Lexicographical Neighbors of Sandheaps
Literary usage of Sandheaps
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The New Englander by William Lathrop Kingsley (1881)
"His son, bight Kjartan, was a brave man and well grown up. Thorstein the White,
a man was called, who lived at sandheaps, ..."
2. New Englander and Yale Review by Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight (1881)
"His son, hight Kjartan, was a brave man and well grown up. Thorstein the White,
a man was called, who lived at sandheaps, ..."
3. The Temple of Mut in Asher: An Account of the Excavation of the Temple and by Margaret Benson, Janet A. Gourlay, Percy Edward Newberry (1899)
"... and, rising slightly, disappears between sandheaps, forming a gap through
which one sees the distant rosy hills of the Gebel el Geir. ..."
4. The Living Age by Making of America Project, Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell (1876)
"... is the true cumulative faculty by which days add treasure to treasure, solidly
built up in the mind — not like those shifting sandheaps of acquirement, ..."
5. Music: A Monthly Magazine, Devoted to the Art, Science, Technic and (1896)
"... and we may deem ourselves happy, if in the endless sandheaps we may find a
few forlorn grains of gold. Be content that your taste is not that of the ..."
6. The New Englander by William Lathrop Kingsley (1881)
"His son, bight Kjartan, was a brave man and well grown up. Thorstein the White,
a man was called, who lived at sandheaps, ..."
7. New Englander and Yale Review by Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight (1881)
"His son, hight Kjartan, was a brave man and well grown up. Thorstein the White,
a man was called, who lived at sandheaps, ..."
8. The Temple of Mut in Asher: An Account of the Excavation of the Temple and by Margaret Benson, Janet A. Gourlay, Percy Edward Newberry (1899)
"... and, rising slightly, disappears between sandheaps, forming a gap through
which one sees the distant rosy hills of the Gebel el Geir. ..."
9. The Living Age by Making of America Project, Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell (1876)
"... is the true cumulative faculty by which days add treasure to treasure, solidly
built up in the mind — not like those shifting sandheaps of acquirement, ..."
10. Music: A Monthly Magazine, Devoted to the Art, Science, Technic and (1896)
"... and we may deem ourselves happy, if in the endless sandheaps we may find a
few forlorn grains of gold. Be content that your taste is not that of the ..."