Lexicographical Neighbors of Reclusions
Literary usage of Reclusions
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Proceedings by International Geographical Union General Assembly, International Geographical Union, Cantors Assembly (U.S.) (1882)
"... to the hidden reclusions around the south-pole for wide topographic and geologic
exploration, for the ascent of its giant mountains, for the gradual ..."
2. Neuman and Baretti's Dictionary of the Spanish and English Languages by Henry Neuman, Giuseppe Baretti (1851)
"Couch, any thing fit to lean RECLUIR, ta. To shut up, to seclude. reclusions,»/'.
1. Réclusion, the act of shutting RF. ..."
3. The Life of St. Columba, Founder of Hy by Adamnan, William Reeves (1857)
"... SIMILI reclusions. ALIO itidem *in tempore, vir beatus, 'aliquantis in Scotia*
diebus "conver- satus, ..."
4. Biblia by Charles Henry Stanley Davis (1902)
"... or are differing considerably from other reclusions of them, and it is
consequently a decided advantage to have the three fables on papyrus indicating ..."
5. Letters Written During a Journey in Spain and a Short Residence in Portugal by Robert Southey (1808)
"It is said that the Bierzo could not hold the disciples who flocked to Fructuoso,
and that he was obliged to establish Convents and reclusions, as they were ..."
6. The Education of Mothers of Families, Or, The Civilisation of the Human Race by Louis-Aimé Martin, Edwin Lee (1842)
"... castes, privileges, vassalage, the celibacy of priests, monastic reclusions,
religious suicides, these vices and degradations of civilised Europe; ..."