Definition of Danglings

1. dangling [n] - See also: dangling

Lexicographical Neighbors of Danglings

dangle
dangle-berry
dangleberries
dangleberry
dangled
dangler
danglers
dangles
danglier
dangliest
dangling
dangling modifier
dangling participle
dangling participles
danglingly
danglings
dangly
dangs
danielsite
danio
danios
danish
danishes
dank
danker
dankest
dankish
dankishness
dankly
dankness

Literary usage of Danglings

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

1. The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman by Laurence Sterne (1887)
"... and danglings, to as many devils as chose to accept of them. When issues of events like these my father is waiting for are hanging in the scales of fate ..."

2. The Monthly Review by Ralph Griffiths (1815)
"... at Versailles,"— to military trappings and danglings crowding the royal levee rooms,— and to princely buildings that are as self-willed and extravagant, ..."

3. Studies of a Biographer by Sir Leslie Stephen (1902)
"... but to Bagehot, in spite of certain faint proclivities towards Catholicism, their speculations appeared to be futile danglings after extinct phantasms. ..."

4. Familiar Allusions: A Hand-book of Miscellaneous Information Including the by William Adolphus Wheeler, Charles Gardner Wheeler (1887)
"They fling out their Danglings more wildly than any peal in London : they are nearer the ground, nnd the hurly-burly is melodious enough. ..."

5. The Great Modern American Stories: An Anthology by William Dean Howells, Boni & Liveright (1920)
"She put Jameson on a sofa upholstered in a kind of pink and silver brocade and adorned with certain superfluous hangings, danglings and ..."

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