Definition of Nowls

1. nowl [n] - See also: nowl

Lexicographical Neighbors of Nowls

nowed
nowel
nowell
nowells
nowels
nowhen
nowhence
nowhere
nowhere else
nowhere to be found
nowheres
nowhile
nowhither
nowise
nowl
nowls (current term)
nown
nowness
nownesses
nows
nowthe
nowts
nowy
noxa
noxae
noxal
noxes
noxious
noxious trade

Literary usage of Nowls

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Works of James Pilkington by James Pilkington, John Morwen, James Scholefield (1842)
"Weep he may not, for disfiguring his face; fasting is thought hypocrisy and a shame: and when his paunch is full, then, as priests with their drunken nowls' ..."

2. The Library of Literary Criticism of English and American Authors by Charles Wells Moulton (1905)
"... with their black swollen jobber-nowls reclining on their breasts, and saucy-eyes fixed upon the ill-favoured prophet—appeared so like the concluding ..."

3. American Literature by Alphonso Gerald Newcomer (1901)
"Also poems, and several nowls: "A Tallahassee Girl," 1882; "Alice of Old Vincennes," 1900. ..."

4. The History of English Poetry: From the Close of the Eleventh to the by Thomas Warton (1824)
"... They armed them in mattes; They sett on their nowls ' Good blacke bowls k, To keep their ..."

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