与 «MONTHLING»相关的英语书籍
在以下的参考文献中发现
monthling的用法。与
monthling相关的书籍以及同一来源的简短摘要提供其在 英语文献中的使用情境。
1
New Folklore Researches: Folk-prose
8 ' What does Nine stand for ?' ' God is one, etc., etc., a nine monthling is the child
.' ' What does Ten stand for ?' ' God is one, etc., etc., a ten monthling is the calf.' '
What does Eleven stand for ?' ' God is one, etc., etc., an eleven monthling is the ...
Lucy Mary Jane Garnett, John Stuart Stuart Glennie, 1896
2
Greek Folk Poesy: Folk prose. The survival of paganism
God is one, etc., etc., eight windings has the Archipelago." ' What does Nine
stand for ?' ' God is one, etc., etc., a nine monthling is the child.' ' What does Ten
stand for ?' <r ' God is one, etc., etc., a ten monthling is the calf.' fl ' What does
Eleven ...
John S. Stuart-Glennie, 1896
3
The Miscellaneous Poems of William Wordsworth
Yet hail to Thee, Frail, feeble Monthling ! — by that name, methinks, Thy scanty
hreathing-time is portioned out Not idly. — Hadst thou been of Indian birth,
Couched on a casual bed of moss and leaves, And rudely canopied by leafy
boughs, ...
One more there is at home doth sit, the youngest of the three, Her boy is but a
suckling yet, a monthling babe is he; To her, when noontide hour was nigh, 'twas
thus her mother said, “ Give me the basket, daughter, the workmen must have ...
5
The Knickerbocker: Or, New-York Monthly Magazine
It 's a her,' replied Hepsy, looking at the scrawny monthling with affectionate pride
, ' and we laid out to call her Hepsy after me, but it do n't make no odds, we had
just as loose save it for the next one.' ' ' Call her Polly, then, after my wife ; and ...
Charles Fenno Hoffman, Timothy Flint, Lewis Gaylord Clark, 1862
Not content with the rude divisions into infancy and childhood and boyhood, he
marks it into more minute epochs: — the babe in " new-born helplessness;" — the
" frail and feeble monthling," on whose face " Smiles are beginning, like the ...
Francis Lister Hawks, Lambert Lilly, Caleb Sprague Henry, 1839
'Pitlochry all right?' she offered, judging from his open, eager-to-please
expression that this would be more than enough. 'Brilliant!' he enthused, jumping
in. He had a big meaty face, a bit like a monthling already, with tight blond curls at
the top ...
8
An Introduction to Late Modern English
The first uses we do find in the OED for Wordsworth are after-years, fieldward,
monthling and pennied, all of which are Anglo-Saxon in nature, though none
survived into PDE. Thackeray, according to Phillipps (1978: 129), was the first to
use ...
Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade, 2009
9
The poems of William Wordsworth
But what is time ! What outward glory I neither A measure is of Thee, whose
claims extend Through 'heaven's eternal year.' — Yet hail to Thee, Frail, feeble,
Monthling ! — by that name, methinks, Thy scanty breathing-time is portioned out
Not ...
William [poetical works] Wordsworth, 1845
10
The Complete Poetical Works of William Wordsworth: Together ...
Yet hail to Thee, Frail, feeble Monthling ! — by that name, methinks, Thy scanty
breathing time is portioned out Not idly. — Hadst thou been of Indian birth,
Couched on a casual bed of moss and leaves, And rudely canopied by leafy
boughs, ...
William Wordsworth, Henry Reed, 1839