Definition of Foids

1. foid [n] - See also: foid

Lexicographical Neighbors of Foids

fogydom
fogydoms
fogyish
fogyism
fogyisms
foh
fohawk
fohawks
fohn
fohns
fohs
foiba
foible
foibles
foid
foids (current term)
foie gras
foil
foilable
foiled
foiler
foilers
foiling
foilings
foilist
foilists
foils
foilsman
foilsmen
foin

Literary usage of Foids

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Journal of the Royal Geological Society of Ireland by Royal Geological Society of Ireland (1857)
"All the specimens that have occurred to him are casts, which consist of an oblong coil of subcylindrical wire-like foids. ..."

2. First Aid in Illness and Injury: Comprised in a Series of Chapters on the by James Evelyn Pilcher (1892)
"foids for narrow cravat. one, can be formed by folding the two ends together, and two may be made by cutting it along the line of the fold. ..."

3. Hand-book of physiology by William Senhouse Kirkes (1899)
"... with a Billar membrane, by and inner layers of the these means affording an extensive surface in which the blood mav be aerated. In amniotic foids. ..."

4. The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference on the by Charles George Herbermann, Edward Aloysius Pace, Condé Bénoist Pallen, Thomas Joseph Shahan, John Joseph Wynne, Andrew Alphonsus MacErlean (1913)
"contained an embroidery case in the foids of her dress, and shoes of red leather enriched with gold tracery. The excavations carried on by MA Gayet have ..."

5. The Library of Literary Criticism of English and American Authors by Charles Wells Moulton (1904)
"Yet, however ample the foids of our charity, a candid review of his career, upon his own showing, leaves no room to doubt that "a deceived heart turned him ..."

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