Lexicographical Neighbors of Narrownesses
Literary usage of Narrownesses
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Sonnenschein's Cyclopædia of Education: A Handbook of Reference on All by Alfred Ewen Fletcher (1889)
"The peculiar prejudices, narrownesses, ifec., of the home and family are almost
certain to be left unconnected, and even to be emphasized. ..."
2. The Women of Tomorrow by William Hard (1911)
"For this reason it becomes necessary to resist certain narrownesses in certain
phases of home economics ... One of these narrownesses is the assumption ..."
3. Females and Their Diseases: A Series of Letters to His Class by Charles Delucena Meigs (1848)
"Such reflections ought to convince you that the congenite narrownesses and
constrictions of the vagina ought not to be treated with the knife, ..."
4. Dissertations and Discussions: Political, Philosophical, and Historical by John Stuart Mill (1859)
"The present became the era of reaction against the narrownesses of the ...
against those narrownesses of another sort which the eighteenth century had left. ..."
5. Social Solutions in the Light of Christian Ethics by Thomas Cuming Hall (1910)
"There are shocking narrownesses in our common Protestantism. ... And nothing will
so soon break down these narrownesses as common work and union with other ..."
6. Woman; Her Diseases and Remedies: A Series of Letters to His Class by Charles Delucena Meigs (1851)
"I wish that you would take the trouble to reflect carefully for a few moments,
on the power we possess to overcome constrictions and narrownesses, ..."
7. Dissertations and Discussions: Political, Philosophical, and Historical by John Stuart Mill (1874)
"The present became the era of re-action against the narrownesses of the eighteenth
century, as well as against those narrownesses of another ..."
8. What Science is Saying about Ireland (1882)
"The knowledge possessed by these is, of course, apt to be merely professional,
besides which professional men are subject to professional narrownesses. ..."