Lexicographical Neighbors of Overclad
Literary usage of Overclad
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Short Talks with Young Mothers on the Management of Infants and Young Children by Charles Gilmore Kerley (1922)
"Most babies are overclad at all seasons of the year. When prickly heat develops,
regardless of the season, it is a sure sign that the child has been kept ..."
2. Treatment of the diseases of children by Charles Gilmore Kerley (1909)
"Most babies are overclad at all seasons of the year. When prickly heat develops,
regardless of the season, it is a sure sign that the child has been kept ..."
3. The Journal of Home Economics by American Home Economics Association (1910)
"... remembering that if one part is overclad and another thinly covered, a lack
of equilibrium in the temperature renders the organism weak, liable to colds ..."
4. Familiar Allusions: A Hand-book of Miscellaneous Information Including the by William Adolphus Wheeler, Charles Gardner Wheeler (1894)
"Just behind the palace (which is of excellent architecture) in the centre of the
enclosure rises an hi.L'h hill or mount aine all overclad ..."
5. Six Months in Italy by George Stillman Hillard (1881)
"... in the centre of the inclosure, rises a high hiii or mountain all overclad
with tall wood, and so formed by nature as if it had been cut out by art, ..."