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Definition of Lxxxiii
1. Adjective. Being three more than eighty.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Lxxxiii
lxiv lxv lxvi lxvii lxviii lxxi lxxii lxxiii lxxiv lxxv | lxxvi lxxvii lxxviii lxxxi lxxxii lxxxiii (current term) lxxxiv lxxxv lxxxvi lxxxvii | lxxxviii lyable lyam lyams lyard lyart lyase lyases lyate lyates |
Literary usage of Lxxxiii
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Middlemarch: A Study of Provincial Life by George Eliot (1873)
"... CHAPTER lxxxiii. "And now good-morrow to oar waking souls Which watch not one
another ont of fear ; For love all love of other sights controls, ..."
2. The Lives of the Lord Chancellors and Keepers of the Great Seal of England by John Campbell Campbell (1845)
"CHAPTER lxxxiii. CONCLUSION OF THE LIFE OF LORD CLARENDON. CHAP. THE victim of
these arbitrary proceedings was now in France, lxxxiii. experiencing by turns ..."
3. Publications by Oxford Historical Society (1906)
"lxxxiii. May 9 (Sat.), 1719. There are 365 Steps to go up to the Top of Boston
Tower in Lincolnshire, but 406 to the Top of the Tower of S*. ..."
4. The Works of Washington Irving by Washington Irving (1861)
"CHAPTER lxxxiii. Events at Granada, subsequent to the submission of El Zagal,
Wno can tell when to rejoice, in this fluctuating world? ..."
5. The Poetical Works of John Dryden by John Dryden (1909)
"... their fire-ships, like jackals, appear, Who on their lions for the prey attend.
they send: lxxxiii Silent in smoke of cannons they come on: (Such vapors ..."
6. The Works of William Makepeace Thackeray by William Makepeace Thackeray, Sir Leslie Stephen (1899)
"CHAPTER lxxxiii TROUBLES AXD CONSOLATIONS ' N our early days at home, when Harry
and I used to be so un- dutiful to our tutor, who would have thought that ..."