Definition of Magots

1. magot [n] - See also: magot

Lexicographical Neighbors of Magots

magnonics
magnons
magnotherapy
magnox
magnoxes
magnum
magnum opi
magnum opus
magnum opuses
magnums
magnus
magnus hitch
magnussonite
magophony
magot
magots (current term)
magpie
magpie-goose
magpie-lark
magpie-larks
magpielike
magpies
magret
magrets
magrums
mags
magsman
magsmen
magstripe
magstripes

Literary usage of Magots

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

1. Historical and Descriptive Account of the Caricatures of James Gillray by Thomas Wright, Robert Harding Evans (1851)
"LES TROIS magots. THE .THREE SCAMPS. THE THEEE BARRYMORES. Nov. 1st, 1791. The Earl of Barrymore and his two brothers, three of tho wildest rakes of the day ..."

2. Trumps: A Novel by George William Curtis (1861)
"The magots, however, had no buttons upon their coachman's coat; one reason of which omission was, perhaps, that they had no coachman. ..."

3. The Savage by Piomingo (1833)
"This opinion! will endeavor to illustrate by a sublime comparison, and then I shall have done: "If the sun breed magots" (why do you laugh? the language is ..."

4. American Vulgar: The Politics of Manipulation Versus the Culture of Awareness by Robert Grudin (2006)
"In the 19605, it was tres chic to sip coffee at Les Deux magots across from ... Then Les Deux magots started showing up in tourist guides, and the price of ..."

5. Fata Morgana: A Romance of Art Student Life in Paris by Andre Castaigne (1904)
"made up of rich Americans playing Bohemia and frequenting the Deux magots in appropriate costume ; the band of the Red-headed Goat, artists who despised art ..."

Other Resources:

Search for Magots on Dictionary.com!Search for Magots on Thesaurus.com!Search for Magots on Google!Search for Magots on Wikipedia!

Search