Lexicographical Neighbors of Paradisaically
Literary usage of Paradisaically
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Constitutional and Political History of the United States by Hermann Von Holst, John Joseph Lalor, Ira Hutchinson Brainerd (1892)
"... the republicans might with good reason have been told, if they clung to his
candidacy, that they imputed to the people a paradisaically ingenuous way of ..."
2. The Constitutional and Political History of the United States by Hermann Von Holst, John Joseph Lalor, Paul Shorey, Ira Hutchinson Brainerd (1892)
"... the republicans might with good reason have been told, if they clung to his
candidacy, that they imputed to the people a paradisaically ingenuous way of ..."
3. Main Currents in Nineteenth Century Literature by Georg Morris Cohen Brandes (1906)
"As far as possible he evades troublesome questions: he refuses, for example, to
decide whether mankind came into being in a savage or in a paradisaically ..."
4. The Masque Torn Off by Thomas De Witt Talmage (1882)
"The witnesses must have had excess of delight. Their pleasures were pyramidal.
They bloomed paradisaically. If they drank wine, it must be the best that was ..."
5. Tour in England, Ireland, and France: In the Years 1826, 1827, 1828, and by Hermann Pückler-Muskau (1833)
"The first is a singular and paradisaically luxuriant country, differing completely
from the forms and appearances of that which surround us. ..."