¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Poulders
1. poulder [n] - See also: poulder
Lexicographical Neighbors of Poulders
Literary usage of Poulders
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Monthly Review by Charles William Wason (1832)
"On the left bank of the Scheldt, in the rear of the Tete de Flandre, we find the
poulders, vast and fertile tracts, successively formed by ..."
2. Reminiscences of James A. Hamilton: Or, Men and Events, at Home and Abroad by James Alexander Hamilton (1869)
"Let Holland depend upon England and Belgium fur the coal which is to dry her
poulders. Let Norway, and Russia, and Belgium, and the United States of America ..."
3. Memorials of Old Kent by George Clinch (1907)
"The flat country around, the tall poplars, and surrounding embanked marshes
called "poulders,"1 complete a landscape which transports one in fancy to the ..."
4. Publications by Shakespeare Society (Great Britain) (1853)
"... poulders, wine swillers, singers, dauncers and Majestic. players. God hath
now blessed England with ..."
5. The Camden Miscellany by Camden Society (Great Britain), Royal Historical Society (Great Britain) (1902)
"... among the ladies full of sweete waters and damaske poulders. At night after
all this triumphe in a bankett, ..."
6. The Library by Bibliographical Society (Great Britain)., Library Association (1890)
"The recipes seem to indicate that our English forefathers must have had marvellous
powers of digestion, to bear the gruesome "brothes, poulders, and dyett ..."