Lexicographical Neighbors of Tridarn
Literary usage of Tridarn
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. One-act Plays by Modern Authors by Helen Louise Cohen (1921)
"... and to the right of the door, is a tall, highly polished, oaken grandfather's
clock, with a shining brass face; to the left of the door is a tridarn. ..."
2. Three Welsh Plays: The Merry Merry Cuckoo, The Deacon's Hat, Welsh Honeymoon by Jeannette Augustus Marks (1917)
"The tridarn dresser is lined with bright blue paper and filled with luster china.
The floor is of beaten clay, whitewashed around the edges; ..."
3. The Transactions of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion by Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion (London, England) (1902)
"... tridarn "; while another was, if I remember rightly, a carved clock case.
On examining the pieces in both competitions, I was astonished to find that ..."
4. A Book of One-act Plays by Barbara Louise Schafer (1922)
"Between the clock and the door, back center, is a small tridarn (Welsh dresser)
and a chair. From the rafters hang flitches of bacon, hams, ..."
5. The Fourth Book of Pilgrimages to Old Homes by Fletcher Moss (1908)
"... with plenty of milk while we talked to Jael about her tridarn, or three decker
oak cupboard, dated 1651, her Welsh dressers with lustre ware, ..."
6. A Land-girl's Love Story by Berta Ruck (1919)
"... were all in the big front kitchen, with its dresser, its tridarn (or three-decker
oaken chest), its grandfather clock, and its long table set for seven. ..."