10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «PESTILENTIALLY»
Discover the use of
pestilentially in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
pestilentially and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal: Exhibiting a ...
Then he gives a nominal list of no fewer than 27 of these glandular cases that
occurred in the 14th regiment alone, between the 20th of June and the 22d of
October, every one of whom, it may fairly be presumed, was pestilentially affected
, but, ...
2
The Medical and Physical Journal
... to it ; that a human being feeding on, or receiving into his system, the flesh of a
pestilentially diseased brute animal, may certainly have disease excited thereby
in his system, but a disease of a nature altogether new, and terminating with him,
...
George was the first that entered; and, the place being crammed full with
offenders, the atmosphere soon became pestilentially close. The poor boy in vain
shrieked that he was about to be suffocated. At last, in despair, he bit the lad next
to him ...
4
The principles of physiology applied to the preservation of ...
... by the terrible name of the ' Black Hole ;' George was the first that entered; and
the place being crammed full with offenders, the atmosphere soon became
pestilentially close. The poor boy in vain shrieked that he was about to be
suffocated.
5
The English republic, ed. by W.J. Linton
The Curse whieh has demoralized Franee hreathes pestilentially through this
English air. Beware lest on that pestilenee the Destroying Angel eome to smite us
into the grave from whieh there is no redemption — the grave of a dishonoured ...
William James Linton, 1851
6
Merchants' Magazine and Commercial Review
... from view the fact that the only inhabitants of Labuan were monkeys and
alligators, and that it was nothing but a mud-flat so pestilentially unhealthy that
even the Malays, innured to noisome miasmata, made a point of not residing
there.
Freeman Hunt, William B. Dana, 1851
... and thence to Portsmouth to retrieve my horse, Zephyr, who no doubt had
spent all this time contentedly siring mares in the stable yard of the Dolphin Inn.
Bassett and I pressed on, and spent the last night of our journey at a pestilentially
foul ...
8
Heraclitus Christianus: or, The man of sorrow: a reflection ...
ADD we now to the preceding Mi- jfjL series, another Malady and affliction of
spirit , which they call Love ; but fo contagious, that all States in the World are
therewith tainted : an Evil so pestilentially venomous , that it mingles and -
plynges ...
Heraclitus (Christianus.), 1677
9
A concise view of the rise and progress of homœopathic medicine
... Drosera; against Croup, Spon- gia mar: tost; against Raphania, which
sometimes rages pestilentially in Europe, and 6nce here in Albany, produced by
secale cornutum he discovered the most speedy and certain remedy in Solanum
Nigrum; ...
10
Johnson's dictionary of the English language in miniature
Y§'>f Pete'chial, a. pestilentially spotted " *1' Pet'1t, a. small, inconsrderable e e c
Petit'i0n, s. a request, prayer,' entreaty' Pt-tit'ion, 0. a. to supgglicate, to solicltl A
Petit'ionary, a. suppl tory, petitioning Petit'ioner, 0. one who oifers a petition ' ...
3 NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «PESTILENTIALLY»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
pestilentially is used in the context of the following news items.
Dirty carriages, filthy toilets: Mahatma Gandhi rides in a third-class …
There was a pipe in it but no water, and I say without fear of challenge that it was pestilentially dirty. A snapshot of India The compartment itself ... «Scroll.in, Feb 15»
Saving the Railways, for the aam aadmi
It was pestilentially dirty” — Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, describing a train journey in September 1917. The daily concerns of today's aam ... «The Hindu, Feb 13»
Le Mot Juste
So pestilentially ubiquitous has this fallacy become, in fact, that the grammatically correct use of the objective form in such constructions (for ... «First Things, Jul 11»