10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «VERBARIAN»
Discover the use of
verbarian in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
verbarian and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
A Supplementary English Glossary
Miss Austen, Persuasion, ch. v. Verbarian, word-coiner. In The Doctor, Southey
gives himself free scope as a verbarian — Hall, Modern English, p. 21.
Verdinoale, a farthingale.' And busks, and verdinqales about their hips. Hall,
Satires, IV. vi.
Thomas Lewis Owen Davies, James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps,
1881
2
The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia: The Century ...
The verbally used [Scythian] ionns are rather but one step removed irom nouns
used predicatively, with subjec~ tlve or possessive pronominal elements
appended. Whitney, Liie and Growth oi Lang., p. 233. verbarian (ver-ba'ri-an), n.
and a.
William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin Eli Smith,
1900
3
The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia: The Century ...
In "The Doctor " Southey gives himself free scope as a verbarian, much after the
way of Rabelais, Thomas Nash, Taylor the Water-poet, or Feltham. F. Hall, Mod.
Eng., p. 21, note 2. II. a. Of or pertaining to words; verbal, verbarium (ver-ba'ri-um)
...
William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin Eli Smith,
1914
4
The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia: Dictionary
The verbally used [Scythian] iorms are rather but one step removed from nouns
used predicatively, with subjective or possessive pronominal c ements ap ended.
Whitney, Liie and Growth 0 Lung, p. 233. verbarian (vcr-ba'ri-gn), n. and a.
William Dwight Whitney,
1904
5
The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia: The Century ...
In "The Doctor" Southey gives himself free scope as a verbarian, much after the
way of Rabelais, Thomas Nash, Taylor the Water-poet, or Feltham. F. llall, Mod.
Eng., p. 21, note 2. II. a. Of or pertaining to words ; verbal, verbarium (ver-ba'ri-urn
), ...
6
The Imperial Dictionary of the English Language: A Complete ...
One who deals in words merely; one skilled in words; a literal adherent to, or a
minute critic of words; a verbarian. Verbality (ver-bal'i-ti), n. The state or quality of
being verbal; mere words; bare literal expressions. Sir T. Browne. Verbalization ...
7
A Dictionary of the English Language, Containing the ...
... own experience ; anc added, with a smile, that he had more than once amused
himself with the thought of a verbarian attorney-general, authorized to bring infor
mation ex officio against the writer or editor of any work in extensive circulation, ...
8
The New Thesaurus of English Words and Phrases Classified ...
(old) 124; colloquial; Anglice. dex, glossary, thesaurus, gradus, delectus,
concordance. etymology, derivation; gloss-, termin-, orism-ology; paleology &c, (
philology) 560. lexicography ; glossographer &c. (scholar) 492; lexicologist,
verbarian.
Christopher Orlando Sylvester Mawson, Peter Mark Roget,
1911
No brogue, no foreign accent, but pure, unadulterated English, with a lack of long
words — a verbarian habit worthy of imitation even by those who boast of having
souls above an oyster. My sudden and unannounced appearance among them ...
10
I. On the constitution of the Church a. State 3d ed. [1e ...
... own experience; and added, with a smile, that he had more than once amused
himself with the thought of a verbarian Attorney-General, authorized to bring
informations er oflicio against the writer or editor of any work in extensive
circulation, ...
S. Taylor Coleridge, H.N. Coleridge,
1839
NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «VERBARIAN»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
verbarian is used in the context of the following news items.
A Point of View: What's the point of satire?
After all, in a working life that's consisted, in large part, of tossing lexical firecrackers in the bemused faces of more placid verbarians, I've ended up with some of ... «BBC News, Feb 15»