Lexicographical Neighbors of Morbidnesses
Literary usage of Morbidnesses
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Chambers's Encyclopaedia: A Dictionary of Universal Knowledge (1901)
"The next bodily symptom in importance is morbidnesses of speech. On the patient's
speech we chiefly depend for our diagnosis of most cases. ..."
2. School, College and Character by Le Baron Russell Briggs (1919)
"The first lesson of life, as Lowell reminds us, is to burn our own smoke; that
is, not to inflict on outsiders our personal sorrows and petty morbidnesses, ..."
3. The Church of the first days: lectures on the Acts of the Apostles by Charles John Vaughan (1873)
"... the morbidnesses of a religious fancy : but none the less would we appeal to
the hearts of those here present before God, whether there is not in the ..."
4. Chamber's Encyclopaedia: A Dictionary of Universal Knowledge (1890)
"The next bodily symptom in importance is morbidnesses of speech. On the patient's
speech we chiefly depend for our diagnosis of most cases. ..."
5. The Local Preachers' Magazine and Christian Family Record: For the Year (1857)
"There is nothing like the stern realities of life for curing the morbidnesses of
the mind. If at any time you are placed in doubt whether a book you have ..."
6. Truth's Conflicts and Truth's Triumphs; Or, The Seven-headed Serpent Slain by Stephen Jenner (1854)
"There is nothing like the stern realities of life for curing the morbidnesses of
the mind. If at any time you are placed in doubt whether a book you have ..."