Lexicographical Neighbors of Longheadedness
Literary usage of Longheadedness
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A History and Some Records of the Volunteer Movement in Bury, Heywood by T. H. Hayhurst (1887)
"He had their longheadedness, however ; or perhaps it would be more strictly
chronological to say they had his longheadedness. ..."
2. A History and Some Records of the Volunteer Movement in Bury, Heywood by T. H. Hayhurst (1887)
"He had their longheadedness, however ; or perhaps it would be more strictly
chronological to say they had his longheadedness. ..."
3. The Gentleman's Magazine (1870)
"He had counted on a certain homage to, his “longheadedness “—not intimacy, which
might come later. But he would have liked consolation—eg, ..."
4. European Police Systems by Raymond Blaine Fosdick (1915)
"The neophyte detective is perhaps 27 or 28 years old. He is developing a certain
shrewdness and longheadedness in his work ..."
5. Report of the Annual Meeting (1904)
"The result of the investigations is, then, to show that in this early Cretan
population longheadedness is quite predominant : of forty-six male crania ..."
6. Selections from the Prose Writings of John Henry, Cardinal Newman by John Henry Newman (1895)
"... into a dry, unamiable longheadedness ;—if by good society, into a polished
outside, with hollowness within, in which vice has lost its grossness, ..."
7. Materials for the Physical Anthropology of the Eastern European Jews by Maurice Fishberg (1907)
"long-headed humanity.1 How far the longheadedness of the Jewish immigrants to
the United States as compared with the Jews in eastern Europe is due to the ..."