10 LIBROS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADOS CON «INVENDIBILITY»
Descubre el uso de
invendibility en la siguiente selección bibliográfica. Libros relacionados con
invendibility y pequeños extractos de los mismos para contextualizar su uso en la literatura.
1
Encyclopædia metropolitana; or, Universal dictionary of ...
Life, by Malone. INVENDIBILITY, from in, privative, and vendere, to sell. Not
being able to be sold ; unsaleable state. All that is terrible in this case is, that the
author may be laughed at, and the stationer beggared by the book's invendibility.
Encyclopaedia, Edward Smedley, 1845
2
Encyclopaedia metropolitana: or Universal dictionary of ...
All that is terrible in this case is, that the author may be laughed at, and the
stationer beggared by the book's invendibility. Brome To the Reader. INVENOM,
also, and now, perhaps, more commonly, written Envenom, q. v. Fr. envenimer.
Venom ...
Edward Smedley, Hugh James Rose, Henry John Rose, 1845
3
The works of the English poets, from Chaucer to Cowper
All that is terrible in this case, is, that the author may be laughed at, and the
stationer beggared by the book's invendibility. It concerns him to look to the one, I
am provided against the other. For it is unkind and unmanly to abuse me for
being a ...
Alexander Chalmers, Samuel Johnson, 1810
4
The Nitty-Gritty Baseline Quiddity Collection of Dave ...
Ferritungstite, churchwardenismmetachrosisboshdoneEmpeo. Gumption,
Phasianellidae. Sneckdrawn if pseudoartistic; circumvallation done conchitis.
Uncontrolled had stanzaic, Fleta deferred ought desmidiology invendibility nor
vellicative ...
5
The Century dictionary and cyclopedia: a work of universal ...
All that la terrible in this case is that the author may be laughed at, and the
stationer beggared by the book's invendibility. Brome. invendible (in-ven'di-bl), a.
[< i»-3 + vendible.] Not vendible ; unsalable. invenomt, invenomet, v. t. Obsolete
forms ...
William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin Eli Smith, 1906
6
The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia: The Century ...
Same as enveil. invelopt, invelopet, ». t. Obsolete forms of envelop. Jer. Taylor.
invendibility (in-ven-di-bil'i-ti), n. [< invendible : see -bility.] The state or quality of
being invendible ; unsalableness. All that is terrible In this case is that the author
...
7
The Century Dictionary: An Encyclopedic Lexicon of the ...
All that is terrible In this case Is that the author may be laughed at, and the
stationer beggared by the book's invendibility. Brome. invendible (in-ven'di-bl), a.
[< «n-3 + vendible.] Not vendible ; unsalable, invenomt, invenomet, v. t. Obsolete
...
William Dwight Whitney, 1889
8
Encyclopædia Metropolitana; Or, Universal Dictionary of ...
... the company frequently sat invelopnt with the fumes of tobacco in
consequence of smoaking being permitted in the publick room. Dryden. Prose H'
orln, vol. i. p. 487. Life, by Malone. INVENDIBILITY, from in, privative, and
vendere, to sell.
Edward Smedley, Hugh James Rose, Henry John Rose, 1845
9
Universal dictionary of the English language: a new and ...
All that Is terrible In this case is, that the authot may be laughed at, and the
stationer beggared by the book's invendibility."—Brome. (To the Header. ) * in
vend i-ble, a. [Pref. in- (2), and Eng. vendible (q. v.). j Not vendible ; not saleable ...
Robert Hunter, Charles Morris, 1898
10
Universal Dictionary of the English Language: A New and ...
ín-vénd-í-bÜ'-i-t*, s. [Pref. in- (2), and Eng. vendibility ;(q.v.).] The quality or state
of being invendible ; unaaleabl eneas. " AU that is terrible In this case Is. that the
author may be laughed at, and the stationer beggared by the book's invendibility.
Robert Hunter, Charles Morris, Thomas Henry Huxley, 1897