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Examples

  • "Perhaps you had the name Eudosia vaguely in your memory when you chose the name Theodosia.

    A Dream of Empire Or, The House of Blennerhassett William Henry Venable 1878

  • Then Eudosia, daughter of the said Theodosius the emperor, and wife of Valens, went by a vow to Jerusalem, and there a Jew gave to her for great love a great gift.

    The Golden Legend, vol. 4 1230-1298 1900

  • The year 1828 saw the beginning of another great work, "Eudosia, a Poem on the Universe"; it was "printed" with even greater neatness and labour; but this, too, after being toiled at during the winter months, was dropped in the middle of its second "book."

    The Life of John Ruskin 1893

  • Eudosia was a Roman empress, wife of the second Theodosius.

    A Dream of Empire Or, The House of Blennerhassett William Henry Venable 1878

  • "It was by these means (i.e. Homoeopathically) that the Princess Eudosia with rose-water restored a person who had fainted!"

    Medical Essays, 1842-1882 Oliver Wendell Holmes 1851

  • "It was by these means (i.e. Homoeopathically) that the Princess Eudosia with rose-water restored a person who had fainted!"

    Complete Project Gutenberg Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Works Oliver Wendell Holmes 1851

  • "No, surely!" exclaimed Eudosia, with delight instead of alarm.

    Autobiography of a Pocket-Handkerchief James Fenimore Cooper 1820

  • "You make so many purchases, dear Eudosia, that I should think you would weary of them."

    Autobiography of a Pocket-Handkerchief James Fenimore Cooper 1820

  • Eudosia had interpolated the word "hundred," quite innocently, for, as usually happens with those to whom money is new, her imagination ran ahead of her arithmetic.

    Autobiography of a Pocket-Handkerchief James Fenimore Cooper 1820

  • Eudosia had some indistinct glimmerings of this fact, though it was not often that she came to sound and discriminating decisions even in matters less complicated.

    Autobiography of a Pocket-Handkerchief James Fenimore Cooper 1820

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