Lexicographical Neighbors of Nodations
Literary usage of Nodations
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Gentleman's Magazine (1812)
"If there are any gradations in their accom!nodations of their customers, they
may be left to their respective appearances, though all are good. ..."
2. A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquitiesby William George Smith, Charles Anthon by William George Smith, Charles Anthon (1870)
"... was to provide the proper nodations for foreign ambassadors and such as were
connected with the Republic by ..."
3. Over the Range to the Golden Gate: A Complete Tourist's Guide to Colorado by Stanley Wood (1889)
"... the lovely suburbs and nodations of Denver are prob- in the country. There are
six ments, to say nothing of some •o days, can be profitably spent jng ..."
4. The English Reader; Or, Pieces in Prose and Verse, from the Best Writers by Lindley Murray (1842)
"... and shine only by reflection; have fields, and eas, and skies of their own;
are furnished with all accom- nodations for animal subsistence,fand are ..."
5. Reports of Cases Argued and Adjudged in the Supreme Court of the District of by Charles Cowles Tucker (1883)
"But ;t is ki-'own that a dock-yard or a magazine would afford >|l com nodations
for persons stricken by mortal blows. ..."
6. Hermathena by Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland) (1883)
"... for in 358 lunations there are (according to the approximations here adopted)
777 semi-nodations, bringing thus the moon to the opposite node; ..."
7. The Memorial History of the City of New-York: From Its First Settlement to by James Grant Wilson (1893)
"By May, 1851, the mission comprised eight houses, with nodations for one
hundred ^^^^^^^^^^ enty souls, and had become r for good in that benighted ..."
8. A Year in Europe by John Griscom (1824)
"At Saxton's Hotel I found ample room, and good acoon. nodations, for this is not
the season of visitors, The views i. * Gossypium, the cotton plant. ..."