¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Reveilles
1. reveille [n] - See also: reveille
Lexicographical Neighbors of Reveilles
Literary usage of Reveilles
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Original Letters, Illustrative of English History: Including Numerous Royal by Henry Ellis (1825)
"reveilles Your, &c. Car dicy a smile fols dix Ne fees ny fut an pair Tel ...
reveilles your, &c.' Louis the Twelfth was in declining health at the time of ..."
2. Transactions of the Philological Society by Philological Society (Great Britain). (1887)
"62 [we read] : 'Next morning come the fidlers, and scrape him a wicked reveilles,' '
I do not know the date of this book. Englishmen are commonly not very ..."
3. The Ship's Company and Other Sea People by James Douglas Jerrold Kelley (1896)
"Ah! those first reveilles, those awful reveilles are ever rude awakenings, and
is it a wonder the homesick, half-aroused boy discovers life to be lonesome ..."
4. The Ship's Company and Other Sea People by James Douglas Jerrold Kelley (1897)
"Ah ! those first reveilles, those awful reveilles are ever rude awakenings, and
is it a wonder the homesick, half-aroused boy discovers life to be lonesome ..."
5. Works by Manuel Márquez Sterling, William Makepeace Thackeray, Leslie Stephen, Louise Stanage (1902)
"At daybreak John was to awaken him, but his own eagerness for the sport had served
as a reveilles long since—so long, that it seemed to him as if the day ..."