¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Stagnations
1. stagnation [n] - See also: stagnation
Lexicographical Neighbors of Stagnations
Literary usage of Stagnations
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Air Force and the Great Engine War by Robert W. Drewes (1995)
"One of the first was occurrence of a high rate of stall stagnations. STALL stagnations
An engine stall is a momentary hesitation in engine operation caused ..."
2. Medical Record by George Frederick Shrady, Thomas Lathrop Stedman (1884)
"... by reason of Jacques [privies], Dunghills, and other excrementitious stagnations
and accumulations, which offend and annoy the bodies of Men, ..."
3. The Epidemic of 1878 and Its Homoepathic Treatment: A General History of the by Ernest Hardenstein (1879)
"Fifth—Shallow stagnations, when exposed to the hot summer suns for a considerable
length of time, give out disagreeable odors evidently arising from ..."
4. The Works of Alexander Hamilton by Alexander Hamilton (1904)
"A third circumstance, perhaps not inferior to either of the other two, conferring
the superiority which has been stated, has relation to the stagnations of ..."
5. The Monthly Review by Ralph Griffiths (1817)
"They well know that in their lines they can never be secure from these stagnations.
They should, therefore, prepare for them. ..."
6. The Library of Original Sources: Ideas that Have Influenced Civilization, in edited by Oliver Joseph Thatcher (1915)
"A third circumstance, perhaps not inferior to either of the other two, conferring
the superiority which has been stated, has relation to the stagnations of ..."