¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Signaries
1. signary [n] - See also: signary
Lexicographical Neighbors of Signaries
Literary usage of Signaries
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Inscriptions of Kourion by Terence Bruce Mitford (1971)
"Signs 8 and 9 are indeed puzzling, since as they stand they offer forms hitherto
unknown alike to the Paphian and the non-Paphian signaries. ..."
2. The Inscriptions of Kourion by Terence Bruce Mitford (1971)
"393, 394, for the signaries of archaic and classical Paphos; table 6, p. 395,
for the Common Cypriot. ; Bull. Inst. Class. Stud London, Suppl. 10: pp. ..."
3. Good Will, Trade-marks and Unfair Trading by Edward Sidney Rogers (1914)
"... in discussing neolithic culture, calls attention to a collection of prehistoric
Egyptian pottery marks, the so-called signaries of the First Dynasty, ..."
4. Good Will, Trade-marks and Unfair Trading by Edward Sidney Rogers (1914)
"... in discussing neolithic culture, calls attention to a collection of prehistoric
Egyptian pottery marks, the so-called signaries of the First Dynasty, ..."
5. Psychology and Pedagogy of Writing: A Résumé of the Researches and by Mary Elizabeth Thompson (1911)
"... more or less pictographic, which have their representatives in signaries used
in ancient commerce and in manufacturers' trade-marks" (9, p. 46). ..."
6. Psychology and Pedagogy of Writing: A Résumé of the Researches and by Mary Elizabeth Thompson (1911)
"... more or less pictographic, which have their representatives in signaries used
in ancient commerce and in manufacturers' trade-marks" (9, p. 46). ..."
7. The Story of the Alphabet by Edward Clodd (1900)
"... characters more or less pic- tographic, which have their representatives in
signaries used in ancient commerce and in manufacturers' trade marks. ..."
8. The School World: A Monthly Magazine of Educational Work and Progress (1902)
"... signaries, and more nearly related to these old Aegean scripts than to their
Levantine or Phoenician counterparts. More directly bearing upon tne ..."