10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «FLATUOUS»
Discover the use of
flatuous in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
flatuous and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Encyclopaedic Dictionary: A New, Original and Exhaustive ...
"This flatuous crudity is by the heat consumed.”7mm: l'la Redo, p. 152. 3.
Generating wind in the stomach. " Rhubarb in the stomach. in a small quantity
flatuous nor loathdlgest and overcome, bei not some."-Bacon: Natural E , i 44. “till
-0M4!“ s.
Robert Hunter, Charles Morris, 1896
2
The Workes of that Famous Physitian, Dr. Alexander Read ...: ...
The causes of crudity are ebriety, gluttony, a sedentary life , and The diffcm:
flatuous meats and drinks; such are beere or ale not well boyled, fastbffffiez;
pease,beans,chesnuts,turneps, radishes, green fruit, swines Hesh, gMJo'uJ-u.
water ...
3
A Dictionary of the English Language: Intended to Exhibi ... ...
Fistula, Fistshula, Fistshula, Fistula, Fistula. Flatulence, Flatshulencc, Flatulence,
Flatulence, Flatulence. Flatuous, Flatshuous, Flatuous, Flatuous. Fluctuate,
Fluctshuatc, Fluctuate, Fluctuate, Fluctuate. Fortune, Fortshune, Fortshune,
Fortune, ...
Which is a windy flatuous humour stuffing The head, and thence derived to th'
animal parts. To be too over-curious, loss of goods Or friends, excess of fear or
sorrows, cause it. Enter a sea-nymph big-bellied, singing and dancing. Nymph.
John Ford, R. F. Hill, 1985
5
Lloyd's Encyclopædic dictionary
In a unull quantity, doth digest ami overcome, being not flatuous nor loathsome."
— Bacon: Natural Butory, f 44. ftat'-u-ous-ness, s. [Eng. flatuous; -nest.] The
quality or state of being flatuous ; flatulence, wind. "They «qm fluctuations and ...
®flatuous ̄,. or may say that the attack [is caused by] sorrow and fear. Now when
the symptoms ofdementia appearinasevere form, noincident at all, orifthere be
anya smallone, taking place in the ...
7
The Method of Physick: Containing the Causes, Signes, and ...
Therefore( as Galen saith) all rumours do chance besides nature , which proceed
either of humours , or os a flatuous and windie s irit, which is gathered sometime
vnder the skin , sometime vnder the thinn'e lrnes that couer the bones ...
8
An American Dictionary of the English Language: Containing ...
... Dictatshur, Discomfitshur, Discourushus, Disnaturalize, Disustshured,
Divestshur, Dutyus, Etfectual, linraptshur, Estuary, Estuste, Eventual, Expostulate,
Factshlll', Fastuous, Festshur, Fisttlll, Flatulenoe, Flatuous, Fluctuate, Fortune,
Fnctshur, ...
Noah Webster, Chauncey Allen Goodrich, Noah Porter, 1850
9
A Contemporary History of Affairs in Ireland, from 1641 to ...
And this flatuous humor filleth the emptie blader of his vaste thoughts with soe
much winde of pride, as he pre- siimes" that fortune, whoe hath once been his
good mistris, should euer be his handmaide. But the wings of self-conceite
wherwith ...
Sir John Thomas Gilbert, 1880
And this flatuous humor filleth the emptie blader of his vaste thoughts with soe
much winde of pride, as he presumes that fortune, whoe hath once been his
good mistris, should euer be his handmaide. But the wings of self-conceite
wherwith he ...
Irish Archaeological and Celtic Society, 1880