primævality

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search
See also: primaevality

English

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

primævality (uncountable)

  1. Obsolete spelling of primevality.
    • 1791, Food for Book-Worms. Price One Shilling, (To Be Allowed in Purchase, or on Returning It,) a Catalogue of Books, for 1791, [], page 73:
      Holloway on Primævality and Pre-eminence of the Sacred Hebrew
    • 1846, “Jaunting in Jamaica—As It Used to Be”, in The Sporting Review, page 330:
      Yet in the genial climates of the sun it is pleasant living: existence has a primævality about it, which during the dreaminess of repose, the dolce far niente, hangs like a mist about the mind;
    • 1895, Douglas Sladen, “Quebec: the Capital of New France”, in On the Cars and Off. Being the Journal of a Pilgrimage Along the Queen’s Highway to the East, from Halifax in Nova Scotia to Victoria in Vancouver’s Island., London: Ward, Lock & Bowden, Limited, page 50:
      And sometimes the glamour would be heightened by the apparition on the ramparts of the captive bear, or the imprisoned bison, kept by the officers, poor relics of the primævality so rapidly forsaking America.