Lexicographical Neighbors of Streps
Literary usage of Streps
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Specimens of the Poets and Poetry of Greece and Rome by William Peter (1847)
"streps. I've hit the nail That does the deed, and so you will confess. Soc. ...
streps. Good chance but you have noted A pretty toy, a trinket in the shops, ..."
2. The World's Progress: With Illustrative Texts from Masterpieces of Egyptian by Delphian Society (1913)
"streps. None of speaking, But a most apt propensity to cheating. Soc. If this be
all, how can you hope to learn? streps. Fear me not, never break your head ..."
3. The Masterpieces and the History of Literature: Analysis, Criticism by Julian Hawthorne, John Russell Young, Oliver Herbrand Gordon Leigh, John Porter Lamberton (1906)
"streps. None of speaking, But a most apt propensity to cheating. Soc. ... streps.
The blows of him that beats me do I feel; But having breathed a while, ..."
4. The World's Progress: With Illustrative Texts from Masterpieces of Egyptian by Delphian Society, J. K. Brennan (1913)
"streps. None of speaking, But a most apt propensity to cheating. Soc. ... streps.
The blows of him that beats me do I feel; But having breathed a while, ..."
5. Aristophanous nephelai =: The clouds of Aristophanes. : The Greek text with by Aristophanes, Benjamin Bickley Rogers (1852)
"streps. You have heard a million times what 'tis I want : My debts ! my debts !
... streps. I've found a notion how to shirk my debts. SOCR. ..."