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Definition of Time of origin
1. Noun. The oldness of wines.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Time Of Origin
Literary usage of Time of origin
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Field Geology by Frederic Henry Lahee (1917)
"JOINTS IN RELATION TO THEIR time of origin 201. Age of Joints.—From what has been
stated above certain important conclusions may be drawn: (1) Joints having ..."
2. A Treatise on the Law of Domicil, National, Quasi-national, and Municipal by Michael William Jacobs (1887)
"marriage the father has changed his But this is a fiction ; so is domicil of
domicil ; or suppose that at the time of origin. So that we have fiction ..."
3. The Eruption of Krakatoa: And Subsequent Phenomena by John Wesley Judd, Richard Strachey, William James Lloyd Wharton, Frederick John Evans, Francis Albert Rollo Russell, Douglas Archibald, George Mathews Whipple (1888)
"These have been assumed to be as follows :— time of origin Assumed time of ...
The periods which elapsed between the time of origin of each movement and ..."
4. The Problem of the Old Testament Considered with Reference to Recent Criticism by James Orr (1906)
"... the iniquity of Eli's house shall not be purged (" atoned for," the Levitical
word) with sacrifice nor offering for ever." VI. time of origin OF THE ..."
5. Manual of Geology: Treating of the Principles of the Science with Special by James Dwight Dana (1894)
"After or during the upturning of the sandstone appears, therefore, to be the time
of origin of the larger part of the eruptions. ..."
6. Manual of Geology: Treating of the Principles of the Science with Special by James Dwight Dana (1894)
"After or during the upturning of the sandstone appears, therefore, to be the time
of origin of the larger part of the eruptions. ..."