Definition of Crambes

1. crambe [n] - See also: crambe

Lexicographical Neighbors of Crambes

craisin
craisins
crake
crakeberries
crakeberry
craked
craker
crakers
crakes
craking
cram
cram full
cram school
cram schools
cram session
crambes (current term)
crambin
crambo
cramboes
crambos
cramdown
cramdowns
crame
crames
cramesies
cramesy
crammed
crammer
crammers
cramming

Literary usage of Crambes

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

1. The Monthly Review by Ralph Griffiths (1821)
"The notion of there being such a noun as crambe, crambes, &c., which was constantly repeated in the elements of Roman instruction, has no reference whatever ..."

2. A Treatise on the Law of Executors and Administrators by Edward Vaughan Williams, Roland Lomax Vaughan Williams, Joseph Fitz Randolph, William Talcott (1895)
"Des- of a child en venire sa mtre, interest crambes v. Tomkins, 4 Bro. CC 149, must be computed from the time of its note; 8. C. 1 Cox, 133. ..."

3. The Old Humanities and the New Science by Sir William Osler (1920)
"Only in this way does Nature preserve the Selenas, the Leas, and the crambes, so dear to Cato and so necessary for the sustenance of our hard-working, ..."

4. The Irish Quarterly Review (1858)
"Our opinion is that, in the numerous Greek schools erected at Borne «he first declension of substantives was xja/t/S?), rig, p • crambe,crambes ramie, ..."

5. The Monthly Review by Ralph Griffiths (1821)
"The notion of there being such a noun as crambe, crambes, &c., which was constantly repeated in the elements of Roman instruction, has no reference whatever ..."

6. A Treatise on the Law of Executors and Administrators by Edward Vaughan Williams, Roland Lomax Vaughan Williams, Joseph Fitz Randolph, William Talcott (1895)
"Des- of a child en venire sa mtre, interest crambes v. Tomkins, 4 Bro. CC 149, must be computed from the time of its note; 8. C. 1 Cox, 133. ..."

7. The Old Humanities and the New Science by Sir William Osler (1920)
"Only in this way does Nature preserve the Selenas, the Leas, and the crambes, so dear to Cato and so necessary for the sustenance of our hard-working, ..."

8. The Irish Quarterly Review (1858)
"Our opinion is that, in the numerous Greek schools erected at Borne «he first declension of substantives was xja/t/S?), rig, p • crambe,crambes ramie, ..."

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