Lexicographical Neighbors of Overvivid
Literary usage of Overvivid
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. University Musical Encyclopedia by Louis Charles Elson (1912)
"While the worthy doctor regarded his son's efforts in musical composition merely
as an outlet for an overvivid imagination, the young Hector found pleasure ..."
2. The International Library of Famous Literature: Selections from the World's by Richard Garnett, Leon Vallée, Alois Brandl, Donald Grant Mitchell (1899)
"She turned from Mr. Simeon English's overvivid picturing less perhaps with scorn
than with dread. There was something strange, coarse, violent, ..."
3. Industrial and Personal Hygiene by George Martin Kober (1908)
"... July 28, 1907), to the fact that children suffer more frequently from night
terrors, which are really overvivid dreams, on Sunday and Monday nights. ..."
4. Industrial and Personal Hygiene by George Martin Kober (1908)
"... July 28, 1907), to the fact that children suffer more frequently from night
terrors, which are really overvivid dreams, on Sunday and Monday nights. ..."
5. The Venice Academy: Containing a Brief History of the Building and of Its by Mary Knight Potter (1905)
"Thus, the colours, which the light of the Academy makes crude and overvivid, were
there softened and dimmed. So, too, the lack of anatomical construction in ..."
6. Reports of the President's Homes Commission: Message from the President by George Miller Sternberg (1909)
"... in an editorial (Journal AMA, July 28, 1007), to the fact that children suffer
more frequently from night terrors, which are really overvivid dreams, ..."