¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Mings
1. ming [v] - See also: ming
Lexicographical Neighbors of Mings
Literary usage of Mings
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. English Prose: Selections edited by Henry Craik (1908)
"The truth is, Sir Christopher mings was a very stout man, and a man of great
parts, and most excellent tongue amongst ordinary men, and, as Sir W. Coventry ..."
2. English Prose: Selections with Critical Introductions by Various Writers and by Henry Craik (1917)
"The truth is, Sir Christopher mings was a very stout man, and a man of great
parts, and most excellent tongue amongst ordinary men, and, as Sir W. Coventry ..."
3. Archeological Explorations in Northeastern Arizona by Alfred Vincent Kidder, Samuel James Guernsey (1919)
"The opening up of the immensely fertile archeological field of northeastern
Arizona is due to the initiative of Prof. Byron Cum- mings, whose first ..."
4. Annals & Memoirs of the Court of Peking (from the 16th to the 20th Century) by Edmund Backhouse, John Otway Percy Bland (1914)
"CHAPTER VIII THE LAST OF THE mings KUEI WANG (Prince Kuei), the last and the
longest-lived of the four fugitive claimants to the Dragon Throne, ..."
5. Publications of the Navy Records Society by Navy Records Society (Great Britain) (1894)
"Christopher mings to force a trade upon the Spanish West Indies.—A dm. ...
The judge of the court and mings were amongst the purchasers of them. ..."
6. China and the Allies by Arnold Henry Savage Landor (1901)
"CHAPTER XLIX The mings—Li-kung—A betrayed Emperor—Uh-san-kui and the Tartars—Tchung-che
the first Emperor of the Tsing Dynasty—A-ma-uang—The sea-faring ..."
7. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1899)
"Miss Clara E. Ct mings, 'Lichens'; LM Underwood, 'The ETC tion of the Hepática:';
Rodney H. True, ' Pla and Poisons.' Third Week, July 19-26. ..."
8. The New America and the Far East: A Picturesque and Historic Description of by George Waldo Browne, Henry Cabot Lodge, Joseph Wheeler, Kogoro Takahira, John Davis Long, Leonard Wood, Charles Herbert Allen (1907)
"THE mings AND MANCHUS. THE successors of the Mongols were the mings, so called.
The story of the rise of this dynasty is as romantic as that of any of the ..."