КНИГИ НА АНГЛИЙСКИЙ ЯЗЫКЕ, ИМЕЮЩЕЕ ОТНОШЕНИЕ К СЛОВУ «UNCLOISTER»
Поиск случаев использования слова
uncloister в следующих библиографических источниках. Книги, относящиеся к слову
uncloister, и краткие выдержки из этих книг для получения представления о контексте использования этого слова в литературе на английский языке.
1
Encyclopaedia Londinensis, Or, Universal Dictionary of Arts, ...
To UNCLOISTER, v. a. To set at large. Why did I not, uncloister'd from the womb.
Take my next lodging in a tomb ? Norris. To UNCLOSE, v. a. To open. Soon as
thy letters trembling I unclose, That well-known name awakens all my woes.
Pope.
2
The letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford: including ...
It is so difficult to uncloister you, that I regret not seeing you when you are out of
your own ambry. I have nothing new to tell you that is very old ; but you can
inform me of something within your own district. Who is the author, E. B. G. of a
version ...
Horace Walpole, John Wright, George Agar-Ellis Dover (1st baron), 1840
3
The Letters of Horace Walpole, Earl of Oxford
TO THE REV. WILLIAM COLE. Strawberry Hill, Dec. 10, 1775. I WAS very sorry to
have been here, dear Sir, the day you called on me in town. It is so difiicult to
uncloister you, that I regret not seeing you when you are out of your own ambrg.
Horace Walpole, Peter Cunningham, 1857
4
Annual Meeting: Proceedings, Constitution, List of Active ...
Let us uncloister them, and let education be as free as air and light ; and if the
high schools help do this, God bless the high school ! (Applause.) When I see the
rich giving a hundred thousand dollars here and there for other institutions, I say,
...
American Institute of Instruction, 1866
It is so diflicult to uncloister you, that I regret not seeing you when you are out of
your own ambry. I have nothing new to tell you that is very old ; but you can
inform me of something within your own district. Who is the author, E. B. G. of a
version ...
earl of Orford Walpole (Horace), 1820
... certain, that the first popular works in our language came from the pens of
authors distinguished in active life; and that, in every succeeding age, the
originally uncloister-like character of English composition has on the whole been
sustained.
7
The Museum of Foreign Literature, Science and Art
Eliakim Littell Robert Walsh, John Jay Smith. it is certain, that the first popular
works in our language came from the pens of authors distinguished in active life;
and that, in every succeeding age, the originally uncloister-like character of
English ...
Robert Walsh, Eliakim Littell, John Jay Smith, 1832
8
A Dictionary of the Portuguese and English Languages, in Two ...
To Uncloister, v. a. soltar, por em liberdade. To Unclose, v. a. abrir. — To unclose
a letter, abrir huma carta. Unclouded, adj. naö escuro, claro, naö nubrado, que
naö tem Huvens. Uncloudiness,s. falta de nuvens, qualidade do que he claro.
Antonio Vieyra, Jacinto Dias do Canto, 1827
9
New Italian and English Dictionary in Two Parts: With a New ...
1. to uncloister. Chiabr D i «montare, vn, 1. to dismount; slight; descend
Dismontato, -a, adj. dismounted ; alighted Dismuóvore, va. 2 irr. to move; excite;
stir up Disnnniorársi, vre/. 1, to withdraw one's love Disrtatuiale, adj. unnatural;
against ...
10
A Critical Pronouncing Dictionary, and Expositor of the ...
To UNCLOISTER, fin-kloia'tur, e. n. To set at large. To UNCLOSE, fin-kloze', v. a.
To open. UNCLOSED, un-kl6z'd', a. Not separated by enclosures. UNCLOUDED,
un-kl8u'ded, a. Free from clouds, clear from obscurity, not darkened.
John Walker, Thomas Tegg ((Londres)), 1827