Lexicographical Neighbors of Reconfining
Literary usage of Reconfining
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Penal Code of the State of New York in Force December 1, 1882: As by New York (State) (1906)
"reconfining persons discharged upon writ.— A person, who either solely, or as a
member of a court, or in the execution of a judgment, order or process, ..."
2. The Living Age by Making of America Project, Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell (1891)
"In 1859 a German physicist, Kirchhoff by name, performed in his laboratory the
classical experiment of reConfining our attention, however, ..."
3. The Diseases of the Ear: Their Nature, Diagnosis, and Treatment by Joseph Toynbee, James Hinton (1868)
"... I have arrived at the conviction that the bubble of water, discharge, or
mucilage, acted beneficially by temporarily reconfining tho ..."
4. The Penal Code of California: Enacted in 1872, as Amended Up to and by California, James Henry Deering (1897)
"reconfining persons discharged upon writ of habeas corpus. § 364. Concealing persons
entitled to benefit of habeas corpus. § 365. ..."
5. The Codes and Statutes of California: As Amended and in Force at the Close by California, Carter Pitkin Pomeroy (1901)
"reconfining persons discharged upon writ of habeas corpus. Sec. 363. Every person
who, either solely or as member of a court, knowingly and unlawfully ..."