ..."
4. England Under the House of Hanover: Its History and Condition During the by Thomas Wright (1848)
"... is probably for this reason that they are termed in the original print "
invisibles." A few years later the fashionable costume furnished an invisibles. ..."
5. The British and Foreign Medico-chirurgical Review, Or, Quarterly Journal of (1861)
"Moyens de rassembler dans un très petit Espace tous les Corpuscules normalement
invisibles contenus dans un Volume d'Air déterminé. Par M. POUCHET. ..."
6. The Works of George Berkeley by George Berkeley (1871)
"A great number of insensibles—or thus, two invisibles, say, you put together
become visible, therefore that MV contains or is made up of invisibles. ..."