Lexicographical Neighbors of Lurkingly
Literary usage of Lurkingly
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Library of Literary Criticism of English and American Authors by Charles Wells Moulton (1910)
"... world—bard of the river and the wood, ever conveying a taste of open air, with
scents as from hayfields, grapes, birch-borders—always lurkingly fond of ..."
2. Complete Prose Works by Walt Whitman (1891)
"... world—bard of the river and the wood, ever conveying a taste of open air, with
scents as from hayfields, grapes, birch-borders—always lurkingly fond of ..."
3. Punch by Mark Lemon, Henry Mayhew, Tom Taylor, Shirley Brooks, Francis Cowley Burnand, Owen Seaman (1898)
"... I am'lost As he lurkingly I know he learns frum me n 'thin?. Audible sensation
through house on appearance of dragon. Only men unaffected are Siegfried ..."
4. The Life of Thomas Jefferson by Henry Stephens Randall (1871)
"Even Jefferson's answer to the " Conciliatory Proposition" (adopted July 31, the
clay before the adjournment), does not lurkingly point to ultimate ..."
5. Sermons by Phillips Brooks (1903)
"I spoke about the friend who seems to be perfectly one with you, yet whom you
are always lurkingly afraid of losing because you feel that there is in him ..."
6. Specimen Days in America by Walt Whitman (1887)
"... world—bard of the river and the wood, ever conveying a taste of open air, with
scents as from hayfields, grapes, birch-borders—always lurkingly fond of ..."