Lexicographical Neighbors of Mansuetudes
Literary usage of Mansuetudes
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. History of Friedrich II. of Prussia, Called Frederick the Great: Called by Thomas Carlyle (1873)
"in indolent mansuetudes (fell rages, if you cut on the raws at all); in perpetual
incongruity; and, alas, at last, in brandy-and-water,—till, ..."
2. History of Friedrich II of Prussia, Called Frederick the Great by Thomas Carlyle (1862)
"in indolent mansuetudes (fell rages, if you cut on the raws at all); in perpetual
incongruity; and, alas, ..."
3. History of Friedrich II, of Prussia: Called Frederick the Great by Thomas Carlyle (1900)
"in indolent mansuetudes (fell rages, if you cut on the raws at all); in perpetual
incongruity; and, alas, at last, in brandy-and- water,—till, ..."
4. History of Friedrich the Second, Called Frederick the Great by Thomas Carlyle (1862)
"in indolent mansuetudes (fell rages, if you cut on the raws at all); in perpetual
incongruity; and, alas ! at last in brandy-and-water, till, ..."
5. The Works of Thomas Carlyle by Thomas Carlyle (1897)
"in indolent mansuetudes (fell rages, if you cut on the raws at all!) ; in perpetual
incongruity; and, alas, at last, in brandy-and- water, — till, ..."
6. At the Gates of the East: A Book of Travel Among Historic Wonderlands by John Patrick Barry (1906)
"It was Homer, the First of the Troubadours, who conceived the First of the
Magdalenes, and drew forth all the mansuetudes of the situation in order ..."