Lexicographical Neighbors of Mussiest
Literary usage of Mussiest
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Disclosures from Germany by Karl Max Lichnowsky, Gottlieb von Jagow, Munroe Smith, James Brown Scott (1918)
"Except in the really swell places things are not nearly so well served or so
clean, the mussiest looking girls wait, never clean, in fact we find the ..."
2. Intimate Letters from France During America's First Year of War by Elizabeth H. Ashe (1918)
"Except in the really swell places things are not nearly so well served or so
clean, the mussiest looking girls wait, never clean, in fact we find the ..."
3. Intimate Letters from France During America's First Year of War by Elizabeth H. Ashe (1918)
"Except in the really swell places things are not nearly so well served or so
clean, the mussiest looking girls wait, never clean, in fact we find the ..."
4. The German Classics from the fourth to the Nineteenth Century: With by Friedrich Max Müller, Wilhelm Scherer, Franz Lichtenstein (1900)
"... Seide ins Hemd an mancher Stelle hineinziehen mussiest. nun schau ihn in der
Mitte an : da ist er aufgebläht -wie ein Segel. schlimmer Geruch und Dunst ..."
5. The Disclosures from Germany by Karl Max Lichnowsky, Gottlieb von Jagow, Munroe Smith, James Brown Scott (1918)
"Except in the really swell places things are not nearly so well served or so
clean, the mussiest looking girls wait, never clean, in fact we find the ..."
6. Intimate Letters from France During America's First Year of War by Elizabeth H. Ashe (1918)
"Except in the really swell places things are not nearly so well served or so
clean, the mussiest looking girls wait, never clean, in fact we find the ..."
7. Intimate Letters from France During America's First Year of War by Elizabeth H. Ashe (1918)
"Except in the really swell places things are not nearly so well served or so
clean, the mussiest looking girls wait, never clean, in fact we find the ..."
8. The German Classics from the fourth to the Nineteenth Century: With by Friedrich Max Müller, Wilhelm Scherer, Franz Lichtenstein (1900)
"... Seide ins Hemd an mancher Stelle hineinziehen mussiest. nun schau ihn in der
Mitte an : da ist er aufgebläht -wie ein Segel. schlimmer Geruch und Dunst ..."