¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Malodors
1. malodor [n] - See also: malodor
Lexicographical Neighbors of Malodors
Literary usage of Malodors
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Proceedings by Philadelphia County Medical Society (1903)
"Another important beneficial result of this treatment is seen in the unloading
of the breath of its malodors and consequently of its often malignant ..."
2. Annual Report by Indiana State Board of Health (1901)
"The malodors and poisonous effluvia from Nixie 1'ond is practically :i thing of
the past. This condition of sanitation is very satisfactory to the citizens ..."
3. The Literary World by Samuel R. Crocker, Edward Abbott, Nicholas Paine Gilman, Madeline Vaughan Abbott Bushnell, Bliss Carman, Herbert Copeland (1878)
"other we dislike rough and gritty surfaces, malodors, discords of sound and color,
and inartistic forms. A painful sensation is accompanied by an excessive ..."
4. Child-Placing in Families: A Manual for Students and Social Workers by William Henry Slingerland (1918)
"And of course the mingled malodors of ill-kept lavatories, filthy kitchens,
littered storerooms, and neglected beds will be agreeably absent. ..."
5. Smell, Taste, and Allied Senses in the Vertebrates by George Howard Parker (1922)
"... soon become insensitive to these and it has long been recognized that invalids
are not affected by the malodors that may come from their own bodies. ..."