10 LIBROS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADOS CON «OVERFINENESS»
Descubre el uso de
overfineness en la siguiente selección bibliográfica. Libros relacionados con
overfineness y pequeños extractos de los mismos para contextualizar su uso en la literatura.
1
The New Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal
The craving after the Ideal, which belongs to Sentiment, makes its possessor
discontented with the mortals around him, and the very overfineness of nerve that
quickens his feelings sharpens also his irritability. For my own part, so far from ...
2
Club Life of London with Anecdotes of the Clubs, ...
By John Timbs John Timbs. Hunt that Steele's “overfineness of nature was never
more beautifully evinced in any part of his writings than in this testimony to the
merits of poor Dick Estcourt.” Ned Ward, in his Secret History of Clubs, first edition
, ...
3
Lives of the Queens of England, from the Norman Conquest: ...
She was followed to the tomb by Isabel, duchess of York, second daughter of
Pedro the Cruel, a lady noted for her overfineness and delicacy, yet at her death
showing much penitence for her pestilent vanities.' But the grief for all these
deaths ...
Agnes Strickland, Elisabeth Strickland, 1860
4
An Arthurian Miscellany
O selfless manand stainless gentleman, Who wouldst against thine own
eyewitness fain Have all men true and leal, all women pure; How, in the mouths
of baseinterpreters, From overfineness not intelligible To things withevery sense
asfalse ...
5
The roll of the Royal College of Physicians of London: ...
The craving after the ideal, which belongs to sentiment, makes its possessor
discontented with the mortals around him, and the very overfineness of nerve that
quickens his feelings sharpens also his irritability. For my own part, so far from ...
Royal College of Physicians of London, William Munk, 1835
6
Chambers's Twentieth Century Dictionary (part 3 of 4: N-R)
Overfar, ōvėrfär′, adv.(Shak.) to toogreatan extent. Overfast, ōvėrfast′, adj. too
fast: at too great speed. Overfeed, ōvėrfēd′, v.t. and v.i. to feed to excess. Overfill
, ōvėrfil′, v.t.tofillto excess. Overfineness, ō′vėrfīn′nes,n. excessive fineness.
7
The New Monthly Magazine
The craving after the Ideal, which belongs to Sentiment, makes its possessor
discontented with the mortals around him, and the very overfineness of nerve that
quickens his feelings sharpens also his irritability. For my own part, so far from ...
Thomas Campbell, Samuel Carter Hall, Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron Lytton, 1832
8
The Duchess de la Vallière: A Play in Five Acts
The craving after the Ideal, which belongs to Sentiment, makes its possessor
discontented with the mortals around him, and the very overfineness of nerve that
quickens his feelings sharpens also his irritability. For my own part, so far from ...
Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron Lytton, 1837
9
The New Monthly Magazine
The craving after the Ideal, which belongs to Sentiment, makes its possessor
discontented with the mortals around him, and the very overfineness of nerve that
quickens his feelings sharpens also his irritability. For my own part, so far from ...
O selflessman and stainless gentleman, Who wouldst against thineown
eyewitness fain Have allmen true and leal,all women pure; How, inthe mouths of
base interpreters, From overfineness not intelligible To things with every sense
as false ...
Alfred Lord Tennyson, 2013