Definition of Recaned

1. recane [v] - See also: recane

Lexicographical Neighbors of Recaned

recamiers
recan
recanalisation
recanalisations
recanalise
recanalised
recanalises
recanalising
recanalization
recanalizations
recanalize
recanalized
recanalizes
recanalizing
recane
recaned (current term)
recanes
recaning
recanned
recanning
recans
recant
recantation
recantations
recanted
recanter
recanters
recanting
recants

Literary usage of Recaned

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

1. The Quarterly Review by William Gifford, John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero Ernle, George Walter Prothero (1817)
"I use this expression, as the scene recaNed perfectly to my memory a puppet-show of that name, which I recollect to have seen in my childhood, ..."

2. The Mentor (1894)
"The list of articles made during the year includes halters, clothes-lines, onion-nets, oyster-bags, door-mats, chairs recaned, knitted skirts, socks, ..."

3. Some Modern French Writers: A Study in Bergsonism by Gladys Rosaleen Turquet-Milnes, Henri Bergson (1921)
"A son of the people, — of a mother who recaned the chairs of Orleans Cathedral, and for whom he had always the most filial respect and love, ..."

4. Proceedings of the Annual Session by Colorado Teachers' Association (1877)
"Besides the brush-making, chairs are recaned, and work of this kind is taken in from the city, keeping a number of children profitably busy. ..."

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