¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Putrified
Literary usage of Putrified
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Church History of Britain: From the Birth of Jesus Christ Until the Year by Thomas Fuller, John Sherren Brewer (1845)
"... otherwise most dangerous are the smells of man's flesh, or sweat putrified;
for they are not those stinks, which the nostrils straight abhor and expel, ..."
2. The Church History of Britain: From the Birth of Jesus Christ Until the Year by Thomas Fuller, John Sherren Brewer (1845)
"... otherwise most dangerous are the smells of man's flesh, or sweat putrified;
for they are not those stinks, which the nostrils straight abhor and expel, ..."
3. History of the Expedition to Russia Undertaken by the Emperor Napoleon, in by Philippe-Paul Ségur (1825)
"from the infection of the air by the putrified carcasses of men and horses that
strewed the roads, sprang two dreadful epidemics—the dysentery and the ..."
4. A History of Inventions and Discoveries: Alphabetically Arranged by Francis Sellon White (1827)
"... where, mixing with some of the putrified parts of the wood, and being washed
with the rains, it budded and produced within this tree, ..."
5. The Retrospect of Medicine by William Braithwaite (1864)
"[The following successful attempt to restore to its natural appearance a putrified
dead body, in order to prove its identity, reflects the greatest honour ..."
6. Discourses Upon the Existence and Attributes of God by Stephen Charnock, William Symington (1874)
"... and cull out their bodies, though wrapped up in a cloud of the putrified
carcases of the wicked. As he knew them from all eternity to elect them, ..."
7. A Natural and Medicinal History of Worms, Bred in the Bodies of Men and by Daniel Le Clerc (1721)
"The Gene- ' is from the fecundated Feminine Egg; nor can they f find here, a
decay'd or putrified Place who think ' lodge in the Blood, ..."