Lexicographical Neighbors of Overencouraged
Literary usage of Overencouraged
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The History of Cuba by Willis Fletcher Johnson (1920)
"... privilege in a city where the circulation of air had not been overencouraged.
M. Masse comments at length upon these conditions in his book on Havana. ..."
2. Seventy-first New York in the World War by Robert Stewart Sutliffe (1922)
"meets were, therefore, not overencouraged. On the other hand, games employing
large numbers were encouraged. So superior seemed the British system ..."
3. Manual of the Diseases of Children by John Madison Taylor, William Hughes Wells (1901)
"If such brains are overencouraged, they are capable of using up too readily what
little residual vigor there is in the entire organism. ..."
4. Food: What it is and Does by Edith Greer (1915)
"For others it destroys sleep and delays digestion. Its use is not to be
overencouraged, but regulated it is of value under many conditions of adult life. ..."
5. Reports of the Industrial Commission by United States Industrial Commission, James Henderson Kyle, Albert Clarke (1901)
"... comes to overencouraged mill and factory building. He thinks there will be no
material reaction in wool unless the tariff is reduced, but says there is ..."