10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «IRRENOWNED»
Discover the use of
irrenowned in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
irrenowned and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Encyclopaedia metropolitana: or Universal dictionary of ...
For, all he did was to deceiue good knights, And draw them from pursuit of praise
and fame, To slug and sloth and sensuall delights, And end their daies with
irrenowned shame. Spenser. Faerie Queene, book ii. can. 1. IRRETARABLE,") Fr
.
Edward Smedley, Hugh James Rose, Henry John Rose, 1845
2
Encyclopædia metropolitana; or, Universal dictionary of ...
News from Brussels, S[C IRRENOWNED, in, privative, and renown, q. v. Fr.
renommee ; Lat. nomen, a name. Without renown, without name ; without fame or
reputation. For, all he did was to deceiue good knights, And draw them from
pursuit ...
Encyclopaedia, Edward Smedley, 1845
3
London encyclopaedia; or, Universal dictionary of science, ...
IRRENOWNED', adj. Fr. in and renommc ; Lat. in, re, nomen. Void of honor. We
now say unrenowned. For all he did was to deceive good knights, And draw them
from pursuit of praise and fame To sluggish sloth and sensual delights, And end ...
4
The London encyclopaedia: or, Universal dictionary of ...
IRRENOWNED', adj. Fr. in and renomme ; Lat. in, re, nomen. Void of honor. We
now say unrenowned. For all he did was to deceive good knights, And draw them
from pursuit of praise and fame To sluggish sloth and sensual delights, And end ...
5
A Dictionary of English and Bengalee: Tr. from Todd's Ed. of ...
অপৃতিফলদন্টুয়ক, অঢণ্যধর্নীয়, অপুতিকার্যা, না যার বা অনঘো করা যার না we যা ডার,
অপরিহার্যতো, পুন্ডিফল বা পুরদ্ধারৰিহদন | অডড়ুম্রর্নীয়তা ' Irrenowned, a. মর্যাদো
বা সন্থমহান | Irrefragable, a. Lat. অকট্রিটা, অলখুঁড়র্নীয়', অ-র্ঘণ্ডর্নীয়' ...
Samuel Johnson, Henry John Todd, Ramcomul Sen, 1834
6
A New Abridgment of Ainsworth's Dictionary: English and ...
Irremediably, ita ut sanad v. corrigi nequeat. Irrémissible, venia indi gnus.
Irremovable, immuta bilis. Irrenowned, inhonoratus. Irreparable, Irreparabilis.
Irreparably, pe nil ne, funditua. Irreprehensible, irreprehensus, inculpa tue. ¡
rreprehensibly ...
7
A Dictionary in English and Bengalee; Translated from Todd's ...
অপুতিফলদায়ক, 111111111, 121111111, পুতিফল 11 পুরস্কারবিবান ৷ Irrenowned, a-
111111 11 সতুমহান | Irreparability, n. s. অস্তুশষের্নীয়তূ, পৃতিকয়ে উদ্ধার 11
মেরামৎ হইতে পারে না যাহার 11 যাহাতে তভার বা তদবস্থা 11 তদ হুযাগ্যত্ব l \ -
Irrepawble, ...
8
Encyclopaedia Londinensis
We now say, UNRENOWNED z For all he did was to deceive good knights, And
draw them from pursuit of praise and fame To fluggish sloth and (ensual delights,
*And end their days in irrenowned shame. IRREPARABLE, adj. Not to be ...
9
The United States Democratic Review
He says it “contains sixteen thousand words not to be found inany similar,
preceding work:"_but when one opens the book in the middle and finds,
consecutively, irremovability, irremvovable, irremocabl-y, irremoval,
irremurterable, -irrenowned ...
Conrad Swackhamer, Spencer Wallace Cone, 1856
10
The poetical works of Edmund Spenser: With memoir and ...
For all he did was to deceive good knights, And draw them from pursuit of praise
and fame To slug 2 in sloth and sensual delights, And end their days with
irrenowned 3 shame, And now exceeding grief him overcame, To see the
Redcross ...
Edmund Spenser, Charles Cowden Clarke, 1868