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Etymologies
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Examples
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To-night I finished reading "Queed," a most delightful novel, that leaves a good taste in your mouth, which is more than can be said of many.
A Woman Rice Planter 1914
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It is commonly reported in Richmond that the characters in his novel "Queed," the scenes of which are laid in Richmond, were "drawn from life."
American Adventures A Second Trip 'Abroad at home' Julian Street 1913
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Meanwhile, I had turned to fresh work; and, as it chanced, "Queed" was both begun and finished in the interval while "Captivating Mary Carstairs" was taking her last journeys abroad.
Captivating Mary Carstairs Henry Sydnor Harrison 1905
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In a crude, energetic, excessively eulogised novel published in America a few years ago -- _Queed_ -- we were introduced to an economist engaged upon a work so learned that he knew there were only three persons in America capable of understanding it.
Personality in Literature Rolfe Arnold Scott-James
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Athorowe swerdes, alyche the Queed dystraughte, 455
The Rowley Poems Thomas Chatterton
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The rest are in a fair way to undergo such a change as came to Queed, the sedentary hero of Mr. Harrison's novel, when he took up boxing.
The Joyful Heart Robert Haven Schauffler 1921
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When I sat down I noticed that he was reading Henry Sydnor Harrison's ` ` Queed '', a book which was justly popular at that time.
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I at once showed Mr. Harding an article I had written in which I stated that not only was ` ` Queed '' a real novel, with a real plot, and real characters, but that I believed the readers were stimulated by the spiritual advance of the hero.
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Queed, himself, long before the end, becomes a marionette without a toe on the ground; his
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Queed, a novel with a frontispiece by R.M. Crosby.
The Byrd library 1914
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