Lexicographical Neighbors of Reknotted
Literary usage of Reknotted
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Letters of Henry James by Henry James (1920)
"My dear Edith and my dear Edward, The d'Humieres have just been lunching with
me, and that has so reknotted the silver cord that stretched so tense from the ..."
2. The Writings of Bret Harte by Bret Harte (1896)
"She ran her fingers through his sandy curls, deftly smoothed his beard and
reknotted his neckerchief. " You oughter hev put on your other shirt, Gabe; ..."
3. Scholasticism Old and New: An Introduction to Scholastic Philosophy by Maurice Wulf (1907)
"The thread of tradition extending from ancient to modern philosophy is now for
all time reknotted. Nothing in the world seems less like an intellectual ..."
4. Scholasticism Old and New: An Introduction to Scholastic Philosophy by Maurice Wulf (1907)
"The thread of tradition extending from ancient to modern philosophy is now for
all time reknotted. Nothing in the world seems less like an intellectual ..."
5. Studies of Paris by Edmondo De Amicis (1882)
"... threads of stories madly broken and reknotted, rambles, or rather furious
races, whose aim one cannot see, and which present at every step a precipice. ..."
6. Art Panels from the Hand Looms of the Far Orient by Garabed Thomas Pushman (1911)
"... generally in pure cream color, the weft nearly always cotton; the ends are
finished with long fringe, knotted and reknotted till it forms a band about ..."