Definition of Margs

1. marg [n] - See also: marg

Lexicographical Neighbors of Margs

margo tibialis pedis
margo ulnaris antebrachii
margo uteri
margo zygomaticus alae majoris
margosa
margosas
margravate
margravates
margrave
margraves
margravial
margraviate
margraviates
margravine
margravines
margs (current term)
marguerite
marguerite daisy
marguerites
mari complaisant
maria
mariachi
mariachis
marialite
marian lithotomy
maricite
maricolous
maricons
maricopaite

Literary usage of Margs

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Valley of Kashmír by Walter Roper Lawrence (1895)
"As the summer draws on the sheep and cattle are driven up from the valley to the woodland glades, and as the sun grows hotter they pass on to the margs ..."

2. Charles de Sainte-Marthe (1512-1555) by Caroline Ruutz-Rees (1910)
"margs. de la Marg., Vol. III, p. 152. He echoed, it is true, his mistress' phrases, but he missed her soaring conceptions as a Platonist no less than the ..."

3. On the Edge of the World by Edmund Candler (1919)
"The margs, or meadows, lie on the northern side—open plots with a margin of ... In most of the large margs one comes across their low huts of horizontal ..."

4. Kashmir in Sunlight & Shade: A Description of the Beauties of the Country by Cecil Earle Tyndale-Biscoe (1922)
"... clothed with carpets of flowers of all colours and hues, true paradises to all lovers of flowers. On these margs roam droves ..."

5. The New England Historical and Genealogical Register (1888)
"... this marriage were n son Edmund Taylor, and daughters margs- ret Webb and Hanna Claxton mentioned above. William Taylor, the testator, had three wive«. ..."

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