Lexicographical Neighbors of Sybaritically
Literary usage of Sybaritically
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning by Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1897)
"because I like sitting in a cloud; it's so sybaritically soft a chair. Now I love
you for the kind words you say of him, who deserves the best words of the ..."
2. The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning by Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1897)
"because I like sitting in a cloud; it's so sybaritically soft a chair. Now I love
you for the kind words you say of him, who deserves the best words of the ..."
3. The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning by Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1897)
"because I like sitting in a cloud; it's so sybaritically soft a chair. Now I love
you for the kind words you say of him, who deserves the best words of the ..."
4. The Gentleman's Magazine (1898)
"Driven out of the oats, the cows merely march into the loch and there sybaritically
enjoy the grateful coolness where their tormentors cannot reach them. ..."
5. The Gentleman's Magazine (1898)
"Driven out of the oats, the cows merely march into the loch and there sybaritically
enjoy the grateful coolness where their tormentors cannot reach them. ..."
6. The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning by Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1897)
"because I like sitting in a cloud; it's so sybaritically soft a chair. Now I love
you for the kind words you say of him, who deserves the best words of the ..."
7. The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning by Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1897)
"because I like sitting in a cloud; it's so sybaritically soft a chair. Now I love
you for the kind words you say of him, who deserves the best words of the ..."
8. The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning by Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1897)
"because I like sitting in a cloud; it's so sybaritically soft a chair. Now I love
you for the kind words you say of him, who deserves the best words of the ..."
9. The Gentleman's Magazine (1898)
"Driven out of the oats, the cows merely march into the loch and there sybaritically
enjoy the grateful coolness where their tormentors cannot reach them. ..."
10. The Gentleman's Magazine (1898)
"Driven out of the oats, the cows merely march into the loch and there sybaritically
enjoy the grateful coolness where their tormentors cannot reach them. ..."