Lexicographical Neighbors of Sardined
Literary usage of Sardined
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Mysterious India: Its Rajahs--its Brahmans--its Fakirs by Robert Chauvelot (1921)
"I believe the air itself is sardined!" We took coffee on the terrace, by moonlight.
M. Louit extolled to me the resources of the little colony of eight ..."
2. The Cinderellas of the Fleet by William Washburn Nutting (1920)
"... twenty-four men and two officers nicely sardined aboard a packet originally
designed for only eighteen, spent their time at sea and their money in port. ..."
3. The Great Push: An Episode of the Great War by Patrick MacGill (1916)
"There were nine of i;j there altogether; sardined in the bay of the trench which
the Munster Fusiliers held a few days ago. Nine! Flaherty, whom I knew very ..."
4. The Land of Sunshine by Charles Fletcher Lummis (1901)
"... found anything so bad as summer in the land which is sardined with the vast
majority of the people who confess that they are the smartest in the world. ..."
5. The War-whirl in Washington by Frank Ward O'Malley (1918)
"... the conductor, himself wedged hopelessly among a solid bulge of patriots
sardined into the forward end of the car, would bellow back in maddening tones ..."
6. By-ways of Nature and Life by Clarence Deming (1884)
"They are crowded with sealers, not unfrequently carrying as many as two hundred
and fifty men, " sardined" three in a bunk scarcely the same number of feet ..."
7. On the Heels of De Wet (1902)
"Still more disgusted, we returned to our bedding, and sardined in with the ruck
and rubbish on the platform. • •••• t • • Sunrise in South Africa. ..."