Lexicographical Neighbors of Squabbed
Literary usage of Squabbed
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Publications by English Dialect Society (1880)
"Squab, v. to push ; to squeeze, Squab-pie, a pie- made of well seasoned fat
mutton, with layers of apples and an onion or two. squabbed ..."
2. The Metropolitan (1842)
"... squabbed down upon his knees before the king, gazed upwards in his face, his
large eyes open to their fullest extent, his lips parted, his face flushed, ..."
3. The London Magazine by John Scott, John Taylor (1821)
"The deity of the place was in his study, lolling on a well squabbed sofa, by the
side of a blazing fire ; his back guarded from the draft by a large folding ..."
4. The World's Best Essays, from the Earliest Period to the Present Time by Edward Archibald Allen, William Schuyler, David Josiah Brewer (1900)
"... squabbed; the guard's horn plays " Lullaby." Every flower by the roadside is
a poppy. Each jolt of the coach is but a drowsy stumble upstairs. ..."
5. The National Magazine by Abel Stevens, James Floy (1853)
"... squabbed ; the guard's horn plays " Lullaby." Every flower by the roadside is
a poppy. Each jolt of the coach is but a drowsy stumble up-stairs. ..."
6. Crowned Masterpieces of Literature that Have Advanced Civilization: As by Edward Archibald Allen, William Schuyler (1908)
"... squabbed; the guard's horn plays H Lullaby." Every flower by the roadside is
a poppy. Each jolt of the coach is but a drowsy stumble upstairs. ..."