Lexicographical Neighbors of Muzzier
Literary usage of Muzzier
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Routledge's Every Boy's Annual by Edmund Routledge (1870)
""Thank ye for fetching these here things. If you'll sit down, the lot of ye, on
that log there, I'll give ye a bit of dinner. Down, muzzier. ..."
2. New Edition of the Babylonian Talmud (1903)
"It ought to read: " Thou shalt not thresh with a muzzled ox." Why, then, is ox
mentioned ? To compare the muzzled with the muzzier (ie, the man who muzzles ..."
3. German Atrocities, Their Nature and Philosophy: Studies in Belgium and by Samuel Whitaker Pennypacker, Newell Dwight Hillis (1918)
"... the future investigator of morals will be able to see some of the causes which
brought about the passage of the "Salus- Grady Press muzzier" of 1903. ..."
4. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1822)
"... and sentimentale for the best part of a week to come ; and then, you know,
that on these cursed unhappy occasions, a muzzier of Tene- ..."
5. The Arena by Harry Houdini Collection (Library of Congress) (1905)
""The muzzier." Illustrations—"Flags of Chile and Argentina," "General San Martin
at the Age of Seventy- Two," "Monument to General San Martin," "General San ..."