Citations:effossion

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English citations of effossion and effosion

compare Citations:defossion
  • 1824, Alexander Pope, The Works of Alexander Pope, Esq: With Notes and Illustrations by Himself and Others. To which are Added, a New Life of the Author, an Estimate of His Poetical Character and Writings, and Occasional Remarks,, page 14:
    ... effossion of coins, the procuring of mummies; and, for all those curious discoveries by which he hoped to become (as himself was wont to say) a second Peireskius.
  • 1845, Edward Smedley, Hugh James Rose, Henry John Rose, Encyclopaedia Metropolitana: Difform- Falter, page 404:
    EFFOSSION, Lat. effodere, effossum, to dig out; e, and fodere, to dig; of unsettled etymology. The digging out. He [Cornelius Scriblerus] had already determined to set apart several annual sums, for the recovery of manuscripts, the effossion of coins, the procuring of mummies; ...
also spelled with one s:
  • 1856, Samuel Klinefelter Hoshour, Letters to Squire Pedant, in the East, page 43:
    I [] exsiccated its humid and aqueous surface by effosion.
  • 1829, The London Encyclopaedia: Or Universal Dictionary of Science, Art, Literature, and Practical Mechanics, Comprising a Popular View of the Present State of Knowledge, page 711:
    ... effosion of coins , and the procuring of mummies .
  • 1920, United States. Bureau of Mines, Bulletin, page 241:
    Effosion (L.). The digging out from the earth, as of fossils, etc.