Lexicographical Neighbors of Sapour
Literary usage of Sapour
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Early English Poetry, Ballads, and Popular Literature of the Middle Agesby Percy Society by Percy Society (1848)
"Thy bread is blacke, of ill sapour and taste, And harde as a flint because thou
none should waste, That scant be thy teeth able it to breake; ..."
2. The Cytezen and Uplondyshman: An Eclogueby Alexander Barclay, Frederick William Fairholt by Alexander Barclay, Frederick William Fairholt (1847)
"Thy bread is blacke, of ill sapour and taste, And harde as a flint because thou
none should waste, That scant be thy teeth able it to breake; ..."
3. Early Tudor Poetry, 1485-1547 by John Milton Berdan (1920)
"EARLY TUDOR POETRY Thy bread is blacke, of ill sapour and taste. ... moste diuers
of sapour, On one dishe dayly nodes shalt thou blowe. ..."
4. Early Tudor Poetry, 1485-1547 by John Milton Berdan (1920)
"Thy bread is blacke, of ill sapour and taste, And harde as a flint because thou
none should wast, That scant be thy teeth able it to breake, ..."
5. A View of the History and Coinage of the Parthians: With Descriptive by John Lindsay (1852)
"... and after the birth of a son, who was called sapour, a favorable opportunity
occurring, he was presented to his father who joyfully received him, ..."
6. Early English Poetry, Ballads, and Popular Literature of the Middle Agesby Percy Society by Percy Society (1848)
"Thy bread is blacke, of ill sapour and taste, And harde as a flint because thou
none should waste, That scant be thy teeth able it to breake; ..."
7. The Cytezen and Uplondyshman: An Eclogueby Alexander Barclay, Frederick William Fairholt by Alexander Barclay, Frederick William Fairholt (1847)
"Thy bread is blacke, of ill sapour and taste, And harde as a flint because thou
none should waste, That scant be thy teeth able it to breake; ..."
8. Early Tudor Poetry, 1485-1547 by John Milton Berdan (1920)
"EARLY TUDOR POETRY Thy bread is blacke, of ill sapour and taste. ... moste diuers
of sapour, On one dishe dayly nodes shalt thou blowe. ..."
9. Early Tudor Poetry, 1485-1547 by John Milton Berdan (1920)
"Thy bread is blacke, of ill sapour and taste, And harde as a flint because thou
none should wast, That scant be thy teeth able it to breake, ..."
10. A View of the History and Coinage of the Parthians: With Descriptive by John Lindsay (1852)
"... and after the birth of a son, who was called sapour, a favorable opportunity
occurring, he was presented to his father who joyfully received him, ..."