Lexicographical Neighbors of Methodises
Literary usage of Methodises
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Works of the English Poets, from Chaucer to Cowper: Including the Series by Alexander Chalmers, Samuel Johnson (1810)
"... Intrigues, and women's thousand tricks, Prudes, methodises, and devotees,
Fastings, fi-asts, pray'rs, and charities, Ceres, with her mysterious train, ..."
2. Report by Indians Rights Association (1904)
"The methodises, Presbyterians, Baptists and Congregationalists are working in
different parts of the Islands, not interfering with one another, but, ..."
3. A Dictionary of the English Language by Samuel Johnson, John Walker, Robert S. Jameson (1828)
"To ORDER, (cr'-der) vn To give command ; to give direction. ORDERER, (or'-der-er)
ni One that orders, methodises, or regulate«. ORDERLINESS, (or'. ..."
4. The Monthly Review by Ralph Griffiths (1809)
"... methodises, we have never cast the smallest reflection ; and we are solicitous
to argue the point at issue without per- tonalities ..."
5. Political Essay on the Kingdom of New Spain by Alexander von Humboldt (1811)
"... which conversions have been hitherto attempted in foreign parts by our missionary
societies. Had they sent away instead of the anabaptists, methodises, ..."
6. The Historians' History of the World: A Comprehensive Narrative of the Rise by Henry Smith Williams (1904)
"... and who methodises each part of the discourse ; but he thinks I am he whom he
will shortly behold dead, and asks how he should bury me. ..."