«WONTLESS» தொடர்புடைய ஆங்கிலம் புத்தகங்கள்
பின்வரும் புத்தக விவரத்தொகுப்புத் தேர்ந்தெடுப்பில்
wontless இன் பயன்பாட்டைக் கண்டறியுங்கள்.
wontless தொடர்பான புத்தகங்கள் மற்றும் ஆங்கிலம் இலக்கியத்தில் அதன் பயன்பாட்டுச் சூழலை வழங்குவதற்கு அதிலிருந்து பெறப்பட்ட சுருக்கமான சாரங்களைத் தொடர்புபடுத்துகின்றன.
1
The Lost Beauties of the English Language: An Appeal to ...
Fairfax : Tasso. There's auld Bob Morris that wons in yon glen, The king of good
fellows. Robert Burns. Woning, a dwelling. Tell me, sir, what is thy name, and
where thy woning is. MS. Cantab, Halliwell. Wontless, without wont,
unaccustomed.
2
The London encyclopaedia: or, Universal dictionary of ...
To be accustomed ; to use; be ' used : wontless is unaccustomed, and the other
derivatives correspond. Passing their time according to their wmt, they waited for
the coming of Phalantus. Sidney. Through power of that, his cunning thieveries ...
3
The Works of the British Poets: With Prefaces, Biographical ...
IN Honoua A u; whither, Love! wilt thou now carry me) 'What wontless fury dost
thou now inspire Into my feeble breast, too full os thee ? TVhilst seeking to aslake
thy raging fire, Thou in me kindlest much more great desire, And up alost above ...
4
The Poetical Works of Robert Southey: With a Memoir
He, remembering the past day When from his name the affrighted sons of France
Fled trembling, all astonished at their force And wontless valor, rages round the
field Dreadful in anger; yet in every man Meeting a foe fearless, and in the faith ...
Robert Southey, Henry Theodore Tuckerman, 1880
5
Joan of Arc. (Second edition.)
He, remembering the past day \Vhen from his name the afl'righted sons of France
Fled trembling, all astonish'd at their force And wontless valour, rages round the
field Dreadful in fury; yet in every man Meeting a foe fearless, and in the faith Of ...
6
Hymns. Visions. Elegiac poems
What wontless fury dost thou now inspire Into my feeble breast, too full of thee ?
Whilst seeking to aslake thy raging fire, Thou in me kindlest much more great
desire, 5 And up aloft above my strength doth raise The wondrous matter of my
fire to ...
Edmund Spenser, John Aikin, 1810
7
Lucretius On the Nature of Things: A Philosophical Poem, in ...
505 Spread through the frame, so deep the dire disease Perturbs his spirit ; as
the briny main Foams through each wave beneath the tempest's ire. He groans,
since every member smarts with pain, And from his inmost breast, with wontless
toil ...
Titus Lucretius Carus, 1870
8
The works of Virgil, closely rendered into Engl
They enter now The groves of Trivia, and his gilded domes. Daedalus, as goes
the legend, as he flies The realms 'of Minos on his sweepy wings, Adventuring to
trust him to the sky, 20 Along a wontless region floated off To th' icy Bears, and on
...
Publius Vergilius Maro, Virgil, 1871
9
The poetical works of Edmund Spenser ... from the text of J. ...
What wontless fury dost thou now inspire Into my feeble breast, too full of thee ? _
Whilst seeking to aslake thy raging fire, Thou in me kindlest much more great
desire, 5 And up aloft above my strength doth raise The wondrous matter of my
fire ...
Edmund Spenser, John Aikin, 1810
10
Translated and Original Poems
'Tis he; but Gods should never walk with men, But with their equals; far too
imbecile The mortal race not dizzy to become In wontless heights. No traitor he,
nor yet Ignohle; much too great indeed to he The servant, and to he companion to
The ...