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Definition of One hundred ninety
1. Adjective. Being ten more than one hundred eighty.
Lexicographical Neighbors of One Hundred Ninety
Literary usage of One hundred ninety
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. United States Statutes at Large: Containing the Laws and Concurrent by United States (1850)
"On the county of Brooke, one thousand one hundred ninety-five dollars and fifty
cents. On the county of Bath, two thousand three hundred five dollars and ..."
2. Journal by California Legislature. Assembly, California, Legislature (1912)
"... and Los Angeles City precincts numbers one hundred ninety- two, one hundred
ninety-three, one hundred ninety-four, one hundred ninety-seven, one hundred ..."
3. The Manufacture of Pulp and Paper: A Textbook of Modern Pulp and Paper Mill by J. Newell Stephenson (1921)
"... one- hundred-two, etc., one-hundred-twenty-one, one-hundred-twenty- two, etc.
to one-hundred-ninety-nine, the next number being two-hundred. ..."
4. Indian Wars of New England by Herbert Milton Sylvester (1910)
"... under the command of Major Edward Gibbons, with one hundred ninety men.1 It
was thought fit to make a final effort with these people toward a possible ..."
5. The Manufacture of Pulp and Paper: A Textbook of Modern Pulp and Paper Mill by J. Newell Stephenson (1921)
"... one- hundred-two, etc., one-hundred-twenty-one, one-hundred-twenty- two, etc.
to one-hundred-ninety-nine, the next number being two-hundred. ..."
6. The Public and General Statutes Passed by the Congress of the United States by Joseph Story, United States, George Sharswood (1839)
"... one thousand nine hundred seven dollars and fifty cents ; on the county of
Brooke, one thousand one hundred ninety-five dollars and fifty cents ; on the ..."
7. The Colonial Records of the State of Georgia by Georgia General Assembly (1904)
"... twelve Shillings to William Butler the 24th of July 1736 from his Cash Book
entring the said Bill only One hundred Ninety three Pounds twelve Shillings, ..."
8. The Statutes at Large from the Magna Charta, to the End of the Eleventh by Great Britain (1765)
"... millings and two pence three farthings, in fuch manner, order and degree as
is herein after mentioned, that is to fay, the fum of one hundred ninety ..."