Lexicographical Neighbors of Refeel
Literary usage of Refeel
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Constitutional History of England Since the Accession of George the by Sir Thomas Erskine May (1887)
"The bad harvest of this year, and the failure of the potato crop, precipitated
a crisis which the Corn- refeel o{ the law League and public opinion must ..."
2. The Potomac and the Rapidan: Army Notes from the Failure at Winchester to by Alonzo Hall Quint (1864)
"... a large number of Testaments which had been taken from the bodies of killed
or wounded at the refeel roadside hospital, with letters and other papers. ..."
3. Notes on English Etymology: Chiefly Reprinted from the Transactions of the by Walter William Skeat (1901)
"In any case, Wedgwood makes one good point, in which I at once concur, viz.
that the compound verb to refit certainly arose, primarily, from the ME refeel, ..."
4. A Broader Elementary Education by John Pancoast Gordy (1903)
"The ultimate purpose of all knowledge about literature is to help the student to
rethink the thoughts and refeel the feelings of an author. ..."
5. A Broader Elementary Education by John Pancoast Gordy (1903)
"The ultimate purpose of all knowledge about literature is to help the student to
rethink the thoughts and refeel the feelings of an author. ..."
6. Swain School Lectures by Andrew Ingraham (1903)
"Very few indeed are called to refeel the feelings that preceded speech; and of
these fewer still are chosen; and these even come back and cannot tell the ..."