Lexicographical Neighbors of Sabling
Literary usage of Sabling
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Reports of the United States Commissioners to the Paris Universal Exposition by Edward Henry Knight (1880)
"M. Haak reports that by this method he has successfully retarded the hatching of
the eggs of the sabling for the period of five mouths, at the end of which ..."
2. Coomassie and Magdala: The Story of Two British Campaigns in Africa by Henry Morton Stanley (1874)
"... and by the circumambient mountains, which recede from all points to a distance
of ten miles, is dimly seen through the sabling twilight the lofty head ..."
3. The Baviad, and Maeviad by William Gifford (1811)
"One luckless evening, " When twilight on the western edge " Had twined his hoary
hair with sabling sedge," as he was " weeping" (for, like Master Stephen, ..."
4. The Baviad, and Maeviad by William Gifford, Anthony Pasquin, Robert Faulder (1810)
"One luckless evening, " When twilight on the western edge " Had twined his hoary
hair with sabling sedge," as he was " weeping" (for, like Master Stephen, ..."
5. The Poetical Register, and Repository of Fugitive Poetry for (1807)
"... unseen, sabling the splendid tints of Fancy, comes Disgust: Disgust or
Disappointment crowns ..."
6. Lives of Distinguished Shoemakers (1849)
"One luckless evening " When twilight on the western edge Had twined his hoary
hair with sabling sedge,'1 as he was "weeping" (for, like Master Stephen, ..."