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Definition of One-eared
1. Adjective. Having a single ear.
Lexicographical Neighbors of One-eared
Literary usage of One-eared
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Pioneer History of Indiana: Including Stories, Incidents, and Customs of the by William Monroe Cockrum (1907)
"They attributed it all to the same one- eared black cat, and as soon as they were
able to get away, they moved up east on the Patoka river and none of them ..."
2. Psychology of the Other-one: An Introductory Text-book of Psychology by Max Friedrich Meyer (1922)
"The one-eared person therefore reflexly adjusts his sense organ by turning ...
When the one-eared person has thus learned to stretch out his arm with the ..."
3. Hyksos and Israelite Cities by William Matthew Flinders Petrie, John Garrow Duncan (1906)
"At the head stood a small one-eared pot, no. 101, of whitish ground with red ...
11o, 111, and a small one-eared white pot. Grave 378 was 80 x 40 d. x 30 w. ..."
4. Animal Life and Intelligence by Conwy Lloyd Morgan (1891)
"... from a chance sport of a one-eared rabbit, Anderson formed a breed which
steadily produced one-eared rabbits ("Animals and Plants under Domestication," ..."
5. The Ear of Dionysius: Further Scripts Affording Evidence of Personal Survival by Gerald William Balfour, Florence Melian Stawell (1920)
"... a slave, the Tyrant—and it was called Orecchio—that's near One Ear, a one
eared place, not a one horsed dawn [here the automatist laughed slightly], ..."
6. Through Arctic Lapland by Charles John Cutcliffe Wright Hyne (1898)
"First Hayter spoke, then the one-eared Finn lifted up his voice, and then I chimed
in; and between each separate piece of talk the pirate expostulated and ..."
7. Is the Negro a Beast?: A Reply to Chas. Carroll's Book Entitled "The Negro a by William Gallio Schell (1901)
"... also that caused tho mutilated guinea- pigs to be born by tho females who
looked upon the self-mutilated males; and that caused tho little one- eared ..."
8. Elements of Physiological Psychology: A Treatise of the Activities and by George Trumbull Ladd, Robert Sessions Woodworth (1911)
"... considerable) power of localization as possessed by a one-eared person;1 and,
further, in the assignment of sounds to front and rear, above and below. ..."