Definition of Coniines

1. coniine [n] - See also: coniine

Lexicographical Neighbors of Coniines

coniferin
coniferization
coniferophyte
coniferophytes
coniferous
coniferous tree
conifers
coniferyl-alcohol oxidase
coniferyl alcohol
coniferyl alcohol dehydrogenase
conifold
conifolds
coniform
coniine
coniine hydrobromide
coniines (current term)
conima
conimas
conimene
conin
conine
conines
coning
conins
coniofibrosis
coniolymphstasis
coniometer
coniophage
conioses
coniosis

Literary usage of Coniines

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

1. Anatomy, Descriptive and Surgical by Henry Gray (1883)
"The transverse colon, the longest part of the large intestine, passes transversely from right to left across the abdomen, opposite the coniines of the ..."

2. Curiosities of Literature by Isaac Disraeli, Benjamin Disraeli (1858)
"... call this a yearly tribute ; but coniines, the French memoir-writer, with a national spirit, denies that these gifts were either pensions or tributes. ..."

3. A General Collection of the Best and Most Interesting Voyages and Travels in by John Pinkerton (1814)
"... they were at laft left on the conIines of the count's dominion, in a little uninhabited ..."

4. The Gentleman's Magazine (1833)
"... as far as Shropshire is concerned (to which he strictly coniines himself) the best known to exist. Next to Mr. Morris's may be ranked those of TF Dukes, ..."

5. The History of the Crusades by Joseph Fr. Michaud, William Robson (1853)
"... he became lord of Carac, and some castles situated on the coniines of Arabia and Palestine. ..."

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