Lexicographical Neighbors of Reinvigorator
Literary usage of Reinvigorator
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science by Kansas Academy of Science (1922)
"The barberry doc« increase the severity of stem rust, and may act as a reinvigorator
of the fungus. ..."
2. The American Cyclopaedia: A Popular Dictionary of General Knowledge by Charles Anderson Dana (1873)
"Through the itinerant system, of which he was the reinvigorator and life-long
illustrator, the spiritual destitution of our pioneer population was relieved. ..."
3. The American Cyclopaedia: A Popular Dictionary of General Knowledge by George Ripley, Charles Anderson Dana (1883)
"Through the itinerant system, of which he was the reinvigorator and life-long
illustrator, the spiritual destitution of our pioneer population was relieved. ..."
4. Pietism and Methodism: Or, the Significance of German Pietism in the Origin by Arthur Wilford Nagler (1918)
"At times he lingered on by-paths; but invariably he returned to take up the main
issue, the reinvigorator of personal piety. His efforts centered about one ..."
5. Sexual Science: Including Manhod, Womanhood, and Their Mutual Interrelations by Orson Squire Fowler (1870)
"As a recreating amusement it has no equal, nor as a pro- longer of life, or
reinvigorator of all the faculties. It promotes »flection, because enjoying ..."
6. A Treatise on Theism, and on the Modern Skeptical Theories by Francis Wharton (1859)
"... the holy Clotilde," the companion of his solitude and reinvigorator of his
philosophy, rises above the nymph Egeria, and unites the three anomalous ..."
7. Eclectic Journal of Medicine by John Bell (1840)
"... stadium as an astringent to restrain hemorrhage, and in the last stage of
debility, as a sub-tonic, or safe stimulant and reinvigorator. ..."