Lexicographical Neighbors of Tuftily
Literary usage of Tuftily
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Irish Literature by Justin McCarthy, Maurice Francis Egan, Douglas Hyde, Charles Welsh, Gregory, James Jeffrey Roche (1904)
"Apple alleys bowering, Pinked-topped orchards flowering, Fenced off hill and
wind; Leek tree forests loftily, Carrots branching tuftily, Guarded it behind. ..."
2. Bards of the Gael and Gall: Examples of the Poetic Literature of Erinn, Done by George Sigerson (1907)
"Apple alleys bowering, Pink-topped orchards flowering, Fenced off hill and wind ;
Leek tree forests loftily, Carrots branching tuftily, ..."
3. The Golden Treasury of Irish Songs and Lyrics by Charles Welsh (1907)
"Apple alley bowering, Pinked-topped orchards flowering, Fenced off hill and wind;
Leek tree forests loftily, Carrots branching tuftily, Guarded it behind. ..."
4. The Organic Constituents of Plants and Vegetable Substances and Their by Georg Christoph Wittstein (1878)
"Crystallises in delicate, orange-yellow, tuftily-united needles, tastes at first
sweetish, irritating, afterwards burning and acrid, fuses readily, ..."
5. The Rothamsted Memoirs on Agricultural Chemistry and Physiology by Rothamsted Experimental Station, John Bennet Lawes, Joseph Henry Gilbert (1893)
"It grows tuftily, and is said to have the tendency to banish other grasses.
Its character is to yield a good early feed, and a free-growing and hardy ..."
6. The Rothamsted Memoirs on Agricultural Science by Rothamsted Experimental Station, Joseph Henry Gilbert, John Bennet Lawes (1893)
"It grows tuftily, and is said to have the tendency to banish other grasses.
Its character is to yield a good early feed, and a free-growing and hardy ..."
7. The Works of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland by Samuel Johnson (1800)
"... B '*• beauty has wings and too tuftily fli«, ™ Vne unrewarded, icon fick«»
and diet. '* nymph cur'd by time of her folly and pride, ..."